Climbing and Pillar Roses 
For the trellis, porch or arbor, the Climbing Roses produce a most 
wonderful covering of delicate foliage and delightful flowers. Climbers, 
after you once have them started, should not be cut or pruned in the 
spring, except to cut off dead wood, but when the flowering season is 
over, trim back the shoots that have flowered as much as desired. 
American Pillar. A single flowering variety of great beauty, flowers of 
large size, lovely shade of pink with clear white eye and clustered 
yellow stamens. Flowers borne in immense bunches. A beautiful sight. 
Dorothy Perkins. The old favorite soft shelbpink still popular with many 
gardeners who appreciate its good qualities. 
Dr. W. Van Fleet. An exquisite delicate pink Rose, long pointed buds 
of flesh-pink. A climber, yet splendid for cutting as flowers are borne 
on stems 12 to 18 inches long. 
Paul’s Scarlet. The most popular of all Climbing Roses. A vivid scarlet, 
of large size, produced in clusters of 3 to 20 flowers on long, strong 
stems. 
Red Dorothy Perkins. Intense crimson-scarlet; double flowers in brilliant 
clusters set in glossy shining foliage which is not subject to mildew or 
spots. Extremely vigorous and one of the handsomest red Roses. 
Rugosa and Hybrid Rugosa 
Roses 
A valuable hardy shrub type of the Rose used in 
landscape work, in partial shade or sunlight, partial- 
larly effective for its lustrous, rich dark green, heavy 
foliage and attractive blossoms. 
Dwarf Polyantha or Baby Rose 
Rosa Rugosa Rubra. Flowers deep rosy carmine color, 
succeeded by conspicuous seed pods of large size 
and brilliant color, creating a showy effect in the 
late summer and autumn. Single blossoms. 
Pink Grootendorst. Identical with Red Grootendorst 
except in color, which is splendid clear pink. 
Red Grootendorst. Imagine a shrubdike Rugosa Rose 
covered with trusses of lovely crimson baby Roses 
and you will have a fair conception of this new 
hybrid variety. Valuable as an isolated specimen or 
in mass in a bed or in shrubbery border or may be 
used as an everblooming hedge. Hardy, continues 
in bloom until late in fall. Double blossoms. 
Baby Ramblers Make Attractive Small Hedges. 
This type of Rose makes a 
compact, dwarf, bushy form 12 
to 18 inches high. They produce 
a mass of small “baby” sized 
flowers from early spring until 
frost. They are unusually attrac- 
tive planted in beds, along 
walks or borders. 
Gloria Mundi. The most brib 
liant orange-scarlet imagin' 
able. Never fades, showy, 
welbformed, double flow' 
ers produced in profusion. 
Baby class. 
Golden Salmon. Bright or' 
ange-scarlet buds expand- 
ing to glistening orange 
blooms that fairly blaze in the 
sunlight. Very showy. 
Ideal. The richest and brightest 
of the Baby types, an intense 
brilliant scarlet and medium 
size. 
Paul’s Scarlet Climber. 
Mme. Cecile Brunner. Fairy or Sweet- 
heart Rose. A dainty variety with 
small double blooms of perfect 
form. They are arranged in pro' 
fuse graceful sprays. Soft rosy pink 
on rich creamy white ground. 
Moderately fragrant. 
Austrian Brier Rose 
Austrian Copper (Rosa foetida bicolor). - 
Graceful shrub Rose with small foliage 
and brown stems, covered with innum' 
erable single flowers of intense copper' 
red on the inner surface of the petals 
yellow on the outside. Similar to the Rosa Rugosa 
types, these Roses are used as ornamental bush speci¬ 
mens on the lawn or in shrubby borders. 
F. J. Grootendorst. 
and golden 
18 
MILTON NURSERY CO., MILTON, OREGON 
