Vines 
The Linn County Nurseries 

—QOpulus sterilis. Common Snowball. The well 
known old fashioned shrub. 
—Trilcobum. American Cranberry bush. 8 ft. 
One of the handsomest of Shrubs. Single 
white flowers in May and brilliant scarlet 
berries through the fall. 
WEIGELA, hendersoni. 6-8 ft. Produces deep 
rose flowers in May and June. 
—Rosea. 6-8 ft. Beautiful showy pink flowers. 
WITCH HAZEL—Hammamelis vernalis. 5-6 ft. 
Blooms in March. Retains green leaves 
very late. 
WILLOW, Pussy. Good foliage. Large, silvery 
pink catkins with yellow stamens in early 
‘spring. Forces easily. 
WINTERBERRY. See Ilex. 
VINES 
BITTERSWEET oriental, Celastrus orbiculatus. 
Large clusters of orange-scarlet fruit. More 
fruitful than the native bittersweet, but has 
smaller berries. 
—Scandens, Am. Bittersweet. The well-known 
native bittersweet having large showy orange- 
scarlet berries. 
CLEMATIS. Large Flowering. They are very 
exacting in their requirements. The soil 
should be moist and cool yet must be well 
drained, and the tops should be in the open 
but not exposed to too much heat. 
—Henryii. White. 
—Jackmani. Purple. 
—Paniculata, Japanese Clemitas. Great masses 
of small fragrant white flowers in September. 
Hardiest of all and easiest to grow. 
—Mme, Edward Andre. Carmine violet. 
IVY, Boston. Parthenccissus tricuspidata. Very — 
refined, clings closer but is less hardy than 
englemanni. The closely clinging vines make 
a dense cover of foliage in summer and the 
bare vines show intricate branching pat- 
terns in winter. For east or north walls. 
—Engleman Ivy. Parthenocissus quinque-folia 
englemanni. An improved variety of virginia 
creeper. The hardiest vine clinging to smooth 
walls, also good for arbors. 
28 
Size 
2-2% ft. 
2-3 ft. 
2-3 ft. 
2-3 ft. 
18-24 in. 
2-3 ft. 
Each 
1.15 
1.25 
1.00 
1.00 
£15 
.90 
Each 
$. .60 
.60 
1.25 
15 
OO 
Per 10 
11.00 
11.00 
8.50 
8.50 
6.50 
8.00 
Per 10 
$ 5.00 
5.00 
11.00 
1.00 
6.00 
4.50 
