MOST BEAUTIFUL OF 
Roses oA ALL FLOWERS 
We consider our sélection of Roses on this page to be the 
most dependable of the long list of rose varieties 
You can add beauty to your home with Roses. Plant them in the garden, on the trellis and ° 
arbor. You will be proud of the everblooming Rose Bud—Fresh cut Roses from June until 
frost as well as the fences and walls covered in June with a blanket of Rambler Roses or the 
hardy large flowering types. 
HARDY EVERBLOOMING ROSES 
Price heavy 2 yr. field grown plants $1.20 each; 3 for $3.25 
postpaid. Guaranteed to reach you in good growing condition. 
Bloom the first summer (except climbing varieties). 
Ami Quinard—Best of the “black” Roses—very dark velvety crim- 
son. 
Edith Nellie Perkins —Delicate color blends of light cerise—pink 
and gold. - 
E. G. Hill—pazzling scarlet to deep pure red. 
Etoile de Holland —Brilliant crimson red—one of the most de- 
pendable and long lived. 
Frau Karl Druschki—Best of the large white hardy roses. 
Golden Charm —vVery double fragrant sunflower yellow. 
Pres. Hoover—Cerise pink, softly flamed with yellow, orange and 
scarlet. 
Radiance, Pink —still ranks as one of the best. 
Roslyn—orange buds—full golden yellow flowers. 
» C il 
Hardy Climbing Roses A) Heavy Zr. 
Price, Climbing Roses, $1.20 each; 3 for $3.25 postpaid. 
_ Climbing American Beauty —Deep Pink and Large Bloom. 
Dr. Van Fleet —Large Double White, Hardy and Free Bloomer. 

Excelsa —Red Rambler, one of the best ramblers. ° 
Paul’s Scarlet—rinest Red, A Most Beautiful Rose. 
Primrose —Double primrose yellow blossoms. Best 
climbing yellow. 
White Dorothy —A fine white rambler climbing 
rose. 

Special Climbing Rose Offer 
Six—2 yr. Climbing Roses. One each of 
above varieties, all for $5.75 postpaid. 
Plants for Shaded Situations 
; Shrubs 
Barberry Thunbergil (green) 
Cornelian Cherry (Cornus Masc) 
Hamamelis Vernalis (Witch Hazel) 
Hydrangea Aboroescens (White) 
Hydrangea (Oak Leaved) 
Ligustrum (Regal Privet) 
Ninebark (Dwarf type) : 
Snowberries—red, pink and white 
White Kerria (Rhodotypus) 
Evergreens 
Boxwoods—both types 
Mahonia (Holly Leaf. Mahonia) 
Taxus (all varieties) 
Wintercreepers (see page 27) 
Ground Covers 
Vinca Minor (Blue Periwinkle) Price $5.00 for 25; 
$12.00 per 100. 
Wintercreoper (Evergreen), Euonymus Colorata 
SPRING or FALL 
Both are good planting seasons for most all 
types of Nursery stock. Remember to plant EARLY 
in the Spring. Whenever possible Fall planted 
stock should be mulched and otherwise protected 
over the first Winter. 


FRAU KARL DRUSCHKI 
White American Beauty 
Scarff’s Roses 
Carefully packed for shipment 
I would like to tell you that my roses reached 
me in a week’s time in excellent condition. Al- 
though the temperature was 91 degrees and the 
package stayed in the offite all day, the roses 
were in fine shape—moist and as if just dug. 
—Mrs. E. C. Savage, Virginia 

Plant Roses several inches deeper than they 
stood in the nursery row. Dig large hole and use 
a mixture of Peat Moss and top soil to fill the 
hole around the roots. Trim the top severely when 
planting (early Spring). Correct low pruning to 
produce the finest blooms is 6 to 8 inches above 
the ground level. In the fall for winter protection 
mound earth up about a foot high around the 
bushes and then give added protection with tall 
grass, straw, fodder, or other suitable material. 
Horticultural Peat Moss for Roses $1.00 per bag of 
approximately one bushel. 
FACTORS INFLUENCING 
The early bearing of fruit trees 
(Continued from page (8) 
7. For the first three or four years stimulate the 
tree growth as much as possible with good cultural 
methods and the use of nitrogen fertilizers in very 
early Spring (cease cultivation, etc., in late July so 
trees will mature growth well before winter.) 
8. At this stage it may be well to slow up the 
tree growth for a few years in order to throw it into 
fruit production. This restricted growth is the reason 
dwarf fruit trees come into bearing before the 
standard kinds. 
9. Keep your trees healthy with timely sprays (see 
eur yeh ahs Planting” booklet for Spray sched- 
ules. 

