RAINBOW PANSY. 
A quadri-colored Pansy, very beau¬ 
tiful, reddish steel blue, with white 
and pink edge, marked with a golden 
and pink face. Pkt., 4 cts. 
RUBRA, OR RED, PANSY. 
A beautiful collection of red and fiery shades, including 
“Fire King,” “Cardinal,” “Victoria” and others of the 
most desirable named varieties. Pkt., 4 cts. 
SNOW QUEEN PANSY. 
A mixture of pure white and white with a dark center, 
making a wonderfully pretty show when massed by them¬ 
selves. Pkt., 4 cts. 
SWEET SCENTED PANSY. 
This is a new class, obtained by hybridizing the Pansy 
with the Violet, affording the sweet perfume of the latter 
and retaining the large and many-colored blooms of the 
former. Pkt., 5 cts. 
FINEST MIXED PANSY. 
A mixture of the above seven named Pansies, together with 
numberless other shades and combinations. Pkt., 3 cts. 
PANSIES. 
Belt, Pa., Mar., 
gave you an or- 
for flower seed last 
year, and was very much 
pleased with the result. 
The Pansies were the 
most beautiful I ever 
saw,” P. A. Coulter. 
KINO OF 
BLACKS PANSY. 
The color is a beautiful rich coal black, with a glossy, velvety finish; 
flowers large and of good substance, coming true from seed. Pkt., 3 cts. 
METKOR I»A]NSY. 
A large, rich, mahogany-colored Pansy, with soft, velvety finish, the 
upper petals margined with tints of silver or gold. Pkt., 4 cts. 
PEACOCK PANSY. 
A handsome variety of a deep ultra-marine blue. The upper petals 
have a narrow edging of white, the blue shading from this to the center, 
the colors blending to resemble the feathers of a peacock. Pkt., 4 cts. 
Claverack, N. Y., Aug., 1899.—“I have planted Pansy seed for years and have had 
very pretty ones. I find your seed better than any other.” Anna B. Rivers. 
V. White] 
