Radiance and 
Red Radiance Roses 
ROSES 
HJORT’S THOMASVILLE 
GROWN 
For 40 years the raising of choice, field-grown Roses has been a specialty with us. At Thomasville 
the past growing season has been an ideal one, and we ofTer a fine lot of plants. Nowhere can finer 
ones be obtained. No Southern garden is complete without a planting of Roses, and our prices are 
very low for good quality. 
PRICES OF ROSES Each 12 100 
2-yr. No. 1 plants.$0 50 $5 00 $40 00 
2-yr. Medium plants. 35 3 50 25 00 
HYBRID TEA ROSES 
Ami Quinard. Deep, velvety crimson, almost as 
black as Nigrette. Strong grower; good bloomer. 
Betty. Coppery yellow, shaded rose. 
Betty Uprichard. Orange-carmine outer petals; 
light salmon reflexes. Vigorous. 
Caledonia. The best of the new white Roses. 
Large, double, high-centered. 
Condesa de Sastago. A Spanish novelty of 
high coloring—coppery red and yellow. 
Daily Mail Scented Rose. Semi-double; bright 
red; fragrant. 
Dainty Bess. Charming, large, single wild-rose- 
pink flowers in clusters. For exhibition, dis¬ 
bud, leaving one flower to grow large. This 
delightful Rose is a strong grower and free 
bloomer. We highly recommend it. See illus¬ 
tration, page 17. 
Dame Edith Helen. Soft rose-pink; large; very 
fragrant. 
Edith Nellie Perkins. An excellent and de¬ 
pendable Rose for Southern gardens. Deep 
pink, shaded salmon; long-pointed buds. 
Editor McFarland. By long odds the best new 
pink Hybrid Lea Rose we have tested in years. 
Comparable to Radiance in growth and bloom¬ 
ing. During the hottest summer weather it 
was our best pink variety. Pointed, deep pink 
buds, with a glow of amber and paler edges. 
Fine for cutting. 
E. G. Hill. Fragrant, massive blooms of deep 
crimson. A fine grower and bloomer for so 
large a Rose. One of the best of newer kinds. 
Elizabeth of York. Pointed buds and semi¬ 
double flowers of cerise-pink, shaded yellow. 
Fine bloomer. 
Ethel James. Large, single, soft orange-pink 
flower. 
Etoile de Hollande. The most generally suc¬ 
cessful of deep red Roses. Brilliant crimson; 
fairly double. Vigorous. 
Francis Scott Key. Very double; light red. 
Golden Dawn. A newer deep yellow Hybrid 
Tea of great promise for Southern gardens. 
Irish Elegance. Single variety with bronze- 
pink buds, opening apricot and yellow. 
Irish Fireflame. Another single variety. Or¬ 
ange-crimson, shaded pink and gold. 
Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria. The most gener¬ 
ally satisfactory of white Hybrid Teas. 
Killarney. Deep pink. Long a Southern 
favorite. 
Killarney Queen. Sport of Killarney with 
larger flower of deeper pink. 
Luxembourg. Long the leading deep yellow. 
Beautiful bud; full flower. 
Margaret McGredy. Scarlet. One of the best 
of newer red Roses. 
M rs. A. R. Waddell. Deep apricot. An old 
favorite. 
Mrs. Charles Bell. The shell-pink Radiance. 
Large, well-shaped blooms on stilf stems. Free 
bloomer; even more vigorous than its parent. 
We vote it the best Rose ever introduced. 
Mrs. Erskine Pembroke Thom. Large; bright 
canary-yellow. A favorite among deep yellow 
Roses. 
Mrs. Oakley Fisher. A single, apricot-yellow 
Rose. 
Mrs. W. C.-Miller. Deep pink, shaded salmon. 
HYBRID TEA ROSES CONTINUED ON PAGE 16 
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