38 
THE GOOD & REESE COMPANY WHOLESALE TRADE LIST 
Hardy Vines and Climbers -Concluded 
Kudzu Vine 
This Is the most rapid growing: vine that anyone knows 
of. By measurement It has been known to grow twenty 
feet In a week. The foliage is large and tropical. It is 
entirely hardy. Everyone has trouble in getting nursery 
grown plants of this to grow. We have prepared and of¬ 
fer pot-grown plants, the kind that has the crown to the 
plant and the ball of earth to the roots, and you try to 
stop them growing and see If you don’t run into a snag. 
This is proving a great forage plant in the South, espe¬ 
cially adapting itself to the large area of the South where 
the land is sandy and no grass grows. All kinds of stock 
prefer it to hay or other coarse feed. Try It. 60 cents 
per dozen; $4.00 per hundred; $35.00 per thousand. 
Lathryrus, or Hardy Everlasting Pea 
This is also known as the Hardy Sweet Pea. One of the 
best and most desirable flowering hardy climbing plants. 
Attractive both in flower and foliage, growing to a height 
of 8 to 10 feet, and producing clusters of large Sweet Pea 
flowers the entire summer; fine for cutting, lasting well. 
Price, Held-grown roots, $1.00 per dozen; $7.00 per hundred. 
LATHYRUS LATIIOLIUS ALDUS—Pure white. 
LATHYRUS LATIFOLIUS SPLENDENS—Rosy red. 
Passiflora (Passion Vines) 
CONSTANCE ELLIOTT. 
The flowers are pure white, excepting a very slight col¬ 
oring at the base of the corolla. Perfectly hardy every¬ 
where. Price, 2%-lnch, 50c per dozen; $3.50 per 100. 
Wistaria 
A Popular Hardy Vine—Bearing long racemes of flow¬ 
ers. Two colors, lavender-blue and pure white. Price, 
50 cents per dozen; $4.00 per hundred. 
Hardy Plants and Perennials 
Including Border Plants and Bulbs 
Artemisia Lactifolia 
This Is a new introduction from China, bearing most ef¬ 
fective flowers on erect stems 3% to 4 V6 feet high, clothed 
with elegantly-cut dark green foliage and terminated by 
panicles of Hawthorn-scented creamy-white sphere-like 
and graceful flowers. It is at its best from the latter part 
of August to the end of September, and is particularly 
valuable on this account, being unlike any other plant in 
bloom at that time. Price, $1.00 per dozen; $7.00 per 
hundred. 
Achillea, Hardy Plant 
New Achillea, Houle de Neige—(The Great Cemetery 
Plant). A plant will produce hundreds, and even thousands 
of flowers the first summer; but when established the sec¬ 
ond year they have more than five thousand perfect flow¬ 
ers on a plant at the same time. It commences to bloom 
early m July, and is a perfect mass of beautiful flowers till 
frost, the same bloom keeping perfect two to three 
months. Its flowers are pure white, perfectly double, and 
produced In large sprays, making It one of the finest cut 
flowers for bouquets, vases, baskets, etc., or for any kind 
of decorations. For cemetery planting it is the most val¬ 
uable of all flowers. Price, 50 cents per dozen; $4 per 100. 
Hardy Begonia Evansiana 
Think of it! A hardy Begonia, one that stood twenty 
degrees below zero last winter, and came up and bloomed 
all summer. Another thing in its favor, it requires shade 
to grow in, at least partial shade. So many persons write 
us asking for plants suitable for shady places. Well, Be¬ 
gonia Evansiana fills the bill. It is a wonderful, beautiful 
Begonia, having pendulous flowers in large racemes al¬ 
most covering the entire plant. Color a sparkling pink 
that is simply entrancing. Everybody will want a hardy 
Begonia. It is also fine for pot culture. Price, $2.00 per 
dozen; $12.00 per hundred. 
Caryopteris Mastacanthus 
Cnryopteris Mastacanthus. (Blue Spirea.) A fine, bushy 
border plant, growing about 3 feet high; from Septem¬ 
ber until frost covered full length of the stems with at¬ 
tractive umbels of lavender blue. Not entirely hardy 
in the North and should be heavily protected. Price, 
60 cents per dozen; $4.50 per hundred. 
