SUMMER ROSES. 
The following June varieties are among the best of this season. 
Price, 37 cents; $3 per dozen. 
Fulgens. Bright, scarlet-crimson, exquisite color and very showy. 
Madame Hardy. Pure white, large, fine substance, very full. 
Madame Zoutman. Palest flesh, shape perfect. The most beautiful 
of all light summer roses. 
Madame Plantier. A June rose, of the hybrid China class; pure 
white, very free, and a good pillar rose. 
Baltimore Belle and Queen of the Prairies are the best hardy 
running roses. 
Rosa Rugosa. A new rose from Japan, having luxuriant dark- 
green, rugose leaves, which make it very attractive as a shrub. It 
produces large, single red flowers, in clusters, which are of great 
beauty when partially opened. 37 cents. 
Rugosa Alba. Like the preceding, except in the pure white flowers. 
Persian Yellow. This is the brightest and best of this color. 
Spiraea Aurea. If frequently pruned, the golden color is very bright. 
Spiraea Thunbergii. Low-growing, with fine, delicate, lanceolate 
leaves, flowering very early ; very pretty. 
Spiraea Van Houtti. The most profuse flowering of all the Spirreas, 
the bush being a . mass of bloom. 
Spiraea Prunifolia Flore Plena, Callosa, Lindleyana, and other 
varieties. 
Snowball, Viburnum Sterilis. The well-known variety. 
Snowball, Viburnum Plicatum. A very desirable and great im- 
provement upon the previous, with rich, dark-green, rugose foliage, 
and superl) trusses of white flowers in midsummer. Unsurpassed 
for the lawn. 50 to 75 cents. 
Weigelias, Coccinea, Lavallei, Madame Couturier, and other 
most distinct varieties. 
Weigelia Lowii. Mr. Meehan exactly describes this variety as "hav- 
ing dark-crimson (lowers, with white stamens projecting, reminding 
somewhat of fuchsia flowers." Hut he seems to me to be in error 
in naming it \V. Floribunda, an old variety, from which this is 
entirely distinct. His praise of this is well merited. 2 to 3 feet, 
37 cents; $3 per dozen. 
