TOTTY’S ’MUMS, MADISON, NEW JERSEY 
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MARIE DUFOUR HORTENSE MALGAT 
Early Flowering Chrysanthemums 
STANDARD VARIETIES 
Price of these varieties: 20c. each, $2.00 per doz., $15.00 per 100. Our selection, $10.00 per 100. 
A. Barham. A beautiful orange bronze and the 
first variety of this color to come into flower. 
Was wonderfully popular in the New York mar¬ 
ket during the past Fall. Shows up wonderfully 
well under light when used as a decoration. 
Alfred Fleurot. Rosy lilac. 
Aquitaine. Salmon bronze on ochre ground; 
large, drooping flower when disbudded. 
Border Beauty. Fiery orange, with gold tips 
and reverse. 
Carmelite. Deepest golden yellow; very free. 
Carrie. Deep yellow; a beauty. 
Chaldon. Reddish crimson with gold tips; large 
flowers. 
Champagne. Fiery, ruby red. 
Cranford Pink. Like the foregoing. Not exactly 
a new seedling, but its merits and culture have 
never before been thoroughly understood. The 
color is a most exquisite shade of shell pink. When 
cut in long sprays that have never been dis¬ 
budded, it is a beautiful sight, and when grown un¬ 
der glass and disbudded as recommended for 
Cranford Yellow there is nothing in sight at that 
season of the year to compete with it. 
Cranford White. Purest white; very well-known 
variety. 
Crimson Pride. Crimson, topped gold. 
Crimson Diana. Crimson sport from Diana. 
Crimson Grunnerwald. Crimson sport from G. 
Grunnerwald. 
Diana. Bronzy orange, shaded gold. 
Dora Blick. Pink. 
Dorothy. Snow white. The most vigorous of all 
the early whites. Makes the most beautiful 
sprays and if disbudded and numerous shoots 
Icit on the plant they will finish every flower with 
s perfectly still' stem. 
Esperance. White, with greenish center. 
Evelyn. Crimson bronze, in full flower Sept. 20th. 
Etoile d’Or. Yellow. 
Firelight. Brilliant carmine, shaded with scarlet. 
In perfect condition to cut Oct. 1st, either out¬ 
doors or under glass. The earliest and best 
thing in its color. 
Francis. Bronzy red; splendid habit. 
Fedora. Bright, rosy lilac. 
Glacier. Pure white. 
Golden Queen of the Earlies. Sport from Queen 
of the Earlies. 
Harvest Home. Deep yellow. 
Harrie. Bronzy orange on gold ground. 
Helena. Chestnut, shaded gold, with gold tips. 
In flower Sept. 18th. 
FI. II. Crane. Chestnut with gold reverse; ready 
to cut Sept. 25th. 
Jack Bannister. Lemon yellow, shaded reddish 
copper. 
Jimmie. The deepest rose in color with petals 
standing straight out, making the flower of the 
largest size. Is excellent either disbudded or in 
sprays. 
La Rhin. Reddish terra cotta; still habit. 
La Cygne. Purest white; in full flower Sept. 20th. 
One of the most useful of the early-flowering 
varieties. 
L’Aisne. Violet purple; dwarf; sturdy habit and 
free flowering. 
L’Argentuillais. Deep chestnut. 
L’Aube. White, shaded rose. 
Le Danube. Bose. 
Le Pactole. Bronzy yellow; large flower; strong 
grower; slightly disbud. 
I.e Tage. Terra cotta. 
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