Unusual Shrub Rases 
The Evergreen Shrub Rose 
Mrs. Dudley Fulton 
Mrs. Dudley Fulton. This, we consider one 
of the finest and most valuable Rose novel¬ 
ties ever put on the market. The bush is cov¬ 
ered during the spring, summer and fall with 
good-sized, single, silvery-white flowers which 
make the plant look like a small snowstorm. 
One of the most remarkable things about this 
Rose is the splendid evergreen foliage, which 
is always glossy as if varnished, and in Cal¬ 
ifornia ,at least, the foliage is just as attrac¬ 
tive in the middle of winter as in the sum¬ 
mer. As we write these words, on Nov. 15th, 
our plants are smothered in bloom. The Amer¬ 
ican Rose Annual for 1936 (page 202) carries 
enthusiastic comments on Mrs. Dudley Fulton 
from growers in Idaho, Utah, Illinois and 
Pennsylvania, without one unfavorable word. 
Grows to 3 feet. U. S. Plant Patent No. 122. 
$1.00 each. 
AUSTRIAN COPPER 
Austrian Copper. It makes a large shrub 4 
or 5 feet high and as much across, and al¬ 
though it blooms but once in the spring, it is 
one of the most beautiful plants imaginable 
at that time, studded as it is with small, 
single, 2-inch blooms of the most brilliant 
copper-scarlet color. Do not prune it. lust 
leave it alone for best results. $1.00 each. 
THE SWEETBRIER 
Rosa rubiginosa. The original Sweetbriar 
Rose, bearing quantities of beautiful deep 
pink double, exceedingly fragrant, small 
flowers all along the stems in spring. The 
handsome fern-like foliage covers the plant 
profusely and is also delightfully fragrant 
when wet with dew or rain. A very hand¬ 
some Rose species. 6 feet. $1.00 each. 
Perfume and Color 
Rosa damascena trigintipetala. A form 
of the old Damask Rose which we like to 
recommend not only because of the exqui¬ 
site perfume of its semi-double pink flow¬ 
ers in the spring but for the clusters of 
little 3 / 4 -inch orange-scarlet hips which 
weigh the branches down in fall and win¬ 
ter. Cut sprays of these hips will keep 
their brilliancy of color for two months 
after they are cut and placed in water. 
This is the Rose from which Attar of Roses 
is made. Grows to 6 feet. $1.00 each. 
Baby Roses 
Baby Doll (Tip Top) Produces quantities 
of dainty, beautifully shaped, miniature 
buds of buff-yellow and white, edged 
with Rose. 75c. 
Cecile Brunner. The miniature flowers, 
rose pink shaded salmon, fill a niche 
which no other Rose can occupy. 4 ft. 75c. 
Chatillon. The best bright pink Baby 
Rose, semi-double, gigantic clusters. 18 
inches. 50c. 
Else Poulsen. A tall type of Baby Rose, 
with exquisite flowers of clear rose-pink, 
every slender little bud and open flower 
absolutely perfect in form. Blooms almost 
the entire year. 4 feet. 50c. 
Kirsten Poulsen. Similar to Else Poulsen, 
but with bright crimson flowers. 4 ft. 50c. 
Gloria Mundi. The little double flowers, 
like baby pompon chrysanthemums, have 
the brightest and most striking color in 
the Baby Roses — brilliant, luminous, 
orange-scarlet — borne in great clusters 
which cover the plant. 24 inches. 50c. 
THE NEW CLIMBER, GOLDEN GLOW 
A Yellow Baby 
Sunshine. Makes a compact little bush, 18 in¬ 
ches high, covered all through the season with a 
profusion of perfect little double flowers which 
are a deep apricot-orange in the bud, lightening 
to apricot-yellow in the open flower. The only 
good yellow Baby Rose. 75c each. 
Me w Climbing Rose Introductions for 1937 
— 63 — 
Apricot Glow. A magnificent vigorous 
climber, bearing a profusion of medium sized, 
double, nicely formed flowers of light apricot 
color with yellow shading at the base. The 
blooms appear in large trusses and have a 
pleasing fruity fragrance. It should be ex¬ 
tremely popular. Patent Applied For. $1.50 
Golden Glow. This is said to be one of the 
finest yellow climbers yet produced, although 
we have not ourselves observed the blooms. 
The medium sized flowers are semi-double, 
profusely produced in clusters of four or five, 
and the color is a pure bright yellow without 
other shadings. It sounds good. Patent Ap¬ 
plied For. $1.50 each. 
Climbing Countess Vandal. Ever since the 
bush form of Countess Vandal was introduced 
its long-pointed buds of coppery bronze, pink 
and gold have been drawing increasing ad¬ 
miration each year. In 1937 is being intro¬ 
duced for the first time a Climbing Countess 
Vandal, and it produces the same beautiful 
buds in great profusion. Patent Applied For. 
1.00 each. 
Climbing Lady Forteviot. Beauti¬ 
ful glossy foliage, and the golden 
yellow buds flushed 
with apricot which are 
so much admired in 
the bush form of this 
Rose are multiplied in 
beauty and number 
many times in this 
climbing sport. The 
fruit - scented flowers 
are borne freely, too. 
$1.00 each. 
Souv. de Mme. C. 
The bush form of 
this exquisite Rose is not too 
strong nor too free with its 
blooms. Therefore, the climber, 
which is extremely vigorous 
and produces many more of the 
beautiful satiny silver - pink 
blooms is warmly welcomed. 
If it lives up to its promise it 
will surely be one of the finest 
of pink climbing Roses. Illus¬ 
trated at right. $1.00 each. 
If you purchase 10 or more 
assorted Roses, the prices are 
less. See quantity rates page 54. 
Golden Dream. A big spreading shrub Rose 
6 feet high and as much across, with possibly 
the finest foliage of any Rose. In the spring 
and two or three other times during the sum¬ 
mer and fall it is covered with great quan¬ 
tities of beautiful long apricot-pink and gold 
buds borne on 2 to 3 foot stems, and opening 
to handsome cup-shaped colorful flowers. 
Delicately fragrant. $1.00 each. 
Reveil Dijonnais. For sheer brilliancy of 
coloring this is probably one of the most out¬ 
standing climbers ever introduced. The blooms 
are a brilliant cerise-pink with a yellow cen¬ 
ter, opening to a primrose-yellow flower, 
deepening to pink toward the edges of the 
petals. In the spring the flowers are borne 
in great masses and each bloom is immense 
in size. Through the summer several other 
bursts of bloom appear. Probably not hardy 
in the East. $1.00 each. 
Souvenir de Mme. C. 
Chambard, Available in 
a Climber (described at 
left) or as a Bush (see 
opposite page). 
The Climber of the Year 
Climbing Hinrich Gaede. The extraordinar¬ 
ily brilliant orange-vermillion coloring of this 
striking Rose is now found in a climber, and 
what a climber! Most climbers do not seem 
to bloom steadily through the summer, but 
this one, over the two years that we have 
observed it, has bloomed all summer long. 
The color illustration on left hand page gives 
but a poor idea of the richness and beauty 
of the flowers on this free-blooming new 
Climbing Rose. Plant Patent Applied For. 
$1.25 each. 
Apricot Glow, 
A New Fragrant 
Flowered 
Climber 
