New Guide to Rose Culture for 1907 



27 



The ^z"'zi Baby Rambler 



SUPERB FOR SINGLE SPECIMENS, DWARF HEDGES AND BEDDING 



Think of it ! An Ever- Blooming Dwarf Crimson Rambler. Unique and Novel. Blooms Every Day in the Year ! 



Grows but 20 inches High ! Introduced and Color- Plated for the First Time, Spring 1905 



By THE DINGEE & CONARD COMPANY 



IN introducing this petite French debutante year before 

 last we claimed it to be the most wonderful Kose ever 

 introduced. This broad assertion has been more than 

 fulfilled, a fact to which thousands of our customers have 

 gladly testified. It has every good point that the amateur 

 seeks in a Rose, and if it has any faults we have never 

 Been them. 



A direct descendant of that great old Climbing Rose, Crim- 

 son Rambler, it attains a height of but 20 inches when 

 full grown. From the time that it is in the cutting bench, the 

 tiny plants commence to bloom, and there is not a day in the 

 year when it will not produce with wonderftil freedom flow- 

 ers fully the equal, if not the superior of Crimson Rambler, 

 in large panicles, which have shown as high as 120 blooms in 

 a cluster. 



Imagine a bed of this superb variety, a perfect mass of clear, 

 brilliant, rubv-rose flowers, from early Spring until severe 

 frosts, when it can be brought indoors, where it will excel the 

 Azalea and all other plants of this expensive type for winter 

 blooming. Of sturdy, vigorous habit of growth, dark, glossy 



foliage, wonderfully free from insects, it requires no petting 

 or coaxing to succeed with— indeed, it is impossible to keep 

 this marvelous Rose from flowering all the time. « 



For single specimens, low hedges, borders, or for cemetery 

 work, it stands alone in a lass of itself. Remember that our 

 stock is genuine, imported direct from the foreign grower. 

 The only dillerence between one- and two-year-old plants is 

 in the comparative yield of flowers. Roth sizes will bloom 

 with the utmost freedom. AbsoltUely hardy everywhere. At 

 the great Flower Shows held all over the country" this superb 

 novelty has attracted widespread attention, and has won gold 

 medal after gold medal. 



Dear Sirs:— You can't find another Rose that will equal 

 Baby Rambler. We have had .'^ovcral plants on trial the 

 past year. They were full of bloom all sunnnor in the 

 open ground, and at this writing we have a plant in an 

 ordinary living room, which has been full of flowers all 

 winter and now has several fine blooms. They last a 

 month. Respectfully. 



Randolph, N. Y., Feb. G. 1900. RAY H. PALMKR. 



P'D Xr^P Own •oot-stock, strong one-year-old plants, from original stock, 15 cts. each; 9 for $1; $1.30 per dozen, 

 -■-VXV^J^ postpaid, by mail; $10 per 100, by express. Two-year-old plants, on own roots, from 4 and 5-inch pots, 

 35 cts. each; 3 for $1; $3.50 per dozen; $25 per 100. Strong, imported, low-budded plants, three years old, 50 cts. each 

 3 for $1.25, by express, at purchaser's expense. 



