KAYLOR NURSERIES, LAKEWOOD, WASH. 3 
Swo Tlew Glads 
Serene Susan 
Merely being the tallest Glad we grow 
would not justify us in introducing this 
e it were lacking in other good quali- 
ies. 
It is a line bred flower in which white- 
ness of color, length of stem and size of 
floret were dominating factors. The seed 
parent was Mt. Index, the pollen parent 
a tall growing seedling of large size but 
poor color. 
Our field notes show Serene Susan has 
prdouced plants up to six feet tall. Stems 
and flower head are well balanced, with 
up to 22 buds of which eight will open 
in the field. All our records are made 
in the field where our Glads grow with- 
out any special petting so often used to 
produce those “magnificent spikes” of 
semi-forced blooms one sees too many 
times in shows. 
Color is almost snow white with a 
little lavender tinting in the _ throat, 
Which also carries a creamy feather. It 
will open to nine inches across the floret 
and is a mid-season bloomer doing well 
from medium size bulbs. Plenty of bulb- 
lets which germinate easily. Has made 
good in eastern, mid-western and coast 
gardens. —$3.00; M—$2.25; S—$2.00; Blts. 
—4-$2.00. 
Sunshine Sally 
The size and coloring of Barcarole al- 
ways appealed to us, but we never could 
get the stems long enough to carry the 
flowers. 
We crossed Barcarole onto the tall- 
growing Tahlahneka and Sunshine Sally 
is the result of the wedding. She has gone 
through a lot of testing and has always 
come across with good points. We missed 
a part of the coloring of both parents 
but in many ways Sunshine Sally is bet- 
ter than either. It is a clean Salmon tint- 
ed medium orange up to. six inches 
across, Six open on a 60 inch strong 
stem. Florets are heavy-textured, round 
and wide open. They have a golden 
throat and the long stem makes it fine 
for tall baskets. Plenty of bulblets and 
does well from medium sizes. L—%3.00; 
M—S82 25; S—$2.00; Blts.—4-$2.00. 
The Best of the Glads 
In an effort to simplify our Glad list 
we have cut the “hot air’ from descrip- 
tions and given you the main facts as we 
see the varieties perform in our gardens. 
There are hundreds of varieties which 
we do not grow—many of them good 
ones. Some of these we have under test. 
It is not to the advantage of either us 
or our customers to grow two, three or 
more kinds that have such minor differ- 
ences that only an expert can tell them 
apart. We try to select the best, but they 
must have quality and some distinctive- 
ness. 
Our system of pricing explains itself. 
For those who want quantities of one 
kind, figure ten of a kind at eight times 
the single price; twenty-five of a kind at 
seven times the single price. For lar- 
ger quantities we will be glad to quote 
price. 
Last year’s crop of large bulbs was 
short, but we have plenty of mediums 
and smalls, so, if not instructed other- 
wise, we will send next size—and more 
of them—where large bulbs are sold out. 
We have taken more prizes with spikes 
from medium than we ever, have from 
large bulbs. Usually they produce as 
large spikes, but are a little later bloom- 
ing. Order early and state how to ship. 
Gled Bulb Discounts 
If your order is for less than $2.00 add 
25c to pay postage. If for $5.00 or more 
select ten per cent in extra free bulbs. If 
for $10.00 or more select 15 per cent in 
extra bulbs and if for $25.00 or more Se- 
lect 20 per cent in extra bulbs. 
Abagail. Minuet coloring but a much 
better lavender. Taller and a better per- 
former. L—$1.00; M—75c; S—50c; Blts.— 
6-50c. 
Bridesmaid. Tall salmon pink with 
creamy throat. Opens six large florets. 
M—15e; S—2-15c; Blts.—10-25c. 
Burma. Ruffled ceep rose. Very large 
and heavy florets. Opens best if cut and 
placed in water. L—15c; M—2-20c; S—3- 
15e; blts. 10-20c. 
Carrara. One of the tallest, large milk- 
white florets with small red lines in 
throat. A good performer. L—20c; M—15c; 
S—20c; Bits—10-25c. 
Chehalem. A new, tall-growing medi- 
um red from Becker, of Portland. We 
have had it but one year but like it for 
its very early blooming. Large, well 
opened florets of a clear medium red. 
Will fill a vacant place in the scheme 
of things. L—25c; M—2Cc; S—15c; Bits. 
10-25c. 
Connecticut Yankee. Many times win- 
er in Eastern shows. Many large light 
pink florets open on a tall stem. Deeper 
color in throat. L—-75c; M—50c; S—25c; 
Blts.—5-40c. 
Cover Girl. She’s tall enough and big 
enough to cover a lot of bouquet space 
in a pink with orange overcast color. L— 
20e; M—15c; §e-2-20c; Bits.—20-25c. 
