In this section we include Hybrid Tea Roses and the so-called Pernetianas, the most 
popular and useful Roses for the garden. Their flowers have beautiful form, fragrance, 
and color in bewildering variety. The plants are usually dwarf, seldom more than 3 feet 
high, and are hardy enough to withstand the winter in almost all parts of the United States 
and Canada, provided they are properly protected where zero weather occurs. 
All these Roses are two-year-old, field-grown, budded plants, 75 cts. each, $6.50 for 10, except where 
otherwise noted. All Roses priced at $1 each are $9 for 10 
Roses will be shipped by express at purchaser’s expense. If wanted by mail, add 10% of their value east of the 
Mississippi; 20% west of the Mississippi. Unless very small lots are ordered, we prefer 
to ship by express. We recommend express shipments for Roses. 
Abol. Glorious, pale blush-pink buds opening to 
very full, fragrant flowers of glistening ivory- 
white, sometimes tinged with blush at the edge of 
the center petals. A vigorous grower and a 
continuous bloomer. 35 petals. 
Albast. Pale salmon buds, opening to dainty, 
double, chamois-pink flowers with about 40 
quilled petals. Attractive. $1 each. 
Alexander Marghiloman. A very double, ivory- 
tinted flower with big, shell-like petals sometimes 
tinged with deep yellow at the base. Sprawling 
habit. 70 petals. 
Alice Stern. Vigorous, upright bush with pointed 
buds and well-shaped cream-white flowers faintly 
tinged with fawn. A steady and continuous 
bloomer. 30 petals. $1 each. 
Amami. A very lovely semi-double flower of soft 
peachy pink and silken texture. Plants are 
vigorous. 15 petals. 
Amelia Earhart (President Charles Hain). See 
page 3. 
Ami Quinard. Striking semi-double Rose of very 
dark crimson-maroon, produced freely on tall, 
semi-shrubby plants. Buds beautiful color. 
Striking. 15 petals. $1 each. 
Angele Pernet. A unique Rose with brownish orange 
buds, opening to cup-shaped flowers of vivid 
orange-apricot which pales to salmon as the 
blooms develop. 18 petals. 
Aphrodite. Remarkable for its brilliant vermilion 
buds and Iarge-petaled, almost single flowers of 
bright coral, tinged with gold. Somewhat like a 
slightly fuller Isobel. 12 petals. $1 each. 
Attraction. See page 3. 
Autumn. A fine garden plant of remarkably strong 
habit, with glossy, disease-resistant foliage. Its 
fiery brown-orange buds show deep old-gold on 
the inner surface of the petals, and as the blooms 
open they become bright yellow streaked with 
crimson. 70 petals. $1 each. 
Barbara Richards. Lovely semi-double flowers of 
creamy pink with a strong yellow tone in the 
center. At times the color is much deeper and 
richer. 15 petals. 
Betty. Remarkable for its long, tapering coppery 
pink buds of an exquisite form which has never 
been surpassed. The large pale buff-pink flowers 
are of less importance. 15 petals. 
Betty Uprichard. One of our finest bedding Roses 
because of its remarkably vigorous branching 
habit. The buds are bright orange-carmine on the 
outside, opening to semi-double flowers with light 
salmon-pink on the inner surface of the petals. 
One of the most popular varieties. 17 petals. 
Briarcliff. A popular Rose in the florist shops which 
grows well in the garden, producing heavy, long- 
lasting rose-pink flowers. Fragrant. 36 petals. 
Buttercup. See page 3. 
Caledonia. A modern white Rose with long, ex¬ 
quisitely mottled creamy white buds opening to 
beautifully shaped, snowy flowers with pale green 
shadows. Plants are notably strong and bloom 
over a long period. 25 petals. 
Cathrine Kordes. See page 3. 
Cecile Walter. See page 3. 
Charles H. Rigg. See page 3. 
Charles K. Douglas. An old favorite which has won 
deserved popularity through many years of 
yeoman service in the garden. Its big, loosely 
shaped flowers are striking crimson-scarlet and 
are produced continuously on strong, upright, 
branching plants particularly adapted to bedding 
use. 24 petals. 
Charles P. Kilham. Perhaps the best of the brilliant 
orange-pink Roses of the Mme. Edouard Herriot 
color. In fact, the bloom looks like a greatly 
improved double Herriot. The plants are dwarf, 
branching, and are continuously in bloom. 70 
petals. Illustrated in color on page 12 . 
Chateau de Clos Vougeot. One of the best-loved 
Roses of the garden in spite of the sprawling habit 
of the plant. The deep blackish scarlet buds and 
open blooms hold no tinge of purple but are over¬ 
spread with a blackish, velvety sheen of the rich¬ 
est texture in all rosedom. The fragrance is un¬ 
forgettable. 75 petals. 
Columbia. A fine, upstanding garden Rose with 
bright pink flowers having stiff petals that last a 
long time when cut. 60 petals. 
Conqueror. Strong plants with remarkably hand¬ 
some foliage and semi-double saffron-yellow flow¬ 
ers with deep tones of orange and copper on the 
outer surface. 15 petals. $1 each. 
Constance. A lovely Rose with globular, double 
blooms of deep pure yellow which does not fade. 
56 petals. 
Coral. See page 3. 
Countess Vandal. See page 3. 
Crimson Glory. See page 3. 
Cuba. One of the showiest and most decorative 
Roses for the garden. It grows tall and produces 
big cup-shaped flowers with broad banner-like 
petals of flaming scarlet-orange, aging to a vivid 
orange-pink. 16 petals. 
Dame Edith Helen. Remarkable for the magnificent 
size of its very double, symmetrically formed 
flowers, with regularly imbricated petals of a soft, 
even tone of pure pink. Magnificent when at its 
best. 70 petals. 
Dazla. A very showy, practically single Rose of the 
Angele Pernet color, with curiously recurved, 
angular petals arranged in a sort of pinwheel 
effect. Very showy. 15 petals. $1 each. 
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