suffusions. Highly desirable seedlings should 
come from this, many worthy of separate propa¬ 
gation. Pkt. 25c; spec. pkg. 60c; Ya oz. $1.00. 
L. OCHRACEUM—htzw30. A fine pot Lily, with 
flowers variably yellow, from cream to rich 
ochre, always with wine to olive stains. Sweet- 
scented. Tends to be ever-blooming. Pkt. 25c. 
L. PARDALINUM — cbatzy60. Panther Lily. 
Splendid pyramids of reflexed orange flowers, 
marked crimson. Very hardy. Makes big clumps. 
Pkt. 15c; spec. pkg. 35c; *4 oz. $1.00. 
L. PARDALINUM GIGANTEUM—A new and 
still scarce form, with flowers even larger and 
more brilliantly colored. Very robust. Pkt. 25c; 
spec. pkg. 60c. 
L. PARRYI—catmstzy36. A most graceful Lily 
from the Sierras, with pleasantly perfumed flow¬ 
ers of clear lemon. Pkt. 25c; spec. pkg. 60c. 
L. PHILADELPHICUM—cnstzySO. Flame Lily. 
Upturned cups of fiery orange, the petals richly 
spotted maroon, but shading to burnt orange 
toward the petal tips. Fully hardy. Pkt. 15c; 
spec. pkg. 35c; *4 oz. 90c; 1 oz. $3.50. 
L. PHILIPPINENSE FORMOSANUM — 
ecbhth50. A wonderful Lily that will flower 
within eight months from seed if kept growing 
continuously. Long trumpets of translucent 
snowy whiteness, but with rose suffusions on the 
reverse. In pots, often blooms from new offsets 
several times in one season. In the open ground it 
survives Maine winters without protection. Two 
distinct types. “Strain A,” as described above, 
pkt. 10c; spec. pkg. 25c; 4 oz. 50c; 1 oz. $1.75. 
“Strain B,” no rosy tintings, just pure white, 
pkt. 15c; spec. pkg. 35c; % oz. SOc; 1 oz. $2.50. 
L. POLYPHYLLUM—cstzy40. From Himalayan 
woodlands, and rare. Fragrant flowers, cream 
primrose without, but inside they are purest 
white, marbled with purple. Pkt. 25c; sp. pkg. 60c. 
L. POMPONIUM—czy40. Brilliant scarlet flow¬ 
ers, wax-like and reflexed, up to twelve on a 
stem. June. Pkt. 25c; spec. pkg. 60c. 
L. PRIDE OF CHARLOTTE—ecbh50. A new 
Lily, probably a natural hybrid, although seed¬ 
lings come true. The flowers have the exact col¬ 
oring of Regale, only the anthers are darker, but 
the blossoms are longer and with more of a 
trumpet form. They first open as Regale passes 
its prime, and, of course, are still beautiful when 
Regale is well done. It is a remarkably hardy 
and robust Lily, possessing astounding vitality. 
It grows from seed as quickly as Regale, and in 
addition it produces quantities of little bulbils in 
the leaf axils, in the manner of the Tiger Lily. 
Altogether it is likely to prove the most valuable 
hybrid Lily yet introduced. Seeds only, pkt. 35c; 
spec. pkg. $1.00. 
L. PRINCEPS—ecbhSO. A hybrid of L. Sargen- 
tiae on Regale. As easy as Regale, and very 
much like it, but later in flowering. Pkt. 20c; 
spec. pkg. 50c. 
L. REGALE—ecbh50. Easiest of hardy Lilies, 
quick germinating, strong growing and disease 
resistant. Many great white flaring trumpets, 
but lemon yellow in the throat and rosy in re¬ 
verse. Richly perfumed. Pkt. 5c; % oz. 25c; y 2 
oz. 40c; 1 oz. 65c; *4 lb. $2.00. 
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