Page Eighteen 
TOTTY’S ’MUMS, MADISON, N. J. 
EARL Y FLOWERING CHR YSANTHEMUMS—Con tin ued 
STANDARD VARIETIES—EARLY FLOWERING 
Prices of these varieties: 20c. each, $2.00 per dozen, $15.00 per hundred. Our selection, $10.00 per hundred. 
Abercorn Beauty. Deep bronze sport from Polly. 
Albert Chausson. Orange red, lipped yellow. 
Alfred Fleurot. Rosy lilac. 
Aquitaine. Salmon bronze on ochre ground; 
large, drooping flower when disbudded. 
Bouquet Rose. Beautiful rose pink; fully open 
September 20lli. 
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. 
Chas. Jolly. Rosy pink. 
Comtesse Foucher de Cariel. Orange bronze. 
Cranford White. Purest white; very well-known 
variety. 
Crimson Pride. Crimson, topped gold. 
Countess. Purest white; a splendid cut flower 
variety. 
Crimson Diana. Crimson sport from Diana. 
Crimson Grunnerwald. Crimson sport from G. 
Grunnerwald. 
Diana. Bronzy orange, shaded gold. 
Dora Blick. Pink. 
Dolly Reeves. Deep pink; a good shaped flower. 
Esperance. White with greenish center. 
Ethel Blades. Chestnut scarlet. 
Evelyn. Crimson bronze, in full flower September 
20th. 
Etoile d’Or. Yellow. 
Francis. Bronzy red; splendid habit. 
Fedora. Bright, rosy lilac. 
Gismonda. Mauve. 
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. 
H. H. Crane. Chestnut with gold reverse; ready 
to cut September 25th. 
Jack Bannister. Lemon yellow, shaded reddish 
copper. 
La Rhin. Reddish terra cotta; stiff habit. 
La Cygne. Purest white; in full flower September 
20 th. 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. 
L’Ouse. Rose on white ground with gold center. 
La Somme. Deep, mauve pink. 
La Tamise. Marble white, shaded lilac. 
Le Danube. Rose. 
Le Pactole. Bronzy yellow; large flower; strong 
grower; slightly disbud. 
Le Tage. Terra cotta. 
Leslie. Rich buttercup yellow; very beautiful 
variety; one of the earliest to flower. 
Lucifer. Reddish crimson; striking color and first- 
class variety. 
Mandarin. Fiery red and gold; one of the most 
striking varieties ever raised. 
Marie Doucet. Cream, shaded lilac. 
Market White. One of the most popular whites 
in Europe; very largely grown for pot plants. 
Mabel Roberts. Deep pink with long, erect 
sprays. 
Mme. Aug. Nonin. Delicate pink. 
Mme. Drouard. Deep brick red. 
Mignon. Delicate rosy mauve; a charming 
variety for disbudding. 
Miss Balfour Melville. Deep bronze, with old 
gold tips. 
Miss Burchfell. Deep, blush pink, with gold 
center. 
Miss F. Collier. Purest white, waxy flowers; 
good habit. 
Mrs. A. Beech. Bronze. 
Mrs. J. W. Scott. White. 
Nellie Blake. Chestnut crimson. 
Normandie. Delicate pink; lovely color. The 
earliest and perhaps the best. 
October Gold. Old gold. Grand for bunching. 
Orion. Guinea gold; free and bushy. 
Perle Chatillonaise. Creamy white with rosy 
peach shadings. 
Primevere. Primrose; dwarf, bushy habit. 
Provence. Bright pink with gold points and 
center. 
Roi des Blancs. Pure while. 
Roi des Jaunes. Yellow. 
Savoie. Pure white. 
Tapis d’Or. Brilliant, golden yellow. Too pro¬ 
lific unless disbudded. 
Tonkin. Reddish orange; large (lowers. 
Tottie. Reddish orange; Lhe late flowers are 
almost scarlet. 
Touraine. Porcelain; a lovely shade; broad, 
incurving florets. 
Verona. Fiery terra cotta. 
Wells’ Crimson. Bright crimson with gold 
reverse and tips. 
Wells’ Primrose. Large, drooping flower. 
Wells’ Scarlet. Scarlet terra cotta; very free, 
and one of the hardiest varieties, flowering well 
up to nearly Thanksgiving. 
Wliitepoint. Reddish lilac, with white points 
to the florets. 
