Garden Notes. 501 



5. Dr. Marx : brilliant crimson ; habit robust, vigorous, 



and rather tall. 



6. Due d'Aumale : brilliant crimson ; habit rather more 



dwarf than No. 1. 



7. Duchess of Sutherland : bright, or sometimes pale rose ; 



habit vigorous, equal to No. 5. 



S. Lady Alice Peel : deep pink; a most perfect and beau- 

 tiful rose; habit compact, and rather dwarf, like No. 1. 



9. La Reine : brilliant glossy rose ; flowers large, perfect 

 in shape, and most splendid ; this very fine rose does 

 not bloom so well early in the season as towards its 

 close ; habit rather dwarf, about equal to No. 1. 



10. Madame Laflfay : rosy crimson; habit about equal to 



No. 2. 



11. Marquise Boccella : very pale flesh ; habit dwarf — more 



so than any of the preceding, and very compact. 



12. Robin Hood : bright rosy pink ; a most elegant and 



beautiful rose; habit about equal to No. 2. 

 Now let the genuine lover of roses imagine a fine neatly 

 dressed lawn, with twelve well-arranged groups, containing 

 from ten to twenty plants each of the above beautiful roses, 

 in bloom from May till November, exhaling their sweet per- 

 fume in the freshness of the morning and evening, and glow- 

 ing with beauty under the beams of the mid-day sun. Can 

 any thing in floriculture be more desirable, or more deserving 

 of admiration from the lover of the works of nature ? 



Art. V. Garden Notes, No. 2. By Dr. M. A. Ward, 

 Athens, Ga. 



The " Camak's Red-twigg'd peach" of Messrs. Hovey &, 

 Co.'s Nursery Catalogue, I suppose to be identical with "Lig- 

 num rubrum, a curiosity^' in that of Mr. Prince. I greatly 

 prefer the former name, because it is commemorative of a 

 most excellent man and zealous pomologist. May it live a 

 thousand years. I trust Mr. P. will be willing to cancel the 

 latter, out of regard to the memory of his friend, and because, 

 as a descriptive name, it is not exactly correct; for it is not 



