"Beautiful results may be got on smallest grounds." 



This is half of a back yard, the whole of which is equally handsome. The place to which it 

 • belongs took a capital prize in the Carnegie Flower Garden Competition. 



I 



"Muffle your architectural angles in foliage and bloom,'' 



An in\'isible fault of this plantinK is that it was set loo close to the building and tended 

 to give an impression, probaliiy groundless, of promoting dampness. Also it was an 

 Inconvenience to mechanics in painting or repairing. 



