\ )0U will find listed below nearly all of the good Roses 
V available on the market, including many of the newer 
m/ kinds that have definitely proved themselves worthy and 
Sa Oilr C Regal Roses are two-year, field-grown plants, budded 
on Multiflora seedlings here at West Grove, Pa. 4 hey are 
grown on a heavy clay ground on unproved and heavily 
fertilized soil. The plants are sprayed religious y each week 
and are otherwise kept clean, healthy, and thrifty during the 
entire period of production. As a result, they are heavy, well- 
matured stock, unsurpassed anywhere for size and quality 
They are carefully dug with little or no exposure, stored 
naturally, and slapped in a healthy, vigorous condition. 
Furthermore, we select for our retail trade only the heaviest 
and best-branched plants. You always get the cream of the 
entire crop. . , . , , 
Always keep your Roses well nourished, proper y pruned, 
and regularly and thoroughly sprayed or dusted. In this 
way only can one be assured of real success, i ou can be sure 
that complete success will amply and most satisfactorily pay 
for all of your care and effort. 1 ry Iri-ogen as a spiay. It is 
a general-purpose spray for all insects and fungous diseases. 
We recommend it highly as the best on the market. Write 
for prices and information. 
„ ALL VARIETIES, DELIVERY FREE 
rnces : 65 cts. each; $6 per doz.; $45 per 100 
Ami Quinard. Blackish velvety red; very fragrant. Strong, 
upright grower and the best-known of the black Roses until 
the new Nigrette appeared. 
Autumn. The darkest and richest colored of the Talisman- 
Hoover group. Good upright grower and Quite active bloomer. 
We like it. 
Betty Uprichard. Two-tone salmon and carmine. A very free 
and constant bloomer and vigorous grower. Sweetly fragrant. 
Flowers semi-double but rich in appearance. This Rose is one 
of our favorites. 
Charles K. Douglas. Bright crimson-scarlet. A very popular 
and worthy Rose. Long-pointed buds developing into large 
flowers. Slightly fragrant. A bushy and healthy grower. 
Charles P. Kilham. Orient-red and orange. Beautiful in bud 
form developing into large, fine flowers. A splendid bedder of 
vigorous and bushy growth. A heavy bloomer. 
Dame Edith Helen. Clear pink. Very large, heavily petal ed 
flowers on long stems. Has true Rose fragrance. A good exhi¬ 
bition type. Vigorous grower. 
Director Rubio. Velvety magenta-red. Immense semi-double 
blooms. A low bedder with an abundance of foliage. Makes a 
wonderful, spectacular show. 
Duchess of Wellington. Deep saffron-yellow, tinted orange. 
Beautiful long-pointed buds and large, semi-double flowers. 
Delightfully fragrant. Low, spreading type of growth. An 
old favorite. 
Edith Nellie Perkins. Two-toned salmon and carmine. A very 
free-blooming, bushy Rose with perfect blooms. One of the 
finest of recent introduction. 
Editor McFarland. Clear pink. A wonderful Rose with long 
stems and large, perfect flowers. Plant is unusually vigorous 
and always active. There can be no better Rose than this one. 
E. G. Hill. Dazzling scarlet toning to pure red. Very double, 
perfectly formed blooms on long stems. \ igorous, healthy 
grower, constantly blooming. Also very fragrant. A splendid 
Rose. 
Etoile de France. Velvety crimson with cherry-red center. 
Large, double flowers, intensely fragrant and long-lasting. 
Strong grower, healthy and free-blooming. 
Etoile de Hollande. Dark red. Finest red Rose yet produced. 
Buds are of perfect form; blooms large and double, on long stems, 
and truly fragrant. Plant is strong, vigorous, and easily grown, 
with healthy foliage. It is constantly in bloom. Everybody’s 
favorite red Rose. 
Frau Karl Druschki. A Hybrid Perpetual that blooms through¬ 
out the whole season. Lacks fragrance but has snow-white 
blooms of immense size, fully double and of perfect form. 1 he 
most famous of all white Roses. More vigorous in growth 
than any of the Hybrid Teas, but it should be somewhere in 
every garden. 
