HYBRID TEA OR EVERBLOOMING ROSES 
These are the most popular of all Roses because of their ever- 
blooming habit and variety of color. We have always made a special 
effort to deliver extra-fine, strong, budded plants direct to the cus¬ 
tomer from our nursery where they are grown. This insures fresh, 
vigorous plants that will thrive and bring much joy and satisfaction 
to the grower. It has been very gratifying to receive many favorable 
comments regarding the type of Rose plants we have delivered to 
satisfied customers in the past. 
Roses like a deep bed of about 12 to 14 inches of good soil, with 
well-decayed manure spaded in. Set bushes 1 l /i to 2 feet apart, 
placing them so that the junction of branches and root is just covered 
with soil. All classes of Roses should be pruned back severely to 
about 6 to 8 inches when planted. 
Protect Hybrid Teas in the winter b3’ hilling the soil up around 
the plants or by covering with a litter of strawy manure or leaves. 
Be sure to remove this early in spring. 
Extra-strong plants, $7.50 per doz., $50 per 100, except where noted 
Admiral Ward. Blackish buds, opening slowly 
to large, superbly formed blooms of good 
crimson-red; very fragrant. Grows moderately. 
Ami Quinard. Fine, upstanding bush with 
numerous, semi-double, blackish crimson 
flowers, very dark and velvety. 
Autumn. Gorgeous crimson-scarlet and gold 
buds, which open to deep yellow, very double 
flowers, streaked and flushed with crimson. 
Plant vigorous and free flowering, especially 
in the fall. 85 cts. each, $9 per doz. 
Betty Uprichard. A very fine Rose, unsur¬ 
passed in vigor, blooming, color, and resistance 
to heat or drought. Copper-red buds, opening 
to flowers of brilliant orange-carmine on outer 
surface of petals, showing light salmon reflexes. 
Briarcliff. Large, pointed buds and double, 
high-crowned, fragrant blooms of brilliant 
rose-pink on good stems. 
Charles K. Douglas. A fine, bright red, semi¬ 
double Rose which is becoming very popular. 
Charles P. Kilham. Large, beautifully shaped 
blooms of brilliant red-orange, suffused with 
glowing scarlet; slightly fragrant. Foliage 
resistant to mildew. Vigorous, bushy, upright. 
Comtesse Vandal. Plant Fatent No. 38. Su¬ 
perb, bronze-tinted buds with rose and orange 
tones, opening to huge, shapely salmon-pink 
flowers flushed with gold and flesh tones. A 
consistent winner of first-prize honors. $1.50 
each. 
Dame Edith Helen. One of the largest pink 
Roses known. Clear pink. Moderate growth. 
Director Rubio. Reddish salmon flowers of 
huge size and broad, flat, open form. A very 
striking flower, borne rigidly erect on a vigor¬ 
ous, stout-stemmed plant. 
Duchess of Luxembourg. A large, very double, 
rich golden yellow Rose of vigorous habit. 
Duchess of Wellington. For many years con¬ 
sidered the best, yellow Rose. Enormous, 
tapering buds of golden orange, slowly opening 
to very large saffron-yellow blooms. Very 
vigorous and healthy. 
Edel. Ivory-white, globular blooms, slightly 
fragrant. Need protection from disease. 
Edith Nellie Perkins. An exceedingly fine, 
soft creamy pink flower deeply stained with 
ruddy copper tones on the backs of the petals. 
Fragrant, froe flowering, and vigorous. 
Etoile de France. Vivid crimson flowers with 
rounded centers of bright cerise. 
Etoile de Ilollande. Considered by many the 
best red Rose. Brilliant red blooms of magni¬ 
ficent size, perfect in half-open state, showing 
clean, attractive centers when fully open; 
petals enormous; very fragrant. 
Gruss an Teplitz. A good bedding Rose with 
small, dark, velvety crimson flowers in pro¬ 
fusion until frost. 
Hilda. Very large, double, lasting flowers of 
bright carmine. 
