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HENRTADREER -PHILAKLPtllAfA- 



SELECT ROS&S- 



Hybhid-Tea Rose Dean Hole 



Constance (Pemet-Ducher, 1915). A free-flowering variety, 

 producing beautiful long orange-yellow buds of perfect form; 

 these are more or less streaked with crimson; as the flowers 

 fully develop they open to a full globular flower of golden- 

 yellow. $1.50 each. 



Dean Hole (Dickson & Sons, 1904). Silvery-carmine with 



salmon shadings, large, full, of fine form and very fragrant; a variety 

 of great excellence. 



Duchess of Wellington. Described and off'ered on page 119. 



Edgar M. Burnett (McGredy, 1915). Very large, full flowers of 

 splendid form, with large flesh-colored petals tinted rose, an advance 

 on the type of Rose of which the beautiful Lady Alice Stanley 

 is a representative; one of the sweetest scented Roses in ex- 

 istence, even surpassing "La France" in this respect. 



Edith Part (McGredy, 1914). A Rose with a novel and 

 ■ entirely distinct blend of color, which is a rich red with a 

 suffusion of deep salmon and coppery-yellow with a deeper 

 shading in the bud stage of carmine and yellow; very 

 sweetly scented. 



Edward Mawley (McGredy, 1911). A beautiful 

 rich crimson, touched with maroon, with a delightful 

 velvety gloss on the petals, which are large, forming 

 a good sized flower with high globular centre. The 

 growth is strong and the very fragrant flowers are 

 borne in profusion. 



Etoile de France (Pemet-Ducher, 1905). One of 

 the best of the red varieties that succeeds equally well 

 in all parts of the country; color vivid crimson with 

 darker shadings; very double, of good size and de- 

 liciously scented. 



Florence Pemberton (Dickson & Sons, 1903). An excellent 

 bedding Rose of vigorous habit of growth flowering profusely 

 throughout the season, continuing in good shape during hot 

 summer weather. In color it is a creamy-white suffused with pink 



Select Hybrid=Tea Roses 



Francis Scott Key (John Cook, 1913). This strong, sturdy 

 growing variety of American origin has proven a valuable Rose 

 for the garden. The flowers are large, very double, well formed 

 and of unusual substance, while in color it is a deep even red. 

 $1.50 each. 

 General MacArthur (E. G. Hill, 1905). A well- 

 known favorite, and one of the best all-around bedding 

 Roses in our collection, it is one of the earliest and 

 most perpetual flowering sorts; its flowers are of good 

 form, of a warm, rich crimson scarlet, and 

 delightfully scented. 



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

 A beautiful variety, possessing an entirely 

 distinct color — a glowing vermilion with 

 orange-red suffusion. The flowers are large, 

 full, of perfect form and highly tea-scented; 

 very free-flowering. 

 Gorgeous (Hugh Dickson, 1916). Flowers 

 large, full and exquisitely formed, of an 

 amber yellow, veined with reddish-copper, 

 a most striking and novel color; it is of 

 strong, vigorous habit. 

 Grange Colomb (P. Guillot, 1912). An ex- 

 ceptionally free-flowering, vigorous grower. 

 Color soft ivory-white, with salmon-yellow 



fawn centre; as the flowers mature, they gradually pass to 



pure white, a splendid bedder. 

 Qruss 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-crimson; 



very fragrant, a free, strong grower and in bloom all the time. 



Hvbrii>-Tra Ro?e 

 FLOKENCii Pemberton 



bold flower with high pointed centre and great depth of petal. 

 Price. Strong, two-year-old plants of any of the above, except where noted, $1.00 each; $1200 per doz. ; $90 per 100. 



25 or more supplied at the 100 rate. 