Gruss an Aachen. Yellowish rose color. The large, full, double 
flowers cover the bush in a mass of bloom. A most splendid 
bedder, low and heavily foliaged. Blooms in masses but is fine 
for cutting and is constantly blooming. This Rose can give you 
more satisfaction with less effort than hundreds of others on 
the Rose lists. 
Hawlmark Crimson. Intense, velvety crimson, tinted maroon. 
Flowers are semi-double and slightly fragrant. Very free 
bloomer and splendid bedder. A dark color that commands 
much attention. 
Henry Nevard. Another Hybrid Perpetual which we find to have 
the blooming habit of a Hybrid Tea*. Crimson-scarlet in color. 
Large blooms of splendid form, sweetly scented. A real 
“American Beauty.” 
Imperial Potentate. Carmine-pink. Large, ' double, well¬ 
shaped flowers of true Rose fragrance. Bush is vigorous, with 
healthy, beautiful foliage. 
Joanna Hill. Creamy yellow. It has long buds that open to 
perfect flowers, very full, on long stems and slightly fragrant. 
A very good grower, with healthy foliage and upright, well¬ 
shaped bush. A very fine Rose. 
Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria. Cream-white, with greenish center. 
The best white Hybrid Tea known. Blooms are large, full, and 
perfectly formed, with rich fragrance. Strong grower and good 
bloomer, the flowers coming on long stems. With us, it grows 
like the Radiances. We have a good strain that amazes everyone. 
Killarney, Double White. Pure white. Long-pointed buds. A 
good grower and a good bedder. One of the famous Killarneys. 
A nice Rose. 
Lady Alice Stanley. Two-toned pink and coral. Long-pointed 
buds opening -to beautiful cup-shaped flowers which are very 
double, of perfect form, and sweetly fragrant. Strong, erect 
grower. 
Lady Ashtown. Clear rose-pink. Long-pointed buds and bril¬ 
liant flowers. Very vigorous and bushy in habit. Unusually 
active bloomer and splendid variety. 
Leonard Barron. Salmon and pink. Flowers very full, of im¬ 
mense size, and strongly fragrant. 
Margaret McGredy. Orange-scarlet. Very large, long-pointed 
buds and fine double flowers. Bush very vigorous and full in 
growth, with healthy, glossy foliage. Constant and heavy 
producer of flowers. 
Miss Rowena Thom. Bright rose, mixed with mauve and old- 
gold. Bears immense flowers of perfect form, on long stems. 
Vigorous, healthy, and bushy grower like Radiance, one of 
its parents. 
Mme. Albert Barbier. Salmon tinted with nankeen-yellow, 
with a darker center. Usually classified as a Hybrid Perpetual 
but a truly everblooming Rose in action. Flowers large and 
beautiful. Vigorous, upright grower, bushy, extremely healthy, 
and constantly in bloom. This is what we call a real Rose. 
Foolproof and easy to grow. 
Mme. Butterfly. Rose color mixed with apricot and yellow. 
Most perfectly formed buds, long lasting when cut. Highly 
scented. Strong and satisfactory grower and very popular. 
Very active bloomer. 
Mrs. Aaron Ward. Indian-yellow, sometimes tinted with salmon- 
rose. Low grower but continuous and heavy producer of 
flowers. An old favorite. Small buds open to fine, well-shaped 
flowers. Has agreeable fragrance. 
Mrs. A. R. Waddell. Reddish salmon, bordered with scarlet. 
Flowers are semi-double, of striking color. A very good, bushy, 
many-branched grower with heavy foliage. Profuse bloomer 
with delicious fragrance. A very decorative bedder. 
Mrs. G. A. van Rossem. Two-toned orange and apricot-yellow, 
with golden yellow base. The reverse is often chrome-yellow 
or bronze. One of the most spectacular combinations of color 
imaginable. The bloom is fairly large and very full. Bush is 
vigorous and always in bloom. 
Mrs. Henry Morse. Bright and clear vermilion on the outside 
of the petals and flesh-pink on the inside. Buds are very long- 
pointed, developing into very largo blooms of perfect form. A 
strong grower and slightly fragrant. 
Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont. Golden yellow. Has long-pointed bud 
with flowers of medium size. Color is a rich and deep yellow 
which does not fade. Plant is a low grower, compact, and very 
bushy—an ideal bedder. A constant and heavy bloomer. 
Ranked by many as our present "best yellow.” 
