HYBRID TEA ROSES 
The Hybrid Teas are the backbone of the Rose-garden 
and supply color for garden decoration as well as the finest 
of all flowers for cutting. Every flower show depends on 
Hybrid Tea Roses for the main display. 
Rose Hill grows only dependable varieties. Every Rose 
shown on this page has proved worthy. 
American Beauty. HP. Dark pink, shaded carmine; 
full, double; unforgettable fragrance. Strong grower. 
30c each. 
Ami Quinard. Semi-double; dark crimson-maroon with 
blackish shades; richly perfumed. Strong-growing 
plants. 30c each. 
Antoine Rivoire. Rosy flesh, shaded carmine. 30c each. 
Apricot Dawn. A sport of Golden Dawn with fragrant, 
double flowers of apricot and pink tones. A beautiful 
Rose on a beautiful bush. 50c each. 
Autumn. Burnt-orange, streaked red. Good in fall. 
30c each. 
Ben Arthur Davis. The full double flowers are really a 
delight. Petals are golden yellow at the base, growing 
lighter at the edges; reverse has a slight tinge of pink. 
A bushy grower with glossy green foliage. The plants are 
free and continuous in their bloom. 50c each. 
Betty Sutor. Pale rose-pink, veined. rose; reverse of 
petals bright pink; slightly fragrant. Hardy and free 
blooming. 50c each. 
Betty Uprichard. Salmon-pink, reverse carmine; very 
fragrant. 30c each. 
Caledonia. See in color in the Dependable Fifteen. 
30c each. 
Charles K. Douglas. An extra-good scarlet-crimson 
flower freely produced on a large, bushy plant. 30c each. 
Christopher Stone. A strong-growing bush with perfectly 
healthy foliage and great loose flowers of brilliant 
scarlet-red. It has delicious old-Rose fragrance and is 
one of the best bloomers we have ever grown. It ts 
gest aceoming one of the most popular red Roses. 75c 
each. 
Columbia. Another perfect cut-flower with bright pink 
blooms on heavy, almost thornless stems; delightful 
fragrance. 30c each. 
Condesa de Sastago. 
Fifteen. 30c each. 
Cynthia. This is a perfectly formed flower of rich oriental- 
red. A splendid Rose for exhibition and is unusually 
free blooming for a Rose of such good form. Splendid 
plants. 40c each. 
Dainty Bess. Large, single flowers of soft rose-pink; 
fimbriated edges. A dainty flower. 35c each. 
Dame Edith Helen. Immense, perfectly formed blooms 
of clear pink; delicious fragrance. 30c each. 
Director Rubio. Immense blooms of cochineal-pink. 
30c each. 
Duquesa de Penaranda. A glorious large flower of 
coppery apricot which holds its form for a long time and 
is delightfully fragrant. The plants are sturdy, with 
spiendid healthy foliage and are produced right through 
the season. 75c each. 
Edith Krause. A large double flower of greenish white. A 
much prettier Rose than the description indicates. The 
flower is fragrant and we especially like it because of its 
very vigorous, healthy growth. A plant which can 
always be depended on. 50c each. 
Edith Nellie Perkins. See in color in the Dependable 
Fifteen. 30c each. ; 
Editor McFarland. See in color in the Dependable Fif- 
teen. 30c each. 
E. G. Hill. See in color in the Dependable Fifteen. 30c ea. 
Empress. A large, fully double flower of bright pink 
tinged with salmon. It is richly fragrant and we like 
it because of its good plant and generous floriferousness. 
40c each. 
Etoile de France. 
Illustrated in the Dependable 
Large double flowers of deep red. 
30c each. : 
Etoile de Hollande. Illustrated in the Dependable 
Fifteen. 30c each. 
Francis Scott Key. Perfectly formed, imbricated flowers 
of dark Tyrian pink. A popular Rose in the South. 
30c each. ' 
Frau Karl Druschki. Long-pointed white buds stained 
carmine; immense, pure white, open flowers; scentless. 
Strong growth. 30c each. 
Glowing Carmine. Tall-growing, free-blooming plants 
with perfectly formed flowers of clear carmine. A 
splendid exhibition flower which retains its form for a 
long time. A very different, desirable Rose. 50c each. 
Golden Dawn. Large, fragrant flowers of straw-yellow. 
30c each. 
Golden Ophelia. 
30c each. 
Grenoble. Large; globular, scarlet blooms, freely pro- 
duced on an immense, branching plant. Nice for cutting. 
30c each. 
Hadley. A glorious crimson-red; delightfully perfumed. 
30c each. 
Heinrich Wendland. Spectacular flower of reddish 
copper flushed with orange, and an orange reverse to 
petals. Honey-like fragrance. Lovers of gay colors 
should plant a whole bed of this, as it is really startling. 
40c each. 
Hinrich Gaede. Another spectacular Rose of lummous 
vermilion shaded with golden yellow. It is a_high- 
centered flower much better formed than most of these 
gay-colored Roses and it carries a rich fruity fragrance. 
Plants are of average growth and are generous bloomers. 
50c each. 
