
TaLLyHo! 
V for Victory. Patent 543. Brownell sub-zero hybrid tea, this time in 
sulphur-yellow with a touch of red in the centers. Fully double, very fragrant, 
long cutting stems; plant is vigorous to 5-6 feet, good disease-resistant foliage. 
Our test plants, this summer, have made an excellent showing. ere) 
Will Rogers. Patent 256. This is a ‘“controvertial” rose. Its critics say 
it burns badly in the hot sun. We agree. Its admirers call it the best of the 
black-red roses and recommend light shade for best performance. Certainly 
one of the most distinctive of all moderns—fully double, with a beautifully 
ruffled petal arrangement; almost always in profuse bloom; heavy attar of rose 
perfume. We say Will Rogers is a great rose and so will you, if you give it a spot 
it likes, protected from a too brilliant sun. 1.50 
Yours Truly. Patent 697. Another Ted Morris creation, introduced in 
1945. Rated by many the best of the hot-weather pinks; blooms in high tempera- 
tures and holds its beautiful rose-pink tones to the end. Upright grower, with 
long, smooth stems; richly sweet-scented. 1.50 
And so, gentle reader, the catalogue writer once again wipes his fevered brow, 
asks your forgiveness for his enthusiasms, his mistakes and his repetitions, and signs 
off with “Yours Truly.” 
