EVERBLOOMING 



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*Rome 

 Glory 



See page 7 \:i 



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• GIRONA. Page 2. \^J H.T. New 1939. See 

 illustration and description, page 2. 



-A- GOLDEN STATE. See illustration on back 

 cover. H.T. (F. Meilland, 1938.) Plant Patent 

 303. Golden yellow. The official Rose for the 1939 

 Golden Gate International Exposition, San Fran- 

 cisco. Buds of buff-yellow, open to glowing hearts 

 of mikado orange. These golden blooms are 

 generally borne singly, but always on erect stems, 

 making them exceptionally fine for cutting. It 

 retains its rich color till the petals drop. Has faint 

 clove fragrance. Golden State was awarded a 

 Gold Medal at Bagatelle in Paris, June, 1937. 

 Other 1937 awards are: Gold Medal, International 

 Rose Test Gardens, Portland, Ore.; American Rose 

 Society's Gold Medal Certificate; and the Grand Gold 

 Medal, for "the most beautiful Rose oj France," 

 Lyons, France. $1.50 each; 3 for $3.75.i" 



• LADY LECONFIELD. New 1939. H.T. See 

 description page 3. $1.50 each.* 



• LILY PONS. H.T. (Brownell, 1938.) Plant 



Patent applied for. Yellow. This sulphur-yellow 



Rose marks the successful effort of Mr. Brownell 



to produce a sub-zero, fragrant, full-petaled 



yellow Hybrid Tea, which has been 



achieved after many years of painstaking 



work. $1.50 each; 3 for $3.75.i' 



• MME. CHARLES MALLERIN. H.T. 



New 1939. Rights to patent reserved. 

 See description page 3. $2 each.i* 



jjl •MME. HENRI GUILLOT. Page 3. 

 JPP^^ (l) H.T. (C. Mallerin, 1938.) Plant 

 ^^ Patent 337. Deep pink. Color is 

 watermelon to raspberry-pink, heavily 

 veiled with reddish orange, which pro- 

 duces flame-like glow. The artistic, 

 long, urn-shaped buds open to large, 

 camellia-shaped, 20-petaled blooms, 

 4}/^ inches across, with velvety tex- 

 tured, shell-like petals which keep form 

 and color for davs when cut. 1936, Gold Medal, 

 Bagatelle. $1.50 each; 3 for $3.75. i- 



• McGREDY'S SUNSET. H.T. (S. iMc- 

 Gredy & Son.) Plant Patent 317. Long- 

 pointed buds of clear yellow tipped with car- 

 mine open to large, fragrant blooms, the upper part of 

 the petals lightly brushed with apricot. Certificate oj 

 Merit, National Rose Society. $1.50 each; 3 for $3.75.'!* 



• rVIISS AMERICA. H.T. (J. H. Nicolas, 1937.) 

 Plant Patent 264. Flesh-pink. The color is flesh with 

 salmon and gold suffusion, faint gold at the base, and 

 frequently with a salmon center. The flowers average 

 65 petals and are produced singly on long stems all 

 season. $1 each; 3 for $2.50. i* 



• MRS. FRANCIS KING. H.T. (J. H. Nicolas.) 

 Patent 253. Cream-white. Large, full-petaled, fra- 



rant blooms of rich cream color which eventually turn 

 pure white. $1 each; 3 for $2.50.+ 



• POINSETTIA. H.T. (Howard & 

 Smith, 1938.) Scarlet. Beautiful poin- 

 settia-scarlet, semi-double blooms are 

 produced freelv all season on \ igor- 

 ous plants. $1.25 each.* 



• RADIO. @ H.T. (P. Dot, 1937.) 

 Plant Patent 197. Radio has all the 

 pep, vigor, hardiness, form, delightful 

 fragrance, and habit of the illustrious 

 Condesa de Sastago, from which it is 

 a direct oflspring. The major color is 

 an appealing soft primuline-ycllow 

 with each petal impishly and unevenly 

 striped, and s<Mnetimcs blotched, with 

 brilliant carmine or at times with 

 China-pink, all delightfully diflerent. 

 $1 each; 3 for $2.50.1* 



*See Quantity Prices, page 3 

 •f-No further discount 



THE CONARD-PYLE CO. 



