82 
Breck’s Roses 
HYBRID TEA ROSES, continued 
GLOWING SUNSET. (Kordes, 1934.) Plant Patent No. 104. 
An alluringly fragrant Rose with inner flower petals that are 
almost quilled, giving the full-blown Rose a striking and ap¬ 
pealing air of gaiety. The color is a blend of rose-pink and 
soft orange-yellow, which makes its name a most fitting one. 
SI.00 each. 
GOLDEN DAWN. (Patrick Grant, 1929.) A magnificent new 
Rose from Australia, with big, fat, golden yellow buds stained 
with coppery red, opening to delightfully scented, lemon- 
yellow flowers of splendid form and substance. 
GRENOBLE. (C. Mallerin, 1927.) High-centered, double flowers 
of 30 to 40 clear scarlet petals, fragrant, and extremely lasting. 
A splendid new red Rose of vigorous growth and continuous 
flowering habit. 
Gruss an Teplitz. (Geschwind, 1897.) A most vigorous, erect 
bush growing 3 to 5 feet high, bearing a profusion of fragrant, 
medium-sized, gracefully nodding flowers of rich scarlet-crim¬ 
son shaded with black. Splendid for garden decoration. 
HINRICH GAEDE. (W. Kordes Sons, 1931.) Probably the most 
brilliantly colored of all Hybrid Tea Roses. The shapely buds 
are of a brilliant nasturtium-red color and open to a large, high- 
centered flower of luminous vermilion shaded golden yellow. 
A splendid Rose. $1.00 each. 
JEAN COTE. Plant Patent rights reserved. (J. Gaujard, 1936.) 
Immense brownish orange buds open to great flowers of solid 
orange, really almost brown. They are quite double and are 
produced on good strong stems. The fragrance is rather fruity. 
Plants are medium height and branchy, with large, glossy 
foliage. $1.50 eachi 
Joanna Hill. (J. H. Hill Co., 1928.) A splendid Rose for cutting, 
with curiously shaped, buff-yellow buds on superb stems. 
Flowers expand slowly, paling as they develop to deep creamy 
yellow with old-gold shadings. 
Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria. (P. Lambert, 1891.) A charming old 
Rose with pointed, lemony white buds, opening to perfectly 
formed, very double white flowers lightly tinted with lemon. 
Margaret McGredy. (1927.) Strong, bushy, free-blooming plants 
with double, cupped flowers of brilliant brick-red, distinct from 
any other variety. Thoroughly dependable. 
McGredy’s Ivory (Portadown Ivory). (1929.) Beautifully formed 
Roses of creamy white with long, deep, shell-like petals and 
long-lasting fragrance. A fine exhibition flower. 
McGredy’s Pride. (1936.) Plant Patent rights reserved. Very 
lovely flowers of orange and salmon-pink, flushed and veined 
saffron-yellow, with yellow flushed pink on the reverse of the 
petals. A very distinct flower of wonderful brilliancy and we are 
sure it will please our customers. Plants are good. $1.50 each. 
McGredy’s Sunset. (1937.) Plant Patent No. 317. Outside 
petals clear buttercup yellow, inside chrome-yellow flushed 
with scarlet. This fine new rose makes a magnificent bush, 
that produces generously throughout the blooming season. 
$1.50 each. 
McGredy’s Triumph. (1936.) Plant Patent No. 190. Very large 
branching plants with thick canes and heavy bronzy foliage. 
Extra-large flowers of ripe strawberry color, flushed scarlet and 
orange. Unusually good plants and unusually attractive blooms. 
$1.25 each. 
Mrs. Sam McGredy. (1929.) Exquisite flowers of scarlet-copper- 
orange heavily flushed with red. Attracts as much attention as 
any Rose in the garden. Strong, bushy plants with red canes 
and rich bronzy foliage. A really good-looking plant. 
BREXONE ROSE FOOD (4-12-4) 
Growers using this highly specialized plant-food will find 
that the results are truly amazing, as this has been com¬ 
pounded to meet, in every way, the exacting requirements 
of the Rose, the world’s most popular flower. 5 lbs. 45c; 
10 lbs. 90c; 25 lbs. $1.85; 50 lbs. $3.25; 100 lbs. $6.00. 
