•Edith 

 Nellie 



Perkins -t-*^^ 



75 cts.* ^PPb^ 



•Mrs. Pierre 



S. du Pont 



gOcts.* 



I f 



•President Herbert Hoover. 75 cts.* 



r/ you desire advice for planning a new Rose-garden or for reno- 

 vahng an old one, please write us early. After March 1, during our rush 

 stason we are obliged to make a nominal charge for drawing plans 



The Star i^ Dozen 



Value Fof onl 



$j|05 PICKED TO PRODUCE ^^^ $g.5 



•Editor 



McFarland 



90 cts.* 



PICKED TO PRODUCE 

 the FINEST BLOODS at LEAST COST 



The StarDoz. OfferFl2 Ci;l7s) $8-5° 



en trving to grow Roses for 10 to 12 years, 



it it takes quality plants to produce quality 



S, C. C, Frostburg, Md., June /-, /p^7. 



THE STAR 25 SET 



Add the 13 named below to the Star Dozen 

 and you have 25 high-quality everblooming 

 Roses to give you blooms from June until 



frost. In 

 6 tinted, 



*'I was about disgusted trying to raise Rosjuntil I planted the Star Dozen. They were 

 so fine that I ordered a dozen more last fall and |0 more plants this s^""g-^ I hey are wonoer- 

 ful, the best I have ever planted, and I have hi 

 with poor success. At last I have found out tlVE 

 Roses." 



You, too, can have supreme Rose satis- J^T 

 faction from the Star Dozen or Star Twenty- 

 five. Eleven of the Star Dozen and nineteen 

 of the Star Twenty-five are shown in color in 

 this Catalog. 



Every plant is guaranteed, and you can 

 confidently depend on hundreds of blooms 

 next year if you plant these Roses this fall. 



Page 



^Ami Quinard. Crimson. $1 8 



-A-Duquesa de Penaranda. Apricot. $1.. 5 



• Edith Nellie Perkins. Salmon. 75c.. . 12 



• Editor McFarland. Deep pink. 90 cts. 13 

 •Etoile de Hollande. Crimson. 75 cts. . 13 

 •Federico Casas. Coppery pink and 



orange. SI 10 



• Golden Dawn. Pale yellow. $1 10 



• Luna. Moonlight-yellow. SI 14 



• Miss Rowena Thorn. Pink. 75 cts. ...13 



• Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont- Yellow. 90c.. . 12 



• President Herbert Hoover. Multi- 



colored. 75 cts. 12 



luded are 7 shades of red, 6 pink, 

 nd 6 shades of yellow. p 



•Autumn. Multicolored, 75 cts 9 



•Betty Uprichard. Carmine and salmon. 



75 cts. . .. . „ 



•Catatonia. Vermilion. 51.25 4 



•E. G. Hill. Dark crimson. 75 cts 10 



•Grenoble. Scarlet. $1 lo 



•Lady Ashtown. Pink. 75 cts. U 



•Margaret McGredy. Orange-scarlet to 



carmine-rose. 75 CtS. 14 



•Mrs. E. P. Thorn. Clear yellow. 75 ctS. 1 5 

 •Mrs. Sam McGredy. Red-orange. SI- 15 



•Pink Pearl. Pearly pink. $1 16 



•Sir Henry Segrave. Lemon-yellow. $1.18 



•Soeur Therese. Yellow. $1 17 



•Souv. de Mme. C. Chambard. Coral 



or satiny peach-pink. $1 17 



ThcSlar25.0fferFl3a?no)for$17 



These 6 Side-Panel Roses Are in the Star Dozen 



•EDITH NELLIE PERKINS. H.T. See illus- 

 tration Salmon-pink. Long-pointed buds of 

 cream, orange, and rosy carmine open to salmon 

 flowers, heavily overspread with gold on the in- 

 side of the petals, while the reverse is rosy 

 carmine. 75 cts. each.* 



•MRS. PIERRE S. DU PONT. H.T. See 

 illustration. Golden yellow. This is the ace of 

 the golden yellow Everblooming Roses. Winmr 

 of more Gold Medals for outdoor blooms tiiai; 

 any other Rose ever grown. 90 cts. each.* 

 •PRESIDENT HERBERT HOOVER. H t 

 See illustration. Multicolored. Long-lastiri;_'; 

 flowers of scarlet-yellow, cerise-pink, and llaiii' . 

 Awarded Gold Medal, 1934, for the best AnK, i- 

 can Rose introduced within the previous 5 ye;ir . 

 75 cts. each.* 



•EDITOR McFARLAND. H.T See illustra- 

 tion. Deep pink. The firm-textured, perfectly 

 formed flowers are of a clear, brilliant pink. They 

 come on long cutting stems, are fragrant, and last 

 longer than any Rose we know. 90 cts. each.* 

 •MISS ROVVENA THOM. H.T. See illustra- 

 tion. Rose-pink. Produces finely formed, deli- 

 ciously fragrant, rose-pin k blooms 5 to 6 inches In 

 diameter. There is a yellow base to the petals 

 which lights up the whole flower. 75 cts. each.'J^ 

 •ETOILE pE HOLLANDE. H.T. See illus- 

 tration. Crimson. The most universally be- 

 loved, everblooming crimson Rose. It is nearly 

 faultless and it charms continuously witli its 

 delightful color, its form, long cutting stems, 

 vigorous, healthy growth, and intense true Rose 

 perfume. 75 cts. each.* 



ir 



*Etoile de HoUande. 75 cts.* 



12 



"This bed of Star Roses is about 10 years old. I have had mamifirpnt 

 blooms both June and fall."— W. H. C, Upper Montclair, N. J. 



l^--4fT.— ^ 

 Planting plan 

 for the • 25 



.^ (^^The diagram to the left will help you to plan your Rose-bed 



of 25- or for the Star Dozen, make bed 2 feet, 9 inches wide and 

 7 feet 9 inches long. Plant these Roses IS inches apart. 



13 



