Soeur Therese (Sister Therese) Each $1.35, Three $3.75, Doz. $13.50 
Long, pointed buds are chrome-yellow, heavily marked with carmine; 
the open flower is rich Daffodil-yellow and holds its color well. Sweet- 
brier fragrance. The blooms come freely on splendid cutting stems. 
You can always recognize this Rose from its habit of forming sturdy, 
3-foot, upright canes, which are topped by a “‘lighted’ candelabra of 
five or more burning yellow blooms. 
Sterling Each $1.35, Three $3.75, Doz. $13.50 
A magnificient flaming pink flower of superb form in bud as well as 
open. The base of the bloom is yellow, giving it a richness as well as 
as clarity of color seldom observed. It has excellent foliage, grows 
strongly and blooms very freely in summer as well as in autumn. A 
sterling novelty. Winner of the Hubbard medal. 
Sutter’s Gold (Plant Patent No. 885) 
Each $2.25, Three $6.00, Doz. $24.00 
(Winner All-America Rose Selections, 1950.) The most outstanding 
feature of Sutter’s Gold is its beautiful, long, pointed, yellow bud richly 
shaded with coppery red. When fully open it is a superb yellow Rose 
with coppery veins through its flower petals. It is an unusually strong 
grower, free branching and exceedingly free blooming for a yellcw Rose. 
The fragrance is excellent, foliage very good; all in all a fine addition 
to the selection of yellow Roses. It also won the Foreign Gold 
Medal in Paris in June, 1948. An International Winner. 
New Yorker 
(See page 113) 
Talisman Each $1.35, Three $3.75, Doz. $13.50 
Brilliant red and gold buds, opening to well- 
shaped blooms of scarlet-orange and rich yellow. 
Cexistantly in bloom; the most vivid color yet pro- 
duced in Roses. 
“Tom Breneman” (Plant Patent No. 986) 
Each $2.00, Three $5.25, Doz. $21.00 
The glorious new Rose “Tom Breneman’’ was 
a originated by the late Fred Howard, America’s 
ad leading rosarian. From the time the bud unfurls 
until the last petals fall, you will find nothing 
flat or dull in this variety. The rugged plants give 
unstintingly throughout the entire season. The 
long coral-rose buds expand slowly into beautiful, 
long lasting flowers. During the height of the sea- 
son, when the bushes are covered with their coral- 
rose buds and flowers, that priceless ingredient, 
fragrance, is so intense that those standing close 
to the plant, inhaling the delicious fragrance, al- 
ways remark—’’Tom Breneman is the Rose we 
have been waiting for.’ 
Capistrano 
(See page 110) 
Tallyho 
Tallyho combines the finest characteristics found in the best Roses of 
today with a color which is entirely new to Roses. The coloring, varying 
somewhat with the weather and the planting location, on the inside of 
the petals is always a delightful shade of pink, such as Tyrian rose, 5 
China-rose, phlox-pink, or Neyron-rose, and the outside of the petals varies 
from crimson to cardinal-red. Although it is a bi-color, the contrast is not ul 
great. The buds are ovoid in shape, opening to flowers with a_ spicy , : 
fragrance. The long-stemmed flowers last exceedingly well when cut be- . , z 
cause they have plenty of substance. It continually branches and throws 5 # 
out long, straight flower stems with a beautiful bud at the top. The plant ‘ 
will be one of the largest in the Rose garden. 
The Doctor Each $1.35, Three $3.75, Doz. $13.50 
This magnificent Howard & Smith Rose is internationally recognized as 
one of the outstanding new Roses. We regard this Rose as one of the best; 
a variety which will be greatly sought after when better known. The buds 
are long and pointed, expand to a simply enormous bloom in their fully 
developed state. The color is an exquisite silvery pink, uniform in color both F Ole 
in bud and open flower, with a fragrance so intense that it can be detected ae 
many yards away. 
Will Rogers (Plant Patent No. 256) Each $1.50, Three $4.00, Doz. $15.00 
The color is black velvety crimson-maroon, which holds its color till the last 
petal falls. It fragrance is so_intense that a few will scent a room with 
“Attar of Roses’’ fragrance. Strong and vigorous grower with dark green 
foliage retained throughout the season. The blooms are quite double, with 
a beautifully ruffled petal arrangement in the open flower. Marvelously 
free in bloom qualities, bearing lavish quantities of flowers from April 
to the advent of following winter frosts. The Rose, cut in early morning 
and placed in water, will keep in fine condition for five or six days, and 
during this period dispels its most delightful fragrance. 
Tallyho: (Plant Patent No. 828) Each $2.00, Three $5.25, Doz. $21.00 ~i- : 
[115] 