Jean Bostick (Yellow Condesa de Sastago). (J. A. Bos- 
tick, 1937.) This is one of our own introductions. A 
rich yellow sport from Condesa de Sastago, it has the 
same cupped form as its parent and the same splendid 
upright, free-blooming bush. This is one of the best 
growers and bloomers that we have and _is especially 
satisfactory in the South, where yellow Roses usually 
fade badly. 40c each. 
Golden yellow flowers of fine form. 
HYBRID TEA ROSES, continued 
Joanna Hill. Large semi-double flowers of light yellow are 
freely produced on an upright bush. The blooms are 
fragrant and have splendid stems. It is one of the best 
of this color for cutting purposes. 40c each. 
Jonkheer J. L. Mock. Immense two-toned pink— 
silvery rose inside, reverse carmine-pink. Splendid form. 
30c¢ each. 
Julien Potin. For years this has been the most dependable 
exhibition yellow Rose, because of its perfect form and 
dependability. If you want a yellow Rose for a show 
table, plant Julien Potin. It is of average growth and 
very generous. 50c each. 
Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria. Illustrated in the Depend- 
able Fifteen. 30c¢ each. 
Katharine Pechtold. Opens from an old-gold and 
bronzy orange bud into a semi-double flower of prac- 
tically the same coloring; the colors last better than 
most of that type. It ts deliciously fragrant and we 
like it very much. The plants are vigorous and bushy. 
50c each. 
Lady Hillingdon. T. A lovely old Tea Rose of deep 
saffron-yellow; fragrant. A free-branching plant with 
beautiful foliage. 30c each. 
Luxembourg. Illustrated in the Dependable Fifteen. 
30c each. 
Maman Cochet. T. Perfect form, double; carmine-pink, 
creamy buff at the center. Impervious to diseases. 
40c each. 
Margaret Belle Houston. This great Rose, which was 
named for General Sam Houston’s daughter, should be 
a favorite in Texas. The flowers are of good size and 
they are a lovely shade of velvety crimson. 30c each. 
Margaret McGredy. The color is a brilliant orange- 
vermilion, quite different from any other Rose. 30c each. 
Mary, Countess of Ilchester. Double, rose-pink blooms 
which make splendid cut-flowers; moderately fragrant. 
30c each. 
McGredy’s Scarlet. Big plants with shapely double 
flowers of just plain red. A fine Rose. 30c each. 
McGredy’s Yellow. This appeals to us as one of the 
nicest of the newer yellow Roses. It has unusually 
pleasing form in a nice shade of yellow which lasts much 
better than most yellow Roses. Plants are of average 
size, healthy and are good performers. It is delightfully 
fragrant, a virtue all yellow Roses do not possess. 
75c each. 
Mevr. G. A. van Rossem. One of the first of the spec- 
tacular Roses, whis is still one of the most popular. 
The perfectly formed flowers are a gay mixture of orange 
and appricot over a golden yellow ground. But best of 
all it is one of the sweetest Roses we have ever grown. 
Try it for cutting. It is not only beautiful but two or 
three blooms will perfume the house. 40c each. 

Mme. Butterfly. A perfect cutting Rose of light pink, 
touched with golden yellow at the base of the petals. 
30c each. 
Mme. Nicolas Aussel. Very large and very fragrant; 
salmon, shaded carmine and ochre, tinted yellow at 
base. 40c each. 
Mrs. Dudley Cross. Pale yellow, sometimes flushed with 
pink; mildly fragrant. Vigorous plant. 30c each. 
Mrs. E. P. Thom. This is one of the dependable yellow 
Roses planted by every Rose-lover everywhere. The 
plants are upright, sturdy, and the large double flowers 
are a nice shade of canary-yellow. It is one of the yellow 
Roses which holds its color. 50c each. 
Mrs. Paul Goudie. A lovely new bicolor Rose with well- 
formed fragrant flowers, yellow-edged and veined with 
rose-pink. Like most of this kind, it fades considerably 
if left on the plant, but when first open it is a glorious, 
fragrant variety which every rosarian will want. A 
nice dependable plant. 75c each. 
Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont. Golden yellow. Free-blooming 
plants. 30c each. 
Olympiad. This is one of the older bicolored flowers and 
retains its popularity because of the unusual coloring— 
blood-red, shaded with coppery yellow. The blooms are 
delightfully fragrant, making them splendid cut-flowers. 
Average growth and bloom. 50c each. 
Patience. A nicely formed flower of scarlet, shaded 
orange, with moderate fragrance. We like the strong- 
growing plant, its continuous bloom, and the form of 
the flowers. 50c each. 
Pink Golden Dawn. This glorious Rose is one of our own 
discoveries. It is a sport of the great Australian Rose, 
Golden Dawn, and has the same large, double, deliciously 
fragrant flowers, freely produced on a husky, spreading 
plant with beautiful foliage. Golden Dawn is one of 
the finest garden Roses we have, and we take great 
pleasure in offering our customers a pink sport with all 
of its parent’s virtues. $1.00 each. 
Portadown Bedder. Petals orange-yellow, with_ pink 
flush on the outside and rose-scarlet within. Dense, 
bushy plants. 50c each. 
