2i. ROSES THAT BLOOM IN JUNE. 



will, however, in no instance, follow the path of 

 othars merely because the track is made, but will, from 

 observation, make all my own assertions, and give 

 my own views, trusting that my readers will make 

 allowances for soil, climate, and a difference of opin- 

 ion on all subjects. 



Garland is a pretty white, producing its flowers in 

 clusters, containing frequently from seventy-five to one 

 hundred, forming a conical corymb of about sixteen 

 inches in diameter, the whole plant appearing in the 

 distance like a pagoda of snow interspersed with foli- 

 age of the brightest green ; the growth is very rapid, 

 making ten to twenty feet in a season. .Madame 

 d\Jrblay, or Wells White Climber, has been highly 

 extolled ; in growth it is the giant of climbers, for 

 strength and rapidity excelling any that 1 have seen j 

 the foliage is also very strong, partaking in that re- 

 spect of the Bourbon family. Its flowers are pure 

 white, like the preceding, and produced in very large 

 bunches. It is of a very hardy nature, and will with- 

 stand severe cold without being the least affected. 

 It is also an excellent variety to propagate for stocks 

 whereon to bud or graft the finer sorts of Bengal, 

 Tea, or Bourbon Roses, having no appearance of be- 

 ing liable to sucker from the root. 



Ruse Blanche^ or Bengalensis Scandens, is appa- 

 rently a hybrid between some of the Sempervirens 



