GLEN SAINT MARY NURSERIES 
Hardy Roses 
ROSES, continued 
Letty Coles. (T.) Beautiful blush-colored 
flowers, sometimes tinged with pale yellow. 
Medium to large size and fine form. Sweet 
Tea fragrance. 
Louis Philippe. (Beng.) Rich, velvety crim¬ 
son. While not so valuable for bouquets as 
some varieties, as the petals soon drop after the 
flowers arc cut, it is the most showy and satis¬ 
factory dark red Rose we have for gardens and 
grounds. It makes a large, vigorous bush, and 
there is scarcely a time during the entire year 
when it is not covered with bright red flowers. 
There are always flowers, and nearly always 
quantities of them. 
Louis Richard. (T.) Coppery rose, the 
center sometimes deep red. Very handsome. 
Mad. Alfred Carriere (II. N.) Pearly white, 
with slight pink tint in the center. In our 
own gardens one of the most satisfactory, being 
an unusually strong grower and constant 
bloomer. Flowers of good size and handsome. 
Mad. Barriglione. (T.) Coppery carmine- 
rose; fine buds ; flowers semi-double. 
Mad. Bravy. (T.) Creamy white, large, full, 
of symmetrical form and great fragrance. A 
profuse and constant bloomer. 
Mad. Camille. (T.) 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. Very 
vigorous. 
Mad. Joseph Schwartz. (T.) Large, globu¬ 
lar 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.) Large and full flowers, 
varying from rosy salmon to rosy flesh. Beau¬ 
tifully shaped, in buds and full-blown flowers. 
Very free and constant bloomer—one of the 
most satisfactory in our collection. 
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; a very profuse bloomer. 
Mad. Plantier. (LI. 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 yellow; 
large and double; margins of petals wavy; 
beautiful glossy foliage; free-flowering. 
Madam Wagram (Climbing Paul Neyron). 
(C. T.) Flowers very large, full and double. 
The color is a delicate shell-pink, a trifle 
deeper than Duchesse de Brabant overspread 
with silvery sheen. At base of petals there is 
a tinge of yellow. 
Magna Charta. (H. C.) Bright clear pink, 
flushed with violet-crimson; very sweet; flow¬ 
ers extra large, fine form, double and full. A 
spring bloomer. Makes a large, vigorous bush. 
Manda’s Triumph. (W.) Strong-growing, 
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 re¬ 
sults. Here it is at home; a strong, vigorous 
grower, producing freely its magnificent flow¬ 
ers at all seasons in great abundance. It should 
have the first place in every collection. 
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