COLUMBIA 
KAISERIN 
AUGUSTE VIKTORIA 
PRESIDENT 
HERBERT 
HOOVER 
There’s a Whole Satntnet 
LADY HILLINGDON 
y' Wight’s must 
Shown on these two p 
commended Roses. Th 
true” varieties for Sou 
erly planted and prunet 
with a great display of 
One each of the 
Roses here shoM 
field-grown plai 
Carefully packed i 
GooJ 
Tojo 5oi 
A.' SVioviP 
■I). • Toirit- 
O NE cannot imagine a Southern garden without Roses. Nor 
ean one imagine a garden with too many Roses—unless it 
be one where the plants are neglected and sadly over¬ 
crowded, a condition that rarely oceurs. Because of the mild 
Southern climate and favorable soils, Roses thrive under our 
sunny skies and are lavish in displaying colorful blooms, and 
spreading fragrance abroad. 
In spring the Rose lover eagerly looks for the first sign of 
growth; then impatiently waits until the swelling buds burst 
into full bloom. From then until hot midsummer his garden is a 
mass of color. When cooler days and nights of autumn eome 
the plants give a second season of bloom, and then the reds 
seem to be brighter, the pinks richer, and the yellows more 
golden than earlier in the year. Truly Roses are the supreme 
flowers for the Southland. 
TALISMAN 
PINK RADIANCE 
