EVERBLOOMING 



• E. G. Hill 



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*Feu Pernet-Ducher. See page 11 (2) 



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* Faience 

 See page 11 



• COUNTESS VANDAL. Page 9. H.T. 

 Plant Patent 38. Copper and salmon. A charm- 

 ing Rose from the first tints of color on the large, 



long, tapering buds until the flower opens and ages 

 and the petals fall. The buds are orange-copper and 

 open to perfumed, exquisitely formed blooms of copper, 

 salmon and gold. These flowers, on strong, erect stems, 

 are splendid for cutting. They are produced continu- 

 ously from June until frost. $1 each; 3 for $2.50. i* 



• DAINTY BESS. Page 8. © H.T. Blush-pink. 

 This Rose i5 dainty, adorable, and altogether charming 

 in its simplicity, for it has only 5 petals, but the flowers 

 are large, 3 to 4 inches across, and the petals are quaintly 

 ruflfled. The blooms come continuously all season, both 

 singly and in clusters, and the attractive blush-pink 

 flowers are decorated with a mass of stamens en wine- 

 red filaments which add the final artistic touch to the 

 beauty of Dainty Bess. This is unquestionabh' the 

 most popular single-petaled Rose. It is robustly healthy 

 yet as charming as a baby and has no rival. $1 each.* 



• DUCHESS OF WELLINGTON. H.T. Yellow. A 

 delightful Rose from the famous Dicksons of Ireland 

 who introduced it in 1909, and it is still a great favorite 

 because of its chrome-yellow buds which are very large, 

 long-pointed, and marked with carmine. The open 

 blooms, with heavy tea fragrance, are buff-yellow, 

 deeper toward the center, and furnished with a mass 

 of golden stamens. Continuous in bloom. A really 



great bedding Rose and fine for cutting. 75 CtS. 

 each.* 



• DUQUESA DE PENARANDA. Page 9. ® 



H.T. Copper-apricot. This beauty from south- 

 ern Spain first draws attention with its lovely 

 long-pointed buds of apricot-orange which open 

 to charming blooms of coppery apricot. You 

 would want this Rose even if only a few blooms 

 were produced in a season, but when you learn 

 that, before we introduced it in 1931, it had 

 won a gold medal for "the most outstanding, 

 continuous-blooming new Rose," you will surely 

 want it in your garden. SI each.* 



•EDITH NELLIE PERKINS. Page 12. ® H.T. 

 Salmon-pink. For dependable all-season bloom this 

 Rose is a leading variety in the salmon-pink class. 

 It requires no petting; just keep it well fed and you 

 will be rewarded with lovely long-pointed buds and 

 enchanting blooms from June until hard frost. One 

 of the fine varieties for cutting. 85 Cts. each.* 

 (See "Star Dozen," pages 12 and 13.) 



• EDITOR McFARLAND. Page 13. ® H.T. 

 Deep \nnk. One notable feature of this perfectly 

 formed flower is its ability to hold its form and color 



for days when cut. The Parisian cut-ilower 

 vendors value this Rose on account of its lovely 

 form, rich pink self color without other shading 

 and its long-lasting quality. Long buds open to 

 deep pink flowers with delightful fragrance and 

 come singly on erect, firm stems. In our estima- 

 tion this Rose ranks among the very best in the 



deep pinks. $1 each.* (See "Star Dozen," pages 



12 and 13.) 



• E. G. HILL. (D H.T. Crimson. The flowers 

 arc- large, lull, brilliant crimson, and as they come 

 singK oil strong, erect stems, are splendid for cut- 

 ting. IVoduces richly fragrant, 50-petaled flowers. 

 75 cts. each.* 



• ETOILE DE HOLLANDE. Page 12. ® H.T. 

 Cmii.son. riic most uni\c-rsally known, cverbloom- 

 ing crimson Rose. It is nearly faultless and it 

 charms continuously with its dcligluful color, its 

 form, long cutting stems, vigorous, health\ growth, 

 and the intense true Rose perfume. 85 cts. each.* 

 (See "Star Dozen," pages 12 and 13.) 



*See Quantity Prices, page 3 

 •f*No further discount 



THE CONARD-PYLE CO. 



