Hybrid Perpetual Rates 
Alll of these Roses are $1.00 each, less quantity discount on page 4 
Fuller descriptions, illustrations, and culture are given on page 13 in our General 
Catalogue **Garden Gems’’. Varieties which repeat are indicated by an (R) 
Baroness Rothschild. Light pink, 
daintily tinted with white and pale rose. 
Captain Christy. Flesh-pink, deepening 
toward center. R. 
Duchess of Sutherland. Warm pink, 
tinted Iemon at base. 
Felbergs Rosa Druschki. Soft live pink 
blooms. R. 
Ferdinand Pichard. 
pink and scarlet. R. 
Fisher Holmes. Red-scarlet beneath a 
velvety black sheen. 
Frau Karl Druschki. Magnificent snow- 
white blooms. R. 
General Jacqueminot. Scarlet-crimson 
buds and clear red flowers. 
Georg Arends. A most exquisite shade of 
soft pink. R. 
Heinrich Munch. Immense; soft pink. 
Petals streaked 
R. 
Henry Nevard. Crimson-scarlet. R. 
Hon. Ina Bingham. Daybreak-pink 
petals; center of golden stamens. R. 
Louise Crette. Pure white, inside petals 
creamy white. R. 
Mme. Albert Barbier. Soft fawn-yellow, 
paling to white. R. 
Mrs. John Laing. Clear pink. R. 
Mrs. R. G. Sharman-Crawford. Rosy 
pink, shading lighter toward base of 
petals. R. 
Oskar Cordel. Bright carmine. R. 
Paul Neyron. Dark lilac-rose. Immense. 
Pittsburgh. Very large buds and blooms; 
light flesh-pink, with a yellow base. R. 
Prince Camille de Rohan. Dark crim- 
son flowers, shaded black-maroon. R. 
Roger Lambelin. Crimson flowers 
streaked with white. A curious and 
beautiful variety. 
Triomphe de I’Exposition. Cherry-red. 
Ulrich Brunner. Bright carmine-red. 
ROGER LAMBELIN 
$1.00 

Large-flowered Hardy Climbing Roses 
Prices as noted, less quantity discount on page 4 
The letters at the end of descriptions represent the blooming 
period in the vicinity of New York City: E., from May 25 to 
June 3; MS., from June 4 to 12; and L., after June 12. 
Fuller descriptions, illustrations, and culture found on pages 14 and 15 in our 1944 General Catalogue ‘“*Garden Gems”’ 
American Pillar. LC. Scarlet-rose with 
large white centers. MS. $1.00. 
Blaze. LC. Pat. 10. Scarlet. Vivid scar- 
let flowers over a long blooming period. 
$1.25. 
Climbing American Beauty. LC. Large 
flowers of brilliant carmine. MS. $1.00. 
Doubloons. LC. Pat. 152. Large yellow 
flowers, generously produced. Un- 
questionably hardy and rugged. MS. 
$1.50. 
Dr. Huey. LC. Large, ruffled, maroon- 
red flowers in tremendous clusters. 
Stays in full flower several weeks. E. 
$1.00. 
Dr. W. Van Fleet. LC. A soft pale shade 
of flesh-pink. MS. $1.00. 
Dream Girl. Pat. 643 The new ever- 
blooming hardy climber. Introduced by 
Bobbink & Atkins in 1944, This variety 
fills a long-felt need for a real coral-pink, 
full-petaled hardy climbing Rose. Another 
most appealing quality Is its pleasant 
spicy and penetrating fragrance. When 
it is used as a cut-flower in the house, the 
perfume is even more noticeable and 
lasting than outdoors, and the true 
coral-pink, apricot and salmon colors be- 
come more beautiful and intense until 
the last petal unfurls. The blooms last 
for days after cutting. Beginning in 
June when older climbers like Mary 
Wallace, Dr. W. Van Fleet, and others 
in this class begin to flower, Dream Girl 
produces successive crops of bloom 
throughout the summer, ending with a 
gorgeous display in late fall. $2.00 net; 
no discount or quantity rate. 
Elegance. LC. Yellow. Spectrum-yellow 
in center, shading to a pale yellow on the 
outer petals. MS. $1.00. 
Golden Climber (Mrs. Arthur Curtiss 
James). LC. Pat. 28. Perfectly formed 
golden yellow flowers of Hybrid Tea 
quality and fragrance, on 114 to 2-foot 
stems. MS. $1.50. 
Golden Glow. LC. Pat. 263. Yellow. 
The pure spectrum-yellow Hybrid-Tea- 
like flowers are 31% to 5 inches in diam- 
eter. MS. $1.25. 
Mary Wallace. LC. Large bright pink 
flowers with a Juminous sheen. MS. 
$1.00. 
Mercedes Gallart. LC. Red. Ever- 
blooming. The first crop in June is a 
cerise-red changing to magenta, but in 
midsummer and autumn the blooms are 
clear bright crimson, intensely fragrant. 
Hardy. E. $1.25. 
Mme. Gregoire Staechelin. LC. Pink. 
Also called “Spanish Beauty.” Huge, 
fragrant, delicate pink flowers, stained 
crimson. E. $1.00 
Mme. Sancy de Parabere. LC. Vigor- 
ous, thornless Boursault Climber with 
semi-double, vivid rose flowers. Very 
early flowering and exceedingly hardy. 
The earliest and hardiest Climber. $1.00. 
Mrs. Whitman Cross. LC. New 
Climber. (Introduced by Bobbink & 
Atkins, spring, 1943.) Similar to Jacotte, 
with the same vivid orange colors, with 
an overlaid pinkish sheen. Gorgeous late 
summer and fall crops. $1.50. 
East Rutherford, N. J., Phone: RUtherford 2-0700 7 
Abbreviations: LC., Large-flowered Climber; Bour., Bourbon; 
CHP., Climbing Hybrid Perpetual. These refer to the classes. 
New Dawn. LC. Pat. 1. Apple-blossom- 
pink. The first hardy everblooming 
Climber. L. $1.50. 
Paul’s Scarlet Climber. LC. Red. 
Intensely red flowers, borne in loose 
clusters. MS. $1.00. 
Purity. LC. Large, cup-shaped, white 
flowers. MS. $1.00. 
Roserie. LC. Frilled, deep pink flowers. 
$1.00. 
Silver Moon. LC. White. Handsome 
foliage and big, saucer-shaped, moon- 
white flowers with brilliant yellow cen- 
ters. MS. $1.00. 
Zephirine Drouhin. Bourbon. Vivid 
ink. Blooms freely in spring and spar- 
ingly in fall. $1.00. 
The changes in prices or dis- 
counts in this 1944 Supplement, 
though comparatively few, cancel 
previous prices in our General 
Catalogue, published Jan- 
uary, 1944. 
Orders received prior to Sep- 
tember 15 are booked at previous 
Catalogue prices. 

