Available at Any Season 
Hedychium coronarium (“Ginger Lily”). Canna-like growth; waxy white 
flowers with a rich fragrance; fall blooming.each 50p 
Hedychium flavum. Taller, light yellow.each $1.50 
Hedychium Gardnerianum. Tall, with deeper green foliage and yellow 
flowers .each $1.00 
Hemerocallis Aureole. Clear orange yellow.-.each 50c 
HemerocaJlis Calypso. Light yellow Burbank hybrid-.each 50c 
Hemerocallis fulva. The old-fashioned tawny day-lily-each 25c; 5 for $1.00 
Hemerocallis flava major. Low light yellow.each 25c 
Hemeroeallis Golden Bell. Large clear bright yellow flowers of beautiful 
form and delightful fragrance; an English importation and one of our finest 
varieties .each $1.00 
Hemerocallis. Gold Standard. Large deep yellow...each $1.00 
Hemerocallis Maggie Perry. New English fulva hybrid in deep coppery 
orange, almost red .......each $1.00 
Hemerocallis, Sir Michael Foster. Very tall lemon yellow; evergreen and 
almost ever blooming .each 75c 
Hemerocallis Sovereign. Deep yellow.....each 50c 
Lachenalia pustulosa. Low pastel tinted spike.......each 25c 
Moraea bicolor. Picturesque iris-like plant with soft yellow flowers....ea. $1 
Moraea iridioides. Lovely iris-like flowers through a good part of the year; 
ornamental foliage ...each 50c 
Moraea Macleayi. Smaller flowered than preceding and lower in growth, 
but of similar habit; a nice thing......each $1.00 
Moraea undulata. Lower and more recumbent than the allied iridioides; 
flowers smaller..........each $1.00 
Sisyrinchium striatum. An interesting “Blue-eyed Grass” from Chile, with 
tall racemes of creamy yellow flowers. Unusual and exceedingly effective 
in the landscape .......5 for $1.00 
EASTERN CUSTOMERS WILL FIND OUR ABILITY TO SHIP 
BOTH IRISES AND DAFFODILS IN EARLY SUMMER AN IN¬ 
ESTIMABLE ADVANTAGE, GIVING THE PLANTS AN EXTRA 
LONG PERIOD OF ROOT-GROWTH BEFORE THE ONSET OF 
WINTER. 
SPECIAL NOTE 
Our garden is not a large one, nor grarvdly landscaped, but it contains 
its full quota of rare and interesting plants, and those who will but remem¬ 
ber that it is simply a horticultural workshop and do not expect too much of 
it otherwise, are always welcome visitors. In addition to our innumerable 
daffodils and irises, which form a collection not easily surpassed, we grow 
various species of Moraea and Nerine, a very fair array of freesias and 
Hemerocallis, and divers odds and ends in small bulbs, rock plants, peonies, 
herbs, and other perennials. Late spring and early summer and again the fall 
are in general the most favorable times to secure stock for planting, but to 
view the flowers our spring months are best, February and March for daffo¬ 
dils and April to June for irises. Do not, however, look for any signboard 
at the garden beyond the street-number, for even at the cost of some busi¬ 
ness we are devotqd believrs in the slogan, 
KEEP THE LANDSCAPE BEAUTIFUL! 
THOSE COMING FROM OUT OF TOWN MAY APPRECIATE 
THE CONCLUDING REMINDER THAT REDLANDS HAS BEEN 
GLORIOUSLY ENDOWED BY NATURE AND, MOST OF ALL IN 
ROSE AND ORANGE-BLOSSOM TIME, IS A SIGHT WORTHY A 
FAR JOURNEY TO SEE. 
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