—32- 
MISS EMMA Y. WHITE. 
MORNING GLORY. 
Convolvulus Major. If you have only 
the common Morning Glories that have 
been self-sowing in your garden for years, 
you have no idea of the rich and varied 
colors a package of fresh seed will give. 
Try it. Oz., 1 2 cts. ; Pkt, 2 cts 
Double White Morning; Glory. A 
beautiful Morning Glory, the “White Tas¬ 
sel ,” very double and fringed, with delicate 
purple or red marks in the center, resem¬ 
bling a dainty white tassel. It might be 
called an “All-day Gloiy,” as it remains 
open the entire day. A large percentage, 
but not all, will come double. Pkt., 6 cts. 
NICOTIANA. 
A night-blooming tobacco t a lovely flower for the garden 
or window. The plant attains a height of three feet, and at 
evening or early morning is covered-with large, pure white, 
star-shaped flowers of delicious fragrance. In the house it 
can be kept in flower the whole season by cutting back from 
time to time; and out of doors if the crop of blossoms be¬ 
comes small remove the old branches, and new shoots will 
soon spring up. Annual. Pkt., 4 cts. 
MOON FLOWER (Ipomraa Grandlflora). 
The genuine Southern Moon flower, of whose beauty and fracrrance so much is told. It is a rapid. 
NIGELlA (Love-in-a-Mist). 
An old-fashioned annual, of easy and 
rapid growth, known also as “Devil-in-a- 
Bush ; “ “Ragged Tady,” etc., from the 
way in which its pretty blue flowers are 
curiously enveloped in a thick, fine feath¬ 
ery foliage. Pkt., 2 cts. 
for further hints ns to care, Annual. Pkt., 8 cts. 
Randolph, Vt., Feb. 18, 1897.—“Wo 
trouble with your seeds; all como." 
Mas. E. L. Iluoou. 
