ELLA V. BAINES, THE WOMAN FLORIST, SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. 25 



The Newer and More Scarce Hydrid Roses 



Price, 35 cents each, except where noted. These Roses are hardy and suitable for planting in cold climates. 



"All are extremely fragrant. 



AMERICAN BEAUTY — Color red, with touches of 

 crimson, and intensely fragrant. No Rose has a 

 sweeter or more penetrating fragrance than 

 American Beauty. A most beautiful Rose and a 

 great favorite. 40 cents. 



PINK AMERICAN BEAUTY, or GEORGE AHRENDS 

 — This is a wonderful new Rose, just as fine in its 

 way as a pink Rose as White American Beauty is 

 as a white Rose. Extra fine; brilliant clear pink. 



WHITE AMERICAN BEAUTY, or FRAU KARL. 

 DRUSCHKI — This grand white Rose has become 

 renowned as the very highest type of its class and 

 the best snow-white Rose ever introduced. It is 

 an extraordinarily strong grower, and has the 

 vigor and hardiness of an oak. Its magnificent 

 flowers are nothing less than glorious — immense 

 in size and produced with great freedom. Color is a 

 marvelous white, without a tinge of yellow or any 

 other shade. A true paper-white, the standard by 

 which all white Roses are judged. We grow "White 

 American Beauty" literally by the thousands. 40c. 



ARTHUR R. GOODWIN — The color is coppery 

 orange-red, passing to salmon-pink as the flowers 

 expand. A superb combination of color. 



GEORGE DICKSON — Velvety black scarlet-crimson, 

 with brilliant scarlet reflexed tips, with heavy and 

 unique, pure crimson-maroon veining on reverse. 



HIS MAJESTY (The King of Roses) — Dark, deep 

 crimson; superb. Mr. Crowell, the noted rosarian, 

 says the best of all red Roses. 



HUGH DICKSON — Intense velvety crimson, shaded 

 scarlet. 



■ An intense deep scarlet, shaded 

 blackish-crimson, 



J. B. CLARK 



black. 



KING GEORGE V — Color rich 

 flushed deep velvety crimson. 



MADAME EDWARD HERRIOTT— "The Daily Mail 

 Rose." Winner of the gold cup which was offered 

 by the London Daily Mail for the best new Rose. 

 M. Pernet Ducher describes its color as follows: 

 "Buds coral-red, shaded wth yellow at the base, 

 the open flowers of medium size, semi-double, are 

 of a superb coral-red, shaded with yellow and 

 bright rosy-scarlet passing to a shrimp-red." 

 50 cents. 



MRS. JOHN LAING — Immense size; bright shell- 

 pink. 



NEW CENTURY — A grand Rose that is entirely 

 hardy, bearing beautiful silvery-pink flowers in 

 clusters. This Rose is in bloom all the time. 



SIR THOMAS LIPTON (Conard, 1905) — (R.) The 

 best pure white Rugosa Rose. Strong and vig- 

 orous; grows four feet high. Flowers perfectly 

 double; pure snow-white. Fragrant. 



Standard Varieties of Hybrid Perpetual Roses 



ANNE DE DIESBACH (Glory of Paris) — A lovely 



carmine-rose. 

 BLACK PRINCE — A rich, brilliant dark crimson. 

 BOULE DE NEIGE (Ball of Snow) — Pure white; fine. 

 CLIO — Delicate flesh, with center of rosy-pink. 

 CONRAD F. MEYER — Clear flesh-pink; 4 in. across. 

 COQUETTE DES ALPES — Pure white; very full; 



free; fragrant. 

 DUC DE ROHAN — Clear, dazzling bright red; extra. 

 EUGENE FURST — Deep red shaded crimson; fine. 

 FRANCOIS UEVET — China-pink; dleicately shaded 



carmine. 

 GENERAL, JACQUEMINOT — Known as "General 



Jack;" shining crimson. 



HARDY EVERYWHERE 



Price, 25 cents each; five for $1.00. 



GLOIRE LYONNAISE — Pale shade of chamois or 

 salmon-yellow. 



MADAME CHAS. WOOD — Cherry-red; free bloomer. 



MADAME 3IASSON — Bright, rich crimson; a gem. 



