
12 Most Spectacular Roses 
in Gardens on Parade 

Charlotte 
Armstrong © 


CHARLOTTE. 
ARMSTRONG 
(Plant Patent Rights Reserved) 
Blood-red buds, magnificent flowers, 
spectrum-red in cooler months, cerise 
in summer heat. The long-stemmed 
blooms, produced in prodigious quanti- 
ties throughout the season, are ideal for 
cutting because they open slowly and 
retain their beauty until the last petal 
drops. The headline All-America Selec- 
tion for 1941. 
Characteristics. .strong, vigorous, free-branch- 
ing; luxurious disease-resistant 
foliage. 
$1.50 each; 3 for $3.75; 12 for $15: 
ANEW CLIMBER 


a L. Ferrer F. FERRER 
. J. & P.CO. 
Many of our friends ask us to select for them the peers in the Parade 
of Modern Roses. This year that is especially easy, because we have 
had the votes of the more than 100,000 Rose enthusiasts who visited 
the J. & P. Rose Gardens in Gardens on Parade at the New York 
World’s Fair of 1940. So this splendid group has been made up for 
you from the Roses they said they liked the best. Seven are new for 
1941. Your friends will admire them too, as they grow in your 
garden this summer, and win prizes for you in the Rose and Flower 
Shows. Every one is shown in full color in this book. 
Adoration, salmon-pink 
Flambeau, glowing scarlet 
McGredy’s Salmon 
Neville Chamberlain, sal- 
mon and bronze 
Pearl S. Buck, gold tinged 
apricot 
Riviera, coppery orange 
Rose Bampton, China red 
Dicksons Red, scarlet-red 
Eclipse, golden yellow 
Hector Deane, crimson 
McGredy’s Sunset, saf- 
fron, orange-scarlet 
White Briarcliff, lovely 
white 
All 12 Plants, 
GROUP *50 1 of each Calis $16.) for only. . 
24 Plants, 2 
GROUP *50D Double Let aot Oy oe : 
ROSE D’OR (Propagation Rights Reserved) 
By a providence of Nature, we are in the unusual position of being able to allow 
our friends to have in their gardens this summer one of the outstanding new Roses 
to be introduced to the general public in 1942. Thrillingly bedecked in pure gold— 
shimmering, intense, radiant—Rose d’Or is the hybridist’s dream of perfection. 
Even on a drab day, its large flowers bring golden sun- 
shine to the garden and home. Excellent, pointed buds 
slightly flecked with red. Distinctive for depth, contour, 
and permanence of color. From Gaujard, it is an accen- 
tuated form of the pure Souvenir de Claudius Pernet with 
an added touch of red to deepen the color. Slight fragrance. 
Bud......pointed, with long neck and attractive sepals. 
Flower... .medium large (about 5 in.), slightly cupped, 
with 20 to 25 large, stiff-textured petals; holds 
its intense golden yellow even in hot August sun. 
Foliage. ..ptofuse, medium dark green, shiny. 
Plant... . .3¥% ft. tall—upright, free-growing. 
Habit... .very hardy, vigorous, resistant to disease. Con- 
tinues to bloom throughout entire season. 
Awarded. .First Certificate of Colle Oppio, Italy, 1939. 
$1.50 each; supply limited—only 2 plants 
to a customer. 

Everblooming 
Climbing Rose 
New for 1941, this large-flowered, long- 
stemmed, everblooming Climbing Rose 
comes to us from the accomplished 
Pahissa in sunny Spain. Has a unique, 
pleasing, piquant, cinnamon fragrance. 
The lovely, semi-single, lustrous dark 
velvety-red flowers, set off by bright yel- 
low stamens, have 12 stiff-textured petals 
and appear in clusters of 3 to 5, holding 
attractiveness for a long time; plant con- 
tinues with some color all summer. Lay 
canes down for winter in cold regions. 
The connoisseur will prize F. Ferrer. 
Habit.. .vigorous and spreading, covering 10 
to 12 ft. Following the prolific 
clusters in June, it repeats all summer 
with flowers one to a stem. 
Foliage. .attractive,dark green, disease-resistant.., | 
$1.50 each; 3 for $3.75; 12 for $15. 9 

Rose d’Or 
© J. & P. CO. 

