Mme. Ch 

Heart’s Desire 
iang Kai-shek 
Katherine T. Marshall 
Armstrong 
Heart’s Desire 
(@Qr This 1942 All-America Winner has long-pointed buds of bright lum- 
inous red without other shadings. The flowers are always borne on long 
AASRS stems, and keep longer than most other kinds after they are cut. But 
the most outstanding feature of the rose is its superb fragrance. A few 
blooms will perfume an entire room. Occasionally there is a weak neck or a globular 
flower, but few can resist the clarity of color and the wealth of fragrance. Plant 
Pat. No. 501. $1.50 each; 3 or more, $1.25 each. 
Horace McFarland 
One of the three 1945 All-America Winners, this rose is a beautiful 
living tribute to its namesake, the late Dr. J. Horace McFarland, who 
AA\RS was one of the world’s foremost authorities on roses. It is a good “solid” 
rose in every respect. The long-pointed, orange-pink buds are extraor- 
dinary for their length and beauty of form. In the bud the color is more orange 
than pink, and as the big fully double flower opens it becomes a deep apricot-pink 
with lighter shadings of salmon and coral-pink. The plant is tall, upright, and 
vigorous, with long straight stems and broad leathery foliage. Moderately fragrant. 
Plant Pat. No. 730. $1.50 each; 3 or more, $1.25 each. 
Miss Clipper - 

Mrs. E. P. Thom 


