MISS EMMA V WHITE 36 Excelsior, Minn. —“Your Salmon Pink Phlox 
was unusually large and beautiful.’’— Miss 
Bessie Perry. 
ANNUAL 
GRANDIFLORA PHLOX 
The Phloxes are the showiest and mcst easily 
raised of all annuals. The Grandiflora is a large- 
flowering strain, both the single florets and the 
flower heads being very large and showy. 
. Price, pkt., 150 seeds, 6c; 2 pkts., 10c. 
Phlox, Salmon-Pink. Very effective in a mass 
by itself or with white. 
Phlox, Scarlet. Almost as handsome for bed¬ 
ding as Geraniums. 
Phlox, White Perfection. Pretty for the ceme¬ 
tery or design work. 
Grandiflora Phlox, Special Mixed. A special 
mixture of the above and other choice named 
varieties. 1-16 oz., 20c. 
PHLOX 
DWARF PHLOX 
The plants grow quite compact, the blossoms 
forming a floral crown for each little plant which 
will last for weeks. Splendid for edgings and rib¬ 
bon bedding. 
Price, pkt., 100 seeds, 6c; 2 pkts., 10c. 
Dwarf Phlox, Fireball. Blood red. 
Dwarf Phlox, Snowball. Pure white. 
Dwarf Phlox, Mixed. Red and white mixed. 
Grandiflora Phlox Collection 
One-half pkt., each of 8 grand sorts, 25c. 
PRIIV1ULA, Fringed Giants 
(Chinese Primrose) 
Primulas are easily raised from 
seed. See my “Culture of Flow¬ 
ers” for directions. They bloom 
year after year, but as new plants 
bloom more freely it is well to sow 
seed every year. 
Fringed Giants, Mixed. Splen¬ 
did mixture of new fringed varieties, 
including my three named sorts! 
Pkt., 40 seeds, 6c. 
Fringed Giants, Pink, Red 
and White. Each, separate, per 
pkt., 40 seeds, 8c. 
Primula Malacoides. The new 
Baby Primrose, with a profusion of 
lavender or white flowers, borne in 
whorls along tall, graceful spikes, 
blooming in 4 to 5 months. Pkt., 8c! 
Primula Obconica. An almost 
ever-blooming species. The blos¬ 
soms are lilac-tinted, in showy 
clusters of from ten to fifteen flowers 
in a bunch. Pkt., 150 seeds, 8c. 
Hardy Primrose (Polya ntbus). 
Low-growing perennials hardy ex¬ 
cept in extreme North. A choice 
mixture. Pkt., 6c. 
Lowville, N. Y.—"My Primroses 
and Cyclamen from your seed have 
been a great success.”—Mrs. Louis 
Archer. 
