a good mulch, the plants are ideally situated and respond with generosity. They are hardy, 
even In severe winters in the north. They are fibrous rooted, not bulbs, and must be 
planted at once when received. Altho they can be moved any time, it is better to ship 
from late fall to early spring. 
They are an almost perfect border or landscape plant, never have to be dug and re- 
planted. All that you must do for them is keep the weeds down and water. A heavy leafy 
mulch helps every way. 
In Daylilies, the sepals are colored and petal-like and are an essential part of the 
See display. Best planting time is fall, winter or spring. They can be planted in summer 
also. 
In the following list those plants known to be evergreen here are marked E. These 
often flower here in winter. 
Hemerocallis Araby. 30”. E. A lovely pastel color, with the effect of bronze on gold 
dust. Blooms early. 75c. 
H. Calypso. Large, fragrant lemon yellow flowers. Opens in evening. 42”. June- 
August. 30c ea. 
H. Cecil Houdyshel. E. A Dr. Traub origination. A deep crimson with an old copper 
shade that makes it outstanding in our garden. Slight shade gives better color to flowers. 
3 ft. June-July. $1.00. 
H. Chengtu. E. Brilliant coppery orange-red with carmine mid-zone. 36”. July-Sept. 
D0c. 
H. Cinnabar. E. Cinnamon sprinkled with orange, gold-glistening. 30”. July-Aug. 50c. 
H. Crown Prince. E. Color like Mikado. 30”. June-Aug. 25c ea. Per doz. $2.25. 
H. Dauntless. E. Cadmium yellow. Fulvous red blended in mid-zones. Pastel effect. 
. 30”. June-Aug. 75c. 
H. E. A. Bowles. 48”. Large ruffled flowers of deep red-orange blended with gold. 
arly. / 5c) 
H. Evangeline. 40”. Large, rosy flowers with purple eye zone. Early. $1.50. 
H. Florham. E. Still popular old hybrid. Large, golden yellow. May-July. 50c. 
H. Florida. Pastel shades. Light chrome yellow with rose blush. Darker mid-zone. 
July-Aug. $1.50. 
H. Iris Perry. E. 36”. July-Sept. Orange-bronze. 50c. 
H. Kwanso. The Double Orange Daylily. 25c ea. 3 for 50c. 
H. Linda. E. Petals, ruffled golden yellow, flecked with cinnamon, and a rose zone. 
Sepals, pure yellow. Very lovely. June-July. 50c. 
H. Mandarin. E. 48”. Lemon yellow. June-July. 50c. 
H. Margaret Perry. E. Brilliant orange-scarlet. 4 ft. July-Aug. 35c. 
H. Mikado. E. Orange with mahogany-red zone. A favorite. 3 ft. May-July. 35c. 
H. Modesty. 36”. Large, pale creamy yellow. Our nearest white. $1.25. 
H. Nubiana. E. Dark chocolate-red with yellow stripe in petals. One of the darkest 
varieties. 2 ft. 60c. 
. Patricia. 30”. Pale yellow, large fragrant flowers. July-Aug. $1.00. 
. Radiant. 42”. Rich orange, June-July. 50c. 
. Rajah. 40”. Deep English red, veined darker. Garnet red eye-zone. July-Aug. 75c. 
. Rosita. E. 36”. Near carmine, tinted copper. Part shade best. $1.00. 
Royal. E. 40”. Beautiful golden yellow. Fine texture. July. 75c. 
. Serenade. 48”. Rose on apricot cream. Faint dark overcast. June-July. 75c. 
. Sibyl. E. Dark red-purple petals, lighter sepals. $2.00. 
. Soudan. 36”. Lemon yellow. Broad, wavy petals and sepals. June-July. 50c. 
. Spitfire. 30”. Fiery red, yellow mid-rib and throat. Almost constant bloomer, 
spring to fall. $1.50. 
H. Vesta. 30”. Deep orange with glistening gold sheen. May-July. 50c. 
H. Vulcan. E. 30”. Darkest maroon red. July-Aug. 75c. 
H. Wau Bun. Large apricot, sprinkled fulvous-red. The twisted and curved petals 
add gracefulness to its beauty. 75c. 
Ismene. Their large, very fragrant, white flowers are very desirable for cutting and 
15 
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