Independence Day. Flaming yellow buds, 
heavily shaded with copper and brown, open¬ 
ing quickly to light orange-pink flowers. 
Joanna Hill. A glorified Mrs. Aaron Ward. 
Heavy lemon buds, developing into a very 
double bloom with Indian-yellow center, sur¬ 
rounded by bold, buff petals. 
Jonkheer J. L. Mock. A gorgeous, very double, 
brilliant pink variety, shaded darker on the 
outside of petals. 
Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria. Considered best- 
white. An old standard variety with creamy 
white buds opening to perfectly formed blooms 
of snowy white. 
Kardinal Piffl. Bushy plants of spreading, 
dwarf habit, with large, double, warm orange- 
pink flowers of handsome shape. 
Killarney. Long-pointed buds, opening to 
bright pink blooms with large petals. 
Konigin Luise. Large bud. double, high-cen¬ 
tered, very lasting white flower. 75 cts. each, 
$9 per doz. 
Lady Alice Stanley. One of the best and most 
dependable Roses. Massive buds and blooms 
of very large size, fully double, with outside 
petals coral-rose, inside pale flesh-pink. Un¬ 
usually disease-resistant. 
Lady Ashtown. A fine old standard variety. 
Satiny buds and double blooms of deep shining 
pink with yellow glow at base of petals. 
Disease-resistant. 
Lady Hillingdon. Beautiful apricot-yellow; 
lovely buds, exquisitely formed; produced 
continuously. 
Lady Margaret Stewart. Erect plants with 
large copper-orange buds opening to bright 
golden yellow flowers of wonderful shape. 
Los Angeles. Beautifully shaped flowers of 
satiny pink, richly shaded with deep rose and 
gold. A very difficult Rose to grow in the East 
because of its susceptibility to black-spot. 
Margaret McGredy. Brilliant red petals on 
hinges of deep gold. Buds upright. Free. 
Mary Hart. Plant Patent No. 8. Very dark 
red Rose of the Talisman type, with curious 
mahogany-brown and sherry tones. An ex¬ 
traordinarily free bloomer, and the color does 
not turn bluish. $1.50 each. 
McGredy’s Scarlet. Handsome, loosely formed, 
crimson Rose with glorious orange-scarlet 
sheen in the depths of its velvety petals. Plant 
unusually strong. 85 cts. each, $9 per doz. 
Mevrouw G. A. van Rossem. A good novelty 
with vivid orange and apricot buds, opening to 
brownish yellow flowers, strongly shaded with 
copper-pink. 75 cts. each, $9 per doz. 
Miss Rowena Thom. A striking novelty with 
gigantic blooms of brilliant satiny pink, shaded 
with orange-flame at center. Strong grower. 
Mme. Butterfly. Finest of the Ophelia type. 
Bright light pink, shaded with gold. 
Mme. Edouard Herriot. The original of all 
the bright orange-pink varieties. 
Mme. Jules Grolez. Bright rose-pink blooms 
of pointed, pyramidal shape, with waxy 
petals of much substance. Fine grower and 
very free blooming. 
Mme. Nicolas Aussel. Excellent new Rose 
with long coppery buds and vivid salmon-pink 
flowers of superb form, richly toned with gold 
and orange-yellow at the center. 85 cts. ea 'h, 
$9 per doz. 
Mrs. Aaron Ward. Low, bushy plants with 
good foliage. Delightful little buds of golden 
buff, opening to tawny gold and pink. 
Mrs. Charles Bell. A salmon-colored Radiance. 
Very strong and healthy grower. 
Mrs. Erskine Pembroke Thom. One of the 
finest yellow Roses, with long buds opening 
into perfectly shaped flowers of rich lemon- 
yellow. Very vigorous and disease-resistant. 
Mrs. Franklin Dennison. Very large white 
blooms of unusual substance, sometimes lightly 
shaded pink and deepening to yellow. 
Mrs. Henry Bowles. Magnificent flowers of 
dark, lustrous pink, very freely produced by a 
healthy, vigorous plant. 
