§ PETER HENDERSON & CO., NEW YORK.—WHOLESALE PLANT LIST. 
The list offered below 
contains the very best 
hardy Roses known at 
the present time. Look 
over it very carefully. 
CAPT. CHRISTY. 
EXTRA LARGE IMPORTED HARDY ROSES 
We offer, this season, a grand collection of the finest hardy var- 
ieties imported from the most celebrated growers of England and the 
Continent. They are extra large strong plants, growing in 5 and 6 inch 
pots, and cannot fail to please the most fastidious. These are all 
budded low on Manetti stock and should be planted deep enough to 
cover the graft. They are all extra-strong well-ripened plants and 
will, under ordinary cultivation, produce magnificent flowers. The 
list contains the best varieties known at the present time. 
Alfred Colomb. Carmine crim- 
son, a grand Rose, should be in 
every collection. 
Anna Alexieff. Very pretty 
shade of rose, large, full and of 
good habit, fine for massing. A 
grand Rose for every purpose. 
Anna de Diesbach (Gloire de 
Paris). Rich carmine. 
Baron de Bonstetten. Blackish 
crimson with vividredshadings. 
Baroness Rothschild. An ex- 
quisite shade of satiny pink. 
Boule de Niege. Pure white, 
strong grower and free bloomer. 
CAPT. CHRISTY. Delicate 
flesh color, deepening in shade | 
toward the centre; one of the 
most beautiful of Roses. The fol- | 
iage isquitedistinct. Itisvervy | 
| 
free in flowering and, taken all | 
in all, may be considered one | 
of our best Roses. (See cut.) 
Caroline D’Arden. Pure rose, a 
beautiful color. 
Chas. Lefebvre. Deep reddish | 
crimson, large full flowers. 
Countess of Oxford. Very pro- 
fuse ; soft, rosy carmine. 
Eugene Verdier. Violet crimson, 
a superb rose. 
John Hopper. Bright rose with 
carmine centre, large and full. 
La France. Peach-blossom pink. 
Mabel Morrison. Pure white; 
large flowers. 
Marie Baumann. Crimson ver- 
milion, suffused carmine. 
| Merveille de Lyon. Extra large, 
blush white. 
| MRS. JOHN LAING. Rich 
satiny pink, deliciousfragrance. 
Paul Neyron, Flowers five inches 
across; color, lovely dark pink. 
Persian Yellow. Hardy yellow 
Rose; best of its color. $1.00 
and 75 cts. 
Prince Camille de Rohan. Dark 
crimson maroon, almost black. 
Queen of Queens. Pink, with 
blush edges ; large and full. 
Rosieriste Jacobs. Bright red, 
a tine free-flowering sort. 
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Suzanne M. Rodocannachi. Deep 
pink, wonderfully free blooming. 
Ulrich Brunner. Cherry red; a grand 
Rose, very free blooming. 
Prices, except where noted : 
Extra Selected Plants, 40c. each; 
$4.00 per doz. Collection of 24 grand 
Roses, for $8.00. 
Second Grade of the above, fine 
plants, 30c. each; $3.00 per dozen. 
Set of 24 sorts for $5.00. All plants 
for this season’s blooming. 
Hardy Ever-Blooming Rose, 
DINSMORE. 
This peerless variety merits all the 
praises which have been bestowed on 
it. For years we had been looking for 
a variety which had all the desirable 
qualities of a bedding Rose—that is, 
one which was of good color, fine 
form, a profuse bloomer, and which 
would stand the rigor of our Northern 
winters without protection; and we 
can conscientiously say that, until 
the ‘‘ Dinsmore” was produced, there 
was none to our knowledge which 
combined all these qualities. Itisa 
vigorous, healthy Rose of branching habit, and is simply 
loaded with flowers all summer long, being even more 
profuse than most of the tender ‘‘ everblooming” Roses. 
The flowers are large, perfectly double and of a dazzling 
\\\\' searlet-crimson color, and have that rich, spicy fragrance 
peculiar to the best hybrid Roses. Wherever summer 
Rosebuds are wanted it has no equal. (See cut.) 
“6 
1st size, 40c. each; $4.00 per dozen. 
3.00 a 
ss 1.00 < $8.00 per 100. 
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