DECIDUOUS SHRUBS. 
501 
ate them; and though they form very pleasing clumps when 
growing wild, it is not certain that they could be made so beautiful 
even for that purpose alone as selected cultivated sorts. What are 
known as the Scotch roses are valuable only for the extreme earli¬ 
ness of their flowers. Their growth is slender, stiff, and very thorny, 
and they send up innumerable suckers. The flowers are small, 
semi-double, and numerous. 
Division II.— Hybrid Perpetual Roses which Bloom More 
than Once each Season. 
This division embraces classes of roses that differ widely in 
many respects. Some flower but twice, others are in almost con¬ 
stant bloom till late in autumn. Some are quite hardy, others half- 
hardy, others, among the Noisette, China, and tea roses, are tender 
house-plants, though many of these may be wintered out with care¬ 
ful protection. The China and tea roses are the original perpetuals, 
and all the other classes have been created by hybridizing with one 
or another of the numerous species of June roses, and “breeding 
in-and-in ” with these crosses to produce all the varieties now in 
cultivation. All are hybrid perpetuals; but those which show 
some resemblance to the families with which they are crossed are 
separated into classes as follows : 
Class I. Perpetual Moss Roses. —The name signifies their 
character. The following are good sorts, but are not so mossy as 
the parent species, blooming in June : 
1. Alfred de Dalmas, light blush, in clusters.; blooms freely. 
2. Eugenie Guinoiseau , deep cherry; large, and quite mossy. 
3. Madame Edward Ory, rosy carmine, large ; not vigorous. 
4. Pompone, dark crimson; blooms freely in autumn. 
5. Perpetual White, white; large clusters of buds and flowers. 
6. Salet, bright rose ; quite mossy; a free grower and bloomer. 
Class II. Hybrid Perpetuals or Remontants. —Though all 
the roses of this division are really hybrid perpetuals, our nursery- 
