CLIMBING ROSES 



Highly Useful Plants for Any Garden 



Your garden is missing something well worth while it 

 you are not making full use of Climbing Roses for 

 backgrounds, screens and tall decorative effects. The 

 long canes can produce the most amazing mass of bloom, 

 on arches, trellises, garage walls, fences, etc. New Dawn 

 and Prosperity are especially free in bloom. These two 

 are also particularly hardy and will withstand much cold 

 without protection. 



Climbing Roses usually require a full growing season 

 after planting before they bloom. With all varieties on 

 these two pages, do not prune away any of the first 

 year's growth, as this is the blooming wood for the fol- 

 lowing year. 



•Blaze 



ABLAZE. Plant Pat. 10. Scarlet-crimson. Makes 

 a gorgeous show for weeks in June. Under favorable 

 conditions it sometimes repeats in the fall. Quite 

 hardy and brilliant. $1.50 ea. ; 3 for $4. 



•DR. J. H. NICOLAS. Plant Pat. 457. This pillar 

 Rose is sensational in the size of the beautiful, fra- 

 grant, rose-pink flowers. The 50-petaIed blooms are 

 like large Hybrid Teas. When they are spent, just 

 pinch them off and new flowers will form, but not as 

 profusely as in June. $1.50 ea. ; 3 for $4. 



3 CHOICE CLIMBERS 53.95 



• Blaze. Plant Pat. 10. 

 •Golden Climber. Plant Pat. 28. 



• King Midas. Plant Pat. 586. 



ASK FOR OFFER 121 



•New Dawn 



.^ 



•NEW DAWN (Everblooniin- Dr. W. Van Fleet). 

 Vigorous. Blush-pink. Awarded the Bloomfield Gold 

 Medal by the American Rose Society for "the best 

 hardy Everblooming Climbing Rose ever produced 

 anywhere in the world." This record remains un- 

 challenged. 



We have a specimen plant in our display garden 

 with 12 to 15-foot canes, with rich green foliage, that 

 year after year in June provides masses of lovely, pale 

 pink, fragrant blooms on long cutting stems, and re- 

 peats its bloom until hard frost, and in normal seasons 

 into November. $2 ea. ; 3 for $5. 



•PROSPERITY. White. Constantly in bloom, 

 spring, summer and fall. Delightful, double flowers 

 in clusters. A vigorous pillar Rose or can be grown 

 as a tall, graceful shrub without support. Height 7 ft. 

 $1.25 ea.; 3 for $3.35. 



So^cn^(<^^^i^ 



CLIMBING HYBRID TEAS 



for Mild Climates 



The glory of southern gardens and gems elsewhere 

 if they can be grown in a sheltered spot or given winter 

 protection according to the climate. 



•CLIMBING CRIMSON GLORY. Plant Pat. 

 736. One of the world's most loved Roses can now 

 be had as a climber, with the same richly fragrant, 

 gloriously colored, deep crimson blooms and the same 

 clean, disease-resistant foliage. $2 ea. ; 3 for $5. 



•CLIMBING MRS. PIERRE S. DU PONT. 



Golden yellow. Beautiful golden yellow blooms, de- 

 scribed on page 16. $1.50 ea.; 3 for $4. 



•CLIMBING TALISMAN. A climbing form of 

 the famous Talisman Rose. See illustration, page 17. 

 $1.50 ea.; 3 for $4. 



•HIGH NOON. Plant Pat. 704. Yellow. Re- 

 MfE^ gional All-America award for mild climates. 

 " '■ V^ v Here in southeastern Pennsylvania, it has 

 lived through two winters wath no protection what- 

 ever. The tips of the canes were killed last winter 

 but that had no bad effect, as it has been blooming 

 constantly and is making fine new growth. Beautiful 

 golden yellow^ buds on long stems for cutting. $2.50 

 ea.; 3 for $6.75. 



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