Repeat-Blooming 

 Climbing Roses 



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 flowering monthly 

 until frost, though not as freely as in June. The hardiest are 

 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. 



These Roses have come through many winters success- 

 fully in our gardens and we heartily recommend them. 



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. 



© ^ArBlaze. Ablaze with scarlet blooms (T) 



ABLAZE. Pillar. ® Plant Pat. 10. Scarlet-crim- 

 son. This brilliant red Rose resembles Paul's Scarlet 

 Climber in growth and bloom. It makes a gor- 

 geous show for weeks in June. Under favorable 

 conditions it often repeats in the fall. Quite 

 hardy. $1.25 ea.; 3 for $3,154 



^NEW DAWN (Everblooming Dr. W. Van 

 Fleet). (D Plant Pat. No. 1. Blush-pink. 

 Awarded the first plant patent and the Bloom- 

 field Gold Medal by the American Rose So- 

 ciety for "the best hardy Everblooming Climb- 

 ing 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 year in 

 June provides masses of lovely, pale pink, fra- 

 grant blooms, like 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. | 



August 2. 1943 Billings, Mont. 



"I wish to personally report that my two New Dawns *^ 



arc almost constantly in bloom and the freest bloom- 

 ing and most glorious Roses in my garden. They arc 

 planted next to a Paul's Scarlet Climber, and while 

 one would say those colors are too close, I think one 

 emphasizes the other and each looks bright because 

 of Its neighbor."— Mrs. A. V . S. Order No. 695. 



q GREAT CLIMBERS $0.55 



^ (Value $4.00) ^ 



1 each Doubloons, Blaze and New Dawn 

 ASK FOR OFFER 22 



^CLIMBING MRS. PIERRE S. DU PONT. Pillar. 

 Golden yellow. Beautiful, j^oldcn yellow blooms iis shown 

 in illustration on page 17. $1 ea. ; 3 for $2.50.* 



^CLIMBING SUMMER SNOW. Pillar. Plant Pat. 

 400. Clear white blooms in clusters. $1.50 ea. ; 3 for 

 $3.75. t 



New 

 Dawn 

 blooms 

 from June 

 until frost 



^CLIMBING TALISMAN. Pillar. Multicolored. A 

 climbing sport of the famous Talisman Rose with multi- 

 colored blooms. $1 ea.; 3 for $2.50.* 



-;^MERMAID. A vigorous Climber. Immense, single 

 blooms of sulphur-yellow glorified with a heavy, shaggy 

 mass of rich golden anthers. The flowers come abundantly 

 all .season. $1 ea.; 3 for $2.50.* 



-A-PROSPERITY. Pillar. White. A lovely, fragrant, 

 oak-hardy Rose for pillars or low fences, as it grows only 

 about 7 feel. The well-formed flowers are full petalcd and 

 come in great clusters all llie growing season. Color is 

 white with a dainty pink llusli in the center. The hardiest, 

 most continuous-blooming Pillar Rose. $1 ea.; 3 for 

 $2.50.* 



^SOUV. DE CLAUDIUS DENOYEL. Pillar. Crim- 

 son. Deliciously fragrant, large, perfect crimson blooms. 

 A most satisfactory, repeat-blooming crimson Climber. 

 $1 ea.; 3 for $2.50> 



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