DAYLILIES &% Dz. 4 &. Stout 

THERON 

VESTA 

WAU-BUN 
THERON. 21% ft. July to Sept. Large, full, dark 
mahogany-red. Throat dark red outside, orange in- 
side, producing a striking purple and gold effect. 
Has been in great demand ever since introduction. 
A truly great Daylily. See picture. $2.50 each. 
“Theron has bloomed and was indescribably beautiful. Your 
description does not do it justice. On clear days there were red 
tones in it that beggared description.”—Mrs. H. E. Carrer, 
Tallabassee, Fla. 
TRIUMPH. 314 ft. July. Special and individual form. 
Petals broad, strongly recurved; sepals semi-erect. 
Large; rich orange with a slight fulvous red halo in 
mid-zone. $2.00 each. 
VESTA. 214 ft. July, Aug. Semi-dwarf; deep orange 
with an unusual glistening gold sheen. See picture. 
$1.25 each. 
VULCAN. 21% ft. July, Aug. Even-toned, light 
velvety maroon, with faint golden brown midrib; 
throat of the medium-large (4”) flower 1s golden 
orange. A very showy variety of deepest tone. 
Only recently available. $3.00 each. 
WAU-BUN. 3 ft. Late June and July. Large flowers 
of light cadmium-yellow, slightly sprinkled with 
faint traces of fulvous red, abundantly gold-glisten- 
ing; petals large, broad, with ends slightly and dis- 
tinctively twisted. Summer Iris provides a fine 
companion in your garden. See picture. $1.50 each. 
YELDRIN. 314 ft. July, Aug. Small but full; very 
uniformly yellowish orange; buds and backs of the 
sepals are noticeably brown-red. Much branched. 
Remains open evenings. $2.00 each. 
ZOUAVE. 314 ft. June. Near to a red bicolor. Petals 
rich fulvous red with darker mid-zone; sepals lighter. 
Medium sized and much branched. Usually repeats 
in September. Remains open evenings. $3.00 each. 
What Others Say! 
“T still think that in every respect Mikado is the leader among 
the Daylilies. It will make a Daylily fan of anyone who has the 
least possibility.”—Mrs. Bricur Tartow, Ocala, Fla. 
“Since Sept. of 1941 I have bought $79 or $80 worth of Hemero- 
callis. The repeat orders are the best indication of the worth of 
Eyes plants.””—-CLoyp F. SENSENBACH, White Haven, Pa., Oct. 24, 
42. 
“T thank you for the shipment of Hemerocallis. which arrived 
here during my absence. 1 was at the New York Botanical Garden 
three times this summer, and was very much impressed not only 
with Dr. Stout’s hybrids but with the carefuJ way they are being 
checked and rechecked before introduction.’”’—EpGAR ANDERSON, 
Vents: of the Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 
7, 1941, 
“I am not able to attend to my flowers properly any more, So 
of late years, have been interested only in hardy Hemerocallis.” 
Mrs. James G, Raucn, 420 Main St., Slatington, Pa 
See Special Collections on page 12 
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