
yl Hybrid Tea Roses 
The following varieties, except where noted, 2-yr. field-grown budded plants, $1.25 each; 12 for $13.50, postpaid. 
Ami Quinard. This Rose is rather small in the bud 
as compared to many Hybrid Teas, but the color 
is so very dark that it is much admired. Petals are 
velvety deep maroon, unfurling to a nicely formed 
flower. Bush low. Quite free in bloom. 
Betty Uprichard. This is a Rose which does well 
most everywhere and is liked for its strong, healthy 
growth, beautiful two-toned flowers, and delight- 
ful fragrance. The inside of the petals 1s salmon 
suffused with orange while the reverse 1s deep 
coppery carmine. It is popular all over the world. 
See color illustration on page 2. 
Briarcliff. The pink cut-flower Rose par excellence, 
both under glass and in the garden. It has ex- 
quisite form, beautiful rose-pink coloring, and 
delicious fragrance. Fool-proof plants produce 
their lovely blooms on Jong stems. See color illus- 
tration on page 7. 
Charlotte Armstrong. Plant Pat. No. 455. A 
beautiful cut flower and very fine in the garden. 
Deep cerise flowers on Iong stems, produced freely 
all season. Especially pretty in the bud. $1.50 
each. 
Christopher Stone. Great big, fragrant flowers of 
brilliant scarlet-red on a strong, bushy plant with 
healthy foliage. A wonderful bloomer. Rich old- 
time Damask fragrance. See color illustration on 
page 6. 
Comtesse Vandal. Plant Pat. No. 38. This lovely 
garden Rose produces beautifully formed, lIong- 
stemmed flowers of rich salmon and vivid rose- 
pink. Its long-pointed buds are distinctly shaded 
with coppery bronze and the open blooms finish 
with a soft silvery sheen. 
Condesa de Sastago. The most popular of all 
bicolor Roses. Plants are unusually strong, 
branching freely and blooming right along all 
season. It is a Rose for garden color, having 
large, fragrant, cup-shaped blooms, burning cop- 
per inside and deep yellow outside. 
Crimson Glory. Plant Pat. No. 105. Richest 
velvety crimson, perfect in form and wonderfully 
fragrant. A very strong grower and free bloomer. 
Popular everywhere. See color illustration on 
back cover. $1.50 each. 
Dainty Bess. It is a dainty flower, dainty in its 
informal singleness and dainty in its exquisite 
soft rose-pink coloring. The bloom is glorified by 
a mass of wine-colored stamens. Flowers are from 
3 to 4 inches across and the edges of the petals are 
slightly ruffled. Plants are quite tall and branch 
well, blooming freely all season. 
David O. Dodd. A Vestal Rose introduced in 
1926 and still unexcelled in size, form, color, and 
fragrance. The big blooms are fully double, very 
fragrant, and the color is rich crimson, flushed 
scarlet. We never have any trouble with this 
Rose because the bushy plants attend strictly to 
growing and blooming. Illustrated on page 6. 
Duquesa de Penaranda. This is a large, double 
flower of pleasing form and unusual rich color. 
The buds are apricot-orange and open to fully 
double flowers of coppery apricot. A distinctly 
different, fragrant flower. The plants are upright 
and carry attractive glossy foliage. A great Rose. 
Eclipse. Plant Pat. No. 172. Long, slender yellow 
buds open to golden yellow flowers of good size and 
doubleness; fragrant. Plants are fairly taJJ and 
produce fine crops of bloom. You will want several 
plants to have lots of buds for cutting. 35 petals. 
See color illustration on page 6. $1.50 each. 
Edith Nellie Perkins. One of the best of all two- 
toned pink Roses. The double flowers are of 
medium size and nicely formed with inside salmon- 
pink, flushed with orange, while the reverse is 
light orient-red shaded cerise-orange. It 1s mildly 
fragrant. Flowers are produced in generous crops 
on splendid bushy plants. See color ilustration 
on page 7. 
Editor McFarland. The standard dark pink 
garden Rose. Its blooms are shapely and the 
deep pink color lJasts. It is the best garden Rose 
of this color for cutting, remaining in good con- 
dition an unbelievably Jong time. Growth is 
ideal and the healthy plants are generous bloomers. 
See color illustration on page 7. 
Etoile de Hollande. The world’s favorite red Rose. 
Big branching plants, with immense leaflets, 
bloom freely. The loosely double blooms are 
among the largest, with huge petals of brilliant 
scarlet-crimson, and carry a delicious muscat fra- 
grance that once enjoyed will never be forgotten. 
See color illustration on page 2. 
Forty-niner. Plant Pat. No. 792. A _ brilliant 
bicolor Rose. The Iong-pointed bud of chrome- 
yellow overlaid pink opens to a flower vivid 
yellow outside and bright red within. Heavy, 
straight stems; pleasingly fragrant. See color 
illustration on back cover. $2.50 each. 
Frau Karl Druschki. Very large and extra double, 
snowy white Rose that has been a prime favorite 
for many, many years. It is such a healthy, 
sturdy, free-blooming plant that one can forgive 
its lack of fragrance. 
Golden Dawn. A very fine Rose with blooms vary- 
ing from soft Iemon-yellow to deep golden yellow. 
Delightful fragrance and spreading plants well 
covered with handsome foliage. Prolific in bloom. 
Golden Rapture. Lovely long buds open to large 
double blooms of rich yellow which hold their 
color unusually well. Splendid stems make them 
ideal for cutting. An easy Rose to grow. See 
color illustration on page 6. 
Harvard. Lovely pointed buds and deep crimson 
open flowers. Fragrant and of fine form. Vigorous 
and upright in growth, with good cutting stems. 
See color illustration on page 7. 
Heart’s Desire. Plant Pat. No. 501. Attractive 
healthy plants are continuously in bloom with 
perfectly formed buds of deep red which open to 
large loose flowers of velvety scarlet-red. There 
are about 25 petals and the richest old-time fra- 
grance of any modern Rose. $1.50 each. 
Horace McFarland. Plant Pat. No. 730. Large, 
high-centered buds developing ito huge, full 
flowers of buff-salmon. Sturdy, upright grower 
with large, leathery foliage. Spicy fragrance. See 
color illustration on back cover. $1.50 each. 
Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria. One of the most 
beautifully shaped Roses in the world. Its snowy 
petals are symmetrically arranged about a lemon- 
white center. It has a delicious magnolia-like 
fragrance. 
Mirandy. Plant Pat. No. 632. This richly colored, 
deeply fragrant new Rose is a masterpiece, for It 
has won first place in the All-America Rose Selec- 
tions for 1945. The huge flowers have as many as 
50 petals of extremely dark crimson-red, and the 
blooms are freely produced on strong, upright 
stems. Leathery dark green foliage and Damask 
fragrance. You'll never regret adding Mirandy to 
your Rose collection. See color illustration on 
front cover. $1.50 each. 
SSS 
4 JOS. W. VESTAL & SON, Box 871, Little Rock, Ark. 
