FLOWERING VINES 
Each Per2 Perl0 
Strong Plants, 2 year, No. 1...$1.00 $1.90 $ 9.00 
BITTERSWEET (Celastrus scandens). Native vine, 
producing bunches of orange-red berries, retaining 
their color over a long period. Popular for Winter 
bouquets. Plant two for pollination. 
BOSTON IVY (Ampelopsis veitchi). Clings closely to 
any wall without support. The leaves grow very 
thickly overlapping each other, forming a tapestry 
of rare charm which changes in Autumn to beautiful 
shades of crimson and yellow. 
EVERBLOOMING HONE YSUCKLE (Lonicera heck- 
rotti). From June to October the plants are covered 

with hundreds of fragrant flowers, flame-scarlet out- ‘ — 
side and gold inside. Equally fine for porch, trellis, Trumpet Vine 
or fence. It is perfectly hardy, and thrives in sun 
or partial shade. 
PURPLE WISTERIA (Wisteria sinensis). We offer 
grafted plants of the Chinese Wisteria which is char- 
acterized by large, fragrant flowers. They come 
into bloom very young and all the flowers in each 
cluster open at about the same time before any leaves 
appear. 
SCARLET TRUMPET HONEYSUCKLE (Lonicera 
sempervirens). Although lacking in fragrance, the 
flowers of this vine are very showy, a bright scarlet 
and shaped like a trumpet. They appear in June and 
continue all Summer until late September, followed 

by attractive yellow berries. Thrives in sunny as well Everblooming Honeysuckle 
as shady locations. = sg eee aE aie 
y Purple Wisteria 
SILVER LACE VINE (Polygonum auberti). The fast- 
est growing hardy vine, usually growing 15 to 20 ft. 
the first year. From the middle of Summer until late 
Fall covered with thousands of white flowers. 
SWEET AUTUMN CLEMATIS (Clematis panicu- 
lata). Fragrant, star-like flowers, creamy-white, 
an inch across, are produced in reckless abund- 
ance in September. Later, its feather-like seed 
pods create the illusion of a second blooming 
period. Grows 20-30 ft. with unusual rapidity. 
TRUMPET VINE (Bignonia radicans). Orange-red, 
trumpet-shaped blossoms make it one of our most 
decorative vines. The flowers are 5 to 6 in. ong. They 
appear in clusters for many weeks in Midsummer. 

