HE HALL 
Queen Elizabeth 
Grandiflora. (Lammerts.) Gracious is the word for this tall, free- 
> flowering garden rose. Great quantities of clear, clean pink blooms 
come for months on end. Lightly ruffled and cupped in shape, often two or 
three on a very strong stem and also singly. A well-established plant is a 
thing of beauty that you will be proud of. 
Queen Elizabeth was the first Grandiflora, and it is still generally con- 
sidered to be the best of its type and the one to which all others are com- 
pared. Very sturdy, tall and vigorous, blooming extremely well. 
$3.40 ea.—3 or more, $3.20 ea. 
Peace 
», Hybrid Tea. (The House of Meilland.) So many Peace roses have been 
planted you might think there would be no more room for them. But 
more are planted every year and it is never a disappointment if you start 
with a good Star plant. It is truly the rose of roses... strong, free 
blooming, healthy in growth... enormous, firm petaled, long lasting in 
bloom. The color is delicate ivory and pale gold, softly penciled pink at the 
edge and becoming pinker as it develops. Known and enjoyed world-wide. 
$3.40 ea.—3 or more, $3.20 ea. 
Chrysler Imperial 
(Qe Hybrid Tea. (Lammerts.) Another stalwart that belongs in every yard. 
* Everyone likes big, big roses of glowing red, deliciously perfumed . . . 
and that describes Chrysler Imperial. Best of all, the plant is anxious to 
bloom and ts well able to do so all summer long. Big solid buds and full, 
high-centered flowers of rich crimson-red with a velvety overcast. 
Reliable and most favorably known as one of the indispensable Hybrid 
Teas that are the very foundation of a rose garden. Perfect for cutting. 
$3.40 ea.—3 or more, $3.20 ea. 
A 

PEACE 
QUEEN ELIZABETH 
LOCATION IS 
IMPORTANT 
Be sure your roses will have 
at least four hours of sunshine a 
day. They like full sun. The soil 
should be reasonably fertile, 
with adequate drainage. With 
this as a start, you CAN grow 
roses—wonderful roses—that 
will make you proud of your 
green thumb. 
You'll need to prune and fer- 
tilize them in early spring and 
faithfully spray them through 
the growing season in order to 
ward off the bugs and diseases 
that like roses just as well as 
you do. Spraying soon becomes 
as routine a job as going to 
market every week. Roses 
require plenty of water, so be 
sure to supply it. Roses are fun 
and rewarding and give you far 
more than they ask—less than 
five minutes a week. 

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