DOMINION. 314 ft. June, July. Extra- 
large, full flowers with rich red colorings in a 
concentric three-toned pattern. Second 
period of irregular bloom from mid-August 
until November. Strong, bold, royal. Re- 
mains open evenings. $3.00 each. 
HANKOW. 324 ft. July to late Aug. Flow- 
ers are large (51”), rich yellowish orange 
with bold scarlet eye-zone in petals. A clone 
of the species H. fulva, extensively culti- 
vated near Hankow, China, for food and 
medicine. $2.00 each. 
HIAWATHA. 314 ft. June, July. Numerous 
medium-small, golden orange blooms on 
branching, upstanding scapes. Like H. 
multiflora but taller, larger, and earlier. Re- 
mains open evenings. $1.50 each. 
LINDA. 2/4 ft. July, Aug. Large flower with 
crinkled petals; base golden yellow with 
cinnamon fleck and red eye in sharp contrast 
to the bright and clear yellow sepals; practi- 
cally a bicolor with pastel shaded eye-zone. 
See picture, page 8. $1.00 each; 5 @ 80 cts. 
MAJESTIC. 3 ft. July. Large, full flowers 
(6”). Petals recurving and slightly ruffled. 
Color clear uniform orange. Truly a ma- 
jestic bloom that outclasses any other or- 
ange variety. $3.00 each. 
MIDAS. 314 ft. July. Medium-large, full 
and well spread; clear glowing orange. Very 
‘tall, strong and erect scapes; excellent for 
background. $1.00 each; 5 @ 80 cts. 
MIKADO. 3 ft. June to Aug. Mikado has 
placed first three times and second once in 
the four annual polls of Hemerocallis spe- 
cialists, including 321 varieties of Daylilies. 
Flowers of striking color; the large spot of 
mahogany-red in each petal contrasts 
sharply with the rich orange of the rest of 
the flower. Many spreading branches. 
Tends to bloom again during September. 
See picture. 50 cts. each; 5 @ 40 cts. 
MONARCH. 3 ft. July. Much and firmly 
branched. Full, crisp, large, star-like, light 
cadmium-yellow blooms with a delicate 
halo of fulvous orange in mid-zone. Re- 
mains open evenings. $2.00 each. 
MULTIFLORA. 214 ft. Aug. to Oct. A 
superb fmale to the Daylily season, usually 
continuing beyond first frosts at Weiser 
Park. The scapes are upstanding and much 
branched. Flowers clear orange and small- 
est of the Daylily species. Grassy foliage. 
$1.50 each. 
MULTIFLORA SUMMER HYBRIDS. 21/4 
ft. Late June to late Aug. Extremely long 
bloom season. Numerous small (2 to 3”), 
clear orange flowers on heavily branched 
scapes. 60 cts. each; 5 @ 40 cts. 
See page 12 for Special Collections 
See page 14 for Daylily Primer 
PATRICIA. 214 ft. July, Aug. Second choice 
in ballot of 321 varieties. Rated 93.7, or .08 
below Mikado. Pale yellow with tinge of 
Iemon-chrome and throat of flower green- 
ish; petals and sepals of uniform tone. Large 
(5"), shapely, full flowers with pronounced 
fragrance. Exceptionally good in hot sun 
and early evenings. $1.25 each; 5 @ $1.00. 
RAJAH. 314 ft. July to late August. Large, 
gaily colored English-red, with conspicuous 
eye-zone; throat pale orange, with greenish 
tinge; blades traversed by darker-colored 
veins, with eye-zone, as in Mikado, near the 
shade of garnet-brown. Scapes heavily 
branched, bearing as many as 20 flowers. See 
picture page 10. $1.25 each; 5 @ $1.00 each. 
SACHEM. 314 ft. July. Medium-large and 
full; dark red, near carmine; yellowish or- 
ange throat in sharp contrast, forming a 
concentric, two-toned pattern. Holds color 
and form exceptionally well throughout the 
day and in hot weather. $3.00 each. 
SERENADE. 4 ft. June, July. Very light 
pastel shade of yellow and pink in pleasing 
harmony. Petals twisted and crinkled, with 
faint halo. Flowers medium-large, on tall, 
slender, stiff stems. Try this variety in 
combination with Siberian Iris, Perry’s Blue 
for a garden picture. See picture page 10. 
$1.00 each; 5 @ 80 cts. 
SOUDAN. 3 ft. July, Aug. Medium-large 
(4”), empire-yellow flowers, very full and of 
recurved lily type, with broad, pleasingly 
creped and crinkled petals and sepals. See 
picture page 10. $1.00 each. 
“Daylily Mikado is No. 1 in polls by judges but in my 
opinion Patricia and especially Rajah in my garden far 
surpass it. Am anxious to see if Theron, will beat 
Rajah.””—A.sBert A. BRECKMANN, Coreopolis, Pa. 

