226 



HORTICFLTITKE 



Affgnst 16, 1913 



TWO RARE LIL 



Hardy, Beautiful, Fragrant. 



LILIUM MYRIOPHYLLUM 



LILIUM MYRIOPHYLLUM. Mr. E. H. Wilson, the 

 offered, in North-western China. He considers this the 

 lent for forcing. It has been predicted that this will be 

 mav be grown at home. The flowers are white, slightly 

 veliow at the centre, and extending part way up the trum 

 mine, and lacking the heavy oppressive odor of most lilies. 

 Medal at the S. A. F. & O. H. International Flower Show, 

 Gold Medal bv the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, 

 Exhibition, Lx)ndon. 1912. Bulbs, ready in October, each, 



famous plant collector, collected for us the bulbs now 

 finest of all lilies. It is absolutely hardy, and is excel- 



come the Easter Lily of the future, and being so hardy, 

 suffused with pink and with a beautiful shade of canary 



pet. It is delightfully perfumed, reminding one of the jas- 

 Blooms out-of-doors early in .luly. Awarded the Gold 



New York, 1913, as the Finest New Plant on exhibition; 

 and a first-class certificate by the Royal International 



$1.50; dozen, $15.00. 



R. & J. FAR 



Nurserymen and Seedsmen 



