Paul’s Carmine Pillar.—A single variety with bright carmine flowers. It is quite hardy and looks well covering a trellis. One of the best single climbers. The Single White is also desirable.
Alice Grey.—Belonging to the Ayrshire section. Blooms in summer, the flowers are creamy white, edged with pink.
Banksia.—Delicately scented and well adapted for walls. Both the yellow and white should be grown, also the improved variety Fortunei.
Gloire de Dijon.—Well-known, should be in every garden.
Rosa Brunonis.—White Indian Rose. Fine foliage. The single creamy flowers are beautifully centred with yellow. A lovely variety for rambling among trees.
Rosa Moschata Nivea.—Musk Rose. Another single. The flowers are scented, the colour white, suffused with pink, and the centre of each occupied by a bunch of golden anthers, the buds pink. Very free growing.
Austrian Briars.—For rambling over dwarf trellis or about the base of stone balconies these roses are most useful. Both the yellow and copper-red forms are worth growing.
Rosa Rubrifolia.—Red-leaved Rose. Of little importance, so far as its flowers are concerned, but delightful for its richly coloured leaves and purple shoots.
Rêve d’Or.—Belonging to the Noisette section. A favourite variety with nankeen copper flowers, and a profusion of rich brown shoots.
Lamarque.—White with yellow centre, a free flowering kind, growing well on a wall.