1084 THE GARDENERS' CHRONIOLE AND odii GAZETTE. ГМоувмвев 14, 1563, 
раа афр аа СООО aeTUECC* TEMO Oma uw IuYI. 5 e aar RA С 
ne “Та the multitude of counsellors there is|amateurs, that at present Н. Ps, Bourbon the Royal Horticultura Bun в regulations in regard 
0! тету са I think Teas), сан. be Лны to =ч new plants, Were be made to apply to the 
SST ыша," page 1038 :— Bourbons are not № orth а separate| Hyacinth at the њем» of the Royal Horticultural 
Clause 1. No doubt those who can grow the delicate eem rs ач scentless, usually under size, and, with | Society, it would not hold good as applicable to the 
ала Tea Roses first- - have an immense advan- | a rec — p for еа blooming. The j exhibitions of any other Society except as + 
. tage over those who jov d А у delicate- | two mos uable e Malm n and Acidalie. We tee value as a precedent. Itis а genera] and 
coloured оси Ros LP. 8 mprehensive rule that is required, not a partia] and 
but if this mixture um "eas enables the Н. Ps to win, The А Noisettes worth keeping for sh «енна iile. à А flower that has never before 
does not that show the value of the € ture? Itis Solfaterre, Meg phe de Rennes, Lamarque, Célestine appeared at any meeting of the Royal Horticultural 
against my interests to admit кА into 1 Noire de Dijon, which, I tbe | Society, might have been shown at the [racinth 
Н. Ps; still, I would by no means exitodé them. The | others, is не Фен а Tea-Noisette. America is ? a | exhibitions of Edin MD or elsewhere, so hai M 
Рз аге unfortunately at present short of delicate| hard opener, but extra "d when it succeeds 
colours. They have no full-sized pure white Rose;| The Cloth o and a G are on 
е ое not one yellow Rose; they are well up in|fit for orchard houses. You p therefore, make | іп the United Kingdom. It is thereon f probable tut 
mson, and dark Roses. These are their forte up a Noisette class unless you confine it to the above. | а flower that would be considered old at Edin nburgh, 
They pe only four first-rate — ed Roses— | This I should like—the best box of yellow Roses, Tea- | might claim to be a new variety at South. Kensington, 
the last being uncertain and not over hardy, viz,| Noisettes, numbers unlimited ! From Мау till frost | or vice versd. Again, however indifferent the collection 
Caroline de Sanal, Duchesse d'Orleans, Modus Knorr, | set in, I can do this well nearly every day. of new flowers might be in point of quality, if this 
andtheQueenof Denmark. Queen Victoria (doeswellon| There is, however, another c КҮ viz. funds. | newness mus t determine the ju gment, no other con- 
Manetti here) is € Ра A р wet weather Rose.|In provincial places they could not stand “ iy sideration could be permitted to influence the judges, 
— Darzens I h idot—the uelis r во many classes, "The В. Н. Society could, and, no | if а stand, professedly of new varieties, were of the 
perfect and ааш. of "Wl Shi Мы" M. Riv: doubt, m do во, if it was e generally Заа си дес апа yet „had uei appeared before, 
cannot be grown all lands. The other wish of nurserymen and ama teu уа andin common зу 
месі Roses 
h 
Q 
о 
Я 
£g 
g 
Ё. 
