The American Handbook of Ornamental Trees

Cover The American Handbook of Ornamental Trees
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Nat. Ord. Juglandaceae. Monoecia, Polyandria, Linn. Catkins of the staminate flowers simple, cylindrical, loosely imbricated, with a 5 -6 -parted scale for a calyx. Styles two, very short, with large stigmas. Fruit with the husk undivided.
1. J. CINEREA, Linn. Leaflets mostly eleven, oblong lanceolate, oblique or roundish at the base, softly pubescent beneath; petioles downy. Fruit ovoid, oblong, leathery, downy, sticky, or viscid, and the shell of the nut deeply striated. Butternut; white waln
...ut. Native of most of the Northern, Middle, and Western States.
The ailanthus has been admired for its " oriental" appearance in the landscape. As OF ORNAMENTAL TREES. 137 it is fast growing in disgrace, this tribe is the best substitute. This kind seldom exceeds fifty feet high, is generally round-headed, with an inclination to become flat. The finest specimen at Bartram is fifty-five feet high and fifty- four inches in circumference.
It thrives best in a cool, deep, and rich loam ; and is best propagated by sowing the nuts about four inches apart, in rows, early in spring, covering them about two inches deep.


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