
TEXAS CENTENNIAL 
ARLES. (2-3) Well formed buds of medium size. Salmon- 
orange and buff. The flowers open io a pleasing shade 
of buff, with orange-pink reverse. Attractive plants 
clothed with glossy-green foliage which is disease-re- 
sistant. Exceptionally free flowering. 75 cents each. 
AUTUMN. (3) Very double burnt-orange, red, and yellow 
flowers—one of the richest combinations of color in 
Roses. Very fragrant and continuously borne on strong, 
upright plants with leathery foliage. 50 cents each. 
CALIFORNIA. (3) (Patent rights reserved.) A sensation- 
al new California Rose. The color is ruddy orange 
toned with saffron-yellow, the exterior of the broad pet- 
als overlaid with saturn-rose. The buds are long and 
pointed and open to a huge bloom, often six inches in 
diameter. $1.50 each or 3 for $3.75. 
CONDESA DE SASTAGO. (4) Highly colored copper and 
yellow Rose with an alluring spicy scent. Bud golden 
yellow with red markings. In the fully open flower the 
fiery copper on the inside of the petals is in marked 
contrast with the rich gold on the reverse. A con- 
tinuous bloomer. The plant is unusually strong and 
upright in growth, with clean, disease-resistant foliage 
carried along the whole stem well up to the flower. 
50 cents each. 
FAIENCE. (3) The two-tone soft peach and cadmium- 
yellow colors of this fine new Rose throw out such an 
iridescent glow that van Rossem, its originator in Hol- 
land, has named it for the famous pottery so well known 
for these colors. It is the fine type of Rose we have 
grown to expect from him. The handsome bud is long 
and tapering, the open flower is beautifully modeled 
and large, with an artistic china pink deepening toward 
the center to an opalescent coppery-rose. The reverse 
of the petals is cadmium-yellow lightly veined with 
pink. A good clean grower, well covered with large 
foliage and a continuous bloomer. 75 cents each. 
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