
GEORGE YELD 
ORANGE AND RED TONES 
BAGDAD. A brilliant and richly colored flower of true Oriental 
splendor. The rich brown and red tones give a gay and bold 
pattern that is very pleasing. 4 feet, summer. $1.50 
CINNABAR. Fittingly, the flower is brownish-red, with a yellow 
throat. The recurving petals have the outer half sprinkled with 
rose-brown. 30 inches, summer. 75c 
CRISSIDA. Bright orange with a narrow banding of reddish brown 
across the petals. Fine substance. 30 inches, summer. 50c 
FULVA MACULATA. A blending of soft yellow and burnished cop- 
per with decided pink tone in the center of the open cup-shaped 
flowers. 48 inches, summer. 75c¢ 
KWANSO FLORA PLENA. You will like this double hemerocallis, 
orange in color, flushed with red. 42 inches, summer. 50c 
MARGARET PERRY. A most persistent flowering hybrid. The 
blooms are brilliant rose-red and buff-orange, lined with yellow. 
48 inches, summer. 35c 
MIKADO. The best known and the most distinct of Dr. Stout's older 
originations. The flower is a fine orange, the three petals having 
a banding of dark red-purple. 36 inches, summer. 50c 
RADIANT. We cannot praise this exceptionally clear orange too 
highly. Of heavy substance and fine texture. 42 inches, sum- 
mer. $1.00 
VESTA. A deep orange-yellow flushed a bit with red, and having 
a glistening sheen. 24 inches, summer. $1.00 
HEMEROCALLIS 
[DAYLILIES] 
Daylilies are most satisfactory garden flowers. Their 
lovely lily-like flowers are borne on graceful stems 
well above their masses of grassy leaves. They are 
very easy to grow in most any good garden soil, in 
either full sun or light shade. The flowers are in all 
tones of yellow, from light to deep, some a rich orange, 
while still others have reddish markings on the petals. 
Many are also delightfully fragrant. 
They are essential plants for the perennial border, 
where the flowers and foliage make a substantial con- 
tribution. By careful selection of early and late bloom- 
ing varieties, bloom may be had from spring almost to 
fall. Place the taller kinds toward the back, lower 
orowing toward the front. Daylilies are especially 
effective planted in clumps or groups about garden 
pools. Their ability to flower in light shade makes their 
use practical when other garden flowers are not 
satisfactory. 
LIGHT YELLOW 
HESPERUS. A marvelous new lemon-chrome, with blooms 7 inches 
across. 48 inches, summer. $3.00 
HYPERION. A great favorite. Large, waxy, firm flowers of sofl 
canary yellow. 42 inches, summer. 75c¢ 
PATRICIA. A clear and even tone of pale yellow with a greenish 
throat. A charming and full formed flower with pronounced fra- 
grance. 36 inches, summer. $1.50 
SUNNY WEST. Immense flowers of pale canary yellow, with a 
waxy finish. Many buds on extra strong, tall stems. 48 inches, 
summer. $1.00 
THE GEM. A fine yellow. 36 inches, summer. 35c 
WAU-BUN. An excellent variety with broad petals of cadmium- 
yellow, the outer half flushed with red. 30 inches, summer. $1.50 
WINSOME. Delightful blossoms of pale creamy yellow. Fragrant. 
30 inches, early summer. 50c 
DEEP YELLOW 
FLORHAM. Large, ruffled flowers of deep yellow, with a gay 
twist at the tips of the petals. 36 inches, summer. 35c 
GEORGE YELD. Large open flowers; the petals are long and re- 
curving; the head a golden yellow, separated from the outer 
orange section by a rosy band; sepals a clear orange yellow. 
36 inches, summer. 75c 
GOLD DUST. A good early yellow dwarf. 24 inches, spring. 35c 
GOLDEN WEST. Large yellow flowers of extremely fine substance. 
48 inches, summer. $1.50 
MRS. J. R. MANN. A beautiful deep yellow, with fluted petals and 
flaring sepals. 36 inches, summer. 50c 
QUEEN MARY. Deep yellow-orange flowers, spreading type of 
bloom. Outstanding among the early flowering varieties. 42 
inches, early summer. $1.50 
SOVEREIGN. A fine orange-yellow dwarf. 30 inches, early sum- 
mer. 35c¢ 
