CLIMBING VINES 

Hedera helix on Sundial 
CORAL VINE (Antigonon) 
Leptopus. Blooms freely from June until 
fall. Blossoms a very delicate pink, 
produced in racemes. A very desirable 
vine for the South. Fast grower. Each 
Dey Peavy ao ti eae ee, ae pe nO 
NOTICE. Due to congestion and 
resulting delays during the Christmas 
holidays, no nursery stock will be 
shipped during the period Dec. 16 
through Dec. 28. 




CONFEDERATE JASMINE 
Trachelospermum 
Jasminoides (also known as Rbyncho- 
spermum jasminoides). The fragrance, 
in early spring, of the starry white 
blossoms of Confederate Jasmine is 
one long to be remembered. Evergreen. 
Leaves dark green. Each 
O-TISDOLS Ire urea Te ee gh > $0 75 

ENGLISH IVY (Hedera) 
Helix. English Ivy, with its dark green 
leaves, is excellent for covermg brick 
walls, stumps, or any location where it 
is desirable to have an evergreen vine. 
Often used as a ground-cover. Each 
Open-ground plants.............$0 30 
CLIMBING FIG (Ficus) 
Pumila. (Sometimes catalogued Ficus 
repens). This lovely evergreen vine 
clings very closely to any surface on 
which it climbs. Excellent on chimneys 
or masonry. Hardy south of the latitude 
of Montgomery, Ala. 

Each 
SaT DOTS aihek ets ope We lee ae POR 
YELLOW JESSAMINE 
Carolina (Gelsemium sempervirens). A 
hardy, woody twiner whose brilliant, 
tubular, yellow flowers are one of the 
first indications of the coming of spring. 
Glossy evergreen foliage. Each 
eee 80504 

Open-ground plants...... 
BAMBOO 
The graceful branches and dainty foliage 
of the Bamboos deserve a prominent place 
in gardens of the Lower South. The clump 
sorts can be readily kept in bounds. They 
make excellent screens and windbreaks. 
Bamboos will thrive in practically any 
type of well-drained soil if supplied plenty 
of plant-food and moisture. 
Bambusa argentea. Grows 25 to 35 
feet high. Its long, slender stems, 
slightly drooping from the weight of the 
masses of deep green foliage, form one 
of the most graceful plants in the garden. 
The clump type so much in demand. Each 
Small clumps, 6 to 10 canes.... ..$1 50 
Bambusa argentea striata. Green stems 
striped yellow near the base and with a 
stripe down the green foliage. The 
variation is most pronounced in young 
plants. Each 
Small clumps, 6 to 10 canes.... ..$1 50 
Phyllostachys aurea. A running type. 
Ultimate height is 30 to 40 feet. At- 
tractive light green. Canes make ex- 
cellent fishing-poles, and are often used 
here in harvesting pecans. Control by 
digging up runners. $1.50 each. 

We guarantee all of our nursery stock 
to be well grown, true to name, and prop- 
erly handled and packed. Our responsi- 
bility ceases on delivery of goods to trans- 
portation company. All claims for shortage 
must be made promptly. 

“T recerved the Pecan trees in good 
condition. They were the best Iot of trees 
I have ever purchased and am well pleased 
with them. I like the way they are rooted. 
. . —Rev. L. O. R., Leesville, S. C. 

TUNG-OIL—A Vital Necessity 
ALEURITES FORDI 
The Chinese Tung-Oil Tree was intro- 
duced into this country from China by the 
U. S. Department of Agriculture about 
30 years ago. It is valuable for its oil, 
which is used in paints, varnishes, and 
lacquers, and in a rapidly increasing 
number of commercial products. 
Tung-Oil has been so vital to the war 
effort that since 1941 it has been under 
strict control by the government. When 
controls are removed we will again have 
annual consumption in the United States 
up to 150 million pounds of Tung-Oil. 
This is more than fifteen times our greatest 
domestic production. America has a ready 
market for its entire production of Tung- 
Oil for many years to come. 
Prices of whole dry fruit at the thirteen 
U. S. Tung mills ranged last season up to 
$100 per ton. Considering the ease and 
economy with which this crop can be 
produced, there is not a more promising 
tree crop for the South. 
Beginning at the Atlantic seaboard in 
Georgia, the principal Tung-Oil territory 
extends west through north and middle 
Florida, the southern third of the states of 
Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, 
into Gulf coastal Texas. All lands in this 
WIGHT NURSERIES - CAIRO, GEORGIA 
area are not adapted to Tung production, 
so sites for Tung culture should be se- 
lected with the greatest care. 

AT-year-old Fairchild Tung-Oil Tree grow- 
ing at Wight Nurseries, Cairo, Georgia 
Fairchild. This vigorous, highly pro- 
ductive variety of Tung, originating here 
in Cairo, and named for the father of the 
RINTE 
Cs IN J 
ush 
American Tung industry, Dr. David 
Fairchild, has been tested at Cairo in a 
budded orchard for eight years with ex- 
cellent results. 
The tree is a vigorous, symmetrical, 
and regular bearer. Outstanding in its 
ability to bear a heavy crop of fruit and 
at the same time produce a large number 
of terminals for the following year’s crop. 
Fruit is small, borne in clusters, with 
very thin husk, giving high proportion of 
meats to whole fruit. Oil content of whole 
dry fruit more than 25 per cent, from which 
commercial mills should recover 21 per 
cent. Our experimental orchard, at six 
years old, produced 2260 pounds of whole 
dry fruit per acre. 
After thoroughly testing the Fairchild 
variety, we can recommend it without 
reservation for planting throughout the 
Tung-Oil territory. 
All Fairchild trees will be cut baék to 
30 inches before shipment. 
Prices: 1-yr. buds, 3 to 5 ft., $1 each; 
$7.50 for 10; $60 per 100. 2-yr. buds, 
$1.50 each; $10 for 10; $75 per 100. 
SELECTED SEEDLINGS 
Grown from seed, carefully selected in 
our own orchards. Each 10 100 
l-yr., 2 to4ft.....$0 50 $3 00 $20 00 
Ask for quantity prices. ‘ 
23 