The New Hardy Ever-Blooming Carnation. 
“Margaret Wheeler” 
Let the originator. Judge Robert Wheeler, of Oklahoma, 
describe this wonderful plant: “Its chief merits are: Color. 
Bright rose-pink at base of the petals, shading to cream 
on edges. Size will average 2% Inches in diameter with¬ 
out removing buds. Very full flower but seldom breaks 
the calyx. Strong vigorous grower; perfectly hardy in 
this latitude.” Let us add that it blooms all summer 
long, covering itself with its beautiful pink flowers and 
has the glorious clove fragrance In a marked degree. 
Think of it! A hardy ever-blooming pink Carnation for 
your garden. For plants to bloom this summer, dozen, 
$1.00; per hundred, $7.00. 
Dicentra Spectabilis 
Bleeding Heart—One of the most beautiful of hardy 
border plants. Flowers in the early spring with rose- 
colored, heart-shaped flowers hanging from the under side 
of branches their entire length. Perfectly hardy and eas¬ 
ily cultivated; grows about two feet high. $1.00 per 
dozen; $7.00 per hundred. 
Hardy Pompon Chrysanthemums 
These beautiful varieties are again very popular for 
outdoor bedding purposes. They are quite hardy, and 
with but a slight covering of leaves or coarse stable lit¬ 
ter during the winter will take care of themselves after 
once planted, and produce an abundant, almost lavish, 
profusion of bloom; and the plants lend a coloration to 
the garden just at a time when other plants have been 
destroyed by frost and are looking their worst. Frost 
does not materially affect the flowering, and it will fre¬ 
quently happen that an armful of flowers can be cut after 
a sharp frost. 50c per doz.; $3.50 per hundred. 
DINIZULA—Rosy-lake; very fine. 
ELEGANTA—Deep pink, tipped and edged white. 
GOLDFINCH—Magnificent; gold, shaded crimson. 
GOLDEN FLEECE—I>arge, bright lemon-yellow. 
DIANNA—Best white. 
.AIRS. VINCENT — Large, deep purplish-rose. 
RHODA — Bronzy-pink; fine. 
Burbank’s Shasta Daisies 
ALASKA—The Shasta Daisy is one of the most marvelous 
productions in the flower line that has ever been brought 
to the notice of floriculturists. It is the first of a new 
type which has been obtained by hybridization and rigid 
selection through a series of years. Its first qualification 
is extreme hardiness. Second, it is perennial, blooming 
better and more abundantly each season. Third, it is 
not particular as to soil. Fourth, it blooms for several 
months. Fifth, the flowers are extremely large and 
graceful, averaging about four inches in diameter, with 
petals of the purest glistening whiteness, which are borne 
on single, long, stiff, wiry stems. Sixth, the blooms when 
cut remain perfectly fresh and in good condition for two 
weeks or more. No other flower can compare with it for 
usefulness. 50 cents per dozen; $3.50 per hundred. 
KING EDWARD—The giant of giants in the Shasta Daisy 
family. Snow-white, yellow disc. 75 cents per dozen; 
$5.00 per hundred. 
Eulalias (Hardy Grasses) 
Price, 50 cents per dozen; $3.00 per hundred. 
GRACILLIMA, UNIVITTATA—A beautiful ornamental 
grass, with narrow, graceful foliage. Very valuable. 
VARIEGATA—Deep green foliage, broadly striped length¬ 
wise of the leaf. Pure white. Very handsome. 
ZEBRINA, Zebra-Striped Eulalia—One of the most beau¬ 
tiful of ornamental grasses. Foliage marked crosswise 
with band of whit© and green. 
Furikia Subcordata Grandiflora 
The White Day Li'ly—The Funkias all make handsome, 
showy plants, and this is the best of Its class. Beautiful, 
broad, ovate leaves, with large, lily-like pure white, fra¬ 
grant flowers. Price, 75c per dozen: $5.00 per hundred. 
Gaillardia Grandiflora 
X ill »» C* • 
A hardy perennial useful for cutting, large Daisy-like 
flowers. The center is dark reddish-brown. Petals mark¬ 
ed with rings of brilliant crimson-orange. 40 cent© per 
dozen; $3.00 per hundred. 
