ROSES THAT BLOOM IN JUNE. 17 



Aimee Vibert, an association which will long pre- 

 serve it from oblivion. Triomphe de Bollwiller, is 

 a superb blush-white rose, very large, very double, 

 in great clusters, and agreeably fragrant; in the 

 south it is surprisingly fine, but with us it is rather 

 tender. When this rose first made its appearance 

 in France, it came out as the most beautiful of the 

 "Teas;" after its more general cultivation it was 

 placed among the Noisettes ; it now falls back to 

 those sorts that only bloom once, where it is now 

 distinguished under the name of Sempervirens odo- 

 rata. After fourteen years travel through the 

 French catalogue it is now set down where it 

 should have been placed at first, a situation given 

 to it by me four years ago. There are several other 

 varieties of Rosa Sempervirens, but none of suffi- 

 cient interest or distinction from the above to claim 

 any detailed notice. In the southern states, this 

 family, associated with Rosa Laevigata or Georgia 

 Evergreen Rose, would make a very splendid group 

 for covering fences, embankments, or any other ob- 

 ject where a continual foliage was desirable ; they 

 require very little pruning, and would soon cover a 

 large space. They could be propagated by layer- 

 ing to any extent; any good soil will suit their 

 growth. They could also be used for covering the 

 naked stems of trees with great advantage, in an 

 ornamental point of view ; if used for such a pur- 

 2* 



