FARR NURSERY COMPANY, WEISER PARK. PENNA. 
irrimrrrimrTrrrririrrirrrtrrinroTmnroTnrnrrwwrrirr^^ 
General List of Hemerocallis“C°"‘‘"'j«d 
“Fulva” Clone Maculata. (Maculata Daylily» July; 3'. Bold, 
outcurving coppery orange, shaded crimson. Larger, 6", and 
later than Europa. $1.00 each; 5 @ 85c. 
Cold Dust. May, June; 2'. A neat, elegant and low grower. 
Empire yellow, reversed bronze. 4". One of the best early 
varieties. $1.00 each; 5 @ 85c. 
Golden Bell. (Wallace) June, July; 3’. Trumpet-shaped, pale 
apricot-orange flower; very full, 4", and of fine substance. 
$1.00 each; 5 @ 85c. 
Coldeni. (Betscher) Early July; 3'. Deep golden orange; full, 
4". $1.00 each; 5@ 85c. 
Gypsy. (Betscher) Late July; 4'. Stems and foliage strong. 
Flowers deep orange; full, 4". $1.00 each. 
Hyperion. (Meade) July; August; 4'. Canary yellow, of a lum¬ 
inous shade. 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. $1.00 each. 
Kwanso FI.-PI. June; August; SVz'. Large, 5", double, coppery 
orange flower, on heavy stems. 50c each; 5 @ 40c. 
Middendorfii. May, June; 2'. Semi dwarf; orange yellow, SVi", 
blooms. 50c each; 5 @ 40c. 
Ophir. (Farr) Early July to late August; 41/2*. Mr. Farr’s best 
introduction. Golden, waxy, yellow flowers, five inches across, 
six inches long; stems 4-5' high. One stem usually carries 25 
or more successively opening, giant, heavy texture and last¬ 
ing flowers. Award of Merit, Royal Horticultural Society of 
England, 1931. An exceptionally long bloom season and an 
exceptionally fine Daylily. The inside of a fresh bloom is a 
reflected haze of deep gold. $1.00 each. 
Royal. (Japan) July; 3’/z'. Golden yellow, 4", flowers, Hyperion 
beauty of texture. $1.00 each; 5 (a) 85c. 
Sir Michael Foster. (Muller) June, July; 4'. Clear apricot yel¬ 
low; sweet-scented, with extra-long, funnel-shaped throats, 
measuring 5-6" across. $1.00 each; 5 @ 85c. 
Sirius (Yeld.) June-July, 32". Wide and funnel shaped, rich 
orange with faint red tinge; medium full and 4" spread. 
Trace of a faint brown red eye. Petals charmingly crinkled and 
margins wavy. $3.00. 
Sovereign. May; 20". Semi-dwarf in habit, with pale chrome- 
yellow, SVz", flowers, shaded brown on outside. Neat foliage. 
AMRHS, 1931. $1.00 each; 5 @ 85c. 
The Cem. (Betscher, 1929). July, August; 3'. Deep orange 
yellow or apricot, 4V'2". $1.00 each. 
A Book on Hemerocallis 
Dr. A. B. Stout, Director of the Laboratories of the New 
York Botanical Cardens, and Hemerocallis Hybridist, has 
just published a very interesting and valuable book on Day- 
lilies. He gives full descriptions of the various species and 
practical points on their use and culture. The book con¬ 
tains a number of colored and half-tone plates. Something 
you will need for reference. 120 pp. 
Price, $3.00 postpaid 
Send cash with order to The Macmillan Company, New York City 
The Cold of Ophir 
+ 
It was a rare coincidence when Bertrand H. Farr re¬ 
called the Cold mines of Solomon and named Hemero¬ 
callis Ophir; for no other plant variety we have ever 
handled has enjoyed such constant demand and such 
fixed value. 
Here are entirely unsolicited and unexpected 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. 
I have at least 20 varieties of Hemerocallis in my garden and 
I believe Farr’s Ophir is the most satisfactory. If I could only 
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. 
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 depend¬ 
able of fully a hundred sorts. Port Rose Carden, Freeport, III. 
Please send me your new catalog. I got two clumps of Ophir 
from you two years ago. They are now in bloom and are decid¬ 
edly the loveliest things of their species that I have ever seen. 
Dr. Cuy Steele, Cambridge, Md. 
The Ophir Day Lilies purchased from you started to bloom 
June 28th, ended July 24th. The temperature was 111° on two 
days and over 100° nearly every day with no rain. S. A. Carret- 
son, 3712 Orleans Ave., Sioux City, Iowa. 
Hemerocallis Ophir from a plant in the Farr Display Cardens; 25 bloom 
buds to a stem; bloom from July 1 to August 5. 
tnr^innmnnnrrimnnnr^^ • 5 • ^innnnnnnnnnnnnnnrs^^ 
