
New Dawn 
CLIMBING ROSES 
Climbing Roses are popular for covering 
trellises, pillars, walls, banks or fences. 
The climbing Roses are hardy with win- 
ter protection. 
Excelsa. This climbing Rose is an old favor- 
ite that continues to be popular. Large clusters 
of bright crimson, double flowers appear in 
June. It is “Red Dorothy Perkins” to many 
Rose fanciers. Each $1.25. 
New Dawn. (Patent No. 1.) New Dawn 
has the double distinction of being the first 
everblooming climbing Rose, and the first plant 
for which a patent was issued. The large, pink 
Roses bloom over an unusually long season 
throughout summer and fall. The flowers have 
a charming fragrance, and the long stems are 
fine for cutting. Removal of the old blooms 
encourages continued flowering. 
Each $1.85. 
World’s Fair 



ROSES /~ 
BABY RAMBLERS 
Baby Ramblers or Polyantha Roses were origi 
nated by crossing Hybrid Tea Roses with hardy 
climbers. They are dwarf, bush-type plants with 
clusters of many small, shapely Roses. They are 
useful for massing in beds or for edging borders, 
especially because of their continuous flowering. 
They are hardy. but hilling soil at the base of the 
plants is a desirable winter protection. 
ideal. For those who want a Baby Rambler with dark 
scarlet blooms, Ideal cannot be surpassed. Immense 
compact clusters of small shapely Roses are borne 
throughout the summer. Each $1.25. 
Summer Snow. (Patent No. 416.) Here is the most 
prolific white Baby Rambler. Large clusters of pure 
white flowers provide a dependable long-season display. 
The blooms have a delightful fragrance. Each $1.50. 
FLORIBUNDAS 
The Floribunda Roses are bush-type Roses with 
larger blooms than those of the Baby Ramblers. 
They are useful wherever color in mass is desired 
from early June until frost. They are hardy with 
protection. 
Betty Prior. (Patent No. 340.) The shell-pink flow- 
ers bear a striking resemblance to red Dogwood. It is a 
mass of color in June, and the red buds continue to 
open throughout the summer and fall. The bushes are 
normally 3 to 4 feet in height. This Rose is useful for 
tall mass plantings, borders and specimens. 
Each $1.50. 
World’s Fair. (Patent No. 362.) Here is the first 
Floribunda to be listed among the All-America Rose 
Selections. The large (3 to 4 inch), velvety, dark red 
flowers are borne in such profusion that the 2-foot 
bushes are lost beneath them. A mass planting never 
fails to attract admiration. The plant blooms continu- 
ously from early summer to frost. It is useful for mass 
plantings, borders and specimens. Each $1.50. 
HYBRID TEAS 
Hybrid Tea Roses, the favorites of the commercial 
florist, are valued for their continued bloom, 
charming form, fragrance and variety of color. 
They require full protection in winter. 
Betty Uprichard. The colors of this Rose blend in 
charming contrast, salmon-pink inside and coppery red 
outside. Of special merit is the proven high resistance 
of this Hybrid Tea to black spot leaf disease. It has a 
vigorous habit of growth. Bach S125. 
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