~ Climbing 
Roses 
Climbing Roses grow 
best on open trellises 
or on fences. It is best 
to protect them for 
the winter by laying 
down and covering 
with soil or tying canes 
together and wrapping 
with several alternate 
thicknesses of heavy 
paper and burlap—tie 
to trellis. 
Blaze 
(Plant Patent No. 10.) Masses of vivid scarlet for a long period in the spring 
time. Intermittent flowers all season. (Note: Pluck only actual flowers when 
trimming after blooming as new bloom-shoots grow from first eye below the 
flower cluster.) Sometimes called the everblooming Paul’s Scarlet. 
Dorothy Perkins 
This is an old-fashioned pink-clustered ‘ram- 
bling Rose. Most hardy. 
Crimson Rambler 
This is the darkest red of the old-fashioned 
rambling Roses. Most hardy. 
Dorothy Perkins 
Paul’s Scarlet 
A great profusion of large, well-shaped vivid 
scarlet-red flowers in large open clusters in 
June. Good for cutting. Very popular. 
New Dawn 
(Plant Patent No. 1.) The best everblooming 
climbing Rose for our territory to date. Soft pink 
flowers changing to white. June and intermittently 
through summer. Needs careful winter protection. 
