THE CONARD-PYLE CO. s T E s r t°g s r e o g v r e° p T s ^ 



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• MARY HART. H.T. Ma- 

 roon-red. Plant Patent No. 8. 

 The bud of this widely ad- 

 "* vertised sport is maroon- 

 red, and it opens to a well- 

 formed, fragrant bloom of 

 rich red with a velvety pile 

 on the petals — a shade of 

 red unique among Roses. 

 $1 each; 3 for $2.50. 



No further discount on this 



patented 

 Rose 



ssem. 75 cts. each 



;rb ROSES 



(or on these two 

 noted for ever- 

 tes and each a 

 r class. One each 

 Rowena Thorn, 

 >ssem, Mrs. Pierre 

 *ederico Casas. 



for $n 



loses 



epaid 

 OFFER F12 



.60 



m 



*Mrs. G. A. 

 Van Rossem 



H.T. (Red-orange). See illus. at top of page 

 A spectacular Rose which shows best in 

 the half-open bud stage when it is of the 

 deepest red-orange, almost brownish, with 

 deeply impressed maroon veins. Toward 

 the end the color tones to old-rose. The 

 rich coloring with the unusually heavy 

 veining makes this one of the most inter- 

 esting Roses we grow. It is strongly and 

 deliciously perfumed. 75 Cts. each.* 



*Federico Casas. H.T. 



See illustration 



Carrying the brilliant colors 

 that we associate with sunny 

 Spain, this gay Rose has been 

 very popular with visitors, and 

 we believe is one of the most 

 desirable of the modern 

 "fancy" Roses. 



The big, nearly double (25- 

 petaled) flowers are a lovely 

 blend of copper and orange and 

 are pleasantly fragrant. They 

 are continuously produced, and, 

 like most of the high-colored 



Roses, are especially brilliant in the cool days of autumn. 

 The vigorous plants have strong, thorny canes holding 

 each flower erect on good cutting stems. 



The foliage is an attractive shade of light green. 

 $1 each.* 



Pierre S. du Pont. $1 each 



• McGREDY'S SCARLET. H.T. Red. The fineiy 

 formed bud is dull red and opens slowly into a magnifi- 

 cent, very large bloom of just "red," which lasts a long 

 time. If a partly opened flower is pulled apart, the in- 

 side of the petals will be found to be brilliant scarlet; 

 possibly in a moist climate it would be scarlet outside, 

 too. Slight Tea scent. A splendid Rose for cutting as 

 the perfectly formed flowers have about 30 petals and 

 come on long stems. 75 cts. each.* 



• MISS ROWENA THOM. H.T. See opposite page. 



• MRS. AARON WARD. H.T. Yellow. An old Rose 

 which is always in demand. Buff buds open to fully 

 double flowers of yellow and pink. The plants are 



dwarf and are very free with 

 their lovely blooms. Fine to 

 cut and an ideal boutonniere 

 Rose. 75 cts. each.* 



*Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont 



H.T. 



Golden yellow. See illustra- 

 tion. Winner of more Gold 

 Medals for outdoor blooms 

 than any other Rose ever 

 grown. The bud is long- 

 pointed, rich reddish gold, 

 almost orange in the depths 

 of the petals, and holds its 

 color well to the end. Foliage 

 is very ornamental, healthy, 

 and extremely disease-resis- 

 tant. This is the most con- 

 tinuous-blooming yellow Hy- 

 brid Tea. It has the fragrance 

 of well-made Rose pot pourri. 

 The plants are low-growing and 

 it does not seem possible that 

 they could produce so many 

 blooms. We recommend Mrs. 

 Pierre S. du Pont as the best 

 all-round yellow garden Rose. 

 40 petals. Gold Medals: Societe 

 Nationale d'HorticuIture de 

 France, 1927; Saverne, 1927; 

 Lyon, 1928; Rhone, 1928; Baga- 

 telle, 1929; Harding $100 Prize, 

 1928; Certificate, Pedralbes, 

 1929. $leach.* 



sSvfc '; 





y DISCOUNTS SEE PAGE 2 



*Federico Casas. A lovely cut-flower. $1 ea. 



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