HYBRID PERPETUAL ROSES 
RUHM VON STEINFURTH. (L. Weigand, 
1920.) Pure bright red; heavily perfumed. 
SENATEUR VAISSE. (Guillot pere, 1859.) 
Brilliant red with darker shadings. 
S. M. GUSTAVE V. (P. Nabonnand, 1922.) 
Perfect, live pink; very fragrant. 
SOLEIL D’OR. (Pernet-Ducher, 1900.) Or¬ 
ange-gold and pink. The famous ancestor 
of all the highly colored modern Hybrid 
Teas or Pernetianas. 75 cts. each. 
SOUV. DE MME. H. THURET. (Texier, 
1922.) Salmon-pink with chrome-yellow 
stamens. Almost everblooming. 
SOUV. DE WILLIAM WOOD. (E. Verdier, 
1864.) Dark velvety red; very fragrant. 
ST. INGBERT. (P. Lambert, 1926.) White 
with yellowish and reddish center. 
SUZANNE-MARIE RODOCANACHI. (L. 
Levfeque, 1883.) Rosy cerise, shaded 
lighter. Liberal in bloom. 
SYMPHONY. (C. Weigand, 1934.) Plant 
Patent No. 79. Pink, deeper center. $1.25. 
THOMAS MILLS. (E. Verdier, 1873.) 
Large; deep pink, streaked with white. 
TRIOMPHE DE L’EXPOSITION. (Margot- 
tin pere, 1855.) Large cherry-red blooms. 
ULRICH BRUNNER. (A. Levet, 1881.) 
Large; bright carmine-red; fragrant. 75 cts. 
VICTOR HUGO. (Schwartz, 1885.) Car¬ 
mine-red, shaded dark purple. 
VICTOR VERDIER. (Lacharme, 1852.) 
Salmon-pink, with darker shadings. 
We can also supply the following varieties 
at Si each 
Arrillaga 
Cardinal Prituze 
Charles Gater 
Chot Pestitele 
Coronation 
Druschki Rubra 
Duke of Edinburgh 
Dupuy Jamain 
General Stefanik 
Giant of Battles 
Her Majesty 
Jeannie Dickson 
Juliet 
Mabel Morrison 
Marchioness of London¬ 
derry 
Margaret Dickson 
Marquise de Castellane 
Mile. Eugene Verdier 
Mons. Louis Ricard 
Mrs. J. F. Redly 
Pittsburgh 
Vick’s Caprice 
COLLECTION No. 1: We will supply 1 each of 100 varieties, for $80.00 
COLLECTION No. 2: We will supply 1 each of 25 varieties, for $20.00 
I NCREASING in importance, as their 
garden value is realized, this class 
soon promises to rival the Hybrid 
Teas. Requiring less attention than 
Hybrid Teas, with a color-range almost 
as varied, the Polyantha Roses are in¬ 
dispensable for bedding, mass effects, 
and edgings. They flower continuously 
from early summer to frost—dwarf vari¬ 
eties and tall varieties, small-flowered 
and large-flowered. 
Prune lightly with an occasional thinning out of old wood. The tall-growing varieties we have indicated with “T,” and 
those which are particularly good for hedging are marked with “H.” All others are low bedding varieties. 
FLORIBUNDA ROSES 
This is a new name, not a new class, which has received some recent publicity. The name was coined to indicate those 
Roses which are especially suitable for mass bedding effects; in other words, those which we have for years called “good 
bedding Roses.” We have indicated the Floribunda Roses by an asterisk (*) on this and the following page. 
SMALL-FLOWERING VARIETIES 
75 cts. each, $6.50 for 10 of any one variety, unless noted. Those priced at $1 each are $9 for 10 of any one variety. 
7ENNCHEN MULLER. (J. C. Schmidt, 
1907.) Shining, bright pink blooms of 
fairly large size, with sharply quilled petals, 
borne in fine trusses. 
CAMEO. (G. de Ruiter, 1932.) This is a dis¬ 
tinct shade of shell-pink and salmon, with 
a glow of gold. It is half-way between the 
pinks and the orange-salmon Roses. 
CECILE BRUNNER. (Mme. Ducher, 1880.) 
Small, exquisitely formed bud and flower of 
light pink with yellow base. 
CORAL CLUSTER. (R. Murrell, 1920.) 
Small, pale coral-pink flowers of rather 
delicate shade, in very large trusses. Plant 
of excellent growth. 
CORAL CUP. (Bobbink & Atkins, 1936.) A 
sport of Gloria Mundi, discovered and de¬ 
veloped by ourselves. The same healthy, 
compact, free-blooming plant as Gloria 
Mundi but with flowers of a soft shade of 
coral, just as fresh and dainty as it can be. 
$1 each. 
RU 
Sunshine 
\ 
Anne Poulsen. See page 14 
FOR LARGE-FLOWERING VARIETIES, see page 14 
13 
DAINTY. (G. de Ruiter, 1931.) Medium¬ 
sized, cup-shaped flowers of pale salmon- 
pink, keeping an even color. 
DOLLY VARDEN (G. de Ruiter, 1930.) 
Unusually large, double, clear pink flowers 
borne on extremely floriferous plants. 
EUGENIE LAMESCH. (P. Lambert, 1899.) 
Reddish orange buds and yellow, semi¬ 
double flowers, which turn to pink with 
age; they bloom in small clusters. Tall 
growth. 
GLORIA MUNDI. (G. de Ruiter, 1929.) 
Rather large, fully double, lasting flowers 
of glowing scarlet-orange, borne in clusters. 
GOLDEN SALMON SUPERIEUR. (G. de 
Ruiter, 1929.) An improved form of Golden 
Salmon, with small, bright 
scarlet - salmon flowers, 
tinged with yellow. $1 each. 
KATHARINA ZEIMET. (P. 
Lambert, 1901.) Very 
pure white flowers. 
MISS EDITH CAVELL. (Meiderwyk, 1917.) 
Small, semi-double, scarlet-red flowers 
shaded darker. Strong, bushy plants. 
ORLEANS ROSE. (Levavasseur & Sons, 
1909.) Flowers small, fairly double, bril¬ 
liant light red with a whitish center. 
^SUNSHINE. (M. Robichon, 1927.) The flow¬ 
ers are small, full, golden orange when first 
opening, changing to soft pink. A few 
flowers will scent a whole room. Dwarf 
plants, blooming freely. $1 each. See color 
illustration below. 
TIP-TOP. (P. Lambert, 1909.) Orange-yel¬ 
low, running into lemon-yellow, with yel¬ 
lowish pink edges. Very dainty. 
TRIOMPHE ORLEANAIS. (Peauger, 1912.) 
Cherry-red, quite double. 
