Where But One Grew Before—the Fall Strawberry Man. 
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Out Door Roses 
Roses require rich soil ^vith plenty of vegetable fiber in it in order to do 
their best. They must be partially protected anywhere in Xew York State and 
similar latitudes. Barn manure is best for roses and it must be put about them 
in the fall when they are dormant. Only slight coverings are necessary^ such 
as boxes, barrels and the like, stood over the bushes to keep away the extreme 
cold and snow from breaking them down. All broken and diseased wood must 
be cut away each spring and the new branches cut back about one-half in 
length. Our rose bushes are not to be compared with the cheap trash offered 
by department stores; and at the price we ask for them—25c each or $2.50 per 
dozen—are real bargains. Most every bush will bloom freely the first year set 
out. We offer a smaller grade of plants at lOc. each: $1 per dozen. Add Bo 
for each rose plant if by mail. 
FREE GIFT WlTH EVERY ORDER 
It has boon our j)'>licy during tbi- 
past fpw years to give extra plants, 
seeds or bulbs to patrons in order to 
induce them to Increase their orders 
and make them amount to $2 or more. 
We accept oriler.s f«>r $1.00 or even 
less, but there is hardly any profit itt 
these small orders, as it takes as lonK 
to do the cleri<al work and almost as 
long: to fill the small order as th*- 
larKer one. 
As an inducement to make your or¬ 
der as large as j)ossible, we tit^ree to 
send one Dahlia tuber free ^^ith every 
order amounting to $2.00. If you.or 
der $10 worth of goods, you get .'> tu¬ 
bers. If you order $50 worth you gn 
25 tubers, etc., etc. 
We liave more than 2.5 bushels (»f 
the finest Dahlias we have even seen 
and we are going to give them away 
as long as they last. There are about 
four varieties of the <lifrerent color.s, 
some of the latest introductions. We 
will give you choice of 
varieties as far as }k) 8- 
slble, and in an order 
calling for several tu¬ 
bers we will i)ut in dif¬ 
ferent kinds. This offer 
applies to orders sent by 
express. If you have 
your plants sent by mail, 
please "send 5c addi¬ 
tional to pay postage on 
Dahlia tuber. If you or¬ 
der a tubers, the extra 
postage retjuired would 
be 25c. etc., etc. 
Crimson Rambler. —This is undoubt¬ 
edly the most popular of all roses. U 
is hardy, wonderfully free flowering, 
rich glowing crimson, intensely bright 
and vivid in color. The plant is a 
strong, rampant grower, making shoots 
10 to 12 feet long after the first year. 
The flowers are produced in great 
trusses, pyramidal in shape, often 
twenty-five to thirty in a cluster, fairly 
covering the plant from the ground to 
the top with a mass of bright glowing 
crimson, the most wonderful rose in¬ 
troduced in the past twenty-five years. 
25c each. 
Baby Rambler, Dorothy Perkins. 
Yellow Rambler, White Rambler, 25c 
each. 
Alfred Colomb. —Brilliant carmine 
crimson: very large, full, fine globu¬ 
lar form. Extremely fragrant; fine 
sort, 25c each. 
American Beauty. —l^arge, globular, 
pink, shaded with carmine: delicious 
odor. 50c each. 
Anna de Diesbach. —Carmine, a 
beautiful shade; very hardy, large and 
double, very fragrant. A fine garden 
sort. 25c. 
Caprice. —Large, pink, striped and 
