other order this coming season. You can use my name as a 
recommendation for your Cosmos. 
ELI JAGO, 
Supt. Mrs. P. Schuyler Estate. 
Lenox, Mass., Jan. 11, 1915. 
Mr. Edward Lewis, Derby, Conn. 
I am pleased to inform you that your strain of Cosmos is a 
very good one, and that the plants bought from you last spring 
produced a splendid lot of flowers of good size and color. 
S. W. CARLQUIST, 
Supt. for Robt. Winthrop, Esq. 
Lenox, Mass., Jan. 11, 1915. 
Mr. Edward Lewis. 
The Cosmos plants of yours, grown on the Sunnyridge 
estate of George Winthrop Folsom, Esq., of this town, were 
unique, rare choice. The earliest and largest blooms I ever saw 
of the early blooming Cosmos. 
WALTER S. MARSDEN, Gardener. 
Lenox, Mass., Feb. 1, 1915. 
Mr. Edward Lewis. 
The Cosmos we purchased from you last season proved to be 
the finest w© ever saw, both in the size of flower and in early 
blooming. These plants received no special attention or fer¬ 
tilizer, which adds to their popularity with us. 
OSCAR W. WHITTEMORE, 
Supt. Brook Farm, Rev. Anson Phelps Stokes. 
Charlestown, New Hampshire, Jan. 15, 1915. 
Mr. Edward Lewis. 
For 1 true summer blooming Cosmos I have never known any 
other variety to equal yours. In gardening parlance they cer¬ 
tainly are "good doers” in every way. One ceases to wonder 
whether they will bloom before frost, inasmuch as they flower 
all the time. 
VERNON ; T. SHERWOOD, 
Gardener for Mrs. Sherman Paris. 
Hiddenhurst, Sharon Station, N. Y. 
Mr. Edward Lewis. 
^ Cosmos you sent m§ were perfectly grand, the finest I 
ever had. The season was very dry, but we had flowers to give 
away. ' . , ". ^ ■„ 
D. G. CROWLEY, Gardener. 
