Valley of the Sun 
MISSION BELLS 
(Pat. No. 923) All-America winner in 1950. A beautiful deep salmon pink 
opening to a clear shrimp pink color. Vigorous, heavily branched plants 
with coppery green foliage and very few thorns. 
pleasant tea fragrance. 
NEW YORKER 
(Pat. No. 823) A vigorous, tall growing rose of the reddest red in your 
garden. The flowers delightfully fragrant, long lasting, and heavy textured. 
Up to 62 inches across, the blooms are non-fading in hot weather. Each $2.00 
NOCTURNE 
(Pat. No. 713) All-America Rose Selections 
winner. There’s not much doubt that the 
exceedingly long, perfectly shaped buds 
are the finest of any red rose. Nocturne is 
bright cardinal red with darker shadings of 
crimson. Stems are long and stout. 
Each $1.75 
PEACE 
(Pat. No. 591) All-America winner, and the 
most popular rose in America. Giant flow- 
ets, passing through a vast series of colors 
from golden buds to canary yellow open 
flowers, and then a steady succession of 
shades cream, white, and apple blossom. 
Truly magnificent. Each $2.50 
SAN FERNANDO 
(Pat. No. 785) Long, well formed buds open 
to fragrant, glowing red flowers. Dark, 
leathery foliage. Holds both its intense 
color and fragrance very well. An All- 
America winner in 1948. Each $1.75 
& 
NOCTURNE 
(Pat. 713) 
Free blooming, with a 
Each $2.25 
@ SUTTER’S GOLD (Pat. 885) 
cs ee Nas 
SUTTER’S GOLD 
(Pat. No. 885) All-America winner in 1950, 
as well as a winner in competitions in France 
and Switzerland. This new and meritorious 
rose has a long yellow bud, and the open 
flower is yellow, marked with orange and 
red. The over-all effect is just pure gold. You 
will find the plants have leathery, glossy 
green leaves which are highly resistant to 
disease. The flower has a rich tea fragrance 
not found in any other yellow rose. Each $2.25 
TALLYHO 
(Pat. No. 828) All-America winner in 1949, 
and a bi-color, although both shades are pink. 
This leads to some of the most delicate and 
interesting graduations in color, with the 
inner sides Tyrian rose to phlox pink, and the 
outer sides from crimson to cardinal red. 
The over-all effect is pink, but a very lively 
and exciting pink. The plants are among the 
largest in the garden. The flowers are spicily 
fragrant. Each $2.00 
®@ 
HEART'S DESIRE 
(Pat. 501) 
One of the things that 
makes roses so popular all 
over the world is the fact 
that they are really very 
easy to grow. To tell the 
truth, one of the dangers 
that roses have to brave is 
over-kindness. This is par- 
ticularly true in respect to 
fertilizer when the plants 
are first set out. Don't fer- 
tilize at all when you first 
plant your bushes. 
The thing your roses will 
appreciate most is regular 
watering, and by watering, 
we mean soaking, not 
sprinkling. Fertilizer may 
be given at regular inter- 
vals and in small amounts 
after the bushes become 
established. 
For more cultural help, 
please turn to page 13. 
TEXAS CENTENNIAL 
(Pat. No. 162) Now this is one of the most 
vigorous of ail the roses you will have in 
your garden. The plants not only grow four 
feet tall, but they put on a bushy, spreading 
growth to equal their height. The flowers 
are a bright, glowing carmine-red, of the 
same fine form and texture as President Her- 
bert Hoover, which is its parent. Lots and 
lots of blooms on astonishingly long stems. 
You'll like this one! Each $1.50 
WILL ROGERS 
(Pat. No. 256) This is the darkest red of all 
our patented roses—a velvety crimson- 
maroon. You'll be enthralled by its depth of 
color, and will forgive its tendency to “blue” 
a bit during the hottest weather. The rich 
attar of roses fragrance fills q@ room when a 
bouquet is cut, delighting the senses in every 
way. Strongly double flowers, with ruffled 
petals. Vigorous plants, with dark green 
foliage. Each $1.50 
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