Blooming Reset Iu 
These Potted Roses 
for sale all through 
the year—At the 
Nursery—cannot be 
shipped. 
Drive over to our Nursery and see the display of these gorgeous 
Roses growing and blooming in these Cloverset Pots. Make your 
selection and get IMMEDIATE EFFECT in your own garden. 
Price Roses in Cloverset Pots ........---++:+s++e3> $1.65 each; 5 for $7.50 
PATENTED varieties .....-.----+-+:+eeees: 40c each above Patented Price 
Plants for Shaded Locations @ NEW and RARE @ 
Shrubs Ornamental trees and shrubs 
ta ialap dane Bd eS Tiree Turn to pages 28 and 30 for the listing of some 
Witch Hazel Df. Ninebark of these aristocrats of Horticulture. 
White Hydrangea White Kerria 
Evergreens : M 
ral Peat Moss 
Boxwoods—both types Taxus (all varieties) Horticultu a 
Mahonia (Holly Leaf Mahonia) 
pes As a service to our customers, we can fur- 
Wintercreepers (see page 25) 
nish native acid Peat Moss in 25-lb. bags (114 
bu.) at $1.50 each; 50-lb. bags (242 bu.) at $2.50 
each. F.O.B. Nursery. 
Ground Covers 
“Vinca Minor, Price, $5.00 for 25; $12.00 per 100. 
*Wintercreeper (Evergreen), Euonymus Colorata 
ROSA MULTIFLORA LIVING FENCES 
“For Living Fences and Soil Erosion Control” 
Fences are expensive. It takes a lot of time to put up a fence, and you can look forward to the 
annual chore of keeping it in repair. Now, if you could grow your own fence, a fence that would 
last a lifetime, require little or no attention once it is established, and at the same time have a thing 
of beauty, you would have the answer toa farmer’s prayer. 
Rosa Multiflora is the one answer to the fence problem that has come out of the Soil Conservation 
Service. It does its job so well that we nurseries are having trouble supplying the demand for plants. 
Rosa Multiflora is colorful in flower, bearing an abundance of small white or dusty pink flowers which 
bloom about the same time as other roses. These are followed by masses of berries which turn red 
and persist through the winter, producing a welcome diet for birds during the lean months. 
For fence plantings to form a livestock barrier a single row with the plants spaced twelve inches 
apart is recommended. The best method for ground preparation is to back furrow an eight- to 
ten-foot strip on the proposed fence line, disc down well, and plant on the back furrow. Seedlings 
can be hand set against the vertical berm of the furrow, and a handful of dirt pushed against the 
roots to hold the plant erect. Dirt is replaced by reverse furrowing, firmed and leveled. Price, 12-18 
‘inch plants, 25 for $3.50; 100 for $7.50; 500 for $35.00; and 1000 for $60.00, Mail or Express Prepaid. 
26 
