HORTICULTURAL SPECIALIST 
5 
Each 
leathery foliage and beautiful big coppery 
pink flowers..$1.00 
Radiance. (John Cook, 1908.) Probably the 
hardiest, most vigorous and most generally 
dependable hybrid tea in America, free from 
about all ailments, almost too robust to plant 
with the bulk of its class. Color silvery rose, 
and fragrant. 
Red Radiance. (Gude Bros., 1916.) Rosy red 
and floriferous like the type, very vigorous .. 
Rev. F. Page Roberts. (B. R. Cant & Sons, 
1921.) A tremendously popular variety, the 
long pointed buds are coppery red in color, 
opening a lovely yellow, not a very good 
grower . 
Sir Henry Segrave. (Alex. Dickson & Sons, 
1932.) Long pointed buds develop into very 
large high centered flowers of a lemon yel¬ 
low color deepening towards the centre, has 
a rich fragrance.$1.00 
Signora. (Aicardi, 1936, Patent 201.) A strik¬ 
ingly beautiful new variety, long buds of . 
warm burnt sienna open to a lighter hue sug¬ 
gesting mandarin. Handsome foliage, flow¬ 
ers carried on long stems, splendid for cutting.$2.00 
Token. (Montgomery Co., 1934, Plant Patent 
No. 95.) Of an unusual color, a glowing shade 
of rich unripened apricot finished with soft 
coral.$1.25 
Talisman. (Montgomery, 1929.) No rose ever 
introduced made such a sensation as Talis¬ 
man. It blooms very freely in the garden, the 
flowers are unique in their colorings, running 
from rich apricot, gold, deep and rose pink to 
old rose. Immensely popular. 
Ville de Paris. (Pernet-Ducher, 1920.) Very- 
rich buttercup yellow, buds are long and flow¬ 
ers extra large. Preferable to Souv. de Claud¬ 
ius Pernet . 
Wilhelm Kordes. (W. Kordes Sons, 1922.) The 
color here is truly unique, being rich red with 
a coppery suffusion overlying a golden salmon 
ground. Long buds, high centered flowers and 
very fragrant . 
Willowmere. Brilliant pink flowers suffused 
with a golden light. 
All Hybrid Tea roses offered unless otherwise 
priced are 75 cents each, $8.00 per dozen, $60.00 per 
100. We handle only the highest quality of field grown 
two year old grafted plants. We do not offer any of 
the cheap discarded greenhouse forced roses, nor do 
we handle any on their own roots as they are value¬ 
less in New England, although succeeding quite well 
in certain of our warmer states. 
HYBRID PERPETUAL ROSES 
These roses which were immensely popular before 
the advent of the Hybrid Teas are more winter 
hardy than the latter and well adapted for the colder 
portions of New England. In nearly every case 
they have a very pronounced fragrance. While the 
majority bloom principally in June, a few are fair¬ 
ly constant bloomers. 
Captain Hayward. (Bennett, 1893.) Crimson scar¬ 
let, fine form, fragrant and robust. 
Frau Karl Druschki. (Peter Lambert, 1900.) Very 
large, pure white, extremely vigorous, although 
