86 TH 
S GARDENERS 
CHRONICLE. 
[JULY 18, 1874, 
stakes his reputation on a patented plan for venti- 
lating ger es wees ASi or is simply a 
slightly Leret oe eigr of so y elses, And so the 
cultural oll "without ee to us 
ne or but few, nt shal of any st 
e smallest 
the exhibi ie W, W. Paler, Ca 
aoe enr i r. W. 49, 
sd A radical a iea all the 
bert to the 
ic, 
ently expansive to fill up the 
the oe barrel oe linder to which 
by means ofa 
` aa di. 
on essrs, T, H. rar a a Co, o f Chplnisford; had 
; bese ioy of mans thet les o all 
D ito a erm neat in 
ats to wth ot 6 hei perfect water- 
ed as for ic, public, or 
requirements, and which consists in the 
ame time i the 
discharge of one flush until a second can be o 
i ves 
engineers, there being 
ket. 
considerable di received a 
silver medal for a sliding wal shieli, shield, which in prin- 
ciple a as the one which was fixed 
to the each wall en t Chiswick, and taken down some 
years 
Mae, Ye James “Boyd & Sons, tetas exhibited a 
large, neat, well made and most easily ventilated 
> Seong ones and Mees Boulton & Co, 
show of small 
-= Cio 
the Royal Pottery, W: 
SAA eas vs wre t hama his 
cotta j and Mr. Horley of Toddingon ini his 
, which at ce advertised 
"Bronne. Roser 
VLI. 
_ of its undying popularity 
as spot on which flowers can be grown, the Rose is surely 
: TRS There ere Is many a small railway station 
of Sng sem: also | 
Villa Garden. No more complete evidence is required . Cyt 
which has so 
about the country that ‘aig smiles with Roses at 
this season m the year. The plants are carefully 
diligently looked shes, and large, 
re the result. Ata 
ot many wiles pek London can be 
e old-fashioned variety, the York and 
Lancaster, with its charming rosy-red flowers striped 
and flaked with white ; and the wonder is that it is 
not more generally grown for its novelty of meet 
notwithstanding it is thin and wanting in fulnes 
hibit them at one or more of the 
many horticultural shows up and down the country, 
who also propagate a hd annually by budding on the 
Briar stock, The 
recorded, ‘Bevadably 
the failure signee fres! sd more complete attempts, 
“t He who would have beautiful Roses in his garden, 
must have ogi Roses in his heart; he must 
love them well, and always, He must have not only 
the glowing pr id yi the enthusiasm, a 
passion, but the tenderness, the ar ae oe the 
reverence, the watchfulness of love.” So writes the 
ev. S. R. Hole, in his Book About Roses, Te ‘s the 
a 
that transforms ns many a 
nt hedgerows “een it is not a 
difficult matter to ee a few. A man can always be 
got hedges, cm a small consideration, 
In the aia of London much m 
difficult ; country friends ak be appealed to, or the 
rian offices of some friendly Rose grower or 
obtained. 
_ Stock, so ots be cuali eer 
| should be removed, bu 
TES h u buty 
this year. Rose culti- 
SA E PAS, 
vators are influenced in their budding pora bah = 
by the condition of ra scion as well as of th 
and in order that t 
3 à o ; 
“ In no case will it answer to bud until the eis flows 
ey both in the stocks.and the plants from w 
e bh to taken. o 
i Pe ee. otherwise the 
peritis. (Na 
given as 
autumn, ) 
stocks, the operation p 
lays, or until the 
be 
current year; the 
will gen piani indicate that the wo e and 
n a ured.” Now it may bi i hy asked, 
Wha the. exact meaning Mr. 
wo! “rE the 
stock,” in his otherwise 
b ing a cut along 
branch to be budded, an inch or gth, ie taking g 
care t the bark only, and ro into the wood t 
neath the bark, then he mak fransvi 
the upper part of the slit, about one-third o 
of an inch in length (see 
imperfectly done, but because the conditions were not 
avourable to a perfect jointure. 
bu wi and in relation to this\ 
remarks “t The 
l 
e wood is ripe and thoroughly 
laid down as radically 
pein that shire be an active flow T sap in the 
to eae the words of a 
modern n the su that well-bein; 
of the Ra e depite i the presence pei a 
BOPI of vital fluid, a full flow of sap at 
Next panes a matter re. ne bud to 
used, make the c oc 
and brought down by means cisive cut to 
lik ke a half-inch, or alittle mom, below it, on 
way with it a piece of wood, 
h to 
ration is to remove the 
It is not 
act the 
practice soon kd his eas ; and ers must 
necessity look for a few failures till, by the teaching 
of poy 2 gy they become a littl ded in the art 
di 
. Next, to inse 
cleft made in the bark of the 
corner of the bark beneat 
by hand, or ‘th they 
the leaf-stalk behi 
you a vigorous-growing sho¢ 
a Rose without Cutting i away a leaf with it. This 1 
the prowih SFIN pases = this it 
