4 
WILLIAM N. CRAIG, WEYMOUTH 
Each Doz. 
.75 8.00 
.50 
.30 
5.00 
3.00 
warm and very well drained location. 
Is excellent for pot culture. 
Bulbiferum. A native of Central 
Europe this lily proves to be a good 
grower in North America. The 
bright orange red flowers are dotted 
deep purplish black and tinged or 
blotched yellow in the centre. Flow¬ 
ers in early June... 
Callosum. Flowers are orange red, 
unspotted, reflexed in the same way 
as superbum and Chalcedonicum, 
loves full sunshine, blooms late July 
Canadense. A beautiful and graceful 
native lily succeeding well in either 
sunshine or shade. Fine either in 
the garden or for naturalizing. The 
drooping reflexing flowers are yellow 
to reddish in color, heavily spotted 
within.20 each, 2.00 doz., 15.00 per 100 
Extra Big Cultivated Bulbs 
.40 each, 4.00 doz., 30.00 per 100 
Canadense Flavum. The yellow form 
of the Canadian lily. Succeeds 
splendidly in full sunshine but will 
also thrive in fairly heavy shade. 
.25 each, 2.00 doz., 15.00 per 100 
Canadense Rubrum. The red form of 
this charming lily. 
.25 each, 2.50 doz., 18.00 per 100 
Candidum. The most immaculate and 
beloved of all garden lilies. Needs a 
well sweetened soil and being a pure 
bulb rooter very shallow planting, not 
over 2 inches deep. Lay bulbs partly 
on their sides at planting time, hav¬ 
ing dusted well with lime or sulphur, 
bed well in sharp sand. Home grown 
bulbs are ready in late July, imported 
ones in August and early September. 
As this lily makes a rosette of leaves 
in late summer early planting is de¬ 
sirable. We offer several types of this 
lily but specially recommend the new 
Salonica form. 
American Grown. Fine sound bulbs 
3.00-5.00 per doz. 
English Grown. Very sound and hard 
bulbs, the type seen all over Great 
Britain in every cottage garden, pro¬ 
duced by one of the most expert 
growers in England.3.00-6.00 per doz. 
Dutch Grown. These are fine firm 
bulbs and are giving better satisfac¬ 
tion than the French.4.00-5.00 per doz. 
North of France. This variety is very 
heavily imported but unfortunately 
bulbs have been badly diseased in re¬ 
cent years. We offer them from the 
best available source.3.00-7.50 per doz. 
Peregrinum. A type with black stems 
which has proved more disease proof 
than others. We have a limited sup¬ 
ply of this variety in small bulbs. .75 each, 8.00 doz. 
Salonica. While attending the great 
Lily Conference in England in 1933 
I saw spikes of this new variety 7 
feet high carrying 25-30 flowers each. 
In 1936 I secured a good batch of this 
variety which has proved more nearly 
