OLDER VARIETIES 
OF HEMEROCALLIS 
PRICES REDUCED (AS LONG AS THEY LAST ) 
o0c each or one each of any ten varieties for $4.50 
Covers most of the entire season’s bloom 
The varieties listed on this page are not our originations. While they are older, I still consider 
them very good. They are more plentiful, and naturally are less expensive. The varieties that we no 
longer consider desirable have been eliminated from our list altogether. 
AUGUST PIONEER. (Stout.) Dormant. 
Chrome-orange, flushed red.  Loveliest of 
the multifloras. Ht. 315 ft. Aug., Sept. 
BAGDAD. (Stout.) Dormant. 
Rich brown and red. Ht. 4 ft. May, June. 
BOUTONNIERE. (Stout.) Dormant. 
Small, overlapping petals. Sepals almost 
clear orange; petals light rosy peach. Ht. 3 ft. 
July. 
CINNABAR. Evergreen. 
Cadmium-yellow, overcast richest cinnamon. 
4-inch bloom. Ht. 2% ft. May, June. 
</2 
DAUNTLESS. (Stout.) Evergreen. 
Huge; cadmium-yellow with faint fulvous 
mark. Ht. 214 ft. May, June. 
GYPSY. Evergreen. 
Light orange, fulvous brown overcast. Very 
effective; much admired. Ht. 314 ft. May, June. 
HYPERION. Dormant . 
The much-loved huge, wide, lemon-colored 
sort. Ht. 3 ft. May, June. 
J. A. CRAWFORD. Evergreen. 
Rich apricot-yellow shaded light cadmium. 
| Many flowers on 4-foot stems. June. 
KWANSO. Dormant. 
Huge, double; orange, rose, copper. Ht. 34% 
ft. June, July. 
MIKADO. (Stout.) Evergreen. 
Mellow orange, dark red-purple eye zone. 
Ht. 3 ft. May, June. 
OPHIR. Dormant. 
Big, lily-shaped; golden yellow. Ht. 31% ft. 
June, July. 
RAJAH. (Stout.) Dormant. 
A later Mikado with more intense color. 
Garnet-brown, orange background. Ht. 31% ft. 
June, July. 
| SERENADE. (Stout.) Dormant. 
Crinkled petals in pastels, giving an effect of 

pale coral-pink. Ht. 3 ft. May, June. 

We pay transportation on all orders amounting to $3.00 or more; otherwise add 35c for packing 
and postage. 
A WARNING 
The first flowers on a newly planted Daylily 
will not give you a full conception of the true 
character of that particular variety, for they are 
usually small and in some cases not so intense 
in color as they will be after becoming established. 
Give them a full season’s growth before you pass 
judgment, and I believe you will say that they 
are the most beautiful flowers and the easiest to 
grow that you have ever tried. 

Many people make the mistake of dividing 
Daylily clumps when they are no larger than 
that in the photograph shown here. This clump 
has grown one year after being transplanted; it 
must have produced 50 to 75 blooms. 
RUSSELL GARDENS, SPRING, TEXAS 

Transplanting 
A Year After 
