


DUQUESA DE PENARANDA. $1.25 each 
KILLARNEY QUEEN. Pink. (Budlong, 1912.) 
A sport of Killarney with blooms of bright 
sparkling pink. A little fuller and perhaps 
stronger in growth than. its parent. Unforget- 
table fragrance. 17 petals. $1.50 each. Supply 
exhausted until fall 1948. 
LADY ALICE STANLEY. Pink. (McGredy, 
1909.) Very large, silvery pink flowers; sweetly 
fragrant. Deeply veined foliage. Forty years 
old and is still one of the best garden Roses. 
75 petals. $1.50 each. Supply exhausted 
until fall 1948. 
LA FRANCE. Pink. (Guillot fils, 1867.) Bright 
pink flowers with curled petals gleaming with 
silvery tints; mmtensely fragrant. The first 
Hybrid Tea Rose, La France has long held an 
esteemed place among rosarians. Its truly de- 
lightful fragrance and beauty are most enjoy- 
able. 60 petals. $1.50 each. 
MARCIA STANHOPE. White. (Lilley, 1922.) 
A large, perfectly formed, semi-double, pure 
white Rose with magnificent golden stamens 
showing through. Good dependable white 
Roses are still scarce; we consider this one of 
the best. Very fragrant. 25 petals. $1.25 each. 
MARGARET ANNE BAXTER. White. (T. 
Smith, 1927.) Large buds and fragrant, snow- 
white flowers, sometimes tinted a soft flesh- 
pink. A fine plant yielding pretty flowers. Also 
among the best of white Roses. 75 to 100 petals. 
$1.25 each. » “ 
i vas 
McGREDY’S SCARLET. $1.15 each — 
Mr. Bobbink’s Favorite 12 
Monthly Blooming Hybrid Tea Roses 
A planting of these special twelve va- 
rieties will produce dozens of perfect, fra- 
grant blooms for years to come, beginning 
about ten weeks after a spring planting and 
the following summer if fall-planted. For 
many years I have observed these vigorous 
kinds thriving in all climates and in soils 
able to produce a good crop of vegetables. 
Here they are: Betty Uprichard, Charles 
K. Douglas, Condesa de Sastago, Du- 
quesa de Penaranda, Etoile de Hollande, 
Golden Dawn, Imperial Potentate, 
Marcia Stanhope, Miss Rowena Thom, 
Mme. Butterfly, Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont, 
Poinsettia. 
GROUP OFFER S-48-1 
12 varieties for $13.75 net 
1 of each, regular value $15.40 
GROUP OFFER S-48-3 
36 Plants for $40.00 net 
3 each of 12 kinds 
Twelve Roses spaced about 16 to 18 inches apart 
each way may be planted in a bed 4 ft. wide by 6 ft. 
long. If a longer bed is required plant twelve in a 
bed 3 ft. by 9 ft. 
MARGARET McGREDY. T. Red. (McGredy 
1927.) Double, cup-shaped flowers open 
orange-scarlet, turning a peculiar shade of 
carmine-rose. Blooms constantly. 30 petals. 
$1.15 each. 
McGREDY’S SCARLET. T. Red. (McGredy, 
1930.) Large, loosely formed, vivid rose-red 
flowers. Plants are healthy and large. This 
Rose is not scarlet—it is red, and one of the 
best. Very slight Tea fragrance. Blooms al- 
most continually. 35 petals. $1.15 each. 
McGREDY’S YELLOW. Yellow. (McGredy, 
1933.) Unfading canary-yellow flower of ex- 
cellent form with a mass of gold anthers glorify- 
ing the center of the flower. Plants vigorous 
and free blooming, with dark, glossy, holly- 
like foliage. A fine cup-shaped Rose of lovely, 
clean color. 25 petals. $1.25 each. 
MISS ROWENA THOM. Pink. (Howard & 
Smith, 1927.) A big Rose on a big plant. 
Enormous buds open to great flowers of fiery 
rose shaded with mauve; fragrant. A splendid 
plant inherited from its mother, Radiance. 
55 petals. $1.25 each. 
MME. BUTTERFLY. Pink. (E.G. Hill, 1918.) 
Perfectly formed, light pink flowers faintly 
tinted with gold. Richly perfumed. A beautt- 
ful Rose and a perfect cut-flower. The ideal 
form of buds and open blooms of this grand 
old Hybrid Tea is often considered the stand- 
ard of excellence by which newer varieties 
are judged. 30 petals. $1.50 each. 
MME. JOSEPH PERRAUD. Bicolor. (Gau- 
jard, 1934.) Long, slender buds of nasturtium- 
orange opening to sweetly fragrant, flowers of 
nasturtium-buff, with a hint of pale pink at 
the petal edges. Popular all over the country. 
An excellent flower for exhibition purposes. 
28 petals. $1.50 each. Available in spring 
only. 
MME. JULES BOUCHE. White. (Croibier, 
1911.) Perfectly formed, Iong-poimted buds 
and high-centered flowers of pure white with a 
slight pink tint in the center at first; moderately 
fragrant. Healthy plants, always in bloom. 
Many rosarians believe this to be the finest 
White Rose. 34 petals. $1.25 each. 

ETOILE DE HOLLANDE. 
$1.25 each. 
MME. LEON PAIN. Pink. (P. Guillot, 1904.) 
Lovely double, soft flesh-pink flowers of ex- 
cellent form; moderately fragrant. Plants 
medium in height. One of the oldest Roses, 
yet we know of no other Rose that can out- 
flower it, outlive it, or compare with its lovely 
clean color. It never fails. 43 petals. $1.50 ea. 
MRS. CHARLES BELL. T. Pink. (Mrs. C. J. 
Bell, 1917.) A sport of Red Radiance with 
fragrant flowers of similar form but of an ex- 
quisite delicate salmon-pink coloring. The 
only Rose of this color and so distinct and 
brilliant that one never need hesitate to iden- 
tify Mrs. Charles Bell. The color may be 
compared to that well-known salmon-pink 
peony, Walter Faxon. 27 petals. $1.25 each. 
MRS. ERSKINE PEMBROKE THOM. Ycl- 
low. (Howard & Smith, 1926.) Pure, unfad- 
ing, fragrant yellow flowers of fine form. Beau- 
tiful growth. Very hardy. 43 petals. $1.15 each. 
PINK 
DAWN. 
$1.25 each 

It is difficult for us as growers to estimate our exact needs two years in ad- 
Gegiuuers 
COLLECTION 
INTRODUCTORY 
ROSE OFFER S-48-2 
a an a ws Sere 
East Rutherford, N. J. 
vance (the time it takes to produce a good Rose plant). While certain kinds 12 
become sold out, there are other excellent varieties remaining. When granted 
the privilege of assisting with the selection, a substantial price reduction 
from catalogue value of $1.15 to $1.50 or more is made possible. Our selection 
will embrace a balanced and harmonious combination of colors to include the 
best reds, pinks, yellows. and bi-colors. Each plant will be labeled with the 
correct name but we cannot tell you in advance what they will be. You will 
recognize them when received and as they come into bloom the first season, NET 
some of them standard kinds and some novelties. We furthermore promise the 
size and quality of each plant is right up to standard. We will select from those 
listed on pages 3, 4, 5, and 6. 
Everblooming Hybrid. 
Teas, our selection, for 
$4 4-50 
(12 varieties, each one labeled 
true to name) 
