Ramona —Soft, flesh-pink stripes on white ground, very dainty and deli¬ 
cate. Pkt., 100 seeds, 5c.; oz., 10c. 
Venus— Of the largest expansion form; color, a rich salmon-buff. Pkt., 
100 seeds, 5c.; oz., 10c. 
Prince of Wales—A bright, self-colored, deep rose flower of grand size and 
beautifully hooded form; frequently four on a stem. A greatly improved Her 
Majesty, one of Fckford’s finest. Pkt., 100 seeds, 5 cts.; oz10 cts. 
Queen Victoria —The nearest approach to yellow in Sweet Peas. Color a soft 
primrose yellow, slightly overlaid with faint purple, which imparts a much 
deeper tone. Flowers of very large size and finest form, erect, slightly pointed, 
with edges finely recurved. Pkt., 100 seeds, 5 cts.; oz., 10 cts. 
Stanley— Rich, glossy, dark maroon, of large expanded form. Pkt., 100 
seeds, 5 cts.; oz., 10 cts. 
Triumph —Flowers of grand, large size and most beautiful coloring. Stan¬ 
dard stiffly erect, broadly expanded; color, white; suffused with salmon-pink, 
tinted wit-h carmine at the base; wings widely spread, delicately veined with 
rosy carmine, shading to deep rose in the center. Pkt., 100 seeds, 5 cts.; oz., 
10 cts. 
New Double Sweet Pea. 
Double Sweet Peas are of incomparable beauty. The plants are of extremely 
robust growth, producing a lavish profusion of richly fragrant flowers; the 
flowers are extra large, frequently measuring over two inches across. They 
■will not all come double, but if the plants are grown strong and luxuriant, they 
usually produce from 20 to 40 per cent, of double blossoms. Pkt., 100 seeds, 
5 cts.; oz., 10 cts. 
Sweet Peas, Best New Mixed. 
Owing to a special demand for all the new and finer named varieties, I have 
selected all the large flowering and most distinct sorts, especially for those 
that can afford to pay for the scarce and rarer varieties that heretofore have 
been too expensive to include in a mixture, including in all some twenty-five 
or thirty named varieties. This I call my best mixed and I can particularly 
recommend it as extra choice and fine. Pkt., 100 seeds, 5 cts.; oz., 10 cts.; 
Va, lb.,25 cts.; lb., 90 cts. 
Sweet Peas, Fine Mixed. 
This strain, although not embracing thenewseedlings.contains a beautiful 
assortment of the famous Eckford Sweet Peas. Pkt., 100 seeds, 4 cts.; oz., 
8 cts.; Vx lb., 20 cts.; lb., 65 cts. 
Good Mixed—Pkt., 75 seeds, 3 cts.; oz., 6 cts.; A lb., 15 cts.; lb., 45 cts. 
NOTICE—One package each of the entire collection 
(34 pkts.) for $1.15, any 3 pkts. for 10 cts., and four oz. 
pkts . for 25 cts., 2 oz. pkts. for 15 cts. 
New Dwarf Pink Cupid Sweet Pea. 
Pink Cupid— Bears generally three and sometimes four 
flowers to a stem. The flowers are identical with the 
tall-growing Blanch Ferry and are fully equal in size. 
The standard is a bright rose pink, while the wings are 
pure white and light pink. Pkt., 100 seeds, 5 cts.; oz., 
10 cts. 
New Dwarf White Cupid Sweet Pea. 
Grows but five inches high and blooms so freely for 
months that it appears a perfect mass of white—the 
leaves being quite hidden. The flowers of fine form and 
large size, are of the most perfect white, and the plants 
remain in full bloom two months longer than any other 
Sweet Pea. Useful for bedding’ Pkt., 100 seeds., 5 
cts.; oz., 10 cts. 
