Wisteria. See page 43 Polygonum Auberti. See page 43 
HARDY 
Hardy Vines and Climbers add 
beauty to the home by providing 
shade, seclusion, pleasing foliage, 
flowers and fragrance to veranda, 
porch, pergola, fence or trellis. They 
clothe bare banks and rocks and 
make unsightly objects attractive. 
Some of them are tolerant of, or 
prefer shade; others, such as the 
Clematis and Wisterias, luxuriate 
only in full sunlight. All should be 
planted in ordinarily good garden 
soil, well watered at planting-time 
(and subsequently whenever dry), 
and given a top-dressing of well- 
rotted manure each spring. Pot- 
Grown or Field-Grown —which is 
preferable? Clematis, Honeysuckles, 
English Ivies, Trumpet Vines, Climb¬ 
ing Hydrangeas, and a few others 
are always preferable pot-grown, 
but in many kinds, field-grown 
plants, if set out before growth 
is advanced, produce equally good 
results and cost less for packing and 
transportation. 
Pot-grown climbing plants can be 
shipped and planted when in full 
growth or dormant. 
VINES 
ACTINIDIA arguta. Bower Ac- 
tinidia. A Japanese climber with 
shining dark green foliage, which 
thrives in sun or half shade. White 
flowers, with purplish centers. 
Edible fruits. Strong Each 10 
pot-grown plants. . .SO 85 $7 50 
AKEBIA lobata. Three-leaJ Ake- 
bia. Flowers in long racemes, 
smaller than those of A. quinata. 
Each 10 
Pot-grown plants... SO 80 $6 50 
A. quinata. Five-leaJ Akehia. A 
fine climber with attractive foliage 
and rather inconspicuous violet- 
brown flowers, with a pleasant 
cinnamon scent. Thrives in sun. 
Strong pot-grown Each 10 
plants.SO 75 S6 00 
Ampelopsis 
Ampelopsis aconitifolia. Adonks- 
hood Vine. A very graceful vine 
with deeply cut leaves, resembling 
those of a larkspur. Strong, pot- 
grown plants, 80 cts. each. 
Clematis coccinea (texensis). See page 42 
Clematis Lawsoniana. See page 42 
Clematis, Crimson King. See page 42 
RXJTIIERFOIID, N. J 
41 
