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V 



Lillian Moore, all of the long-bud type, fragrant, 

 splendid foliage, lavish bloomers, and especially 

 good in the Autumn. Lillian Moore, you know, 

 is the famous Panama Exposition trophy rose S& 

 It will perhaps intere^ you to hear that these were 

 planted when only " year old ^ock." They are now 

 two years and a few months, and thinning out will 

 be necessary next Spring. Duchess of Wellington 

 is in the foreground — how remarkable she is! — 

 Lillian Moore comes next with her camelila-like 

 blooms, and then Primrose, three rows with climb- 

 ing Ghislaine de Feligonde on the wall. The blue 

 border is Farquhar's " Dwarf Blue," a nine-inch 

 ageratum that quickly assumes the form of a 

 miniature hedge, and a dra^ic cutting of the fine 

 blue tufts will keep it fresh looking and very blue 

 from early Summer until late Fall. 



EVANGELINE 



* * * Cfaangeltne )Stoob like one cntranceii, for toitttn ^zx 

 ©fiien memories rose, anb loub in tfje mibst of tfje music 

 l^earb sfje tf)e sounb of tfte sea, anb ait irrepressible sabness 

 Came o'er Ib^r Ijeart, anb unseen sfje stole fortfi into tfje garben. 



— Henry W. Longfellow 



I o t I I 



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