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ra ■ BARRINGTON ■ ■ PARK MALL |j| OPEN TODAY 9.30am-12.30pm Lucky Number Draws for Frozen Chickens 11 a.m. and 12 noon * * * LOCAL COMMUNITY PHOTOGRAPHS ON DISPLAY * * * AMPLE FREE PARKING

Just about now you'll notice the gaps. — You've pruned the roses, pulled ' 0 /7 I out the scruffy shrubs, —■>' - s? Ti-r-Xf reshaped the lawn and taken all ‘ I Ij ' t^ie ev id ence of hard work to I | A the tip. Very likely you've decid<JL & ec * to gaps with new rose bushes. rj«OKy dy»s?ir Good thinking. Pop over to AJ? O'' JS Gardenway, we've plenty of strong bushes. In favourite red ;3bL there's velvety Melina, deepest X** Precious Platinum and Julischka for the Floribunda ~ Fans. Silver Jubilee isn't silver : J£-.5 JmP R but copper-salmon and shapely. Others like Matangi we'll be VJ pleased to show you when you ca | L Climbing roses are real flowering value. They are beautiful on walls, pillars, fences or pergolas and we have them in many distinct varieties including: — Cecile Brunner the popular creamy pink miniature; Bantry Bay profuse in flower and growth will cover a large area with its clear pink clusters; Galway Bay has deep coral pink tonings, free flowering on long stems; Korona the brightest, showiest scarlet floribunda and Handel a top class climber with perfect cream flowers, picotee-edged with deep rose. We knocked the price back to $5.99. Yes, all varieties new stars and firm favourites, reds, yellows or pinks, they're all one price, climbers too. The price is reduced but not the Gardenway guarantee. Come Summer, if just one of our roses fails to reach your high expectations bring it back and we'll refund the cost cheerfully, on the spot, without fuss. Customers who buy 5 will do even better. Select 5 or more from any of the bushes or climbers displayed and you pay only $5.49 each, a saving of 50c per bush. 1977-78-79-80-81-82-83, Maxitoms are still only 99c. They're looking good and needless to say they're going out fast. Tomato huts assure you earlier crops, heavier yields. For the earliest crops we advocate a glasshouse or warm n . sunny wall, but this isn't always available. However, a jT plant in the open has the advantage that it can be trained ; in all directions to give the heaviest yield. Mrs Long and others have proved this. In Canterbury, plants in the open !■ are checked by chilling Easterlies not to mention killed by l 'J>L|T-—>• frosts. That's where tomato huts are indispensible. Use them for your 'Maxitom' and other valuable fruit and vegetable crops. Tomato huts 79c each. Maxitucker brings out the best in tomatoes. (r i A A Maxitucker is a concentrated, balanced plant food containl > j ing Magnesium, especially helpful in growing tomatoes and \ Ps *—y some other plants such as roses. You can use Maxitucker X on all high yielding plants whether grown for fruit, leaf or flower. Maxitucker is made from the best quality ingredients and only costs $2.49 for a 3kg pack. Growers agree, the flavour's in the feeding. Polyanthus and primrose packs are only $1.45 and large clumps only 99c at Gardenway branches. The clumps are in flower for instant effect with more stems pushing up. 7#J±"' Packs planted now will flower later in Spring and during .Summer. _ specialist seedling grower has chosenZV varieties suitable for sun or partial shade. The seasonal selection at Gardenway •' branches includes Persian Carpet Wallflower and Brompton Stock for fragrant gardens and the first of the Summer annuals, Nemesia and Livingstone Daisy, all $1.45 per pack. Vege plants $1.25 per pack.

Open 7 Days Km*l£djU*llliO| Gardenway BfiSSIIIII ■ . ■ •*-.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19830820.2.20.1

Bibliographic details

Press, 20 August 1983, Page 2

Word Count
595

Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Press, 20 August 1983, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Press, 20 August 1983, Page 2

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