



a ee ee ee 
Mrs. P. S. du Pont 
Poinsettia 


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Doorway or Portal 


FASC he \G AU oe 
EVERBLOOMING ROSES 
Continued 
95¢ each; $2.65 for any three; 
$4.85 for any six; $9.00 for any 
twelve. 
Mrs. Henry Morse. Bright carmine on the 
outside of the petals, flesh-pink on the inside. 
The long, pointed, elegantly formed bud opens 
into a large, fragrant flower of perfect form. 
The plant is strong growing and very healthy. 
Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont. This is the ace of 
the golden yellow Roses. Winner of more gold 
medals for outdoor blooms than any other Rose 
ever grown. Pointed buds, high-crowned flow- 
ers, particularly lovely in the autumn. Low, 
sturdy plant, abundant glossy foliage. 
Mrs. Sam McGredy. Coppery scarlet-orange 
flowers, flushed dull red and of fine form, 
make this a Rose to rave about. It is double, 
with 30 to 40 petals, and richly fragrant. Both 
plant and flower are very distinctive. Shown 
in natural color on the outside back cover. 
Poinsettia. Brilliant poinsettia-scarlet, long- 
stemmed, double flowers and exquisitely long 
buds. One of the most delightfully fragrant of 
all Roses. Plant grows well and has good foliage 
of dark lustrous green. 
Never sprinkle or water your Roses from 
overhead. Do ‘not get the foliage wet. 
“Blackspot,’’ the worst enemy of the Roses, 
is very often caused by the moisture on the 
foliage at night. Do not let your Rose bed 
dry out but soak the ground around the 
plants by letting the water run from the 
hose into the bed or by use of the very 
handy ‘Soil-Soaker.”’ 

Good Rose piants are very scarce this spring. 
To avoid disappointment, please send your 
orders in to us early. 
Blaze. (Plant Patent No. 10.) The first hardy 
scarlet climber to be everblooming when once 
established. Resembling in color its sister va- 
riety, Paul’s Scarlet. Each $1.00 
Climbing American Beauty. A Rose of uni- 
versal popularity. Carmine or old rose color, 
this large flowering climber is appreciated 

Blaze Climber 
HARDY 
CLIMBING ROSES 
Hardy climbers, as a rule, bloom but once each year, but there are a few excep- 
tions which you will find noted below. The great spectacular show made by a single 
Climbing Rose makes this class valuable and necessary for every garden. Climbing 
Roses can be trained on supports of many kinds, such as fences, pillars, pergolas and 
trellises, or against garages and other outbuildings; or merely left to trail on sloping 
banks. The varieties listed here are hardy in ordinary winter weather, with little pro- 
tection, and they will flash into life again in the spring with a display of spectacular 
beauty. Most of them are large-flowered, and the blooms make fine cut flowers. 
Try some of the newer ones, they are unusual departures from the old Rambler types. 
Doubloons. (Plant Patent No. 152.) A radiant 
yellow climbing Rose with large, compact, dou- 
ble blooms coming in clusters. Vigorous grow- 
er with long, heavy canes. Blooms in midseason 
and tends to rebloom later. Each $1.00 
Paul’s Scarlet Climber. Intensely red, me- 
dium size flowers borne in loose clusters. Some- 
everywhere. Each 75c¢ times blooms again in the autumn. Each 75¢ 
Mt 3 
7 VAs CLIMBING ROSES — Artis- 
ee tA tically take care of those 
barren and hard to beautify 
narrow spaces. 




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For Garage or Building To Cover a Fence Covering an Archway 
[54] 
