KAYLOR NURSERIES, BLAINE, WASH. 
3 
Puck 
Here is a puzzle for students of 
genealogy. A Gold Eagle mother and a 
Winged Victory father produced this at¬ 
tractive but decidedly out of the run-of- 
mill flower. From its mother it gets 
earliness; from its dad its extremely long, 
pointed and twilled outer petals, but from 
where does it get its honest-to-goodness 
reddish-orange color? 
Petals are somewhat recurved but 
when expanded, measure about seven 
inches across the bell of the flower. The 
lower petal is the longest I have ever 
seen on a Glad. Almost a self color with 
a little old rose dusting on the lowers—a 
flower you cannot overlook either in the 
garden or vase. Grows a 50 inch spike, 
very willowy, a 24 inch flower head with 
five open. Has won first prizes—if that 
means anything to you—and has made 
good in other districts. It is a Kavlor 
Glad, therefore disease resistant, a rapid 
propagator with good substance and place¬ 
ment. Price for 1937: large $1, medium 
75c, small 50c, with five at the price of 
four. 
Aldebaran 
If you see this Glad for the first time 
with its back to the sun, window or other 
light you will be struck with the clean, 
Robert Brownlee 
translucent beauty of its coloring — it 
makes you think of beautiful cathedral 
glass. A clean rose-pink or light salmon- 
red with large rich cream throat, holding 
its color exceptionally well in any kind of 
light. A 50 inch plant with the spike 
rising from low growing foliage. A 25 
inch flower head carries up to 20 buds 
with six or more 5x5 y 2 inch florets open. 
Drouth resistant. Cut them and place in 
front of a light—you will be delighted. 
It is a Kaylor Glad, therefore disease 
resistant, a rapid propagator with good 
position. Price for 1937: large bulbs $1.50, 
mediums $1.00. 
John Virgil 
This had Leschi for a mother and 
Red Lory for a dad and the result is a 
flower that is almost a self color in a 
translucent dark violet red, or purple 
favoring the red side rather than the 
blue. Forty-six inches tall from low grow¬ 
ing foliage thus permitting the cutting of 
a long spike. Flower head is 26 inches 
carrying up to fourteen 5x5 1 / 2 inch florets 
open at once. They are of such uniform 
size as to make the slightly tapering 
spike resemble a purple column. Spacing 
between florets is wide enough to let each 
floret stand out as an individual and yet 
tie in with the whole. It is a Kaylor Glad, 
