8 
looses 
oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo 
HYBRID TEA ROSES, continued 
RHEINGOLD. (M. Leenders & Co., 1934.) New. Lasting, 
fragrant, double golden yellow flowers larger than Souvenir 
de Claudius Pernet. Free blooming. The yellow flowers form 
a pleasing contrast with the rather large, leathery, light green 
foliage. $1.50 each. 
ROCHESTER. Plant Patent No. 131. (J. H. Nicolas, 1934.) A 
bedding Rose with a strong, bushy plant, and flowers very 
much like Rev. F. Page-Roberts, of golden yellow and reddish 
buff, with pronounced carmine markings on the reverse. 
Flowers come in good-sized clusters. A profuse bloomer. 
$1.25 each. 
ROSLYN. (E. Towill, 1929.) A distinct yellow variety which 
has proved of high merit in the garden. The big, double, golden 
yellow flowers are exquisitely formed. 
SOUVENIR (Golden Talisman). Plant Patent No. 25. (A. N. 
Pierson, 1930.) Splendid clear, gleaming yellow sport of the 
popular Talisman. The plant is a remarkable grower and 
blooms freely. $1.00 each. 
Souvenir de Claudius Pernet. (Pernet-Ducher, 1920.) Splendid 
flowers of clear, light yellow, with specially handsome, dark 
green, glossy foliage. A very dependable garden Rose. 
Talisman. (Montgomery Co., 1929.) A Rose cf sensational 
appearance, combining tones of scarlet and orange-yellow with 
intermediate harmonious shades. 
TOKEN. Plant Patent No. 95. (Montgomery Co., 1933.) 
Large, Ophelia-shaped bud. The double flowers are a single- 
toned, sun-ripened apricot—a unique color. It is a free bloomer 
and has an upright growth in the garden. Its glossy foliage is 
disease-resistant. $1.50 each. 
TREMNO. (J. Bohm, 1935.) One of the darkest of all Roses. A 
large, very double flower of velvety, deep maroon, with the 
delicious fragrance of the old-time Roses. Flowers are freely 
produced on a strong, branching plant. The best of this type 
of Rose. $1.50 each. 
Ville de Paris. (Pernet-Ducher, 1926.) Relatively tall plants, 
bearing large, globular, semi-double flowers of clear, translucent 
yellow. A very charming and graceful bedding variety. 
WHITE BRIARCLIFF (Mme. Louis Lens). Plant Patent No. 
108. (L. Lens, 1933.) A splendid new white Rose of perfect 
form and of a pure glistening white without any tinting. The 
flowers, on good cutting stems, are continuously produced on 
medium-sized, branching plants. $1.50 each. 
WILLIAM ORR. (S. McGredy & Son, 1930.) An extremely full, 
velvety crimson flower with a high-pointed center. Plant 
vigorous and sturdy. One of the most shapely and generally 
satisfactory new crimson Roses. 
Willowmere. (Pernet-Ducher, 1913.) One of the finest Roses in 
the world. Long, glowing salmon-pink buds, opening to 
blooms of brilliant shell-pink, with a luminous glow of yellow. 
YOSEMITE. Plant Patent No. 109. (J. H. Nicolas, 1934.) 
Semi-double flowers of orange-scarlet, suffused with carmine on 
the reverse. A very striking flower on a vigorous, bushy plant 
of free-blooming habit. $1.25 each. 
Hybrid Perpetual Roses 
The varieties which belong to this class make heavy bushes 
3 to 6 feet tall and bear a profusion of fine, bold flowers in early 
Summer and a few scanty blooms from then until Autumn when 
a fair second crop is produced. Hardier than Hybrid Teas. 
Frau Karl Druschki. (P. Lambert, 1900.) Finest white Rose of 
any class; beautifully shaped and enormous. Flowers freely 
throughout the season when established. Not fragrant. 
General Jacqueminot. (Roussel, 1852.) A popular old favorite 
with almost double, beautifully pointed flowers of light scarlet- 
crimson; intensely fragrant. 
Georg Arends. (W. Hinner, 1910.) Long-pointed buds and 
exquisitely shaped flowers of clear, soft pink. Fragrant and 
extremely appealing. One of the most beautiful. 
