AN ALL-AMERICA ROSE— 
Today, the All-America Award is the highest distinc- 
tion bestowed in this country on the very best of the new 
roses. Plants are sent to 18 official test gardens and 6 
demonstration gardens located in different parts of the 
country so that every type of climate, soil and other grow- 
ing condition is represented. 
For two years experi, impartial judges carefully check 
the development and growth of all roses, scoring each on 
13 to 15 separate and distinct qualities. The highest- 
scoring roses are then submitted to the National Rose 
Jury, which gives the best of the high-scoring roses the 
coveted All-America Rose Selections Awards for that year. 
When a rose receives this high honor it necessarily 
must be the finest rose possible to produce—outstanding 
in vigor, habit, disease resistance, foliage, floriferousness, 
bud form, flower form, substance, color-opening, color- 
finishing, fragrance and stem. 
Many hundreds of rose varieties have been tested by 
the National Rose Jury for A.A.R.S. in the past ten years, 
but out of all the entries only 28 varieties have won the 
coveted All-America Award during the entire 10-year 
period. : 
Thus, when you buy Arp’s Capistrano, Mission Bells, 
Sutter’s Gold and Fashion, you do it with the assurance 
that you are receiving America’s finest roses for 1950. 

IVNGSS 


Voted an All-America Award for 1950. The out- 
standing feature of the variety is its beautiful, long- 
pointed, yellow bud, richly shaded with orange 
and red. Because the plant is so strong, vigorous, and free 
branching, it produces great quantities of these extraordi- 
narily fine buds, each one borne on a long, straight stem, 
just right for cutting. An abundance of large, glossy leaves 
makes the plant a handsome one. Sutter’s Gold has a rich 
tea fragrance not found in any other yellow rose. 
(Pat. App. For) 
Each $2.50, 3 for $6.30, doz. $25.00 
PATENTED ROSE VARIETIES ARE BEING GROWN AND 
SOLD UNDER LICENSES FROM THE PATENT OWNERS 
PLANT PATENT NOTICE 
“THE following provisions apply to all patented and trade-marked 
plants. Each of the plants so indicated is a patented variety under 
the laws of the United States and any asexual reproduction, or 
distribution by sale, gift or otherwise of scions, buds or cuttings 
therefrom for such reproduction without license from the patent 
owners, constitutes an infringement of the patent for same. 
Any unauthorized reproduction, sale or other distribution of re- 
producing propagating material of these plants covered by the 
patents, under the names and/or trade-marks of the patent 
owners, or any other name or names, will render the reproducer, 
seller and distributor thereof liable to prosecution for infringe- 
ment under the United States Patent and Trade Mark Laws.” 

SUITERS GOL 
1950 ALL-AMERICA AWARD WINNER 
ASS mee E/Ayl, UCR E DES Ol Nemes GrOuvacrn 


