Vestal’s Chrysanthemums are prize-winners 
VestaPs Prize-Winners and Novelties 
All plants, 20c each; 3 for 50c; 12 for $1.50 
Black Hawk. The largest and most beautiful of the 
dark crimson Chrysanthemums introduced as yet. 
The great incurved flowers look as if they were cut 
from crimson velvet. Blooms about November 15. 
Pulling. A grand, brilliant yellow flower for 
exhibition, producing blooms of magnificent size 
and texture. Blooms about November 10. 
Cardonia. Elegantly formed, deep yellow flowers 
of incurved type. Average stems. Blooms about 
November 10. 
Chieftain. Beautiful incurved pink flowers of per¬ 
fect form. One of the finest of the incurved types 
in cultivation. Blooms about November 10. 
Coahoma. A fine incurved flower of bright yellow. 
Plants of medium height. October 20. 
Coronna. Standard variety with lovely golden yel¬ 
low, incurved flowers. Blooms about October 25. 
Friendly Rival. A well-known, popular florists’ 
variety, bearing giant golden yellow flowers, 
deeper in tone than almost any other yellow 
“Mum.” Blooms about November 10. 
Golden Bronze. Huge, coppery gold flowers will 
develop from terminal buds. Blooms about 
November 1. 
Golden Celebration. A vigorous bright yellow 
variety. Fine for Thanksgiving. Blooms about 
November 20. 
Golden Glory. Plant 4 feet high, with huge, globu¬ 
lar flowers of perfect finish, radiant in shining 
golden yellow. Blooms about November 5. 
Immaculate. One of the finest of the large in¬ 
curved white varieties. Blooms about November 7. 
Josephine Foley. One of the best white “Mums” of 
recent years. Blooms about November 5. 
Keystone. Bronze flowers, 8 inches in diameter. 
Plants 4 feet high. Blooms about October 22. 
Margaret Graham. Beautiful, pure white, round 
flowers for Thanksgiving. A fine variety. Medium 
height. Blooms about November 20. 
Marie de Petris. A wonderfully beautiful flower of 
intense yellow, with a perfect incurved center. 
Splendid plants. Blooms about November 15. 
Marigold. Monster yellow flowers, unsurpassed in 
size and tint in their season. Blooms about 
November 5. 
Mrs. William Thaw. Large flowers of clear, 
medium yellow which hold well. Foliage and 
stems are good. Blooms about November 10. 
Old Rose. A beautifully formed flower of great size. 
An old-rose-pink tone tinged with a silvery sheen 
as it matures. Blooms about November 1. 
Orchid Queen. Large incurved bloom of a pleasing 
shade of orchid-pink. A strong grower. Blooms 
about November 10. 
Prince. Very large and fine flower resembling the 
older Chieftain in its clear rose-pink tone. Comes 
into bloom naturally about November 5. 
Purple King. Tall-stemmed flower, very double, 
globular, and the nearest approach to purple in 
this family. Blooms about November 10. 
Richmond. A brilliant golden yellow flower of fine 
form, perfect fullness, and silky finish. Blooms 
over a very long period, starting about November 5. 
Rose Charm. A large rose-colored Pompon that is 
lovely in both form and color. Stiff stems. 
Rose Perfection. Blooms two weeks earlier than 
the fine pink Chieftain, and is equally lovely in its 
soft rose shade. Blooms about November 5. 
Snow-White. A big, incurved flower of glistening 
icy white, like a perfectly carved ball of spotless 
marble. Blooms about November 5. 
Stately White. Well named is this splendid va¬ 
riety whose large incurved blooms of pure white 
always demand admiration. 
Tekonsha. A grand, large-flowering bronze “Mum,” 
just right for Hallowe’en. Easy to grow. Blooms 
about November 5. 
VestaPs White. Perfect incurved flower of globu¬ 
lar shape, snow-white and enormous. Blooms 
about November 15. 
White Chieftain. A pure snow-white form of the 
above, and, like its parent, keeps in exhibition 
form a long time. Blooms about November 5. 
White William Turner. An incurved, ball-shaped 
flower of fine form and the purest white. Exhibi¬ 
tion type. 
Yellow Monument. A straw-yellow sort with fine 
keeping qualities. Blooms about November 10. 
Yellow William Turner. An incurved yellow 
sport of William Turner, blooming about No¬ 
vember 15. 
Tender 
AMARYLLIS 
Superb winter-flowering bulbs with immense, Iily- 
Iike flowers of deep crimson, orange-scarlet, pink, and 
many mixed and striped varieties. Choicest bulbs, 
50c each; 3 for $1.25. 
YELLOW CALLA LILY 
Delightful golden yellow flowers of exceedingly 
graceful form. Blooming-size bulbs, 50c each; 3 for 
$1.25. 
CRINUM 
Fimbriatum (Angel’s Lily; Milk and Wine Lily). Pure 
white flowers with a delicate pink stripe in the center 
of each petal. Very fragrant. Superb pot-plants; 
hardy outdoors in the far South. Large bulbs, 50c ea. 
Pink. Pink-flowering Lily for pots or for bedding out¬ 
doors in the far South. Large bulbs, 50c each. 
Bulbs 
GUERNSEY LILY (Nerine) 
Sarniensis (Spider Lily). A lovely plant for borders 
and gardens in the South, or potting where it is not 
hardy. The dazzling scarlet flowers appear in the 
autumn and winter. Blooming-size bulbs, 20c each; 
6 for $1.00. 
TUBEROSES 
Deliciously fragrant flowers of waxen texture in close 
spikes on tall stems. Usually grown as pot-plants, but 
the bulbs are hardy out-of-doors in the extreme South. 
Double Dwarf Pearl. Blooms in August and Septem¬ 
ber, producing tall spikes of double, deliciously 
scented white flowers. Biggest bulbs, 10c each; 12 
for $1.00. 
Mexican. Pure waxy white, single, fragrant flowers on 
tall stems. Perpetual bloomer. 10c each; 12 for 75c. 
JOS. W. VESTAL & SON, Box 871, Little Rock, Ark. 
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