THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
679 
WM, PAUL & Ss 
SYLPH (Zea), white, tinted uwih violet and 
peach, beautiful blendi — colours ; large, high- 
centred, “with d deep, stiff pe and constitution 
hardy, very free-blooming, 7s. * — 
ZEPHYR (Tea), sulphur-yellow, changing to 
nearly white, la'ge and full, cup form, very and 
elegant, habit and vigorous; a very effective Rose, 
and excellent for cutting, 7s. 6d. each. 
MERICAN VARIETI 
MRS. PIRRPONT MORGAN (Tea), 
3s, 6d. and 5s. 
PINK SOUPERT (Polyentha), 
3s. 6d, and 5s. each. 
PRINCESS BONNIE (Tea), 
3s. Gd. and 5s. each. 
3 — CONTINENTAL ROSES FOR 1895. 
selection of the best varieties, including FIAMETTA 
N eer as a white Papa Gontier), 3s. 6d. 
ROSES OF 1894. 
p; 
e, exoredin ely pease 
— Spend Rose. 3s. 6d. a 
DUKE OF YORK (China), white to rosy pink, 
—— tipped crimson ; exceedingly pretty and distinct. 
LORNA. 5 DOONE (Bourbon), mage — 
shaded with enw large, Asplendid Autumnal bloomer 
3s, 6d, and 5s. 
LORD PENZANCE’ HYBRID SWEET BRIARS. 
each; the set of nine varieties, 42s, 
OTHER ENGLISH * rr no of 1894. 
Fall Descri CATALOGU. ti 
nin wb pal election of ROSES in pots foront door 
upwards. 
Also a lar, 
— or for pot culture, 12s, to 30s. dozen, 75s. to £10 
; larger plants, 42s. per dozen and 
AULS’ NURSERIES, 
WALTHAM CROSS, HERTS. 
LILY BULBS, 
PLANTS, SEEDS, &c. 
CATALOGUE on application: 
TOKIO NURSERIES, 
i n Tokio, Japan. 
Cable Address: NURSERIES, TOKIO.” 
F. TAKAGHI, Proprietor 
THE NEW EARLY STRAWBERRY ë 896, 
The . — re in ae oy — prolific. 
Solid d fru it, § good flav igh perfume. — 
warded F 
— ‘Royal — B oity, 1895. See Gardeners’ 2. 
March 2; Journal of Horticu ture, March 14; and The Garden, 
March 16. Having purchased t he —.— af — Stock of this 
grand New Early Strawberry . e Raiser, we have pleasure 
in offering 2 ga fonon 
Streng P n pots 2 per 100 
8 — = £3 per 100 
Ready for delivery early in July. 
EARLT ORDERS . 9 „ AS STOCK IS LIMITED. 
Further particulars upon application. 
Wm. CUTBUSH & SON, Highgate N London ; 
And BARNET, |} HERTS. 
15s. per dozen. 
9s. per dozen. 
STRAWBERRIES. 
e leading 2 new or old, in small 
sas * — first year. Open-a ir plants, very 
cheap. Special low e for tes for 
Market Growing 
FRUIT TREES 
OF ALL SORTS. SEND FOR LISTS, 
JOHN WATKINS, 
POMONA FARM NURSERIES, WITHINGTON, HEREFO 
THE NEW 
Dendrobium 
Johnsonia, 
50 SPLENDID PLANTS 
Of this magnificent Novelty, all with young 
growths, will be OFFERED for SALE by 
PROTHEROE & MORRIS, 
Also 500 Plants, just to hand, of 
‘| DENDROBIUM PHALENOPSIS 
SCHRODERIANUM, 
AND OTHER NEW ORCHIDS. 
SANDER & CO., 
ST. ALBANS. 
W. W. & 8s 
CELEBRATED PEAT 
(ALL QUALITIES), 
Now in SPLENDID CONDITION 
FOR STACKING. 
Delivered direct from Grounds to any part of the 
United Kingdom, 
CARRIAGE PAID, 
BY RAIL, ROAD, or STEAMER, 
SEND for SAMPLES and PRICES. 
A FURTHER IMPORTATION OF 
BAMBOO CANES, 
From 4 feet to 20 feet, in Black and White, 
Our “ELECTRIC” WEED KILLER 
is the best. ExTERMINATES WITH ONE WATERING, 
40 gal. for 1000 gal. of water £2 13s, carriage paid. 
SHADINGS and NETTINGS vescxerioxs. 
Prompt Delivery same day, 
SULPHUR, the finest ground, fresh importation. 
W. WOOD and SON’S CELEBRATED 
PRIZE MANURES, 
W. WOOD & SON, F.RHS. 
(Established 1850), 
WOOD GREEN, LONDON, N. 
of more 
have taken their place. 
THE 
Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1895, 
ROSES AT THE TEMPLE SHOW. 
fs sir pe a lover * the queen of flowers it is alwayer 
to see them in any guise what- 
ack of interest, owing to the fact 
that they are beyond his powers of cultivation; 
and, in truth, all those exhibited, whether as 
plants or cut flowers, came from the trade, Of 
course, it is jast as easy for an intelligent ama- 
teur to grow them under glass—but as a matter of 
faot, no one does; they may, and do, grow a few, 
with more or less success, but they never 
their cultivation for exhibition flowers, and 
rarely, if ever, take the same pains with them as 
with those grown in the open air. ‘There i is also 
new flowers may be brought forward; they 
y look very promising, but then, as 
they have wn under g ed am adenn 
they will be fine weather Roses, or able b with- 
catalogues; yet, withal, it could not fail to be 
a great pleasure to every lover of the Rose 
can be e even at this early 
season with many of our favourites. The Rose 
exhibits were of two classes, plants in pots and 
cut blooms, and of both of these there was an 
excellent displa 
The principal exhibitors of pot plants were Mr. 
Charles Turner of Slough, Messrs, William 
Paul & Son of Waltham Cross, and Messrs. Paul 
& Son of Cheshunt. In a class of this kind 
arrangement goes for more than the excellence 
of individual blooms, and think most people 
to the first-named firm fg. 102,5. 01; ; 
but while aa was primaril. 
let it not be su; that the flowers were indif- 
ferent, for i in truth they were not, and many of 
them m 
where the er- of the flower is alone con- 
idered. en one recollects how Roses 
used — to be shown, immense bushes of 
about 6 to 7 feet through, with a forest of sticks 
t trained, we feel 
j that 1 we have fallen t upon better amas, and plants 
nd not so over-trained, 
Of course, ‘kas are a 
