Star Climbing Roses 



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BLAZE 



GOLDEN SHOWERS 



crblooming Kind. (Kallay.) A Climber 

 d planted and enjoyed in such amazing 

 numbers all over America that it needs no description. It blooms with 

 coinplete freedom and regularity in a great burst of scarlet in June and 

 again in the fall, with some bloom in between. Its brilliant color acts 

 like a beacon on any street. Flowers come in medium-sized clusters but 

 in such profusion that they turn the plant into a blaze of glory. Slightly 

 fragrant, they last for several weeks. The plant is very hardy and vigor- 

 ous, and it asks almost nothing in the way of care ... no spraying, no 

 fertilizing. The only pruning needed is to cut off the dead blooms when 

 they fade. Plant Blaze on a fence, on an arch, against a garage wall, at 

 a doorway . . . wherever you put it, you will have an unforgettable 

 picture when it blooms. 



$2.50 ea. — 3 or more, S2.20 ea. 



Everblooming Climber. (Lammerts.) Plant Pal. 

 /'/i^' 1557. This rose has the distinction of being the 

 /M^ only Climber that has been given the All-America Award. We 

 ^^^ consider it the finest yellow Climber because it blooms so freely. 

 In early spring the large glossy foliage appears, and that in itself is 

 decorative. The first year Golden Sho\vers produces many solid daffodil- 

 yelloNV flowers and in the following years it literally covers itself with 

 bloom. The sunny flowers are fragrant and unusually large for a Climb- 

 er — up to 5 inches across, with 25 to 30 petals. Buds are long pointed, 

 inany of them borne only one to a stem. Extremely vigorous in growth, 

 with canes so strong that the plant can almost stand alone like a bush 

 rose, without support. It grows 6 to 8 feet tall and is ideal against a post 

 or pillar. 



$3.25 ea. — 3 or more, $3 ea. 



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