Rose and Chrysanthemum Specialists 
9 
CLIMBING ROSES, continued 
Mme. Jules Gravereaux. A splendid Rose. 
Long-pointed buds; extra-large, double flowers 
of delicate flesh-pink and yellow. 
New Dawn. Plant Patent No. 1. The 
Everblooming Dr. W. Van Fleet. It is iden¬ 
tical with its parent in every way but blooms 
continuously throughout the summer and fall. 
2-yr., budded, field-grown plants only, $1.50 
each. 
Paul’s Scarlet Climber. Vivid scarlet 
flowers of excellent shape and size, borne in 
clusters which make a brilliant display. 
Reine Marie Henriette. Large, well-shaped 
flowers cf cherry-red. A vigorous climber, 
blooming persistently. 
Silver Moon. Long, creamy buds, opening 
to large, semi-double white flowers, with petals 
of great substance; center of golden stamens. 
Solfatare. Very fine, shapely buds with fully 
double, deep lemon-yellow flowers. 
Tausendschon (Thousand Beauties). Large 
flowers, charmingly ruffled, of many shades of 
pink, yellow, creamy white, and bright rose- 
pink, in enormous trusses. 
William Allen Richardson. Orange-yellow; 
outer petals lighter; center coppery yellow. 
Strong grower; good bloomer. 
Yellow Banksia (Lady Banks Rose). A 
vigorous grower in the South. Small, double, 
sulphur-yellow flowers in clusters; delicious 
violet fragrance. 
Hybrid Perpetual Roses 
All Roses of this class are perfectly hardy. The flowers are very double and of the most gorgeous 
colors, but they do not bloom perpetually as their name implies. They produce one lavish crop of 
blooms in the spring, and some bloom occasionally in the summer and fall. 
Strong, 1-yr. plants from 2 1 / 2 -in. pots, 25 cts. each, $2 per doz.; 2-yr., from 4-in. pots, 35 cts. each, $3.50 per doz. 
American Beauty. Rich dark carmine 
blooms of full, globular form, and delightfully 
fragrant. Very vigorous grower, blooming with 
unusual freedom. 
Frau Karl Druschki (White American 
Beauty; Snow Queen). See page 5. 2-yr. field- 
grown budded plants are 35 cts. each; $3.50 per doz. 
General Jacqueminot. Bright red flowers 
of excellent form, generally blooming a second 
time. A fine old favorite of strong, bushy growth. 
J. B. Clark. Very large, double, light red 
blooms, shaded darker. Prune back to 18 inches 
each spring, and disbud for magnificent blooms. 
Mme. Masson. Brilliant crimson flowers 
resembling American Beauty. A constant and 
free bloomer. Very fine. 
Paul Neyron. Deep rose-pink flowers of 
immense size—probably the largest Rose grown 
and one of the finest. Very double, full, and 
fragrant. 
Polyantha Roses 
Polyanthas are dwarf, bushy plants, producing their flowers in enormous, many-flowered clusters. 
They are continuously in bloom throughout the entire growing season, and are especially desirable 
for low hedges, massing, and edging. 
Strong, 1-yr. plants from 2 1 / 2 -ku pots. 20c. each, $1.50 per doz.; 2-yr., 
from 4-in. pots, 35c. each, $3.50 per doz. 
Echo. Dwarf sport of Tausendschon. Lovely, frilly 
flowers of soft pink. Bushy and very free flowering. 
Ellen Poulsen. Popular bright rose-pink variety. 
Large clusters borne profusely on a vigorous, dwarf, 
bushy plant. 
Kirsten Poulsen. Tall, bushy plant bearing all the 
time huge sprays of single, bright crimson flowers 
which last a long time. Superb Rose. Budded stock 
only, 50 cts. each, $5 per doz. % 
Golden Salmon. New. Be one of the first to have 
this outstanding Rose-sensation in your garden. Strong, 
vigorous grower; mildew-proof foliage. 
Gruss an Aachen. Orange-red and yellow 
buds; large, light flesh-pink and salmon-yellow 
flowers with deeper center. Strong, branching 
plant, continually in bloom. 
Ideal. Small, rich lustrous garnet flowers pro¬ 
duced continuously in very large, effective clus¬ 
ters. Fine for beds or borders. 
Lafayette. Large, attractively frilled flowers of 
bright crimson, produced 40 to 50 flowers on each 
spray, and making a continuous display throughout 
the season. 
La Marne. Beautiful, semi-double, blush-white 
flowers edged with vivid pink. Exceptionally free 
and continuous flowering. One of the prettiest. 
Miss Edith Cavell. Brilliant scarlet-red, with darker 
shadings. The small flowers are produced in very large 
clusters. Blooms freely and is a most desirable variety. 
Mile. Cecile Brunner. Also called “Sweetheart Rose” 
and “Mignon.” Small, exquisitely formed buds and flowers 
of light pink with yellow base, in graceful clusters. 
Salmon Spray. A new type with great sprays of broad, 
flat, single flowers of vivid salmon-pink. Plants grow 3 
feet high. Fine for massing. 
Salmon Spray 
