ANCHUSA CAPENSIS OR CAPE 

 FOR-GET-ME-NOT. 



A hardy annual of more than ordinary beauty. It grows about 

 two feet high, branching freely and bearing a profusion of the most 

 lovely flowers, similar in all respects to the Forget-me-not, though 

 the blossoms are much larger and of finer color. It is always 

 taken for a beautiful, large-flowering Forget-me-not, and for bou- 



Suets and cut flowers it is indeed superior to it. Its color is a 

 eep, clear, brilliant blue with a pure white eye ; one of the rarest 

 and most lovely shades of that color. It blooms early and con- 

 tinues all summer. Pkt.. 100 seeds. 3 cts. 



Arabis Alplna. 



ARABIS ALPINA. 



The pure white flowers groxo so uniform and thickly that it aives 

 the (ffect of a sheet of snow. Plants perjectly hardy. The earliest, 

 prettiest spring flower. The spreading tufts are densely clothed 

 with neat, lively green leaves and covered with pure white flowers 

 of the most lovely effect, conspicuous in great distance, especially 

 in large masses on rockeries or broad edgings for parkroads, hav- 

 ing the advantage of braving the greatest drought during summer 

 and always looking neat. Pkt., 150 seeds, 4- cts. 



Mrs. Katie Johnson, Chanute, Kans., February 26th, 1898, writes:— I had 

 some lovely Pinks Phlox and Snap Dragon last year, raised from yourse^ds, 

 and I wish yon suceess- 



