JUBILEE. H. Perpetual. (1897.) 4-5 feet. 
One of the really BLACK-red roses, with all-season double blooms of 
intense fragrance. Does not “biue’’ and appears completely immune 
to mildew, rust or blackspot. In California, we prefer Jubilee to the better- 
known Black Prince, in a similar velvety color. 3 for 4.50 eacheii7s 
KATHLEEN. H. MOSCHATA. (1922.) 10 - 15 feet. 
Kathleen, with the Musk fragrance, is so closely associated with us from the 
beginning, I think of her almost as a personal friend, who will be grown 
and listed in this catalog, as long as I write one. Certainly not for the 
enthusiast who can see no beauty except in the hybrid teas, or who 
yawns at the sight of apple blossoms, for these it closely resembles. 
“A breath of Spring that got lost and wandered into summer,” nicely says 
Mrs. V. B. McMillin of Canon City, Colo. Strong grower in sun or shade, 
completely healthy and oak-hardy. Can be confined to shrub proportions 
or will reach a second story window ... fully amenable to your wishes, 
never stops blooming. 
“Kathleen, like the famous ‘Sally in our Alley, surely is the ‘darling of our 
hearts’... she is so aptly named, with that famous milk-and-roses complexion, 
one associates with Irish colleens.” We like this, Mrs. McMillin and shall thank 
you with the usual gift of roses. 3 for 5.00 each 2.00 
KAZANLIK. R. Damascena. (Ancient.) 4 - 5 feet. 
An old and famous damask, named for the historical Balkan city in the 
center of the perfume industry. Its rosy-pink, double flowers come in 
such spring abundance, you won't mind too much, if it devotes the summer 
to plant growing, with which to delight you still more when Spring comes 
again to your garden. 2.00 
LADY PENZANCE. H. Sweetbrier. (1894.) 6 - 7 feet. 
Similar to Eglantine in its apple-scented foliage but perhaps more graceful 
and moderate in growth-habit. The single flowers are a metallic coppery 
shade, in great spring profusion. 2.00 
LA FRANCE, Hybrid’ Tea: . (1867.) 4 = 5 feat: 
The great-grandmother of the whole race of hybrid tea roses. Its big 
soft-pink, classic blooms, with that special, intense La France fragrance, 
are a nostalgic memory to thousands of rose-lovers, the world over. 
Inclines to grow tall... very profuse, all season ... not moody anywhere. 
Still a dignified and lovely rose today. 
From the ‘Heart of a Garden,’’ by Rosamund Marriott Watson, we 
quote—"Brave in bright rose and silver, and scented like the gardens of Hesperides, 
that favored plot which contains my many bushes of La France is a place whereby 
to linger and give thanks. There are moments when I stay, loitering in the late 
blue twilight, to wonder whether there is any one of the pink roses quite so well- 
worth growing.” Supply limited 2.25 
22 
SP ene 
