Caballero 
Chameleon 
Easter Morn 
Fluffy Ruffles 
Chloe Friar Tuck 
Chloe's Child Helen Fischer 
Comet Linda 
Cornell Madam Butterfly 
Debutante Marionette 
Gay Troubadour Meteor 
Howdy Mrs. David Hall 
Jean Nashville 
Mamie Lake Ruby Langston 
Martie Everest Tracery 
Mary Guenther Wheeler Halo 
Merriewoode Star 
pe oaes EVENING BLOOMING 
arty Gown Calypso 
Regal Lady Cee 
Royal Crown 
Spring Fantasy 
Frances Russell 
Garden Charm 
su-Lin Midwest Sunshine 
Tamara Moonbeam 
Moonray 
HALO OR BANDED Pale Moon 
Au Revoir Rivermont 
Blanche Hooker Show Girl 
Browneyed Susan Sonata 
Cathedral Towers Starlight 
Colonial Dame Sunny West 
Daafu Tracery 
Dauntless Vespers 
Dominion Wheeler Halo 
Dorothea White Lady 
GARDEN CLUB PROGRAMS 
If yowre looking for something really unusual for one 
of your meetings this year, get as your speaker, Dr. 
Philip G. Corliss of Somerton, Arizona. He not only 
is an excellent speaker and authority on many garden 
subjects, but he also has a wonderful collection of slides 
to show. If you can’t get him for your speaker, make 
arrangements with him to rent his slides. Theyre tops! 
(41) 
A HEAT AND WIND RESISTANT NEAR-WHITE 
Are you growing RUBY LANGSTON? If not, you're 
missing one of the loveliest and most satisfactory 
daylilies we know. Ruby Langston is the palest day- 
lily we grow — a creamy lightness, rather than very 
light yellow, The substance is superb, and when other 
very pale ones have started to get frayed because of 
the heat, RUBY LANGSTON is still just as fresh and 
crisp as when it first opened. 
Last summer on an established clump RUBY LANG- 
STON bloomed for over two months. One day during 
this time, when the temperature had been in the high 
90's with a strong westerly wind blowing, practically 
every daylily in the garden showed signs of wear and 
tear, and every pale yellow was completely frayed 
except RUBY LANGSTON. Very late that afternoon 
Mr. Clint McDade came to the garden, At that time 
the wind was blowing in almost gale-like proportion. 
As we looked over the entire garden, seeing the re- 
sults of the combination of the high heat and strong 
wind on the daylily blooms, Mr. McDade looked at the 
fresh, crisp blooms of RUBY LANGSTON and said, 
“I've never seen anything like it. That's the finest 
daylily you grow.’ 
It may not be an eye-catcher, and if you see it at 
the shows, you might easily pass over it because of 
the more spectacular things you will be seeing, But 
when you grow it in your own garden, you will find 
RUBY LANGSTON gaily victorious over all adverse 
weather conditions when many of the spectacular ones 
which caught your eye have bowed to the elements. 
WHERE TO PLANT - Daylilies will grow in either full 
sun or light shade, and in any part of the country. 
They do not require any special kind of soil, but will 
grow in lime or acid, clay or sandy. They will toler- 
ate poor growing conditions, but respond amazingly 
when given a good loamy spot. Your daylilies will 
live and bloom in a poor location, but will astound 
you with their beauty if you give them a spot with 
plenty of humus, and feed them. 
