12 
M. H. WALSH, WOODS HOLE, MASS. 
HYBRID TEA ROSES, continued 
My Maryland. Bright salmon-pink with paler 
edges; delightfully fragrant and very floriferous. 
Old-Gold. Vivid reddish orange, with rich coppery 
red and apricot shadings. Dark coppery foliage; 
continuous flowering; good grower and mildew- 
proof; sweetly scented. Gold Medal, National 
Rose Society. 
Ophelia. Salmon-flesh shaded with rose; perfect 
shape and habit. Excellent for forcing, and for 
out-of-doors. One of the best. 
Padre. Brilliant coppery red, flushed with yellow 
at the base—a charming color combination. The 
beautiful, long-pointed buds are borne on long, 
stiff stems. Good for cutting or garden decoration. 
Vigorous in growth; very floriferous. $1.50 each. 
Papa Gontier. Rosy crimson; fine, long buds. Very 
fragrant. Flowers of good shape, though not so 
double as some other varieties. 
Pharisaer. Rosy white, shaded salmon. 
Pilgrim. A beautiful shade of bright rose-pink. 
The bud is long and of ideal form and the petals 
are of good substance and retain their color until 
ready to drop. The plant is a wonderful grower, 
producing blooms in abundance. Field-grown 
plants. 
Premier. Pure rose-pink blooms, produced freely 
on stiff stems; very fragrant. 
Prince de Bulgarie. Deep rosy flesh, shaded with 
salmon; flowers very large and full. 
■Queen Mary. Canary-yellow, crayoned with car¬ 
mine; most floriferous, and its exquisite, beauti¬ 
fully serrated leaves and apple-green wood lend it 
a character all its own; deliciously tea perfumed; 
growth vigorous. One of the most decorative 
Roses of today. 
Queen of Fragrance. Double, shell-pink blooms, 
tipped with silver, of good shape and very fra¬ 
grant. Desirable for every garden. 
Radiance. An American variety; awarded the silver 
medal of the American Rose Society in 1914. 
Flowers bright carmine-salmon, mingled with rose, 
shading to a coppery yellow at base of 
petals. The plant blooms freely. 
Red Cross. Orange-crimson-scarlet, with delightful 
Tea Rose perfume. Foliage waxy and leathery. 
Growth is vigorous and erect; very floriferous. 
Red Radiance. A sport of Radiance; has the same 
free-flowering qualities, but the plants are stronger 
in growth and blooming habit. The blooms are 
carried on long, strong stems. 
Red-Letter Day. The glowing scarlet-crimson buds 
and fully opened cactus-like flowers never fade, 
as the reflex of the petals in satiny crimson-scarlet 
colorings is devoid of blue or magenta. Its 
refined, vigorous, erect growth, with dark glaucous 
sage-green foliage, is festooned with delightful 
blooms throughout the entire flowering season. 
It is an ideal Rose for bedding or cutting, combin¬ 
ing in a marked degree all the essentials required 
in either class. Awarded Gold and Silver-Gilt 
Medals of National Rose Society. 
Richmond. Pure scarlet; of free-growing and free- 
flowering habit. 
Rose Marie. Clear rose pink with long pointed 
bud. 
Senateur Mascuraud. Slender, tapering buds, open¬ 
ing into large, light yellow blooms with richer 
tints at center; fairly fragrant. 
Shot Silk. Medium-sized buds and blooms of cop¬ 
pery rose tinged with apricot and yellow; sweetly 
scented. 
Souvenir de Claudius Pernet. Lovely sunflower- 
yellow blooms, deepening in center. Plant is of 
branching habit and carries many large, full 
blooms. 
Souvenir de George Beckwith. Large, double, 
salmon-pink and yellow blooms; fairly fragrant. 
Resembles the Lyon Rose somewhat. $2 each. 
Souvenir de Georges Pernet. Brick-red buds, ex¬ 
panding to double blooms of terra-cotta-pink; 
sweetly scented. Free bloomer and hardy. $2 
each. 
Souvenir de H. A. Verschuren. Light buff-yellow 
blooms, nearly perfect in form, shading to orange 
in the center; fragrant. In cool seasons the color 
is intense. 
Souvenir du President Carnot. Flesh, shaded white; 
good-sized flower. 
Sunburst. A very vigorous grower, of erect and 
slight spreading habit, with very few thorns; fine, 
reddish green, bronzed foliage; fine, long, pointed 
buds, generally borne singly on long, stout stems; 
flower large, fairly full and of elongated cupped 
form; cadmium-yellow, with orange center. This 
variety has attracted great attention, both in 
Europe and America. It flowers freely over a 
long season. Good for forcing under glass, for 
bedding and for the garden. 
The Queen Alexandra Rose. Blooms fairly full and 
of medium size. The color is unusual, being scar¬ 
let on the inside and yellow on the outside of the 
petals; quite fragrant. 
Viscountess Folkestone. Creamy white, center deep 
salmon-pink; petals of great substance. 
William F. Dreer. Flowers soft, silvery shell-pink; 
at certain stages of development a golden suf¬ 
fusion illuminates the entire flower. Blooms are 
at their best in the half-opened stage. 
Radiance Rose 
