Dreer's Select Potted Roses 



Novelties and Varieties of Recent Introduction 



Strong Two-Year-Old Stock Specially 

 Prepared in Pots for Outdoor Planting 



Alice Harding 



Mallerln, 1937. Plant Patent No. 202. A real exhibi- 

 tion yellow Rose with wonderful garden qualities. The 

 bud is large, golden yellow flaked with carmine, and the 

 open, long-lasting bloom is pure gold. Sweet honev 

 fragrance. $1.25 each; §12.50 per doz.; $100.00 per 100. 



Better Times 



Jos. H. Hill Co., 1934. Plant Patent No. 23. An out- 

 standing new Rose with long crimson buds opening into 

 brilliant cerise-red flowers that are large, double, deli- 

 cately fragrant, and produced on long, strong stems. 

 Excellent for cutting. Leathery dark green foliage. A 

 very free bloomer. 85c each; $8.50 per doz.; $70.00 per 

 100. 



Carrie Jacobs Bond 



Carrie Jacobs Bond 



Howard & Smith, 1935. Plant Patent No. 158. A 

 magnificent new Rose named in honor of the author 

 of "The End of a Perfect Day". Of aristocratic growth 

 with large, double blooms of ideal form carried singly 

 on long, upright stems. The color is an enchanting rich 

 deep rose enhanced by a luminous coral sheen. Mod- 

 erately fragrant and good at all seasons. We feel con- 

 fident that it will be the most popular Rose of the 

 years to come. $70.00 per 100. 



Christopher Stone 



(H. Robinson, 1935). Brilliant scarlet-crimson flowers, 

 alive with vivid scarlet and at times shaded crimson. 

 The petals have a velvety sheen. Has a delicious old- 

 Rose scent. $70.00 per 100. 



Countess Vandal 



Leenders, 1932. Plant Patent No. 38. A vigorous 

 Rose with long, pointed, copper-orange buds and 

 large, double, high-centered, sweet-scented flowers. The 

 color is brilliant pink with a beautiful salmon glow. 

 Long stemmed. A Gold Medal Winner. 85c each; $8.50 

 per doz.; $70.00 per 100. 



Crimson Glory 



(Kordes, 1934). Plant Patent No. 105. Well-branched 

 compact bushes of good symmetry laden with mag- 

 nificent large urn-shaped buds which open to flowers 

 of an intense, deep, and vivid crimson shaded with 

 deep red and mellowed by a velvety nap. 1934, Silver 

 Medal, International Flower Show, New York; Certificate 

 of Merit, German Trial Grounds; 1936, Gold Medal, 

 A. R. S.; 1937, Gold Medal, Hartford. $80.00 per 100. 



Dlcksons Centennial 



Dicksons Centennial 



Alex. Dickson & Sons, 1937. Plant Patent No. 223. 

 A truly marvelous new Rose with magnificent blooms 

 of deep glowing crimson with velvety red shadings. In 

 the fully developed flower the inner petals are spark- 

 ling Strawberry red. The whole is much enhanced by 

 the lustrous velvety sheen which radiates from every 

 petal. Has long, elegantly pointed buds developing into 

 large full blooms of Peony shape. Makes a strong, bushy 

 growth and produces an abundance of fragrant blooms 

 of highest merit. $70.00 per 100. 



Eclipse 



J. H. Nicolas, 1936. Plant Patent No. 172. A plant 

 of good strong habit producing long streamlined buds 

 of rich gold without shading. The fiowers are semi- 

 double, freely produced. In Rome and Paris several 

 international prizes have been awarded to this Rose. 

 $1.00 each; $10.00 per doz.; $80.00 per 100. 



Glo\Nring Carmine 



Howard & Smith, 1936. The name describes this 

 beautiful new Rose perfectly. It is a strong grower 

 with shapely buds and of a splendid color with good 

 lasting qualities. One of the outstanding new Roses 

 in our trial grounds. $70.00 per 100. 



Glowing Sunset (Wilhelm Breder) 



Kordes, 1934. Plant Patent No. 104. A glorious 

 new Rose with long, pointed buds opening to full, 

 double flowers of a most artistic form with the Inner 

 petals lengthened and twisted as in a choice Cactus 

 Dahlia. The color is a lovely combination of orange, 

 yellow, and rose-pink blending into a vivid light apri- 

 cot-orange. The alluringly fragrant flowers keep In 

 water for several days. $70.00 per 100. 



Golden State 



F. Meilland, 1938. Plant Patent No. 303. A truly gor- 

 geous Rose, superior to most other yellows in vigor, 

 erectness of growth, and abundance of bloom. An excel- 

 lent, continuous blooming garden Rose with a lovely 

 clove-scent. Its long buds open to glowing hearts of yel- 

 low-orange. The flowers are borne sometimes singly 

 sometimes in small clusters on fine erect stems. Each 

 flower has from 40-50 petals which when they unfold 

 change to a deep unfading buff veiled with salmon. 

 Awarded in 1937 the Gold Medal, Bagatelle, Paris, and 

 chosen the official Rose for the Golden Gate Interna- 

 tional Exposition, 1939. Has disease-resistant foliage 

 and is fine for cutting. $1.25 each; $12.50 per doz.; 

 $100.00 per 100. 



The aB«zaiil reproduction of Patented Roses Is reserved and Is 

 ■tzlotly prohibited under tlis provlalOBS of tb* Flant Patent Aot- 



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