Kniphofia Coral 
CORALINA. Red and deep orange flow- 
ers loosely formed into a medium size 
head. 4 feet. $1.50. 
CROWN OF GOLD. A stately flower 
with large heads of pure gold and green. 
A very attractive color. 60c. 
GOLD ELSE. One of the really pretty 
dwarf hybrids. The flower heads are only 
about 3 inches, the stem 18 inches tall and 
the foliage is very grassy. A superb vari- 
ety for cutting and flower arrangements. 
50c. 
HOUTROUGE. Huge flowers on 6-foot 
spikes. Brilliant red. $1.00. 
NOEL. A dwarf orange that blooms in 
Midsummer and is useful for that reason if 
not for its attractive small flowers. 2 feet. 
50c. 
ROUGE ET SOUFFRE. A tall growing 
variety with very bright red and yellow 
flowers. Midseason. 60c. 
SHOW YELLOW. Similar to Crown of 
Gold except that it is a deeper yellow and 
has no green. 4 feet. 50c. 
STAR OF BADEN. Blooms twice during 
the summer, bearing numerous large heads 
of the most unusual color among all flow- 
ers; a beautiful shade of tan or dark 
honey-yellow. 40 inches. $1.00. 
TUBERGENII. Similar to Star of Baden 
in form and habit, but with more orange 
coloring to the flowers. 5 feet. $1.00. 

31 
SUNBURST. A stunning flower of dis- 
tinct form. The flowers are about 12 inches 
long. Buds upright, red at the tip, turning 
orange as they develop. The open flowers 
turn down after opening and are a lemon 
yellow. The radiation of the flowers in all 
directions from a common center gives it 
tn aeaas of light rays radiating. 6 feet. 
UVARIA. A species from South Africa. 
Very tall growing and useful as a back- 
ground. The flowers are cylindrical, very 
closely set, and the color is saffron-yellow 
below and scarlet above in most plants, 
as the color is variable. A charming spe- 
cies. 5 feet. 50c. 
W. F. DREER. This is an old favorite 
and is the largest and tallest of all. Bright 
orange-red flowers on 6-foot stems. 50c. 
DWARF HYBRIDS. These are Rufa hy- 
brids varying in height from 18 inches to 
3 feet, The color range is truly astonish- 
ing, ranging from white through cream, 
yellow, orange-pink, red and combinations 
of these colors. Just the thing for the 
cutting garden and for planting among the 
average perennials. Sold in mixture only. 
$3.50 doz. 
Leucocoryne 
Glory of the Sun 
IXIOIDES ODORATA. Recently intro- 
duced from Chile. Large heads of fragrant 
sky-blue flowers with white center and 
golden stamens on thin 15-inch stems. 
Valuable for cutting and for massing in 
the border. Requires same culture as Free- 
sias. Plant 6 inches deep. Delivery Sept. 
to Feb. $1.75 per doz. 
Leucojum 
Snow Flake 
AESTIVUM. A hardy bulb producing 
spikes of eegant, drooping white flowers 
with small green or yellow tip. Flowers 
very early in the Spring. Useful for cut- 
ting and naturalizing. 112 feet. Fall de- 
livery. $1.25 doz. 
Lewisia 
BRACHYCALYX. Best of the deciduous 
Lewisias. Pinkish white flowers of satiny 
texture measuring 112 to 2 inches across. 
A native of the mountains of Southern 
California and is well suited as a rock 
garden plant. The rosette of leaves is pro- 
duced early in the Spring in moist loca- 
tions, and the flowers soon follow in great 
profusion. The plants grow close to the 
ground. The specie listed is deciduous and 
may be lifted and stored away during the 
Summer and Fall. It is perfectly hardy. 
Delivery Aug. to Feb. 50c. 
Libertia 
Irids from New Zealand and Australia 
with tall, grassy ornamental foliage and 
pretty white flowers that resemble the 
blue-eyed grass (Sisyrinchium), but pro- 
duced in great profusion on established 
clumps. Will grow in full sun and part 
