

miss e;ama v. white. 



MORNING GLORY. 



Convolvulus Major. If you have only 

 the common Morning Glories that have 

 been self-sowing in your garden for years, 

 you have no idea of the rich and varied 

 colors a package of fresh seed will give. 

 Try it. Oz., 1« cts. ; Pkt., 2 cts 



Double White Horning Glory. A 

 beautiful Morning Glory, the "White Tas- 

 sel," very double and fringed, with delicate 

 purple or red marks in the center, resem- 

 bling a dainty white tassel. It might be 

 called an "All-day Glory," as it remains 

 open the entire day. A large percentage, 

 but not all, will come double. Pkt., 6 cts. 



NICOTIANA. 



A night-blooming tobacco, a lovely flower for the garden 

 or window. The plant attains a height of three feet, and at 

 evening or early morning is covered with large, pure white, 

 star-shaped flowers of delicious fragrance. In the house it 

 can be kept in flower the whole season bj' cutting back from 

 time to time; and out of doors if the crop of blossoms be- 

 comes small remove the old branches, and new shoots will 

 soon spring up. Annual. Pkt., 4 cts. 



NIG ELLA (Love-in-a-Mist). 



An old-fashioned annual, of easy and 

 rapid growth, known also as "Devil-in-a- 

 Bush," 'Ragged L,ady," etc., from the 

 way in which its pretty blue flowers are 

 curiouslv enveloped in a thick, fine feath- 

 ery foliage. Pkt., 2ctS. 



MOON FLOWER (Ipomoea Grandiflora). 



The genuine Southern Moonflower, of whose beauty and fragrance so much is told. It is a rapid, 

 robust climber, a single vine often covering a whole porch, which in the summer twilight will be cov- 

 ered with immense white blossoms, five inches across and very fragrant. One lady writes: "Stran- 

 ?ers passing bj' always stop to admire my Moonflowers, and the family never tire of their beauty and 

 ragrance." The seed has a very hard shell, and the tiny germ needs assistance in cutting its way 



through. If the seeds are slightly filed and soaked they will hardly ever fail, 

 for further hints as to care. Annual. Pkt., 8 cts. 



cutting 

 See Cultural Directions 



Moonflower. 



Randolph, Vt., Feb. 18, 1897. —"No 

 trouble with your seeds; all come." 

 Mrs. E. L. Bcooks. 



