SPRING CATALOGUE OF SEEDS, BULBS AND PLANTS FOR 1899. 
73 
J Every garden, every cottage, every fence, wall, stump , or old tree is beautified 
flowering vines here offered. Vines are nature's draperies and are essential to ai 
tify one's home surroundings. Heautiful, beautiful vines, many* an unsightly 
lovely screen , or fence , or trellis, do theyr make, masses of beautiful blossoms and 
nish. The following selection is al 1 that can be desired among annual climbers. 
Glories and Nasturtiums are part icul arl y fine . 
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One of the prettiest vines imaginable: slender vines, 
thickly clothed with dark preen, feathery foliage of preat. 
beauty and dotted with intensely bright, velvety Tittle 
flowers that shine like little stars against their glossy back¬ 
ground of green. Fine for training to small trellises or to 
run up poles or strings.Mixed colors, white scarlet etc.5 & 10 
Gapary Bird plo\Ver. 
A dainty vine with beautiful cut-leaves and pretty deli¬ 
cate flowers of a o'/jar canary yellow. From the color of its 
blossoms, and also from a fancied resemblance of their 
shape to a bird with wings expanded, the plant obtains its 
common name. A pretty vine for the window or for a shel¬ 
tered location out of doors. 
CENTK 08 EM A ti ItANIM F 1,0 It A 
COByKA StfANDKNS. 
Gcptroseipa Grapdiflora, 
This new vine has come to stay. It is easy to grow,quick 
to bloom, beautiful in tlower and leaf, and is a hardy peren¬ 
nial, lasting for years. It will flower the first season from 
Seed, and autumn frosts will find it, still in bloom. It is a low 
graceful climber, growing only six to eight feet high, which 
makes it far more suitable for a low trellis or lattice work, 
or to train around a door or window in summer, than a tall¬ 
er, larger-leaved vine would be, and its masses of large in¬ 
verted pea-shaped blossoms, two inches or more across, and 
borne in clusters of four to eight flowers together, are very 
showy and pleasing. Fill a small vase with its dainty, bright 
flowers and foliage alone, and see how lovely thev are lor 
cutting. In color they range from rosy violet and reddish 
purple, with exquisite feathering or bordering of pure white 
to pure snow white. The rosy violet shades are most com¬ 
mon, but as the buds and the back of the flowersof the dark 
varieties are pure white, each vine has the appearance of 
bearing different colored (lowers at once. The winning way 
in which the flowers look up at one has won them the fanci¬ 
ful name of Look-at-me Vine. Per pkt. 
Mixed — All colors . 5 & 10 
Pure White—A fine novelty of this year . 10 & 20 
MAURANDYA. 
This vine is not 
grown half as much as 
it deserves to be. It has 
an exceedingly grace¬ 
ful habit, very hand¬ 
some, dense foliage, 
pretty, fox-glove like 
blossoms borne in 
great profusion, and 
keeps green until after 
severe frosts. A beau¬ 
tiful vine for hanging 
baskets,with its dainty 
white, maroon, and 
rose-colored blossoms. 
jyiorim>£ Glories. 
The old-fashioned Morning Glory, as easy to grow as any 
weed. Brilliant, beautiful flowers of every shade of white, 
blue, pink, scarlet and variegated. The standard vine. 
Pure White .5 & 10 j Dark Blue . . 5&10 
Dark Red .5 & 10 | Black A novel color.5 & 10 
Mixed Colors- Per oz., 15.5 & 10 
One packet each of above Jive soris 15c. 
Gobsea. 
One of the finest of all climbers, equally good for out of 
door or for house culture. Pretty foliage and large, beauti¬ 
ful hell-shaped flowers that open a clear green, but turn to a 
lovely purplish blue. Plant seed edgewise in moist but not 
wet soil: cover to prevent evaporation, and do not, water 
again unless soil becomes very dry. When seedlings ap¬ 
pear water with great moderation until out of the seed leaf. 
Scandens Fine bluish purple. 5 & 10 
Alba -Fine pure white.10 & 20 
