MME. JEAN GAUJARD 
(Gaujard, France) 
Plant Patent applied for 
A Rose of real distinction from the 
home of Pernet-Ducher Roses now 
owned by Monsieur Jean Gaujard. The 
long-pointed bud and high-centered 
flowers are borne profusely on long 
stems. When fully opened the blooms 
are an orange-buff, rich in tone and 
character. Its half-open buds show the 
inside of the petals a warm orange and 
the reverse of the petals a carmine-pink 
with a suffusion of gold at the base. 
The contrast is rich and alluring, both 
in regular daylight and also when cut 
and under electric lights. Foliage is a 
light green and is well spaced on the 
branches. It is disease-resistant, and a 
most desirable Rose for garden and cut¬ 
ting. Gold Medals: C. F. S. R., 
France, 1934; Colie Oppio, Each $1.50 
Italy, 1937. 515 dozen 
MRS. FRANCIS KING 
(J. H. Nicolas) 
Plant Patent No. 253 
All hybridizers agree that a good white Rose is 
hardest to produce. This probably is why such a 
connoisseur as Mrs. Francis King, one of the 
founders of the Garden Club of America, specified 
a white Rose as the one she wished to bear her 
name. She wisely wanted a Rose not easily 
duplicated. To make the problem more difficult, 
she requested “white gola” with the arcticness 
and vigor of the Alaskan Rose, Nutkana, the new 
strain developed in our own laboratories. The 
bloom is very large and full, carried on a long 
upright stem, white drawing to pale gold in the 
center. It has the pleasing fragrance of wild 
Roses and is a prolific, continuous p l <t< aa 
bloomer. Cert, of Merit, Portland, 
lq v7 $10 dozen 
MME. JEAN GAUJARD 
Plant Patent applied for 
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