Any Two — 2 year $ -j 
I .00 
Roses below for. . J 
Post 
L Paid 
Really 3 year old, potted plants. Strong, sturdy, 
on own roots at little more than former prices 
for 1 year plants. This great stock must be 
moved. Order Today! See detailed prices bot¬ 
tom of page. 
Hardy Climbing Roses 
Hardy everywhere without protection, requiring little attention, blooming 
gorgeously in early summer. Once planted last a lifetime. For climbing over 
porches, garages, trellis, embankments, cemetery planting, for screening un¬ 
sightly places or single specimens they have no equals. Free from insects, 
hardy as oaks, cheap in price, permanent. 
Keystone 
(See Color Illustration Second Cover Page) 
Perfectly hardy everywhere, blooms in wonderful profusion. The open flower 
is perfectly double, with buds beautifully formed. Color clear lemon-yellow. 
The only hardy deep yellow Everblooming climber we know of. This is 
a really great Rose. Don’t miss it. 
Dr. W. Van Fleet—A splendid hardy rose, large flowers about 4 inches across, 
full and cup shaped; color flesh pink deepening to rosy-flesh in center. 
Dorothy Perkins—Shell-pink; extremely hardy, vigorous and free blooming. 
The shoots frequently grow ten to fifteen feet in one season. The perfectly 
double flowers are in immense clusters of thirty or forty. 
Bess Lovett—Flowers fragrant, clear bright red, good size, double. 
Heart of Gold—Hardy Climber. Crimson with white at base of petals. 
Excelsa—The flowers are very double, produced in immense trusses of thirty 
to forty flowers to each truss. Color intense crimson. 
Gardenia (Hardy Marechal Niel)—Very sweetly fragrant; creamy yellow. 
White Dorothy Perkins—Is a rampant grower, and in a short time will cover 
a large trellis. Glistening white. 
Silver Moon—Blooms very large four or more inches in diameter, pure white 
in color and of good substance, beautifully cupped, forming a clematis-like 
flower. 
Mary Lovett—Hardy as an oak, a grand rose wherever an absolutely hardy, 
white climbing rose is wanted. 
American Pillar—Of extremely vigorous habit of growth; foliage lively green 
the season through. It has a profusion of bright pink, semi-double flowers in 
clusters which are followed by clusters of attractive red berries. 
Jacotte—Color deep coppery yellow, tinted coppery red, borne several to¬ 
gether on long stems. Very fragrant. 
Mary Wallace—Large, semi-double flowers, 4 inches 
across; color clear rose pink with salmon at base of 
petals. Very hardy. 
Eugene Jacquet—Immense trusses of fragrant 
cherry-red flowers in profusion. 
Emily Gray—A new yellow. Glossy foliage, buds 
long, flowers golden yellow, semi-double. Needs 
protection north of Washington, D. C. 
Alberic Barbier—Entirely free from insect attacks; 
heavy waxy foliage, shines as if varnished. The 
beautiful yellow flowers are unusually double, 
sometimes singly, sometimes in clusters. 
Christine Wright—Large, thick, leathery foliage. 
Flowers bright pink, 4 inches in diameter; almost 
double borne in large clusters. A fine pillar rose. 
Violette—Rather large flowers of deep reddish vio¬ 
let borne in big trusses on a strong slender-caned 
plant. 
Aunt Harriet—Amazingly fine with its masses of 
dazzling scarlet-crimson roses. The bright effect is 
intensified by the pure white centers and brilliant 
golden anthers. 
NEW LOW PRICES, POSTAGE PAID, on all roses on this page: Strong, first size pot-plants, 20c 
each, any 3 for 50c, postpaid; extra heavy two-year-old plants, 55c each, any 2 for $1.00, prepaid 
by parcel post. Larger plants, star size, 75c each, $8.00 per doz., assorted; any 6 at doz. rate, by 
parcel post. 
t-J. w ra.' '*S 
Excelsa, the Improved Crimson Rambler 
Keystone, our Superb Free 
Blooming Climber 
HARDY CLIMBING ROSES ONCE PLANTED, LAST A LIFETIME 
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