4K 
HARDY ROSES 
THE ELM CITY NURSERY COMPANY 
__- 
WOODMONT NURSERIES INC. 
Rambler Roses and other Hardy Climbing Roses 
With the advent of the Ramblers, we have a class of roses of such vigorous 
growth that almost any garden structure can be completely festooned with an 
effective growth of vine, glossy foliage and an abundance of bloom which rivals 
the famed California gardens. To get best results with the Rambler Roses, it is 
necessary that they be well fertilized, as these roses are hearty feeders. This can 
be done to best advantage at the time the ground is being prepared for planting. 
VARIETIES 
Alberic Barbier. Creamy white, canary 
yellow in center. Attractive foliage. 
American Pillar. Vigorous grower. 
Single, clear pink. 
Anne of Gerstein. Dark crimson. Hy¬ 
brid sweet brier. 
Baltimore Belle. Pale blush, becoming 
nearly white; compact and fine. 
Christine Wright. A bright wild rose 
pink. Blooms produced singly and 
in clusters. Vigorous grower. 
Climbing American Beauty. Vigorous 
grower, hardy, blooms very large and 
full, color rosy crimson. 
Crimson Rambler. This wonderful 
Japanese Rose is one of the most im¬ 
portant and valuable acquisitions of 
recent years. 
Dorothy Perkins. Very double and are 
borne in clusters of ten to twenty. 
The color is a clear shell-pink. 
Excelsa. Known as the Red Dorothy 
Perkins, very full blooms of crimson 
maroon, tips of petals scarlet. 
Hiawatha. Single, bright ruby red, 
white center with dark yellow anthers. 
Lady Gay. Similar to the popular 
Dorothy Perkins, but lighter in color. 
Multiflora. A charming species. Great 
clusters of white single flowers, showy 
red fruits which last all winter. 
Philadelphia Rambler. The blooms are 
larger than the Crimson Rambler and 
full to the center and of a deeper 
crimson color. 
Prairie Queen. Bright rosy red, extra. 
Setigera. The Michigan or Prairie 
Rose. Large single flowers, of a deep 
rose color. 
Source D’or. Golden yellow. Glossy 
foliage, vigorous. Each, 50 cents; 
per ten, $4.50. 
Sweet Brier. Old favorite, fragrant fo¬ 
liage. 
Tausendschon, or Thousand Beauties. 
Charming, strong grower. Flowers 
in large clusters varying from creamy 
pink to bright red, all in the same clus¬ 
ter. 
Trier. Creamy white with dark yellow 
anthers and are borne in large clusters. 
White Dorothy Perkins. Same habit 
of growth and freedom of flowering as 
Dorothy Perkins, but with pure white 
blooms. 
Wichuriana. Memorial rose, trailing 
species, pure white, single. 
William C. Egan. Bloom is large, very 
full, clear flesh-color. 
Baby Rambler and Hybrid Polyantha Roses 
These dwarf bushy roses have many uses. Hardy and continuously in bloom 
throughout the entire growing season, they offer great opportunities. These 
little roses are very useful as a border or foreground in beds, or border of taller 
growing sorts, for low hedges of brilliant color and for planting in groups in the 
herbaceous garden. 
Aennchen Muller. Brilliant carmine- 
pink. 
Baby Dorothy. Dwarf rose with large 
clusters of blooms, same color as the 
popular variety Dorothy Perkins . 
Baby Rambler. Dwarf rose with great 
clusters of blooms of same color as 
Crimson Rambler. Blooms all summer. 
Baby Tausendchon. (Louise Walter). 
Flowers large and semi-double of 
flesh pink color. Shadings identical 
with the popular climbing Tau¬ 
sendchon. 
Clothilde Soupert. Very double, pearly 
white. 
Ema Teschendorf. Flowers vivid crim¬ 
son. Very free. One of the brightest 
of this type. 
Jessie. Cherry-red with white center. 
Very free bloomer. Compact habit. 
Orleans. Deep geranium-red with a 
showy center of white, large truss. 
One of the most desirable of the dwarf 
polyanthas. 
White Baby Rambler. (Katherine 
Zemet). White, very free and con¬ 
tinuous bloomer. Compact habit. 
Yvonne Rabier. Pure white, full and 
free bloomer. Clean foliage. Strong 
grower. 
Prices of Roses on this page, see page 62. 
FOR SPECIAL DISCOUNTS SEE PAGE ONE . 
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