GABDEN SEATS 117 



twenty feet in height. It makes a beautiful shade 

 for trellises and bears in the season a profusion of 

 large trumpet-shape snow-white flowers that are 

 richly scented and very beautiful. There is also 

 a heavenly blue that combines artistically with the 

 white. One feature of this vine is its thick, over- 

 lapping, glossy foliage, and its nightly scores of 

 immense silky blooms which are of rare fragrance. 

 By actual count a strong vine will bear from one 

 to three thousand blossoms in a season. There has 

 within the last few years been discovered a new 

 variety that opens early in the morning and re- 

 mains so nearly all day. 



The beautiful blue of the Paradise Flower is 

 used when one wishes for this color in decorations. 

 The clusters are large, showing from twenty to 

 thirty at a time and it blossoms continually from 

 the time it becomes established until frost. 



For a rustic seat, why not try the wild grape or 

 Crimson Glory vine? It is so strong and hardy, 

 notable for its heavy foliage which makes a splen- 

 did shade and in the fall is a mass of rich crimson. 

 We have grown to think of morning glories as a 

 pretty, small flower that grew in our grandmother's 

 garden. Many of us have not realized that they 



