HYBRID TEA ROSES 
Etoile de Hollande. Brilliant crimson. Fairly 
double, fragrant blooms on long stems. The most 
generally satisfactory and successful of non- 
patented deep red Roses. $1.25. 
Forty-niner. Patent 792. One of the most brilliant 
and attractive of bicolor Roses. Vivid Oriental 
red with chrome-yellow reverse, the yellow being 
most evident in the bud. $2:00.2-2S5 
Fred Howard. Patent 1006. All-America Winner 
for 1952. Long, rich yellow buds are delicately 
penciled at the tips with a soft pink. Large flowers 
on stiff stems. Bush is strong grower. 
Golden Dawn. Bud is sunflower-yel-ow, flushed 
with old-rose; flower very double, perfectly 
formed, fragrant. Open flower is lemon-yellow, 
showing pink tinges as it ages. Vigorous bush; 
abundant foliage. $1.25. 
Grande Duchesse Charlotte. Patent 774. Pointed 
buds on long stems; carmine-red, opening to 
begonia-pink. Tall grower; bronze foliage. $1.75. 
Helen Traubel. Patent 1028. All-America Winner, 
1952. Beautiful new pink Hybrid Tea Rose named 
for the first lady of American opera who is known 
the world over for her magnificent voice and skillful 
performance of Wagnerian roles. Long, tapered 
buds; large flower. Color varies with the weather; 
sometimes it Is lively, light pink, more often 
apricot-pink. Very vigorous growth. $2.75. 
Innocence. Large, almost single 
flowers with showy golden stamens, 
Dainty Bess. A lovely variety. $1.50. 
Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria. White with slight 
lemon tint at center. The most generally satis- 
factory of white Hybrid Tea roses. $1.25. 
Katherine T. Marshall. Patent 607. Clear, 
glowing pink buds, slightly salmon, and large, 
double flowers on stiff stems. One of the Top Ten 
Roses of America, and greatly valued in the 
South for its vigorous habit and lovely bloom. 
$1.75. 
Killarney Queen. Finest of the Killarneys. 
Ivory-white 
similar to 
Deep 
rose-pink, semi-double flower; very lasting. $1.25. 
CHRYSLER 
IMPERIAL 
1953 
All-America Winner 
THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA 
$2-75.2 $0 
HELEN TRAUBEL 
Light Editor McFarland. Beautiful light pink 
sport of the favorite Editor McFarland, dis- 
covered in our fields by Peter W. Hjort. Fully 
as vigorous, prolific and constant as its parent. 
Many Itke the color much better than that of the 
parent. $1.25. 
Lowell Thomas. Patent 595. Deep yellow in 
spring and fall, lighter in summer. High cupped 
center and large, open flower. Is a favorite in 
many parts of America. Grows well at Thomas- 
ville. $2.00. 
Max Krause. Golden yellow; large, Radiance-like 
blooms on vigorous bush. $1.25. 
McGredy’s Sunset. Patent 317. Deep golden 
yellow, tinged orange; opens clear yellow. Large 
flower; strong stem; heavy foliage. Almost the 
equal of Eclipse for vigorous growth. At Thomas- 
ie regarded as one of the finest of yellow Roses. 
1575: 
Mirandy. Patent 632. Very large, double, dark 
garnet-red; highly fragrant. Upright and vigorous 
in growth. Usually produces just one flower to a 
stem, eliminating disbudding, and producing 
specimen bloom. At Thomasville, where many 
Roses are tried, tt is the favorite dark red. $t-75. ae 
Mission Bells. Patent 923. 
buds, opening to large, salmon-pink _ flowers. 
Very vigorous, branched growth. One of the four 
1950 All-America Winners, and a Rose which, 
for its many good qualities, appears to be here 
to stay. $2.25. 
Mme. Cochet-Cochet. Patent 129. Well-formed, 
coppery pink buds open into large, well-formed, 
salmon-pink, fragrant flowers. We like this Rose 
better each year, for it is vigorous and prolific. 
$1.50. 
Mme. Henri Guillot. Patent 337. Long,. flame- 
pink buds, changing to watermelon-pink, open 
blooms; fragrant. It is a rather unusual Rose in 
color; is vigorous and spreading in growth, with 
abundant foliage, and has many admirers in 
the South. $1.75. 
Deep shrimp-pink 
