NEW ROSE 

 Mr£. Pierpont Morgan 



•9 

 tn 



riAULE'5 BOUQUET SET OF.... 



^ ' = - ig EVER=BLOOniNG ROSES. 



Especially adapted lor garden culture in summer or house culture 

 tn winter. None better for bouquets. A mass of roses the entire season. 

 Bridesmaid. Clear light pink; fine, full, large flower. 

 Bride. The best of all pure whites. 

 Beauty Inconstant. The rose of many colors. 

 Belle Siebrecht. Rich solid pink; very attractive. 

 Clothilde Soupert. See illustration below. 

 Corienne. Beautiful flesh, suffused tawny copper. 

 Qraziella. Creamy white, shaded pink. 

 Henry H. Stanley. Amber rose and apricot yellow. 

 Mad. Jos. Schwartz. Pure white, tinted rose. 

 Mad. Pernet Ducher. Sulphur yellow, shaded golden. 

 rieteor. Rich dark velvety crimson. 



Perle de Feu. Intense red, shaded vermilion and j'ellow. 

 Pearle des Jardins. The king of all yellow roses. 



?ueen's Scarlet. Rich scarlet; truly a garden gem. 

 he Queen. The best white garden rose. 



Any of the above 15 Ever=blooming Roses, 15 cents each, 

 2 for 25 cents, 6 for 50 cents; or I will send one strong 

 plant of each of the 15 varieties for only $1.00, postpaid. 



Maule's ♦ Roses. 



WHILE I do not pretend to assert that no other house sends out 

 good Roses, yet I do say without fear of contradiction, that 

 Maule's Roses, wherever tried, have given the best of satisfaction. 

 My system of rooting and growing Roses for my mailing trade is such, 

 that my plants invariably please all, when the directions for culture, 

 which I send with every order, are followed. Would you not, at any 

 time, rather have one good, healthy, well-rooted Rose than a half dozen 

 poor, puny, sickly cuttings? Such plants can hardly survive the jour- 

 ney through the mails, and if they live at all, only by the greatest care 

 can they be persuaded to grow. I can honestly say that from the many 

 thousand plant orders my friends have favored me with during the las't t 

 few years, I have not, in all that time, received a dozen letters of com- 

 plaint. X shall strive to continue to deserve it by giving my customers 

 the very best Roses that skill and attention can produce. 



10 NEW EVER=BLOOMING ROSES. 



There are some new Roses, and others of recent introduction, that 

 deserve to beset aside as especially handsome. I give below lOof the very 

 best, each and every one a gem sure to please. Hardy with prottction. 



MRS. PIERPONT MORGAN. A sport from Madame Cusin, but it is 

 much more robust and free blooming, with flowers and foliage much 

 larger than that variety. The long-stemmed buds and flowers are 

 elegantly shaped, fragrant, and of fine substance; color intense bright 

 cerise or rose-pink. 



SOUV. DE MADAME VERDIER. Beautiful buds, tinted in the centre 

 with a warm buft'-yellow that changes to pure white in the open flower; 

 very double and sweet. 



MADAHE ABEL CHANTENAV. A free flowering, perpetual bloom- 

 ing Hybrid Tea with beautiful buds and semi-double flowers; color rich, 

 bronzy rose shaded salmon. 



PRINCESS BONNIE. Color a grand, solid crimson, just the shade 

 wanted in the ever-blooming section, the base of the inner petals pret- 

 tily marked with clear white. The fragrance is delightful, equal to the 

 finest hvbrid perpetuals. 



PRESIDENT CARNOT. The growth is stocky, with erect shoots, 

 bearing fine buds. Ihe flowers are large, full and fragrant; color flesh- 

 white, shading into warm pink. Considered the best new rose. 



MADAHE EUGENIE RESAL. This is a true "Daily," with semi-double 

 flowers of a carmine rose color with shadingsof coppery red and ytllow. 



MADAilE WAGRAN. Free blooming and vigorous. The flowers are 

 large, very double; color light pink, with deep bright centre; yellow 

 shadings at base of petals. 



BARONESS BERGE. The flowers are camellia-like and of dainty 

 shape, with regularly recurving petals. The color is light yellow; petals 

 bordered with pink, and center of a warm china-rose. 



