VEGETABLE AND FLOWER SEEDS, ETC. 
53 
PHLOX DRUMMONDI. 
PHLOX—STAR OF QUEDL 1 NBURGH. 
For variety, brilliancy of 
color and constant show, there 
is no flower that equals the 
Phlox. This highly prized hardy 
annual is indispensable in every 
garden for bedding and ribbon¬ 
ing. Duriog the whole summer 
and autumn a good bed of Phlox 
presents a most gorgeous dis 
play, dazzling the eye with its 
brilliancy. The Phlox requires 
a good soil, and will grow about 
fifteen inches in height; set the 
plants about eighteen inches 
apart—if too thick they suffer 
from mildew. pkt. Cts. 
Fine Mixed Colors .10 
Grandiflora, mixed colors; 
large flowered variety. A 
more effective plant for pro¬ 
ducing rich masses of color 
could not easily be found.. .10 
Bright Scarlet ..10 
Pure White .10 
Star of Quedlinburgli, 
mixed colors.10 
POPPY. 
A remarkably showy class of free 
flowering plants, producing a rich and 
elegant display in mixed borders, 
shrubberies, etc. Seed should be sown 
early in spring, where the plants are 
designed to bloom, as they are diffi¬ 
cult to transplant. Thin to 12 or 15 
inches apart. Succeeds well in almost 
any soil. Hardy annuals. Pkt. Cts. 
Shirley, flowers large, very grace¬ 
ful and elegant, ranging in 
color from purest white and 
delicate pink, through in¬ 
numerable shades to bright 
crimson ; mixed colors.10 
Iceland, blooms continuously 
from early in June to October ; 
mixed colors.10 
Papaver Umbrosum. brilliant; 
flowers rich vermilion with 
shining black spots on each 
petal; 18 inches high.5 
Mikado, large double flowers, 
pure white with fringed edges 
of crimson scarlet..5 
MIKADO POPPY. 
Ranunculus-Flowered, double; mixed colors. 5 
Carnation, double; mixed colors.5 
Pseony-Flowered, large flowers, very double; mixed colors. 5 
Tulip Poppy, twelve to fourteen inches high, producing well above the foliage 
fifty to sixty large and splendid flowers of the most vivid scarlet imaginable ; 
commences blooming early in June and flowers abundantly for six to eight 
weeks.10 
