CONNECTICUT YANKEE—441—(Schenetsky ’44) 
A great flower with an enviable show record in- 
cluding many grand champion awards, several in 
recent Illinois shows. Opens 8-10 light pink flor- 
ets with carmine throat mark on double-row spike. 
Don’t be without this one. 
L. 50c; M. 35c; S. 25c 
DAISY MAE—521—(Lins 45) 
Soft orange-salmon with cherry blotch. A husky 
grower that is winning more and more ribbons 
and friends each season. Opens 6-7 at once. 
L. 15c; M. 10c; S. 3-15¢ 
DAWN GLOW—560—(Jack 745) 
This is truly a beauty in the pastel department— 
a light rose pink. Can’t quite see it as a rose (any 
more than I can Corona), but it certainly is one 
of the most beautiful glads I have ever grown, 
and a winning show flower every time. One would 
think anything so delicate in color might not hold 
up well, but this is not the case. Florets often go 
over 6 inches, and they are nicely ruffled. Am 
finding it an excellent seed parent. Sets seed from 
almost any pollen and produces beautiful ruffled 
off-spring in pastel pink, lavender and rose. 
L. 25c; M. 20c 
*DIEPPE-—432— (Hassel °45) 
Classification wrong here. It should be 586, as 
scarlet is the color, not salmon. Dieppe was one 
of the most outstanding glads in the past trying 
season; was good for everyone. For me it won 
Best Recent Introduction at the Leroy, IIl., show. 
Opens 7 giant, slightly ruffled florets on very tall 
spikes. It should be in every glad garden. 
L. 2-25c; M. 3-25e; S. 5-25c¢ 
EVANGELINE—560— (Palmer ’48) 
Altho classed a light rose, Evangeline is nearer to 
light pink—540—maybe rose pink. Throat of 
florets shade into cream, and they are nicely 
ruffled. Over-all spike is massive as 8 to 10 flor- 
ets will open and several show color. Florets be- 
yond middle of flowerhead sometimes face up, 
but otherwise this is a variety that is all any 
showman can ask for and more than they usually 
get. 
M. $1.50; S. $1.00 
HARRY HOPKINS—554— (Salmon 747) 
This is one of the best post-war glads to come 
out of Holland, and tho stuck with a “New Deal- 
er’s” name it is still a very fine glad. But it isn’t 
black red; it’s deep rose—the same color as Bur- 
ma. Color is intensely deep and does not burn or 
fade. Opens fine in field in hottest weather. 
Spikes sturdy and straight. 
L. 50c 
Rec’d the bulbs. Thanks a lot. I can see it will be a 
pleasure dealing with you. Your bulbs look fine.—J.J.J., 
Cedar Rapids, Iowa. 
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