LoveWs Nursery, Inc. 



LITTLE SILVER, N. J. 



JUNE ROSES 



JUNE ROSES 



These hardiest of all Roses will make you a June garden which will be 

 unequalled for beauty in your neighborhood. The cut blooms, also, will fill 

 the vases of your house with fragrant charm for many Junes to come. For 

 best results, prune severely in early Spring, manure liberally and hoe often. 

 Plant 2 to 3 feet apart. 



Heavy, field-grown plants, (except as noted) each 70c, doz. $7.00, 



100 SoO.OO 



American Beauty. Most outstanding Rose of our fathers' day, American 

 Beauty is still among the favorites. Bears many extra large flowers of rich 

 rosy-carmine, double, full, and globular in shape, lasting when cut, and 

 carrying a delicious fragrance. Our plants of this famous old sort are fre- 

 quently nearly as everblooming as are most Hybrid Tea Roses. 



Druschki Rubra. Crimson blooms, similar in shapeliness and vigor to that 

 best of white Roses, the popular Frau Karl Druschki. Each 90c, doz. S9.00. 



Frail Karl Druschki. Most popular of all white Roses, this magnificent 

 variety produces many huge, long, pinkish buds, which turn to mammoth 

 snow-white flowers, very shapely, with firm petals of wax-like texture. Re- 

 peats its bloom frequently. This vigorous, taU grower (often over six feet 

 in height) is sometimes called the White American Beauty. 



General Jacqueminot. Introduced in 1852, this lovely sort is the oldest 

 Rose listed herein, with an early, abundant bloom of scarlet-crimson buds, 

 turning to clear red Roses, hardy, and chiefly outstanding because of the 

 unparalleled quality of their delightful perfume. 



Magna Charta. Produces a great many bright, deep pink blooms, attractively 

 suffused with carmine, big, double, cupshaped, and heavily perfumed. A 

 hfirdy sort which is much used by florists for forcing in pots. 



Mme. Albert Barbier. Nearest in color to yellow of any June Rose, this 

 compact, dwarf bush bears many long, shapely pearl-white buds, suffused 

 with soft salmon flesh, and turning to big well-formed flowers of fawn- 

 yellow, very fragrant, and showing a center tinged with apricot-gold when 

 bloom is fully open. Also, and even more important, it is absolutely ever- 

 blooming in character. 



Mrs. John Laing. A lovely old favorite which bears many big, double, 

 shapely Roses of a solid, satiny pink, intensely fragrant, from extra-splendid 

 buds. 



Soliel d'Or. This famous ancestor of all the modern multicolored Roses is 

 still unsurpassed in color, with orange-gold and pink strugghng for supremacy 

 upon its sweetly perfumed petals. 



Ulrich Brunner. For well over half a century, this dependable sort has been 

 most popular as a heavy producer of bright cherry-red blooms, big, cup- 

 shaped, and intensely fragrant. 



SHRUB ROSES 



As hardy as the hardiest of Shrubs, but as beautiful as any Rose Bush. 

 Heavy, field-grown plants, (except as noted) each 70c, doz. .'S7.00, 



100 $50.00 



Rugosa Rose. 4 to 5 ft. Wonderful bush for a seashore hedge, with big, single 

 flowers ranging from pink to rosy-carmine, followed by attractive red berries. 

 Also good for specimen planting, in separate beds, or in a mixed group of 

 shrubbery. Hardiest of Roses. Each: 15 to 18 in. 35c. 18 to 24 in. 50c. 



Conrad F. Meyer. 8 to 9 ft. Tallest of Rugosa hybrids, this hardy sort 

 produces many big silvery-pink Roses, glowing and fragrant, through the 

 season. They are good lawn specimens, and mix well with tall shrubs for 

 screening an unsightly object. 



F. J. Grootendoorst. 4 ft. Most popular Rose for an everblooming hedge, 

 being a continuous producer of small, bright crimson flowers, fringed like 

 carnations, in great clusters. Also good in a shrub border, en masse in a 

 Rose bed, or as individued specimen. 



Pink Grootendoorst. Similar to the above sort in all respects, save for the 

 color of its blooms, which, a splendid clear pink, is preferred by many to 

 the crimson of its parent. 



The Golden Rose of China {Rosa Hugonis). 6 ft. This erect shrub from the 

 Orient bears long, arching wands, covered with lovely flowers like delicate, 

 fragrant, yellow Tulips, in early May. Even without its bloom, the feathery 

 foliage renders these hardy Roses unsurpassable for a distinctive, nearly 

 impenetrable hedge if planted from 15 to 18 inches apart. 



SKYROCKET 



This amazing new variety is really more of an everblooming shrub 

 than a June Rose. It produces a carnival of blood-red flowers, a display 

 that is hypnotizing in its beauty, from early June until frost. In addition 

 to this desirable factor, its big seed pods will attract countless birds 

 to your home grounds. Makes a gorgeous hedge plant. Strong, 2 year, 

 field-grown plants, each 75c, doz. $8.00. 



Rugosa Rose 



ROSA ROULETTI 



(R) THE ROCK GARDEN 

 ROSE (R) 



r 



6 to 8 inches. This lovely necessity to any 

 rock garden has met with tremendous appeal. 

 The small, double, rose-pink flowers are in con- 

 tinuous bloom from early Summer until frost, 

 from miniature, compact foliage. If taken out of 

 the ground in mid-Fall, and placed in pots, they 

 will furnish lovely Winter Blooms for your house 

 or apartment. (R). Strong blooming-age plants, 

 each 75c, doz. .'>7.50. 



All varieties, unless otherwise noted, each 70c, doz. .$7.00, 100 $50.00 



{Add 10% to your remittance if shiprrient is desired by parcel post) 