Mrs. John Laing. (H. Bennett, 1887.) A very popular Rose of 
erect habit, with cup-shaped flowers of glowing pink. 
Paul Neyron. (A. Levet, 1869.) A very popular old Rose with 
smooth stems and gigantic flowers of deep purple-rose. 
Ulrich Brunner. (F. Levet, 1881.) Tall-growing, robust plant 
which produces an abundance of huge, circular, frilled flowers 
of glowing cherry-red. Very showy and popular Rose. 
A New Class of Everblooming 
Hybrid Perpetuals 
These robust varieties are bedding plants, their growth not ex¬ 
ceeding that of well-grown Hybrid Teas; actually, they are Hybrid 
Teas, plus hardiness. (The following list is in order of novelty.) 
OTTO KRAUSS. (C. Weigand, 1931; introduced in U. S. by 
Joseph Breck & Sons, 1933.) Rich copper bud opening to 'a 
large, double bloom of orange-copper, lightened with salmon 
and gold at the bases of the petals; quite fragrant. Three or 
four blooms come on long stems, opening in succession. Vigor¬ 
ous plant, with shiny, healthy foliage. $1.00 each. 
S. M. GUSTAVE V. (P. Nabonnand, 1922.) As prolific as any 
Hybrid Tea. The medium to large blooms are brilliant Paul 
Neyron pink, very double, heavily scented with true old Rose 
perfume. We consider it one of the best everblooming pink 
Roses. An ideal bedding variety. 75c each. 
MME. ALBERT BARBIER. (Barbier & Co., 1925.) Color 
identical to that of the lovely Mrs. Aaron Ward—buff, salmon, 
and yellow. The large blooms are artistically nested in hand¬ 
some foliage and have long stems for cutting. 75c each. 
HENRY NEVARD. (F. Cant & Co., 1924.) A mammoth bloom 
of most perfect form and a frequent winner as “Most Beauti¬ 
ful Rose in the Show.” It is velvety crimson in color, and 
very fragrant. Stems are often 2 feet long. 75c each. 
SPECIAL OFFER: one 4 e £S?es f<®° ve $3.00 
Austrian Brier Roses 
These are shrub Roses and should not be planted in beds with 
the varieties wanted for cutting. They are ornamental bushes to 
be used as lawn specimens or in shrubby borders. 
$1.00 each; 10 for $9.00 
Austrian Copper (Rosa foetida bicolor ). (Gerarde, 1596.) Graceful 
shrubs with small foliage and brown stems, covered with 
innumerable single flowers of intense copper-red on the inner 
surface of the petals and golden yellow on the outside. 
Harison’s Yellow. (Harison, 1830.) The fine old-fashioned bush 
Rose which grows in old farmyards and gardens all over New 
England. Thousands of bright yellow, semi-double flowers in 
long sprays adorn its spreading branches in early Summer. 
Persian Yellow {R. foetida persiana). (H. Willock, 1837.) Some¬ 
times mistaken for Harison’s Yellow, but a less vigorous plant 
with smaller, more cup-shaped, and deeper golden yellow 
flowers. An extremely handsome, decorative shrub. 
Climbing Tea Roses of Special Interest 
Cl. Mme. Caroline Testout. A climbing sport of this famous 
old Rose which made Portland the Rose City of the West. 
Large, very double flowers of bright satiny rose. An inter¬ 
mittent bloomer and one of the best of the Climbing 
Hybrid Teas. $1.00 each. 
Cl. Etoile de Hollande. A climbing sport of the popular 
Hybrid Tea, with even finer flowers than the dwarf form. 
Pure scarlet-crimson, with wonderful perfume. $1.00 each. 
Cl. President Hoover. A climbing sport of this splendid 
garden Rose, with flowers exactly like its parent, of scarlet, 
yellow, cerise, pink, and flame. Flowers are produced on 
long stems on vigorous plants. $1.00 each. 
Mermaid. A half-hardy climber which is one of the most 
beautiful Roses in the garden. Large, single flowers, 5 to 
6 inches across, of pale sulphur-yellow, with a mass of 
amber stamens. Has a few flowers all the time. $1.25 each. 
