Yatures 
Hall’s Honeysuckle 
Tht Villts 


PLANTING AIDS: 
Vines require the same planting 
methods as shrubs. If they are to 
grow on a building, don’t plant too 
close, 1 foot away is good and 12 
feet is better. 
If you wish to train the Wisteria 
to a tree form, remove side shoots 
and train the strongest leader to a 
stake to the desired height. Allow it 
to branch at the top only. Stake 
may be removed after a year or two 
as the plant will then be strong 
enough to support itself. Old Wis- 
teria plants that do not bloom should 
be heavily root pruned. 
Spring planting only. 
BOSTON IVY 
The most valuable plant for covering 
walls of all kinds. Dense, lustrous green 
foliage becomes a flame in the fall. The 
blue berries add attractiveness and persist 
well into the winter. 2-year plants, 90c 
each; $2.30 for 3; $6.50 for 10. 
ORIENTAL BITTERSWEET 
(Celastrus) 
One of the finest for winter bouquets. The 
brilliant orange berries are easily grown on 
your own plants in your own yard. The 
superior Oriental Bittersweet which we list 
is much more certain to fruit and be com- 
pletely covered with the decorative berries 
throughout the fall and winter. It is a 
rapid grower which does well in either sun 
or shade but fruits much more prolifically 
in full sunshine. Heavy, field-grown plants, 
90c each; $2.30 for 3; $6.50 for 10. 
GLORIOUS NEW 
HYBRID WISTERIAS 
Lovely new hybrids—long, glorious clus- 
ters of dainty, pea-shaped flowers. Long 
blooming period and usually start to bloom 
the first year after planting. New varieties 
may be trained in tree form that will pro- 
duce large, sturdy trunks. (See Planting 
Aids.) 
Floribunda Rosea. The fin- 
est pink Wisteria. Very 
profuse blooms. Clusters 
12 feet long. 
Kyushaku. Translated, this 
means “nine feet.” The 
lavender flower clusters 
actually do attain a 
length of three feet. 
Violacea Plena. Double 
flowers of the deepest 
color. Dark purple clus- 
ters 14% feet long. 
The above in fine, 
2-yr., grafted plants: 
$2.00 each; any 3 for $5.50. 
[14] 

Goldflame Honeysuckle 
HONEYSUCKLE 
Goldflame. An exquisite variation of an 
old favorite. The immense, showy clus- 
ters of trumpetshaped buds open into 
fragrant flower clusters up to 7 inches 
across. The inside color is a lovely 
creamy, golden yellow, while the reverse 
is a brilliant flame-pink. Dark glossy 
foliage. Can be sheared to a hedge or 
shrub, despite its natural tendency to 
vine. Always in bloom from spring until 
heavy frost. 2-year plants, $1.00 each; 
$2.50 for 3. 
Halliana (Hall’s Honeysuckle). The old 
favorite used for so many years as a 
ground cover, to hide unsightly fences 
and walls, and to hold steep banks. The 
evergreen foliage is most attractive and 
during the summer the fragrant cream 
colored flowers appear. Excellent for 
trellises. A universal favorite for many 
years. Plant 18 inches apart each way. 
2-year plants, 60c each; $1.50 for 3; 
$4.00 for 10; $8.00 for 25. 
SILVER LACE VINE 
Where quick coverage on a trellis or a 
screen for a porch or any other location is 
desired, there is nothing like the Silver 
Lace Vine. The foliage is a good shade of 
green to the very end and the fluffy, 
cream-white flowers are borne in late sum- 
mer and fall in great sprays. Even the 
seed pods that follow them are most at- 
tractive. Plants will often grow as much as 
20 feet in a single year and are quite 
easily trimmed to keep them from getting 
out of bounds. 2-year plants, 90c each; 
2.30 for 3; $6.50 for 10. 

Silver Lace Vine 
