MORE FINE ROSES, continued 
INDIANA. Hybrid Tea. (The House of Meilland.) Plant Pat. 
2597. One of the brightest red roses, with pleasant light perfume. 
A true, solid, bright cardinal-red. Plants are seldom without 
color even during sultry weather. Fully double, velvety, cup-shaped 
blooms of excellent form and profile. A compact, well-branched 
bush of moderate height but above average in vigor. Bloom pro- 
duction is extremely good. The foliage is heavy, large, deep green 
and abundant. 
$3.25 ea.—3 or more, $3 ea. 
LADY X. Hybrid Tea. (The House of Meilland.) Plant Pat. 2697. 
A delicate soft lavender color—entirely different and unique. A 
perfect rose for cutting. Buds are long and slender, with petals 
gently rolled at the edge. Every bloom is elegantly shaped and 
very long lasting. Light tea fragrance. We get many good reports 
on the form and beauty of this rose. As for its performance in the 
garden, a Massachusetts gardener wrote that his bush grew to 
over 7 feet and was very hardy. 
$3.50 ea.—3 or more, $3.10 ea. 
PICTURE. Hybrid Tea. (McGredy.) Through many years this 
rose has maintained its place, in spite of the fact that numerous 
other pink kinds have been introduced in the meantime. Its vel- 
vety clear rose-pink color is one reason. Another is its dependable 
bloom production. Flowers are of rather modest size but nicely 
formed and they carry a light perfume. The bush is of medium 
height, vigorous, with strong canes and glossy, dark green leaves. 
$2.75 ea.—3 or more, $2.40 ea. 
POLYNESIAN SUNSET. Hybrid Tea. (Boerner.) Plant Pat. 
2530. Coral-orange, with a warm, iridescent glow. Exquisite 
buds and huge 6!4-inch flowers, fully double but with an open 
center. Both the color and the flower form hold for the entire 
life of the bloom, both outdoors and in the house. A heady, fruity 
scent suggests the tropics. Hardy and vigorous. 
$3.75 ea.—3 or more, $3.30 ea. 
SUMMER RAINBOW. Hybrid Tea. (R. Jelly.) Plant Pat. 2746. 
Light crimson-pink with a soft chrome-yellow reverse, and as the 
flower develops, the crimson passes to fuchsia-pink. Full, high- 
centered blooms of large size with firm, satiny petals. Pleasing tea 
fragrance. Stems are straight and strong, excellent to cut. Aver- 
age height, thrifty and healthy. 
$3.25 ea.—3 or more, $3 ea. 
TALISMAN. Hybrid Tea. (Howard.) The rose that made 
history—the first multicolor. An orange and rose combination of 
medium size, double, with nice perfume. At its best in spring and 
fall. Easy to grow. Fairly tall, with long stems and light green, 
leathery foliage. 
$2.75 ea.—3 or more, $2.40 ea. 
TIFFANY. Hybrid Tea. (Lindquist.) Plant Pat. 7304. A cutting rose 
> par excellence. Long, superbly formed buds and high-point- 
3° ed flowers. A blend of light pink and pale gold, always clear 
and fresh looking. Flowers are about 5 inches across, full but not 
heavy. Tea rose fragrance. Medium tall, very free blooming. 
$3.50 ea.—3 or more, $3.10 ea. 
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Choiee Floribunda Roses 
FASHION. Floribunda. (Boerner.) A classic Floribunda, recognized everywhere as one 
@ of the very best. Soft coral-peach-pink suffused with gold, a combination that livens 
A8BS the bush. Fine Hybrid Tea form and firm substance; fragrant too. Plants are loaded 
with bloom time after time all summer. About 3 feet tall, with disease-resistant foliage. 
$2.75 ea.—3 or more, $2.40 ea. 
GENE BOERNER. Floribunda. (Boerner.) Plant Pat. 2885. Clear soft pink flowers with a 
», deeper pink center, borne in clusters of 7 to 9 on strong stems. The dainty pointed 
* buds are deep rose in color, and a plant with buds and blooms in various stages of 
A 
opening is a most delightful picture. This is a tall bushy plant, often over 31% feet high. 
$3.50 ea.—3 or more, $3.10 ea. 
GOLDILOCKS. Floribunda. (Boerner.) Sunny yellow flowers in showy clusters, becoming 
lighter as they age. They are very double, cupped at first, gradually opening to 3 inches or 
so, with 45 petals. A dense, rather spreading plant of average to low height, producing 
bloom in steady succession. Very easy to grow and a nice reliable plant for garden use. 
$2.75 ea.—3 or more, $2.40 ea. 
RUMBA. Floribunda. (Poulsen.) Plant Pat. 1919. Excellent asa hedge. Very free growing, 
bushy and vigorous, reaching about 3 feet in height, with abundant foliage resistant to 
disease. Flowers in clusters of 5 to 12 are a flash of colors—a yellow, an orange, a straw- 
berry-red, a pale pink will be shown all at one time in a cluster. Light but spicy fragrance. 
$3.25 ea.—3 or more, $3 ea. 
SARATOGA. Floribunda. (Boerner.) Plant Pat. 2299. These pure white, gardenia-like 
& flowers are not only breathtakingly beautiful but also exceptionally large. The open 
flower is often 414 inches across—unusual in a Floribunda. Buds are somewhat cream 
colored, opening to the purest white. Profuse blooming; medium tall. Old rose fragrance. 
$3.25 ea.—3 or more, $3 ea. 
TAMANGO. Floribunda. (The House of Meilland.) Plant Pat. 2857. Very dark buds and 
4-inch, luminous velvety red flowers with 40 or more petals. Usually in massive clusters. 
The deep red color lasts for days. Light tea fragrance. A healthy, sturdy plant, taller 
than most Floribundas. Neither winter cold nor sweltering heat seems to affect it. 
$3.75 ea.—3 or more, $3.30 ea. 
FIRE KING 
Hin hi Floribunda. (The House 
C 
of Meilland.) Plant Pat. 
» 1758. A brilliant deep orange-red— 
* a grower in New Hampshire remarks 
on its “‘carrying power.’ Neat-looking, 
perfectly formed buds and flowers in big 
clusters, and the plants are exceptionally 
vigorous. Each fragrant bloom is of me- 
dium size, with about 45 thick petals, 
regularly arranged. Tall and uniform in 
growth and a steady producer all season. 
$3.25 ea.—3 or more, $3 ea. 
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