Harlan P. Kelsey, Owner, Salem, Mass. 
LILIES, continued 
*LiIium specio8um rubrum. Dark purplish red flowers. 
Probably the best variety for the ordinary garden. 
superbum. Turk's-Cap Lily. 3 to 6 ft. No description 
will do justice to this magnificent American Lily. 
Golden, recurved petals, the flowers in perfect pyra¬ 
mids, often forty on a single stalk. A clump of them is 
literally a blaze of scarlet and gold. 3rd size. 
2nd size. 
1st size. 
*tenuifolium. Siberian Coral Lily. 1 to 2 ft. Flowers 1 to 
20 on rather short raceme, nodding, rich scarlet. Does 
well in ordinary garden soil. 
*tigrinum. Tiger Lily. 2 to 5 ft. An old-fashioned variety 
of very easy culture. Flowers 3 to 10, nodding, bright 
red, thickly spotted with bright purplish spots. Ordi- 
*wallacei. Dwarf species. Very showy. Pale red flowers. 
One of the best for ordinary garden culture. 
washingtonianum. 6 to 7 ft. Stout stem. Often 15 to 
25 very fragrant flowers of white to rich wine-color. 
One of the finest Pacific Coast species, of rather easy 
culture if given good, rich soil. 7-8 in. 
8-9 in. 
TRILLIUMS 
permanent. Brilliant sea 
TRILLIUM cernuum. 
12 to 15 in. Nodding white flowers; 
erectum. Erect Wake Robin. 8 to 16 in. Large; red 
fruit; very ornamental; brown-purple, often greenish. 
April and May. 2nd size. 
10 
100 
1,000 
SI 50 
S12 00 S100 00 
2 00 
16 00 
140 00 
40 
2 00 
18 00 
75 
5 00 
30 00 
1 00 
8 00 
60 00 
1 50 
12 00 
100 00 
1 00 
8 00 
60 00 
l 00 
8 00 
60 00 
1 50 
i 
12 00 
2 50 
20 00 
4 00 
30 00 
5 00 
40 00 
Trilliums. They must 
?Ie strong clumr 
3 of, say. 
Lilly beautiful tli 
ling, and 
'ers. 
; 10 
100 
1,000 
SI 00 
1 
$8 00 
40 
3 00 
SI8 00 
75 
5 00 
30 00 
4 
