COLONIAL DAME (Milliken) 
Year after year Colonial Dame remains one of our favorites here 
at the garden. She is such a well-behaved lady—no matter what 
the weather conditions are she is always her beautiful self the 
whole summer long, and is often the last to bloom in the fall. 
Large flowers of buffy apricot, with a pale rosy-tan banding above 
the bright golden throat. The petals are broad, very ruffled along 
the edges and creped over the flattened portions, and overlap the 
sepals. The whole {lower opens wide, giving a flower of excep- 
tional beauty and charm. In addition to all of her other good 
qualities she is an excellent parent, having two children who are 
more beautiful than she, namely Madrigal and Capri. Deciduous. 
Hardy. 3 ft. See color illustration, page 29. $4.00 
CORALLINE (Nesmith) 
Large flowers which are pale yellow heavily flushed with 
“shrimp pink”. Flowers late. Deciduous. 3 ft. $1.50; 3 for $3.75 
CORNELL (Wheeler) 
Deep crimson red petals and dusted yellow sepals. Wonderfully 
rich contrast. Recurved and frilled. Midseason. 3 ft. $6.00 
CRIMSON STAR (Douglas) 
Large open flowers of crimson with a deeper halo of red just 
above the throat of golden yellow. Very brilliant. Semi-evergreen. 
fits $10.00 
DAILY DOUBLE (Douglas) 
Medium orange with a honey-brown eye zone. Large percentage 
come double. The petals and sepals furl slightly making a double 
flower of great charm. 3 ft. $2.00 
DAWN PLAY (Nesmith) 
An open flower of deep rose with a goiden throat. Its height 
makes it useful for planting behind lower growing plants of a 
border. Deciduous. 4 ft. $2.00 
DOMINION (Stout) 
A fine dark colored daylily. The medium-large flower is rich 
reddish-brown with a yellow throat. Semi-evergreen. Summer. 
Shalt $1.00; 3 for $2.50 
DR. STOUT (Traub) 
A deep orange flower with a lively red overlay, creating a 
brilliant sunburst effect. 3 ft. Evergreen. $1.00; 3 for $2.50 
DOROTHEA (Lester) 
Very attractive and different. The six-inch flowers have a 
soft, unusual, and very beautiful coloring which gives an 
orchid-lavender effect. The petals have a light yellow ground 
color which is flushed with heliotrope and also have a deeper 
heliotrope eye zone; the sepals are pale yellow. Deciduous. 
2% to 3 ft. $4.00 
DUCHESS OF WINDSOR (Traub) 
Surely this is a work of art. The very broad petals spread 
wide and open. The base color is cream with a golden glint 
and just above the throat is a flush of rose, so delicate as to 
be almost elusive. The plant is vigorous and evergreen. A 
choice variety. 24 inches. $1.00; 3 for $2.50 
EMPEROR JONES 
Rich mahogany with golden throat and mid-rib on the pet- 
als. Evergreen and possibly tender. 3 ft. $1.50 
E. W. YANDRE (Hayward) 
The flowers are large, 6 inches, and are exceptionally flar- 
ing. This wide open characteristic and the creped edges make 
them very noticeable. The color is reddish-brown and gold. 
Evergreen. 21% to 3 ft. $1.00; 3 for $2.50; 10 for $7.00 
FANTASIA (Stout) 
The petals of this intriguing daylily are a pale dull red 
which gradually shades to burnt sienna at the very tips. Most 
outstanding feature, however, is the fantastic twisting and 
curling of the petals. 3 ft. $1.00 
FELICITY (Nesmith) 
An enchanting ruffled yellow, with many flowers to each 
scape. 32 inches. $4.00 
FESTIVAL (Stout) 
A bi-color of orange and “English red”. The throat, the 
mid-stripe of the petals and the sepals are orange, the sepals 
having a brown overlay near the edges. The petals are red 
except for the mid-stripe. The ends of the petals are twisted 
and compressed as in Wau-Bun. Deciduous. 3% ft. 
$1.00; 3 for $2.50 
FLAMBOYANT (G. Douglas) 
Deep Indian-yellow with a bright red-brown halo on the 
petals. Both sepals and petals are fluted and recurve in 
graceful manner. 3 ft. $3.00 
FOLLOW ME (Mary Stevens) 
Follow Me is a 6% inch bloom of Swiss Rose in color with 
a midrib extending from the throat which is yellow green 
and running to a point in both sepal and petal, starting in 
the throat and extending out into the whole flower, gives 
the effect of a large star in the throat. The petals and sepals 
ane slightly ruffled and recurved. (Introducer’s egg 
B} sic i 
28 
FOND CARESS (Milliken)—See introductions. 
GARNET ROBE (Milliken) f 
We have always thought Garnet Robe was beautiful, but of 
course we were a little prejudiced because he belonged to us, but 
now there seem to be lots of people who think this glowing deep 
velvety red with the yellow-green throat is quite a hemerocallis, 
according to the number three placement in the hemerocallis 
poll. A very vigorous grower, with many well branched scapes 
to an established plant. Evergreen and hardy. 3 ft. $10.00 
GEORGE KELSO (Traub) 
Splendid large flowers (5% inches) whose beauty is enhanced 
by the pronounced ruffling of the petals. The soft light orange 
coloring is suffused with bronze, the sepals being somewhat 
lighter in color than the petals. Vigorous, early blooming, and 
evergreen. 36 inches. $1.00; 3 for $2.50 
GEORGIA (Stout) 
A beautiful daylily with wide petals and large flowers of 
peachy-pink. You can’t go wrong if you are looking for this color 
—very popular. Evergreen. 3 ft. $3.00 
GOLDEN WEST (H. P. Sass) . 
Large yellow flowers, clear in color and of extremely fine sub- 
stance. Summer, in milder climates also in the fall. Evergreen. 48 
inches. 75c; 3 for $2.00 
HAZEL SAWYER (Wheeler) é ; 
A medium sized flower of dusty pink with a yellow throat. Mul- 
tiplies rapidly and is a profuse bloomer. 3 ft. $1.50 
HESPERUS (H. P. Sass) ; 
A marvelous lemon-chrome, with blooms 7 inches across. 48 
inches. Summer. Deciduous. $1.00 
HIAWATHA 
It produces a shower of rather small golden flowers held waist 
high and the flowers remain open in the evening. They give an 
airy touch in the garden and are useful in flower arrangements. 
June and July in the East, into the fall in California. Deciduous. 
iehbs 50c; 3 for $1.25 
MILLIKEN 
These daylilies are all 
