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SUTTER'S GOLD—Bedecked with Gold Medals. = 
SUTTER’S GOLD. Patent 885. ARS 81%. 43 inches. 
All-America winner in 1950—weighed down with gold medals—Bagatelle, 
Portland and Geneva. This has to be good! Long, tapering buds in a 
brilliant combination of orange and vermilion, open to a 35 petalled flower, 
the color varying with the season. Very fragrant for a rose of this color— 
blooms all the time. 
These comments seem superfluous for a variety so be-decked with world- 
wide honors. 3 for 6.00 each 2.25 
CLIMBING SUTTER’S GOLD. Ch. H. T. P.A-F. 15 - 205een 
A new introduction, with the same qualities which made the bush famous. 
It's about time I repeated still again—a climbing sport of a bush hybrid 
tea will produce probably five times the bush blocm in a season ... can 
be allowed to run or kept to shrub proportions to suit your purpose. Who 
invented this word ‘‘climber’’ anyway? It’s a misnomer—you don't have 
to build a fence, trellis or a two-story building to plant a “climber.” 2.75 
SUNTAN. 2% - 3 feet. 
Has all the good qualities of its famous parent, Mrs. Pierre S. duPont and 
adds a new color-note, pretty accurately described by its name—that is 
if you don't freckle or turn lobster-red. Flower is large, 35 petalled, well- 
shaped on long stems—all season bloom. 
Roy Hennessey says it deserved an expensive debut, or anyway a 
patent tag. 
“Suntan ... healthy, hardy in growth as a sunflower ... superb in blooming. 
No yellow rose surpasses it in fragrance or form.” St. Clair Garwood, Xenia, 
Ohio. 1.79 
———_— 
ROSE EGO... “What I don’t know is not knowledge.” —Oxrorp RHYMES 
90 
