FLYING CLOUD FARMS 
NEW BEDFORD, MASS. 
LILLIE (Mair, Scotland) —Lilac with a white throat. A good propagator and we believe 
good for commercial use. If you are looking for a commercial variety of this color,, 
it is surely worth a trial. L 5-20c, M 10-20c, Bits. 100-20c. 
LILYDALE (Gilrey, Australia) —A hig exhibition white, with about ten open and al¬ 
though the demand has kept our stocks small, we still think it is one of Gilrey’s best.. 
L 20c, M 15c, S 2-15c, Bits. 12-20c. 
LISBETH (Errey, Australia) —This flesh pink glad is flecked a bit with salmon and has 
an orange buff throat. It is strictly an exhibition variety and as such is outstanding,, 
but unfortunately not a fast increaser. L 50c, M 35c, Bits. 3-15c. 
LOCHNAGAR (Mair, Scotland) —Really a mahogany color. Mair calls it dark slaty 
rose, with a white blotch. Flowers are large and well placed on a very tall spike. 
We now have a good stock of this variety and are reducing the price and hope it will 
find a place in many of your gardens this coming season. L 20c, M 15c, S 2-15c, Bits.. 
15-20c. 
LOUIS BOUMEISTER (van Deursen, Holland) —A good addition to the weak purple 
class and it is especially valuable as a commercial because the spikes are tall; does ex¬ 
ceptionally well from small bulbs and propagates easily. L 5-20c, M 10-20c, S 15-20c,. 
Bits. 100-20c. 
LUCIFER (Errey, Australia) —This extremely popular variety, and justly so, is bright 
orange with an amaranth crimson shaded blotch, making a striking color combina¬ 
tion. Ten large flowers on a very tall spike give something outstanding for the 
exhibitors. L 4-30c, M 5-20c, S 6-15c, Bits. 50-30c. 
M. M. SULLY (Lemoine, France) —The old stand-by. White with blotch and still a 
good one. Very early. L 10-50c. 
MADELON (Lemoine, France) —A great advance over the old favorite M. M. Sully, 
above, from the same originator. White with a dark blotch, the spikes are tall and 
straight; about eight large flowers open on an 18 bud spike. The white color is 
clear and the dark red blotch makes a most attractive color combination. L $1.00,. 
M 75c, S 50c, Bits. 2-20c. 
MAHOGANY (Mair, Scotland) —Rich red brown with creamy yellow veinings and 
throat markings, on a typical Mair spike. It is one of the very best in the dark col¬ 
ored section. The color is very clear for a variety as dark as this one. L 40c, M 25c, 
S 15c, Bits. 5-20c. 
MAID OF ORLEANS (Pfitzer, Germany)— The outstanding white of the last few years. 
A fine show variety and generally admitted to be the coming commercial white. It 
has been a big winner in all the glad growing countries and surely deserves all the 
good things said of it. L 10-80c, M 10-60c, S 10-30c, Bits. 20-20c. 
MAKENU (Burns, New Zealand) —Large, wide-open, ruffled florets of a rich orange 
shade, with scarlet blotch. Opens 8-10 perfectly formed, large florets of Pfitzer’s 
Triumph type, at once. Does not burn in strong sun. Award of Merit at Canter¬ 
bury, N. Z. 1934. First class exhibition variety. L $3.00, S $1.50, Bits. 35c each. 
MARCHEN (Pfitzer, Germany) —A soft light-flame pink self, of the purest shade. Ihe 
blooms, which are about six inches, are of good substance and well placed on a good 
spike, making it one of Pfitzer’s best new ones. L $1.20, M 80c, S 40c, Bits. 2-25c. 
On Jan. 20, 1935, a Pennsylvania customer writes:—“The bulblets I got from you last year, produced 
real nice bulbs, some of them bloomed; cne flower measured 4^4 inches across, I expect to have some real nice 
flowers from them this year. 
