-Floribundas 
These useful cluster-flowered roses are free-flowering beyond belief, 
hardy to cold, vigorous and easily cared for. They are more colorful and 
more continuous in their blooming than annuals or perennials and will 
provide an almost unbelievable show of color from early spring until 
very late fall. Floribundas are superb for mass color, and it is difficult to 
imagine anything more attractive than a hedge or border blanketed with roses. 
Planted singly, they are ideal for colorful accent plants, or 
as a source of cut flowers. We've indicated the approximate 
size each variety reaches in our gardens. In areas with cold winters 
and a shorter growing season, plant heights may average somewhat lower. 
White Bouquet 
All-America Winner for 1957 
Pale cream to snowy-white 
New for 
New for 
olin, 8 
Pale gold to white Compact rounded plant 
Very double, 2-2! in. Grows 1% to 2 ft. tall 
Fine for cutting Luxuriantly foliaged 
This is just what you’ve wanted—a Floribunda light 
and bright, one to blend well with everything. Moon- 
sprite’s handsome low to medium height plant is 
almost continually decked out with very double 
chrysanthemum-like blooms, shading from pale gold 
at the heart to snowy-white at the outer edges. The 
blooms are borne in big showy panicles and are de- 
lightfully fragrant. Plant Pat. No. 1450. 
$2.50 each; 3 for $6.60; 12 for $26.40; 
25 for $50.00. 
1957 
Large gardenia-like flowers to 4 in. 
Compact plant, 1% to 2 ft. 
The flowers are unusually large for a Floribunda— 
4 inches or more across. Especially fragrant, they 
unfold to a graceful gardenia-like flower with broad 
petals. To have won a coveted All-America Award, 
means that White Bouquet has had to prove its 
growing and blooming ability to critical rose judges 
in all parts of the country. Plant Pat. No. 1415. 
$2.50 each; 3 for $6.60; 12 for $26.40; 
25 for $50.00. 
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