| 
| 
ROS ҮІ. 
By Мв. WiruaM Рат, F.R.H.S., ire NURSERIES, 
à WAL Cno 
Max 2,1£63.] 
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
mist. I do rot speak, of mere Nd even 
de urse a super- 
e of moisture in the air, oteta above 
the ені ‹ orriver. E. C. 
ES.—No. 
THAM 
Last year's brood, the proved new „Ба ses, have bee 
j— dealt ает iod eoe were, as а whole, the best 
Em 
dne Odier. 
, pur еше; 
flow 
the same habit. 
ie quite full 
e that 
always open fre 
ся е уеаг. Let us 
now 
obtain вот ра: of this year's novelties, the 
purplish red 
in Engl and these under glass. The d 
ritui. eh ng them must not be taken as fixed 
{ s last summer, and are 
now ide in the forcing houses here, But Roses 
and shown by the raisers in the dry warm | 
eg 
B 
afford no precise information as to | 
ather | n. 
n: 
nicely. form 
thoroughly perp 
the flowers are 
an 
g 
ог very “double, 
a 
red; form 
in 
ely. Майа иа, 
Madame Freeman, H.P., is white, 
of average size, globular 
ed white Ros 
.Pau 
| by Verdier, of rer А - of the b 
|B.P, is а pretty delicate P ao coloured flower, 
not over large, but 
dam 
nicely in the way of 
А а d desir dna EP, 
th 
stick in the traps to denote e their whereabou 
Potatoes were reg 
about three weeks, 8, ана во res of enar 
delicately tinged with rose ог car 
ized, full, and beautifully formed 
о ins, and som е, кн 
Madame Brianson, H.P., 
flower, reddish carmine siad d 
Leila E A fine; it is е 
some soils Rose Men 
easily caught and destro; еу and by fi ing u the 
Eee? таун у Iquite cleared the ны or this 
of all „Т.Е, ei tham. [This is a very old 
the pani good on 
ta i v. “регин me to call attention. to 
] lit p 
Veronica 
Р., is a fine 
Rose, globlar, large, a Коё fall. 
в 
їп ш, and full ; 
free growth and 
etual Mrs. Wm 
olet shaded with fiery red, 
AE produced in а апа 
ер Маа кош ele Adéle Jouga, 
owers, not 
е, -— pplensing а md ni Sweet; th 4 
nd 
1 w 
out of doors. But a little light is better than darkness | violet. 
n them 
flowers rich purp 
| large, full, and it Т к ве 
Princess Alico 
d 
and 
lightly tinted үйнө six ro 
ed |1 
; Rishi 
brilliant pare ain йош ky! жел 
thos 
Б от ие purposes, 
оёз іп а border last summer, the ei light a 
a | dry, and I found it had many good qualities. It began 
to bloom when: oir: 2 iio. high] and continued to 
mprove, lasting as long as most annuale J. E. 
Шы, Piscieulture — Some of your readers who may 
only skim he columns of the Times may be 
| interested os the оа of а letter оп this subject by 
d eid. E 
, has flowers of а a 
= быы во many bold and striking Ros ses. „The Бев 
n | fall, and very s the 
are "usually produced singly ; the growt 
e о 
free, 
is a 
f | double, 
aried gr Alfred de Rou ugem 
from ds D 'Sunn ny South," is Ендй зы у 
with fiery red, се. € узуш nd large ; double only 
ib Full is 
caution, because applied to new Roses 
not describe as more than double. 
scented), “а mem from* eter may be 
pronounced promising; the flowers are white with a 
slightly ым айне, largo, double КЫЛЫ "i de e} Mid very 
sweet. Baron Adolphe de Rot H.P., is a grand 
Rose, highly decorative, bui e алеї Пу ўзня! 
