EVERBLooMiNG roses_ ^IjOSGS hy Bohhink 6jAthins 
Lady Margaret Stewart. Brilliant orange-yellow, 
turning gold as the blooms open. A rival of the 
great Rev. F. Page-Roberts. A lovely cut-flower. 
54 petals. 
Lady Pirrie. Produces an abundance of beautifully 
formed coppery pink buds which open to pale 
flesh-colored flowers. One of the best garden 
Roses. 24 petals. 
Lady Sackville. See page 5. 
Lady Ursula. Buds and blooms of good substance 
in shades of light pink. Very vigorous and useful 
bedding Rose. 58 petals. 
Lady Violet Astor. See page 5. 
Lai. See page 5. 
Leonard Barron. See page 5. 
Lesley Dudley. See page 5. 
Lilian. Flower very large, semi-double, cupped, 
unusually lasting, very fragrant, golden yellow. 
Vigorous, spreading plant; profuse continuous 
bloomer all season. 30 to 35 petals. $1 each. 
Little Beauty. See page 5. 
Lord Charlemont. Deep crimson, well-formed, high- 
centered and fragrant blooms. Moderately bushy 
plant. 53 petals. $1 each. 
Los Angeles. Flowers brilliant salmon-pink with a 
strong underglow. One of the most popular Roses 
ever introduced. 27 petals. 
Louise Krause. Fragrant, pure yellow flowers, borne 
singly on long stems. The plant is vigorous, up¬ 
right, bushy; profuse, continuous bloomer. 45 
petals. $1 each. 
Lucie Marie. Fragrant flowers of fine buttercup- 
yellow, flushed with apricot and orange. Very 
handsome. About 40 petals. 
Ludwig Oppenheimer. See page 5. 
Lydia. See page 5. 
Malar-Ros. See page 5. 
Margaret Anne Baxter. Large buds and fragrant, 
snow-white flowers, sometimes tinged with soft 
flesh-pink. Very pretty. 75 petals. $1 each. 
Margaret McGredy. The double, cup-shaped 
flowers open vivid scarlet and turn to a remarkable 
shade of brick-red or scarlet-orange. This is one 
of the best garden Roses introduced in many years. 
30 petals. 
Marguerite Chambard. A flower of globular shape, 
rejoicing in a brilliant shade of geranium-red, 
tinted with vermilion. 50 petals. $1 each. 
Marie Maass. The large, intensely fragrant, pure 
white flowers become ivory-white as they develop. 
Vigorous, bushy plant. 60 petals. $1 each. 
Matador. See page 5. 
Max Krause. Flower double, moderately fragrant, 
yellow in bud, opening golden yellow. Growth 
vigorous; continuous bloomer all season. 65 
petals. See color illustration on page 16. $1 each. 
Max Vogel. Large, full, well-formed flowers of 
coppery salmon, passing to salmon-buff. Free 
flowering. 25 petals. $1 each. 
McGredy’s Ivory. Huge, deep-petaled, fragrant, 
creamy white flowers, sometimes illumined with 
pale yellow at the base. 35 petals. $1 each. 
McGredy’s Scarlet. Large, loosely formed flowers 
of vivid rose-red with a blazing scarlet sheen. 
A striking variety. Vigorous, healthy plants. 
35 petals. 
McGredy’s Yellow. See page 5. 
Memory. Large flowers of light pink with silvery 
reflexes, shading down to apple-blossom-pink and 
yellow at the base. Superb buds. A glorious Rose. 
15 petals. $1 each. 
Mevrouw G. A. van Rossem. Glowing apricot- 
colored buds which open to bright golden yellow 
flowers streaked and veined with orange. Richly 
fragrant. 30 petals. 
Mevrouw Welmoet van Heek. See page 5. 
Miss C. E. van Rossem. A bushy little plant bear¬ 
ing an abundance of dark red, well-formed buds 
and open flowers throughout the entire season. 
28 petals. 
Miss Cynthia Forde. Upright, vigorous plant which 
bears an abundance of sparkling pink, double, 
well-shaped flowers with pointed overlapping 
petals. 48 petals. 
Miss Rowena Thom. Vigorous plants with enormous 
buds and blooms of fiery rose shaded with mauve. 
Unusual color. 55 petals. 
Miss Willmott. Perfectly formed, enormous white 
flowers, occasionally touched with faint pink in 
the center. 40 petals. 
Mme. Butterfly. An indispensable garden Rose with 
light pink flowers faintly tinted with gold. Sweetly 
and richly perfumed. A perfect cut-flower. 30 
petals. 
Mme. Caroline Testout. Globular, silvery pink 
flowers. The ancestor of many of our garden 
Roses, and still a good variety. 28 petals. 
Mme. Edouard Herriot. Brilliant orange-red. A 
historical Rose of remarkable beauty. Unsur¬ 
passed by many of the recent varieties. 15 petals. 
Mme. Joseph Perraud. See page 5. 
Mme. Jules Bouche. One of the finest of all white 
Roses for garden use. Plants are very vigorous, 
branching, and always in bloom. Flowers medium¬ 
sized, white, flushed pink in center. 34 petals. 
Mme. Leon Pain. A notable old Rose of splendid 
bedding habit with soft flesh-pink flowers of ex¬ 
cellent form. 43 petals. 
Mme. Nicolas Aussel. Very large, double, intensely 
fragrant flowers of salmon, shaded carmine and 
ochre, tinted yellow. 25 petals. $1 each. 
Monarch. A splendid pale pink Rose of exhibition 
form, borne on an upright, vigorous plant. 60 
petals. 
Mrs. Aaron Ward. Well-shaped little buds of golden 
buff, unfolding to attractive, double, tawny gold 
and pink flowers. Low-growing plants. 50 petals. 
Mrs. A. R. Barraclough. Gigantic rose-pink flowers 
richly shaded with yellow and gold. One of the 
finest exhibition Roses grown. Strong grower. 
40 petals. 
Mrs. Beatty. A very pretty Rose of pure, soft yel¬ 
low. Plants are moderately vigorous and bloom 
abundantly. 25 petals. $1 each. 
Mrs. Charles Bell. Sport of the well-known Rose, 
Red Radiance. Flowers of similar shape, but 
delicate shell-pink. 27 petals. 
Mrs. Erskine Pembroke Thom. A well-known, 
thoroughly tested, pure, unfading yellow Rose, 
of fine form. One of the best garden yellows. 
Strong, bushy plants of medium height. 43 petals. 
Mrs. Henri Daendels. See page 5. 
Mrs. H. G. Johnstone. Rose-pink, deepening at 
base and edges to rose-madder. Robust grower 
and profuse bloomer. $1 each. 
Spray your Roses every 10 days with Tri-ogen 
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