2, 
27 
ч 
o 
= 
RE 
2 
un 
©; 
= 
„Ф 
* rh 
E 
u 
et 
LR 
55 
ЕЕ] 
© 
2 
E 
2 
= 
Sq 
Ф 1 
о 
E 
"ch 
= 
є+ © 
B 
E 
мид, б 
аге either tender, as Virginale and Dr.| As summer xo whil: st the shows are held | the АРЫНУ 6 ists" mig or when raised 
pa rupe. во late as July 1, 16 is аге worth while to шаке | оп the contin а was во offered to Mns h 
Bontine very i Я TAE Or эзчү. pei pes they are moved every | England, that any one of these might beco 
to shot out i fro oni HIPS Dia xes the five yellow етте year, o ted again! rth wall, or cut bac variety 
Solfaterre, Gloire de Dijon, Triomphe de | month 9 F бал А оо фо: be, they will be mainly | his fellow competitors, and ther reby be dec 4 on the 
Célestine Кен, апа еба which are perfectly | | bloomed out, except in cold lands, or in wet cold | same level of competitive resources, it would very much 
growable on a south wall? or the four best white hardy | summers, be fon the ile of show. On the whole | mitigate, though not altogether remove, the objections 
Roses, M. Zoutman—the finest of all whites—Acidalie, — of the "quee, I cannot but think, as regards to the rule proposed by Mr. Cutbush. I have looked 
Devohiensis and Sombreuil? I think that such Roses | amateurs, that, at present, it i е Dutch lists as I could lay hands 
are not only beautiful, and fit to go with Н. Р.в, but a feni а as to families of Roses. I would merely have | 00, to ascertain in how mm ny of them the six varieties 
а і n open classes both for Tea Боа and Moss Roses. staged by Mr. Cutbush in March last were catalogued 
E More though I pon no doubt that the|in the ее Xe I exclude Maria Theresa, SR, 
, D.R., 
94 
i 
= 
g 
B 
á th e flowed from a zeal for the to sm ах ү Est ella w. of the si six varieties 
bes un uu 6l rien Mol o. ch an arrange- dip cause, а jx not p^ any selfish motives, І m named Ifind Rouge КОМУ, to be quoted insiz- 
ment would not,I thin E. be — i apes truly say the same of my own Кас. I hav teen lists at prices av verag m 1s. to 2s. 6d. It t has 
with small stocks of Roses, o whos е | in process of tim 
Stocks are made up of all eden Obat tton | to show Roses ао the sud ef к Galisia” will ‘account for its morcs a high price, ‚ though 
among amateurs is short enough a , and the апа “Р,” W. Е. Radclyffe, Rushton, Nov. 9 ing b i ltivation f 1 iod. Estel 
e 
р, find in three list 
` вее! mu v 
more bars in us и of competitors." STRAY NOTES swim сое —No. П. and шау perhaps have reached England before 
rymen, e doubt the suggested|  DuRING last su oh saw eat many hang.| Prince of Orange, S.R., or D.R., appears in 1 
ould | be carried = (always, as regards ing baskets—some so markably "pretty, and so lists, and being ee at а moderate figure, must be 
Н.Р. P^ ^ јео tho do fects ted out); but thi other ery plentiful. This variety is so generally grown for 
m for them а their opinion upon. and во miserable, that perhaps а few words on their | exportation to England, that it too EN be re і 
течій but опе “G.” favours “singl y be of use to the owners of such as the | as “new of 1863,” even if ye utbash. I 
агава" І - Ma spits tre rebles, provided th tt find нч JEN. S.B., to be; off fered in threo lists, in 
Let Iftrebles are shown, properly speaking, th t nother at 3s, in anotber at бз. "пе 
should be separated a itl but not mixed "Cp er he | ics so ‘popular, c XS аго во T2 and so easil 
box. separa! — mp three haps ea may regarde as the Mee M: may pub have Жш. the stock, 
boxes instead of one, where 2 4 Roses are shown. We | best and most usual basket type. Those ough wood Lp Maid of Deom ark, S.W., E San Francs 
do not want more boxes to travel with. ud 4 po can | Белей, p those made of p дер, resembling | I cannot find in any rof the Dutch lists. I infer from 
л | closely-se& Pine sticks, though they are уча, this that Mr. Cutbush онн, "Seedling Hyacinths 
n the last t paragraph “G.” refers to disbu. me I| pretty, are less easy to 'suspend, and perhaps i ‚ Which he names, and can therefor 
hav: ^ already d my opinion = ~ point. I se nas that we see them more rarely. xhibit them in England before they appear in 
exists it u r H nti 
M 
У e we to meet f . 
should be rigidly enforced. This will She more| with them with n tin linings inside, seemingly it gives him a great advantage over those other exh 
censors. Rules в hould be few, simple, and rigidly made to hinder al ts pretty and graceful ways in | bitors who have not the same pri vilege, i unde 
carried out, or t ight fl x present usage, when there is no restriction as to th 
test sufferers. e three most exquisite flower baskets I ever saw in age o the flowers; | while, were the rule he suggest 
Here, however, we are met t by another difficulty— life were three that were in the Gl 
of their Mr. Veitch's nursery. То - F^ Gloxini t entire monopol 
cups eae back again, as it may please the| well worth а visit, but really those hanging paskata of the Exhibition. of new r Hyacint tis, Quo. 
