TERMS OF SALE 
Not less than six plants at dozen rates or twenty-five at hundred rates, or two 
hundred and fifty at thousand rates. 
All plants offered in this list are well established in two-inch pots. 
No charges made for boxes, packing or delivery to express office. 
All claims must be made within five days from receipt of goods. We aim, by 
making each shipment profitable, to -get new customers and keep old ones. 
C. 0. D. Shipments must be accompanied by one-half the amount of the order. 
We take all possible pains to keep every variety separate and true to name. 
Our packing is done by experienced men. The plants are wrapped in paper 
with moss at the roots. ( When the weather will permit they are packed upright in 
slatted crates; in cold weather they are packed in paper-lined boxes in such a way as 
will carry them safely to any part of the country. 
Our terms are cash with order; we do not have time to keep books, and at the 
price we sell we cannot take any risk. 
Pelargonium Novelties 
When Easter Greeting Pelargonium 
was introduced, the prediction was made 
that it would be the forerunner of a new 
race of ever-blooming pelargoniums 
suitable for either bedding out or for 
pot culture. It gives us pleasure there- 
fore, to offer the following sports ot 
Easter Greeting. 
Our E verblooming or Remontant Set for 1913 
SWABIAN MAID — ( Schwabenmad- 
chen). This new sport of Easter Greet- 
ing has large reddish carmine flowers 
with five very regular mack blotches 
bordered with purplish carmine. Very 
effective coloring. Its habit, foliage, 
robust growth, and everblooming quali- 
ties are like its parent Easter Greeting 
and can therefore be grown either as a 
pot plant or bedded out. 
WURTEMBERGIA — Easter Greeting 
Sport. Medium sized florets of a bright 
carmine, with large velvety, sharply 
defined blotches. Has all the good qual- 
ities of its parent. Equally valuable 
bedded out or as a pot plant. 
Our bed of this variety at Minneapolis 
was very full of both bloom and buds 
and attracted a great deal of attention at 
the Convention as it was the first time it 
had ever been shown in this country 
planted out in beds. This variety is 
bound to make a place for itself with 
those who are looking for something new 
in bedding plants. 
LUCY BECKEIt — This grand novelty 
is a sport of Easter Greeting and is like 
it in everything but color, which is a 
rosy pink. It is if anything even more 
free in bloom. 
EASTER GREETING — ( Ostergruss ) 
“This new species is the earliest of all 
Pelargoniums with enormous florets and 
clusters having light green foliage and 
of dwarf robust growth. It blooms from 
March until Fall. The florets are of a 
fiery amaranth red with five regular 
shaped spots. The first and only kind to 
bloom as well bedded out as in pots and 
to do so all Summer. The only kind that 
stands bedding out in groups. 
Nov. 12, 1912, the Ohio Experiment 
Station, at Wooster, Ohio, has tested 
Easter Greeting for two seasons as a 
pot plant and found it to be the freest 
bloomer in their collection, surpassing 
any Azalea as an Easter plant. The past 
season they tried it bedded out and were 
much pleased with it as a bedder. 
This new ever-blooming Pelargonium 
was shown by us in the “Out Door Plant- 
ing Exhibition” at Minneapolis. This 
bed at Convention time was covered with 
blooms and buds and remained in bloom 
until time for frost in September. It 
proved the most attractive novelty in 
bedding plants shown at the Convention. 
We predict that it and its sports will 
prove the forerunners of a new race of 
ever-blooming kinds that will increase 
the demand for a plant that rivals the 
Azalea in beauty. 
