ELLA V. BAINES, THE WOMAN FLORIST, SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. 



23 



Climbing Tea and Noisette Roses 



This class includes some of our most beautiful and valuable Roses. They are unusually free and con- 

 tinuous bloomers, producing flowers of rare and striking- beauty. As they are all climbers, they should 

 be placed near porches, pillars or trellises, where they have support. They are hardy in the south. 



Price, 20 cents each; any three lor 50 cents. 



-A clear golden- 



■ Known in Cali- 



CLIMBING CLOTHILDE SOUPERT — Ivory-white; 



center deep silvery-rose. 

 CLIMBING DEVONIENSIS — The Climbing Magnolia 



Rose; blush-white. 

 CLIMBING ETOILE DE FRANCE — Dazzling velvety 



crimson. 

 CLIMBING GRUSS AN TEPLITZ — Deepest bright 



scarlet. 

 CLIMBING HELEN GOULD — Richest watermelon- 

 red. Very free. Grand. 

 CLIMBING KAISERIN AUGUSTA VICTORIA — 



Ivorv-white; elegant. 

 CLIMBING KILLARNEY (Mrs. Robert Peary) — Long 



pointed buds of clear Killarney-pink. 

 CLIMBING MME. C. TESTOUT — Clear shell-pink, 



cd £*€cl silvorv - rose 

 CLIMBING MLLE. C. BRUNNER — Rosy-pink on 



creamy-white ground. 

 CLIMBING METEOR — The acme of all red climbing 



E.OSGS ** 



CLIMBING PAPA GONTIER — Bright coral-red; fine. 

 CLIMBING PAUL NEYRON (Madame Wagram) — 



Clear satiny-rose. 



CLIMBING PERLE DES JARDINS — Golden-vellow. 



CLIMBING SOUV. DE LA 3IALMAISON — Creamy- 

 flesh; peach-pink center. 



CLIMBING SOUV. OP WOOTTON — Deep velvety 

 crimson in clusters. 



CLIMBING WHITE MAMAN COCHET — This is a 

 climbing form of White Cochet. Same flowers, 

 same color; nothing beats it. 



CLOTH OF GOLD (Chromatella)- 



yellow. 

 FORTUNE'S DOUBLE YELLOW - 



fornia as the San Rafael Rose. 

 FRANCES E. WILLARD — A pure snow-white Rose; 



none better. 

 GAINSBOROUGH — White, delicately tinted flesh; 



extra. 



crimson; very 



JAMES SPRUNT — Deep velvety 



double. 

 LAMAROUE — Pure white; very double; an old 



standby. 

 MARECHAL NIEL — Magnificent golden-yellow. We 



have extra strong plants of Marechal Niel at 



$1.00 and $1.50 each. 

 PILLAR OF GOLD ( E. Veyrat Hermanos) — Apricot 



and golden-vellow. 

 REINE MARIE HENRIETTE — Pure cherry- red; 



sweet scented. 

 REVE d'OR (Golden Chain or Climbing Safranu) — 



Orange -vellow. 

 SOLFATARE — Clear sulphur-yellow; large, full, 



double. 

 W. A. RICHARDSON — Orange-yellow; center cop- 



perv-yellow. 

 WHITE BANKSIA, or LADY BANKS — Pure white; 



violet fragrance. 

 WHITE BOUGERE — Lovely pure white. 

 YELLOW BANKSIA, or LADY BANKS — Deep yel- 



low; violet fragrance. 



New Varieties of Tender Climbing Roses 



CLIMBING LADY ASHTOWN — Almost hardy; pro- 

 duces a large crop of large soft rose-colored 

 flowers; a beauty. 35 cents each. 



CLIMBING MAMAN COCHET — This is a climbing 

 form of that famous Rose Maman Cochet (see the 



description in "Famous Rose Collection"). This 

 is the same except a climber. Superb. 35 cents. 

 CLIMBING OPHELIA — A climbing form of Ophelia. 

 No better Rose grown than this; a beautiful pink. 

 35 cents. 



