6 
Erwin's Nursery 
DENTON, TEXAS 
T 
ETOILE DE HOLLAND 
sive crops, with good foliage easily pro¬ 
tected from disease. 
GEORG ARENDS (HP. 1910). Light pink, 
Handsome buds open to large and full 
blooms of good form and fine fragrance. 
GOLDEN OPHELIA (HT. 1918). Well 
shaped blooms w i t h a heart of gold¬ 
en yellow, shading lighter toward the 
edges of the fiower, and delicately per¬ 
fumed. The plant is robust and healthy 
and blooms with the greatest freedom. 
GRUS AN TEPLITZ (China. 1897). Small 
to medium sized double blooms of bril¬ 
liant crimson with velvety shadings and 
intense fragrance. Blooms in open clus¬ 
ters with the utmost freedom throughout 
the whole season. Bush extremely vig¬ 
orous and hardy. 
HADLEY (HT. 1914). A rich, crimson red 
fiower with velvety texture, lovely form 
and perfume. Splendid color which blues 
very little. Moderate in growth and 
bloom. 
HOOSIER BEAUTY (HT. 1915). A hybrid 
tea rose originating in Indiana. The 
color is a beautiful velvety crimson, me¬ 
dium buds opening into large, torch¬ 
like double fiowers borne on long stems. 
Fragrant. Plant is healthy but erratic 
in growth with rather sparse foliage. 
HORTULANUS BUDDE (HT. 1919). Dark 
red buds opening to orange-scarlet fiow¬ 
ers, yellow in center. The fragrant 
blooms are produced in great profusion 
on the vigorous plant. A fine bedding 
rose. 
IMPRESS (HT. 1929). Large, ovoid buds 
of deep coral-red, opening to very large. 
extremely double, cup-shaped fiowers of 
rich salmon-cerise, suffused with a lumi- 
inous golden sheen. 
ISOBEL (HT. 1916). Exquisitely pointed 
buds and fiowers with huge petals fiushed 
with carmine-red and orange, becoming 
pink with age. Fragrant; single; five 
petaLs. 
JULIEN POTIN ( H T.). Large, double 
fiowers of deep yellow, with long stems. 
The same type as Souvenir de Claudius 
Pernet, but more richly colored. Vig¬ 
orous, upright plant; profuse bloomer 
and disease resistant. 
JOHN RUSSELL (HP. 1924). Large, ovoid 
buds and immense crimson fiowers of 
the old time globular type with the 
famous exhibition center. Plant excep¬ 
tionally strong and vigorous and one of 
the handsomest of the red roses. 
JONKHEER J. L. MOCK (HT. 1908). Car¬ 
mine buds of gigantic size, opening very 
slowly into enormous blooms of deep 
carmine-pink against which the refiex- 
ing petals show an inner surface of sil¬ 
ver-rose. A strong growing plant, and 
healthy. 
KILLARNEY DOUBLE WHITE ( H T. 
1914). Very long pointed buds of the typ¬ 
ical Killarney form, but snow white. Open 
blooms beautifully formed with a few 
more petals than the original variety. 
KAISERIN AUGUSTE VIKTORIA (HT. 
1891). Well formed, creamy buds which 
develop slowly to blooms of absolutely 
perfect form, snowy white with a slight 
tint of lemon at the center; fragrant and 
free fiowering. 
LADY HILLINGDON (T. 1910). Slender 
pointed buds and elegantly cupped flow¬ 
ers of deep saffron or apricot yellow, 
paling to the edges and becoming lighter 
as they expand; fragrant. The plant is 
erect with perfect foliage and produces 
its flowers continuously on strong, wiry 
stems. 
LADY MARGARET STEWART (HT. 1926). 
A large exhibition bloom with enormous 
petals. It is of perfeet form, with a high 
pointed center, golden yellow, .shaded 
and streaked v'^dh orange and red. Not 
very fragrant. Especially handsome foli¬ 
age. 
LORD CHARLEMONT (HT.). A notably 
good garden rose, vivid scarlet-crimson, 
with deen green, leathery foliage, dis¬ 
ease resistant, better than average 
growth and few thorns. Globular, well 
shaped buds on long stems, fine for cut 
flowers. 
LOS ANGELES (Per. 1916). Lovely buds 
and exquisite flowers of salmon-nink. 
with yellow shading toned with coi’al and 
gold at the base of the petals. The open 
