Quality Nursery Stock Since 1886 
23 
Cl Martian Cochet — Same as Maman Cocbet 
a strong pink climber and good bloomer, flow- 
ers are double and keep well. 
Crimson Rambler — The most popular out-of- 
door climber of today; a rapid producer of long, 
heavy canes, reaching a height of ten to twenty 
feet in one season; rich clusters of bloom form 
a mass of vivid crimson beauty until late in the 
season. Perfectly hardy in the most trying 
climates, being a native of Japan. 
Dorothy Perkins — Beautiful, hardy pink, 
blooming in clusters. An extra good climber 
for the South. 
Marechal Neil — Beautiful, deep yellow; very 
large, full globular form, sweet, free bloomer; 
the finest climbing rose; two years, budded. 
Veilchenblau — The blue rose. Color steel- 
blue or amethyst, sometimes reddish lilac; a 
seedling of Crimson Rambler, with double 
florets in fine clusters. It is probably the 
most beautiful grower, with handsomest foliage 
of any climbing rose in existence; the leaves 
are exceedingly long and slender, with high 
gloss. Indications point to its becoming a very 
popular novelty. 
Tausendschoen — Soft pink, blooming in clus- 
ters. The branches look like large pink ostrich 
plumes; a splendid forcing variety under the 
same treatment given the Crimson Rambler. 
Very valuable. 
White Dorothy— Pure white, sport from the 
beautiful rambler Dorothy Perkins. 
Yellow Banksia — Yellow, small flowers; very 
fragrant. Both Banksia roses are very hardy. 
Climbing, Clinging and Creeping Plants 
These long-lived plants are the most popular 
and best for the South to cover arbors, galler- 
ies, old trees, etc., in a very short time. 
Kudzu — The famous Chinese Kudzu grows 
more in three months than most vines do in 
five years. Adaptable to porches, arbors, fences, 
rockerries, old trees, etc. If you wish a vine that 
will grow anywhere in the bed or poorest soil, 
then plant the Chinese Kudzu. The large, bold, 
green leaves afford a dense shade. The clus- 
ters are deliciously fragrant. 25 cents each, 
$2.50 per dozen. 
Ampelopsis Veitchii (Boston Ivy)— This 
plant resembles very much our ivy, but grows 
very rapidly, covering a large wall in one sea- 
son. The foliage is small and neat and blood- 
red in color in fall. 35 cents each. 
Ivy, Hardy English — The hardy evergreen 
vine that remains so all the year, making it 
one of the most valuable of all hardy vines. 
It is used in covering walls and has become 
popular for covering graves, especially in the 
shade where grass will not succeed. Price, 25 
cents each, pot grown. 
Antignoum Leptophus (Queen’s Wreath) — A 
splendid plant from Central Mexico, producing 
rose-colored flowers in racemes two feet long. 
The profusion of bloom is such as to give the 
resemblance of roses at a distance, hence its 
name, "Rosa de Montana,” or Mountain Rose. 
Will live out in the winter anywhere in the 
South. The vines are killed by frost, but it 
quickly shoots up in the spring and develops 
its flowers from May until frost. This is one 
of the most lovely vines. Bulbs, 25 cents each 
Smaller bulbs, 15 cents each. 
Bignonia 
Strong grafted plants of the very best va- 
rieties. 
Mme. Collier — Dark red flowers, with pale 
yellow to the inside. 50 cents. 
Coccinea — Long, slender flowers, red, striped 
yellow. 35 cents. 
Speciosa — Long pointed flowers borne on 
long stems; flowers light yellow. 35 cents. 
Clematis Paniculata — One of the most beau- 
tiful of our hardy climbing vines. The flowers 
are pure white, and are borne in great panicles 
or clusters of bloom, which fairly cover the 
plant so that a mass or sheet of fleecy white. 
The fragrance is delicious, resembling the Eng- 
lish Hawthorne blossoms, and so subtle and 
penetrating that a large plant in bloom fills the 
air with exquisite fragrance. 25 cents each. 
Clematis Drummondii — Many varieties of 
Clematis grow wild in Texas. Among them 
this is the best. When in bloom the plant is 
