Novelty Hybrid Tea Roses, continued 
GOLDEN DAWN. (Patrick Grant, 1929.) We consider it 
the finest new golden yellow that has come to our atten¬ 
tion lately. The bud is highly colored old-rose and 
yellow, but the flower, when open, is a clear sunflower- 
yellow. Sweetly fragrant. Very vigorous, medium 
height, bushy. $1.00. 
IMPRESS. (A. Dickson & Sons, 1929.) The large, ovoid 
bud is a cardinal-red, shaded orange; open flower very 
large and double, salmon-pink, suffused with a luminous 
golden sheen. Very vigorous, erect. $1.00. 
LUCIE MARIE. (A. Dickson & Sons, 1930.) Splendidly 
pointed, orange-yellow buds, with red veinations. The 
open bloom shows a magnificent blending of coppery 
yellow with the edge of the petals a golden pink. Sweetly 
fragrant. Vigorous, erect. $1.00. 
McGREDY’S SCARLET. (S. McGredy & Son, 1930.) 
This is really a fine, well-formed, and truly colored 
“red” Rose, and so does not exactly tally with the name. 
Deep down inside the red petalage you will find the 
true scarlet tones. Fragrant. Very vigorous, erect and 
bushy. $1.00. 
MARY HART. (G. B. Hart, 1931.) Plant Patent No. 8. 
A red sport of Talisman. Both the bud and open flower 
show a deep velvety maroon-red color that does not fade. 
Mary Hart is just as sturdy and strong a grower as 
Talisman, and the shape of the bloom is exactly the 
same. Vigorous, erect. $1.25. 
MRS. SAM McGREDY. (S. McGredy & Son, 1929.) A 
very distinctly colored Rose such as McGredy or no 
other hybridizer has ever introduced. The large, long- 
pointed bud is a deep coppery scarlet, opening to a very 
double bloom of a coppery orange color. Moderately 
fragrant. Very vigorous, bushy. $1.25. 
