WAV SIDE 
ARDENS 
M E NTO R , OHIO 
PATENTED CLIMBING ROSES 
Blaze Each $1.50, Doz. $15.00 
Hardy everblooming Climbing Rose which inherits the blaz¬ 
ing color ot Paul’s bcariet climber and the everblooming habit 
of Gruss an Tepiitz, thus combining the most attractive fea¬ 
tures oi both its parents, it is a very vigorous climbing va¬ 
riety which will grow to considerable height. 
Easiea’s Golden Rambler Each $1.25, Doz. $12.50 
U. S. Plant Patent ino. 114. A new outstanding Climbing Rose 
from England, producing its comparatively large, double rich 
golden flowers in large trusses. An additional quality is a 
delicious fragrance. Gold Medal Royal Horticultural Society, 
July 1932. Awarded the Cory cup as the best new seedling 
climber or rambler Rose of Britisn origin introduced in 1932. 
Golden Climber Each $2.00, Doz. $20.00 
A departure in Yellow Climbing Roses. Flowers always come 
solitary on stiff, strong stems, often 18 inches or longer, and 
are 4 to 5 inches in diameter, making a cut flower which has 
no equal. Handsome "vine” to cover a fence, trellis, porch, 
pergola or garage wall. 
New Dawn Each $1.00, Doz. $10.00 
(.Everblooming Dr.' W. Van Fleet). Identical in every way 
with its parent in size and formation of its flowers, color, etc., 
but blooms continuously throughout the summer and fall. 
ROSA ROULETTI - Miniature Rose 
New Dawn. 
Polyantha Roses 
Three $1.70, Doz. $5.00, 100 $40.00 
Probably one of the old Lawrenceana Roses popular a century 
or more ago. After being lost to cultivation for many years, a 
plant was found growing in an Alpine window-garden by M. 
Correvon, the Swiss rock garden authority, just a few years 
ago. It is rapidly attaining popularity as a rock garden "gem” 
and as an edging plant in front of Rose beds. The plant grows 
about 6 inches tall in bushy form, is heajthy and hardy and 
blooms from early summer until frost. The tiny, rose-pink, 
quite double flowers are less than an inch in diameter. 
POLYANTHA ROSES 
Cecile Brunner Three $1.70, Doz. $5.00, 100 $40.00 
Small, exquisitely formed buds and flowers of light pink with 
yellow base in diffuse, graceful clusters. Perfectly formed 
miniature Roses of utmost grace and delicacy. Also called 
"Sweetheart Rose” and “Mignon Rose.” 
Chatillon Rose Three $1.60, Doz. $4.50, 100 $35.00 
Bright pink semi-double blooms with an illuminating touch of 
orange. The color lasts well. The trusses are of gigantic size, 
and the plant is both healthy and hardy. 
Eblouissant Three $1.60, Doz. $4.50, 100 $35.00 
Glowing, dark red flowers of medium size, shaded heavily with 
velvety crimson. Large, compact trusses, borne on dwarf but 
robust plants, which bloom constantly. 
Gloria Mundi Three $1.60, Doz. $4.50, 100 $35.00 
Bright orange-salmon flowers in huge clusters. Growth is 
vigorous and bushy. Splendid when planted in masses. 
Eafayette Three $1.60, Doz. $4.50, 100 $35.00 
Large, semi-double flowers of striking light crimson; open, 
frilled form. Blooms very liberally in loose clusters. 
Princess Juliana Three $1.60, Doz. $4.50, 100 $35.00 
A dainty, sweet combination of maiden-blush and peach and 
ivory. The florets are prettily waved, and strung along the 
branched sprays. 
Chaplin’s Pink Climber. 
Hardy Climbing and Rambler 
Roses 
American Pillar Doz. $3.50, 100 $25.00 
A single-flowering variety of great beauty. The flowers are 
of large size, 3 to 4 inches across, of a lovely shade of pink, 
with a clear white eye and clusters of yellow stamens, and 
are borne in immense bunches, and a large plant in full bloom 
is a sight not easily forgotten. 
Bess Lovett Doz. $3.50, 100 $25.00 
Large, fairly full flowers of light crimson-red, cup-shaped, 
and borne in long-stemmed clusters suitable for cutting; 
sweetly fragrant. Plant very strong, exceedingly free flower¬ 
ing, with fine, glossy foliage almost immune to disease. Bet¬ 
ter habits than Climbing American Beauty but totally unlike 
it in color and form. 
Chaplin’s Pink Climber Doz. $5.00, 100 $40.00 
Unquestionably the most important acquisition in climbing 
Roses since the introduction of Dr. W. Van Fleet. It is a 
cross between Paul’s Scarlet and American Pillar, and like its 
parents is of vigorous growth, perfectly hardy, producing 
its large flowers, similar in size and form to Paul’s Scarlet, 
profusely in strong trusses of from 8 to 12 flowers each, but 
in color a rich lively pink. 
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