166 



Dreer's Select List of Hybrid=Tea Roses— ^*# 



Lady Pirrie (Hugh Dickson, 1910). Deep copper reddish- salmon; in- 

 side of petals apricot-yellow, flushed fawn and copper; an ideal variety 

 admired by every one. 



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

 in every way; flowers clear satiny pink; large, very full, of perfect form 

 and very fragrant. 



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

 deeper centre ; a very vigorous grower, with large double 

 flowers and very free; a splendid bedder. 



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. The blooms are large and full. The 

 color is deep cream, passing to canary-yellow in the centre as 

 the bloom develops, with a delicious perfume and sturdy, 

 vigorous growth. 75 cts. each; $7.50 per doz. 



Marquise de Qanay (Guillot, 1910). Very large full glob- 

 ular flowers, on sturdy erect-growing plants; clear, bright, 

 silvery-rose. 75 cts. each; $7.50 per doz. 



Marquise de Sinety (Pernet-Ducher, 1906). While only 

 a moderate grower every one who has seen this beautiful Rose 

 is enthusiastic oter it. The buds are of a rich yellow-ochre, 

 suffused with carmine; the expanded flower, of good size, is 

 semi-double, of a rich golden yellow or Roman ochre, shaded 

 with bright rosy-red. ._ 



Mme. Abel Chatenay (Pernet-Ducher, 1895). Carmine- 

 rose with salmon shadings; long pointed buds and double 

 flowers, a strong grower and very free-flowering. 



Mme. Charles Lutaud (Pernet-Ducher, 1913). A large, 

 full, globular flower somewhat in the way of Marquise de 

 Sinety, but with deeper colored flowers and a more vigorous 

 habit of growth; buds ochre-yellow tinted with carmine; open 

 flowers chrome-yellow. 75 cts. each; $7.50 per doz. 

 with bold, 



Hybkid-Tea Rose 



KlLLARN'EY 



Jonkheer J. L. Mock (Leenders, 1910). One of the best 

 bedding varieties. The flowers, which are produced with the 

 greatest freedom on long stiff stems, are of large size and of 

 perfect form, of a deep imperial-pink, the outside of the petals 

 silvery-rose white. 



Kaiserin Augusta Victoria (Peter Lambert, 1891). This 

 splendid Rose should be in every collection. In color it is a 

 soft pearly-white, tinted with just enough lemon in the centre 

 to relieve the white; remarkably fragrant, beautifully formed 

 flowers on long gracetul stems; a strong, free, healthy grower, 

 handsome foliage. 



Killarney (Dickson & Sons, 1898). This is the best known of Dickson's 

 famous Irish Hybrid-Tea Roses, and is one of the most popular of our 

 garden Roses. In color it is a sparkling brilliant pink, 

 the blooms are large, the buds long and pointed, the petals 

 very large and of great substance. 



Killarney Brilliant (Dickson & Sons, 1914). Killarney 

 Brilliant is a sport from the original in which we have a 

 Rose far more intense in coloring, it being a rich glowing 

 shade of rosy-carmine, and in addition to its rich color it 

 is also larger and more double than its parent. A truly 

 magnificent Rose. 75 cts. each; $7.50 per doz.; $6000 

 per 100. 



Konigin Carola (Turke, 1904). This variety frequently 

 produces flowers seven inches across and perfect in form, 

 both in bud and when fully expanded. In color a beau- 

 tiful satiny-rose, with the reverse of the petals silvery-rose, 

 very floriferous. 



Lady Mary Ward. Rich orange shaded apricot, with a decided metallic 

 veneering, very sweetly perfumed and free-flowering, A Gold Medal 

 Rose. 75 cts. each; $7.50 per doz. 



Price. Any of the above, except where noted, 60 cts. each; $6.00 per doz 



The "Dreer" Doien Hybrid-Tea Rotes offered on page 162 are choice for cutting 



