184 fl mUENRTADREER-PNILADELPHIAfAm • SELECT- ROSES' 



Hybrid-Tea Rose Sunburst 



Hybrid-Tea Rose William Shean 



Select List of Hybrid=Tea Roses 



— Contmued 



Prince de Bulgarie (Pernet-Ducher, 1902). Large, full, 

 double flowers of splendid form, of a silvery flesh color, deep- 

 ening to the centre, and delicately shaded with salmon-rose, a 

 color combination that pleases everyone. 



Radiance (Cook, 1909). An ideal bedding variety of re- 

 markably free flowering habit, of a brilliant carmine pink, 

 with yellow shadings at the base of the petals. 



Richmond (Hill, 1905). A well-known brilliant crimson- 

 scarlet; not very double, but beautiful in bud form, and 

 always in bloom. 



Souvenir du President Carnot (Pernet-Ducher, 1895). A 

 Rose that pleases everybody; fir.e in form, of large size and 

 delicate in color; a soft rose shading to white. 



Souvenir da Qustave Prat (Pernet-Ducher, 1910). An 

 ideal variety, producing its fairly large, globular flowers of a 

 pleasing sulphur yellow color very freely; the plant is of vig- 

 orous habit. 



Sunburst (Pernet-Ducher, 1912). A superb Rose, of good 

 vigorous habit; flowers large, of elongated cup form, espe- 

 cially handsome in bud form; color a rich cadmium yellow 

 with orange-yellow centre. 



Viscountess Folkstone (Bennett, 1886). One of the first 

 Hybrid-Teas introduced, and still the best of its color, which 

 is a creamy pink, shading deeper at the centre; large, full 

 and very free. 



White Killarney (Waban Rose Co., 1909). A pure white 

 sport of the popular Killarney Rose, identical in every way 

 with its parent, excepting in color; which is a pure white. 



William Shean (Dickson & Sons, 1906). Pure pink in color, 

 with shell-shaped petals of good substance, 4 inches long; 

 a glorious Rose of immense size and perfect form and sub- 

 stance, 

 ants, 50 els. each; 55.00 per doz. ; $40.00 per 100. 



OF HYBRID-TEA ROSES. 



Mrs. Arthur Robert Waddell (Pernet-Ducher, 1908). An 

 attractively colored variety that meets with universal favor, a 

 delicate, soft, rosy-salmon, suffused with a golden sheen; 

 flowers of medium size, especially handsome in half expanded 

 form; a free-flowering garden variety that should be in every 

 collection. 



Mrs. Wakefield Christie=Miller (McGredy, 1909). As 

 a pink bedding Rose there is none better and particularly so 

 for massing, the flowers are distinct and novel in shape, the 

 petals having wavy or crisped edges not unlike a Paeony. The 

 flowers which are of large size, remain perfect on the bushes 

 for a long time and are produced very freely, they are of a 

 bright pink color with lighter shadings, the plant is vigorous 

 and free and perpetual flowering. 



Mrs. Walter Easlea (Dickson & Sons, 1910). A valuable 

 crimson-carmine with the back of the petals satiny-crimson, 

 large, full, imbricated form, and very sweet scented. 



My Haryland (J. Cook, 1909). One of the finest American 

 introductions. Very free-flowering, every shoot bearing one 

 or more flowers, which are double, of perfect form, of a bright 

 but tender salmon-pink, which lightens up beautifully as the 

 flower expands; delightfully fragrant. 



Nerissa (Wm. Paul & Son, 1912). A large perfect flower of 

 a creamy-yellow shaded with white and peach-tinted center, a 

 strong grower and free bloomer. 



Pharisaer (Hinner, 1903). Exceptionally free-flowering, 

 producing long buds, which open into large, double-flowers 

 of a rosy-white, shading to a pretty soft salmon. 



Price. Any of the above in strong two-year-old pi 



SPECIAL COLLECTIONS 



One each of the 59 Select Varieties described on pages 181 to 184 for §22.50. 

 One each of the above 59 sorts and a collection of the " Dreer Dozen," offered on page 174, and a collection of the "Peer- 

 less Twelve," offered on page 175, eighty-three Roses in all, a splendid up-to-date collection of high-grade varieties 

 for $33.50. 



THE NEW HYBRLD-TEA ROSES are offered on pages 176 to 180 



