NEW, BARE, AND SELECT PLANTS . 
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fine named sorts. They have been awarded the highest prize by the Massachu¬ 
setts Horticultural Society. These we are euabled to oiler at very reasonable rates. 
For planting for masses of color they are unequalled. 
Price, 15c. each; per dozen; $5 per hundred; $40 per thousand. 
ROSES. 
Our plants are upon their own roots, and are mostly grown in pots for the better 
convenience for transporting at any season and the pertalnty of their growth. It 
is well kuown that roses transplanted from the open ground often fail to grow; 
and of those that succeed, scarcely any of them bloom the first season. Those 
from pots take root at once, and flower abundantly. Purchasers leaving the selec¬ 
tion to us will get a fine assortment of varieties, and generally better plants. 
To obtain a fine display of roses, the soil should be well enriched with old 
manure, covering the ground in autumn four inches deep. If the season is dry, 
give them plenty of water, and occasionally liquid manure. 
TEA ROSES. 
Adam, rose; very large and fine. 
Abricote, light, rosy fawn. 
Archimede, rosy pink, tinted fawn. 
Bon Silene, rich, deep rose; fragrant. 
Bongere, glossy, bronzed rose. 
Ciotiide, cream and rose; large. 
Clara {Sylvian, pure white. 
Due de Magenta, rose-tinted fawn. 
Devoniensis, creamy white; superb. 
Goubault, bright rose; very large. 
Gloire de Dijon, fawn and rose. 
Hovey’s White Tea, waxy white. 
Isabella Sprunt, canary-yellow. 
Jearmie, rose and salmon; fragrant. 
La Boule d’Or, golden-yellow. 
Mad. Maurin, pale yellow; fine shape. 
Moire, flesh, shaded fawn; large. 
Marshall Niel, deep golden-yellow. 
Mad. Joseph Halpen, rose and fawn. 
Mad. Damazin, pale rose and salmon. 
Our selection, 50c. 
Mad, de Vatry, carmine-rose. 
Mad. Falcot, orange-yellow; globular. 
Mad. Williams, yellowish. 
Mad. Margottin, citron-yellow, [tre. 
Mad. Willermoz, white, salmon cen- 
Mad. Celina Noirey, light rose; fine. 
Mad Ducher, clear yellow. 
Marie Sisley, large; yellow', margined 
red. 
Marie Ducher, very large; light rose. 
Nephetos, pure white; very large. 
Pactole, pale lemon; yellow centre. 
Pauline Labonte, light, rosy blush. 
Rubens, yellowish, tinted with rose. 
Reine du Portugal, yellow. 
Rosa alba, white. 
Souvenir d’Elize, cream, tinted rose. 
Souvenir d’un Ami, bright rose. 
Safirano, apricot color; very fine. 
Yellow Tea, clear yellow; beautiful, 
each; $5 per dozen. 
. BON SILENE. 
This old variety, which will be found enumerated in our catalogue twenty years 
ago, is now considered the best Rose for winter-blooming, and is extensively cul¬ 
tivated around Boston for bouquets. The color of the flower-buds, just before 
they open, is very bright and fresh, and it grows and blossoms very freely. 
Price, 60c. each; $4.50 per dozen; $20 per hundred. 
CLIMBING DEVONIENSIS. 
This is one of the most exquisite Roses. The flowers are large, quite double, 
and of a fine creamy white, slightly tinted with blush. The growth is remarkably 
vigorous, making annual shoots ten feet long, which are loaned with its beautiful 
blossoms. Price, 60c. to $2 each; $4.50 to $8 per dozen. 
MARSHAL NIEL. 
No yellow Rose yet produced equals Marshal Niel. The flowers are of the largest 
size, highly fragrant, and of the richest and deepest golden-yellow, the flowers 
remaining in perfection several days. It is a vigorous grower, like the Lamarque, 
and a plant with several hundred blossoms is one of the finest objects among 
flowers. Price, 50c. to $2 each; $4.60 to $15 per dozen. 
