58 
MISS MARY E. MARTIN, FLORAL PARK, NEW YORK. 
THE NEW 
EARLY GIANT FLOWERING 
Fiery Scarlet salvia 
Tngtnietireiawnad 
This is the Salvia of all Salvias to plant. It is 
the earliest and most profuse and continuous bloom¬ 
ing of all Salvias. The flower spikes are enormous, 
of dazzling, fiery scarlet. It grows 3 y 2 feet high, 
making a dense bush, branching from top to bot¬ 
tom., and covered with scarlet plumes until frost. 
I want all of you to give this a trial this year, 
and have put the price down so you can include it 
in your orders. 
Pkt., 50 seeds, 6c. ; 3 for 15c. 
Salvia Sptendens Grandiflora. 
A much improved sort; the spikes are enor¬ 
mous in size, great in number, and very dazzling 
in color. The flower spikes are so large and heavy 
with flowers they droop gracefully, and are called 
Drooping Spikes, Bonfire, etc. Pkt., 50 seeds, 10c 
Salvia Sptendens. & s s 
The standard sort; an easy, continuous and 
persistent bloomer. These scarlet flowers surpass 
the brightest geraniums in color and quantity of 
bloom. Pkt., 50 seeds, 5c. ; y a oz., 20c. 
Salvia Fatens. ^ 
One of the most rare and beautiful of all Sal¬ 
vias ; a rich, deep sky-blue—a blue that is a blue— 
one of the richest blues of all flowers ; a perennial. 
Roots can be kept over winter in the cellar. 
Pkt., 25 seeds, 10c. 
Silvia Farinacea. ^ 
(Tlie Silver Sage.) 
It appears to run altogether to flower, hundreds 
upon hundreds of tall spikes of Silvery Lavender 
blooms rising from a dense mass of foliage during 
the entire season. Par handsomer is it, indeed, 
than most any bedding plant we know of—there 
being none of this color grown. As isolated speci¬ 
mens it is also very showy. Its long lasting and 
graceful sprays were greatly admired when shown 
at our last Exhibition. Pkt., 50 seeds, 5c. 
1 ^fhite Salvia. ^ ^ ^ ^ 
. -A beautiful new kind, having milk-white spikes 
ot flowers, making a beautiful contrast with red, 
white and blue. Pkt,, 60 seeds, 6c„ 
NEW SALVIA 
INGENIEUR CLAVENAD. 
