MME. BUTTERFLY —Rose color mixed with apricot and yellow. 
Beautifully shaped buds, long lasting when cut. Highly scented. 
It is a strong and satisfactory grower, an old favorite, a mighty 
good rose and still very popular. 
MARGARET McGREDY —Orange scarlet. It has very large, long- 
pointed buds and fine double flowers. The bush is vigorous in 
growth, with healthy, glossy foliage. It is a constant and heavy 
producer of flowers. It has become one of the necessary varieties 
for all gardens, and deserves the highest possible rating. 
MISS ROWENA THOM —Bright rose mixed with mauve and old- 
gold. Bears immense flowers of perfect form, on long stems, making 
it fine for cutting. The plant is vigorous, healthy and bushy. 
MISS WILMOTT —Delicate sulphur, cream-yellow. Bloom of good 
form borne on long stems. It is highly scented. 
MRS. AARON WARD —Indian-yellow, sometimes tinted with salmon- 
rose. Blooms are medium in size, but full and many. It is a low- 
grower and continuous bloomer, an ideal bedder. 
MRS. A. R. WADDELL —Reddish-salmon bordered with scarlet. 
Flow-ers are semi-double of striking color. A good grower. 
MRS. CHARLES BELL —Delicate shell-pink with base of salmon—a 
soft flesh color. This rose is a sport of Radiance, with all of its vir¬ 
tues—strong, vigorous grow-er with wonderful foliage, constantly 
blooming, growing anywhere in spite of neglect, delightfully fragrant, 
good for cutting, etc. The three Radiances (Radiance, Red Radi¬ 
ance, Mrs. Charles Bell) are the ideal roses for the garden in this 
country. 
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 ever 
found in a rose. It is the best, most attractive, and most satisfactory 
for the garden of this latest class of rose colors—the two-toned, 
variegated group. The bloom is fairly large and very full. The 
bush is vigorous with healthy, shiny foliage, and always blooming. 
It is slightly fragrant. 
MRS. HENRY MORSE —Bright and clear vermillion on the outside 
of the petals, flesh-pink on the inside. The buds are very long- 
pointed, developing into very large blooms of perfect form. It is 
also slightly perfumed. The bush is of the strong, vigorous, healthy 
type of the Radiance group, and nearly as free-flow-ering. 
MRS. PIERRE S. du PONT —Golden yellow. It has a long-pointed 
bud with flowers of medium size. The color is rich and deep and 
does not fade. The plant is low, compact and very bushy—a good 
bedder. It is a constant and heavy bloomer. 
PRESIDENT HOOVER —Another of the multicolored combinations 
of yellow, orange and red. It has very large blooms on long stems, 
produced on an especially vigorous, healthy bush. It has earned 
a definite and lasting place on the list of choice roses. Its growing 
qualities alone will insure that. Very fragrant. 
PRESIDENT PLUMECOCQ —Orange and copper color. A very good 
grower and actve bloomer, with large fragrant flowers. A new' 
rose of much promise. 
Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont 
RADIANCE —Brilliant carmine-salmon, w-ith reverse side opil-rose and 
yellow-ish red. The best and most successfully-grow-n Rose in Amer¬ 
ica. It thrives everywhere. As a plant, it is the ideal to which all other 
varieties are compared. It is a strong, sturdy grow-er with wonder¬ 
ful foliage, a continous bloomer, producing large, delightfully fra¬ 
grant double flow-ers. This variety and its relatives (Red Radiance 
and Mrs. Charles Bell) have made ordinary, amateur rose-gardening 
in this country successful, and productive. 
RED RADIANCE —Clear, genuine red. A sport of Radiance, exactly 
like it in all respects, except in color. This variety, together with 
Radiance and Mrs. Charles Bell, constitutes a family of Roses in a 
class by themselves. Everyone who plants roses should have these 
three, if no others. Once you have succeeded in establishing a gor¬ 
geous bed of the Radiances, you w-ill have learned sufficiently to 
know w-hat it is all about, and will have developed a taste and de¬ 
sire to branch out into other kinds, even the delicate and uncertain 
novelties that crop up in numerous fashion each year. 
REV. F. PAGE ROBERTS —Golden yellow with the reverse side car¬ 
mine, especially in the bud. The buds are very shapely and the 
blooms of perfect form, double and very fragrant. The bush is low, 
compact and spreading, making it a good bedder. It is one of the 
best known and most popular yellows, remembered always for its 
exquisite coloring. 
ROSLYN —Golden yellow with the reverse side orange. A fairly large 
bloom of rich color. A new variety much advertised. It bloomed 
quite well for us this year, but w-as only a medium grow-er. 
SOUVENIR de CLAUDIUS PERNET— Pure sun flower yellow. The 
flowers are fairly large and full, but open quickly. This is a well- 
known variety, particularly through its use in the cut-flower market. 
It is not as satisfactory in the garden as in the greenhouse, but still 
it does produce many blooms of rich yellow and of exhibition type. 
SOUVENIR de GEORGES PERNET —Orient-red on the edge of the 
petals, reflected over the entire bud. The flower is cochineal-car¬ 
mine. It is an unusual and attractive coloring. The blooms are im¬ 
mense and perfectly formed. The plant is of the low-spreading, bed¬ 
ding type, many-branched and bushy. This variety attracted a great 
deal of attention when introduced and becomes more popular each 
season. 
SY'RACUSE —Scarlet-crimson. Large, very double blooms of rich 
color. A new-ly introduced variety. Very worthwhile because of 
its fullness of bloom. 
TALISMAN —Mixture of golden-yellow-, orange and scarlet-red, with 
variations in nearly every bloom. One of the most widely adver¬ 
tised of all roses. And deservedly so. The plant is a vigorous 
grower of upright form. It produces beautiful buds on very long 
stems, and is very fragrant. This rose is gaining higher recognition 
every year. 
VILLE de PARIS —Brilliant golden yellow. The buds are well-formed, 
the blooms large and unfading in color. The plant is strong and 
a very steady bloomer. It is also slightly fragrant. For real, pure, 
rich yellow, this variety is yet unsurpassed. 
