tiful white, suffused with salmon-pink center; lone buds, petals 
reflex on opening to large, full, perfectly formed flowers; free 
habit. 
Madame Jules Groiez—(Gulllot, 1897.) (H. T.) Bright China 
Rose; large, full and perfect form; very floriferous; splendid 
for bedding and massing. Otherwise named the Red Kalserln. 
Madame Jules Gouchalt—(Turbat. 1913.) (D. P.) Buds 
bright vermilion-red, shaded clear orange-red; flowers same, 
passing to a bright, fiery rose which does not fade. Wood and 
foliage clear green, producing long, erect panicles of twenty-five 
to fifty perfectly formed blooms of good keeping qualities. 
Award of Merit and Silver Gilt Medal, R. H. S., and Gold 
Medal, Paris. 
Madame Lombard—(Lacharme, 1878.) (T.) Buds of deep 
rose, passing to salmon-pink; petals recurve to irregular 
triangular forms; very fragrant and free; similar to Chatenay. 
Madame Masson—(Masson, 1856.) (H. P.) Massive, double 
and full flowers of Intense red with crimson hue, highly per¬ 
fumed; a constant and profuse bloomer, very attractive and 
striking. 
Madame Melanie Soupert—(Pernet-Ducher, 1905.) (H. T.) 
Sunset-yellow on rosy-carmine ground; rich and striking colors. 
Bold, cupped petals, forming large, full and globular flowers. 
Madame Norbert Levavasseur or Baby Rambler—(Levavasseur, 
1903.) (P.) The Crimson Rambler in dwarf form, with the 
same clear, brilliant, ruby-red color. Hardy and healthy 
everywhere, attaining a height of twenty Inches, and blooming 
in profuse clusters until frost, and throughout winter if taken 
indoors 
Madame P. Euler or Prima Donna—(Gulllot, 1908.) (H. T.) 
A lovely shade of vermilion pink changing to silvery-pink; 
very large and full, of perfect form and fragrant; free, vig¬ 
orous and upright. Winner of First Prize and Gold Medal at 
Clermont. 
Madame Plantler—(Plantier, 1835.) (H. P.) A June Rose, 
well worthy of Its long and continued popularity. Pure white, 
large and double; hardy as a forest tree; a free and continuous 
bloomer. One of the best white Hybrid Perpetuals, used ex¬ 
tensively for cemetery planting. 
Madame Segond Weber—(Soupert & Notting, 1908.) (H. T.) 
Rosy-salmon deepening in color as its long, pointed buds open 
and expand into blooms of enormous size, with petals of heavy 
texture and beautiful in form. New and novel. 
Madame Valere Beaumez—(Schwartz, 1909.) (H. T.) Rosy- 
white with golden center, shaded glowing carmine and salmon, 
all of its fancy colors exquisitely beautiful. Large size, full 
form, well rounded, on heavy upright canes; dark green foliage, 
handsome, thick and glossy. Antoine Rivolre X Paul Lede. 
Madame Wagram or Climbing Paul Neyron—(Bemalx, 1895.) 
(H. N.) Clear, satiny-rose; large, beautiful flowers; few 
thorns; medium hardy. 
Mile. Blanche Martlgnat— (Gamon, 1903.) (T.) Buds ex¬ 
tremely long and pointed, of a distinct light silvery color; 
flowers beautiful peach-pink with tints of yellow and crimson 
as in the Aurora Borealis; free blooming and fragrant; 
abundant foliage of a distinct shape and color. Of the Marie 
van Houtte family and will command warm appreciation ae 
rapidly as it shall become better known. 
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