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ILLUSTRATED AND DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE 



Iiafrance 



Pink Baby Rambler — This has all the 

 characteristics of the Crimson but is loaded 

 with great clusters of bright" pink roses. 



Rugosa Roses 



Rosa Rugosa Alba — Pure white, single, 

 having five petals and highly scented. 



Rosa Rugosa Rubra — Bright rosy crim- 

 son, single, succeeded by large, brilliant 

 berries of much beauty. 



Madam George Bruant — White and fra- 

 grant, buds long and pointed, semi-double 

 when open; borne in clusters throughout 

 the season; vigorous and hardy. 



Conrad Ferdinand Meyer — Double sil- 

 very pink flowers, large, cup-shaped; borne 

 well above handsome Rugosa foliage. Ex- 

 quisitely perfumed and perfectly hardy. 



New Century — Flowers clear, flesh pink, 

 three to four inches across, perfectly full 

 and double. Perfume of sweet briers and 

 is one of the most constant bloomers of 

 its class. 



Moss Roses 



Admiral Dewey — Dark red, very vigorous, 

 one of the best. 



Crested Moss — Deep pink buds surround - 

 ea with a mossy fringe and crest: exquis- 

 itely fragrant. 



Henry Martin — Rich, glossy pink, tinged 

 with crimson; large globular flowers full, 

 sweet and finely mossed. 



Luxemburg — Clear, deep crimson, large. 

 very sweet and mossy. 



Perpetual White — Pure white, blooms in 

 clusters, double, beautiful, vigorous. 



Climbing Roses 



ters late in the season, one of the best 

 white climbers. 



Climbing American Beauty — Rosy 

 crimson almost identical with its parent, 

 the American Beauty, and with rare 

 fragrance; strong habit of growth. 



Marechal Neil — Beautiful canary yel- 

 low, large, full, globe-shaped flowers of 

 delightful fragrance. Free-flowering; one 

 of the finest yellow tea-scented roses yet 

 introduced. 



Prairie Queen — Bright canary yellow, 

 compact and globula'r flowers;* a rapid 

 climber; hardy and one of the best. 



Seven Sisters — Crimson, changing all 

 shades to white, flowers are borne in clus- 

 ters; one of the old fashioned sorts. 



Thousand Beauty Rose — A new climb- 

 ing rose, producing on the same bush so 

 many different colored flowers that it is 

 impossible to describe the variations, 

 hence the very fitting name. Blooming" 

 profusely from beginning of June until 

 last of July. Colors run from tender 

 rose to bright rose and carmine with 

 white and yellow tints showing; a strong 

 grower and hardy. 



Rambler Roses 



Crimson — The famous crimson cluster- 

 ed climber, so extremely effective when 

 grown on pillars and trellis. The flowers 

 are grown in pyramidal panicles, each 

 carrying thirty to one hundred blooms and 

 over; the individual flowers are from one to 

 one and one-half inches in diameter and re- 

 main in perfect condition a long time. 



Dorothy Perkins — Clear, shell-pink flow- 

 ers borne in large clusters of twenty-five 

 to thirty, sweetly scented, full and double 

 with crinkled petals. Foliage stays on a 

 long time. 



Plower of Fairfield (.Everblooming Crim- 

 son Rambler) — The name is its best de- 

 scription. Perfectly hardy, and blooms all 

 summer. Has created a sensation among 

 rose-growers everywhere. 



Baltimore Belle 



white, very double. 



- Pale blush, nearly 

 Blooms in large clus- 



Thousand Beauties 



