ROSES 
Qlen Saint Mary Nurseries 
MAD. BRAVY. (X.) Creamy white, large, 
full, of symmetrical form and great fragrance. A 
profuse and constant bloomer. 
MAD. CAMILLE. (T.J Large, very double 
and full; rosy flesh, changing to salmon-rose. 
MAD. CAROLINE KUSTER. (N.) Pale 
yellow, often mottled with rose. An excellent 
free-blooming sort. 
MAD. DE VATRY. (T.) Red, shaded with 
salmon. A choice Rose of bright color and good 
form in bud and flower. 
MAD. GABRIEL LUIZET. (H. P.) Clear, 
bright rosy pink, a beautiful shade. Medium to 
large size, double and full and somewhat flat. 
MAD. JEAN SISLEY. ( Beng ) A free- 
growing, free-flowering Rose of merit. This is a 
fine Rose for bedding. It is full and double, and 
pure white, sometimes tinged blush. 
MAD. JOSEPH DESBOIS. (H. P.) Flesh 
white, shaded with salmon-rose; very large, well 
formed; a remarkably beautiful Rose. Verv vig¬ 
orous. 
MAD. JOSEPH SCHWARTZ. (T.) Large, 
globular flowers, very full and sweet; color pure 
white, the edges of petals tinged with carmine. 
The flowers have the exquisiteness and delicacy of 
its parent, Duchesse de Brabant. One of the most 
satisfactory here. 
MAD. LAMBARD. (T.j Large and full flow¬ 
ers, varying from rosy salmon to rosy flesh. 
MAD. MARGOTTIN. (T.) Flesh-color, some¬ 
times slightly tinted with pale pink at center. 
Medium size, full and double. Delicately fra¬ 
grant. A desirable kind. 
MAD. PHILEMON COCHET. (T.) Color rose, 
shaded with salmon and suffused with a lighter 
shade. Vigorous. 
MAD. PLANTIER. (H. C.) Pure white, above 
medium size, full flat form. A spring bloomer; 
very strong and vigorous. More valuable as a 
stock upon which to bud other varieties than for 
its own flowers. 
MAD. SADIE CARNOT. (T.) Cherry-red; 
a very good variety. 
MAD. SCIPION COCHET. (T.) Rosy yel¬ 
low; large and double; margins of petals wavy; 
beautiful glossy foliage; free-flowering. 
MAD.WELCHE. (T.) Pale yellow, with cop¬ 
pery yellow center; large and full; distinct. 
MAGNA CHARTA. (H. C.) Bright clear pink, 
flushed with violet-crimson; very sweet; flowers 
extra large, fine form, double and full. A spring 
bloomer. Makes a large, vigorous bush. 
27 ] 
MANDA’S TRIUMPH. (W.) Strong-grow- 
ing, creeping plants, producing an abundance of 
small white Roses; petals very slender and thickly 
set together. 
MARECHAL NIEL. (C. N.) Deep yellow ; 
very large, full, globular form; delightfully fra¬ 
grant; the finest of all yellow Roses. In the North 
this Rose is of a delicate constitution, and requires 
careful treatment to get good results. Here it is at 
home; a strong, vigorous grower, producing freely 
its magnificent flowers at all seasons in great 
abundance. It should have the first place in every 
collection. 
MARGARET DICKSON. (H.P.) Finely formed, 
pure waxy white flowers of immense size, some of 
them nearly as large as Paul Neyron. 
MARIE DUCHER. (T.) Generally described 
as "rich salmon-yellow, with fawn center; large, 
very full, somewhat flat; very double and sweet.” 
With us color varies from peach-blossom to light 
rose, suffused with sulphur-yellow, with reverse^of 
petals silvery rose. Medium-sized, nicely formed 
flowers. A good grower and constant bloomer. 
MARIE GUILLOT. (T.) Generally described 
as " pure snow-white, sometimes faintly tinged with 
pale yellow. Large, full and double.” On our 
grounds it is more apt to be pale yellow and often 
distinctly tinged with deep blush or light rose. A 
fine grower, with very pretty flowers. 
MARIE LAMBERT. (T.) Pure white; a seed¬ 
ling from Mad. Bravy, and even more vigorous; 
has been called the White Hermosa, which it 
resembles in form and freedom of bloom. 
MARIE VAN HOUTTE. (T.) Pale yellow, 
the edges of petals often lined with rose. Some¬ 
times both yellow and red Roses are to be seen on 
same bush, but always beautiful flowers. On? of 
the most satisfactory here. 
MARIE ZAHN. (H. P.) Large, well-formed 
flowers; color light silvery rose with carmine shad¬ 
ing; base yellowish. 
MARSHALL P. WILDER. (H. P.) Flowers 
very large, perfectly double, and of good substance; 
color bright cherry-red, shading to crimson. Plant 
a clean, healthy grower. 
MARY WASHINGTON. (C. T.) Small white 
flowers, borne in clusters. Fragrance of a musky 
flavor noticed in some of the Roses of "ye olden 
time.” 
MIGNONETTE (Pol.) Large clusters of per¬ 
fectly formed miniature Roses; pink, changing to 
white. 
MRS. CLEVELAND. (H. P.) Medium to 
large ; nicely formed flowers of a dark red or vel¬ 
vety crimson color. Delightfully fragrant. 
