“FULVA” CLONE MACULATA—(Maculata Daylily) July; 3’. Cold, 
outcurving coppery orange, shaded crimson. Larger and later than 
Europa. 35c each; 5 (g) 25c. 
GOLD DUST—May, June; 2’. A neat, elegant, early and low grower. 
Empire yellow, reversed bronze. Sold out for several years. Now, 
again available. $1.00 each; 5 (a) 85c. 
GOLDEN BELL—(Wallace) June, July; 3’. Trumpet-shaped, pale 
apricot-orange flower; very full and of fine substance. $1.00 each; 
5 @ 85c. 
GOLDENI—(Betscher) Early July; 3’. Well named. Many fine, 
are deep orange; full, medium size. $1.00 each, 
in habit and an effective garden variety. $1.50. 
GYPSY—(Betscher) Late July; 4’. Scapes and foliage coarse. Flowers 
are deep orange; full, but not extra large. $1.00 each. 
HYPERION—(Meade) July; August; 40”. Canary yellow, of a lum¬ 
inous shade, lighter than the Lemon Daylily. Flowers are large 
and waxy; 5-6” spread. Full, numerous and heavily fragrant and in 
bloom for a month. Ranks with Ophir but lighter and later. $3 each. 
KWANSO FL.-PL.—June; August; 3%’. Large, double, coppery orange 
flower of good garden value. 35c each, $3.00 for 10. 
MIDDENDORFFI—Early June; 1%’. Semi-dwarf. Fragrant, pure 
orange flowers. A fine comparison for late iris. 50c each ; 5 ( 5 ) 40c. 
OPHIR—(Farr) Early July to late August; 4%’. Mr. Farr’s best 
Hemercallis. Golden, waxy, yellow flowers, five inches across, six 
inches long; stemes 4-5’ high. One stem usually carries 25 or more 
successively opening giant, heavy texture and lasting flower ^ 
of Merit, Royal Horticultural Society of England, 1931. 
tionally long bloom season and an exceptionally fine Day 
each; 5 (5) 85c. 
ROYAL—(Japan) July; 3%’. Splendid, yellow, medium-siz 
similar to Hyperion : n beauty of texiuie. $1.00 each, 5 (ci 
SIR MICHAEL FOSTER—(Muller) June, July; 4’. Fine, clear apri¬ 
cot yellow; sweet-scented flowers with extra-long, funnel-shaped 
throats, measuring 5-6” across; extended blooming. $1.00 each, 5 
( 3 ) 85c. 
SOVEREIGN—June; 20”. Semi-dwarf in habit, with pale chrome- 
yellow flowers, shaded brown on outside. Neat foliage. AMRHS, 
1931. $1.00 each, 5 ( 3 ) 85c. 
THE GEM—(Betscher, 1929). July to August; 3’. Deep orange yel¬ 
low or apricot. $1.00 each. 
RAJAH—(Stout-1935) July-August; 40”. The flowers are large and 
gayly colored with a conspicuous eye zone. The throat is a pale orange 
with a greenish tinge. The blades are English red, traversed by darker 
colored veins and there is a conspicuous eye zone, as in Mikado, that is 
near the shade of garnet brown. The scapes are coarse branched, bear¬ 
ing as many as twenty flowers. The foliage is a good green, rather dark 
in shade, medium coarse and ascending; spreading to a level about 12 
inches below the flowers. In summary, a darker and later Mikado of 
very robust stature. $3.00 each. 
SONNY (Stout-1935) July-August; 36”. Ever since it first bloomed 
in 1925 this seedling has been considered to be a plant of unusual charm 
and beauty. The flowers have a spread of four to five inches. The 
perianth segments are thick and firm in texture and strongly recurving 
and the petals are somewhat twisted. The throat of the flower is green¬ 
ish in color and the face is a clear and uniform shade of light yellow. 
On hot sunny days the color gradually becomes paler but the texture re¬ 
mains firm and the surface waxy and the flowers do not wither. The 
flowers open about sundown and are widely open throughout the next 
day and well into the following night. During the evening there are 
two sets of flowers that are open. The foliage forms a loose dome of 
spreading-ascending leaves extending almost to the flowers. The scapes 
are still and lossely branched, and they bear as many as fifteen flowers. 
The Sonny Daylily' is a hybrid of the second generation of the cross 
Hemerocallis Thunhergii x H. aurantiaca. $3.00 each. 
VESTA—(Stout-ig3i) July; 30”. Deep orange flowers with a glist¬ 
ening gold sheen. Open flowers have a spread of more than 4”. Semi- 
dwarfed habit, , with fine foliage. Flower stems about 8” above the 
foliage level. Holds up well in hot weather. $3.00 each. 
THE GOLD of OPHIR 
It was a rare coincidence when Bertrand H. Farr 
recalled the Gold mines of Solomon and named Hemerocallis Ophir; 
for no other plant variety we have ever handled has enjoyed such 
constant demand and such fixed value. 
Here are three entirely unsolicited, unexpected and 
quite recent letters which confirm the merits of Ophir. 
All last summer I intended writing you about the Hemerocallis 
you sent. They were very splendid. One plant—Ophir—had at 
one time, over a hundred blooms. It was the most lovely thing I 
ever saw. Mrs. Jacques Busbee, Steeds, N. C., March 7, 1935. 
I have at least 20 varieties of Hemerocallis in my garden and I 
believe Farr’s Ophir is the most satisfactory. If I could have only 
one of the 20 I would choose it as it always does well regardless of 
our seasons which are pretty' hot and dry out here. L. F. Valentine, 
Clay Center, Kansas. July 9, 1935. 
We have often wondered why our enduring favorite, Ophir, hasn’t 
had a friend at court who would advertise it to its full worth. To 
us it is the finest and most vigorous and most dependable of fully a 
hundred sorts. Port Rose Garden, Freeport, Ill. July 15, 1935. 
A Cut Flower Display of late-flowering hybrids of 
Hemerocallis Multiflora 
/WWWWWWN/WWWWWWWWWWWWWl 
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