Е? ers? І вау, э. ы rule at all; but if you | were something complete and perfect. "They wer Literary Curiosity.—For several years bed 
earule, the society w imposes it is bound t g чЫздей, : catalogue of Roses. This ве 
вее it enforced, And of c they were very simple—just a соз tained во 200 inds, pes or less, all of f which Dt thé 
2. “Р.” page 1062 :— sphere of Moss, "the Кау Lycopodium, that of the n I could supply. Very 
The Summer Roses could certainly be shown itself E the frame, and amidst the bright green, little е osity in this, йу y чойт readers, True; but 
together; but, from the rage of late for H.P.’s, | twining in and d clinging and wreathing round, | the rice is that a Mr. Walker, of Leicester, finds 
en and n nother r es in P d i he п : 
m 
2 
E 
= БЫБАКЗЕЗЕ 
- um m i 
well up in them, and they grow and bloom most наа. тыш Torenia asiatica, Тһе exquisite соп appear in my catalogue. My 
beautifully here; [but I am against such a rule, аз | trast or harmony of the "pae the deep gd velvet | Surprise may та нет when а friend handed me а 
ente that it will i inconvenience smaller holders. | purple of "the ig flowers, resting on the dark green | fac simile of my cat alogue, bearing its exact t outward 
want to see a burly shopkeeper of Edmonton or that — f t р ога 
ran jevi 
with his few Roses win a Rose priz ingi all | prices of all the older kinds are not marked in 
of bells at eee €— to ner the bells о of me things secs to Аст ы асыя as а real|l confess that І am поб а true believer in spirit 
Islington and Tooting ! to the | gem. rapping, but I am sadly bothered to know what 
Rose trade ! And the next day I saw some “well-assorted | medium exists between myself and Mr. Walker, 
Moss Roses certainly should be des separate un baskets? "Y rey and a Lobelia, and. чы think а red one d to ed knowledge I have — wd ә = 
except Tea y grew up straight and proper, i Spirit Rappers clear 
classes. They should be shown not quite expanded, bung over just. where they should do; and of "d must I go je to the t me ieri Се of pini, eni 
ав, when fully expanded, their eonlisz character us. lieve that myself and Mr, Walker һауе roamed on 
gone. If trebles are shown, one expanded bloom out; Тһе beautiful ones, however, are no harder the sunny wings of butterflies over тийн of Roses 
of the three trusses would add to ihe prse Ev y knows ке ceni and that the сеа beauties have alike charmed 2 
Tea Roses, without —€— from other classes, | on nother. e lovelies n Lyco- | Mr. Walker and myself? Md hat that ми 
aie Moss Rose class, should be shown byt ко plume ihat P have ever эд, жеге thos $ that so, aft hange to thi c life the same 
; but here again lies у Ае ther of brown English por eon were common to both. In gd to show you ihe 
Ме е coloured Teas worth a *siump." I donot жеш "Th is Moss then may be {resemblance just alluded to, I beg to enclose both E 
Still they are so lovely in the | well о p ide into а ball, placed in the wire | catalogues, but I must ask the favour of their return, t 
monotony of their beauty, that this default may be | basket, and rh essi wall soaked t h. Some|as I value them as curiosities in literature. Carles 
forgiven, scraps of Т, ycopodium are then just ust dotted over it, and Noble, phis Nursery, Bagshot. _ Е 
Instead of а Rose club to form rules for the R littl in a little buried in Vitality of a Fullam Oak.—In making 
world—a world that will never abide by the rules, | the centre of the ball of Moss. The ш; Patel. and the | about this time three years ago we had reluctantly to 
пог even see existing rules enforced (in England we ае е а and a dip in a кш iiic Oak. The tree ай + 
frame rules, and then follow customs)—instead оѓ | bucket of water or E mue use tank, is its happiest | straight stem 6 in height, and a uniform girth 
this, the best way would be for the National Society | mode of watering. E. А. M. nearly 5 feet. After grubbing up it was carted into 
nurserymen and amateurs & wood А я of timber- 
~ 
рарег be c ne 
filled up might be sent {о а dozen nurseryme d Home Correspondence. it but 
k also to a dozen amateurs. Tho: М. should have nothing ew Hyacinths.—l cannot coincide in Mr. Cutbush'8| had pushed around the cut end, and indicated such 
-~ to do with А. classes, and vice versá. — - | жама ы һе “ camnot pereire why the Hyacinth remarkable vigour that it was resolved once more 
. One thing I think will be agreed to by шов | should be any exception to the гше” he quotes from | plant it root downwards. It was therefore re-planted 
