MVOSOTb, Forget-me-not. ” hllCOl'IANA, Star Flower. 
Everybody loves the delicate little Forget-me- 
not. The flowers are mostly exquisite blue or 
pink in charming clusters. They like a moist, 
rather shady place. Fine for beds, also pots. 
Sown in autumn the plants bloom before the 
hot weather comes, and are usually more satis¬ 
factory than when sown in spring. Elegantis- 
sima, White. Grandiflora, Royal Blue. Alpes- 
tris rosea, rose. Victoria, White, Rose, Blue, 
Distinction, azure. Special Mixture. Stricta 
Grandiflora mixed. Dissitiflora Blue. Palus- 
tris mixed. Complete Special Mixture. 
Nasturtium, Tom Thumb. Beautiful an¬ 
nuals for beds, borders and 
window boxes. The foliage is 
handsome, clean and attractive, 
and the flowers large, showy, of 
delicate texture and of a great 
variety of colors and variega¬ 
tions. Plants start quickly from 
seeds, and begin to bloom ear¬ 
ly, continuing throughout the 
season. We have Pearl White, 
Lutea Yellow, Golden King, 
Beauty of Malvern Orange-scar¬ 
let, Atrococcineus scarlet, Em¬ 
press of India Crimson, Coccin- 
eus Brilliant scarlet, Aurora Terra Cotta, Rose, Brilliant 
Dark scarlet. Chameleon Variegated. Separate or Mixed. 
Memesia, very beautiful annuals that 
should be better known. In beauty and profusion they 
are rivals of the Phlox Drummondii, and are desirable for 
both beds and pots. The colors are very striking, and 
many show distinct variegations. Dwarf Compact: White 
Gem, Blue Gem, Triumph, Tricolor. Special Mixture. 
Strumosa Tigrina, Variegata. Coccinea, Mixed. Strumosa 
Dwarf, Yellow, White, Mixed Complete Special Mixture. 
Nemopliila, spreading little annuals with 
large, bright flowers, mostly blue, often spotted. Very 
pretty. Do best sown in autumn. Discoidalis, brown 
eyed white. Insignis White, Sky Blue, Marginiata, Cram- 
beoides, blue. Complete Special Mixture. 
Nig-ella, Love in a Mist, Devil in a Bush. 
Charming hardy annu¬ 
als of easy culture, the 
flowers large, double, 
exquisite in form, set 
off by flue-cut foliage. 
Sow in the garden ear¬ 
ly, or sow in autumn. 
Miss .Tekyll, Sky Blue, 
the finest variety, new. 
White, flue. D w a r f 
White, Blue, Mixed. 
Hispanica, Blue,White, 
Mixed. The seeds of N. 
Damascena are deli¬ 
ciously fragrant. Com- 
plete Special Mixture. 
Nicamdra, Physaloides, often known as 
Shoo-Fly Plant. It grows 5 feet high, and bears an abund¬ 
ance of large bluish white, bell-shaped flowers. It is said 
that house flies will not stay where these plants or branch¬ 
es are found. 
NIerembergia, very graceful and free- 
blooming plants for beds or pots. Start early for beds. 
Grown in pots they bloom well in winter. Frutescens 
Blue, White- Gracilis, lavender. Special Mixture of all. 
Very desirable as bedding plants, the flowers 
appearing in profusion throughout the season. 
The plants grow two to three feet high, and 
like rich soil and a sunny situation. N. Afflnis, 
white, is deliciously scented, and the Hybrids 
are of various fine colors. N. Sander® is more 
graceful, and the smaller flowers are produced 
in abundance, and remain open all day. They 
are especially useful for beds. Afflnis, White, 
Choice Hybrids mixed. Acutifolia, white. Ma- 
crophylla gigantea, large-leaved. Atropurpurea, 
Purple, Sylvestris, five feet high, long drooping 
trumpets in clusters. Sander® Hybrids: White, 
Carnea, Purple, Ruberrima red, Sanguinea, red, 
Mixed. Complete Special Mixture of all sorts. 
Obeliscaria pulcherrima, a pretty annual 
a foot high, the flowers a central black-brown column 
with broad, drooping, gold-margined petals. 
Oenothera,, Evening Primrose. Very hand¬ 
some garden flower, mostly 
a fine shade of yellow. The 
seeds may be sown early in 
autumn, as the young plants 
are perfectly hardy. The 
plant shown in the illustra¬ 
tion is of (Enothera La- 
marckiana, a biennial which 
is fine for a clump or screen. 
(Enothera Youpgii, a hardy 
perennial, is beautiful in a 
bed or border. Acaulis alba, 
dwarf, white. Lamarckiana, 
5 feet, large yellow flowers 
opening in the evening. 
Speciosa, fragrant. Fraseri, jjj 
deep yellow. Youngil, 1 ft. _ 
high, large yellow bloom. Special Mixture of all sorts. 
Oxalis Valdiviana, dwarf, yellow, fragrant. 
Perilla Macrophylla compacta, large, dark- 
colored leaves, not unlike a Coleus. Nankinensis, choco- 
colate-colorcd foliage. Special Mixture. 
IPUacelia, Pretty little annuals bearing 
blue flowers in ecorpoid racemes. Special Mixture. 
Polygonum orientale, hardy annual six 
to eight feet high, the top spreading and 
covered with drooping carmine flower 
clusters. The seeds should be sown 
late in fall to germinate early in spring. 
Once established in a garden the sup¬ 
ply of plants Is readily kept up by self- 
sown seeds. Plants thus started ap¬ 
pear early in spring, and make the 
finest specimens, becoming larger and 
more floriferous until frost. They are 
especially well suited to grow among 
plants in the back-ground, or among 
shrubbery, as they bloom abundantly 
and retain their bright color till frost. 
