HARDY VINES AND GROUND COVERS 
Actinidia arguta. The white flowers with 
purplish centers cover the plant at bloom¬ 
ing-time. 3-yr. plants, $1.00 each. 
Ampelopsis heterophylla. Valuable for 
covering trellises and rocks. 3-yr. plants, 60 
cts. each; $6.00 per doz. 
A. quinquefolia, Virginia Creeper. Green 
foliage changing to scarlet in the fall. 3-yr. 
plants, 50 cts. each; $5.00 per doz. 
A. tricuspidata, Boston Ivy. Will quickly 
cover trellises or walls. Brilliant autumn 
foliage. 3-yr. plants, 50 cts. each; $5.00 per 
doz. 
Arctostaphylos uva-ursi, Bearberry. Snow- 
white flowers, followed by brilliant red 
fruits, from 2 3^2 in. pots, 3-yr. plants, 50 cts. 
each; $5.00 per doz.; $35.00 per 100. 
Aristolochia sipho, Dutchman's Pipe. Large, 
round leaves. Flowers brownish, and re¬ 
semble a pipe. 4-yr. plants, $1.00 each. 
Bignonia radicans. Brilliant orange-scarlet 
flowers in July and August. Green foliage, 
turning crimson in autumn, from 6-in. Pots, 
60 cts. each; $6.00 per doz. 
B. radicans grandiflora, Chinese Trumpet 
Vine. Orange-red, 6-in. Pots, $1.00 each. 
Celastrus scandens. Yellow flowers, fol¬ 
lowed by orange-colored pods which split 
open and disclose scarlet seeds. 3-yr. plants, 
50 cts. each; $5.00 per doz. 
Clematis henryi. Creamy white flowers. 
Pot-grown plants, $1.00 each. 
C. jackmani. Velvety purple flowers. Pot- 
grown plants, $1.00 each. 
C. Ramona. New. Light blue flowers. Pot- 
grown plants, $1.00 each. 
G. paniculata, Virgin's Bower. Covered with 
small white flowers in late summer. Pot- 
grown plants, 60 cts. each; $6.00 per doz. 
Euonymus radicans. A trailing vine with 
dark green, white-veined leaves. Clings to 
rough surfaces. 3-yr. plants, 50 cts. each; 
$5.00 per doz.; $40.00 per 100. 
E. radicans carrierei, Glossy foliage. 3-yr. 
plants, 50 cts. each; $5.00 per doz. 
E. minimus. A dwarf variety, from 4-in. 
Pots, 60 cts. each; $6.00 per doz. 
E. radicans vegetus. Round leaves. Small 
flowers followed by red fruits. A ground- 
cover, clings to rough surfaces. 3-yr. 
plants, 50 cts. each; $5.00 per doz.; 
$40.00 per 100. 
Hedera helix, English Ivy. Perfectly hardy 
in New England. Plants from 3-in. pots, 
30 cts. each; $3.00 per doz.; $20.00 per 100. 
Hydrangea petiolaris, Climbing Hydrangea. 
4-in. pots, 4 yrs. old, $1.00 each. 
Lonicera halliana, Hall's Japanese Honey¬ 
suckle. Opening flowers are white, but soon 
turn to buff. June to late fall. Field-grown, 
50 cts. each; $5.00 per doz.; $35.00 per 100. 
Pot plants, 60 cts. each; $6.00 per doz. 
L. sempervirens, Trumpet Honeysuckle. 
Brilliant red flowers, scarlet fruits. Pot- 
grown plants, 60 cts. each; $6.00 per doz. 
Mitchella repens. An evergreen trailing 
plant with brilliant red berries in autumn. 
Desirable for rock-gardens. 30 cts. each; 
$3.00 per doz. 
Pachysandra terminalis. Desirable for 
growing under shrubs and trees. Greenish 
white flowers in May and June. 20 cts. 
each; $2.00 per doz.; $15.00 per 100. 
Polygonum auberti. Often grows 25 feet in 
one season. A mass of snowy white flowers 
during the entire summer and fall. Pot- 
grown plants, $1.00 each. 
Vinca minor, Ground Myrtle. Evergreen 
trailer with charming deep blue flowers. 
Splendid as a ground cover. 25 cts. each; 
$2.50 per doz.; $18.00 per hundred. 
Wisteria sinensis, Chinese Wisteria. Long 
clusters of light-blue flowers in early sum¬ 
mer. 3-yr. blooming plants, 75 cts. each; 
extra-heavy, 7-yr. plants, $3.00 each. 
W. sinensis alba. Similar to above with 
white flowers. 3-yr. plants, $1.00 each. 
ANNUALS AND BEDDING PLANTS 
The bright colors, the all-summer bloom, and the picking value of annual 
flowers make them almost indispensable. We raise some seventy-five thousand 
of these plants in our greenhouses each spring, including the most popular and 
well known sorts and also several excellent kinds not commonly offered, such as 
cream yellow and pink Lantanas, true Heavenly Blue Morning Glory, three va¬ 
rieties of Blue Salvia, and new colors in Petunias, Zinnias and others. We try to 
have all our annuals in good husky condition, a majority of them pot-grown, 
ready from May 10th on, assuring the maximum of success and satisfaction. 
In 1852 a Brewster captain carried the first cargo of ice to the tropics , with a net 
profit of more than a thousand percent. 
