GOLDSMITH. A brilliant, orange 
yellow, large decorative pompon 
that blooms November 25. Color is 
similar to Princeton. Growth habit 
is stronger and heavier than that 
variety. This variety has found 
much favor with many growers in 
that it follows Princeton and pre- 
ceeds Vibrant, part of the crop mak- 
ing Thanksgiving and providing a 
large golden yellow decorative to 
complement Sunnyside. Goldsmith 
is being grown in the cloth house, 
and when given the same treatment 
as the Valencias, Viking and other 
late flowering varieties produces a 
heavy crop of outstandingly high 
quality cut flowers: 
BRONZE MASTERPIECE. A rose- 
wood bronze sport from Master- 
piece. Growth and flower form are 
identical with the parent variety. 
This color is enthusiastically re- 
ceived by floral designers. Like its 
parent, Masterpiece, and like the 
variety Little America, this variety 
responds in a startling manner to 
disbudded spray technique raising 
an already good variety to a new 
high standard of cut flower quality. 
YUKON. A medium sized, clear white 
spray single of unusually free and 
easy culture. Yukon normally 
blooms December 10 but under low 
temperatures is versatile enough to 
flower for Christmas. It shows no 
tendencies toward blindness. This 
variety provides a white single to 
flower with the pompon Cameo in 
the season between Cordova and 
Snow. It responds well to the same 
cultural requirements as Vibrant, 
Cameo and Garza. 

SARONG. A bright crimson scarlet 
single for December and Christmas. 
This variety grows more freely, is a 
heavier producer and a better ship- 
per than Carnelia. Its cultural re- 
quirements are essentially the same 
as for the varieties Snow and Yel- 
low Snow. It may go blind under 
the same conditions that cause 
blindness in those varieties. Tne 
grower who can successfully grow 
Snow can expect a profitable crop 
from Sarong. The best late red. 
YELLOW ARCADIA. A pure sulfur 
yellow sport from Arcadia. Like its 
parent it is of easy culture and high 
production. A fine yellow to flower 
with Arcadia and preceding Pixie. 
ROSALIND. A pink single some- 
times referred to as a pink Yukon. 
This variety like Yukon will grow 
freely under any normal greenhouse 
conditions. It does well in low tem- 
perature and, if grown slowly, can 
be had for the Christmas cut when 
the color, a clear medium pink, is 
so scarce. For the grower who de- 
mands varieties that grow and pro- 
duce without fussing we recommend 
Rosalind. 
Varieties on This Page $37.50 per 1000 
450 
