HmRTADRKR -PHIIADELPHIA-PA-^ • SELECT- ROSES • 



173 



Hybrid-Tea Rose 

 Gnrss an Teplitz. 



Hybrid-Tea Rose Lyon. 



Select List of Hybrid=Tea Roses 



C on ti lilted. 



George C. Waud (Dickson & Sons, 1908). A beautiful 

 variety, possessing a shade of color hitherto unknown among 

 Roses — a glowing vermilion with orange-red suffusion. The 

 flowers are large, full, of perfect form, and highly tea-scented. 

 The plant is of vigorous growth and very free-flowering. 



Grace Molyneux (Dickson & Sons, 1908). A chaste Rose 

 of rare beauty; the habit of growth is perfection, every shoot 

 producing a bloom. A veritable pearl for garden decoration. 

 The color is a creamy apricot, flesh in the centre, the outer 

 petals when developed are a delicate creamy-white inside, 

 with a faint pink sheen on the reverse. Delightfully tea- 

 scented. 



Grossherzog Friederich (Lambert, 1907). A highly per- 

 fumed carmine-rose pink, flower of medium size, but very 

 floriferous; almost always in bloom. 



Gruss an Teplitz (Geschwindt, 1898). This is a Rose for 

 everybody, succeeding under the most ordinary conditions. 

 In color it is of the richest scarlet, shading to a velvety-crim- 

 son; very fragrant, a free, strong grower and in bloom all the 

 time. 



Gustav Qrunerwald (P. Lambert, 1903). Carmine pink, 

 large, full, of fine form, buds long and pointed; one of the 

 best. 



Joseph Hill (Pemet Ducher, 1904). A perfect gem; of 

 strong, clean, vigorous growth, remarkably free-flowering; in 

 color a lovely shade of salmon-pink; the perfect flowers are 

 large, full and double. 



Konigin Carola (Turke, 1904). This variety frequently pro- 

 duces flowers seven inches across and perfect in form, both in 

 bud and when fully expanded. In color a beautiful satiny- 

 rose, with the reverse of the petals silvery rose; very floriferous 

 and desirable in every way. 



Lady Pirrie (Hugh Dickson, 1910). Deep coppery reddish- 

 salmon, inside of petals apricot-yellow, flushed fawn and 

 copper; an ideal variety. 



Lady Ursula (Dickson & Sons, 1908). A truly magnificent 

 Rose, of vigorous, erect growth, possessing exceedingly free- 

 blooming qualities. The foliage is large, massive and attrac- 

 tive. The flowers, produced on every shoot, are very large, 

 full and of great substance and perfect form, with high centre, 

 from which the petals gracefully reflex; in color a delightful 

 shade of flesh pink, distinct from all others; delicately tea- 

 scented. 



La France (Guillot, 1867). An old favorite, and a model 

 garden Rose in every way; flowers clear satiny-pink; large, 

 very full and of perfect form. 



La Tosca (Schwartz, 1901), Beautiful silvery pink, with 

 deeper centre; a very vigorous grower, with large, double 

 flowers and very free. 



Lieutenant Chaure (Pemet Ducher, 1907). A spU-ndid 

 velvety crimson-red shaded with garnet; fine long bud with 

 petals of cupped form; a vigorous grower and very free- 

 flowering. 



Lyon (Pernet Ducher, 1907). The long buds are tipped coral- 

 red and chrome-yellow at the base. The flowers when ex- 

 panded are large and full, with broad petals of superb color, 

 being a coral-red or salmon-pink, shaded with chrome-yellow 

 in the centre, toning to a shrimp-pink at the tips. 



Mabel Drew (Dickson & Sons, 1911). A magnificent Rose, 

 exquisitely shaped, with smooth, circular petals of great sub- 

 stance, arranged in perfect symmetry. The blooms are large 

 and full. The color is deep cream, passing to intense canary- 

 yellow in the centre as the bloom develops, with a delicious 

 l^erfume and sturdy, ■s^gorous growth. Awarded a Gold 

 Medal by The National Rose Society. 



Price, any of the above in strong two-year-old plants, 50 cts. each; $.5.00 per doz.; $40.00 per 100. 



All Roses are supplied in strong two-year-old plants only. 