TRI-OGEN 
Complete Protection for Roses Against Insects 
and Diseases 
An insecticide and fungicide which comes to you as three 
separate liquids packed in one carton. If these are com¬ 
bined, (at the time of spraying) diluted according to 
directions, and sprayed on the Rose plants at regular 
intervals, all sucking insects, leaf eating insects, and fungus 
diseases will be controlled. Tri-ogen is harmless to foliage 
and blooms, it is convenient and easy to use, and it stimu¬ 
lates growth by keeping the plants in a healthy condition. 
A Small kit (makes 4 gals.) a season’s supply for 12 to 20 
Roses. $1.50. 
B Medium kit (makes 16 gals.) a season’s supply for 50 
to 80 Roses. $4.00. 
C Large kit (makes 32 gals.) a season’s supply for 100 to 
160 Roses. $6.00. 
D Estate kit (makes 128 gals.) a season’s supply for 400 
to 600 Roses. $20.00. 
Miss Rowena Thom. (Howard & Smith, 1927.) A giant Rose, 
frequently 5)^ to 6 inches across. The blooms are rose-pink 
of a peculiar dusky shade, illumined with golden orange. 
Mme. Edouard Herriot. (Pernet-Ducher, 1913.) To many 
known as “The Daily Mail.” A famous Rose which brought 
the first brilliant coral-pink shades into the Rose-garden. The 
large, semi-double flowers are fiery orange-pink, a color un¬ 
surpassed by any of its descendants. 
MME. JOSEPH PERRAUD. (Gaujard, 1934.) The sweetly- 
fragrant flowers of soft orange-buff shading to shell-pink are 
undoubtedly more beautiful than any other Rose in this color 
class. Winner of the Bagatelle Gold Medal in 1934. The buds 
when first opening are orange. This Rose arrests the attention 
of everyone seeing it for the first time. Highly recommended. 
$1.00 each. 
Mme. Jules Bouch6. (J. Croibier & Sons, 1911.) The finest white 
garden Rose. Plants are bushy, 2 to 4 feet high, with erect 
stems bearing numerous medium-sized white flowers of unim¬ 
peachable form, each lightly tinged with peach-pink in the 
center. 
MME. NICOLAS AUSSEL. (Pernet-Ducher, 1930.) Bud very 
long; flower double, salmon, shaded carmine and ochre, tinted 
yellow at the base; intensely fragrant. 
Mrs. Erksine Pembroke Thom. (Howard & Smith, 1926.) The 
most strenuous efforts of modern hybridizers have been de¬ 
voted to producing a good, hardy, everblooming yellow Rose 
for the garden. This variety is the finest that has been achieved 
to date. It is equally good for the garden and cutting. 
Mrs. Henry Morse. (S. McGredy & Son, 1919.) A two-toned 
pink Rose of splendid form and good cutting value. Moderate 
fragrance. Plants of medium size. 
Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont. (C. Mallerin, 1929.) A compact bedding 
Rose of splendid habit, producing an abundance of bright 
yellow flowers, richer in quality than any other yellow garden 
Rose. 
Ophelia. (W. Paul & Son, 1912.) One of the old loves of the 
Rose-garden. A dainty, pearly pink flower, lightly touched 
with gold and cream color. The blooms are exquisitely formed. 
PINK DAWN. (Howard & Smith, 1935.) A fine strong Hybrid 
Tea Rose of exceptional merit. A vigorous, upright grower 
producing buds of deep rose opening to full double flowers of 
fighter pink. Pleasingly fragrant. $1.00 each. 
President Herbert Hoover. (L. B. Coddington, 1930.) A Rose 
of astonishing vigor, producing long, handsomely shaped yellow 
buds deeply stained with maroon and copper, opening to big, 
half-double flowers of soft straw-yellow,flushed with deep rose 
on the outer surface. Very popular 
PRINCE FELIX V (de Luxembourg). (Ketten Bros., 1930.) 
Well-formed bloom, rather large, of brilliant scarlet-red. Tall, 
healthy plant of Radiance type. 
