38 Hordy Perenniol Plants 
The STORRS & HARRISON CO. 
Hardy Chrysanthemums 
The following fine, rugged varieties assembled from various classes, have 
proven hardy throughout the middle west, with some protection, during winter. 
Is advisable to cut off the old tops to a few inches above the ground, then cover 
with old straw or leaves before winter sets in. The best blooms will result from 
annual transplanting, sep¬ 
arating the year-old 
clumps into small divi¬ 
sions. 
All are plants 
from 2^4-in. pots 
after April 20th. 
Postpaid. 
Aladdin 
Aladdin 
Dazzler 
RECENT 
NOVELTIES 
each; 3 for 70c; 
$2.50 per doz. 
2 1 /2-3 inches. 
“The Ever- 
blooming 1 ’Mum.” A 
tall, much branched 
plant; the first termi¬ 
nal flowers in July or 
August; uninterrupted 
until frosts. The 
ct, delightful color is pol¬ 
ished bronze, overlaid with a 
suffusion of damask rose and 
a warm light red. 
Barbara Cumming ^fas¬ 
cinating tight-clustered varie¬ 
ty ; the dominant center a 
gold-tipped, shiny bronze, flush¬ 
ed apricot; the marginal petals 
a lilac-tinged white. Sept. 
Crimson Splendor 4 inches. 
-- - — A great 
shaggy single flower ; crimson- 
maroon with a gleaming gold¬ 
en eye. Sept. 
2 y 2 inches. A showy 
October single; with 
wide rays of orange-red flaming 
away from the yellow eye. 
Granny Scovill 4 inches. Full, 
- ■ ■ fluffy, lovely 
October bloom; a warm coral- 
bronze. 
Peggy Ann Hoover (5 i "- ) - ^ three- 
weeks cut flower. 
Many long, flaring, distended needles; 
clear orchid, fading to white at base and 
at the tiny calla-like tips. Oct. 
Persia (2-3 in.). Semi-double, irregular 
1 1 petalage. Deep rosy carmine 
about a yellow eye ; a central fringe in¬ 
curving to show flashes of silver. Oct. 
Tasiva (2 in.). An exquisite, very early 
.. . white “cushion”. In September, 
the broad mound becomes suddenly smoth¬ 
ered in creamy buds, which day-by-day 
unfold into luscious, fluffy flowers—purest 
white with a soft canary breast. 
NEW HYBRID KOREAN 
Chrysanthemums 
This is a valuable new race of perennials 
introducing lovely pastel shades into Octo¬ 
ber landscapes, with profuse single flowers. 
Height, 2 to 2% ft. 
Aoollo Tnos t profuse bloomer, the 
” flowers 2 inches across. A spark¬ 
ling combination of bronze, red and gold, 
suffused salmon. 
Ceres gold blended with chamois- 
yellow ; dusted with coppery bronze, 
n-mhne Flower 3% inches across; a love- 
” c ly daphne-pink with a sheen of 
lilac-rose, and prominent golden stamens. 
Hebe Luminous pink maturing soft lav- 
- ender-pink, the yellow center with¬ 
in a silvered halo. 
Mars Deep amaranth-red with a velvety 
■' wine-red sheen. The latest. 
Mpmirv Bronze-red changing to cop- 
_ * pery bronze. 3-inch flowers; 
early, showy, long lasting as a cut flower. 
Orion Brilliant canary-yellow; clean-cut, 
U raylike ; erect sprays. 
Vulcan Glowing carmine, maturing to 
_ garnet, and finally to bronze-red ; 
double rayed, around a golden center. 
25c each; 3 for 70c; doz., $2.50. 
THE SET ^ °/ or $ 1.80 
“CUSHION” MUMS 
Pink Cushion 
(Illustrated on color page B.) 
The ’Mum with a Thousand 
Buds! The Earliest Blooming 
Pink ’Mum, August Until’.Frost. 
A wide, dense cushion 18 inch¬ 
es high by 24 to 30 inches across 
when fully developed ,* the lovely 
flowers an intermingling of deep 
rose buds with successive stages 
of tender lilac, blush-white, ivory 
and gold. 
30c each; 3 for 85c ; doz. $3.00, 
postpaid. 
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Golden 
Glorymiim 
New Yellow Cushion 
U. S. Plant Patent No. 251. 
This is the newest glorious 
development in those broadly 
spreading, cushion-shaped, early 
flowering, smothering flowering 
types so popular during the past 
few years. 
Brilliant gold and compactness 
from its “Ohio State” parentage; 
cushion growth, flower shape and 
extreme freedom from “Azalea- 
mum,” the other parent. 
PRICE, postpaid: Each, $1.00; 
3, $2.50; 6, $4.50; 12, $8.00. 
Korean Hybrid—Apollo 
