Popular Hardy 



Climbing and Rambler Roses 



Climbing Roses combine the beauty of their blooms with all the practical features of climbing plants. They 

 are splendid grown on trellises, the garden house, on the porch pillars, or wherever they will have a good support 

 to which they can be trained. Our list of varieties includes those that have proved most popular and desirable. 



Albertine. Vermilion buds and large fragrant flowers of coppery 

 chamois yellow passing to coppery rose. Most attractive. 



American Pillar. A single flowering variety of great beauty. 

 Brilliant pink blooms with clear white eye and yellow stamens. 



Bess Lovett. Resembles Climbing American Beauty in shape 

 of flower but is brighter in color. A clear bright red of good 

 size and of double form. Strong and very fragrant. 



Bonfire. The best of the reds of the Crimson Rambler type — 

 intense crimson-scarlet or fiery red. Many flowered trusses. 



Chaplin's 

 Pink Climber 



Chaplin's Pink Climber. Rich double pink blooms with just 

 a touch of salmon when first expanding. Makes a most effective 

 color display unequalled by any other of this type, 



Christine Wright. Very large, cupped flowers of an exquisite 

 and refreshing bright rose-pink color. Long stems. 



Climbing American Beauty. A strong, healthy, vigorous 

 grower with beautiful deep rose-pink blooms of good form and 

 heavy substance. 



Dorothy Perkins. The old favorite soft shell pink still popular 

 with many gardeners who appreciate its good qualities. 



Dr. W. Van Fleet. An exquisite delicate pink Rose. The long, 

 pointed buds are rich flesh pink carried on stems 12 to 18 inches 

 long. A strong, vigorous grower and splendid for cutting. 



Emily Gray. A real yellow climbing rose with long, pointed 

 buds and beautiful light orange-yellow blooms changing to pale 

 orange as they expand. Protect north of Philadelphia. 



Glenn Dale. Dark green, disease-resistant foliage and long, 

 slightly fragrant, lemon yellow buds of uniform shape which 

 open to creamy white, fairly double blooms borne in clusters of 

 up to 20 flowers on stems long enough for cutting. 



Jacotte. A deep orange-yellow tinted coppery red. Good sized, 

 semi-double, very lasting flowers with moderate fragrance. 

 Blooms in May and June. It never fails to arouse the greatest 

 enthusiasm. 



Marie Gouchault. Just like Dorothy Perkins but deeper in 

 color, a clear Geranium pink and with healthy foliage. 



Mary Lovett. Charming, large, sweet-scented blooms of a pure 

 waxy white color. A strong grower and most profuse bloomer. 



Mary Wallace. Well formed, semi-double flowers of a bright 

 clear rose-pink with salmon base to the petals. Large flowers, 

 generally exceeding four inches in diameter. Very free flowering. 



Mme. Gregoire Staechelin {The Spanish Beauty). A vigorous 

 grower with good foliage. The long, shapely buds are carried 

 on 12 to 14-inch long stems. Shapely, semi-double, fragrant 

 flowers of an iridescent pearly pink tipped with crimson. 



Paul's Scarlet Climber. The most popular of all climbing 

 Roses. A vivid scarlet, of large size, produced in clusters of from 

 3 to 20 flowers on long, strong stems. 



Primrose. A real hardy yellow rambler retaining its glowing 

 primrose yellow color. Moderately fragrant. 2 or 3 blooms to 

 a spray. Fine for cutting. 



Silver Moon. Different from all other Roses, with beautiful, 

 fragrant, semi-double flowers four and a half inches and over in 

 diameter. Creamy white petals of great substance. 



Thelma. Similar in habit of growth to Paul's Scarlet Climber 

 but of a delicate coral pink sufiused with carmine. The flowers 

 usually have three rows of petals. 



Wichuraiana {Memorial Rose). Fragrant, single, pure white 

 flowers with yellow stamens followed in the fall by bright red 

 hips or berries. Particularly splendid as a trailer, forming a 

 dense mat of almost evergreen foliage. 



Any of the above: 75c each; $8.00 per doz. 



Climbing Hybrid-Tea Roses 



While not as free flowering as the bush type of Hybrid-Tea 

 Roses, these climbing forms produce a large crop of flowers in June, 

 with a liberal scattering of blooms throughout the season. All of 

 these varieties require protection in the latitude of Philadelphia 

 and are especially desirable in the southern states. 



Climbing Etoile de Hollande. A climbing form of this most 

 popular Ruse with beautiful, well formed, red blooms. 



Climbing Hoosier Beauty. Beautifully shaped buds of large 

 size. Rich dazzling scarlet blooms. 



Climbing Kaiserin Augusta Victoria. A climbing form of 



this popular white Rose. 



Climbing Lady Ashtown. The best of the climbing Hybrid- 

 Tea varieties. Very large rose-pink flowers. 



Climbing Lady Sylvia. Charming, well-formed flowers of a 

 light soft pink tone tinted with yellow at the base. 



Climbing Los Angeles. Beautiful sweet-scented flowers of a 

 luminous flame pink with golden coral suffusion. 



Climbing Mrs. Aaron Ward. Beautiful Indian yellow flowers. 



Climbing Red Radiance. Attractive bright cerise flowers of 

 splendid form. Fragrant. 



Marechal Niel. Superb; bright golden yellow. Tea-scented. 



Mermaid. Beautiful, single, creamy white flowers measuring 

 3 to 4 inches in diameter. A splendid pillar Rose. 



Mrs. Paul Howard (Howard & Smith, 1936). Very large, 

 double, dark red blooms of exceptional merit. A strong grower, 

 free flowering, and sweet scented. $1.25 each; $12.50 per doz. 



Any of the above, except where noted: $1.00 each; $10.00 per doz. 



Every garden needs its share of Clinnbing Roses 



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