40 BUTZER’S SEED STORE, PORTLAND, OREGON 
OREGON GROWN ROSE BUSHES 
“THE WORLD’S BEST”’—ALL TWO-YEAR FIELD GROWN, BUDDED AND POSTPAID 
No. 1 Grade—Selected Stock, 60c each, 12 for $6.50 
Caution—Unpack plants immediately upon arrival and place in container of water over night. Not longer. 
Plant out immediately if possible. If planting is done in the fall the plants may be left with their tops untrimmed 
until spring at which time they should be cut back to not more than six or eight inches above the ground. Do 
not use any fertilizer at time of planting. 
Angele Pernet—Semi-double reddish apricot. 
Aspirant Marcel Rouyer—Long shape bud, color deep 
apricot, tinted red. 
Augustus Hartman (H.T.)—Brilliant geranium red 
flushed orange; very large, well-formed flowers. 
Austrian Copper—Good old-fashioned roses. Single. 
Autumn—Mingled shades of burnt orange and red. 
Betty Uprichard—Buds coppery red. Flowers semi- 
double; salmon pink on inner surface of petals. 
Briarcliffe—Buds of excellent form, bright pink. 
Chas. P. Kilham—Buds unusually long and slender 
shades of oriental red and rosy orange. 
Chateau de Clos Vougeot (H.T.)—A very rich, fiery 
searlet shading to deep velvety crimson. 
Cheerful (H.T.)—Color, rich orange flame over- 
spreading the petals. 
Constance (H.T.)—Rich orange yellow, distinctly 
streaked and splashed with crimson, long pointed buds. 
Countess Clanwilliam (H.T.)—Color delicate peach 
pink, flamed with deep cherry red. 
Cuba (H.T.)—Semi-double, bright vermilion-scarlet. 
Dainty Bess—Slender, rosy-salmon buds. Single. 
Dame Edith Helen—Pointed buds which open slowly 
to large blooms of brilliant pink. 
Dorothy Page Roberts (H.T.)—Coppery pink, suf- 
fused with apricot yellow. 
Duchess of Wellington—Long saffron yellow buds, 
opening to very large, light yellow flowers. 
Edith Nellie Perkins—Salmon-pink and 
orange, Buds long and pointed. 
E. G. Hill—The most unfading of all red roses. Long 
lasting when cut. 
Etoile de Holland—Brilliant red blooms with beauti- 
ful oval buds. Quite fragrant. 
Feu Joseph Looymans—Long beautifully formed 
buds of apricot color, opening to golden buff. 
Frau K. Druschki—Puer white, outer petals of buds 
occasionally tinged with pink. 
General Jacqueminot (H.P.)—Rich, velvety crim- 
son, changing to scarlet crimson. 
Golden Dawn—Buds of rich straw yellow, opening 
a beautiful well formed fragrant, double sunflower 
yellow. 
Golden Emblem—Beautiful long buds of brilliant 
yellow striped with crimson on the outer petals. 
Golden Ophelia—Deep golden yellow flowers of me- 
dium size. 
Gruss an Teplitz—The old bedding rose. Always in 
bloom with its display of rich crimson. 
Hadley—Rich crimson with velvety texture, very 
fragrant. Beautiful foliage and mildew proof. 
Heinrick Wendland—A beautiful golden-yellow and 
vivid nasturtium red on opposite surfaces of the petals. 
Hoosier Beauty—Long dark red buds opening to 
velvety red. Spicy fragrance. 
Imperial Potentate (H.T.)—Rich, rosy carmine, fine 
buds, splendid cut flower, sweetly scented. 
Irish Elegance—Long, beautiful buds of apricot, 
opening into a single flower. 
Irish Fireflame—Rich deep orange, splashed with 
crimson. Single flower. 
Irish Hope—A beautiful full bud opening into a rich 
red of perfect form. Delightfully fragrant. 
Isobel—F lowers single and of a rich, flushed orange- 
scarlet changing to brilliant pink and copper. 
Joanna Hill—A slender daintily colored variety of 
orange yellow. Moderately fragrant. 
cerise- 
K. A. Victoria—Pearly white, tinted with lemon in 
center. 5 
Killarney Brilliant—Rich glowing shade of rosy-car- 
mine. Sport of the Killarney. ; 
La France (H.T.)—A silvery rose, changing to pink. 
A general favorite. Sweetest of all roses. 
Lady Alice Stanley—Very double flowers of light 
silvery pink, darker on the outside of the petals. 
Lady Ashtown—Deep carmine-pink, shading to a 
yellow at the base of petals. Continuous bloomer. 
Lady Hillingdon (T.)—Deep apricot yellow, long 
and pointed bud. Flowers are of good substance. 
Lady Inchiquin (H.T.)—A vivid garden variety of 
solid color, orange-vermilion brilliantined by cerise. 
. Lady Margaret Stewart—Buds of deep sunflower 
yellow, heavily veined with orange scarlet. 
» Los Angeles—Rich flaming pink, shaded golden yel- 
low. The most popular rose grown. err 
Louise Catherine Breslau (H.T.)—Color a superb 
shrimp-pink shaded coppery-orange and chrome yellow. 
Lulu—Dainty, extremely long buds of coral apricot 
with which the bush is covered at all times. 
Margaret McGredy—Orange scarlet or brick red. 
Beautiful foliage and stout stems. 
Mary Pickford (H.T.)—A rose of the same type as 
Souv. de Claudius Pernet, but much deeper in color. 
McGredy’s Scarlet—Brilliant red petals on hinges 
of deep gold. An exceptionally fine rose. 
Miss Lolita Armour (H.T.)—Color rich chrome yel- 
low, shaded to coppery orange. 
Miss Willmott (H.T.)—Color, soft sulphury cream, 
with the faintest flush of pale pink at the edges. 
Mme. Butterfly—A brilliant pink suffused apricot 
and gold. Very sweet-scented. 
Mme. Edouard Herriot—A pure coppery color, with 
buds of coral red, shaded with yellow at the base. 
Mme. Jules Bouche—White, lightly tinted with pink 
at the center. 
Mrs. Aaron Ward—Indian yellow, washed salmon 
rose; buds small but beautifully formed. 
Mrs. A. R. Barraclough (H.T.)—Large, pointed 
buds; bright watermelon pink with yellow base. 
Mrs. A. R. Waddell (H.T.)—Large, long pointed 
buds of a bright rosy scarlet. 
Mrs. Dunlop Best. (H.T.)—Pointed saffron-yellow 
buds, with dull apricot shadings, opening to rich, 
reddish apricot flowers of great beauty. 
Mrs. E. P. Thom—Has well formed buds and fairly 
large, double flowers of clear, even yellow. 
Mrs. Henry Bowles—Warm pink flushed with sal- 
mon. In constant and profuse bloom, 
Mrs. John Laing (H.P.)—Immense blooms of soft, 
clear pink, very fragrant on stiff, stocky stems. 
Mrs. Sam McGredy—Large double bloom of orange 
salmon, with a suffusion of gold. 
Nona—tThe blooms are semi-double, of rich vermil- 
ion and flame-pink. 
Norman Lambert—Salmon orange suffused bronze, _ 
shading to yellow at the base. 
Old Gold—Coppery red; a very fine and popular rose. 
x Olympiad—Rich oriental velvety scarlet with golden 
ase. 
Ophelia—Flesh pink, shaded with rose, Large beau- 
tifully formed buds. 
Padre—Rich coppery scarlet, Semi-double flowers 
borne on long erect stems. 
