



Cover Your GaraGE with Harpy Cimsinc Roses 
Hardy 
\\UTUMN, 1930 - 
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Climbmg Roses ssn 

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Climbing Roses trained in festoons around our Rose-Garden at West Grove 
*% EMILY GRAY. C. Early. A fragrant, yellow, 
climbing Rose that opens truly yellow, changing to 
ecru. The fairly large flowers are borne m small 
bouquets. It is a robust grower, with decidedly 
individual foliage of a thick, waxy texture, very 
much like holly. In exposed places, 1t needs some 
winter protection, in the northern states until 
fully established. Prune sparingly. $1 each. 
SEVANGELINE. C. Late. Dainty, single, 
fragrant flowers, of apple-blossom color with re- 
flexed petals tipped with pink. A charming mate 
for American Pillar and of great vigor of growth. 
$1 each. 
* EXCELSA. R. Late. The color is an intense, 
clear, scarlet-carmine. Flowers of Dorothy Perkins 
type are perfectly double, produced thirty to forty 
on a stem. Good for cutting. Thin out the oldest 
canes after blooming. $1 each. 
* GARDENIA. C. Early. Of rampantly vigorous 
growth and splendid foliage. Produces, in early 
summer, a mass of pleasing bright yellow buds 
opening to creamy white flowers, 3 to 4 inches in 
diameter and delightfully fragrant. Blooms better 
on old wood. $1 each. 
% GLENN DALE. C.P. Early. Disseminated in 
1927 by the American Rose Society. It is a hardy, 
vigorous climber, with tawny yellow buds, gradually 
opening to large, semi-double, creamy flowers 
fading pure white, borne 20 to a cluster on laterals 
long enough for cutting. Heavy, dark green, 
Hybrid-Tea-like foliage is resistant to black-spot 
and mildew. Awarded Certificate of Merit at 
Bagatelle, 1928. $1 each. 
% HIAWATHA. R. Late. The most brilliant 
red of the single, cluster-flowered, late-blooming 
climbers. Color is deep scarlet, with orange suffu- 
sion, turning to bright pink with white center. The 
blooms are very lasting. $1 each. 


% Mm 
*ILE DE FRANCE. C. Midseason. A semi- 
double form of the great American Pillar Rose, 
with somewhat more cerise in the coloring. Blooms 
come in large clusters. Very profuse. Good foliage. 
It will thrive almost anywhere. Very recommend- 
able. $1 each. 
*LE REVE. P. Pernet. In English, “The 
Dream.” This Rose is a refined Star of Persia, 
producing abundantly its large, clear yellow, fra- 
grant, semi-double flowers, but with better foliage 
and habit and it also blooms every year. One of the 
first to flower in late May, and continues in bloom 
for along time. Hardy. An intense, brilliant yellow. 
$1 each. 
* MME. SANCY DE PARABERE. P. Very 
early. The first climber to bloom. Medium-sized, 
informal, double flowers of clear pmk, and most 
delightfully fragrant. The wood is thornless. 
Needs no protection anywhere. A dependable climb- 
ing Rose for the extreme rorth where few varieties 
are perféctly hardy. $1 each. 
+ MARY LOVETT. C. Early. A large-flower- 
ing, full, white climbing Rose, really a white Dr. 
W. Van Fleet. Blooms do not scorch and remain 
perfect to the end. Sweetly fragrant. It blooms 
freely in early June, and again sparingly in the fall. 
The foliage is large, green, and leathery; does not 
mildew. The best large flowered, double, white 
climber. $1 each. 
*MARY WALLACE. P. Early. Long buds 
and charming large flowers of brilliant, warm pink 
color. Makes a fine pillar Rose and generally graces 
us with a few blooms in the autumn. $1 each. 
+ MARGUERITE CARELS. P. Midseason. 
New. Massive, fully double, eighty-petalled blooms 
of rich pink. Blooms profusely. The most volup- 
‘tuous bloom of any climbing Rose we know. $1.50 
-each. 
PRICES (UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED), *2-YEAR, FIELD-GROWN, STAR SIZE ROSES, $1 EACH; 
90 cts. each when any 12 or more are ordered; 80 cts. each for any 25 or more $1 kinds. 
Deiivery prepaid 
