MING TOY. Pat. 900 
**The Chinese Fire-Cracker’’ 
$1.50 each; 3 for $3.90 
These are the Roses you have been reading so much about. 
They have become extremely popular as landscape material— 
that is, they need not be confined to a special Rose garden 
but may be combined with other shrubs and perennials in 
borders and hedges. The lowest growing kinds make fine 
edging plants, and all are beautiful specimens. 
Floribundas are very bushy and well-branched plants 
that are of extra-free bloom, hardy and healthy. They keep 
up a steady succession of bloom all summer. The well- 
shaped flowers are often like Hybrid Teas and are carried in 
clusters that are good cut-flower material. Floribundas 
serve so many purposes that they are indispensable in any 
modern planting. 
BETTY PRIOR. Pat. 340. Outside dark carmine, inside several 
shades lighter. Large clusters profusely produced. $1.50 each; 
3 for $3.90. 
FASHION. Pat. 789. Oriental-red buds becoming beautifully formed, 
31%-inch flowers of luminous coral-pink. Wild Rose fragrance. A 
bushy, 2-foot plant, blooming freely. $2.00 each; 3 for $5.25. 
FLORADORA. Flowers double, of medium size, cupped when open. 
The color is a distinct scarlet. Sprays of 6 to 12 flowers come continu- 
ously on an upright, much-branched plant. $1.50 each; 3 for $3.90. 
GOLDILOCKS. Pat. 672. Golden yellow buds in clusters on a strong, 
2-foot plant. Very double; fragrant. $1.50 each; 3 for $3.90. 
IMPROVED CECILE BRUNNER. Pat. 851. Peach-pink to rosy 
salmon flowers in dense clusters. $1.50 each; 3 for $3.90. 
LILIBET. Pat. 1209. A dainty newcomer of porcelain-pink. Ovoid 
buds and double, medium-sized flowers with spicy scent. A bushy, 
semi-dwarf plant. $2.50 each; 3 for $6.60. 
COLLECTION 
14 
LILIBET. The All-America Winner for 1954. 
Pat. 1209. 
FLORADORA. The only Floribunda 
