10 
JOHN DAWRANCE, OGDENSBURG, N. V. 
Mar gold. 
best in a light soil and a sunny 
Double African Tall, all shades 
Double French, Dwarf, shades of 
Marigold. There are no finer plants 
grown for garden decoration than 
the Marigolds. The African vari- 
ety is the taller and produces 
flowers of all one shade of color 
in each flower, while the French 
are smaller in growth and flower 
and come in many different 
shades of yellow and brown, and 
many striped and spotted. For 
early blooming the seed should 
be started early in the house or 
hot-bed, or good results may be 
had by sowing in the open ground 
when the weather has become 
settled and warm. They succeed 
exposure. 
of yellow. Pkt. 5 cts. 
yellow and brown. Pkt. 5 cts. 
Mignonette. No garden is complete without the Mignonette. Although 
many fragrant flowers are grown that exceed the Mignonette in beau- 
ty there is no flower better known and so generally grown for its frag- 
rance. The best results are had with this popular annual by sowing 
in the open ground as early in the spring as the soil can be worked, 
sowi the seed thinly as they require plenty of room. Another sowing 
should be made a month later for fall blooming. They do not trans- 
plant well, so 'he seed should be sown where they are to grow. 
Mignonette. (Mammoth Flowering.) 
The largest. and finest of this most 
popular annual. The large indi- 
vidual florets are borne in dense 
spikes on long, strong stems and 
are delightfully fragrant. Pkt 10 
cts. 
Large Flowering Variety. The com- 
mon sweet Mignonette. Pkt. 5 
cts. 
Morning Glory. The popular and pret- 
ty old-fashioned climber of many 
colors. Pkt. 5 cts. 
Imperial Japanese Morning Glory. It 
is almost impossible to accurately 
M iqnonette. describe the colors of this giant 
variety. There are all the shades 
of fed from flesh pink to the darkest crimson, through all tne shades 
of blue to tne deepest purple. Others, pure white, smoky grey, brown 
any many comoinations of these colors. The flowers are enormous 
some of them as large as saucers. The edges are frequently frilled! 
rutiled and scalloped in many curious and beaucaul ways. To obtain 
the best results they should be planted in rauier poor soil. Pkt. 10c. 
Myosotis. (Forget-me-not.) Charming little plants with small star-like 
flowers. The plants prefer a moist situation. Per pkt. 5 cts. 
