House & Garden 
Under an arch 
of delicate 
design one 
passes into the 
“Roserie de 
Madame,’’ 
which is Mme. 
Gravereaux’ 
favorite gar¬ 
den, and which 
contains the 
most coveted 
roses of today, 
including such 
as “Ulrich 
Brunner,” and 
“Test out” 
The baroque 
jardiniere, with 
which the cen¬ 
tral part of the 
Roserie is set, 
is shown above 
in detail with 
its unusual 
base planting 
of standard 
roses. The va¬ 
riety used here 
is named after 
the wife of the 
French Pre¬ 
mier “Mme. R. 
Poincare” 
The central open space of the Roserie, 
smoothly graveled, and framed in heavy 
foliage, is entered through a wide, lattice 
arch covered with that lovely and famil- 
climber, White Dorothy Perkins 
lar 
Within an enclosure of climbing roses is 
the long paneled garden devoted to the tea 
varieties. The beds are neatly bordered 
with an edging of dwarf box. Beyond is 
the chalet that is us%d as a rose museum 
