Telegrams : BEN CANT, Colchester. 
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Lord Penzance’s 
Hybrid Sweet Briar Roses. 
These form quite a distinct break from any class of rose yet in commerce, the foliage of all 
varieties is very sweetly scented. The flowers are single and semi-double freely produced, and they 
make perfectly hardy and large bushes. After flowering they produce bright scarlet seed pods, which 
are very pretty in autumn. Prune fairly hard the first spring ; in after years this class should NOT 
be pruned excepting to cut out any dead or bad wood. 
Dwarf. Name. Description. 
gd. Amy Robsart ( Keynes & Co., 1894), lovely deep rose. 
gd. Anne of Geierstein ( Keynes & Co., 1894), deep crimson rose. 
gd. Catherine Seyton ( Keynes & Co., 1895), rosy-pink with bright golden anthers. 
gd. Edith Bellenden ( Keynes & Co., 1895), pale pink. 
gd. Flora Mclvor ( Keynes & Co., 1894), blush rose colour, with white centre, 
gd. Green Mantle ( Keynes & Co., 1895), rich pink with white centre, 
showy. 
gd. Jeannie Deans ( Keynes & Co., 1895), semi-double, very large rosy crimson, 
gd. Julie Mannering ( Keynes & Co., 1895), pearly pink. 
9d. Lady Penzance ( Keynes & Co., 1894), beautiful soft tint of copper, the base of the 
petals bright yellow. 
gd. Lord Penzance ( Keynes & Co., 1894), soft shade of fawn, passing to emerald yellow 
in the centre. 
gd. Lucy Bertram (Keynes & Co., 1895), rich crimson with pure white centre and 
prominent yellow anthers. 
9d. Meg Merrilies ( Keynes & Co., 1894), crimson. 
gd. Rose Bradwardine (Keynes & Co., 1894), beautiful clear rose colour. 
Polyantha Roses. 
The varieties here named are of Dwarf Habit, very small flowers specially useful for table 
decoration and button-holes, and the plants are splendid for bedding, or as edgings for borders ; they 
also force well and are most abundant bloomers, a distinct and very charming class. They should 
be but little pruned ; merely cut out dead wood, and keep the centre of the plant from getting too 
crowded. 
Standard. Standard. Dwarf. 
Name. 
Description. 
2/- 2/6 
9d. Anny Muller (/. C. Schmidt, 1907), large clusters of brilliant rose- 
coloured flowers. 
1 /- Aschenbrodel (P. Lambert, 1902), colour, peach blood red, with 
orange salmon in centre ; 
1 /- Baby Dorothy, a perpetual flowering dwarf growing form of the 
well-known Dorothy Perkins. 
9d. Cecile Brunner ( Ducher, 1880), blush shaded pale pink. 
1/6 Coronet (W. Paul & Son, 1912), yellow' shaded with rose, very free 
and effective. 
2/- Dew Drop (Hobbies, Ltd., 1913), deep cerise colour, very ranunculus 
like in build of flower, blooms in clusters, very free. 
All Dwarf Roses, priced 1 /- each, will be IO/- doz. when not less than 12 at that price 
are taken, or 70/- IOO, purchaser’s selection. 50 or more charged at the 100 rate. 
