WHITE ROSES 
Frau Karl Druschki. Popular everblooming white. Immense buds 
tinged pink on outside. Flowers large, pure snow-white. 
K. A. Victoria. Pure ivory white buds opening to full, well-shaped 
flowers on fairly long stems. An old favorite. 
McGredy’s Ivory. Long-pointed buds, large perfectly formed creamy 
ivory-white flowers. Sweetly fragrant. 
Snowbird. Low bushy plants completely covered with clusters of 
semi-double pure white flowers. Free flowering. 
ROSES FOR SUMMER PLANTING 
We have ready-to-plant roses in containers on continuous 
display. Come in any time and SELECT YOUR PLANTS 
WHILE IN BLOOM. Our climate allows the planting of roses 
throughout the summer. We grow them for you in containers. 
From these you plant them directly into your garden. 
Tree Reses 
Tree roses or ‘‘standard’’ roses are much in demand for accent 
planting and for those who prefer their roses up high where 
they can be seen without bending over. They are the regular 
roses budded on straight clean stems of another variety. Some 
pruning helps to keep them in a vigorous flowering condi- 
tion. Keep all suckers cut off at the base of the cane and once 
a year thin out and shorten the head. 
We offer Grade No. 1 quality tree roses in the latest and 
best varieties in all colors. Priced $3.50 and up. 
Tree Roses in Containers Slightly Higher. 
PINOCCHIO (Pat. 484) 
POLYANTHA and 
FLORIBUNDA ROSES 
Generally speaking this group of roses are small flowered, but 
like the Azaleas, there are a lot of them. The popular Cecile 
Brunner is one extreme while Red Ripples and Floradora are more 
showy because the flowers are in good size clusters. Beds of 
Floribundas are very bright and showy. The dwarfer ones make 
fine borders for the rose garden, or plant in groups of three or 
more to enliven the shrubbery. Ideal for flower arrangements and 
bouquets. 
Cameo. Profuse blooms of small, semi-double flowers of salmon- 
pink changing to soft orange-pink. Slightly fragrant. 
China Doll (Pat. 678). A floriferous baby rose of perfect pink 
borne so profusely in neat round clusters that one cannot see the 
leaves. The petals always drop cleanly before they become un- 
sightly, and as one crop goes, another one comes. $1.25 each. 
Cecile Brunner. Most popular and best known of the baby roses. 
Small pink buds open to double flowers. Bright pink with a touch 
of yellow at the base of petals. Continuous bloomer. 
Else Poulsen. Clusters of bright rose-pink semi-double flowers on 
long stems. Slightly fragrant. A profuse bloomer. 
Fashion (Pat. 789). 1950 All America Award. A lovely new flori- 
bunda with miniature roses like those of hybrid tea roses. A new 
color—rich salmon-orange borne in clusters. Plant of medium 
height—flowers very attractive. $2.00 each. 
Floradora (Pat. Pending). Dense clusters of good size bright red 
flowers make this a very bright and showy floribunda. Fine foliage 
and sturdy habit. AARS. $1.25 each. 
Orange Triumph. Scarlet orange flowers in enormous clusters cover 
the bushes most of the season. Foliage shiny green. 
Pinkie (Pat. 712). Entirely different from any other baby rose, 
Pinkie shows a perfection in bud and bloom heretofore not found 
in this class. The dainty pink bud is long and slender, the flower 
two inches across. Blooms nearly continuously from early spring 
to late fall. Spicy fragrance. $1.50 each. 
Pink Rosette (Pat. 902). Produces open sprays of peach pink 
flowers, each spray bearing many flowers. Open flowers suggest 
the primness and beauty of Colonial roses. Makes an erect, strong 
growing bush with excellent foliage. $1.50 each. 
Pinocchio (Pat. 484). One of the most popular baby roses of 
recent introduction. Makes a bush seldom over two feet in height 
and clusters of dainty little flowers—salmon-orange flushed with 
gold. $1.25 each. 
Red Pinocchio (Pat. 812). This new brother of the long-favorite 
Pinocchio is of rich carmine which deepens and reveals a velvety 
overcast as the bud opens. The full-blown flower clusters are a 
rich scarlet. $1.50 each. 
6 Select from Our Ready-to-Plant ROSES IN CONTAINERS for Continuous Summer Planting 
