334 THE NURSERY LIST. 



Weigela. See Diervilla. 

 Wellingtonia. See Sequoia. 

 Whin. See Ulex and Cytisus. 

 White Cedar. See Chamascyparis and Thuya. 

 White-wood. See Liriodendron and Tilia. 

 Whitlavia. See Phacelia. 



Whortleberry, Huckleberry {Gaylussacia resinosa). Ericacece. 

 Propagated by seeds, which should be stratified ang 

 otherwise carefully handled. See also Vaccinium. 



Willow. See Salix. 

 Wind-flower. See Anemone. 



Windsor, Broad or Horse Bean ( Vicia Faba). Leguminosce. 

 Propagated by seeds in open air after the soil is fairly 

 warm. 



Wineberry [Rubus phcenicolasius). Rosacecs. 



Increases readily by "tips," the same as the black rasp- 

 berry ; also by root cuttings. 



Winter Aconite. See Eranthis. 



Winter Cress. See Barbarea. 



Wistaria. Leguminoscs. 



Readily grown fi'om seeds. Sometimes by division. 

 Layers. Cuttings of ripened wood, usually handled under 

 glass. The common purple and white kinds are largely 

 grown from root cuttings, an inch or two long, placed in 

 bottom heat, when they will start in four or five weeks. 

 Many of the fancy kinds, especially when wood is scarce, 

 are root- or crown-grafted upon W. Sinensis. 



Witch-hazel See Hamamelis. 



Woodbine. A name properly belonging to climbing Loni- 

 ceras, but often applied to Ampelopsis, both of which see. 



Wormwood, Southern Wood {Artemisia Absinthium). 

 Compo&itcE. 

 Seeds and division. 

 Wrightia, Balfouria (Palay, or Ivory-tree). ApocynacecE. 

 Seeds ; usually by cuttings, which root readily in sand 

 in heat. 



