CHAMPION CITY GREENHOUSES, SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. 
15 
R. P. Struthers —In our estimation the very best 
rhlox grown today—it has no flaults. Color, clear 
cherry-red, suffused with salmon shades; deep red 
eye; fine large truss. The color is so clear and clean 
that each indiviuai floret stands out as distinct as a 
cameo. , 
In addition to the above varieties, we can supply 
this fall the following field grown Phlox. Prices for 
fall delivery, except where noted. 50 cents per dozen, 
$3.00 per hundred, $27.50 per thousand; in lots of 5,000, 
$25.00 per thousand. 
We grow and sell 250,000 Phlox each season. 
Diplomat —Creamy-white; large red center; fine 
head. 
Hardy Phlox. 
Eiffel Tower —A new variety of great merit, and we 
think has no equal of its color. A beautiful salmon - 
rose, with a distinct purple eye. A defined clearness 
of the flower that is charming in the extreme. A 
superb and very chaste variety. 60 cents per dozen, 
$4.50 per hundred, $40.00 per thousand. 
F. G. Von Lassburg —Has an immense white flower 
of porcelain finish, the finest white in cultivation, the 
individual florets being fully double the size of any 
other variety; exceedingly beautiful. $1.25 per dozen, 
$8.00 per hundred, $75.00 per thousand. 
General Von Heutsz— New brilliant salmon-red with 
white star: very free; extra fine. $1.25 per dozen, 
$8.00 per hundred. 
Henry Murger —Enormous pure white flowers, with 
very large, showy, deep carmine eye or center; fine 
florets and trusses; extra. 
Kossuth —Clear, bright purple. 
King of the Purples — Deep, glowing purple; extra 
fine. 
La Vogue — Silvery-rose, with carmine eye. 
Lumineaux — Exceedingly large and strikingly bril¬ 
liant. Color, rosy-pink; base of petals white, with 
rich carmine eye. 
La Perle du Nord— Pure w ? hite; large, deep, dis¬ 
tinct red eye; extra fine. 
Le Sollel —Brilliant China-rose; deeper rose center; 
medium height; early, free-flowering; a great favor¬ 
ite with all who see it. 
L’Esperance —Clear, rosy-lilac; large white eye dis¬ 
tinctly rayed; large florets and an even bloomer. 
Madame P. Langier —Clear crimson, deeper eye; 
considered one of the best. 
Miss Lingard (Early.)—Pearly-white flower, with a 
very faint pink eye; very remarkable bloomer, pro¬ 
ducing two to three crops of flowers during the sea¬ 
son. Indispensable as a cut flower for florists’ use. 
75 cents per dozen, $5.00 per hundred, $45.00 per 
thousand. 
Niobe — The deepest, darkest, richest colored of all 
Phlox. Velvety violet-red with crimson hues; grand 
trusses. 
Ornament—Lake-rose; large crimson center. 
Peachblow— Delicate peachblow-pink, shading to 
white; large trusses; elegant. 
Prime Minister —Deep carmine center, shading to 
white at the edges of petals; large trusses; free 
bloomer; exceptionally fine. 
Queen Alexandria —Pure, even salmon; large crim¬ 
son eye; beautiful. 
Richard Wallace — Pure white, with violet-rose eye; 
large flowers in immense panicles. Too much can¬ 
not be said of this variety. 
Wm. Robinson —Showy in the extreme; salmon- 
rose; large, deep, crimson eye; very large florets; 
produces a mass of bloom. 
REMEMBER our entire list of Phlox can be sup¬ 
plied this fall. 
REMEMBER 
Every variety of Peony and Phlox named on this 
and preceding pages can be supplied this fall; the 
varieties of Peonies we can supply this spring, ready 
now, are the ones preceded with a * including the 
single and mixed Officinals. The Phlox we can sup¬ 
ply at once are the ones named in the first list on 
page 14, including the variety R. P. Struthers, on 
this page. 
