AMUR DAYLILIES 
(H. middendorffii) 
in the field 
Orientai Poppy 
Beauty of Livermore 
in the background 
Dependable 
Hemerocallis 
‘The perennial supreme”. They 
thrive in any soil, asking only a spot 
in the sun (but they’ll do well in 
light shade, too.) They are absolute¬ 
ly hardy; they are not pestered by in¬ 
sects—they’re “foolproof”. 
Flowers are large size, borne well 
about the foliage on many-flowered 
stems; trumpet shaped, much resem¬ 
bling true lilies. Their blooming sea¬ 
son runs from late May to August. 
H. middendorffii (Amur daylily) — 
earliest, closely following tulips. 
Bright golden orange, very profuse 
bloomer. .30c each, 4 for ,$1.00 
H. flava (lemon day lily) — May-June 
blooming, clear lemon yellow color, 
delightfully fragrant. With the pink 
iris Dream or Dr. Chas. Mayo it 
makes a beautiful color 
harmony 3,5c each, 3 for $1.00 
H. fulva (Europa daylily) —coppery- 
orange shaded crimson, blooms in 
July. Tall, showy, needs practically 
no care and blooms at a time when 
few other perennials 
bloom. .30c each, 4 for $1.00 
H. Kwanso —rare and unusual double¬ 
flowering form of the 
above. 40c each 
NEW HYBRID DAYLILIES 
Apricot —light apricot-orange, reverse 
deep brown-orange. .50c 
Calypso — large clear lemon-yellow. 
Night blooming. July-August. 7.5c 
Hemerocallis (daylilies) should he planted in September or October and 
mulched the first winter. 
Oriental poppies must he planted in August—that’s the only time they’re 
dormant. Failure always follows spring planting and usually late fall planting. 
They need only a light covering through the winter as they begin to grow in 
late autumn and stay nearly evergreen throughout the winter. 
