EVERBLOOMING ROSES c J{OSGS hy Bohhinlj ^Atkins 
Miss Rowena Thom. Vigorous plants with enormous 
buds and blooms of fiery rose shaded with mauve. 
Unusual color. 55 petals. 
Miss Willmott. Perfectly formed, enormous white 
flowers, occasionally touched with faint pink in 
the center. 40 petals. 
Mme. Abel Chatenay. A vigorous light pink Rose 
with salmon and flesh shadings. Exquisitely 
formed. 40 petals. 
Mme. Butterfly. An indispensable garden Rose with 
light pink flowers faintly tinted with gold near 
the base of the petals. Sweetly and richly per¬ 
fumed. 30 petals. 
Mme. Caroline Testout. An old war-horse of the 
Rose-garden. The ancestor of most of our garden 
Roses, and still a good Rose in its own right. The 
globular flowers are silvery pink. 28 petals. 
Mme. Edouard Herriot. An historical Rose of re¬ 
markable beauty, unsurpassed in its brilliant 
orange, red, and salmon shades by many of the 
more recent varieties. 15 petals. 
Mme. Jules Bouche. The finest of all white Roses 
for garden use. Plants are very vigorous, branch¬ 
ing, and bear medium-sized flowers of glistening 
white, with an occasional touch of pink at the 
center. 34 petals. 
Mme. Leon Pain. A notable old Rose of splendid 
bedding habit, with soft flesh-pink flowers of 
excellent form. 43 petals. 
Mme. Nicolas Aussel. See page 3. 
Monarch. A splendid pale pink Rose of exhibition 
form, borne on an upright, vigorous plant. SI each. 
Mrs. Aaron Ward. A fine low-growing bedding plant 
with holly-like foliage and well-shaped little buds 
of golden buff, unfolding to double, attractively 
shaped flowers of tawny gold and pink. 50 petals. 
Mrs. A. R. Barraclough. One of the finest exhibition 
Roses. The massive, brilliant rose-pink flowers are 
richly shaded with yellow and gold at the base, 
veined and clouded with deeper shades. Under 
proper conditions it develops to enormous size and 
is the last word in perfect shape and majestic 
beauty. 40 petals. 
Mrs. Beatty. A very pretty Rose of pure, soft yellow. 
Plants are moderately vigorous and bloom 
abundantly. 25 petals. $1 each. 
Mrs. Charles Bell. Sport of the well-known Rose, 
Radiance, with flowers of similar shape but much 
lighter and softer in color, tending toward a 
delicate tone of shell-pink. The plant is a little 
less rampant than Radiance and is ideal for 
bedding. 27 petals. 
Mrs. Dunlop Best. A vigorous, branching plant 
which spreads sideways to considerable extent. 
The blooms are rich apricot-yellow, exquisitely 
fragrant and beautifully formed, resembling in a 
good many respects the lovely old-fashioned Tea 
Roses. 28 petals. $1 each. 
Mrs. Erskine Pembroke Thom. Probably this is the 
best thoroughly tested, well-known, pure unfading 
yellow Rose now grown in gardens. It has dis¬ 
placed the older Souv. de Claudius Pernet to a 
larger extent, because of the more uniform color 
of its flowers and its generally better plant habit. 
43 petals. 
Mrs. George Geary. An extremely double, glowing 
orange-cerise flower with a full, high center, some¬ 
times shaded with cardinal-red. 40 petals. $1 each. 
Mrs. Henry Bowles, Superb Rose of an even, solid 
shade of clear glowing pink. The blooms are 
notably large, perfectly formed, and are produced 
abundantly on a very vigorous plant. 52 petals. 
Illustrated in color on page 13 . 
Mrs. Henry Morse. One of the best low-growing, 
bedding Roses of erect, branching habit, bearing 
handsome flowers of two contrasting shades of 
pink. A very reliable Rose for continuous bloom. 
50 petals. 
Mrs. J. D. Eisele. See page 3. 
Mrs. J. D. Russell. See page 3. 
Mrs. Lovell Swisher. One of the largest Roses 
grown, with flowers of pale salmon-pink tinged 
with creamy yellow. 42 petals. 
Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont. A bright, unfading yellow 
Rose a shade or two deeper than Mrs. E. P. Thom. 
Flowers are beautifully shaped, resembling 
Ophelia in that respect. Plant is renowned for its 
prolific bloom and healthy habit. 42 petals. $1 
each. 
Mrs. Sam McGredy. A very lovely Rose with 
sharply reflexed petals, heavily toned with 
scarlet-orange changing to copper as the buds 
unfold. The blending of fiery hues in this flower is 
impossible to describe. Plants are bushy and 
notably floriferous. 40 petals. $1 each. 
Mrs. S. Paton. Long, tapering buds of shining 
orange-scarlet which open to double, slightly 
fragrant flowers of glowing salmon-scarlet suffused 
with orange. 15 petals. $1 each. 
Mrs. Wakefield Christie-Miller. Fine old garden 
standby which makes stubby, erect growth, bear¬ 
ing at the top of each stem a handsome peony¬ 
shaped flower of bright rose-pink tinted with 
lighter shades. Very fragrant. 50 petals. 
Mrs. W. E. Nickerson. A tall-growing plant which 
produces a profusion of long, slender, silvery pink 
buds which open to semi-double flowers with 
enormous petals tinted with gold and salmon 
shades in the center. 24 petals. 
Nigrette. See page 3. 
Olympiad (Mme. Raymond Gaujard). Big, scarlet- 
crimson buds opening to flowers of rich blood-red 
with copper and yellow flames at the base. 40 
petals. $1 each. 
Ophelia. A favorite old Rose of creamy white with 
pale pink stains and a slight tinge of golden yellow 
in the folds of its petals. Fragrant, free flowering 
and of excellent garden habit. A lovely cut Rose. 
28 petals. 
Padre. A strong-growing decorative Rose of bright 
coppery scarlet, illumined with brilliant yellow 
in the center of the flower. Very free flowering 
and a splendid bedding variety. 17 petals. 
Patience. Large, double, carmine flowers with a 
handsome high-pointed center shaded with scarlet 
and orange. 
Paul Lucchini. See page 3. 
Pink Pearl. Massive double flowers of deep rose- 
pink, resembling the fine old-time Columbia and 
probably the best of that type. 72 petals. 
Polly. A very beautiful, soft flesh-pink flower de¬ 
veloping deep gold tones at the base of the petals 
and a deeper pink flush in the center of the bud. 
Vigorous and free flowering. 45 petals. 
Premier. A famous Rose of the flower shops, popular 
in some gardens. Its stately dark pink flowers are 
borne singly at the top of stiff stems. 39 petals. 
President Deville. Very large, double flowers of 
brilliant crimson, notable for its vigorous growth 
and free-flowering habit. 30 petals. $1 each. 
President Herbert Hoover. One of the most popular 
Roses now grown. The plants are extremely 
vigorous, with large, luxuriant foliage, and produce 
an abundance of big, semi-double flowers of flam¬ 
ing scarlet and yellow in the bud, opening to soft 
creamy yellow blooms tinged with deep rose on 
the outer surface of the petals. 25 petals. 
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