. Choice flower seeds. Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Seeds Catalogs. 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« cts.; Pkt., 2 cts Double White Horning 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 Glory," as it remains open the entire day. A large p


. Choice flower seeds. Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Seeds Catalogs. 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« cts.; Pkt., 2 cts Double White Horning 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 Glory," as it remains open the entire day. A large percentage, but not all, will come double. Pkt., 6 cts. NICOTIANA. A night-blooming tobacco, 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 bj' 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 NIG ELLA (Love-in-a-Mist). An old-fashioned annual, of easy and rapid growth, known also as "Devil-in-a- Bush," 'Ragged L,ady," etc., from the way in which its pretty blue flowers are curiouslv enveloped in a thick, fine feath- ery foliage. Pkt., 2ctS. MOON FLOWER (Ipomoea Grandiflora). The genuine Southern Moonflower, of whose beauty and fragrance so much is told. It is a rapid, robust climber, a single vine often covering a whole porch, which in the summer twilight will be cov- ered with immense white blossoms, five inches across and very fragrant. One lady writes: "Stran- ?ers passing bj' always stop to admire my Moonflowers, and the family never tire of their beauty and ; The seed has a very hard shell, and the tiny germ needs assistance in cutting its way. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that m


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggilbertnurserya, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890