


EE —EEE———— 
Again 
Available 
These four Daylilies intro- 
duced years ago; Princess and Saturn 
mn 1935. The heavy demand for their 
new, distinct and superior qualities 
necessitated immediate withdrawal 
from our further catalogues. Since 
then the demand from friends of 
original purchasers has almost equaled 
our rate of production. At last pro- 
duction has crept ahead and we ven- 
ture again to list them in our catalogue. 
Our supply of strong, field-grown plants 
should be sufficient for 1946 and a new 
crop should be ready by 1947. 
Were 
B. H. FARR. 3 ft. June, July. An out- 
standing variety. Extra-large, full flower, 
with gracefully recurved petals. Glowing 
rosy peach, attractive, parallel, darker 
veinings. Throat pale; no eye. General 
pastel coloring. A favorite with our garden 
visitors. Remains open evenings. $3.00 
each 
PRINCESS. 214 ft. July. Clear, uniform 
Iemon-yellow with full, recurved petals 
spreading 5”. Fragrant. Erect and much 
branched. A distinct and leading clear, 
light yellow. $3.00 each. 
FARR NURSERY CO. 
7 


BI C OL OR 
ROSALIND. 314 ft. July-August. A Stout 
selection from Fulva Rosea. Clear, even- 
toned, shapely rose-pink, with a deeper rose 
eye zone in each petal. The spreading, 
recurving flowers are medium large, with a 
spread of 4 to 5 inches, borne well above the 
leaves. Truly pink Daylilies are mostly a 
disappointmeat to date because plants are 
tender, with sparse or fragile bloom. Rosa- 
lind plants are vigorous and hardy. Blooms 
are lovely, profuse and durable. This 
variety was illustrated and introduced in 
the May 15, 1938 issue of Horticulture and 
is finally available for distribution. $3.00 
each. 
SATURN. 3 ft. June, July. Flowers of ro- 
bust Multiflora type, 3” spread; numerous 
in clusters. Dark orange-red, overcast 
bronze. A trace of eye on crest of petal, 
suffusing into clear apricot-yellow and dis- 
tinctive marginal band. $3.00 each. 
e Weiser Park, Pa. 

