Avcvsr 2, 1919.] 
THE GARDENERS' 
CHRONICLE. 
Gardeners’ 
CONTENTS. 
кош; Жоор ашы 
Fi 64, 70|R 
Go rry crop, "failure 
of the, in Cumberland 72! 
Hardy I v ате 
Serani 
Golden 
i 
osary, the— 
es :— 
French Ch) 
ЕР 
ying . in our 
mut gini A 
оре m а 71|Week's wi 
ondon . 71|/Wheats, 
утаанд a 
ooseberiy E Si Lanc T" 
virginic; ove 
e Mrs, Н he Davila; gion... 
Walnuts, fine тене Di ue 
IN OUR pod 
great value in g 
Trees and Shrub 
itish Tl, and Professor ‘Saree 
hern v 
America, es ‘are 
soil or posit 
ете, 
rysanthemum 
Horticultural Clu ved 
British Garde 
Isle: 
of 7 Wasps, ae of . 
show 
K Раа iet u 
ct species or 
tle, th = beaut 
ubted, 
m 
- No. 1701.—SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1919. 
are ith . 70 Poland, seed-growing in 71 
be of Hort: culture 7z1|Potato нА, the Ago 
Rose ханы нори 
oi, з 
. 70 
THORNS AND THEIR FUTURE 
: it. The many species of Thorns from 
other 1209 ms p e pu a rthern 
are of 
Mr. 
e Hardy in 7 
І hardy аз any of our 
mative trees, and well I fitted for planting in any 
tion. 
e mother 
ese Thorns are sure to come 
and it struck me that 
аас, ki ight give a better абок than 
пу contrivance of b w uld do. 
A fault of the native Thorn is the constant 
1 it requires k it in shape, and it 
eems to me that some of the tic kinds 
would give a better fence. is is an im t 
int e beauty of Englan in the w: 
of being ; the use of iron fences 
Some estates are quite disfigured for мн 
beauty pde iron fence, costl d no 
y an 
enduring as uld seem. Many people ie 
it is the one iw out of the fence trouble, but 
that is a mistake. The only fence for those who 
ish to preserve the beauty of our country is a 
of Thorn. 
use most abes this Lem is the 
compac e range, 
tree in flower, and the most effective 
stop-gap ever seen. The boy who laughs at 
bar par wire would not attempt to cross it, me 
spines are strong and fierce, and when 
Mini ot this « can be son it might well be ай 
to make en fences on a small scale at first. 
Here in cool loam it flowers and fruits freely— 
a ib. 
importance of dwarf 
SA GP 
effective kind from pores J. Wate s kara 
and Crisp's any 
ally removed. 
destroyed if one has to look at them through 
an iron е. en I came to Gravet; page 
found much iron изен 
the woods iid 
nd it h ў 
Siac rie the bare, rabbit and gipsies 
horses. 
To get € us beauty in a mature клам 
or these valuable Thorns 
and 
the fringes oe Зак ун woods, sandy ч 
or knolls апа places, and they should be 
uped, not dotted abou у vigorou: 
enough to battle 
trusted to y mn care of thems 
ence of their ratios form, 
and 
endurance sers of m. fruit in 
some of our pede -like shrubland, and in one 
Gardens trees raised ripe br cf 
grafting was used in so many wa; The i it ы 
so ioni dios that its value for ni may 
fruit of some dea 
in China. 
th 
twenty or more years here. 
Gravetye, Sussex. 
THE ROSARY. 
ROSE MME. ANNETTE AYNARD. 
— Aynard of 
or three new 
pace with “thine ma pred pc it to 
be an emely beautiful variety. The buds 
1 j epe petals of ivory , tipp 
with pink is rigid, flower very 
The novelty may be compared M: 
ns upert, but the pink-tipped petals 
ore yellow, which "ws charm 
on this beautiful seedling. . Forestier, 
i C. 
Bois de Boulonge, Neuilly-sur-Seine. 
THE GOLDEN HOP. 
this note in the hope of obtaining 
e in dont ation as to the origin of the various 
rms of tie Golden Hop which are in үа 
Iden 
п to the form in which the leaf is yellow or 
* golden." My first tance it was 
in 1910, when plants w me by 
Messrs. G. Bunyard and Co. T plants on 
flowering proved to be m , female 
plants with similar ''golden"' leaves were 
sent to me Жы e firm. appears 
that Mes кө and Sons were 
the first in n this cou send out these 
icular si s of E Gol Нор,” їп 
вде supplied by ed later I found 
both the male and the fem 
es 
which I understand was Fari ly ble 
rom the prise was or has become 
From the plan ler's standpoint 
sin 
+ 
o 
H Ap UT male lant, P^ the 
bo hand, proves to be susceptible to the 
m 
There exists, also, I now find, another strain 
of the female Golden Hop. I ee obtained 
шо x this from a plant grow 
Kent, and I am informe 
at d that it 
was pnma orie nally from Mes: J. Veitch 
and Sons, of Chelsea. The three cuttings 
obtained al proved (when grown in the green- 
house) to be susceptible to milde X 
I have also used in inoculation experiments 
LH 
re 67 
zm 
rz 
pro iiam 
ein eral the e plant i 
To e the acta Dd is clear >. hi 
К = in cultivation in this co 
e female Gol о. oe a susceptible 
ESR Golden Hop, a ble’ male 
Golden Hop. 76.8 Lae not oa ko ihe oppor- 
mature ше compare 
the pa ae es aracte 
uld be v: lad of any information as 
to the origin of the Sanon forms of the Gold 
op in Die 
where D is call 
E. S. S i i Mycologist, S.E. Agric. College, 
Wye, Kent 
HARDY FLOWER BORDER. 
сеа 
s a few "ne since, but it is 36 
yet found іп е It is a good bo 
ү. hens the many gard are of diffe 
from ose of the oe — of the other 
ang pe ane's Bills. p — 
Colorado, ie ds 
beyond doubt. The plant s iom one to Ps 
feet high, and has pleasing fi and good-sized: 
blooms, which appear i early June. The colour 
is described as “ fes im rid e height varies 
according to the soil, and in , where 
it flourishes admirably and flowers freely, it it may 
reach mòre a foot. S. A 