Polyantha, or Baby Roses 



A class of miniature Roses derived from the Climbing Polyantha. They are of dwarf habit and 

 bloom so freely as to cover the entire plant with bloom all through summer and fall. The plants are 

 splendid for bedding, or as edgings for borders they are hardy. Let us tell you something about these 

 miniature Roses. While Europe has appreciated these Roses for years, America is just beginning to 

 wake up to the fact that they have come to stay. They are useful either pot grown or for bedding pur- 

 poses or for hedge effect. 25 cents each. 



ANNA MULLER — The pink Baby Rambler; always 

 in bloom. 



BABY RAMBLER — Completely hides itself all sum- 

 mer; bright red. 



CATHERINE ZEIMET — The White Baby Rambler; 

 extra. 



ELLEN POULSON — Dark brilliant pink; fragrant; 

 fine. 



ERNA TESCHENDORFF — Deep crimson flushed 

 with carmine; very dark. 



JESSIE — Bright cherry-crimson. Superb. 



LE PONCHEAU — Dark red in large clusters. 



MADEMOISELLE CECILE BRUNNER — This is the 

 popular Baby Pink Rose. In the past year or 

 two this Rose has fairly jumped into popularity. 



It always was a popular outdoor Rose on the 

 Pacific Coast, but recently even in the effete East 

 and everywhere in America they are planting 

 it simply by thousands for cut flowers. It has 

 become quite the rage. It makes a handsome 

 miniature Rose, coming in sprays of three to 

 five buds, and combined in beautiful effect with 

 so many other flowers in all kinds of floral work. 

 It is a very prolific bloomer and if carefully pro- 

 tected in the winter should be a money-maker, 

 both outdoors and under glass. The bud .and 

 flower are both handsome. Color, blush, shaded 

 light salmon-pink; distinct and desirable. 



MRS. WM. H. CUTBUSH — Flowers the delicate pink 

 of Dorothy Perkins. 



PERLE d'OR — Coppery-orange, changing to fawn. 



New Polyantha, or Baby Roses t 



BABY DOROTHY — This is a glorious Rose. Flowers 

 resemble the Dorothy Perkins. Completely hides 

 the plant with its bloom. 



BABY ECHO — The best. Polyantha produced. Color 

 rosy-flesh color. Of splendid strong growth and 

 freedom of bloom, which are of wonderful keeping 

 qual't'es either on or off the plant. This is the 

 improved Baby Tausendschoen. It has more sub- 

 stance and more color, and is the best of all Baby 

 Roses for pot culture. Be sure and trv this one. 



BABY TAUSENDSCHOEN, or THOUSAND BEAU- 

 TIES — Its flowers are large, so much like Thou- 

 sand Beauties, that it has been rechristened Baby 

 Thousand Beauties. It is a bush form of the 

 Thousand Beauties, having all the charm of the 

 variable coloring in its flowers that its parent 

 has, being firm, white, delicately flushed pink, 

 changing to deep rosy-carmine. A splendid Rose. 

 Try it. 



EDITH CAVELL — Bright crimson; white eye; very 

 beautiful. One of the best new Baby Roses. 



rice 25 cents each 



ETOILE LUISANTE OR BABY HERRIOT — Just pic- 

 ture to yourself the Fairy or Sweetheart Rose 

 ("Cecile Brunner"), colored up like the Daily Mail 

 Rose ("Mme. Edouard Herriot"), only brighter and 

 more brilliant than when that variety is at its best, 

 and you will have some conception of the beauty 

 of this little gem which on account of the simi- 

 larity in color has been known among the cut 

 flower trade as Baby Herriot. Its color is a 

 shrimp-pink "with intense coppery-scarlet suffu- 

 sion, the base of the petals golden-yellow which 

 intensifies and lightens up its high colors. Plant 

 is of free growth and floriferous. We are certain 

 that Baby Herriot will please everyone. 



GEORGE ELGER — A lovely little golden-yellow 

 Polyantha Rose, with a good admixture of Tea 

 blood; like all of its class,' it is free in growth, 

 free in bloom, with small, glossy foliage produced 

 in profusion. The dainty little pointed yellow buds 

 open into pretty little symmetrical Roses. Will 

 prove a very popular corsage variety; is grown in 

 quantity now for this purpose. 



