THE GOOSEBERRY HOUSE. ay 
abundance of air and water, with a daily syringing of 
the trees as soon as the flowering is over, must be the 
chief business in Cherry growing under glass. Dwarf 
bushes for pots may be had at the nurseries for about 
ls. 6d. each out of pots, and in pots at 2s. 6d. or so 
each. So much for Cherry growing. Now I come to 
what may be called a novel affair. 
THE GOOSEBERRY HOUSE. 
Gooseberries can be and are forced in some few lordly 
places; but as arule this is new from a commercial 
point of view. However, I feel convinced not only of 
Fic. 17.—SECTIGN OF A SIXTY-FEET HALF-SPAN ROOF HEDGE GOOSEBERRY HOUSE. 
References to house.—aa, roof glazed into fixed rafters, twenty inches apart; BB, 
the walls all round of Yew, Cupressus, or Arborvite, and kept clipped ; c,asection 
of the ventilator all along the half roof, two feet wide, opened by rack gearing. 
a 
—_——_ + 
EXD SECTION OF HOUSE. 
its utility, but also of its commercial benefit to the 
grower. The crop is both a certain and a remunerative 
