LARGE TRUMPET 1 33 



sulphur and gracefully twisted petals of pure white. The 

 flowers are delightfully musk scented. 



William Goldring. (C. 16 in. §llt$i doz.) A droop- 

 ing Swan's Neck daffodil of good constitution, with long 

 tapering petals of pure white, gracefully curving over the 

 primrose tinged white trumpet. 



W. P. MiLNER. Syns: Minnie Warren, nanus albus. (B. 

 II in. §11* $1.25 doz.) Dwarf, of good constitution, es- 

 pecially effective for small beds, edgings, naturalising in 

 grass and a lovely thing to plant permanently in rock 

 work. The dainty little flowers of cowslip fragrance are 

 freely produced ; creamy-white out of doors but pure white 

 when grown inside. It seeds freely. 



TWO-COLORED TRUMPETS — WHITE WINGED 

 OR BI-COLOUR 



Hybrids between the all-yellow and the 

 all-white trumpet daffodils. They have 

 "white wings," or petals, and yellow trum- 

 pets. Healthy vigorous growers, thriving 

 in the garden border, In pots, or naturalised. 



Ada Brooke. (D. 15 in. § H 50c doz.) A late free 

 blooming variety flowering after Empress and before Gran- 

 dis. Trumpet orange yellow, perianth creamy-white. A 

 strong grower and valuable for cutting. 



BicoLOR. ($1.50 doz.) The type, dwarf and late flower- 

 ing. Rich yellow trumpet and broad pure white petals. 



BicoLOR OF Haworth. (E. 13 in. t $1.50 doz.) Con- 

 taining abscissus blood — and like the latter — among the 

 latest to bloom. The flowers last into June if grown in 

 partial shade. Trumpet rich yellow, perianth pure white. 

 In outline the flowers resemble the elegantly formed earlier 

 flowering Horsfieldi. 



