MODERN EVERBLOOMING ROSES 
Here are ten of the newer Hybrid Tea or Everblooming Roses that we have selected from the long list of ‘Patented’ va- 
rieties as the best of their kind and color. 
Most of these kinds have been awarded medals for excellence. 
All of them are 
worthy of a place in your garden. Our plants are as fine as can be grown and we fee! sure that they will please you. 
Angels Mateu. Plant Patent No. 174. Orange-rose. Large full-petaled 
flowers of splendid form, foliage dark green and leathery. Erect grower. 
Fragrance of ripe Blackberries. A great favorite among connoisseurs. 
Flowers of high quality even in hot weather. $1.50 each 
Crimson Glory. Plant Patent No. 105. Deep crimson, shaded deep 
oxblood-red and mellowed by a velvety nap. It has a wonderful fra- 
grance and is borne profusely and continuously on long, strong stems. 
A great favorite everywhere and a winner of many awards and medals. 
The plant is strong, compact growing, with many stems. Known as the 
best of the crimson Roses. $1.50 each 
Good News. Plant Patent No. 426. Peach-pink changing to silvery 
pink in the open bloom. Full, perfectly formed, tea-scented flowers. 
Vigorous, bushy, and altogether an excellent grower, and constant 
bloomer. A truly dooryard Rose. $1.50 each 
Grande Duchesse Charlotte. Patented. Tomato-red. Award All- 
America Rose Selections, 1942. This Rose aristocrat provides a color 
unknown in any other Rose. The beautiful, long stream-lined buds are 
glowing Morocco-red and open to 25-petaled blooms of unfading dusky 
coral-red, gradually merging to a soft coral-pink. The petals recurve 
and make a delighfully informal, artistic flower with a hint of Carnation 
fragrance. $1.50 each 
Mime. Henri Guillot. Patent No. 337. Deep watermelon-pink heavily 
quilled with reddish orange, all artistically blended into a vivid picture. 
Long tapering buds open to large Camellia-shaped flowers with rich 
fragrance. A really excellent Rose with magnificent blooms. 
$1.50 each 
* singly on strong straight stems. 
Narzisse. Patent pending. Maoize-yellow. Lovely buds and fine full 
flowers of great size slightly scented. Vigorous and erect grower with 
leathery foliage. An exhibition type with its handsome buds on long 
stems. $1.50 each 
Peace. Plant Patent No. 591. Yellow. A sensational new Rose. Buds 
open yellow, with edges picoteed cerise; glorious 5-inch blooms of 
alabaster-white, each petal edged with pink that deepens as the flower 
opens. Very double, showing a center of tawny yellow. The petals are 
large and of great substance. The large exhibition blooms are borne 
Plant supremely strong and vigorous, 
with superb foliage. $2.50 each 
Saturnia. Plant Patent No. 349. Cardinal-red. The face of the large 
petals is cardinal-red while the reverse is salmon-yellow and copper. 
Has a very pronounced, fascinating fragrance. Plant is symmetrical 
with shiny dark green foliage. Fine cutting stems. Awarded the Gold 
Medal for the International Rose Contest in Rome. $1.50 each 
Texas Centennial. Plant Patent No. 162. Bright vermilion-red. Un- 
usually vigorous, with an abundance of healthy foliage. Long, pointed 
buds of perfect form that open into large, richly fragrant blooms on 
long stems ideal for cutting. $1.50 each 
World’s Fair. Plant Patent No. 362. One of the most outstanding 
Floribundas, one of Ameria’s most popular Roses. Clusters of velvety, 
rich scarlet flowers almost hide the luxuriant foliage. Exceptionally 
hardy, will make a continuous display of color from late spring until 
frost. $1.25 each 
Hart & Vicki 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-flow- 
ered, 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 climb- 
ing 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 con- 
siderable height. $1.50 each 
Ci. Cecil Brunner. Well known favorite for over fifty years. Often 
called the Sweetheart Rose because it produces large quantities of 
perfect tittle buds and flowers. $1.25 each 
Dainty Bess. A single Rose of great charm and beauty. Delicate pink 
with reddish overcast and contrasting center of wine-red Bi el i 
.25 eac 
We Guarantee 
OUR ROSES TO BE HARDY NORTH- 
ERN FIELD GROWN and of the very 
highest quality. We guarantee that 
every plant will reach you in perfect 
condition for planting and will bloom 
the next norma! flowering season. 
