For small hedges, solid beds of 
color, or groups in shrubbery 
border, there isn’t anything that 
can compare with Polyantha 
Roses. They come the nearest to 
being truly everblooming of any 
of the Rose family, requiring very 
little care and come into bloom early in the season, producing crop after crop of flowers 
until stopped by frost. 
Do not prune them, simply thin out and remove the dead wood and the oldest canes. 
They will then cover themselves with bloom. 
MISS EDITH CAVELL 
GLORIA MUNDI 
POLYANTHA 
ROSES 
Baby Doll. Exquisite little Roses, pink and 
coppery yellow edged rose. The baby blooms 
look like pink and white popcorn. Dwarf. 
40c each. 
Eblouissant. Bushy little plants with small 
flowers of blackish crimson. Nice for edgings 
or low hedges. 25c each. 
Gloria Mundi. Small, orange-scarlet flowers in 
great clusters. This is the best of the many 
orange-scarlet Polyanthas, as it holds its color. 
25c each. 
CL. CECILE BRUNNER (SWEETHEART) 
George Eiger. Perfectly formed little Roses of 
light yellow are generously produced on small 
branching plants. 25c each. 
Golden Salmon. Clusters of orange-scarlet 
flowers. 25c each. 
Ideal. Medium-sized blooms of dark scarlet 
thickly cover bushy plants of about the height 
of an average Hybrid Tea. 25c each. 
Katharina Zeimet. Fine, branching plants of 
only medium height and a profusion of small 
pure white flowers. 25c each. 
Lafayette. Quite large flowers of a lovely 
shade of cherry-red. One of the most popu¬ 
lar varieties. 25c each. 
M iss Edith Cavell. Attractive, semi-double 
blooms of brilliant scarlet-red. Always 
good to look at and dependable. 25c each. 
LAFAYETTE 
GOLDEN SALMON 
