Hybrid Tea Roses 
These popular flowers are crosses be- 
tween the fragrant and hardy Hybrid Per- 
petuals and the old tender Tea Roses. 
They give quantities of bloom of cut- 
flower quality on plants which are hardy 
with a little protection during the winter. 
They begin blooming in late May or 
early June, depending on the locality, and 
if given plenty of water, occasional appli- 
cations of fertilizer, and kept sprayed or 
dusted so that the foliage is free of disease 
or insects, will bloom practically con- 
tinuously until stopped by frosts. 
All of the Roses we offer are No. 1 grade, 
2-year-old, hardy, northern, field-grown 
plants. ; 
Red Varieties 
Ami Quinard. One of the darkest Roses 
in existence. Velvety crimson-maroon with a 
soft black luster. Averages 17 petals. Carries 
the real old Rose fragrance. Strong-growing 
plants. $1.50 each. 
Applause. Plant Patent No. 829, Big, 
fragrant buds. Well-shaped blooms with 
heavy fragrance. Very free-blooming. $2 
each. 
Charles K. Douglas. A large, loosely 
double Rose of bright red. It is not an ex- 
hibition Rose but for a continuous show of 
color this Rose is tops and, surprisingly, it is 
also fragrant. $1.50 each. 
Charlotte Armstrong. Plant Patent 
No. 455. Very large blooms of glowing deep 
rose-red, on long stems. Strong, upright 
plants, producing freely all season. $2 each. 
Christopher Stone. Large, loose flowers 
of brilliant scarlet-crimson; rich old-time fra- 
grance. Healthy, bushy plants which bloom 
all the time. $1.50 each. 
Etoile de Hollande. One of the most de- 
pendable Roses. Large, loose, semi-double 
blooms are very fragrant. Soft foliage. $1.50 
each. 
TD HEV.O- UE ENS Orcs ei © Varnes 
The Rose has been for thousands of years the queen of flowers, and no garden 
can be complete without representatives of the different types of these lovely blooms. 
We list here only the best varieties of the different classes of Roses, in a quality of 
plant which will give the best service to our customer. 
For exhibition and cut-flower purposes the Hybrid Teas are unsurpassed. For 
a sheer mass of color in the garden there is nothing like the Polyanthas. The Hybrid 
Perpetuals will give you quantities of large, fragrant flowers in June, and Climbing 
Roses can serve many purposes. 
RED VARIETIES, continued 
Crimson Glory. Gorgeous crimson flowers 
shaded red and with a nap so deep the 
shadows are black. Grand form and unforget- 
table fragrance. $1.75 each. 
Grande Duchesse Charlotte. Plant 
Patent No. 774. Begonia-rose blooms come 
singly on a tall, graceful plant. Foliage is 
disease-resistant. $1.75 each. 
Gruss an Teplitz. A big shrub covered 
with open, dark velvety scarlet flowers. Very 
vigorous and dependable. Especially good 
for landscape use. $1.50 each. 
McGredy’s Scarlet. An excellent garden 
Rose which is a nice shade of red, instead of 
scarlet, as the name would indicate. Flowers 
are freely produced on very vigorous, healthy 
plants. $1.50 each. 
Mirandy. Plant Patent No. 632. The 
flowers have as many as 40 or 50 petals of 
deep garnet-red. The sweet spicy fragrance 
is especially notable. $1.75 each. 
New Yorker. Plant Patent No. 823. 
Clear, sparkling red, unfading and brilliant. 
Enormous size and excellent form. Vigorous, 
3-foot plants. $2 each. 
Pink Dawn 
RED VARIETIES, continued 
Poinsettia. This is the nearest to clear 
scarlet of any double Rose. The flowers are 
beautifully formed of 35 velvety petals and 
carry real old Tea fragrance. Plants are tall 
with healthy foliage. $1.50 each. 
Red Radiance. A sport of Radiance and 
equally good, differing only in the beautiful 
deep red color of the large globular flowers. 
$1.50 each. 
San Fernando. Plant Patent No. 785. 
Large, double, currant-red flowers; unusually 
heavy fragrance. $1.75 each. 
Texas Centennial. Plant Patent No. 162. 
A sport of President Herbert Hoover, exactly 
like its parent in plant and shape of flower. 
The color, however, is vermilion-red with a 
touch of gold at the base of the petals. 
$1.65 each. 
Pink Varieties 
Babe Ruth. Plant Patent No. 996. A 
very dependable Rose. Large, heavy-petaled 
blooms are borne on long, strong stems. 
$2 each. 
Betty Uprichard. Semi-double, bicolored 
flowers of deep carmine, with silvery salmon 
tones inside. $1.50 each. 
Capistrano. Plant Patent No. 922. Rich 
rose-pink flowers of heavy texture and large 
size. Pleasingly fragrant. Leathery green 
foliage. $2.25 each. 
Editor McFarland. Perfectly formed 
fragrant Rose with strong stems for cutting. 
Plant blooms freely. $1.50 each. 
Ernie Pyle. Plant Patent No. 673. Large 
blooms have unusually abundant fragrance. 
2 to 214-ft. plant. $1.75 each. 
Good News. Plant Patent No. 426. Cop- 
pery pink buds and large, 60-petaled flowers 
toning to shell-pink. Sturdy plant. Very fra- 
grant. $1.75 each. . 
Helen Traubel. Plant Patent No. 1028. 
One of the newest Roses. Sparkling pink 
varying to apricot. Very large and full. 
Strong, healthy. $2.75 each. 
Katherine T. Marshall. Plant Patent 
No. 607. Large blooms with about 22 petals; 
cupped and slightly fragrant. Deep rose-pink 
with a yellow flush. Leathery foliage on a 
good plant. $1.75 each. 
