
Hybrid Tea Roses 
These Roses are called everblooming, or monthly 
Roses. If kept healthy, they will have one crop of flow- 
ers after the other, until frost. Their flowers have a wider 
variety of color, form, and fragrance than any other class 
of Roses. If given careful winter protection, the plants 
last for years. 
Autumn. Burnt orange, streaked with red. Low grower. 
Duquesa de Penaranda. Beautiful deep apricot. 
Edel. White, with faint ivory shading. Large, double. 
Edith Nellie Perkins. Rich orange outside, salmon-pink 
inside. 
E. G. Hill. Deep maroon. Very fragrant. 
Faience. China-pink. 
Gruss an Teplitz. Dark maroon. Blooms in clusters. 
Joanna Hill. Large yellow, with bronze shading in center. 
Joyous Cavalier. Red. Very free bloomer. 
Kaiserin Augusta Victoria. Popular, snowy white. 
Margaret McGredy. Brilliant red petals on hinges of deep 
gold. 
Mrs. Erskine Pembroke Thom. Deep golden yellow. 
Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont. Golden yellow. 
Mrs. Sam McGredy. Scarlet-orange, changing to copper. 
Delicately perfumed. 
Pink Killarney. Medium pink. 
President Herbert Hoover. Beautiful suffusion of maroon, 
orange and gold. 
{42} 
Hybrid Tea Roses—Continued 
Radiance. Rosy carmine. 
Red Radiance. 
Schawabenland. Rich rose-pink. Vigorous grower. 
Rose-red. 
Talisman. Glowing golden yellow, stained copper-red. 
Hybrid Perpetual 
Paul Neyron. Rose-pink. 
Climbing Roses 
Blaze. Everblooming. 
Dorothy Perkins. Pink 
Excelsa. Red. 
Paul's Scarlet. Scarlet-red. 
Red Radiance. Red. 
Silver Moon. Large, single white. 
Floribunda Roses 
Everblooming type of dwarf, shrubby Rose. Flowers 
are borne in clusters. Bush seldom attains a height of 
over 18 inches. 
White. 
Donald Prior. Deep red. 
Gloaming. Satiny pink. 
Summer Snow. 

