+King Midas @) 
*AMERICAN PILLAR. C. Midseason. Single, pink 
flowers with white centers in huge clusters. $1.10 ea. 
*CITY OF YORK. C. GB) Plant Pat. Pending. A 
new white climber with distinctive qualities which will 
make it a most welcome addition to its class. It is hardy 
and very strong-growing; able to cover a large area. The 
beautiful foliage, small, abundant, clean and shining, 
fairly sparkles in the sunlight. In May and June it Is an 
almost solid mass of bloom, from its very tip right down 
to the ground. The pointed buds, shading from buff- 
yellow to pale cream, open to 3-inch, semi-double to 
double flowers of creamy white, whose delightful fra- 
grance envelops the whole plant. It has a long blooming 
season. $1.50 ea. 
*CLIMBING AMERICAN BEAUTY. C. Very early. 
In late May or early June, the large, sweet-scented, light 
crimson or deep rose-pink flowers decorate the plant from 
base to top. You can cut quantities of the long-stemmed, 
fully double blooms for indoors without spoiling the 
beauty of the plant. Vigorous and healthy, with lovely 
foliage, it has long been a favorite. $1.10 ea. 
*DOUBLOONS. C. (2) Plant Pat. 152. Here is a 
gloriously lovely climbing yellow Rose, noted for hardi- 
ness and vigorous, healthy growth. The shapely buds 
open to large, firm-textured blooms of saffron- yellow 
with clean, spicy fragrance. The blooms keep coming for 
a long time on canes that grow 10 to 12 feet and are well 
furnished with dark green, leathery foliage. A splendid, 
all-purpose variety. $1.50 ea. 
© %* Doubloons (2) 
BEAUTIFUL HARDY 
CLIMBING ROSES 
Hardy Ciimbing Roses provide more blooms for the 
ground space occupied than any other high-class flower- 
ing plant. When the flowers are gone the lovely foliage 
remains on the arches, arbors, trellises, fences, or wher- 
ever the plants are grown. 
The letter after the name indicates the type of growth: 
C., Climbers, vigorous varieties that make massive canes 
and climb many feet; P., Pillar Roses grow only 6 to 
8 feet. 
*DR. W. VAN FLEET. C. Early. Flesh-pink. Same 
bloom and foliage as the everblooming New Dawn. (See 
@) next page.) Very vigorous in growth. $1.10 ea. 
*GOLDEN CLIMBER (Mrs. Arthur Curtiss James). 
C. Plant Pat. 28. Early. Clear yellow flowers like Hy- 
brid Teas come on long stems. Plant in full sun. $1.50 ea. 
*KING MIDAS. C. G) Plant Pat. 586. Early. 
Large, double, golden yellow blooms from pointed buds 
of golden yellow flushed with red. Vigorous in growth and 
richly clothed from the ground up with dark green, 
leathery foliage—a beautiful foil for the large, slightly 
fragrant, yellow blooms. $1.50 ea. 
© C.-P. Co. 
* City of York (3) 
%*MARY WALLACE. C. Early. Vigorous plants are 
covered with large, cup-shaped flowers of glowing rose- 
pink. Very hardy. $1.10 ea. 
*PAUL’S SCARLET CLIMBER. P. 
Midseason. Vivid scarlet and mar- 
velously attractive when in full bloom. 
A row of Paul’s Scarlet on a fence Is 
breathtaking in beauty and the colorful 
show keeps up for weeks. In favorable 
seasons this Rose repeats in the fall. 
The flowers are the same color, size, and 
shape as those of Blaze. (See color illus- 
tration (3) on next page.) The brilliant 
color does not burn or fade and the quan- 
tity of bloom in June is profuse. 
$1.10 ea. 
*SILVER MOON. C. Mid- 
season. White. Great, silvery 
white, semi-double blooms with a 
foil of dark, leathery foliage. 
$1.10 ea. 
Rose Index, Page 30 
THE CONARD-PYLE CO. 
