Hardy Everblooming Roses 



Hardy Everblooming 

 Roses 



Rose "fans" are well aware of the fact that the 

 Hard}' Everblooming or Hybrid Tea Roses may 

 well be planted in the fall and thus get an earher 

 start than if planted in the spring. 



Be sure to give them the same careful attention 

 that the permanently estabhshed rose bed needs; 

 that is, prune back somewhat, pull the soil up 

 around the plants about 6 inches, and add a mulch 

 of stra\\^ manure. 



Uniform prices on all varieties, unless noted 

 otherwise, heavy field-grown plants, each, 90c.; 

 dozen, S9.00; 100, $60.00. 



Ecarlate — Brightest of red roses adapted for massing and 

 bedding. Very satisfactory. Long lived. 



Etoile de Lyon — Charming, golden yellow buds. Very 

 double, sweetly scented. 



Edward Mawley — One of the finest dark crimsons; a 

 true perpetual flowering Hybrid Tea. 



Etoile de France — Deep red rose. Blooms all summer. 

 Large, velvety crimson, richly fragrant. 



Gruss an Teplitz — Always in bloom — and we mean it! 

 Bright, pleasing crimson. 



Jonkheer J. L. Mock — Clear imperial pink. Large flow- 

 ers borne freely. Delightfully fragrant. 



Lady Hillingdon — One of the most popular. Yellow flow- 

 ers of apricot shade. Fragrant. 



Madame Abel Chatenay — Carmine, tinted salmon. 

 Flowers large, exquisitely formed. 



Madam Jules Grolez — Buds and flowers pure rose, shad- 

 ing to bright satiny pink in color. 



Madame Caroline Testout — Brilliant satiny rose, bord- 

 ered silvery rose. Very large flowers. 



Special Offer — One strong two to three-year- 

 old field-grown plant of each of these varieties will 

 be sent for S8.00. 



Madame Abel Chatenay 



And Now for an Old Fashioned -Garden 



Old-fashioned because, like our grandmothers 

 who loved and tended them, they were part of the 

 life of the times before our memories began. But 

 you, too, may have the bright gold of the Core- 

 opsis, the tall blue spires of the Delphinium, the 

 Peach Bells and the Daisies. A Five Dollar in- 

 vestment in the form of sturdy plants, set out 

 NOW, a little love and care, and you will enjoy a 

 wealth of flowers from early next spring till next 

 fall's frosts — a bouquet for every day; and besides 

 they will be a permanent source of delight from 

 year to year. We know these will please you be- 

 cause they have pleased so many others! 



Achillea "Boule de Neige" — 1 to 2 ft., white; all summer. 

 Alyssum saxatile — 1 ft.; April and May; edgings. 

 Asters, Hardy — Fall flowers in variety of colors. Tall. 

 Campanula persicifolia — 13^ ft., blue; June and July. 

 Columbine — Variety of color combinations; 2 ft.; April. 

 Coreopsis — Bright yellow; 2 ft.; June and July. 

 Daisy — Shasta, white, flowers all summer; 1 ft. 

 Hemerocallis — Dajlily; fragrant, yellow; June; 2 ft. 

 Delphinium — Shades of blue; 3 ft.; June and later. 

 Heliopsis — Orange; 2 to 3 ft.; August and September. 

 Iberis — Hardy Candytuft; white edging plant. 

 Iris — German or Liberty Iris; assorted colors. 

 Lupinus — Large spikes of blue flowers; 3 ft.; May. 

 Lysimachia — White flowers; 13^ ft.; July. 

 Phlox— Shades of red, pink and white, 2 ft.; July. 

 Phlox subulata — Edging plant, pink flowers, April. 

 Pinks — Spice Pinks of our grandmother's garden. 



51 Sturdy Plants 



3 of each variety — bound to bloom next 

 year if planted this fall 



$5.00 



The Beginninji of an Old Fashioned Carden 



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