FROM GROWER TO CONSUMER 
39 
Brown's Hybrid Perpetual Roses 
June Massive Blooming Varieties 
The varieties listed below are unquestionably the cream of their class, comprising a full range 
of color. These yield abundance of flowers in June with scattering flowers in the autumn months. 
They make a beautiful background for a bed of Hybrid Tea Roses, and are strongly recommended 
for cold and severe winter climates. While they bloom the first season, their finest Roses come 
in subsequent years. 
Clio. Large, globular, flesh color, with rosy pink shad¬ 
ing. Very vigorous grower and free bloomer. 
Eugene Furst. This is the darkest red Hybrid Per¬ 
petual Rose that we grow and excellent as a con¬ 
trast for the lighter varieties. 
Fisher Holmes. Magnificent reddish scarlet beneath 
a velvety black sheen, bright and glowing—ex¬ 
tremely hardy and vigorous grower. 
Hugonis (The Golden Rose of China). 
Light yellow flowers, borne profusely 
along the slender branches, making a 
striking display, very early in the sea¬ 
son. Erect, branching growth; foliage 
small and persistent. Dependably 
hardy, and a first class yellow flower¬ 
ing shrub Rose. 
Habit of 
Growth. 
r Grows \ 
OrWe Replace 
K FREE ' 
Prince Camille de Rohan. One of the darkest red Roses; 
dark but not somber, being brightened with a tinge of 
almost scarlet brilliance. Sometimes referred to as the 
Black Rose, or Black Beauty. 
Soleil d’Or. A fine hardy outdoor Rose; the large full 
flowers, colored gold, and orange-yellow, varying to 
ruddy suffused with nasturtium-red. 
Ulrich Brunner. An excellent Rose of unusual beauty. 
The buds are finely formed and the blooms when 
opened are full and of bright cherry-red, and unusually 
large. A variety that is essential in any collection. 
Known as the hardy American Beauty. 
Frau Karl Druschki (Snow Queen or White Amer¬ 
ican Beauty). Very vigorous grower, the most gen¬ 
erally planted of all white Roses, tire blooms are 
of enormous size, the outer petals showing a delicate 
tinge of pink. 
George Arends (Pink Frau Karl Druschki). Possess¬ 
ing the same growth and free flowering tendencies 
of Druschki, with the added virtue of being deli¬ 
ciously scented. A royal Rose and should be more 
generally planted. 
General Jacqueminot. The well known favorite old 
“Jack Rose,’’ known and loved everywhere. Showy, 
brilliant red; blooms freely, is hardy and grows 
well anywhere. 
Harrison’s Yellow. Not a hybrid perpetual, but so 
classed on account of its hardiness. Fine, rich yel¬ 
low, small and very double. Blooms in profusion 
but in the spring only. One of the few absolutely 
hardy, yellow Roses. Small, semi-double, golden 
yellow flowers, borne in such profusion that the 
plants are a mass of color. 
J. B. Clark. A very strong grower, with large, dark red, 
double blossoms, shading to maroon. A vety profuse and 
early bloomer. 
Madame Albert Barbier (The Yellow Druschki). New. 
A recent introduction and as free flowering as many Hy¬ 
brid Teas. Its long buds of pearly white, suffused salmon 
flesh, open into large full flowers. A gem in every respect. 
Magna Charta. An old favorite. One of the best of this 
class. Color a deep rose-pink; blooms very large, full, 
cupped, and borne on extra long, straight stems. 
Marshall P. Wilder. Large and well-formed flowers of a 
dark cherry-red color. Borne on good, stiff stems. 
Mrs. John Laing. A beautiful soft pink Rose of excellent 
form and habit, and a very free flowering variety, delight¬ 
fully scented and attractive. 
Paul Neyron. Deep rose. The largest of all Roses. After 
the main blooming season is over in June this variety 
sends up long canes bearing beautiful blooms that would 
make you wish you had planted more bushes. 
Persian Yellow. Absolutely hardy yellow Rose. Blooms but 
once in the season. In June the bush is literally covered 
with small, double, bright yellow Roses that make it a 
brilliant spot in any garden. Desirable for hedging or for 
massing in shrubbery. Is hardy but is not a true hybrid 
perpetual. 
Type of Hybrid Perpetual Rose. 
