1874. ] 
WHO IS EiailT ? 
177 
used witli advantage, but as tlie bark is liable to decay and to harbour and attract 
insects, it is preferable to use wood from which the bark has been removed, 
either oak or fir being suitable, but the wood of the yew-tree being more durable. 
We have to thank Mr. J. 0. Fox, of the Eoyal Horticultural Gardens, South 
Kensington, for the accompanying illustrations. The Eustic Summer-house, 
constructed about G ft. wide, costs about £15, and other sizes in proportion. The 
Hexagon Summer-house. 
Hexagon Summer-house is a more elaborate structure, and more expensive. Both 
these have wooden roofs. We shall take an early opportunity to publish a figure of 
a similar structure with a thatched roof.—T. Moobe. 
WHO IS RIGHT? 
« N my last paper I pointed out the difference of opinion formed by the Floral 
Committee of the Eoyal Horticultural Society and some of the largest 
^ growers of Pelargoniums as to the merits of the different varieties valued for 
^ their leaves. In the present I shall proceed to place side by side the opinions 
of the same authorities as to the value of varieties judged by their flowers:— 
