VESTAL’S HYBRID TEA ROSES, continued 
The following varieties, except where noted, 2-yr. field-grown budded plants, 65c each; 12 for $6.75, 
postpaid. 50 or more at 50c each, by Express collect. 
Nuntius Pacelli. A loosely formed white Rose 
with delicious fragrance. Bushy plants which are 
always in bloom. Dependable. 
Picture. Beautifully formed, medium-sized blooms 
of clear rose-pink. Vigorous, bushy plants which 
produce an unusual quantity of bloom. A great 
Rose becoming popular everywhere. 75c each, 
postpaid. 
President Herbert Hoover. There have been 
several tall bicolors since this Rose came out, but 
this is still the best of them. It is one of the 
tallest growing of all Hybrid Teas, carries healthy 
foliage, and produces its beautiful flowers on 
2-foot stems. Long-pointed buds open into large 
flowers that are a pleasant blend of soft yellow 
and rose-pink. There is a. fragrance but it is 
quite mild. A good Rose to plant in the back of 
the bed, and where long-stemmed flowers are 
wanted for cutting it is unexcelled. See color 
illustration on page 12. 
Radiance. The most popular of all garden Roses. 
Brilliant pink, shaded darker on the outer surface 
of the petals. Vigorous and always in flower. 
Radiant Beauty. Plant Pat. No. 97. A sport of 
the famous Francis Scott Key, with the same 
shade of red but having fewer petals, the flowers 
always open. A fine Rose for the South for 
garden and cutting. $1.00 each, postpaid. 
Red Radiance. Very stout, healthy plants, pro- 
ducing abundant crops of bright light rosy crim- 
son flowers shaped exactly like those of Radiance. 
R. M.S. Queen Mary. Plant Pat. No. 249. Long- 
pointed buds and beautiful open flowers of a 
nice blend of pink and salmon, warmed by an 
orange base to the petals. They are fragrant and 
every flower is perfect. See in color on page 13. 
$1.00 each, postpaid. 
Roslyn. This ts one of the newer yellow Roses 
which is doing especially well in the South. The 
flowers are large, of loose build, and are golden 
yellow shaded with orange on the reverse. Plants 
are of average bushy growth and are good pro- 
ducers. See color illustration on page 5. 
Rouge Mallerin. One of the most satisfactory red 
Roses for cutting and exhibition. They are long- 
lasting flowers and are deliciously fragrant. The 
blooms are double, of perfect shape, and velvety 
scarlet-red in color. Rouge Mallerin is not a 
generous bloomer but it does produce a fair 
quantity of unusually perfect flowers. The plants | 
have good foliage and are better than average. 
See color illustration on page 5. 
Senator Joe T. Robinson. Last year we told you 
that this new Rose of ours had a plant of the type 
we have been breeding for—strong and bushy with 
healthy foliage. Our customers who have bought 
this Rose agree that this seedling, which we named 
for our late beloved Senator, is all that we claim 
for it. The beautiful flowers are of good size, 
nice form, a pleasing shade of dark red, and they 
are delightfully fragrant. This is a Rose that we 
are proud of and believe that you will be pleased 
with it. See color illustration on front cover. 
$1.00 each, postpaid. 
Sir Henry Segrave. Beautifully formed blooms of 
pale Iemon which gradually change to almost 
white. Delightful lemon fragrance. 
Sceur Therese. Plants of this are rather awkward 
as they branch here and there in every direction, 
but they are healthy and strong, so that the flowers 
do not droop. The blooms grow in short-stemmed 
clusters and begin as chrome-yellow buds marked 
with carmine which open to good-sized, loose 
daffodil-yellow flowers. They are pleasingly 
fragrant. Cutting one bloom stem of” buds fur- 
nishes a whole bouquet at once. This Rose does 
unusually well in the South and is becoming very 
popular there. See color illustration on page 9. 
Souv. d’Alexandre Bernaix. Large, very double 
flowers of crimson-red shaded velvety purple and 
splashed with fiery red. Very distinct and very 
fragrant. 
Sunkist. A deeper colored sport of Joanna Hill 
with splendid form and strong stems for cutting. 
Lovely orange-copper tints warm the _ basic 
yellow petal color. A fme American Rose. 
Sunny South. This Australian Rose is too tall 
for the Rose-bed. Plant it in the shrubbery or 
against the fence where its 6-foot plants will 
cover themselves with lovely shelJ-pmk flowers 
all season. Fragrant. 
Syracuse. The long-stemmed _ scarlet-crimson 
flowers, 4 mches across, hold their color until 
the petals fall, and are prize-winers at shows. 
Tall plants with leathery foliage. See in color 
on page 4. 
Talisman. This sensational Rose has dominated 
the bicolor garden sorts for a long time, and it Is 
still the most popular of the bicolor florists’ Roses. 
The plants are quite upright in growth, with 
pale green foliage and double, heavy-petaled 
flowers of scarlet and gold, changing with age to 
ivory-yellow and rose. They are fragrant and 
especially desirable for cutting. See color ilus- 
tration on page 12. 



Vestal’s Fragrant Collection 
ONE PLANT EACH OF . 
Betty Uprichard Dame Ed 
Rouge 
ith Helen Etoile de Hollande 
Mallerin 
4 _ ROSES TO SMELL AS WELL AS SEE 2, 4 5 POST- 
$2.60 VALUE, FOR. . . PAID 
Vestal’s Red is a grand Rose 


JOS. W. VESTAL & SON, Box 871, Little Rock, Ark. 
