NOTICE TO CUSTOMERS 
We wish again to call your attention to 
the fact that our seed is never sold 
through other dealers or in commission 
boxes. They can be purchased only from 
us direct from our catalog or by calling at 
our store in La Conner. TILLINGHAST 
QUALITY SEEDS always bear the name 
TILLINGHAST SEED CO. on every 
packet. 
Bedding and Porch Box 
Plants 
FUCHSIA. Graceful plants with many 
dainty drooping brilliantly colored blooms. 
Single. Pink. Pink with purple bell. White 
with pink bell. 
FUCHSIA, Trailing. Red with purple bell. 
ICE PLANT (Mesembryanthemum) Thick 
leaves, plant drooping. Flowers pink. 
HELIOTROPE. Flowers violet purple and 
very fragrant. 
GERANIUM. Finest of all bedding plants 
in brilliance of bloom and hardiness. 
Double Sorts. 
Fiat. Intense dark salmon pink. 
Helen Mitchell. Brick red. Enormous 
trusses. 
Pink Barney. Wonderful shade of rose 
pink. 
S. A. Nutt. Deep velvety maroon. 
Single Sorts. 
Fire. Brilliant red. A wonderful sort. 
Kavoleski. Brick salmon-red. 
Mrs. E. G. Hill. Soft salmon-pink Very 
fine. 
GERANIUM, Lady Washington or Pelar¬ 
gonium. Large brilliant florets. 
Easter Greeting. Florets of fiery amar¬ 
anth-red with five large regular shaped 
spots on each bloom. 
Gardener’s Joy. Apple blossom pink, with 
two upper petals having blotches of car¬ 
bon brown. 
LANTANA. Dainty plants 12 to 18 inches 
tall bearing a profusion of bright two- 
toned flowers. Sold in three colors: 
Orange, Pink, and Lavender. 
PRICES, postpaid — Any plants listed 
above: Each, 25c; 3 for 60c; 6 for $1.10; 
dozen, $2.00. 
Farm Journal 
We are local representatives for the 
FARM JOURNAL on which we offer a 
special price of FIFTEEN months for 25c. 
This magazine is published in the inter¬ 
ests of the farmer, gardener, and home 
owner, and contains timely articles on 
many subjects. Farming, gardening, new 
crops, cooking, fashions, movies of the 
month, and many other subjects are dis¬ 
cussed in simple every-day language. 
Merely enclose the coupon which we supply 
for your use and send it with 25c in an 
envelope and mail it direct to 
FARM JOURNAL, Philadelphia, Pa. 
Be sure that the correct address is filled 
in on the coupon so that you will receive 
your magazine promptly and correctly ad¬ 
dressed to you. 
Lilies for Spring Planting 
All herbaceous borders should have a 
few lilies scattered through them. The 
sorts offered below can be planted with 
excellent results during the early spring 
months. It is in the hardy border that 
lilies do best, as they get the benefit of 
the shade of the surrounding plants, which 
is so necessary for their welfare; other 
varieties should be planted in the autumn, 
and are offered in our autumn catalog. 
Give these lovely lilies a place in your 
garden—a sunny spot where they can grow 
undisturbed. They will delight you for 
many years to come. We know of no 
flowers which ask less or give more. It 
pays to buy the best obtainable bulbs, such 
as are listed here. 
AURATUM GIGANTEUM. Gold-banded 
Lily of Japan. This is the largest and 
many think the most gorgeous of all. The 
flowers are bell-shaped, with slightly flar¬ 
ing and waved petals, each thickly dotted 
with bristly maroon spots and marked by 
a showy bright yellow band down the cen¬ 
ter. They are intensely fragrant. Ea. 30c. 
AURATUM PLATYPHYLLUM. The tall¬ 
est and largest of the Auratums, with 
broader, darker leaves and larger flowers 
similar to Auratum, but it lacks the red 
spots, leaving a pure white bloom with a 
yellow band. Plant deep Each, 35c. 
HANSON I. Delicately fragrant, nodding 
flowers of pale yellow-orange with thick, 
waxen, recurved petals in clusters above 
broad whorls of leaves on stems 2 to 4 
feet high. Each, 40c. 
HENRYI (Yellow Speciosum). A very love¬ 
ly flower of the Speciosum type. It grows 
8 to 10 feet high or more in favorable 
places and likes to root among low shrubs, 
sending its tall stems up into the sunlight 
where its bright apricot-yellow flowers 
may show at their best. Each, 30c. 
REGALE. Large white blooms with can¬ 
ary-yellow throat and blush-white edges. 
Delightfully perfumed, but not oppressive 
as some of the older lilies. June and July. 
Each, 20c. 
SPECIOSUM RUBRUM. White, suffused 
rose-pink, spotted red. August and Sep¬ 
tember. Each, 30c. 
TENUIFOLIUM. A dwarf, very graceful 
lily with thread-like leaves and clusters of 
nodding tiny bell-like recurving flowers or 
brilliant coral-red in June. Each, 15c. 
TIGRINUM. The Tiger Lily is well known, 
with its showy spotted red-orange flowers 
in wayside gardens in August and later. 
Single, each, 25c. 
Lilies should be planted in soil that is 
moist and yet not too wet. The bulbs 
should be planted not less than 6 inches 
deep and not less than 8 inches apart. 
While some sorts require fall planting, the 
varieties here listed may be planted dur¬ 
ing the winter or very early spring months 
prior to April 1st. Owing to the fact that 
some sorts start growth as soon as the 
weather warms up in the spring we will 
supply any of the ones in this list as long 
as good bulbs are available. Orders re¬ 
ceived after that time will be booked for 
delivery in November or December when 
the new stock is at hand. 
30 
The TILLINGHAST SEED COMPANY, La Conner, Washington 
