SUN GLORY — ID (Lee). A very attractive va¬ 
riety of good size, with strong, long stems. 
Color, soft gold overlaid with sunset red. 
Roots $2.50 Plants $1.25 
SUPREME GLORY— FD (Almy). Here is a pro¬ 
fuse blooming, enormous yellow, with a faint 
flush of red reverse on some of the petals. This 
will be one of the most satisfactory plants in 
your garden. 
Roots $0.50 
THE COMMODORE— ID (Scott-Kemp). Lemon 
yellow. Covered with large blooms all the sea¬ 
son. One of the most satisfactory propagators 
of the year. Of very greatest size obtainable. 
Bush habit good and no drooping stems no mat¬ 
ter how poorly cared for. Some tendency to 
open centers late in the season, but absolutely 
perfect blooms most of the blooming period. 
Blooms twelve inches by eight inches are very 
ordinary and without sacrificing grace in the 
artistic, translucent petalage of this wonderful 
free-blooming dahlia. 
Roots $1.00 
THE FIREMAN— ID (Success). Quite frankly 
we missed this variety last season. This dahlia 
has been a success wherever grown, greatly 
admired by all who have seen it blooming. 
Color is .a brilliant cardinal red, with golden 
flushes and golden tips at the center of the 
flower. One grower last season said it was the 
best purchase of the year, which is a lot to say. 
Plants only $3.75 
i 
THE HOOSIER —FD (Oler). Perhaps one of the 
most beautiful flowers in the garden, with foli¬ 
age unlike any other dahlia in existence so far 
as we know. The Hoosier is an Indiana intro¬ 
duction. Color, as best we can describe it, is 
light yellow overlaid with gold and touches of 
rose, reverse tinted with rose and deeper tones 
of yellow. Under artificial light it is even more 
attractive. Early, free and continuous bloom¬ 
er, with long, straight stems. Its one fault is a 
tendency at times to allow the flower to droop 
slightly. 
Roots $2.50 Plants $1.25 
Twenty-nine M 
