PAINESVILLE, OHIO 
Hardy Roses 61 
80c 3 E f » r c "- 2 5 EVERBLOOMING ROSES 
6 for $4.25 Postpaid. 
Mme. Butterfly. 
Autumn A showy new variety with 
- fine small ovoid buds, burnt 
orange; the opened flowers are medi¬ 
um sized, double, cupped, lasting, 
slightly fragrant; burnt orange 
streaked with red. 
Charles P. Kilham. Very double; 
blazing scarlet-orange. 
g - 
pointed 
buds of orange-buff, and large fairly 
double, free, fragrant flowers ; yellow 
with apricot center. 
Feu Joseph Looymans p 0 °. ” t 
Golden Dawn 
(New). A big, full, 
sturdy Australian 
variety. The buds straw-yellow ; the 
perfect flowers sunflower aging to 
clear lemon-yellow. Very fragrant; 
very free-blooming. 
Pure white; a 
long bud and 
Marcia Stanhope 
full flower. 
McGredy’s Scarlet ^ e ?s Ub of 
large size and continuous bloom; bril¬ 
liant scarlet-tipped crimson, the base 
orange-yellow. 
Mevrouw G. A. Van Rossem 
A choice new kind with vivid orange 
and apricot buds, opening to bronzy 
yellow flowers shaded copper-pink. 
Miss Rowena Thom *‘ s e ,1/;,'',^! 
Mrs. Sam McGredy 
ied and 5 inches or more in diameter, 
borne freely and unremittingly all 
summer; the buds long and shapely. 
Brilliant rose-pink, intensified by a 
golden suffusion at base. 
A beautiful 
c oppery- 
scarlet-orange heavily flushed with red 
on the outside of petals. Flowers are 
large, delicately perfumed, and free. 
Red Columbia 
they open. Full-blown they still retain 
the Columbia compactness, with pro¬ 
fuse, bulky bloom and vivid color, 
crimson-scarlet with a velvet surface. 
Rev. F. Page-Roberts £ ®?orf 
; rose, glorious in the cooler days of 
autumn. A full, shapely flower, golden 
yellow stained red; the copper-red 
buds extra long. 
Hoslyn. Orange buds; full golden yel- 
l low flowers, with deeper center. 
Schwabenland. Extremely large (5 in.) 
‘ with a high spiral center, the petals 
curled and twisted. Luminous rich, 
rose-pink remaining undiminished un¬ 
til the petals fall. 
Mrs. 
E. P. 
Thom. 
Souv. de Claudius Pernet. 
Souv. de Georges Pernet. The color 
is a cheerful succession of reds—from 
orient to cochineal to carmine edge— 
made brilliant by a golden sheen. 
Radiance. 
Wilhelm Hordes Sfd 
ange and copper-red when fresh; but 
a veritable sunset at the close, with a 
broken background, and straggling 
rays of red. 
Baby Ramblers 
Called “Baby” Ramblers on account 
of their very short, close growth as 
compared with the long-known trellis 
climbers, the clustered flowers being 
identical. All summer, their brilliant 
clusters lay ribbons of color along the 
garden borders from June till fall. 
They seldom grow higher than 18 or 24 
inches, and spread never over 2 feet. 
Hedges of the thriftier kinds are 
now being used extensively, thus com¬ 
bining good low-growing hedge material 
with a continuous, sparkling show of 
flowers. 
White Killarney. 
PRICES 60c 
Except 
Noted 
3 for $1.65 
Crimson Baby Rambler 
this dwarf group. Border your paths 
and garden beds with lines of this 
vivid, long-seasoned, long-lived, deep 
crimson clustered Rose. (25 or more, 
by express, @ 45c). 
Hllen Foulsen. Full sweet-scented 
clusters of dark pink. 
£rna Tescbendorff. Unfading cardi¬ 
nal-red ; very dependable. 
Golden Salmon. Flowers large, semi¬ 
double, thickly clustered, red-salmon 
overlaid orange and gold; light eye. 
Gloria Mundi (New) * Brilliant 
orange-scarlet em¬ 
phatic, clear, uniform, comparatively 
unfading. Fully double. Each, 70c. 
3, $2.00. 
Kliiic’ Crarlot (New). Brilliant- 
fviuis acariex .. Red La Fayette.” 
Large, wavy petals-in heavy clusters, 
ideal for borders or mass planting. 
Each, 70c ; 3, $2.00. 
New Baby, Gloria Mundi. 
Qiinlcicf- The newest yellow Rose, 
_______ and probably the best. 
Derived from Joanna Hill, its 
character and habit are equal to 
that superb variety in every re¬ 
spect. Its color is deeper and rich¬ 
er than older yellow varieties; an 
even, shiny orange-copper. 
