


BLAZE COLLECTION 
1 June Morn 
1 Blaze 1 Doubloons 
1 New Dawn 1 Flash 
ALL 5 FOR +500 

38 
© 
1939 


Each $1.00 
3 for $2.50 
JUNE MORN 
Each $1.50 
3 for $3.75 
All Roses on This Page Are Climbers 
June Morn—Patent No. 375. Produces freely its 
large, double flowers (often 5 inches across) of the 
most luscious watermelon-pink inside, and outside of 
petals touched with gold. As a pillar rose it is a 
fountain of beauty, blooming continuously for sucha 
long time in spring and early summer and then bloom- 
ing again in the fall. Each $1.50, 3 for $3.75. 
Doubloons— Patent No. 152. Planted in your garden 
this golden beauty will bring great happiness to all 
who see it. The large yellow blooms cover the entire 
plant for a long period. It also tends to bloom again 
in mid-summer. Very hardy, a vigorous healthy 
grower because it is descended from the wild Prairie 
Rose. Each $1.00, 3 for $2.50. 
New Dawn— Patent No. 1. This is the original Ever- 
blooming Climbing Rose. From spring until freezing, 
it actually produces hundreds of the large, fragrant, 
exquisite apple-blossom pink flowers. They come on 
long stems, ideal for cutting. Tested and proven the 
country over. Very hardy. Each, $1.50, 3 fer $3.75. 
Flash— Patent No. 396. One of the brightest colored 
of all roses, a luminous orange-scarlet with the reverse 
of petals gold. Last spring at Ames, Iowa (where it 
gets 25 below zero) 2 plants of Flash in full bloom were 
a sight that those who saw will long remember. A 
Gold Medal Winner for Climbing Roses in “‘All- 
America Rose Selections” for 1940 and 1941. An 
ideal pillar rose. Each $1.00, 3 for $2.70. 
The Hardy Everblooming 
Scarlet Climber 
Blaze—Patent No. 10. The most popular 
climbing rose in the world. Brilliant scarlet 
flowers produced freely in late spring and 
early summer with intermittent blooms all 
season. Plant in good soil as 
>. the more it grows, the more 
bef % it blooms. Each 
" ——— -£ . $1.00, 3 for $2.56. 
I a 
9) 1932 
