56 dreer's garden calendar. 



NOISETTE ROSES.— These roses are free-blooming, flower in 

 clusters, of taller habit than the foregoing classes ; some of them are 

 very fragrant, and many ot them are quite hardy, and adapted for train- 

 ing to trellisses and pillars. Six choice varieties, S2.00. 



Amie Yibert, pure white. Jaun Desprez, rosy buff. 



'Mad. Deslonchamps, blush. La Pactole, pale yellow. 



Fellenberg, crimson. Ophire, buff. 



Jacques Amyot, rosy lilac. Phaloe, buff and rose. 



MOSS ROSES. 



50 cents each. 

 White Moss, in clusters. .Etna, bright crimson. 



Princess Adelaide, rosy lilac. Salet, rose, perpetual. 



Lane, very large rose. Mad. Ed. Ory, rosy crimson, perp'l. 



CLIMBING OR PILLAR ROSES. 



25 to 50 cents each. 



Baltimore Belie, blush. Monstrosa, pink. 



Queen of Prairie, deep pink. Musk, cluster, white. 



Greville, changeable. White Microphilla, waxy white. 



Lady Byron, pink. Sir Walter Scott, dark rose. 



Lamarque, creamy white. Gloire de Rosamene, scarlet. 



Summer Flowering Bulbs. . 



Iggg* The most prominent in this section are the rare and beautiful 



French Hybrid Grlad.ioIxi.s- 



They are the most stately and effective of the whole genus ; being 

 of a robust erect growth, with green sword-shaped leaves and magnificent 

 flower scapes, rising from three to five feet in height. The colors 

 comprise the most brilliant of orange, scarlet, and vermillion tints 

 upon yellow and orange grounds, including a graduated scale of inter- 

 mediate shades, from," white with rosy blush and salmon rose tints, to a 

 salmon-red and nankeen ; from blush- white with purple crimson throat, 

 and marginal streaks of pink, to light rosy-salmon grounds, with flakes 

 of deep carmine. A succession of bloom may be had from July to 

 September, by planting at intervals from April to June, reserving the 

 strongest bulbs for the latest planting. Their culture is very simple; 

 they will grow in any ordinary garden-mould, but succeed best in good 

 earth, manured with well-rotted horse-dung. The bulbs are taken up 

 in the fall and placed in a dry cellar, protected from frost 



