Hart& Vicks EVERBLOOMING ROSES 
Northern Field-Grown Hybrid Tea Rose Plants With Big Branching Tops and Fibrous Roots 
Plant them this spring and they will blossom this August, next year, and for many succeeding years. They will begin bloom- 
ing in June and continue to bloom until hard frost. 
_Here are twelve everblooming Roses that have been tried and tested. We have selected them for their sturdiness of growth, 
disease resisting qualities, foliage and for the quality, quantity and fragrance of the flowers they bear. We feel sure you will 
love them all. 
EACH $ 1.00 
Ami Quinard. Maroon. Very dark, rich, vel- 
vety crimson-maroon buds and semi-double, 
fragrant, open flowers of 15 petals. Plant is 
tall growing. 
Betty Uprichard. Salmon and carmine. Long, 
pointed buds of rich carmine and coppery 
orange. Open flowers show an interior of deli- 
cate salmon-pink and are very fragrant. Plant 
vigorous growing and an abundant bloomer. 
Condesa de Sastago. Bi-color. Rich yellow 
buds unfold into copper color blooms with yel- 
low on the reverse; fully double with alluring 
raspberry fragraince. Exceptionally vigorous and 
supremely bushy in growth., A fooi-proof Rose 
if there ever was one. 
Edith Nellie Perkins. Salmon-pink. A Rose 
of outstanding merit, vigorous growth and free 
flowering. Long, pointed buds, flowers of good 
size, long lasting and fragrant; double. Out- 
side of petals Orient-red shaded cerise-orange, 
inside salmon-pink. 
Editor McFarland. Deep pink. An outstand- 
ing deep pink Rose, peculiarly even in color. 
They come on long cutting stems, are fragrant, 
plants $2.85 
Frau Karl Cruschki. Snow-white. (Hybrid 
Perpetual.) Pinkish buds and magnificent snow- 
white blooms with deep, firm petals. The best 
white Rose of any class, blooms freely in June 
and occasionally during the rest of the summer. 
Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria. White. This has 
remained the standard of quality in a white 
garden Rose since pre-war days. Absolutely per- 
fect blooms of snow-white with a suggestion of 
yellow at the center. 
Mrs. Pierre S. du Pont. Golden yellow. 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 flowers, particularly lovely in the 
autumn. Low, sturdy plant, abundantly glossy 
foliage. 
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. 
Radiance. Rose-pink. One of the most de- 
pendable and probably the best known garden 
Rose in America. Two-toned rose-pink, cupped 
blooms have a pungent true Rose fragrance 
and are in bloom here in Rochester from the 
middle of June until frost comes in the late 
plants 5-65 
Plants $1O.8O 
Soeur Therese. Chrome-yellow. Golden yel- 
iow buds touched with orange-carmine. Ex- 
guisite, long, pointed bud, making a fine, fra- 
grant cut flower. Vigorous, active grower of 
spreading habit, and a very free bloomer. 
Talisman. Bi-color. A beautiful mixture of 
golden yellow, orange and scarlet varied in 
every bloom. Richly colored buds on long 
stems, fine for cutting, especially in the fall; 
very fragrant. Upright, vigorous grower and 
constant bloomer. Most widely known Rose. 
ROSES BY MAIL 
Up to 12 dcermant Roses can be sent by 
mail. More than this are sent by express. 
If you wish your Rose bushes by mail, add 
8c per plant. West of the Mississippi River, 
add 15c per plant. If no money is sent for 
postage they will be sent by express. 

and last long. Very vigorous growing plant. fall. 
CLIMBING ROSES 
Hardy climbers, as a rule, bloom but once each year, but 
there are a few exceptions 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 protection, 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. 
Blaze. (Plant Patent No. 10.) Bright scarlet. Very popular 
hardy climbing Rose that bears great clusters of semi-double, 
scarlet flowers in wonderful abundance in June and some 
bloom throughout the summer and fall. The plant is thrifty, 
easily grown and will climb to a considerable height. 
Strong, 2-year-old plants, $1.25 each; 3 for $3.15 
Climbing American Beauty. Cerise-red. Large, double, 
fragrant American-Beauty-red flowers of splendid form and 
borne in large clusters. The plant is very thrifty and vigorous 
in growth, climbing to great heights and thoroughly cover- 
ing trellises, garden seats and summer houses. 
: Very large plants, 95c each; 3 for $2.65 
Mary Wallace. Pink. A pillar Rose, making a fine, strong, 
self-supporting plant 6 to 8 feet high, with large, glossy foli- 
age, blooming with great freedom in spring and bearing a 
large number of fine buds in summer and fall. Flowers very 
large, generally exceeding four inches across, well formed, 
i-double, of a bright, clear rose-pink with salmon base. 
as $1.00 each; 3 for $2.85 
Paul’s Scarlet Climber. Brilliant scarlet. The flowers 
are large and beautifully formed, coming in clusters, making 
a vivid splash of color that holds clear and true. The blooms 
come on long stems, making good cut flowers. Does not 
grow very tall and is an ideal pillar Rose. Blooms in late 
June. 2-year-old plants, 95c¢ each; 3 for $2.65 
[51] 
Beauty Rose covers the garden house. 
| Notice how this Climbing American 
It is a very strong growing variety. 

Betty Uprichard 
Mrs. P. S. du Pont 
CR are, 

