320 Bulletin 136. 



65 



68, 

 69, 

 70 



73 

 78, 



75 

 85 

 83 

 90, 



77 

 91 

 93 

 97 

 100. 



lOI 



Matthews, Gov. 



Miller, Paul L. 



Nans/ion. 



New York. 



Oyania, Marshall. 



Peabody, Mrs. J. 



Pratt, Cecil. 



Rena Dula. 



Rinaldo. 



Snow Field. 



Souvenir de Petite Amie. 



Terrell, Constance. 



Tippecanoe. 



Violet King. 



Whitcoinbe, Jessie. 



White Swan. 



Not true to Name. 



9. Belleni. — Not true to description. Advertised pink. Was primrose-yellov/ 



14. Buettner, Mrs. Emil. — Not true. 



31. Ellis, Ruth. — Not true. Advertised as blush white. Was a faint yellow 

 fading much more than Philadelphia. 



92. Toler, 3/rs. Harry. — Advertised as flesh pink, slightly hairy, full and 

 double. With us, this was a good commercial midseason white but Robert 

 F. Hibson was more completely double. 



103. Yellow Plume. — Was pink with us. 



SUMMARY. 



A few plants can be grown in the home window and made to 

 produce flowers equal to any pictured in this bulletin. Page 305. 



Take note of varieties at your local flower shows and insist on 

 the educational side of the exhibit. 



Amateurs will take most comfort in growing plants having 

 three to six large characteristic flowers. Page 307. 



The quality of stock plants is of the highest practical impor- 

 tance. Page 307. 



The great advances in form among the introductions of 1896 

 were made in the whites. Page 308. 



Modesto, the most productive yellow of the year, is typical of 

 commercial standards. Page 311. 



No true pure pink appears to have been obtained in chrysan- 

 themums. 



The intensity of color among the so-called pinks depends upon 

 little-understood cultural conditions. Page 313. 



Lists of varieties recommended on the basis of one year's 

 behavior on Page 317. 



List of varieties that failed to give satisfaction at Ithaca in 1896 

 on Page 320. 



L. H. Bailey. 

 WiLHELM Miller. 



