GROWING GOOD ROSES 
The beds ought not be more than 4 feet wide, and 
the soil should be rich. Avoid making the ground 
loose or spongy. The stiffer and harder the soil in 
the lower layers of the bed, the better Roses grow. 
Old sods, decayed cow-manure, bone meal, and 
commercial dried sheep manure are good fertilizers. 
Keep the surface of the Rose-beds well cultivated. 
Plant Hybrid Tea Roses 114 feet apart. More 
vigorous types need more space. Set the “bud” or 
‘“*sraft’’ at least 1 inch beneath the surface. Spread 


out the fine roots carefully and tamp the soil firmly 
about them. It is well to tread the soil hard about 
the roots. Loose planting is fatal. ; 
Dormant Roses should be pruned in the spring. 
Remove weak and dead wood, and shorten the good 
canes to 6inches. Ramblers of the Dorothy Perkins 
type should have the old canes cut out at the base 
as soon as they are through blooming. Other Climb- 
ers require little pruning; simply remove dead wood 
and an occasional old cane as new ones appear. 

Hybrid Tea Roses 

ROSE, Pink Princess 
DOLLY DARLING. Delightfully blended sunset 
shades of pink overlaid with the luster of deeper 
rose. 
EARLY MORN. Large, double flowers of pleasing 
light pastel pink. 
KING BOREAS. Lemon-yellow, completely double. 
Free, abundant bloomer. A beauty. 
LILY PONS. Pat. 420. White with pure yellow 
center; large, graceful flowers of imdescribable 
delicacy. Vigorous, free bloomer. Often a feature 
of gardens in the cold Northwest. 
No. 112 UNNAMED. Large, double, deep red 
blooms, abundantly displayed in Hybrid Tea 
form and cluster. Sturdy bushes, one of the 
most strikingly beautiful of all red Roses. 
OLD-FASHIONED RED. Like the Roses of 
Grandmother’s garden, with that same fragrance, 
doubleness, bearing constant bloom and fond 
memories of by-gone days. 
PINK PRINCESS. Pat. 459. Bud red; flower deep 
pink. Famous as the first Hybrid Tea free from 
premature defoliation. 
Any of the above, $2 each; 3 for $5.50; $20 per 
OZ. 

A new race from hardier Species that bear the best 
of fragrant flowers, more freely and constantly all 
summer. Plants are of greater sturdiness and vigor 
and live many times as long even after sub-zero 
winters. 
ANNE VANDERBILT. Pat. 504. Brilliant cop- 
pery orange, informal, semi-double, fragrant. 
Constantly in bloom. 
BREAK O’DAY. Orange to apricot, large, very 
double flowers. Very vigorous; free bloomer. 
CURLY PINK. Matchless in the combination of 
size and form of bloom, beauty of cluster, con- 
stancy, vigor, hardiness and performance. When 
established, many large, two-toned pink blooms, 
in several stages form a gorgeous bouquet on 
a single stem. 
DICK WILCOX. A magnificent deep red Rose that 
can grow 2 feet or more in one season. Upwards 
of a hundred of the largest very double blooms, 
year upon year, even following the coldest of 
sub-zero winters. Named for the well-known 
rosarian formerly of Minnesota University, who 
discovered Brownell Roses would winter in the 
cold Northwest. 

ROSE, Early Morn 
ALL PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE 
——— ne 
40 WILLIAM M. HUNT & CO., Inc., 115 West 45th St., New York 19, N. Y. 
