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EVERY ONE A PICTURE OF LOVELINESS 
UR ROSES are field-grown plants, having been culti¬ 
vated in fields during the past two years. In fall 
they are carefully dug, planted in pots, and stored 
in cold storehouses, where artificial heat is only used to 
exclude severe frost and are then moved into frames out¬ 
doors in early spring and gradually exposed to the 
weather. Under this treatment the plants develop in the 
most natural way, and are much superior to stock which 
has been forced in a high temperature into unnatural and 
weakened growth, and to comparatively worthless Roses 
which are sold so cheaply in a dormant condition. 
Leading Tried and Tested Roses 
All varieties listed are 75c each; $8.00 per doz; 
$60.00 per 100. Except as noted. 
Briarcliff. Fine flowers of a silvery rose-pink. Deservedly a favorite. 
Catherine Kordes. A showy, large Rose with long, pointed, rich red 
buds. Long-lasting and fragrant. 
Dame Edith Helen. Brilliant soft pink, strong, vigorous constitution. 
Large flowers. Very fragrant. 
Edel. Enormous, well-built white flower with faintest ivory-white at 
base; very free-flowering, delightfully scented. The best white Rose. 
Edith Nellie Perkins. Vigorous, free-flowering Rose. Oriental red, 
shaded cerise-orange, inside salmon-pink. 
E. G. Hill. I mmense, dazzling red flowers. A vigorous plant producing 
fine cut flowers. 
Etoile de Hollande. Brilliant crimson-red flowers—perhaps the most 
popular red Rose both for its fragrance and vigorous growth. Each, 
85c; $9.00 per doz. 
Golden Dawn. The ideal yellow garden Rose. Lemon-yellow buds with 
crimson shading, opening to large double yellow flowers, resembling 
the old favorite Marechal Niel. 
Gruss an Tepliti. This is the reddest of all the red Roses. Strong 
grower and exceptionally hardy. 
Hadley. Deep crimson with a velvety texture. 
Kaiserine Augusta Victoria. Soft pearly white. 
Lady Alice Stanley. Large buds which, upon expanding, develop into 
large, moderately fragrant blooms, flesh-pink and a coral-rose tint 
on the reverse; very free bloomer, splendid foliage. 
Lady Margaret Stewart. A Rose of unique and distinct color. The 
flowers in the young stage are a deep sunflower-yellow, heavily 
veined and splashed with orange-scarlet, with the reverse of petals 
deeply suffused carmine; long, pointed buds. Sweet-scented. 
Lord Charlmont. Large flowers of deep crimson. Fragrant. $1.00 each. 
Los Angeles. (Howard & Smith, 1917.) This is by far one of the finest 
Roses ever introduced; flame-pink toned with coral; fragrance equal 
to Marechal Niel; will be as popular as the Jack Rose. 85c each; 
$9.00 per doz. 
McGredy's Scarlet. Brilliant scarlet with orange base and light crimson 
edges. Vigorous and free-blooming. 85c each; $9.00 per doz. 
Miss Roweno Thom. Finely formed, fragrant, rose-pink flowers. Petals 
with light yellow base. 
Mme. Butterfly. Blush-pink, suffused apricot and gold, of good texture 
and fragrance. 
Mme. Edouard Herriot (The Daily Mail Rose) . Coral-red, shaded 
yellow at base; open flowers of medium size; semi-double, rosy 
scarlet, passing to shrimp-pink. 
Mme. Joseph Perroud. Truly a superb Rose, combining size, vigor, 
and a lovely form with a color that blends light gold and shell-pink 
into an indescribable beautiful shade of golden buff, sweetly fra¬ 
grant. $ 1.00 each. 
Mrs. Aaron Word. Indian yellow; very free and fragrant; a great fa¬ 
vorite, blooms all summer. 
Mrs. Erskine Pembroke Thom. Proved by test to be the best yellow gar¬ 
den variety; long, shapely buds, particularly good in fall. 
Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont. Well formed buds and flowers of rich reddish 
gold. Profuse and of spicy fragrance. Unusually fine in fall. 
Eternal Youth 
Select New Hybrid Tea 
Pateftied (laieA. 
Better Times. Jos. H. Hill Co.) (U. S. Plant Patent No. 23.) A 
splendid red Rose for cutting. A sport of Briarcliff, grown ex¬ 
tensively by all Rose growers. Noted for its free-blooming 
qualities. Each, $1.00. 
Carrie Jacobs Bond. (U. S. Plant Patent No. 158.) A magnificent 
new Rose with large double blooms, color rich deep rose, en¬ 
hanced by a luminous coral sheen; flowers good at all seasons. 
$1.00 each. 
Countess Vandal. (U. S. Plant Patent No. 38.) Orange coppery 
buds, large double flowers highly scented, brilliant pink lightened 
to salmon. $1.00 each. 
Crimson Glory. (Kordes, 1934.) U. S. Plant Patent No. 105.) 
Awarded silver medal. International Flower Show, New York, 
spring 1934. Well-formed flowers of a good red, in great 
abundance. $1.25 each. 
Dickson's Red. (Plant Patent Applied for.) No. 1 Rose in the All- 
America Selections for 1940. Deep glowing red, holding its color 
without fading. Blooms through summer, furnishing ideal cut 
flowers. See front cover. $1.50 each. 
Eclipse. (U. S. Plant Patent No. 172.) A brilliant new yellow Rose, 
the winner of the most coveted medals of the Rose world in Rome 
and Paris. Continuous bloomer, especially good in the fall. $1.25 
each. 
Eternal Youth. (U. S. Plant Patent No. 332.) New. The perfectly 
formed buds are long, pointed, and colored a beautiful soft pink 
with yellow at the base of each petal. Flower holds its color well 
throughout blooming. Vigorous and free-flowering. $1.50 each. 
Rex Anderson. (Plant Patent Applied for.) Handsome buds and 
blooms of great size. Cream, turning pure white with age. Blooms 
are several on each stem, and come in rapid succession. Vigorous, 
with handsome, dark green foliage. $1.50 each. 
R. M. S. Queen Mary. (Verschuren, 1937.) (U. S. Plant Patent No. 
249.) The outstanding new Rose of 1938. The silken textured 
flower petals are a glowing tone of salmon evenly blended with 
exquisite pure pink. The bright, lively orange tone displayed at 
the base of each petal adds a ray of brilliance to the blooms. 
$1.50 each; $15.00 per doz. 
