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TEA 
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The following varieties, except where noted, 2-yr. field-grown budded plants, 60c each, 12 for $5.90, 
postpaid. 50 or more at 40c each, by Express collect. 
We have only a few varieties of own-root plants. These will be found listed separately. 
Ami Quinard. One of tire darkest Roses grown. 
Velvety crimson-maroon, with rich fragrance. It 
is not very double but you will love it. See color 
illustration on page 13. 
Angela. Its creamy white buds and open flowers 
are exquisite in the extreme, and remarkable for 
a delicious, delicate fragrance rare in white Roses. 
Angele Pernet. Loosely formed, cup-shaped 
flowers of rich brownish apricot. A beautiful 
bloom. Named for his daughter by the great 
Pernet. Low-growing. 
Autumn. One of the most highly colored of the 
Hybrid Teas. Burnt-orange blooms, stained with 
red and pink; 30 petals. Compact growth. See 
color illustration on page 5. 
Betty Uprichard. A two-toned Rose, salmon 
suffused orange on the inside of the petals, while 
the reverse is coppery carmine. It has a spicy 
fragrance. Very vigorous plants with healthy 
foliage. See color illustration on page 9. 
Briarcliff. Long, pointed buds of deep pink open 
to high-centered flowers of brilliant rose-pink. It 
is deliciously fragrant and is one of the finest 
Roses for cutting. See in color on page 4. 
Caledonia. A pure white flower of good size and 
attractive form. The plants are of medium height 
with good foliage and bloom more freely than 
most white Roses. See illustration on page 8. 
Catalonia. Fragrant, globular flowers of vivid 
orange-scarlet on a low, branching plant. Cata¬ 
lonia is in a class by itself as there is no other 
Rose even approaching its brilliant color. 
Comtesse Vandal. Plant Pat. No. 38. This lovely 
garden Rose produces beautifully formed, long¬ 
stemmed flowers of rich salmon and vivid rose- 
pink. Its long-pointed buds are distinctly shaded 
with coppery bronze and the open blooms finish 
with a soft silvery sheen. $1.00 each. 
Condesa de Sastago. Globular flowers of burning 
copper inside and deep yellow outside. One of 
the most spectacular Roses in existence. Fragrant. 
Strong plants that bloom freely. See color illus¬ 
tration on front cover. 
Daily IVIail Scented. A large, double bloom of 
dark crimson. Gets its name from its outstanding 
fragrance. Plants are of medium size and bloom 
generously. 
Dainty Bess. Five-petaled flowers, 3 to 4 inches 
in diameter, with ruffled edges to the petals; the 
color is an exquisite shade of soft rose-pink 
glorified by a mass of wine-colored stamens. For 
table decoration it is unsurpassed. Tall, branchy 
plants always in bloom. See in color on page 12. 
Dame Edith Helen. Massive, perfectly formed 
pink Rose with petals symmetrically arranged 
like a huge pink Francis Scott Key. See color 
illustration on page 5. 
David O. Dodd. This great Rose, introduced by 
us in 1926, is, we believe, unexcelled in size, form, 
color, and fragrance. The strong plants produce 
quantities of bloom during the season. See color 
illustration on page 12. 
Duchess of Wellin^on. Lovely long buds and 
immense, loose saflron-yellow flowers with rich 
old Tea fragrance. Sprawling, bushy plants. See 
in color on page 13. 
Edith Nellie Perkins. This beautiful Rose, one 
of the first Hybrid Teas to bloom, bears an 
unusual quantity of finely formed pale salmon and 
gold flowers, with rosy carmine on reverse. 
Healthy, bushy plants. See in color on page 9. 
Editor McFarland. The finest dark pink Rose. 
Perfectly formed flowers of deep rose-pink are 
freely produced on a bushy plant. As a cut-flower 
it keeps longer than any Rose we know. See in 
color on page 8. 
Beds of Vestal’s Hybrid Teas 
Try some of the Newer Roses 
JOS. W. VESTAL & SON, Box 871, Little Rock, Ark. 
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