President Herbert Hoover. 
pendable Fifteen. 30c each. 
President Macia. This is one of the largest Roses grown 
and one of the most beautiful. The long-pointed buds 
open to 6-inch flowers of pale silvery pink on the face 
of the petals, with a touch of gold at base and a reverse 
of brilliant satiny pink. It is fragrant and surprisingly 
free blooming for such a large Rose. 50c each. 
Illustrated among the De- 
Miss Edith Cavell. 
HYBRID TEA ROSES, continued 
Radiance. See in color among the Dependable Fifteen. 
30c each. 
Red Radiance. Sce in color among the Dependable Fif- 
teen. 30c each. 
Rev. F. Page-Roberts. A rather low-growing plant 
producing a very large flower of buff and yellow with 
red shadings. This ts not only a beautiful two-toned 
Rose but it has the delightful fragrance of ripe Russet 
apples. It is a delightful cut-flower, a prize-winner 
at exhibitions, and you will like the different fragrance. 
75c each. 
Roslyn. Illustrated in color in the Dependable Fifteen. 
30c each. 
Rouge Mallerin. Illustrated in color in the Dependable 
Fifteen. 40c each. 
Sensation. A lovely old Rose of deep scarlet-crimson 
with maroon markings. It is wonderfully fragrant and 
the flowers are freely produced on a healthy, dependable 
plant. 30c each. 
Souv. d’Alexandre Bernaix. Low-growing plants with 
healthy foliage bear medium-sized blooms of rich 
blackish crimson. It is one of the darkest of Roses and 
one of the most fragrant, carrying the real old Damask 
scent. 50c each. 
Souv. de Claudius Pernet. The first real yellow Rose 
and still in great demand. 40c each. 
Souv. de Mme. C. Chambard. A strong upright plant 
with healthy foliage, bearing in crops great satiny 
peach-pink flowers with an unusual lustre. It is the 
only Rose we know of this particular coloring. Fragrant 
40c each. 
Sunburst. Large, double flowers of golden yellow, strongly 
marked with dark red at the base of the petals. 30c each. 
Talisman. Illustrated in color among the Dependable 
Fifteen. 30c each. 
Texas Centennial. Pat. 162. A light red sport of Presi- 
dent Herbert Hoover with its parent’s splendid growth 
and bloom. 60c each, 3 for $1.50. 
Willowmere. Large flowers of rich pink with a yellow 
glow in the center. Strong-branching, very thorny 
plant. 30c each. 
POLYANTHA ROSES 
For small hedges, solid beds of color, or groups in shrub- 
bery 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, produc- 
ing 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. 
Baby Doll. Exquisite little Roses of pink and coppery 
yellow edged rose. The baby blooms lock like pmk and 
white popcorn. Dwarf. 30c each. 
Eblouissant. Bushy little plants with small flowers of 
blackish crimson. Nice for edgings or low hedges. 30c ea. 
George Elger. Perfectly formed little Roses of light 
yellow are generously produced on small branching 
plants. 30c each. 
Golden Salmon. Clusters of orange-scarlet flowers. 
30c each. 
Ideal. Medium-sized blooms of dark scarlet thickly 
cover bushy plants of about the height of an average 
Hybrid Tea. 30c each. 
Katharina Zeimet. Fine, branching plants of only 
medium height and a profusion of small pure white 
flowers. 30c each. 
Lafayette. Quite large flowers of a lovely shade of cherry- 
red. One of the most popular varieties. 30c each. 
Attractive, semi-double blooms of 
brilliant scarlet-red. Always good to look at and de- 
pendable. 30c each. 
CLIMBING ROSES 
Few gardens have as many Climbing Roses as they could 
or should. Climbing Roses take up very little room. They 
can be trained on pillars, fences, trellises, arbors, against 
buildings, or allowed to ramble at will, and when in full 
bloom, there isn’t any flowering shrub that can equal them. 
Many of them are sports of Dwarf Roses in which case 
they produce larger and finer flowers than do their dwarf 
parents and, of course, furnish many more long-stemmed 
flowers for cutting. Our collection includes the best of the 
Climbers for the South. 
Cl. Cecile Brunner. A sport of the little Sweetheart 
Rose which bears clusters of perfect little blooms of 
pink and gold. 50c each. 
Cl. Editor McFarland. A climbing sport of the very 
popular Hybrid Tea of this name, producing the same 
deep pink blooms on long stems. 50c each. 
Cl. Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont. A climbing sport of the 
popular Hybrid Tea of this name, with quantities of 
golden yellow flowers on fine stems. 50c each. 
Cl. President Herbert Hoover. A climbing sport of 
the popular bush Rose of this name, with splendid 
long-stemmed flowers useful for cutting. 40c each. 
Cl. Radiance. An everblooming climbing sport of the 
world’s favorite pink Rose. 40c each. 
Cl. Red Radiance. An everblooming climbing sport of 
the well-known Red Radiance. 40c each. 
Cl. Talisman. An everblooming climbing sport of the 
popular dwarf Rose of this name. 40c each. 
Paul’s Scarlet Climber. Clusters of bright scarlet-red 
flowers on a strong, hardy plant. 30c each. 
