EVERBLOOMING ROSES 
1-yr. plants, 20c each, 12 for $1.95; 2-yr. plants, 60c each, 12 for $5, except where noted 
CRIMSON ROSES 
American Beauty. A very vigorous 
Hybrid Tea Rose, with glowing rosy crimson 
flowers, heavily and richly fragrant. 1-yr. 
plants, 30c each; extra-large 2-yr., 75c. 
Crusader. A robust, free-flowering va¬ 
riety with big, double velvety crimson flowers 
on strong, heavy stems. 
Dardanelle. Grand buds and flowers of 
brilliant cherry-red, changing to bright rose- 
pink, resembiing perfectly formed, semi¬ 
double peonies. 
Etoile de France. See description and 
color illustration on page 9. 
Francis Scott Key. Enormous light 
crimson buds and noble blooms of very 
double form. A magnificent Rose in the 
South. See color illustration on page 4. 
Harvard. Everyone admires its fragrant, 
crimson flowers of splendid form. A vigorous, 
upright plant. 
Helen Gould. Very graceful buds and 
daintily formed open flowers of warm, rosy 
crimson, almost the same shade as the heart 
of a rich, ripe watermelon. 
Laurent Carle. A phenomenally vigorous 
bush with glowing carmine-crimson flowers 
of lovely shape and exquisite fragrance. 
Mrs. Warren E. Lenon. Vigorous plant 
with bright rosy crimson flowers of excellent 
form and size; very sweetly scented. 
Red Columbia. Scarlet-crimson sport 
from the famous Columbia. One of the freest 
bloomers in existence. 
Red Radiance. Very stout, healthy 
plants, producing abundant crops of bright 
light rosy crimson flowers shaped exactly like 
those of Radiance. See color illustration on 
page 4. 
Rhea Reid. Dependable old variety, 
popular in many gardens. Flowers are shin¬ 
ing crimson-scarlet. 
Sensation. Very vigorous, upright plant 
with large, velvety maroon flowers heavily 
scented with the true old Rose perfume. See 
color illustration on page 4. 
Templar. A free-flowering cup-shaped 
Rose of sparkling crimson. Popular in 
florists’ shops. 
Victor. Long-pointed buds and fully 
double flowers of deep rose and carmine- 
crimson. Remarkably free-flowering. See 
color illustration on page 4. 
RED ROSES 
David O. Dodd. See description and 
color illustration on page 8. 
E. G. Hill. Buds unsurpassed in beauty, 
except by the wonderful open flower of dark 
scarlet, toned with deep pure red as it opens. 
1-yr. plants, 20c each; 2-yr., 75c. 
Etoile de Hollande. The most popular 
red garden Rose. Brilliant red blooms, fra¬ 
grant and beautifully formed. Blooms all the 
time. 1-yr. plants, 20c each; 2-yr., 75c. 
General MacArthur. Popular, all-round 
bedding Rose with warm crimson-scarlet 
flowers of excellent form; very fragrant. 
Gruss an Teplitz. Huge, shrubby bush 
with fragrant, double flowers of glorious 
crimson. Extremely free-flowering. 
Hadley. Flowers intense, rich, dazzling 
crimson-scarlet, shaded with blackish velvet; 
very fragrant. 
Lord Charlemont. Splendid new red 
Rose of exceptional richness and beauty, 
full, and sweetly scented. 
Mary Hart. See description on page 3. 
M rs. C. W. Edwards. Very attractive 
rose-red flowers with flames of orange at the 
base of the petals. Strong and prolific. 
Royal Red. The great expanded flowers 
are fully double, sweetly scented, and a 
handsome shade of crimson-scarlet. 
Scarlet Beauty. See description on 
page 3. 
PINK ROSES 
Albert Pike. Handsome, cup-shaped 
flowers of clear cerise-pink, with a glowing 
peach-colored flush. 
Briarcliff. Large, pointed buds and 
double, high-centered blooms of brilliant 
rose-pink; fragrant and long lasting. Stems 
long and stiff. See color illustration on page 4. 
City of Little Rock. Long, perfect buds, 
opening to distinctively shaped flowers of 
bright rosy pink. Vigorous and profuse. 
Columbia. Famous old florists’ Rose of 
clear, imperial pink, deepening as the flowers 
age. Fine stems for cutting. 
Commonwealth. A fine cut-flower with 
long-stemmed, massive buds and flowers of 
deep, solid rose-pink, uniform and unshaded. 
Comtesse Vandal. See description on 
page 3. 
Dame Edith Helen. Massive, perfectly 
formed pink Rose with petals symmetrically 
arranged like a huge pink Francis Scott Key. 
1-yr. plants, 25c each; 2-yr., 60c. 
Dixie. A sport of Radiance, somewhat like 
the flesh-pink Mrs. Charles Bell but has more 
petals and a deeper salmon tone. 
Double Pink Killarney. Exquisite buds 
and flowers of brilliant sparkling shell-pink. 
A strong, sturdy plant. 
Grace Noll Crowell. See description and 
color illustration on page 1. 
