26 QUALITY CHRYSANTHEMUMS 



A COMPOSITE PICTURE OF THE VALENCIA 
STRAIN—VALENCIA, APRICOT VALENCIA, 
JANE AND GOLDEN JANE. 
CALIFORNIA RED DAISY—An intermediate 
brilliant red with good stem and foliage. Med. 
hety ) Mat. Oct.5. 
CALIFORNIA YELLOW DAISY—Good clear 
yellow intermediate type. Med. hgt. Mat. Oct. 5. 
DEBUTANTE—Very large deep pink of un- 
usual beauty. One of the best of the single 
varieties. Tall. Mat. Nov. 30. 
DR. PHILIP S. DOANE—A deep wine red with 
pinkish-silvery reverse. Very large. When dis- 
budded with attain a dia. of eight inches. Tall. 
Mat. Nov. 1. 
25 cents each; 3 for 70 cents; $2.50 per doz. 
EUROPA—A brilliant red single of exquisite 
form and good substance. We consider this 
variety the most outstanding achievement on 
the market today. Med. hgt. Mat. Nov. 10. 
25 cents each; 3 for 70 cents; $2.50 per doz. 
FIESTA—Beautiful reddish-bronze. Very large 
and of striking appearance. Med. hgt. Mat. Nov. 
5. 50 cents each; $5.00 per doz. 
GOLDEN JANE—A golden yellow sport from 
Jane. (See illus. above.) 
GRETCHEN PIPER — Brilliant yellow with 
double row of ray petals. Blooms are 4 inches 
in diameter when disbudded; equally attractive 
when grown in sprays. Tall upright growth. 
Mat. Oct. 25. 
HASEGAWA POINSETTIA—Brilliant red. Ex- 
cellent sprays. Three-inch blooms. Tall. Mat. 
Nov. 15. 
IDA SKIFF—Amber bronze. Short. Mat. Nov. 
1. (See illus. page 25.) 
JANE—A rich golden bronze sport from Valen- 
cia. Tall. Mat. Nov. 20. (See illus left.) 
JEAN—Pure white. Med. hgt. Mat. Nov. 1. 
LIGHTHOUSE—Red single with good sprays 
bearing large flowers. Equally suitable as a 
garden plant or for cascading. Tall. Mat. Oct. 
15: 
LORD PROVOST KELLY—A large, shaggy 
semi-double yellow bloom. Med. hgt. Mat. 
Oct. 10. 
LOUIS FRIED—An outstanding bloom of a 
brilliant red. Petals are long and tubular ter- 
minating in long open tips. Tall. Mat. Nov. 10. 
(See illus. front cover.) 
50 cents each; $5.00 per doz. 
MABEL SEYMOUR —A large white single 
bloom suffused with a pronounced greenish 
shading. Yields large sprays of perfect blooms 
3% inches in dia. without the tedium of dis- 
budding. Med. hgt. Mat. Nov. 1. 
MELBA—Orange bronze. Semi-double, 4 to 5 
inches in diameter. Med. hgt. Mat. Nov. 5. 
MORI APRICOT—Soft apricot shade of yellow. 
Large and when disbudded is a most beautiful 
bloom. Med. hgt. Mat. Oct. 25. 
OCTOBER PINK—A daisy type, light lavender 
pink single two inches in dia. An erect, sturdy 
plant of high productivity. Med. hgt. Mat. Oct. 25. 
25 cents each; 3 for 70 cents; $2.50 per doz. 
PINK SKIFF—A fine, proven pink seedling hav- 
ing the more desirable characteristics of the 
parent, Ida Skiff. Med. hgt. Mat. Nov. 1. (See 
illus. page 25.) 
RADIANT—Bright red. A true daisy type 3 
inches in diameter. Med. hgt. Mat. Nov. 5. 
RED MELBA—Red. Semi-double 4 to 5 inches 
in diameter. Med. hgt. Mat. Nov. 5. 
RED VALENCIA—A sport of Valencia. Same 
in all respects except color. (See illus. left.) 
ROSE CECILE—A small deep rose, semi-double 
with a mauve reverse. Has four rows of quilled 
spoon-tipped petals curled slightly upward. Re- 
sistent to rain and light frosts. Med. hgt. Mat. 
Nov. 25. 35 cents each; 3 for $1.00; $3.50 per doz. 
SLIPPER—A large shell pink with quilled 
petals. Disbudded or grown in sprays it merits 
more than a second glance. Med. hgt. Mat. 
Nov. 1. 
TAGOYA — Brilliant goya red. Semi-double. 
Short. Matures Nov. 1. 
VALENCIA—Most charming shade of orchid 
pink, a strikingly beautiful bloom. Tall. Mat. 
Nov. 15. (See illus. left.) 
WHITE MENSA—Large white with vation but- 
ton in the center. Resembles Shasta Daisy. 
Med. hgt. Mat. Nov. 10. 
WOBURN — A_ Phlox-pink, daisy-like single 
with a tall clean habit of growth. Produces a 
great profusion of 244-inch flowers carried in 
graceful, wiry stemmed sprays. Tall. Mat. 
Nov. 15. 
~~ 

