24 Knight & Struck Company 
September 3, 1915. 
I beg to acknowledge receipt of German and Japanese Iris in good condition and to express 
my appreciation of the good quality of the stock and the careful packing. I may add that the 
potted strawberry plants forwarded several weeks ago also arrived in excellent condition and 
are making a good growth. 
Yours truly, 
DR. CHAS. LYMAN GREENE, 
324 Summit Avenue, 
St. Paul, Minn. 
September 10 , 1915. 
We have been delighted with all the seeds we had from you this season. . . Inci¬ 
dentally, the African marigolds are wonders in size. 
Cordially, 
E. C. LAWRIE, 
Andover, Mass. 
I am taking this opportunity of writing you relative to several of the seed items which l 
purchased of you last Spring. Your seeds are surely all that is claimed for them, and I can 
briefly term them “Quality Seeds,” for in comparing my venture with your seeds during the 
past year, to those purchased of your nearby competitors during former years, I must say that 
the Blue Ribbon in every case must be handed to Knight & Struck. 
ROBERT F. MUELLER, 
421 Thirtieth Street, 
Milwaukee, Wis. 
I wish to give an unsolicited endorsement of your claim to the superior merits of all the 
plants which you furnished me last Spring. The three Budleya Variabilis Magnifica have not 
only filled my garden with their fragrance, but for over two months have supplied two houses 
with their delicately colored and equally delicately perfumed blooms. Your dahlias, including 
the Kalif Wilhelmina and Sherlock Holmes, have been prolific and a delight to the eye. As 
for your rose, the Jonkheer J. L. Mock—it is all you claim — “the most perfect garden rose”- 
in form, color and scent. From one bush alone — it-s first year — I have cut over twenty-five 
gorgeous roses, and it is still blooming. 
Very truly yours, 
EDWIN ARDEN, 
140 Fife Street, 
Forest Hills, L. I. 
The Rarest Gladioli, We Sell Them 
