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FORREST’S HONEST SEEDS 
annual vine is more chaste, and it will quickly 
cover an old tree or an unsightly building. 
Pkt. 5c, M oz. 10c, oz. 15c, lb. 30c, lb. Si.00. 
Whitlavia—The Whitlavia, a good plant 
for baskets, vases, or pots; fine mixed. Pkt. 5c. 
ZINNIA 
The bloom is always gay and profuse, and 
the color range endless. No flowers are more 
showy. Sow seed in open ground, and trans¬ 
plant or thin out to 1 foot apart. 
Tall Double Tall varieties; mixed colors. 
Single Mixed—For bedding these are very 
effective, and are considered more artistic than 
the double-flowering sorts. Pkt. 5c. 
Striped or Zebra -Many colors, hand¬ 
somely striped. These are extremely showy. 
Pkt. 5c. 
Selected Dwarf—All choicest varieties of 
dwarf Zinnias in splendid mixture. The dwarf 
symmetrical habits of these make them desir¬ 
able bedding plants, while the tall ones may be 
thought too coarse. Pkt. 5c. 
PORTULACCAS 
The Portulacca has no equal as a low bedding 
plant for making a dazzling mass of bloom. 
Seed sown in spring commences to bloom early 
in summer and completely carpets the ground 
till frosts with a mass of the most brilliant 
bloom. One plant covers ground for two feet. 
Nothing is prettier in beds or masses. 
Single Mixed—All colors, pkt. 5c. 
Double Mixed — Blossoms resemble small 
roses. All choice colors mixed; will produce a 
large per cent, of double flowers. Pkt. 5c. 
MIGNONETTE 
Mignonette—A well-known hardy annual, 
producing dense, semi-globular spikes of exceed¬ 
ingly fragrant flowers. 
Mixture of many Sorts—Pkt. 5c. 
Golden Queen—Flowers are of a golden 
yellow hue, large and compact. A very beauti¬ 
ful variety. Pkt. 5c. 
Gabriele—New red-flowering; very sweet; 
spikes very thick; one of the best. Pkt. 5c. 
Crimson Giant—An improved large flower¬ 
ed type, with beautiful crimson blooms. Pkt. 
5c, oz. 35c. 
Parson’s White—Long white spikes. Pkt. 
5c, oz. 35c. 
MORNING GLORIES 
The Brazilian Morning Glory—Magnif¬ 
icent summer climbing annual. It grows 
with the greatest vigor and luxuriance. The 
leaves are 8 to 12 inches across, overlapping 
each other and making a dense shade. The 
vine is covered with short reddish hairs, which, 
with its immense leaves and large clusters of 
curious seed capsules, render it highly orna¬ 
mental. We know of nothing better for quick¬ 
ly covering a piazza, arbor, or tree. The flow¬ 
ers are of a beautiful rose color, and are borne 
in large clusters. 
Japanese Imperial Morning Glories — 
Their varieties of color are infinite, running 
from snow-white through all possible shades of 
blue, and of red from the palest of pink to 
darkest reds and purples. They are streaked, 
mottled, striped, marbled, and bordered in 
wonderful fashion, and sometimes show rare 
shadings of ash-gray, bronze, terra cotta, brown 
and slate-blue, colors rarely found in any other 
flowers. oz. 12c, oz. 20c. 
Morning Glories—The Convolvulus or 
Morning Glory is too well known to need a 
description. lb. 15c, lb. 45c. 
Japanese Kudzu Vine — (Jack and the 
Bean Stalk.) To this must be awarded first 
| place as the fastest-growing hardy climbing 