WE WILL REPLACE ANY PLANT 
THAT DOES NOT PERFORM AS 
GUARANTEED, providing you have 
planted and cared for it according to 
our directions, and that you tell us 
about failures before the first of the 
the moisture. 
following August. A SALES AND 
IDENTIFICATION SLIP IS SENT 
WITH ALL ORDERS. NO CLAIM 
WILL BE RECOGNIZED UNLESS THIS 
SALES SLIP ACCOMPANIES IT. 
HART & VICK, SEEDSMEN 
Rochester, New York 

out all the dirt to a de 

Too Shallow 
Doubleons. Plant Patent No, 152. A radiant yellow climber with large, 
compact, double blooms coming in clusters; spicy fragrance. Vigorous 
grower with long, heavy canes. Noted for hardiness. Beautiful foliage 
of dark, velvety green. Blooms in midseason. $1.50 each 
Paul’s Scarlet Climber. 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. 
$1.25 each 
Reveil Dijonnais. Large, semi-double flowers of light yellow with a 
deep zone of carmine, crimson, and scarlet around the edges. A spec- 
tacular climbing Rose. Moderate growth. $1.50 each 
How to Plant and Care for Roses 
Get your Rose bed ready before your new plants arrive. Choose a spot that is protected from 
strong winds and gets at least half a day of full sun. When making an entire new bed, shovel 
pth of 24 inches. Then put 4 inches of Peat Moss in the bottom of the bed, 
add Bone Meal, 10 Ibs. to 40 square feet, and spade up deeply with a spading fork. Mix the soil 
taken out of the bed with one-third Peat Moss, 
soil will setle from 2 to 4 inches; allow for this. 
plants in an existing bed, dig an individual hole about 14 inches in diameter for each plant, 
treating the soil the same as above. 
while you are planting. Keep them covered always. When planting in the spring prune the tops 
of the plants to stand about 6 inches above the ground, leaving at least three eyes. Trim off 
any broken or cracked roots. 
24 inches. Spread the roots carefully. Pack the dirt around them snugly. When hole is three- 
quarters filled with soil, soak with water; 
soil not packed down hard. See diagram of depth to plant. Feed the plants every 14 days, using 
two ounces of a complete plant food per plant until September first. 
one week with a fungicide for black spot and mildew, the next week 
and sucking insects. In June cover beds with an inch of Shredded Tobacco or Peat Moss to hold 
and shovel it back into the bed. No doubt the 
-You are then ready for our Roses. If spotting 
Don‘t expose the roots of the Roses to the sun or wind 
Set Hybrid Tea Roses 15 inches apart, larger growing kinds 18 to 
when water has disappeared, fill balance of hole with 
Dust or spray every week, 
an insecticide for eating 
WINTER PROTECTION 
Just before the first hard freeze in 
the fall, cut plants down to about 18 
inches, remove the mulch of Shredded 
Tobacco or Peat Moss that might har- 
bor black spot over winter, spray or 
dust them with a fungicide, and hill 
them up with 6 inches of soil. After the 
ground has frozen, cover them with 
straw, corn stalks or leaves. In the 
spring remove this litter, and level the 
soil, trim plant to 6 inches and three 
eyes, and start reaular feeding and 
spraying program. This method of cul- 
ture has been very successful. We be- 
lieve it will help you with your Rose 
growing. 
Correct 
Planting Depth 
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