

| *Luis Brinas 
era $1.25 each* 
*LUIS BRINAS. H.T. (P. Dot, 1934.) Plant 
Patent No. 102. See illustration. Orange-copper. 
Fine pointed buds of orange-copper open slowly, the 
petals curling back, making a starry flower with a 
high center. It ts fully double, with 40 to 45 petals, 
and when entirely open the color is soft old-rose, 
flushed with gold. It has a distinctive fragrance 
which is delightful. Has won Gold Medal and high- 
est awards fain French and English Rose Societies. 
Gold Medal, Portland Test- @ardent 1935. $1.25 
each. * 
*x*GLOWING CARMINE. H.T. (Howard & 
Smith, 1936.) Carmine. The name describes the 
color of this handsome Rose. It is a strong 
as a dark 
petals fall. 
grower, blooms freely, and can be used 
pink. The color holds well until the 
$1 each. * 
*HINRICH GAEDE. H.T. (W. Kordes Sons, 
1931.) Multicolored. Long-pointed, shapely bud 
of nasturtium-red color. Kaleidoscopic flowers— 
rich Juminous vermilion, shaded golden yellow. 
Fruity fragrance. $1.25 each. * 
*SENORA GARI. H.T. (P. Dot, 1934.) See 
illustration. Orange. Lovely orange buds open to 
4-inch flowers of buff-apricot, a new Rose shade. 
There is just a hint of a pinkish tint on the petals 
when the bloom is fully open. It is a true self-color 
as the inside and the reverse of the petals are of the 
same luscious tint. It changes color in different 
ways: Sometimes the outside petals change first, 
while on other blooms one-half of the flower will 
change, leaving the other half the original color. The 
second stage is a Quaker grayish shade in perfect 
harmony with the buff-apricot, and when all of the 
petals have made the change, the flower is as attrac- 
tive as when first open. An exquisite Rose at every 
stage. 30 petals and a rich, fruity fragrance. Certifi- 
cate of Merit, Portland Test-Garden, 1935. 
$1.25 each.* 



ke eK AUTUMN, 1936*% & & eK 
* THE CONARD-PYLE CO. * 
STAR ROSE GROWERS .. . West Grove, Pa. 


*LUCY NICOLAS. H.T. (C. Mallerin, 1935.) 
Golden copper. This Rose was awarded. the first 
prize, a $100 gold chronometer, at the 31st meeting 
of the French Rose Society at Besangon, where 60 
novelties were offered In competition. Flowers are 
4 inches across, coppery pink, flushed orange, open- 
ing from beautifully pointed buds, and have a 
sweet, honey-like fragrance. The open flowers are 
somewhat informal, with the outer petals changing to 
soft pink, and eventually the entire flower becomes 
that shade. 25 to 30 petals. Nice, bushy plant w ith 
long, light green foliage. A Rose of great promise, 
named for the d: aughter of the well-known Franco- 
American Rose authority, Dr. J. H. Nicolas. 
Gold Medal, Saverne, 1935. $1.25 each.* 
*MME.JOSEPH PERRAUD. H.T. (J. Gaujard, 
1934.) Nasturtium-buff. Winner of the Bagatelle 
Gold Medal, 1934, and awarded the honor at Lyons, 
France, of being “The most beautiful Rose in 
France for the year 1934.” In our trial-grounds it 
has persistently stood out among the thousand or 
more varieties, and enraptured visitors were in en- 
thusiastic accord with the high acclaim bestowed 
upon it 1m its land of origin. The long, slender, and 
pointed nasturtium-orange buds open to sweetly 
fragrant flowers of a charming nasturtium-buff, 
straying to a lovely shade of shell-pink at the petal 
edges—the nearest approach to a pure buff lightened 
with pink at the petal margins. (From tntroducer’s 
description.) $1.50 each. * 
*MME. VISSEAUX. H.T. 
Rose-orange. This is in the “interesting color’ 
class. Long-shaped copper buds, flushed pmnk at the 
tips, open to a 30-petaled flower of cactus form, 
with a heart of deep apricot which shades to buff at 
the edges of the petals. On well-established plants 
the quaint, fragrant blooms become larger and have 
more petals. A really novel Rose. Gold Medal, 
Lyons, 1935. $1.50 each.* 

(C. Mallerin, 1936.) 

$1.25 pache 
* Senora Gari.’ 
