. f 
] mea: = 
li pel Res - e < SARE IER reer rere ate” ad 
‘ | ees SS Save: 
i . pe ee ene ee ee 
oT H ) 
2M 
f dd b » A, =» 4 5 
EB Boy cs cee 
NO. 30 HEMEROCALLIS PUBLICATION bins VEILVED 
by die Be Sie NV 4 i nis Pp ; ¢ Q 194 
Va! Lyre } ‘ i : 1 ces a 4 i" g wp 
Pobruary. 1949 Hyatts vil ke, Md | nm 
U, Ss Dena tmant nt i 
OTHER RECEN? NUMBERS stiri dg 
rq at ene 

Noe 21. Hemerocallis that do well in Montgomery County, Maryland» In manual of plant 
material published by Men's Garden Club of Montgomery Co» pe 9-11, March 1948. 
No. 22. Registration of Hemerocallis clones» Hesbertia 13:110-116, 1943, 
No. 23. Daylily choices. Herbertia 14:68-69, March 1948. 
No. 24. Registration ‘of Hemerocallis clones. Herbertia 14:125-128, March 1948. 
Nos 25. Making new daylilies. Herbertia 14:134-137, March 1948. 
No. 26. A daylily is not a lily. Midwest Hemerocallis Society News Letter, Volel, Noe 
2, peb, June 19486 
No. 27. Some problems for investigation in 1948. Midwest Hemerocallis Society 1948 
Yearbook, p+ 49, September 1948. 
No. 2d. Hemerocallis species, lec. peAgudle 
No. 296 Notes published by others, lc. p65, 124 
PRICE LIST FOR SPRING 1° ; 
Je Be Se Norton, 4922 Fortieth Place, ‘fyattsville, Mde 
Prices are for divisions shipped prepaid; they are 10, less for delivery at the 
Garden, or on orders of $10 or more. Figures give height in feete Colors are approxi- 
mate. Daylily colors vary with light, temperature, moisture, and time of daye 
Bach week in blooming season, the best of each kind and color is marked with a *, 
and a few of these with **, as the cream of alle These marks of quality are given in 
tae list below. Those that do not get a * for at least one week in three years' trial 
arc discarded and not included in the price list, but here are some of them at 25¢ 
eache They might do better with you: Algeria, Amber Gold, Antares, Chrome Orange, 
Crown of Gold, Flava Major, Floyham, Golden Mantle, Gold Imperial, Harvest Moon, Lady 
Fremor Hesketh, Lemon King, Lutwola Major, Luteola Pallens, Mandarin, Miranda. 
Daylilies succeed under a great variety of conditions. They bloom for two to six 
weeks, from spring to late fall, nearly all colors and color combinations except blue 
and whnitee They are hard to kille Favored planting times are April and August, or 
dust after blooming. They are usually at their best the third year after planting. 
Visit our Garden about May 20 to see most early kinds in bloom; June 15, to see 
the Japanese Iris Garden. July 10 is the peak of bloom for the hundreds of kinds of 
summer blooming daylilies, and soon after Lilium superbum, wild among the trise In 
mid-August our new late hemerocallis hybrids are in flower. But a visit each month 
from March to November is needed to see all our 2,700 kinds of plants in bloom. There 
are over 500 named kinds of daylilies, and thousands of unnamed hybrids to be seen; 
also all kinds of plantain-lilies (Hosta, Funkia). - 
NEW AND VERY SCaRCE. 
$5.00 each while they last 
CaROL ANN (Norton, 1949), midsummer, 5-4 feet, sepals buff, petals old rose.’ 
HIDDEN GLOW (Norton, 1949), late spring, 2-3 feet, light buff, sometimes a glow of red 
in the petals; was numbered NN. 
ARTEMIS (Norton,1949), midsummer, 2-4 feet, light yellow, sepals narrow and blunt, 
petals very wide near the tip and round as a half circle. 
ALBERT GORHAM (Norton,1949), midsummer, 4-6 feet, the large, bold flowers with blends 
of dark old rose and related colors brightened by the wide, buff petal 
mid-lines; was numbered 4M. 
NaRCISS& (Norton, 1948), midsummer, 3 feet, light yellow with a pink tinge, widest 
segmentse 
