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Show GARDEN UNDER FRUIT TRIES English Horticulturists Can Give Lss ton in Ccr.centrition to American Amer-ican Confreres. Evesham, the Valo o Evesham, denominated de-nominated "the very hub of the garden gar-den beauties 'of England," has lately )een sitling tor a cnarming yen injure inj-ure that makes tbe beholder or the euder loig to posseiis Its lovely chain )f blossom and flower and fruit. But here can be only one Evesham, and t is England's. They claim the Evesham Eve-sham gardener Jias the supreme title o fame, that he has done the impos iifcle he Has made the cabbage almost al-most beautlfu. One who plants this garden world n mere words says what most as-tonisKes as-tonisKes t!te visitor there at first view is the gnrden underneath the fruit trees. On the floor of a very closely planted orchard of apple of plum you may find a carpet of any sort of fruit, Eower or vegetable. On the plaLi'uiui of Evesham station Itself the heavy scent of wallflowers is carried from a neighboring orchard, where the trees are so close that you would think the carpet of flowers had as little chance of sunlight as it has of draft. ' How singularly this concentration impresses im-presses the American horticulturist, who having greater spaces at command, com-mand, yet wastes them and their fruitful possibilities. |