CLIMBING ROSES 



LovetVs Nursery, Inc. 



LITTLE SILVER, N. J. 



Climbing American Beauty 



BABY RAMBLER ROSES 



These are the perfect Roses for bedding. Being the only truly everblooming 

 sorts they actually hide their foliage beneath a carpet of lovely bloom from 

 late May until frost. Try a few of these hardy gems, and transform your lawn 

 into a spot of colorful beauty for many months. 



Plant Polyanthas from 2 to 3 feet apart. They need no Winter protection. 

 Price (except as noted) strong, field-grown plants, each 70c, 

 doz. $7,00, 100 $50.00 

 Baby Alan. Huge crops of rich, shining pink Roses, resembhng double English 



Daisies, which they rival in charm. Blooms continuously from June until 



the first heavy frost, and is an introduction of which we feel we can be 



justly proud. Each 90c, doz. $9.00. 

 Else Poulsen. 4 ft. A most populsu- pink-flowered Polyantha, with lasting 



clusters of extra-sized, fragrant, clear rosy pink flowers on good stems. 

 Gloria Mundi. 2 ft. A vigorous, bushy sort with many great brilliant clusters 



of full, double flowers, a glowing orange-scsirlet in color, resembhng baby 



pompon Chrysanthemums. Unexcelled for bedding. 

 Golden Salmon. 15 inches. A dwarf sort with large clusters of single orange 



flowers, a unique and pleasing color when the Roses are planted in big 



groups. 



Improved Lafayette. to 3 ft. Lovely bedding Rose, which is a prolific 



producer of deep brilhant red flowers, richly suffused crimson. Striking in a 



mass planting. Each 75c, doz. $7.50. 

 Marie Pavie. Best white Baby Rambler, with a great quantity of big, double 



Avaxy white flowers, centered flesh-pink when fully open, and sweetly fragrant. 

 Peach Blossom. An unusual sort with big clusters of scarlet-orange buds, 



turning to flowers of a soft rosy carmine, like Peach blooms. 



CLIMBING ROSES 



For many years our Nursery has specialized in the production of ch'mbing 

 Roses, those flowering vines that change barren trellises into ever-changing 

 panoramas of beauty. Our late neighbor. Dr. Walter Van Fleet, was probably 

 the most famous hybridizer in the field of climbing Roses, and we list with 

 pride his lovely introductions, especiaUy the three Lovett Sisters Roses, which 

 we regEu-d as the rulers of their respective colors. 



Price (except as noted), strong, 2-year, field-grown plants, each 60c, 



doz. $6.00, 100 $40.00 

 Alida Lovett. See "Lovett Sisters Roses," page 7. 

 Apricot Glow. Described on page 7. 

 Bess Lovett. See "Lovett Sisters Roses," page 7. 



Climbing American Beauty. Among the most popular of climbing Roses, 

 this counterp£u-t of its lovely nameseike, the gorgeous American Beauty 

 Rose, produces brilliant carmine buds which become shapely flowers of 

 deepest rose-pink, on long stems for cutting. These flowers are often over 

 three inches in diameter and bear an exquisite fragrance. The plant itself 

 is a strong, vigorous, healthy grower, frequently cUmbing ten to fifteen feet 

 in a season. 



Dr. Huey. An unusual sort which bears tremendous clusters of big, semidouble 

 flowers, with ruffled petals, of the deepest crimson-maroon imaginable, for 

 an extra long bearing period. StiU the nearest to a "black" climber knowTi. 



Dr. Walter Van Fleet. Best known and most popular of chmbing Roses, 

 this extra-vigorous sort bears a tremendous crop of long-pointed, rich, flesh- 

 pink buds, turning to long-stemmed and shapely Roses of a soft Apple- 

 blossom-pink, delicately perfumed, and ideal for cutting. It is a strong, 

 healthy bush which will grow to nearly any desired height. 



Dorothy Perkins. An old favorite trailing Rose, this hardy sort produces, 

 late in the season, huge trusses of small, double flowers, a bright shell-pink 

 in color, surrounding the long, slender cones. Dependable for porches and 

 simply perfect for holding banks. Each 50c, doz. $5.00. 



Excelsa. This vigorous grower has dethroned that old favorite. Crimson 

 Rambler, with an immense crop of rosy-scarlet flowers in extra large clusters 

 from glossy foliage, late in the season. Each 50c, doz. $5.00. 



Gardenia. Long the most popular yellow-flowered climbing Rose, Gardenia 

 bears many small clusters of big, pale, creamy yellow buds early in the 

 season, which turn to old- ivory-hued flowers, centered a deeper shade, from 

 handsome foliage. 



Ghislaine de Feligonde. What a shame that so lovely a Rose should be 

 weighted down with such a tongue-twisting name! Apricot-yellow buds, 

 streaked with carmine, turn to pale buff flowers tinted pink at their petals' 

 edges. These flowers, exceptionally large, are borne profusely at the season's 

 beginning, with scattered blooms for several months thereafter; 



Golden Glow. Described on page 7. 



Mary Lovett. See "Lovett Sisters Roses," page 7. 



Mme. Gregoire Staechelin. See "Spanish Beauty," page 7. 



(Add 10% to your remittance if shipment is desired by parcel post) 



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