. Climbing American Beauty Rose Ernestine Cosme. A unique single flowered variety of pretty form and of a delicate soft pink which are produced in great pyramidal-shaped, many flowered sprays, in greatest profusion; a vigorous healthy grower. Excelsa. An intense crimson-maroon with tips of petals tinged with scarlet, an improvement on the old Crimson Rambler. Gardenia. Buds bright yellow, opening double flowers of cream color; incurving towards evening to the shape and color of a Cape Jessamine, hence its name. Hiawatha. A brilliant single, ruby carmine, with a clear white eye and a mass of go


. Climbing American Beauty Rose Ernestine Cosme. A unique single flowered variety of pretty form and of a delicate soft pink which are produced in great pyramidal-shaped, many flowered sprays, in greatest profusion; a vigorous healthy grower. Excelsa. An intense crimson-maroon with tips of petals tinged with scarlet, an improvement on the old Crimson Rambler. Gardenia. Buds bright yellow, opening double flowers of cream color; incurving towards evening to the shape and color of a Cape Jessamine, hence its name. Hiawatha. A brilliant single, ruby carmine, with a clear white eye and a mass of golden stamens. Marie Gouchault. Identical with Dorothy Perkins, excepting in color, which is a clear geranium-pink without magenta shadings. Very free and early. Mary Lovett. Large well-formed flowers of pure waxy white, sweetly scented. Mary Wallace. Well formed, semi-double flowers of a bright clear rose-pink with salmon base to the petals, flowers large, generally exceeding four inches in diameter, very free flowering. Paul's Scarlet Climber. The most popular of all climbing Roses. Unequalled in brilliancy by any other variety, these are of a vivid scarlet, of large size and are produced in clusters of from 3 to 20 flowers on long, strong stems. Paul's Lemon Pillar. A very beautiful and entirely distinct large double, sulphur-yellow, perfectly formed flower, that has proven hardy in this latitude during the past two seasons. Fine as a pillar rose. Roserie {Red Tausendschoen). Of the same habit of growth and flowering as Tausendschoen, but of a deeper and more even shade of cerise-pink, or carmine. Silver Moon. Different from all other Roses, with beautiful semi-double flowers four and a half inches and over in diameter; pure white in color, petals of great substance, beautifully cupped, forming a Clematis-like flower. Solarium. In single flowering climbers this is a gem. It is of the same type as Hiawatha on which it is a decided improve- ment, the flowers being larger, more


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