-3- MINNEAPOLIS, MINN 



SWEET PEAS. 



Best Fifty Varieties. 



I make a specialty of this popu- 

 lar flower, and offer a list of Stand- 

 ard Varieties, and Proved Novel- 

 ties that cannot be surpassed. It 

 contains the very best in cultiva- 

 tion today, with duplicates practi- 

 cally discarded, except as there is 

 a demand for certain similar vari- 

 eties, and is a "Survival of the Fit- 

 test 11 of all the best sorts intro- 

 duced up to the present time. 



America. The brightest blood-red striped. Pkt., 3 cts. ; oz M 8 cts. 



Apple-Blossom. Bright rosy pink and blush. Pkt., 3c; oz., 8c. 



Aurora. Flaked orange salmon on a silver white ground. Pkt. 3c. ; oz. 8c. 



Black Knight. New rich wine-brown or deep clare . Flowers very dark 



and rich. Pkt., 4 cts. ; oz., 10 cts. 



Blanche Burpee. Eckford's large pure white. Pkt., 3 cts. ; oz., 8 cts. 



Charlton Ci 

 seeds are fine 



ty, Mass., April, 1900. 



. All came up." Mrs.L.M.Copen Violet 



Blanche Ferry, extra early. 



The popular pink and white. Pkt., 3 

 cts.; oz. 8 cts. 



Burpee's New Countess. 

 Standard and wings, a most beautiful, 

 clear, light lavender. Pkt. 3c, oz. 8c. 

 Captain of the Blues. Stand- 

 ard, light maroon; wings, light purple. Pkt., 

 cts.; oz.. 8 cts. 



Capti vation. Light magenta, beautifully vein- 

 ed. Pkt., 3 cts.; oz., 8 cts. 



Chancellor. Soft rose pink, heavily veined 

 and shaded at the base of standards a rich salmon or- 

 ange. Pkt., 3 cts.; oz., 8 cts. 



Colonist. Flowers very large; standard glow- 

 ing, rosy pink, wings showing deeper rose shadings. 

 Pkt., 3 cts. ; oz., 8 cts. 



Countess of Cadogan. One of Eckford's 

 1900 novelties. Has the prettiest porcelain blue 

 wings; standards purplish blue. It comes close to a 

 blue. Pkt., 4 cts.; oz., 10 cts. 



Dorothy Tennant. Deep rosy-mauve; beau- 

 tiful. Pkt., 3 cts.; oz., 8 cts. 

 Duke of Westminster. One of Eckford's 1900 

 Tour novelties. Deep rose maroon, overlaid with bright 

 ' perfectly distinct. Pkt., 4 cts, ; oz., 10 cts. 



Earliest of All. A pink and white of the 

 Blanche Ferry type, blooming from ten days to 

 two weeks earlier than Extra Early Blanche Fer- 

 ry. The plants are only about two feet high and 

 can be grown without support. Very desirable 

 for commercial purposes on account of its earli- 

 ness and long season of bloom. Pkt., 4c; oz., 10c. 



Emily Eckford. Flowers large and fine. 

 Reddish mauve and blue. Pkt., 3 cts. ; oz., 8 cts. 



Emily Henderson. One of the standard 

 white varieties. Pkt., 3 cts. ; oz. 8 cts. 



Gorgeous. One of the largest and richest 

 orange pink shades. Deep orange 6almon, beau- 

 tifully veined. Pkt., 4 cts. ; oz., 10 cts. 



Gray Friar. Beautiful watered purple on 

 white ground. Pkt., 3cts. ; oz., 8 cts. 



Hon. F. Bouverie. Eckford's 1900 novelty. 

 A charming flower of grand shape and substance; 

 color a beautiful coral pink. Pkt., 4 c ; oz., 10c 



Lady Grisel Hamilton. Eckfords 1900 

 novelty. One of the handsomest pale lavenders; 

 very large and free flowering. Pkt., 4 c. ; oz., 10c 



Lady Mary Currie. New. Orange pink, 

 suffused with rosy lilac and heavily veined. Very 

 beautiful. Pkt., 3 cts. ; oz„ 8 cts. 



Lady Nina Balfour. New, large, beautiful 

 hooded of pale lavender or lilac Pkt. 4c, oz. 10c. 



