•frThe Fairy. Shrub Rose that requires no spraying. 



New Everblooming Shrub 



HYPERICUM, HIDCOTE 



Not a Rose, but a fine new shrub. 



Bright yellow, cup-shaped flowers about 2 inches 

 across stud the branches of this fine little shrub all 

 summer long, from late June into October. It will 

 eventually grow to 3 or 4 feet in mild climates. 

 Farther north, it is root hardy, growing about 18 

 inches tall if the top freezes back, and blooming just 

 as well. This is a wonderful, improved variety from 

 England, offered in the U. S. for the first time last 

 year. $1.45 ea.; 3 for $4. 



New Everblooming Shrub, Hypericum, Hidcote 



Can you imagine having shrubs that bloom continuously 

 and abundantly from June, right on through early autumn 

 frosts? Can you imagine having Roses that never have to 

 be sprayed or dusted and that can even hold their own 

 against weeds and stray dogs, if planted close? These two 

 do all of that and are, besides, neat, graceful, charmingly 

 flowered plants of infinite beauty and usefulness, for accent 

 plants, hedges, or in mass plantings. 



• MARTHA LAMBERT. An everblooming shrub Rose 

 with large clusters of intense scarlet, single blooms like heads 

 of phlox. Hardy and attractive. Grows 3 or 4 feet high and 

 as broad. $1.50 ea.; 3 or more, $1.30 ea. 



*THE FAIRY. A medium-low, spreading bush with small, 

 shiny foliage, as pretty as boxwood, covered all summer and 

 fall with rosettes of seashell-pink, fully double little Roses in 

 big sprays. It will grow to 4 feet high and broader than tall, 

 but can be kept lower. $1.50 ea.; 3 or more, $1.30 ea. 



HYBRID PERPETUAL ROSES 



These Roses are hardy far north and are well worth grow- 

 ing anywhere. Healthy, vigorous, undemanding, repeat 

 blooming and beautiful. 



• FRAU KARL DRUSCHKI. Snow-white. Unsurpassed 

 in form and size. $1.50 ea.; 3 or more, $1.30 ea. 



• HENRY NEVARD. Glowing deep crimson. Delightfully 

 fragrant. $1.50 ea.; 3 or more, $1.30 ea. 



OFFER 24: One each of the above two for $2.60 



"Living fences" are the easiest kind to erect, the cheapest 

 to maintain, and about the most pleasant of all to view from 

 both sides. Roses, with their long blooming season, make 

 superior fences and their thorns are an added asset for this 

 use. Especially good are the shrub Roses above, Flori- 

 bundas, Climbing Roses trained on wires, or Hugonis, 

 described below. 



MULTIFLORA ROSES make inexpensive, hedgerow-type 



fences for large properties. 1-year plants: 25 for $2.85; 

 100 for $9. They are not suitable for small or medium-sized 

 gardens and we advise against such use. 



• HUGONIS. (The Golden Rose of China.) This is a shrub Rose 

 that is ideal as a 6-foot-high living fence, or singly as a specimen 

 shrub. Graceful vase shape, covered with brilliant yellow, single 

 flowers in early May. $1.50 ea.; 3 or more, $1.30 ea. 



TREE ROSES 



We have a few fine Tree Roses on 3 to 3 3^-foot trunks, Peace 

 and other varieties. Order by color or write for list. $6 for one; 

 $5.50 for each additional. Transportation collect. 



GROUND-COVER ROSE 



*MAX GRAF. Large, single, rich pink blooms in June. Hardy, 

 with handsome foliage all season. Excellent for sunny banks or 

 slopes. $1.35 ea.; 3 to 11, $1.15 ea.; 12 or more, $1 ea. 



*Max Graf 





Wmm 



