WM. ELLIOTT & SONS, NEW YORK 45 Choice Flower Seeds 
ELLIOTT’S SUPERB SWEET PEAS 
A: deep, rich, moist soil is best suited to Sweet Peas. They ate usually. grown in double rows, with a wire trellis or a row of 
brush between. For each double row make the drills about five inches deep, and nine or ten inches apart. Sow plentifully, covering 
about two inches deep, and by degrees, as the vines grow up, fill the trenches with soil. Spring sowings should be made just as early 
as the ground can be prepared; frost does not hurt the little seedlings. The earliest flowers are from seed sown in the Fall, preferably 
in a dry situation, and four or five inches deep, giving them level culture. As fertilizer, a liberal use of bone meal worked into the 
soil will give excellent results. 
Prices for all named varieties, except where noted: Pkt. 5 ets., oz. 10 ets., %4 Ib. 25 ets., postpaid. 
Agnes Johnson. Rose pink, shaded cream; a broad, fully 
expanded flower. 
Blanche Burpee. Pure white: immense size. 
Blanche Ferry. Pink and white; free-flowering. 
Blanche Ferry Extra Early. Same color as precedine, 
but fully ten days earlier. Fine for forcing under glass. 
Countess of Cadogan. Light purple standards and clear 
blue wings; very attractive. 
Countess of Radnor. Beautiful pale lavender 
Countess Spencer. Flowers of gigantic size; three and 
four on a stem; color a lovely shell-pink, shading to 
rose at the edges; inclined to sport, but very beautiful. 
Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 20 cts. 
Christmas Pink. Sown early in Fall will bloom by 
Christmas, and continue flowering all Winter. Pkt. 
10 ets., oz. 25 ets. 
Christmas White. Sown early in Fall will bloom by 
Christmas, and continue flowering all Winter. Pkt. 
10 cts., oz. 25 cts. 
Dorothy Eekford. Supersedes all other whites for size 
and shape. 
Borothy Tennant. Deep rosy heliotrope; very beautiful. 
Duke of Westminster. A beautiful shade of rosy claret. 
Earliest of All. An improved type of- xtra Warly 
Blanche Ferry for early forcing; a fine sort. 
E. J. Castle. Rich carmine rose with salmon shading. 
Emily Henderson. Pure white; blooms early and abun- 
dantly. 
Firefly. Brilliant scarlet. 
Frank Dolby. Color a pale blue, flowers very large. 
Gladys Unwin. A giant open-flowered soft rose-pink. 
Pkt. 10 cts. 
Gray Friar. Purple flaked on white ground. 
Helen Pierce. Marbled bright blue on white ground; 
very beautiful. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Hon. F. Bouverie. Pinkish salmon standard; wings light 
salmon buff. 
Hon. Mrs. Kenyon. The best yellow. 
Katherine Tracy. Soft rose-pink. 
King Edward VII. The best crimson. 
Lady Grisel Hamilton. Beautiful silvery lavender; large 
hooded flowers. 
Lady Mary Currie. Deep orange-pink. 
Lottie Eekford. White, edged lavender. 
Mont Blane. Absolutely pure white; for culture under 
glass, is an ideal variety. DPkt. 10 cts., 0z. 20 cis. 
Mrs. Alfred Watkins. A superb pink of the Gladys Un- 
win type. 
Mrs. Alexander Wallace. Lavender and mauve. DTkt- 
0 cts., 04 25 cts. 
Mrs. J. Chamberlain. White striped and flaked rose. 
Mrs. William Sim. Orange-pink. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 25 ets. 
Navy Blue. Deep violet-blue. The finest blue of all. 
Nora Unwin. Hasily in the front ranks of pure whites. 
Othello. Deep glossy maroon. 
Salopian. Splendid brilliant scarlet. 
Sensation. Of silky-white texture, suffused with faint 
blush pink. 
Stanley. Rich dark maroon. The finest dark variety. 
Stella Morse. Creamy white, tinged with pink; a true 
apricot shade. 
Venus. Lovely salmon-buff, shaded pink. 
MIXED SWEET PEAS 
Elliotts Rainbow Mixture. This mixture contains the 
cream of the newest and best sorts. It is made up 
entirely of new and separate varieties. Pkt. 5 cts., oz. 
15 cts., % Ib. 30 ets., lb. $1.00. 
Eckford’s Hybrids, Mixed. Choice varieties. Pkt. 5 cts., 
Sweet Pea oz. 10 cts., %4 Ib. 25 ets., Ib. 75 ets. 
If you expect the best results from Sweet Peas procure the Rainbow Mixture 