COMPTE DE CHANDON. A new free flowering Tea Rose with beau- 

 tiful light green foliage and flne buds and flowers of medium size, semi- 

 double and fragrant; light golden-yellow, deepening toward the centre. 



SOUV. DE LAURANT GUILLOT. This is a really unique Rose of the 

 Madame de Watteville type, but with wider bordered petals of a deep 

 carmine rose, showing less lemon at their base. 



Any of the above New Ever=blooming Roses, 20 cents each, 

 3 for 50 cents, $1.75 per dozen, postpaid. 



Ci-vf. <t| 05 ' will send one strong plant each of the lO 

 1 Kji ^i.^;y New Roses named above; a collection of 

 Ne\v Ever-blooming Roses without an equal. 



New Rose, Climbing; Heteor. ^/;ont"pagfo°"cover, 



"This new rose might more properly be called a Perpetual Bloom- *~"^""^ 

 ing Climbing General Jacqueminot. A sport from that finest of all Hybrid Teas, Meteor. It 

 is a rose which will make ten to fifteen feet of growth in a season, and show a profusion of 

 ■ bloom every day. Foliage strong, healthy and luxuriant. Buds exquisite; flowers large, 

 beautifully shaped, and of that rich dark, velvety crimson color seen only in the Jacque- 

 minot." Hardy with protection. 25 cents each; 3 for 60 cents. 



New Hardy Ever=bIooming Climbing Rose, Empress Of China. 



Commences flowering the last of May, and will bloom repeatedly till very late in 

 the Fall. In vigor of growth it is unsurpassed. The flowers are small, but very delicate 

 and waxy; fragrant, and are borne profusely. The bud is of especially pretty form, 

 The open flower has much the appearance of a Tea Rose. The color is dark red, 

 changing to a lighter red or pink, like an Apple Blossom. 20 cents each; 3 for 50 cents. 



A New Hardy Climbing Rose Absolutely Free. 



With every order for Maule's Floiuering Plants amounting tn 75 cents and upwards I 

 will include, without '.'xtra charge, one strong plant of the New Hardy, Perpetual Blooming 

 Climbing Rose, Empress of China, described above. This is a most liberal offer, considering 

 that my prices are already as lotv as good plants can be sold for, and can be allowed only on 

 orders for flowering plants listed on pages 76 to S2, inclusive. 



5 POLYANTHA OR FAIRY ROSES. 



By many considered the most desirable class of Roses for bedding and general planting, 

 lovely and distinct class of everblooming Roses. Survive the winter with protection. 



CLOTHILDE SOUPERT. Flowers of large size and very freely produced in clusters. Color 

 is cream white, shading to a peach centre. 15 cents each; 2 for 25 cents. 



PINK SOUPERT. Identical in every way to Clothilde Soupert, except in color, which is a 



solid bright pink, a color similar to the old Hermosa. 25 cents each; 3 for 60 cents. =es 



STAR OF GOLD. Color, coppery gold; flat-rayed flowers, very sweet. 15 cts. each; 2 for 25cts 



MIGNONETTE. Deliciously perfumed, bright rosy-pink. 10 cents each; 3 for 25 cents. 



MINIATURE. Thesmallestof all roses; perfect white flowers in profusion. 10c. each; 3 for 25c. -- 



Pr**" irr» rVn+c I will send, postpaid, one strong plant of each of the 

 rKJi fyKJ v.^iii,a 5 polyantha Roses named above. 



HARDY MOSS ROSES. 



A class of roses which are much admired. The beauty of the flowers 

 consists in the delicate mossy covering which surrounds the bud, and 

 which gives to the opening flower a unique appearance. I have six of 

 the very best varieties. 20 cents each; 3 for 50 cents. 



New Creeping Rose. Rosa Wichuriana. 



A new and beautiful single Rose from Japan. Blooms in clusters on 

 the ends of short branches during July and August. Flowers fragrant, 

 single, pure white, from six to eight inches in circumference, with yel- 

 low stamens, which is followed in the fall and winter with bright red 

 fruit. Foliage, dark shining green, almost evergreen. Valuable for 

 covering low walls, banks or rockeries and for covering graves. It is 

 perfectly hardy, thriving in any situation. 15 cents each; 2 for 25 cents. 



