PETER HENDERSON & CO., NEW YORK-— PLlANT DEPARTMENT. 119 



SEPTEMBER FLOWERING CHRYSANTHEMUMS. 



(Engraved from a sketch made in our Greenhouses Sept. 28th.) 

 For the third year we offer these new Chrysanthemums, and after a more extended trial we do it more confidently. The illustration 

 shows them naturally grown in boxes. They are shown under glass where they were removed to protect the flowers from the September 

 storms. Out of over 100 sorts which we tested we have selected those named below as the most desirable. Hitherto the great objec- 

 tion to Chrysanthemums in our Northern States was that the frost destroyed most of the flowers before coming to maturity, but now 

 this difficulty is overcome, and this grand advance must surely give an impetus to Chrysanthemum culture hitherto unknown. Our list 

 this year contains some new varieties not offered last year. We are indebted to M. Delaux, of France, for this new departure, and it is 

 doubtful if any more valuable acquisition has been secured in the long annals of successful hybridization. 



Albert Thausson. Flower medium, very double; petals numer- 

 ous ; golden yellow, blazed and lined with deep crimson. 



Alfred de Montebello. Large-flowered Japanese ; petals re- 

 curved, outlined in corkscrew ; silvery white with tinge of rose, 

 centre largely gold color ; a pretty variety. 



Baron Veillard. Pteony- flowered hybrid Japanese ; plant dwarf, 

 flower very double and very large ; brilliant yellow, each petal 

 outlined in rosy crimson. Unique and splendid. 



Canaille Bernardin. Very large pseony-flowered ; amaranth violet 

 and brilliant carmine, lightened with white ; entirely new. 



Charles Joly. Japanese hybrid ; flower very lai-ge ; large petals ; 

 beautiful violet rose, glossy white, centre gold ; dwarf habit. 



De Agala. Flower well formed and very double ; rose color, 

 flecked with white, centre golden yellow. 



Jean Nicolas. Japanese ; flowers small and petals slender and 

 curled ; glossy rose and a shade of dim white, centre cream ; 

 flower wholly disheveled ; a new order and a very pretty variety. 



Leon Itasse. Large-flowered Japanese ; petals slender, very nu- 

 merous, brilliant yellow gold, blazed with brick red and light 

 flame ; reverse gold. Unique form. 



Marquise de Montmort. Japanese ; flowers very large, pure 

 glossy rose and silvery white ; a unique and distinct variety. 



M. Dupuis. Pgeony, large double-flowered ; well imbricated ; deep, 

 beautiful canary yellow, reverse rose ; a beautiful novelty. 



M. E. Vaucher. Japanese ; large flowers, beautiful rosy wine 

 color, marked with glossy white, large orange centre. 



M. Francois Katzer. Japanese ; very large flower, curled and 

 disheveled, a rusty rose and light yellow, marked with long lines 

 of deep yellow ; entirely new, the most beautiful and most re- 

 markable of the autumn varieties, obviously distinct. 



M. Frederic l'TJsmayer. Japanese ; flowers enormous, and very 

 double ; large petals, those on the edge rolled up among them- 

 selves, of a most brilliant color, deep yellow, each petal regularly 

 framed with crimson maroon. 



M. Henri Galice. Japanese ; flower very double, brilliant golden 

 yellow, tinged with rosy pink, lightly flamed and pointed with 

 yellow ; form and color new. 



M. Lemaille. Large-flowered Japanese ; petals very long ; color, 

 dregs of wine, centre golden chamois — a new color. Plant dwarf. 



Mile. Germaine Cassagneau. Pasony-flowered, very large ; large 

 petals ; lilac rose, shaded with white ; centre gold color. 



M. Maxime de la Rocheterie. Japanese. This variety obtained 

 a first-class certificate in London. The outer petals recurved ; 

 flowers very large, disheveled and curled ; brilliant orange with 

 yellow centre, shaded rosy crimson. 



Mme. A. Thiebault de la Croure. Japanese ; of a special new 

 form ; carmine purple, centre greenish gold color. 



Mme. B. Jung. Paeony ; flowers enormous, the largest of its kind ; 

 deep crimson red, lighting to chamois, shading to a rich velvety 

 brown ; petals incurved and old gold on reverse, with frequently a 

 silvery edge ; a striking variety and a good plant for exhibition. 



Mme. Eulalie Morel. Japanese hybrid ; flowers very large, very 

 long, recurved petals ; rich, rosy pink, deepest at the centre. 



Mme. Gastellier. Pure white, a large, fluffy flower, double to 

 the centre, one of the earliest to bloom, and one of the most 

 showy varieties in the list. 



Mme. Louis Lionnet. Pseony Japanese hybrid; flowers large, 

 brilliant silvery white, richly tinged with rose; centre old gold. 



M. Zephir Lionnet. Japanese; flowers semi-double, very large; 

 petals long, recurved and curled ; color, violet rose and purple. 



R. du Mesnil de Montchauveau. Japanese ; large flowers, open 

 tubular petals ; beautiful violet and amaranth purple. 



Vice-President Hardy. Japanese. It is, without dispute, one of 

 the most »remarkable varieties in existence ; petals very large 

 and very long, recurved, curled, irregularly grouped ; flower ex- 

 ceptionally large, brilliant yellowish gold, bordered with rosy 

 crimson violet ; new species, distinct from all others. 

 Price for any of the above, 25c. each. 



£5j i— >*f;<*?!T A T . ^)> F*FE R. — Set of 25 new September Flowering Chrysanthemums for ^S.^^^5. 



