10 
LAWRANCE’S NURSERIES, OGDENSBURG, N. Y. 
Salpigloss's. A beautiful and free 
blooming plant with handsome 
veined and tinted funnel-shaped 
flowers. 
Pkt. 5 cts. 
Salvia. (Flowering Sage). A very 
bright and showy bedding plant of 
rather strong growth, bearing long 
spikes of brilliant scarlet flowers 
in great profusion in late summer 
and fall. The seed should be sown 
in the house or hotbed as early 
as possible and the young plants 
planted out when the weather be- 
comes settled and warm. 
Pkt. 10 cts. 
Schizanthus. (Butterfly Flower). A charming annual which on account of 
its ease of culture and the remarkable coloring of its flowers has been 
called the “Poor Man’s Orchid.” The plants attain a height of about 
15 inches, branching freely and producing a multitude of large panicles 
of lovely blossoms. Per pkt. 10 cts. 
Scabiosa. (Mourning Bride). One of the prettiest of our annual plants, 
producing an abundance of richly colored flowers on long stems. A fine 
flower for bouquets, etc. Pkt. 5 cts. 
Scarlet Runner Beans. A beautiful old ornamental climber of rapid growth, 
producing bright scarlet pea-shaped blossoms in abundance. Grows 11 
• to 15 feet high. Pkt. 5 cts. Pint 25 cts. 
Sensitive Plant. (Mimosa Pudica). Very interesting and curious plants, the 
leaves of which droop and close when touched. Pkt. 5 cts. 
Stocks, Large Flowering Ten-wee^s. An exceedingly popular and beautiful 
old garden favorite of many colors and delightful fragrance. Fine for 
cutting. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Stock Princess Alice. (Cut and come again). A fine, pure white, perpetual 
blooming variety of great value for cutting. If sown early it will bloom 
continuously from June until heavy frosts. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Sweet William. An attractive, free blooming, old fashioned plant of rich 
and varied colors, perfectly nardy. Pkt. 5 cts. 
Salpiglossis. 
LAWRANCE’S SELECT LIST of SWEET PEAS 
ABSOLUTELY THE CREAM OF 150 VARIETIES. 
We do not list an extended variety but only the best and most distinct, 
as there are so many varieties so nearly alike that only an expert can dis- 
tinguish them. We grow the new varieties side by side with the old ones, 
carefully comparing them, and discard all inferior varieties and those not 
really distinct or improvements on old varieties. This enables us to list a 
collection of varieties which cannot be improved upon. 
Countess Cadogan. Very large flowers of a bright blue color. Very attrac- 
tive. 
Countess of Lathom. Delicate rosy pink, tinged chamois. 
