112. 
THE HOME GARDEN. 
snows, and yon will build it out accordingly without mak¬ 
ing it inordinately large or inordinately expensiye. It 
Rustic Stand for Plants. 
opens, we will say, from the parlor or dining-room, as the 
case may be, and a passion-yine and hoya (both beautiful), 
with some aid perhaps from iyies, make curtains and por¬ 
tiere. A clump of oleanders in one corner, all glossy green 
and rosy pink, towers above a pile of Moorish cushions in 
which the colors are repeated, and in this luxurious and 
fragrant nest you enjoy the dolce far niente of your day, 
with Daisy, perhaps, in all the graceful abandon of her 
