Y 
Chrysler ; > 5 | ae : : ie Che Best 
i — ' ve 7 =" * wal Everblooming Hybrid 
: | : : Cea “Roses 
Here we list only the very choicest and most 
popular varieties of Tea Roses, with the majority 
of which every lover of the Rose is familiar. 
Duplicates as well as inferior varieties have been 
discontinued. All are good growers and_ free 
flowering and will provide you with an ample 
supply of blooms throughout the summer. There 
is not one individual sort which we cannot en- 
dorse as possessing superior merit. All are two- 
year-old XX No. 1 grade. The finest Northern 
Ohio grown stock available. 
Butterscotch 
Chrysler Imperial (Plant Patent No. 1167) 
Each $2.50, Three $6.60, Doz. $26.40 
Vivid crimson-red, an outstanding red Rose. The buds are long 
and tapering. It is an excellent grower and free blooming. Altogeth- 
er, a fine addition to the red Roses. Winner of the All-America 
Award for 1953. 
| . 
| Blanche Mallerin (Plant Patent No. 594) 
\ Each $2.00, Three $5.25, Doz. $21.00 
j This is that rare beauty, a pure white, fragrant Hybrid Tea Rose. The 
k petals of the beautifully modeled blooms are as white as alabaster; 
| with a live satiny sheen. 
Butterscotch (Plant Patent No. 613) 
Each $1.75, Three $4.65, Doz. $18.69 
Nothing like the color of Butterscotch has so far been seen in Roses 
and very few Roses have as beautifully shaped flowers. The length 
and grace of the flower petals of this new variety are outstanding. The outside 
of the handsome petals is soft, pale orange-yellow; the inside lemon-chrome at 
{ the base, changing to pale yellow-orange, penciled very lightly with orange-buff. 
| The general color effect is a soft pastel capucine-buff. Visitors last year picked 
Butterscotch as one of the finest and most outstanding Roses in our fields. This variety is 
an origination of the Hill Greenhouses of Richmond, Indiana. We are sure you will find 
k Butterscotch one of the chociest Roses you ever grew. 
; Charlotte Armstrong (Plant Patent No. 455) Each $2.00, Three $5.25, Doz. $21.00 
| (Award All-America Rose Selections, 1940.) A Rose of a most unusual color, blood-red in 
i the bud, opening to cerise in hot weather and to spectrum-red in cool weather, while the 
beautiful shape and extreme length of the bud, with its long, clasping sepals and the ex- 
| treme floriferousness and vigor of growth and large, luxurious foliage, make it a most 
| satisfactory Rose in all respects. The bud is long and pointed, the flower is 3 to 4 inches 
| in diameter, high-centered, never showing the center. The foliage is leathery, semi-glossy, 
deep green and highly resistant to mildew. 
Crimson Glory 
Each $1.35, Three $3.75, Doz. $13.50 
The plants branch freely, producing 
a well spread, yet compact bush of 
good symmetry. Following the large, 
urn-shaped buds are the well-formed 
flowers of an intense deep vivid 
crimson shaded oxblood-red and 
mellowed by a soft velvety nap. 
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Crimson 
Glory 
Charlotte 
Armstrong 
[91] 
