Page 12 
‘Brookes & Son , ‘ 7 lose Qrowers, ^JVLodesto 
PRESIDENT HERBERT HOOVER. A cut¬ 
ting Rose par excellence. The plant grows 
tall—vvjfh good foliage, and produces its 
beautiful fragrant flowers singly on very 
long stems. The 
shapely buds 
open to high- 
centered flowers 
of scarlet-yellow, 
cerise-pink and 
flame, which last 
well. Awarded 
Gold Medal, 
1934, for best 
American Rose 
introduced within 
the previous five 
years. 
PRESIDENT 
PLUM ECOCQ. 
A really fine Rose 
in every respect. Perfectly formed cop¬ 
pery-yellow buds, large fragrant open flow¬ 
ers of good form—coppery-buff with an 
overglow of deep salmon. Fine upright 
plant, producing large quantities of the 
beautiful buds for cutting. 
ROGER LAMBERLIN. H.P. A hardy Hy¬ 
brid Perpetual Rose producing a full, high 
centered flower of deep maroon with an 
edging of white on each petal. The petals 
are serrated, reminding one of the very 
popular ruffled petunias. A very novel and 
unusual Rose. Like most of the Hybrid Per¬ 
petual Roses, it produces most of the flow¬ 
ers in the spring. 
ROSE MARIE. Yes, it is pink—but a like¬ 
able shade of pink, and a favorite with 
many Rose lovers. The buds and flowers 
have good form and fragrance, and the 
bush really knows how to produce. 
SIR HENRY SEGRAVE. This wonderful new 
Rose can hardly be said to be white—pos¬ 
sibly ivory, tinted lemon would describe the 
colors—at any rate we class it as the best 
light colored Rose that has come to our 
notice in recent years. The buds and flow¬ 
ers are superb in form and substance and 
the bush is above the average in perform¬ 
ance. The always perfect buds rate high 
in cutting value. 
SOUV. de MME. C. CHAMBARD. Voted 
the most beautiful Rose in France in 1932— 
and it deserved the honor, for here we have 
form in all its perfection, in both the buds 
and open flowers. And the colors! Silvery 
carmine-rose, shading to salmon with a 
satiny sheen that makes the flowers glow 
and sparkle. Slender upright bush—good 
stems for cutting. 
SISTER THERESE. Here is a Rose with all 
the good qualities that make it a valuable 
garden variety—a remarkably strong, tall, 
vigorous, free-branching bush that is always 
in bloom. The very long, gracefully slender 
bud is perfection itself. The color is chrome- 
yellow, tinged carmine and the petalage is 
sufficient to make it excellent for cutting. 
The open flower is somewhat lighter yellow, 
combined with deeper tones of apricot and 
gold, is always wonderful to behold. Heavy 
grade 75c each. Medium grade 50c each. 
TALISMAN. A glorious combination of 
orange, yellow and red—known and loved 
for its great beauty and sterling qualities 
wherever Roses are grown. A strong, tall 
growing bush that carries the flowers on fine 
stems for cutting. 
PRES. PLUM ECOCQ 
Fully described on this page 
t 
MRS. E. P. THOM 
Fully described on Page II 