Jonkheer J. L. Mock. Gigantic, double 
flowers of sparkling pink stained with car¬ 
mine on the outer surface of the petals. A 
magnificent Rose. 
La France. The oldest Hybrid Tea, with 
very fragrant, double, silvery pink flowers of 
great charm. Popular with the older 
gardeners. 
Maman Cochet. An old favorite Tea 
Rose with enormous, fully double, coral-pink 
flowers tinted with silvery tones and shaded 
darker in the depths of the petals. Deli¬ 
ciously fragrant and one of the freest bloomers. 
Miss Cynthia Forde. Strong, upright 
plants bearing delicately toned flowers of 
brilliant rose-pink. Free and continuous 
bloomer. 
Mme. Caroline Testout. A famous old 
Hybrid Tea, once widely planted and still 
grown in great quantities on the Pacific 
Coast. The big, cup-shaped flowers are 
satiny rose-pink. 
Mme. Segond Weber. Huge, massive 
flowers with many petals, varying from light 
rose-pink to deep flesh and salmon tones in 
the center. 
Mrs. U. M. Rose. Long, shapely buds 
and perfect, double flowers of brilliant rose- 
pink, deepening almost to red. See color 
illustration on page 4. 
New Columbia. A handsome Rose of 
true, sparkling pink, deepening a little in the 
center, a little lighter than Columbia; very 
fragrant. 1-yr. plants, 25c each; 2-yr., 60c. 
Paul Neyron. A Hybrid Perpetual Rose 
which blooms more or less freely in the fall. 
Huge, old-rose flowers, probably the largest 
in cultivation. 
Premier. An old, weil-known florists’ 
variety, with massive, deep rose-colored 
flowers of great substance. 
Radiance. The most popular of all garden 
Roses. Brilliant pink, shaded darker on the 
outer surface of the petals. Vigorous and 
always in flower. 
Winsome. Very sweet, fully double 
flowers of a superb shade of brilliant cherry- 
rose. Vigorous and free-flowering. 
William Shean. A fine old Tea Rose with 
handsome, long, tapering buds opening to 
glorious, double, pink flowers. 
PALE PINK ROSES 
Antoine Rivoire. Medium-sized flowers 
of pale lilac-pink, shot with gold. Shaped 
almost exactly like a fully double camellia. 
Josephine Vestal. Long, perfect buds 
opening to beautifully formed flowers of 
creamy white, passing from a golden center 
to faint pink at the tips of the petals; 
sweetly scented. 
Mme. Butterfly. One of the most popular 
Roses grown, bearing exquisitely shaped, 
creamy pink flowers, brightly illumined with 
gold and yellow at the base of the petals. 
Mrs. Percy V. Pennybacker. A very 
beautiful peach-pink flower frosted over with 
silvery pink, giving a unique and lovely tone. 
Excellent for cutting. 
Rapture. A soft but brilliant pink flower 
on the order of Mme. Butterfly, with deep 
apricot and coral tones at the base of the 
petals. See color illustration on page 4. 
William R. Smith. Fine old Tea Rose of 
branching habit, with blush-white flowers, 
creamy at the center and tinged with old- 
rose on the outer petals. 
SCARLET-ORANGE ROSES 
Glorio. A beautiful flower of scarlet- 
cerise, with rich yellow shading at the base 
of the petals. Heavily veined with gold and 
illumined with scarlet in its glowing heart. 
Margaret McGredy. An outstanding 
Rose with huge, cup-shaped flowers of a 
gorgeous orange-scarlet or intense brick-red. 
Very vigorous. See color illustration on page 
4. 1-yr. plants, 25c each; 2-yr., 75c. 
Olympiad (Mme. Raymond Gaujard). 
Vivid cerise-red flowers heavily veined and 
flamed with yellow at the base of the petals. 
Very showy. 1-yr. plants, 25c each; 2-yr., 75c. 
President Herbert Hoover. See descrip¬ 
tion and color illustration on page 9. 
Talisman. See description and color 
illustration on page 9. 
APRICOT AND ORANGE 
ROSES 
Lady Hillingdon. An always-popular, 
beautiful, apricot-yellow Tea Rose. Its 
lovely buds and exquisite flowers command 
admiration. 
Mrs. Aaron Ward. Dainty little buds of 
fawn-pink, tinged with coppery yellow, open¬ 
ing ivory-yellow, delicately tinged with 
tawny pink. Dwarf, compact plants. 
Petit Jean. Deep orange-bufF buds open¬ 
ing to full, straw-yellow flowers, each petal 
edged with peachy pink. 1-yr. plants, 30c 
each; 2-yr., 75c. 
Rev. F. Page-Roberts. Coppery red buds 
opening to huge golden yellow blooms 
stained red outside; very fragrant. 
Souv. de Pierre Notting. Marvelous, old 
double Tea Rose of massive form. Rich 
yellow, varying to bufT-white, sometimes 
tinged with rose-pink. 
6 
JOS. W. VESTAL & SON 
Box 871 • Little Rock, Ark. 