the growth is Mem уы E ERA armes the flow 
ed i clus Chén &dole, 
Н, 
less showy Rose than the last ; 
reddish d e sometimes shaded with eii petas 
22 'and of WA eR pm MAT. t! full an 
c erii | 
реа рү ао owe violet red, 
velvety, the cc "of the NORIS Bely iy aes Em md 
full; somewhat in the style ofi M des Combat 
Ал] eri 
but much darker and very sweet; the flowers are very 
large and f full, the growth vigorous. Emotion i isa е9 
m 
e 
leli cate 
uld both abroad a and - home; the a 
Tiba Hosen. (Tea wit illia 
je rais er ot 
'Vaisse 
inct с tm 
wering variety of the Rose де с 
Ros n; group, onda cing large double саол гесо 
— D» 
пена ти remain with a а jet of w ater passing over the 
ill tl y per erfe ct, and 
leaves s nothing to E дез 
Апу г 
almost pie dm - Roven 1 HP 
а Жо large оту, very | lo: 
vm at the ес. ts au late dosis pene 
limbing or pillar Sœur des А: Р» 
nges, 
rosy wis flower, very large and 
"t ртр my bs hat 
cost and ОША almost nominal. ues, da p^ 
Souvenir A 
nt red ; the s t is good, the — 
"Angers, H ре ased me much 
rs are red, shaded | 
freely. Tri iomphe 
| liber i 
|gra tui end Riding En 
s su e 
b pcm might ua E works of the French 
n 
e of the darkest. 
«S [e A have coded your columns to the 
| subject of fishing, I have thought this statement worth 
бёап t des Batailles 
he “ Senateur,” ore ill | bs 
» [discarded bec: 
а favourite with lw ers o colour; it reminds one of| 
and || е most bri е 
ant of the old '* French" Roses, now 
use во ee black, edged with 
true, conveys the appear- 
© 
апсе м? ыд 
int Genies, 
= еј Сот 
Courcy, Comtesse че Polignac, Deuil de [can Albert, 
r, e Bassano, Grandifl 
80 large, р, with higherand more exquisite eimi 
and perfect form. Тһе flowers of Gustave Rousseau, 
H.P., а аге "Bishop's purple shaded with violet r ed, of 
| Meteorol e have had some weeks of bright 
dry weather with white morning frosts; then after a 
long cm some Showers and slight ei of 
N. a d W. winds; fo 
| 
long 
e two es э) бте d 
lour ; of average size, in 
the мер 
The above-named sorts are described from Ж 
notes taken from Plante in ists In ‘addition i^ P these | 
Iam growing the following: 
[^ 
—Baronne de MSN de 
aravane de Nism: 
ora, Hortense, 
Blachette, Le om Деш Charles Roy 
Madame а Madame "oe. Madame Valembourg, 
Peter , Prin rince Henri es Pays Bas, Senateur 
Favre, V аы js И я 
Tmperatrice Maria Alexandrin a bl ih or 
almost white Rose, not Juge, bnt 3 dud form, and 
full, very promising. ‚Р., is one of | ‹ 
the — and shoyiest, of this enc ы „brood; the 
usually clear red, t times shaded 
cented. 
Hybrid [чечен апа Corn 
This second un Tee list T havo either 
that I s in 
early stago of. the sie D eupped, sufficiently | 2 Mid пилето ПРА sprang from the east and 
very durable; оррете n» the d the heavens. 
{на western points, апа arche у, he. PL. Che" 
A ups a eg. ВЧ n the weather 2 
cut mey —— ag has experience of the 
now of the 
mana ab they k 
combustion cottage 
f plan gs 
MEAS of ааны» s ve. Mo 
de | boiler for the circulation of hot- water? also of Bury & 
d conie 
The p 
gre e gardening f 
Pe débil some oue 8: with these boile 8 A 
dd те our Correspondent the information he 
Het es.—As а humble imitator of Mr. Rivers I 
tive been trying ап orchard e and bred 
“ pinching.” Some of my Peach 
vigorous, with fine fruit, RE early. - 
trees in pots 
I ЪЪ Tenn 
hand 
flow 
uh p piso; -— and full. n Hopper H.P., is a 
h carmine ;” I have never 
seen it otherwise than ie delicately tinted with | 
carmine; it д. however, a prettily- ары Rose 
L'Eclatan ite, „Н.Р. а fine 
са so called 
ы only x er e 
n the most crow 
that “ reris Pride is 
London is proud of Кий ost; ps 
ifraga) ш. grows to perfection, even | 
ded parts of the town." Now, I know | 
forward by d ua" hot ма аз hot as Ше 
good rose-coloured flower, with darker centre, large For C de I must Мы а анын, Time, алм ould bear, for the tbree weeks in March. 
