PAGE 17 
Hardy Lilies 
Gladiol US 
We offer this season some of the newer varieties 
of real merit. Huy a few of these, they will 
liven your glad garden. 
680— Picardy—The greatest pink to date, long 
spikes with large ruffled pink blossoms. 
10c each, 3 for 25c. 
681— Albatros—Whopping big pure white. 
10c each, 3 for 25c. 
682— Minuet—World’s finest lavender. 
10c each 3 for 25c. 
683— Petty Nuthall—Warm coral pink with pale 
ycllcw throat orange tinted. 5c each, 6 for 25c. 
684— Mother Machree—Live lavender with glints 
of salmon and gold. 10c each, 3 for 25c. 
685— Mrs. Leon Douglas—Large flowering orange 
pink blotched and striped with darker shades, a 
real beauty. 5c eac/h, 6 for 25c. 
686— Ruth Huntington — Tall early ruffled light 
lavender. 5c each, 6 for 25c. 
687— Tyrian Rose—Tall tyrian rose, a grand one. 
5c each, 6 for 25c. 
688— Mrs. W. P. Sisson—Tine ruffled cameo p'nk. 
5c each, 6 for 25c. 
691— Tycko Zang—Massive late salmon rose. 
5c each, 6 for 25c. 
692— Pfitzers Triumph— Mammoth orange scarlet 
some call salmon, one of the largest glads of fine 
shape. 10c each, 3 for 25c. 
695—Our surprise mixture of large flowering glads. 
Every one a good one. A wonderful assortment 
of colors and shapes, a joy to grow, at (blooming 
time each day you will see new colors open. 100 
of these will give you blossoms all summer. 
12 for 30c, 25 for 55c, 100 for $2.00 
Strawberries 
Every garden should have a few strawberries. 
710— Dorsett— It is a most productive variety, 
bearing practically perfect berries of most attrac- 
ive appearance and deliciously sweet wild-stcaw- 
berry flavor. Productive, of good size, with at¬ 
tractive berries of a light scarlet color. 
25 for 40c, 50 for 70c. 100 for $1.19. 
714—Fairfax- It is as sweet as Dorsett, 
but matures a few days later having firmer flesh 
of a darker color. 
25 for 45c, 50 for 70c, 100 for $1.19. 
711— Chesapeake —Big shapely berries, very de¬ 
licious; fruit ripens later in season, about a week 
after Fairfax. 50 for 70c, 100 for $1.19 
713—Mastodon—Produce heavily the first season. 
The Mastodon has proven itself far superior to 
other everbearing varieties in many ways. Fruit 
is almost double the size of the common ever- 
bearing. 25 for 75c, 100 for $2.00. 
712— Our Garden Assortment of Strawberries con¬ 
sisting of 25 each of our four berries will give 
you a supply of delicious berries for table use 
practically all summer. 
Price: $1.25 per Assortment 
“Yet Soloman in his glory was not arrayed 
like one of these.” 
Lilies are Majestic and Charming, the most 
stately and beautiful of the Bulbous plants. 
700— Regal Lily—A royal beauty. The flowers are 
white, slightly suffused with pink with a beauti¬ 
ful shade of canary yellow at the center, blending 
out part way up the trumpet. The fragrance is 
fascinating. Flowering about July 1st. 
15c each, 2 for 25c. 
701— Auratum—The Golden Rayed Lily of Japan. 
The flowers are pure white, thickly studded with 
crimson spots while through the center of each 
petal runs a clear golden band. Fully expanded 
the flowers measure nearly a foot across. Blooms 
in July and August. 15c each, 2 for 25c 
702— Tiger Lily—Bright orange red flowers spot¬ 
ted with black. Blooms during the summer. 
15c each, 2 for 25c. 
703— Rubrum Lily—White shaded and spotted with 
rose and red. 15c each, 2 for 25c. 
704— Phillipinese Formosanum —A wonderful lily 
with long grassy foliage, and long wide mouthed 
trumpet shaped bowers, the flowers are of the 
purest white slighly marked externally with lines 
of rose purple. In our trial ground we had one 
plant 8 feet tall with 17 blossoms over 6 inches 
long and 5 inches across at top. Blooms in Sep¬ 
tember. . . Bulbs 25c each. 
- —- ■ % ~— ----- *- ■ ---- —- - acs- 
705—Lily of The Valley—For outside planting in 
a partially shaded spot, not too dry. 5c each. 
