464 
THE GARDENING WORLD 
June 4. 1904. 
Chaber, green ; Ibis, rose pink ; and Fastuosum, red with car¬ 
mine veins. 
SOSES. 
Roses, as usual, were a strong feature of the show, and in¬ 
cluded some magnificent groups from the best growers. 
Messrs. William Paul and Son, Waltham Cross, Herts, sei 
up a magnificent collection, in which the Ramblers were very 
conspicuous. Amongst these we should mention Mme. Edmee 
Cocteau, silvery blush, Waltham Rambler, Dorothy Perkins, 
and Queen Alexandra (very highly coloured), the latter three 
of which have been figured in The Gardening World in jiast 
numbers. Morning Glow is described as a Riviera Rose, though 
with apricot. It is a fine colour for out of doors, being a Rose 
of the Countess of Folkestone type. Another new hybrid Tea 
had brilliant red flowers, and was just named for the first time. 
Messrs. Paul and Son, The Old Nurseries, Cheshunt, as usual, 
came up in grand form with a great variety of Roses, including 
new varieties and showing various types, including Teas, hybrid 
perpetual, hybrid Tea, Rambler, and garden Roses. A charm¬ 
ing new hybrid Rambler was that named Perle de Neige, with 
small, perfectly double, pure white flowers produced in large 
clusters. Although the plants are yet very small when well 
established, the. stems will attain a.'height of 14 ft. (See our 
illustration of this charming variety.) Another new Rose in 
their group was Snowdon, with delicate blush flowers almost 
Rose Perle de Neige. (Se3 Messrs. Paul and Son’s Roses.) 
vie, .might speak of it as belonging to the Rambler class. Reine 
Andre is a hybrid Polyantha with Tea blood in it. A new climb¬ 
ing Tea' Rose named billiard and Barrie had large rich apricot 
flowers shading to a paler tint at the edges. Mme. Charles 
Monier, a new climbing Tea, had very large and full blooms, 
cup-shaped, and soft apricot shaded with white on the outside. 
A well-flowered plant of this had a striking appearance. (See 
our illustration of this variety.) Another new Rose, named 
Field Marshal, is a climbing Tea with very large cup-shaped 
crimson-red flowers. Amongst the rank and file were such 
splendid Roses as Caroline Testout, Gloire Lyonnaise, Duke of 
Edinburgh, Mrs. J. Laing, Mrs. Sharman Crawford, Mme. 
Lacliarme, Medea, Comtesse Festetics Hamilton, Ulrich 
Brunner, Crimson Queen, Aurore, La France, Souvenir de Pierre 
Rotting, Mildred Grant, Mme. Abel Chalenay, Mme. Antoine 
Mari, Mme. Jules Grolez, Antoine Rivoire, and Marie Baumann. 
Earl of Warwick is a hybrid Tea, with salmon flowers tinted 
white, and originated as a sport from J. B. M. Camm. It there¬ 
fore belongs to the Bourbon section, and is flowering early. 
A very lovely Rose was Souvenir de William Robinson, of, 
conical shape in bud, with a charming arrangement of red, 
yellow, white and purple colours in pleasing combination. 
Blush Rambler, as its name implies, has blush flowers. Snow¬ 
storm is a dwarf Polyantha, a perpetual bloomer, with flowers 
varying from flesh to white.. Cherry Ripe was a cross between 
Mrs. W. J. Grant and Ellen Keller. A new American Rose, 
conical in bud and of a soft silvery rose, develops blooms of 
handsome size when fully expanded. Crimson Rambler, Tea 
Rambler, Dorothy Perkins, and others of that class are now 
indispensable in a group of this character. A charming one 
is Psyche, with soft pink flowers that may be compared to 
Crimson Rambler in other respects. Some of the plants were 
10 ft. high. Very tine in this group were Mme. Hoste, Frau 
Karl Druschki, and Florence Pemberton, a hybrid Tea of great 
