18 
Roses for Landscaping the Home Grounds 
s 
! 
CLIMBERS 
Will e 
f New Beauty 
to Your Home 
2 Year No. 1 Bushes 
40c each—3 for $1.09 
>0 
AVIATEUR BLERIOT—Buds 
of orange-pink and apricot. 
Blooms light yellow, chang¬ 
ing to white, borne in clus¬ 
ters. 
AMERICAN BEAUTY—Hardy. 
Large size red blossoms. 
One of the best climbers. 
DOROTHY PERKINS — Soft 
shell pink, small, crinkly, 
in large clusters. 
DR. W. VAN FLEET—Large 
flowers of exquisite pale 
pink on long stems. 
EMILY CRAY—Large golden 
yellow buds which do not 
fade. 
EXCELSA—Large clusters of 
bright crimson flowers. 
MME. CRECORIE STAECHE- 
LIN—New Spanish intro¬ 
duction. Iridescent pearly 
pink with crimson mark¬ 
ings. Medium size blooms. 
PAUL’S SCARLET — Large, 
vivid scarlet red. Does not 
fade. 
ROSERIE—Deep pink flowers 
freely produced. No thorns. 
Color does not fade. 
SEVEN SISTERS—Vary from 
rosy red to blush white. 
SILVER MOON—Large semi- 
double white with yellow 
stamens. 
VEILCHENBLAU—Rosy pur¬ 
ple buds turning grayish 
blue. 
WHITE DOROTHY—Like the 
Dorothy Perkins except 
that the flowers are white. 
M 
me. Cregorie Staechelin 
Hybrid Perpetual Roses—Hardy as Oaks 
2 Year No. 1 Bushes. So-called June Roses, with extra large fragrant blossoms. 
All have blossomed in Nursery. 
FRAU KARL DRUSCHKI—Large snowy white blossoms. Buds are long and beau¬ 
tiful. Very long blooming period. 
GENERAL JACQUEMINOT—Free bloomer. Crimson scarlet. 
GEORGE ARENDS—The “Pink Frau Karl Druschki.” Quite recurrent. Large and 
perfect. 
PERSIAN YELLOW—Deep golden yellow; semi-double flowers. Small. Not cut 
back like the others. 
THE NEWEST 
Rose Creations 
45 cents Each 
Three for 
$1.19 
Rosa 
H 
ugoms 
Golden Rose of China or 
Father Hugo’s Golden Rose 
—Crows to be a handsome 
lawn specimen, 6 to 8 feet 
high. Sometimes before the 
snow has disappeared in the 
spring, it will burst into 
bloom with its exquisite 
roses of light, bright yel¬ 
low. The tiny leaves are 
fern-like, purpling in Au¬ 
tumn. An excellent flow¬ 
ering shrub, with roses for 
flowers. 
Baby 
Ramblers 
45c Each 
3 for 
$1.19 
ALEZANE — Flowers cupped 
opening to sorrel, turning 
rich apricot with the re¬ 
verse of petal sorrel striped 
with yellow veins. $1.50 
each. 
AMELIA EARHART—Beauti¬ 
ful yellow. $1.50 each. 
CARILLON — Buds, orange- 
scarlet, the half-open 
bloom, deep coral overcast 
with orange. $1.50 each. 
COUNTESS VANDAL—A su¬ 
perposition of pink, cop¬ 
per, gold, and salmon. 
GLOAMING — Soft, satiny 
pink heavily laden with 
salmon and amber. $1.50 
each. 
MARY HART—New. Red. 
$1.00 each. 
MATADOR—Scarlet crimson 
with darker silky sheen on 
the reverse. $1.50 each. 
NICRETTE — Almost black 
from a distance. $2.00 
each. 
WHITE BRIARCLIFF —Glis¬ 
tening pure white rose. 
Branching plant and con¬ 
tinuous bloomer. $1.50 
each. 
-»- 
BLAZE—Acclaimed by the 
Nation as the only hardy 
everblooming scarlet clim¬ 
ber. Vigorous and beauti¬ 
ful. $1.50 each. 
COLDEN CLIMBER—The Hy¬ 
brid-Tea flowered climber. 
Long lasting and almost 
always solitary on stems 
often 18 inches long. It is 
very hardy. $2.00 each. 
POLYANTHA ROSES 
48c Each—5 for $2.09 
Grow not more than 24 inches. Flowers borne in clus¬ 
ters of 20 or more. Bloom from May to November. 
CHATTILON—Light salmon pink, semi-double in 
enormous heads. 
EBLOUISSANT—A dazzling red of exceptional merit. 
GLORIA MUNDI—New. Best and most generally 
satisfactory of the orange-scarlet Polyanthus. Fully 
double. 
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For Borders, Hedges, Along the Walk 
Baby Ramblers 
