ELLIS BBOTHEJSS’ CATALOOVE. 
5 !l 
white. Hardy perennial, three to five feet. Our seed is from the celebrated Chaters 
strain. No better can be found. Finest mixed. Price lo < 5 ls. 
Heliotrope. Fine mixture of older sorts. Price lo i 5 ls. 
Heliotrope, Le/noines Giant Hybrids. New varieties with immense heads of 
blooms. In open ground these have often measured twelve to fifteen inches across. 
Color from almost white to deep indigo. Very fragrant. This novelty comes from 
France. Price 15 < 5 ls. 
Humulus, Jafonicus. (Japanese Hop.) Same as the following, except with 
plain green leaf; a fine summer climber. Price 5 As. 
Humulus Japonicus, Variegated. It is an annual, a very rapid grower, useful 
and ornamental. The leaves, — averaging from six to seven inches across — are beauti- 
fully and distinctly marked with silvery white, yellowish green and dark green, partly 
regularly striped, as well as marbled and blotched. It is not injured by insects, does 
not suffer from the heat. This plant will rapidly cover porches, fences, summer 
houses and rustic arches. Three-fourths plants come variegated. Price 10 As. 
Lathyrus (Perennial Peas). The Perennial Peas, while lacking the delicious 
fragrance of the Sweet Peas, are equally as beautiful, and are very valuable from the 
fact that they are in full bloom early in the spring, before the others have begun to 
flower. They live year after year, bearing magnificent clusters of flowers. Perfectly 
hardy and grow six to eight feet high. Not new, but not as well known as should be. 
Lathyrus, Purple. Or dark rose. Price 5 As. 
Lathyrus, Splendens. Dark red, fine cut foliage. Price to As. 
Lathyrus, Pure White. Fine for cutting, lixtra. Price to As. 
Lathyrus, Mixed. Of above. ' Price to As. 
Morning Glory, Imperial Japanese, (new). These grand new Morning Glories 
from Japan are remarkable for the large size and exquisite new colors of the flowers, 
with magnificent foliage, often beautifully blotched. Of strong, robust growth. 
They are of all shades of red, from the most delicate pink to the most brilliant crim- 
son, maroon, blue, and pale lavender to richest indigo and royal purple; also white, 
yellow, gray, slate, copper color, brown, bronze, almost black, and many other odd 
shades. Many have a distinct marginal band of a different color from the rest of the 
flower, and some are as elegantly spotted ; others are striped, blotched, mottled, rayed, 
and shaded, often having seven or eight colors and tints in one flower. Many are of 
very odd and singular forms. Price 10 As. 
Morning Glory (Convolulus). Old-fashioned sorts mixed, still one of the best 
quick growing climbers. Price 5 As. ; oz. 15 As. 
Marigold, Bl Dorado (or Dahlia-flowered). The large, bushy plants, of good 
habit, are each a ball of brilliant colors, manj- single plants having seventy-five to one 
hundred flowers in full bloom at one time. The flowers are globular, as perfectly 
double as a Dahlia, and measuring three inches across. Price, mixed, 5 As. 
Marigold. Finest dwarf varieties ; flowers in profusion, in shades from sulphur 
color to dark orange ; mixed. Price 5 As. 
Marigold, Prince of Orange. Beautiful new variety, florets being striped with an 
intense shade of orange. For effective and persistent blooming in beds and groups it 
has no superior, its beautiful flowers being produced from early spring until late in 
the autumn. Price 5 As. 
Mignonette, Matchet. Of French origin, and a most desirable variety. The 
plants are dwarf and vigorous, of pyramidal growth, with very thick, dark green 
leaves. They throw up stout flower stocks, terminated by long and broad spikes of 
deliciously scented flowers, of a red tint. Price 5 As. ; oz., 40 As. 