MADAME PLANTIER — This is the ironclad white 



cemetery Rose. 

 MAGNA CHARTA — Clear, deep pink, flushed rose. 

 MARSHALL P. WILDER — Scarlet-crimson, richly 



shaded maroon. 

 PAUL. NEYRON — Deep rose or bright pink; large. 

 PRINCE CAMILLE DE ROHAN — Deep, rich, velvety 



crimson. 



ULRICH BRUNNER — Glowing crimson flamed with 

 scarlet. 



The New Hardy Climbing Roses 



HARDY EVERYWHERE 



ALIDA LiOVETT — Both buds and flowers are large; 

 are of ideal form, are held on stiff stems a foot 

 and a half to two feet long and the color is a 

 lively bright shell-pink with shadings of rich sul- 

 phur at the base of petals — a combination that is 

 both novel and beautiful. The flowers are of re- 

 markable substance and long lived, whether cut 

 or left to remain upon the plant, and are pleas- 

 antly perfumed. It is very much brighter and 

 more cheerful in color with larger flowers than 

 those of the justly popular Dr. Van Fleet Rose. 

 35 cents. • 



AMERICAN PILLAR — The flowers are of enormous 

 size, three to four inches across, of a lovely shade 

 of apple-blossom pink, with a clear white eye and 

 cluster of yellow stamens. These flowers are borne 

 in immense bunches. They last in perfection a 

 long time, and are followed by brilliant red hips 

 of berries, which are carried late into the winter. 

 25 cents. 



BESS LOVETT — Resembles Climbing American 

 Beauty in shape of bloom, but is very much 

 brighter in color and much more fragrant. The 

 flowers are clear, bright red, of good size, and of 

 double, full, cupped form, lasting a long time in 

 good condition. Beautiful in bud and bloom and 

 the most fragrant of the Climbing Roses. A vig- 

 orous grower and free bloomer. The large glossy 

 foliage, like that of Silver Moon, greatly enhances 

 the beauty of the flowers. 25 cents each. 



CHRISTINE WRIGHT, or PINK CLIMBING AMER- 

 ICAN BEAUTY — This is identical with the Red 

 Climbing American Beauty described next below 

 this variety; flowers four inches in diameter; 

 color bright, clear pink; immense. Try it; a fine 

 companion for Climbing American Beauty. 25 

 cents. 



CLIMBING AMERICAN BEAUTY — Same color, size 

 and fragrance as American Beauty, with the ad- 

 dition of the climbing; habit. Good foliage and 

 better blooming qualities. One plant of this new 

 Rose will produce twenty times as many flowers 

 in June as the old American Beauty, besides 

 blooming occasionally.during the summer. Blooms 

 three to four inches across; has proved perfectly 

 hardy and stands heat and drought as well as any 

 Rose in our collection. 25 cents. 



GARDENIA (The Hardy Marechal Niel) — This grand 

 Rose has proven itself hardy in Virginia and 

 Tennessee. It is a deep golden-yellow of the 

 largest size. 25 cents.. 



GOLDFINCH — A deep golden-yellow climbing Rose, 

 called by some the Yellow Thousand Beauties; a 

 glorious Rose. 25 cents. 



PAUL'S CARMINE PILLAR — The earliest of the 

 Climbing Roses to come into flower. Color a rich 

 rosy-carmine with white eve. 25 cents. 



PAUL'S SCARLET CLIMBER — The flowers of this 

 superb Rose are vivid scarlet shaded with bright 

 crimson. A gold medal Rose of England. A new 

 shade in Climbing Roses. 35 cents. 



RED DOROTHY PERKINS, or EXCELSA — The de- 

 fects of Crimson Rambler are its unsightly foli- 

 age in unseasonable weather and its defoliation 

 by insects; the infusion of Wichuraiana blood as- 

 sures an ornamental climber which is nearly 

 evergreen, and this will assure this lovely crim- 

 son-scarlet pillar Rose a place in every American 

 garden, for it is quite hardy in addition to all its 

 other fine points. The flowers are very double, 

 produced in large trusses of thirty to forty, and 

 almost every eye on a shoot produces large clus- 

 ters of flowers. The color is intense crimson- 

 maroon, the tips of the petals tinged with scar- 

 let. The finest of all red Climbing Roses. 25e. 