‚ and full, with fine У Isaw this Rose growing by | proves all things, will MY enable us to form а |1 destitute 
-the „thousand with the raiser last summer, and | correct estimate of their value. M leaves on all br Mies Mon. Kos Жон which had be 
- admired it much, but am not sure that it will prove | v. d last s m April to Auzust inclusive. 
Rn K in autumn. me cR eralda, H.P. ^ is of the má ө to know wh г I have committed? Тһе 
ules Margottin race, but darker ini brighter ; large, sois are about 2 ае Jig, or sometimes less, with 
e and very promising. e i =- de Crouy, H. P., Home Correspondence places for four leaves on them. The Wall Peaches out 
introduced by the sam e last, 18 à rose- London Pride. —In the ** Journal lof Botany ? T notice all the winter, with ards 
coloured sort shaded with wii очо large and full 1 f pl | border; now they hav s pang E. 
пау — Peel, H. P. pi e by the raiser as which it yo stated 
every week, They are pour and 
"their iul become Mat fleshy, thick d pecie and 
curled. Are they oyer-fed T [Yes, doubtless.] I have _ 
only ESSE in lh «дыш { 
Mist on 
delicate beaut; e bright that i "bs ave somewhere т that Saxifraga umbrosa | 
Ted Rose, ейде i 
onte i fo эй. n VL es > d |o E eh ied айтан r in the firm of London & Wise, Js 
е. Н.Р., is v а la PEE ebra! 
ei на Па у ЫН т, Кп rge, -— e ж? al Gardeners of the early pest of the v crowded with Pra 
described by the raiser; it is, нр ius. "cn dea. біт Е. Alcock, in his ** Capital of 
ery promising Clyde, H.P., a | Tycoon,” makes „mention E 5 = е касса iuba. т: 
owy 
the petals are not very nume rous, and som 
existed. 
2, p. 71:—* In | V. 
estris) is the as 
Neben алу E m Pax jdm 
seeing this parasite on my | 
E ар 
Mexico & 
som Sui) е 
Mehr d common 
ld Seeman: 
ned the hedges, the ча ыа ue Thistle reminded | Berti А 
pronounce it а little coarse. This is опе of а Ъаїси | us of home while the ES Len blue and white, in A A m р. 3 
of seedlings І raised; but їпрапу some | all their delicacy of hue and texture, mingling with T article in to n rà сой ы ч "hat aro 
three years ago, up to which time it had bloomed in | Camellia Cape Bithi, тЫ grew* wild by iia ed to e Roman Cuts, od a farm 
‘summer only. Lord Herbert, H.P., is — of o hedge-side, spoke of other climes than our Fe ck. ^ Mr. Binks exhibited. 
` Beauty о of Waltham race, аб present іп es | Perhaps it interest some of ndents to th e Oats referred t Messrs.  Lawson's "at 
only ; is brought to their notice, should the | at Battersea Park Show in 1862, and I could not make 
ав rosy carmine, but blue pink would DNE оге | Blue Azalea be, as I believe, unknown in England.|out more than two o r three varieties, all of which were 
nearly ex the nd ине fill ad finely | Brinsley Marlay, St. , Regent's Park. — to e а known, end f t 
dee flower. Lord H.P, is a velvety dreworm (see p. 390).—Last y ear we were gu he rather startling description of the 
rlet erimson flower of E ылы il- | troubled with this pest i ME our Vine P borders. The plan тапчу" euet t C globular heads like ns, there 
. liancy, of good size form, with splendid foliage. | I adopted for curing the evil was this: I cut Potatoes ot the E d approach to such a singular To- 
— This and the last two finest | in 2 half an inch thick, ані inserted. Miri the Jastin i in any of the specimens. If Mr. Binks will 
ttin, ! border inches. below t he surface, placing а small!favour us by giving us his experience of last year, and. 
