*" **J?fie < Dingee'3 Conard Ga^fesx Grove,!^? 



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Climbing 

 Tea 



and 



Noisette 

 Roses 



These are the Roses which make such a 



glorious display in the warmer sections of 



the country, covering porches, pergolas 



and trellises with their handsome foliage 



and gorgeous flowers. 



Those marked H. will be found hardy even in 



the coldest climate if given protection during the 



winter, while those marked M. H. are moderately hardy and 



especially valuable for open ground culture south of Philadelphia 



and in California. 



Mareehal Niel 



// This is the wonderful garden Rose our 



' friends in the Southland are so fortunate in 



being able to grow in their gardens to perfection. 



" Buds and flowers superb, extra large, very double 



^afld deliciously perfumed. Deep golden yellow. 



Blooms with greatest freedom. In the North, should 



have very careful protection in open ground during 



winter. 



Chromatella (Cloth of Gold) (M. H.). Bright yeUow. 

 Climbing Devoniensis (H.). White, tinged with blush. 

 Fortune's Double Yellow (M. H.). Bronzed yellow or 



coppery and fawn color. 

 Solfaterre (M. H.). Climbing habit; fine clear, sulphur- 

 yellow; large, full and double. 

 William Allen Richardson (M. H.). Coppery-yellow. 



flushed with carmine. 

 Allister Stella Gray. Light Yellow. 

 Pillar of Gold. Rosy pink, base yellow. 

 Climbing Bridesmaid. Clear, dark pink. 

 Climbing Marie Guillot. Pure snow-white, tinged 

 with pale yellow. 



The Dingee & Conard Co., West Grove, Penna. 

 Geatlemen: 



Please send me your New Guide to Rose Culture. 



I have a Charles Dingee Rose in my yard and it is a 

 most wonderful one, worthy of its name. 



Mrs. E. S. Hobler, Selma, California 



The Dingee & Conard Co., West Grove, Penna. 

 Gentlemen: 



For years we have bought Dingee Roses, many of them 

 delicate Teas, but it is rare we loose a Rose. Some of them are 

 very hardy, twenty years old, and still blossom freely. 

 Yours truly, 

 Agnes M. Dickson, Oberlin, Ohio 



Climbing White Mam an Cochet 



The exquisite white flowers, every one of which is a 

 perfect specimen of the White Maman Cochet Rose, are 

 borne in great profusion, fairly covering the plant all 

 summer, for it is one of the most constant bloomers of 

 all the white climbing Roses. It is fairly hardy, but in 

 the extreme North, it requires protection. It is a strong, 

 vigorous grower, throwing up strong canes 15 to 20 feet 

 long in a single season. 



Climbing Pink Maman Cochet. A pure Maman 

 Cochet Rose of the climbing habit. Sufficiently hardy to 

 withstand the vigor of the northern winters with protec- 

 tion. Blooms throughout the growing season. 

 Baltimore Belle. Pale blush, variegated carmine-rose 



and white. Very double flowers in beautiful clusters. 

 James Sprunt (M. H.). Deep cherry-red, double. 

 Gold or Ophir (M. H.). Nasturtium-yellow, suffused 



with coppery-red. 

 Lamarque (M. H.). Light canary-yellow. 

 Climbing Cecile Bruner. Color rosy pink, rich, 



creamy-white ground. Needs protection. 

 Striped Reine Marie Henriette. Striped and flamed 



in bright carmine and pale rose. 

 White Mareehal Niel. Identical with its parent, 



Yellow Mareehal Niel, but pure white. 

 Zepherin Drouat. Flowers very large and double, of 



fine, bright rose color. 

 Gloire de Dijon (H.). Rich creamy white, beautifully 



tinged with amber and pale blush. 

 Mary Washington (H.). Pure white; perfectly double; 



borne in large clusters. 

 Reine Marie Henriette (H.). Extra large flowers, 



glowing crimson. 



Price of all Roses on this page, strong plants, 30 cts. each; 

 4 for $1.00; two-year-old plants, 80 cts. each; §8.00 per dozen, 

 by express, of one or more varieties; or 90 cts. each by Parcel 

 Post, with soil on roots. 



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