Center Point, lowa Vines 
Each 
WILLOW. Purple Osier. Salix purpurea. 8-9 ft. A 10-12 .20 
dense small leafed willow particularly adapted to wet 25 for 3.00 
locations but grows anywhere. Fine for hedges and 12-18 PAs 
windbreaks. 2 DeTOr 5.00 
—Purpurea nana. Dwarf Blue Leaf Willow. 4-5 ft. A fine 9-12 in. 30 
hedge plant having a blue green color throughout the 25 for 6.25 
season. Small leaves and twigs. Trims into a very neat 
hedge. 
—Pussy. Good foliage. Large, silvery pink catkins DEBI" Allis .90 
with yellow stamens in early spring. Forces early. 
WINTERBERRY. See Ilex. 
VINES AND GROUND COVERS 
; Each 
BITTERSWEET, ORIENTAL. Celastrus Orbiculatus. A twining vine $ .60 
with heavy foliage and lots of small orange berries. A larger vine but 
berries not as showy as the America Bittersweet until leaves drop. It 
is wise to plant three or four to insure pollenation. Heavy plants. 
—Scandens, Am. Bittersweet. The well-known native bittersweet hav- .60 
ing large showy orange-scarlet berries. 
CLEMATIS. Large Flowering. They are very exacting in their requirements. 
The soil should be moist, cool and sweet yet must be well drained, and the 
tops should be in the open but not exposed to too much heat. 
White, purple or red. aD 
—Paniculata, Japanese Clemitas. Great masses of small fragrant white 1.00 
flowers in September. Hardiest of all and easiest to grow. 
EUONYMUS, fortunei, Winter Creeper. These are the hardiest of the broad- 
leaf evergreen vines. These make good ground covers under trees and 
places where there is not too much winter sun, or they will climb tree 
—Carrierei. Glossy wintercreeper. Clings good. $ 1.00 
—Colorata. Excellent ground cover. Leaves turn red in fall and re- 1.00 
main red through the winter. 
—Vegetus. Big leaf, wintercreeper, a semi-shrub with round, thick, 1.50 
leathery leaves. 
IVY, Boston, Parthenccissus tripcuspidata. Very refined, clings closer 0 
but is less hardy than englemanni. The closely clinging vines makes 
a dense cover of foliage in summer and the bare vines shown intri- 
cate branching patterns in winter. Best on east and north sides. 
—Engleman Ivy. Parthenocissus quinquefolia englemanni. An im- 50 
proved variety of virginia creeper. The hardiest vine clinging to 
smooth walls, also good for arbors. 
—St. Paul Ivy. A very small leaved variety of Boston Ivy having a more 
refined appearance. Slower growing than Boston Ivy. 1.00 
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