PLANTING VINES 
For vines always dig the hole a foot away from a post or wall, never 
closer. Runners of vines may be tied to a post, but it is best to lay the 
runners of English Ivy and Boston Ivy on the ground along the wall 
and permit young growth to find its own way up. 
Climbing Hydrangea vines are very woody and of slow growth. 
Do not cut them back. As soon as plant starts growing well, its 
young shoots will adhere to a wall without effort on your part. 
LATHYRUS - Perennial or Everlasting Pea 
Trailing plants suitable for growing on arches, pergolas, trellises, or 
trailing over rough banks. Stems are annual and die down in autumn. 
Culture. Grow in ordinary soil. Train up arches, pergolas, trellises, or 
fences, or may be left rambling over rough banks, where they cannot 
over-run choice plants. Plant in autumn or spring, 3 feet apart. 
Latifolius, Pink Beauty Each 65c, Three $1.65, Doz. $5.25 
Large racemes of pleasing deep rose flowers, 
Latifolius, Red Each 65c, Three $1.65, Doz. $5.25 
The well known red Everlasting Pea. 
Latifolius, White Pearl Each 65c, Three $1.65, Doz. $5.25 
A_great improvement on the older white variety, the stems giving from 
12 to 15 flowers each. 
On ICOra - Htoneysuckle 
Their climbing qualities are all that can be desired, but the fragrance 
of their flowers makes their strongest bid for favor. They are perhaps 
to the old-fashioned garden as a vine what the Hollyhocks are as a 
plant. They simply should be there somewhere. 
Goldflame Each $1.00, Three $2.75, Doz. $8.50 
Immense, showy clusters of trumpet-shaped buds and fragrant blooms. 
The outside of the petals is brilliant flame-pink, the inside a creamy 
golden yellow. Dark glossy foliage adds to its charm. The plants can be 
sheared to form a hedge or allowed to grow naturally as a vine or shrub. 
Blooms freely from early spring until heavy frost. 
Halliana Each 75c, Three $2.00, Doz. $6.00 
An intermingling of white and yellow. Fragrant; most satisfactory. 
Henryi Each $1.00, Three $2.75, Doz. $8.50 
The Evergreen Honeysuckle. There are practically no vines which retain 
their foliage during the winter in the colder parts of the country. 
Therefore, the Henryi Honeysuckle is a very valuable variety. Its long 
clean dark green leaves remain on the vine all winter. The flowers, 
while fragrant, are of no importance, but the blue-black berries pro- 
duced in autumn add materially to the charm of this plant. Does well 
in shade and is also an excellent windbreak. Hardy as an Oak. 
Sempervirens Magnifica Each $1.50, Three $4.00, Doz. $15.00 
A magnificent Evergreen Honeysuckle with coral colored blooms of 
large size and beautiful blue-gray-green foliage. The brilliant and 
cheerful flowers are freely produced; a worth-while novelty which is 
particularly well adapted where a not too large space must be covered, 
because it does not grow as big as any of the other kinds offered. This 
variety is the most brilliantly colored of all the Honeysuckles. Hardy 
anywhere and blooms from spring till frost. In our opinion the best of 
the lot. 
POLYGONUM .- Silver Lace Vine 
Auberti (Silver Lace Vine) Each $1.25, Three $3.50, Doz. $12.00 
One of tne* fastest growing vines in cultivation. The foliage is perfectly 
clean. No insects bother it. It has no pests and it grows 15 to 20 feet 
the first year after planting. In summer it is covered from top to toe 
with foamy sprays of white flowers. It requires a warm, sunny exposure 
and well-drained sandy soil, fairly rich. If given these conditions its 
. 2 growth is astounding. Will cling to any kind of support, and it will 
Hardy Baltica Tvy- F cover an unsightly building, wall or barn in two years time. Be sure and 
Hedera Helix Gracilis plant only in full sun, eastern or southern exposure 
Clematis Montana Rubens (See page 135) [137] 
Clematis Paniculata 
(See page 135) 
Lonicera Halliana 
