plete wreaths of Eoses. In this way flowers are produced con¬ 
tinuously through the season, till they are stayed by frost. 
This will be found to be decidedly the most useful of all the 
yellow Eoses; indeed, for training against a wall, or over trellis- 
work, or around a pole or pillar, it is unsurpassed. It is more¬ 
over the hardiest of all the yellow Eoses, which alone is no 
small recommendation. 
The variety, we learn, strikes freely from cuttings; and, like 
free-growing Eoses generally, will grow well in almost any kind 
of rich soil, provided it is w 7 ell drained. One of the finest situa¬ 
tions that could be selected for its growth, would be a bank 
backed by sheltering shrubs, which would also serve as a relief 
to its flowers. Here, associated with some of the free-growing 
varieties with rich dark-coloured flowers, and all allowed to 
grow wild with their branches intertwined, the subject of our 
present illustration w T ould form a brilliant figure in a picture of 
surpassing beauty. 
And thus we bring the first volume of the Flokal Magazine, 
and with it our labours in connection therewith, to a close. We 
cannot, however, for the present, lay aside our pen without 
tendering our heartiest thanks to the many generous friends 
who have provided us with subjects to adorn our pages; and 
to the skilful hand wdiich, while it has adorned, has at the 
same time also enriched our volume with a series of the most 
faithful representations of garden flowers which have ever yet 
appeared. 
JOHN E. TAYLOR, PRINTER, LITTLE QUEEN STREET, LINCOLN’S INN FIELDS. 
