

No more waiting from June until June for blooms on 
your Climbing Roses for we now have repeat-blooming 
varieties that bloom profusely in June and keep flower- 
ing monthly until frost, though not as freely as in June. 
These Roses have come through many winters suc- 
cessfully in our gardens and we heartily recommend them. 
Farther North, plant the hardiest: New Dawn, Blaze and 
Prosperity. The others should be planted in a more 
sheltered place if possible and given winter protection 
for two years until well-matured hard wood has formed, 
when less protection will be needed. 
The kinds marked ‘‘Pillar’”? grow to a height of about 
8 feet in normal soils and locations and are not as heavy 
in growth as the regular Climbing Roses. Pillar Roses 
make a beautiful show when planted against a heavy 
pole and the canes trained around it as they grow. 
*BLAZE. P. @) Plant Pat. 10. Scarlet-crimson. This bril- 
Irant red Rose resembles Paul’s Scarlet Climber in growth and 
bloom. It makes a gorgeous show for weeks in June. Under 
favorable conditions it often repeats in the fall. Quite hardy. 
$1.50 ea.; 3 for $3.75 
* Jacotte 
® 
Desc. 
page 20 
*DR. J. H. NICOLAS. P. Page 17. () Plant Pat. 457. This 
modern, very double, large-flowered pillar Rose, which grows 6 to 
9 feet Im a season, Is sensational in the quantities of beautiful, 
fragrant, rose-pink flowers produced each year. The super-sized, 
50-petaled blooms are like large Hybrid Teas and 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 $3.75. 
*MERMAID. C. Immense, single blooms of sulphur-yellow 
with a glorified center showing a heavy, shaggy mass of ric 
golden anthers. $1.25 ea.; 3 for $3.15. 
*CLIMBING MRS. PIERRE S. DU PONT. P. Golden yel- 
low. Beautiful Hybrid Tea blooms. $1.25 ea.; 3 for $3.15. 
*NEW DAWN ((Everblooming Dr. W. Van Fleet). C. @ 
Plant Pat. 1. Blush-pink. Awarded the first plant patent and 
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 unchallenged. 
We have a specimen plant in our display garden with 12 to 
15-foot canes, well clothed with rich green foliage, that year after 
es in June provides masses of lovely, pale pink, fragrant blooms, = 
I 
ke Tea Roses, on long cutting stems, and repeats its bloom until 
hard frost. In normal seasons we have blooms on this plant in 
November. 
Beautify your garage with Roses from June until frost. Use 
New Dawn on arches, arbors, fences and trellises. $1.50 ea.$ 
3 for $3.75. 
*PROSPERITY. P. White. A lovely, fragrant, oak-hardy 
Rose for pillars or low fences, as it grows only about 7 feet. The 
well-formed flowers are full-petaled and come in great ciusters all 
the growing season. Color is white with a dainty pink flush m 
the center. The hardiest, most continuous-blooming Pillar Rose. 
$1.25 ea.; 3 for $3.15. 
* CLIMBING TALISMAN. P. A sport of the famous Talisman 
Rose with multicolored blooms. $1.25 ea.; 3 for $3.15. 
21 




“ie 
arlet blooms @ 
© Blaze. Ablaze with sc 
3 Color Contrast. Climbers $3.95 
One each Blaze, Plant Pat. 10; New Dawn, Plant Pat. 1; 
and Doubloons, Plant Pat. 152. 
ASK FOR OFFER 121 

—— 
New Dawn blooms fr. a June until frost @) 

