Maule's Hardy Roses for Fall Planting 



Get six months start on your rose garden for next season. 



Whether you live East, West, North or South you may order any of the following varieties with the 



greatest confidence. They are all strong, vigorous growers and bloom abundantly. 



Ready for delivery about Oct. 2Sth — which will be the proper time to plant. Order at Once and we will 

 book your order to go forward at that time. 



Hardy Bush Roses 



All of them of robust growth and will carry safely 



over Winter outdoors with but slight protection. 



PRICES. — Any Rose listed below (except Hugonis) 



in two-year size, by express, or Parcel Post (see page 



31), not prepaid, for $1.25 each. Any ten, your 



selection, for only $10.00. 



Anna de Diesbach (Glory of Paris). Flowers large, 

 full and very sweet, color a beautiful shade of car- 

 mine-pink. 



Clio. Flesh color, shaded in the center with rosy pink. 

 Fine globular form. 

 onrad F. Meyer. 

 to 4 inches across. \'ery fragrant. 



Gloire de C. Guinoisseau. Bright vermilion-red 

 with velvety shadings. Large, brilliant. 



Hugh Dickson. Fine crimson, shaded scarlet. Good 

 size and highly perfumed. 



Jack Rose (General Jacqueminot). The standard by 

 which all crimson Roses are judged. 



Mrs. John Laing. Soft pink, beautiful form, large 

 size, exceedingly fragrant and free blooming. 



Paul Neyron. Clear pink, shading to rose. Bears the 

 largest fiowers of any Rose. 



Prince Camille de Rohan. Flower dark velvety- 

 crimson, almost black. Nearest to black of any Rose. 



Sir Thomas Lipton. Beautiful white. Blooms from 

 Mav until November. Makes a very large, strong 

 bush. 



Ulrich Brunner. A brilliant cherry-red seedling of 

 Paul Xeyron. \'erv fragrant: immense size. 



White American Beauty (Frau Karl Druschki). 

 Pure snow white, long buds, perfectly double, wax- 

 like petals. Hardy everywhere that Roses grow and 

 one of the most continuously flowering of this ex- 

 cellent class. 



Rare New Rose Hugonis 



It Blooms in the Snow 



We had Hugonis in bloom during the last snowstorm (Spring 

 of 1917) and I never saw a more beautiful sight. 



Mrs. W. Van Fleet, Washington, D. C. 



A remarkable new Rose, which is the first Rose to 

 bloom in the Spring. The color is intense canary-yel- 

 low, very bright and attractive, and the plant is note- 

 worthy all the growing season by reason of its foliage. 

 When in bloom, the entire plant is covered with the 

 bright, sunshiny yellow blossoms and buds, making a 

 wonderful early Spring show. Hugonis is hardy as an 

 oak and most suitable for lawn specimens or planting 

 among shrubbery. $1.50 each, postpaid. By express, 

 or Parcel Post (see note page 31), not prepaid, 2-year 

 size, $2.50 each; 3-year size, $5.00 each. 



Hardy Climbing Roses 



Every one as hardy as an oak. For growing ov^er un- 

 sightly fences and buildings, for Rose hedges, porch 

 decorations, etc. 



PRICES. — Any Rose listed below, in two-year size, 

 by express, or Parcel Post (see note page 31), not pre- 

 paid, for $1.25. Any ten, your selection, for only 

 $10.00; three-year size, $1.50 each. Any ten, your 

 selection, for only $12.50. 



Aviateur Bleriot. Bears clusters of perfectly double, 

 medium sized, fragrant blooms, of rich, deep, saffron- 

 yellow, deepening in center to coffee shades. 

 Coronation. This new Rose makes beautiful sprays 

 of exquisite crimson- scarlet flowers with a dainty 

 flake of white on some of the petals. 

 Pink Dorothy Perkins. Grows 10 to 15 feet in a 

 season. Flowers perfectly double with petals crinkled, 

 borne in great profusion. Color clear shell-pink. 

 White Dorothy Perkins. Same habit as the above 



but bears pure snow white flowers. 

 Excelsa (Red Dorothy Perkins). Intense clear crim- 

 son with tips of petals scarlet. 

 Gardenia (Hardy Marechal Niel). Deep rich golden 

 yellow flowers passing to creamy white. Very 

 hardy, blooms profusely. This is the finest hardy 

 yellow Rose yet produced. 

 American Pillar. Rich rosy pink flowers in great 

 profusion. Grows thick canes 20 feet long in a single 

 season. -v^. 



Dr. W. Van Fleet. One of the best. Bears its rich 



flesh color flowers on stems 12 to 18 inches long. 

 Silver Moon. Large, single white flowers with a mass 



of pretty golden stamens in center. 

 Tausendschbn (Thousand Beautj^gs) . Colors of every, 

 imaginable shade from pure wfii'te to deep pink. 



Hardy Baby Ramblers 



Attain a height of 18 inches and are ideal for border- 

 ing beds, edging walks or planting in solid beds. Con-, 

 stantly in bloom the summer through. 



PRICES.— Any of the Baby Ramblers listed below 

 in two-year size, by express or Parcel Post (see noce 

 page 31), not prepaid, for $1.25 each. Ten, your 

 selection, for $10.00. 



Red Baby Rambler (Mme. Noebert Levavasseur)., 

 Flowers borne in clusters of twenty to thirty, and' 

 resemble blooms of climbing Crimson Rambler. i 



White Baby Rambler (Katharina Zeimet). Each 

 branch bears fifteen to fifty creamy white flowers at 

 a time. 



Pink Baby Rambler (Phyllis). Same as Red Baby 

 Rambler except in color. 



.4. T. DcLa Mare Co. Inc., Horticultural Printers, 433 to 44S West S7th Street, New York 



