CHAMPION CITY GREENHOUSES, SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. 
MADAME ANTOINE MARI—This is 
a grand Rose for the garden and 
lawn and sure to give satisfaction. 
It is a clean, handsome grower, and 
resembles in this respect that 
famous old variety Marie Van 
Houtte. An early and profuse bloom¬ 
er, both buds' and fiow’ers are extra 
large and beautiful. The form re¬ 
sembles a nice Camellia bloom. Color 
creamy-white, flushed with rosy-red. 
First-class in every way. 60 cents 
per dozen; $4.00 per hundred. 
MADAM JENNY GILLEMOT — Buds 
long and pointed, deep saffron-vel- 
Iow, opening canary with dark 
golden shadings; blooms large, petals 
immense; opens very freely; a line 
upright grower of branching habit; 
exquisitely beautiful; very large in 
size, but very long and pointed. 50 
cents per dozen; $3.50 per hundred. 
MADAME PHILIPPE RIVOIRE—Very 
free branching in growth, foliage 
deep bronzy-green; flowers large and 
full and globular; color apricot-yel¬ 
low, center nankin-yellow, reverse 
of petals carmine; extra. A few 
bushes of a Rose of this character 
producing such an abundance of 
brightness at all times are a great 
acquisition to any Rose garden. 50 
cents per dozen; $3.50 per hundred. 
MADAME LEON PAIN—Robust growth; 
smooth wood; handsome plum-col¬ 
ored foliage; flowers large, full and 
free in opening; silvery-salmon, cen¬ 
ter orange-yellow, reverse bright red 
and yellow. In our gardens the past 
summer it has at all times been a 
grand sight, bearing a great pro¬ 
fusion of exceedingly large brilliant 
Roses. 50 cents per dozen; $3.50 per 
hundred. 
MAGNAFRANO—This Rose is becom¬ 
ing popular because of its splendid 
crimson-scarlet color and magnifi¬ 
cent buds. The flowers are large, 
very regular, full and double, and 
deliciously sweet. 60 cents per 
dozen; $4.00 per hundred. 
MRS. BENJAMIN R. CANT—A splen¬ 
did new garden Rose of round, full 
form and solid color, clear, bright, 
rosy-pink, large size, double and 
full, and quite fragrant. The most 
vigorous grower of all Tea Roses. 
It is an excellent garden Rose—has 
come to stay. 50 cents per dozen; 
$3.50 per hundred. 
O. A. SINGER—A fine garden Rose 
of clear carmine color, deepening 
to the center of the flower. It 
flowers very continuously and freely, especially fine 
in spring and autumn. This grand variety was 
sent out by Mr. Peter Lambert, the great Ger¬ 
man rosarian, and named by him in honor of Mr. 
A. Singer, the Oberhofgartner of Bad, Kissingen. 
60 cents per dozen; $4.00 per hundred. 
PERLE VON GODESBURG (The Yellow Kaiserin)— 
This is identical with Kaiserin Augusta Victoria, 
the peer of any rose except in color, being a pure 
white with a yellow center. Exquisitely beauti¬ 
ful. 60 cents per dozen; $4.00 per hundred. 
SOUVENIR OF WOOTTON (Hybrid Tea.) (Forcing.) 
—Color velvety-red, equal to Jacqueminot. It is 
a double Rose, and is good in bud, half open, oi 
fully expanded. Full, open flowers, frequently six 
inches in diameter. A most excellent Rose. 50 
cents per dozen; $3.50 per hundred. 
STRIPED REINE MARIE H ENRI ETTE-Everybody 
is familiar with that best of all climbing red 
Roses, Reine Marie Henriettc. It is planted more 
largely in Philadelphia and south of that latitude 
than any other climbing Rose. This striped or 
variegated form is identical in every way except 
that the flowers are a bright red, distinctly striped 
with light pink. It will be planted as widely as 
any climbing Rose when Rose lovers know Its 
beauty. 50 cents per dozen; $3.50 per hundred. 
SUNRISE (Tea.) (Forcing.)—In close bud form It 
shows the high, brilliant colors seen only in the 
Austrian Copper, scarlet and yellow. As it opens 
the color deepens, the scarlet turning darker red, 
the yellow to orange and copper, inside of petals 
golden-yellow. Large, perfectly double and of 
grand form. 60 cents per dozen; $3.50 per hun¬ 
dred. 
Helen Good. (For description see page 4.) 
SUNSET (Tea.) (Forcing.)—The color is a remark¬ 
able shade of rich golden-amber, elegantly tinged 
and shaded with dark, ruddy copper, intensely 
beautiful and resembling in color a splendid 
“afterglow.” 50 cents per dozen; $3.50 per hun¬ 
dred. 
TRIER—Semi-double, creamy-white, producing large 
clusters, free and continuous. Mr. Iyambert’s new 
Rambler. 25 cents each; $2.50 per dozen. 
TAUSENDSCHON, or THOUSAND BEAUTY — A 
climbing Rose that comes to us from Germany. 
The flowers upon first opening are the most deli¬ 
cate shade of pink ever seen in a Rose, might be 
described as a white delicately flushed pink chang¬ 
ing to rosy-carmine. It gets its name from its 
many flowers and the variation in coloring; beau¬ 
tiful. 75 cents per dozen; $5.00 per hundred. 
WM. R. SMITH, or MAIDEN’S BLUSH—Have you 
ever seen the blush of a beautiful maiden? If so, 
you will readily understand why this Rose has 
been so named. The soft blending of the salmon- 
pinks and the rose-pinks and the beautiful flesh 
tints in this Rose give a singular resemblance to 
the entrancing flush on a maiden’s cheek. Grown 
by Shellum, the noted Philadelphia florist, a grand 
garden Rose. 25 cents each; $1.50 per dozen; $10.00 
per hundred. 
WELLESLEY—First shown by one of the Massachu¬ 
setts growers, Wellesley has been awarded some 
of the best prizes at the Rose shows all over the 
country. Th color is a beautiful shade of pink, 
the outside of the petals being very bright in color, 
with silvery reverse. 60 cents per dozen; $4.00 per 
hundred. 
