^JjOSGS hy Bohhink £Atljins 
EVERBLOOMING ROSES 
Capt. F. S. Harvey Cant. Rich salmon-pink, faintly 
veined with scarlet and suffused with yellow. 
Flowers large, of fine form and great substance, 
with high-pointed center. Vigorous grower. 77 
petals. $1 each. 
Carillon. See page 4. 
Carmelita. See page 4. 
Carrie Jacobs Bond. See page 4. 
Cathrine Kordes. Large, double, 
extremely lasting, pinkish scarle. 
flowers borne singly on long, strong stem, 
fragrant. 35 petals. 
Cecile Walter. Almost single, orange-copper 
flowers, cupped on opening and slightly 
fragrant. Vigorous grower. 15 petals. $1 each 
Charles H. Rigg. Large, fragrant flower of soft day¬ 
break-pink, passing to eglantine pink; charming 
shape, with 35 petals, borne on stout, erect stem. 
$1.25 each. 
Charles K. Douglas. Striking crimson-scarlet 
flowers produced continuously. Particu¬ 
larly adapted to bedding use. An old 
favorite. 24 petals. 
Charles P. Kilham. A greatly improved 
double form of the famous Mme. Edouard 
Herriot. Brilliant orange-pink. Dwarf, branch¬ 
ing plants continuously in bloom. 70 petals. 
Chateau de Clos Vougeot. Deep blackish velvety 
scarlet of unforgettable fragrance. One of the 
darkest and best-loved Roses of the garden. Low 
growing. 75 petals. 
Claire Desmet. See page 4. 
Clarice Goodacre. Yellow buds and fine, high- 
pointed flowers of creamy white, tinted with pale 
buff. 23 petals. $1 each. 
Director 
stems, 
Edith Nellie Perkins. See page 12 
Colonel Sharman Crawford. See page 4. 
Columbia. Bright pink flowers with 60 stiff petals. 
Lasts a long time when cut. Fragrant. A fine 
upstanding garden Rose. 62 petals. 
Condesa de Sastago. See page 4. 
Conqueror. Semi-double, saffron-yellow flowers 
with deep tones of orange and copper. Foliage is 
remarkably handsome. 15 petals. $1 each. 
Coral. Coral-pink flower with buttercup-yellow 
base. Resembles a deeper toned Los Angeles. 
Vigorous; continuous bloomer. 30 to 35 petals, 
each. 
Countess Vandal. See page 4. 
Crimson Glory. See page 4. 
Cuba. Vivid orange-scarlet buds, opening to im¬ 
mense, cup-like flowers of iridescent copper- 
red and brilliant orange-vermilion. A 
lovely semi-double Rose. 16 
petals. 
Cynthia. See page 4. 
Dame Edith Helen. Very 
double, symmetrically formed 
flowers of a soft, pure pink. Mag¬ 
nificent when at its best. A superb 
exhibition Rose. 70 petals. 
Rubio. Brilliant red buds on very stiff 
opening to a strange shade somewhere 
between rose and scarlet. Low growing. 20 petals. 
$1 each. 
Eduard Schill. See page 12 
Dorothy Page-Roberts. Glistening, coppery pink, 
semi-double blooms suffused apricot; not very 
fragrant. 17 petals. $1 each. 
Dr. Heinrich Lumpe. Well-shaped buds and blooms 
of brilliant pink, borne on plants of excellent 
garden habit. 35 petals. $1 each. 
Souv. de Jean Soupert is the best yellow garden Rose 
11 
