212 THE ROSE: 
It certainly takes after the characteristics of 
’ those twosorts. The flowers are more wavy 
in outline than in the other families; the 
growth is somewhat less vigorous, the wood 
more smooth. Dr. Andry, Glory of Ches- 
hunt, Harrison Weir, Horace Vernet, Lord 
Macaulay, Madame Anna de Besobrasoff, 
Marguerite Brassac, Mrs. Harry Turner, Paul 
Jamain, and W. Wilson Saunders are the 
leading kinds. 
Prince Camille, which was introduced in 
1861, by E. Verdier, gives us the darkest type 
of roses which we have. From appearances, 
we should think it originated in a natural 
cross between varieties of the Giant of Battles. 
and General Jacqueminot types, the charac- 
teristics of the latter predominating. None 
of these bloom freely in autumn, but they are 
magnificent in their dark, velvety shades, as 
seen in the spring. Baron Chaurand, Baron 
de Bonstetten, Abel Carriére, Henry Bennett, 
Jean Cherpin, Jean Liabaud, Jean Soupert, 
La Rosiére, Monsieur Boncenne, and Prési- 
dent Léon de St. Jean comprise the family. 
More than the others, Abel Carriere and Jean 
Soupert take after Giant of Battles. 
Alfred Colomb, another of Lacharme’s 
raising (1865), has a similar habit of growth 
to the Jacqueminot type, but the thorns are 
