FLOWERING GERANIUMS 19 
RUBY. Double. Crimson-red with ruby tones. The 
large clusters are produced on long slender stalks. Good 
eee The variety called New Rusy seems to be identi- 
cal. 40c 
VELMA. Single. Crimson, approaching garnet-red. 
Medium-large flowers. Strong plant. 40c 
No. 42. Single. Intense crimson. A brilliant, yet dark 
color. 40c 
No. 149. Single. Crimson with white center, backs of 
the petals scarlet. Large flowers and clusters. Free 
flowering. A very good variety for which I have not 
been able to find the name. 50c 
French Type 
MARQUISE DE CASTELANE. Double. Rich crim- 
son. Large flowers. Medium-large plant. The standard 
crimson variety in the French Type. 40c 
MY BEAUTY. Double. Rich crimson. Large flowers. 
Medium-large plant. This is similar to MARQUISE DE 
CASTELANE, but the flowers are more double and livelier 
in tone on a more compact plant. 50c 
WILL ROGERS. Single. Deep crimson, approaching 
deep purple-crimson on the lower petals and intense 
scarlet at the base of the upper petals. Large flowers 
in large clusters, on a large, strong plant. Very rich 
in color, and perhaps the darkest of all geraniums. 50c 
BLENDS 
Standard Type 
AFTERGLOW. (Miller). Single. Salmon and old- 
rose blend. Large clusters. The salmon tones predomi- 
nate in the opening flowers, gradually changing to old- 
rose in the older flowers. 50c 
AMERICAN BEAUTY. Double. Deep crimson-rose 
and salmon blend. Large flowers. Strong, tall, bushy 
plant. Free flowering and showy. The varieties called 
Masure’s Beauty, Mrs. SMITH, and RosALi£ appear to 
be exactly the same as AMERICAN BEAutTy. 40c 
AZTEC. (Miller). Semi-double. Deep vermilion with 
golden-tan overtones. Medium to large flowers in good 
clusters. Fairly bushy plant with a tendency to produce 
some long, more-or-less trailing stems. A little pruning 
will keep it bushy and compact, if desired. Exception- 
ally free flowering. 
DORIS KENYON. Single. Pale salmon flushed and 
veined pale rose, deeper in the center. Large flowers 
of good form, with the upper petals warmer in tone 
than the lower. 40c 
RAMONA. Double. Vermilion, crimson and _ rose 
blend. Very large flowers. Bushy plant. The fine 
translucent color is difficult to describe, perhaps ap- 
proaching “cherry.” The flowers are produced very freely. 
RaMona apparently has some Ivy Geranium ancestry. It 
often makes long, somewhat trailing shoots. Since it is 
ee bushy, it can easily be kept compact, if desired. 
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