FORREST’S HONEST SEEDS 
73 
best to keep the young plants in a cool shady 
place during the summer months. Pkt. 5c. 
Damascena — (Nigella.) Love in a Mist 
or Devil in the Bush. A compact, free-flower¬ 
ing plant, with finely cut foliage, curious look¬ 
ing flowers and seed-pods; of easy culture, grow¬ 
ing in any garden soil; hardy annuals; blue and 
white mixed; 1 foot. All sorts mixed. Pkt. 5c. 
Mimosa— (Sensitive plant.) Curious plant. 
Leaves fold together when touched. Pkt. 5c. 
Nicotiana—Sweet scented tobacco plant. 
This plant attains a height of about two feet 
and produces an abundance of large, pure white 
flowers of delicious fragrance. If taken up in 
the fall, cut back and potted, they will bloom 
all winter. Pkt. 5c. 
Mimulus — (Monkey Flower.) Extremely 
rich, spotted and marbled annual which is al¬ 
ways admired for its brillancy and beauty. 
Many colors. Pkt. 5c. 
Oenothera—(Evening Primrose.) Neat 
plants, with large, saucer-shaped flowers, white 
or golden-yellow; open at dusk; emit a delight¬ 
ful perfume. Pkt. 5c. 
SUNBEAM PETUNIAS 
For freedom of bloom, vari¬ 
ety of colors, ease of culture, 
and effectiveness, these rank 
with the Asters, Phlox, and 
Verbenas. If only a little 
care is bestowed upon them, 
Petunias will produce their 
handsome,sweet-scented flow¬ 
ers in their delicate and gor¬ 
geous colors throughout the 
whole summer. 
Grandiflora—Finest mix¬ 
ed. A choice strain, includ¬ 
ing the large flowering varie¬ 
ties. Pkt. 5c, ^4 oz. 35c. 
Inimitable Blotched and 
Striped—Flowers with star¬ 
shaped blotches of symmetri¬ 
cal form; fine for bedding and 
window boxes. Pkt. 5c, ^4 
oz. 20c. 
Inimitable Dwarf Double—New dwarf flowering class of double petunias, plants bushy 
and compact, about 1 foot high, loaded with large double blossoms of every color; striped, fringed, 
etc. Pkt. 5c. 
Salpiglossis — Beautiful garden annuals 
about 18 inches high, bearing large Petunia¬ 
like flowers of gorgeous colors, laced and vein¬ 
ed. Pkt. 5c. 
Large flowering, finest mixed, pkt. 5c. 
Dwarf varieties of finest mixture, pkt. 5c. 
Scarlet Sage— (Salvia.) The Salvia Splen- 
dens or scarlet sage is a standard bedding plant 
that keeps the garden bright with color until 
late in the autumn. This plant lends itself 
to many uses; it makes a good pot plant, does 
well in window boxes, and is useful for cutting 
to give color. Its best use, however, is as a 
hedge or border plant, where long, broad bands 
of intense color are desirable. Pkt. 5c. 
Forget-Me-Not — (Myosotis.) The For¬ 
get-me-nots are among the sweetest and most 
admired of all hardy plants. Blooms in a few 
months from seed. 
Mixed—All sorts. Sends up its delicate 
sprays of bloom in spring and often continues 
in bloom all summer. 
