10 
M. H. WALSH, WOODS HOLE, MASS. 
HYBRID TEA ROSES, continued 
George C. Waud. Glowing orange-vermilion; large, 
full, and perfectly formed; free-flowering. 
Gustav Griinerwald. Carmine-pink, center yellow; 
large, full; buds long, pointed. A splendid Rose 
for bedding and cutting. 
Hadley. Bright red. The blooms are produced very 
freely and in almost unbroken succession. 
Harry Kirk. A soft golden yellow shading to lighter 
yellow at the edge. 
Hill’s America. Beautiful shade of pink. Buds long 
and pointed; flowers of great size and substance; 
fragrant. Vigorous in growth. $1.50 each. 
His Majesty. Dark crimson, shaded deep vermilion, 
crimson toward the edges; full; large; sweetly 
perfumed. 
Hon. Ina Bingham. Of purest pink, deeply venated, 
singularly beautiful. Semi-double blooms carried 
on rigid stems. Growth exceptionally robust. 
Hoosier Beauty. A long slender bud opening into a 
fiery crimson bloom. Vigorous grower. 
Jacques Porcher. Saffron-yellow ground, overlaid 
with carmine-white, changing to clear yellow with 
darker yellow in center. 
J. B. Clark. Deep scarlet, shaded blackish crimson. 
Joseph Hill. Pink, salmon-shaded, outside of petals 
pink-copper; large; full. A superb variety. 
Jonkheer J. L. Mock. Carmine, changing to impe¬ 
rial pink; blooms of large size and highly perfumed. 
The flower is well built, well carried, large, and 
handsome. The plant is a strong, vigorous grower. 
Has in its pedigree Mme. Caroline Testout, Mme. 
Abel Chatenay and Farbenkonigin. A novelty 
which attracted great attention at the Inter¬ 
national Show in London, in 1912, and one which 
has not lost its popularity through the succeeding 
years. 
Kaiserin Augusta Victoria. Beautiful primrose; 
excellent. 
Kate Moulton. Rosy pink shading to salmon. 
K. of K. Semi-double. Color intense scarlet with a 
velvety sheen. $1.50 each. 
Killarney. Deep shell-pink; large, with petals very 
deep, free-flowering and vigorous. 
KILLARNEY BRILLIANT. We consider this new 
Rose—a sport from the original Pink Killarney— 
the most valuable forcing Rose that has been intro¬ 
duced for many years. It is a great improvement 
on the original Pink Killarney; first, because of its 
much more brilliant color, which is almost crimson 
in bright weather, while in dull or cloudy weather 
the color is pure, deep, rosy carmine. In addition 
to its great superiority in color, the flower is 
larger, having from twenty-five to forty full-sized 
petals; deliciously tea-rose perfumed. A great 
acquisition. Awarded Silver Medals, American 
Rose Society, New York Horticultural Society, 
and Pennsylvania Horticultural Society. 
King George V. New. Growth vigorous and very 
branching; flowers very large, and very full, open¬ 
ing freely; rich, blackish crimson, with violet 
flush. 
Kootenay. Clear primrose; large, very full. A free 
bloomer. $1.50 each. 
Konigin Carola. Pale satin-rose; large, full flower; 
very free, and good. 
Lady Alice Stanley. Deep coral-rose on outside of 
petals; inside pale flesh; large, full; fragrant; fine. 
Lady Ashtown. Very pale rose, shading to yellow 
at base of petals, reflex of petals silvery pink. 
Lady Battersea. Beautiful cherry-crimson, per¬ 
meated with an orange shade. Of moderate size; 
very free-flowering. 
Lady Greenall. Intense saffron-orange heavily zoned 
and overspread on deep creamy white; reflex of 
petal faintly suffused delicate shell-pink. Large, 
very floriferous. Strongly tea-perfumed. Very fine 
Rose. 
Lady Mary Ward. Orange, shading to almost an 
apricot tint. 
Lady Pirrie. Deep, coppery, reddish salmon; inside 
of petals apricot-yellow, tinged with fawn-copper. 
Desirable in every respect. 
Lady Ursula. A flesh-pink, practically a solid color. 
Blooms freely during the entire season. 
La France. Beautiful bright pink; large, full, and 
fine. 
LaTosca. Soft pink, tinted with rosy white and yellow. 
Laurent Carle. Brilliant velvety carmine. 
Lemon Pillar. Sulphur-yellow. Plant is an ex¬ 
tremely vigorous grower. $2 each. 
Liberty. Brilliant velvety crimson, even shade 
throughout; free-flowering. 
Lieut. Chaure. Velvety crimson-red; flower large, 
fairly full, possessing petals of great depth; fine 
cupped form. 
Los Angeles. Flaming pink, toned with coral and 
shaded with translucent gold at the base of petals. 
Buds long and pointed, opening into large flowers. 
Two-year-old, dormant, field-grown plants. 
Louise Catherine Breslau. New. Coral-red, shaded 
with chrome-yellow; flower very large, full, and 
globular, possessing large petals of great depth; 
superb coloring, shrimp-pink, shaded with reddish 
coppery orange and chrome-yellow on the reverse 
side of petals. 
Mabel Drew. Exquisitely shaped, with circular 
petals. Blooms large and full; deep cream, passing 
to canary-yellow in the center. 
Marie Van Houtte. Clear sulphur-yellow with edges 
of petals tipped with rose. 
Mme. Abel Chatenay. Carmine-rose, shaded with 
salmon. 
Mme. Butterfly. A new Hybrid Tea Rose some¬ 
times called a “glorified Ophelia.” Color is flesh 
tinted with pink, apricot and gold. Free flowering 
and fully as hardy as any of the Hybrid Teas. 
$1.50 each. 
Mme. Caristie Martel. Large, globular flowers of 
sulphur-yellow, deeper in center. 
Mme. Caroline Testout. Bright satin-rose; large; 
globular. 
Mme. Charles Lutaud. Center chrome-yellow, 
slightly blended with bright rosy scarlet on the 
outer petals; very large flower, full and globular. 
This variety was derived from Marquise de 
Sinety, and is easily distinguished from the latter 
by its deep coloring and more vigorous habit of 
growth. It is bound to become an invaluable Rose 
for exhibition or for garden decoration because 
of color and freedom of bloom. 
Mme. Edmee Metz. Rosy carmine, shaded salmon; 
large, very full; good. 
Mme. Edmond Rostand. Pale flesh-color, shaded 
with salmon, and marked at the center with 
reddish orange. 
Mme. Jules Bouche. White, shaded pink; large, 
full; free-flowering; extra choice. 
