Collection No. 7 
A five dollar bill buys lots of beauty in this group. 
MARK SULLIVAN MISSION BELLS NOCTURNE 
One each of the illustrated 
roses on this page, value $5.75 
~ ALL OUR 
ROSES ARE 
POSTPAID 
il TO YOU 
MARK 
SULLIVAN 
MARK SULLIVAN 
(Pat. 599) A rose of dazzling color! The buds are golden yellow, heavily 
veined with rose-pink and cerise; the open flowers make a magnificent 
display of color. Strong growing plant with dark green foliage. This 
rose really does its best in the warm weather when other kinds are 
reduced in number and size of bloom. The fragrance is as rich as the 
color. This variety, seldom seen in other catalogs, is an example of 
our care in selecting for the Southland. Mark Sullivan is not adapted 
to every part of the country, so catalogs distributed nationally leave 
it off their list. But it’s a mighty fine rose where YOU live, and you 
ought to have it in your garden. $1.75 each; 3 for $4.65 
TALLYHO 
@ (Pat. 828) Plant is strong in every way—tall, vigorous, free- 
- branching, with dark green, disease resistant, leathery foliage 
and a multitude of blooms. Flowers richly colored with bleeding-heart 
rose on inside of petals, accented by a stronger crimson on reverse. 
Buds and open flowers are perfect. Very fragrant. 
$2.00 each; 3 for $5.25 
MISSION BELLS 
(Pat. 923) Large, tapering, fiery salmon buds open to perfect 
blooms of clear salmon-pink, strongly on the salmon side. Won- 
derful tea-rose fragrance, long stems for cutting and beautiful, heavily 
branched bushes combined with the unique color made this rose an 
All-America award winner for two successive years in 1950 and 1951. 
$2.00 each; 3 for $5.25 
4 
oe 
MISSION BELLS 
NOCTURNE 
NOCTURNE 
@ (Pat. 713) If you are particularly fond of perfect rose buds, then 
68° Nocturne certainly must be a part of your garden. These buds 
are the longest, most perfectly streamlined of any red rose. But that's 
not all, by any means. The flowers open to many-petaled, richly tex- 
tured, bright cardinal red beauties with deep pools of crimson in the 
heart of the flower in spring and fall. During the summer the color is 
lighter and brighter, but all season long the same pleasant fragrance 
reinforces the loveliness of color and form. The plants are vigorous, 
the foliage large and lush. You'll find hardly a day during the season 
when you can't proudly display a bud or bloom. Nocturne was an All- 
America Rose Selections winner in 1948 and continues to hold its place 
as one of the best red roses. $2.00 each; 3 for $5.25 
Selections for the Southland 
