MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. 



FEVERFEW. 



Matricaria Fximia, Tom 



Thumb. This is a handsome 

 double white Feverfew, bearing 

 a profusion of button-like flow- 

 ers, suitable for out-door or for 

 pot culture. Half-hardy peren- 

 nial, although it may be treated 

 as an annual. Will bloom the first 

 year if started early. Pkt., 4c. 

 Partheni folium Aureum, 

 Golden Feather. This is 

 the variety so much used as an 

 edging plant, or to give contrast 

 to the foliage bed. Its quill- 

 petaled flowers, forming little 

 balls of golden yellow encased 

 in a fringy white border, are in 

 fine contrast to the glossy yel- 

 low of its finely-cut foliage. 

 Hardy perennial. "Pkt., 2 cts. 



Forum, Ark., March, 1897.— "I was much 



pleased with your seeds last year. Some of 



my Abutilon plants made a growth of five 



feet, with branches half an inch through." 



Mrs. S. L. Stafford. 



FLOWERING MAPLE (Abutilon). 



The florists advertise each year new and desirable varie- 

 ties of these always popular plants, but the seed here offered 

 will give you as choice a selection, being grown from many 

 of the newer and charming kinds. The colors range from 

 pure white, straw, and yellow, to rose, crimson and scarlet, 

 with the beautiful veins and markings peculiar to these del- 

 icate swinging bells. They bloom from seed when ten or 

 twelve inches high. Mixed. Pkt., 6 cts. 



FORGET-ME-NOT, VICTORIA. 



As popular now as in days of old when a German knight 

 lost his life in trying to secure, for his lady-love, the tiny 

 blue flower, growing on the banks of the Danube, crying, as 

 he fell into the river, "Vergissmein nicht!" (Forget me not), 

 thus naming this beautiful flower and making it an emblem 

 of fidelitv. A charming, deep blue variety. Perennial. 

 Pkt., 4 cts. 



Golden Feather. 



FOUR O'CLOCK 



(Mirabilis Jalapa). 



Also called "Marvel of Peru," and by th« 

 French, "Beauty of the Night." The Foui 

 O'Clock is so easily grown, and makes suck 

 a beautiful show the latter part of the da5 

 and early morning, that it always finds s 

 place in the annual garden. It should be 

 grown for the children, if for no other pur- 

 pose, from which they may be allowed to 

 pick freely, they so enjoy its bright colors 

 and sweet fragrance. Mixed, all colors, some 

 with dark green and others with yellowish- 

 green foliage. Pkt., 3 Cts. 



Wichita, Kans., Oct. 4, 1897.— "I ordered a good many 

 seeds of you last spring and am much pleased with them, 

 I have recommended you to many of my friends, and h >p« 

 you will receive a large order from this neighborhood 

 next year." Mrs. Emma Teverbauoh 



