INFORMAL DECORATIVE DAHLIAS 
Andrea Ericson. Splendid white. 
Roots 50 cts. each 
Forest Fire. A very spectacular variety. Lemon- 
yellow, shaded to rich scarlet toward the tips. 
Roots 60 cts. each 
Hunt’s Velvet Wonder. Deep rosy magenta, 
blending into a deep purple. A very attractive 
variety. Roots 75 cts. each 
Jane Cowl. Warm buff on old-gold, blending to 
apricot and rose at center. Roots 50 cts. each 
Mrs. George Le Boutillier. Carmine-red. A giant 
exhibition variety. Roots 75 cts. each 
MINIATURE DAHLIAS 
Bishop of Llandaff. Bright scarlet with a deep 
garnet center. Roots 50 cts. each 
McKay’s Purity. A very good white. 
Roots 50 cts. each 
Pink Lassie. A beautiful soft shade of rose-pink 
with cream and lighter shadings. 
Roots 90 cts. each. Plants 75 cts. each 
Red Eye. Orange-scarlet. Roots 75 cts. each 
DWARF DAHLIAS 
Elsie. Soft peach, shading to Jemon-yellow. 
Gertrude. Clear primrose-yellow. 
Kate. Bright cardinal-red. 
Maria. White with a cream cast. 
Rosalie. Bright violet, shaded lighter at center. 
Roots of any of above varieties, 70 cts. each 
SINGLE DAHLIAS 
Garnet Poinsettia. Rich glowing garnet. 
Roots 45 cts. each 
Pequot Yellow. Very large; clear yellow. 
Roots 50 cts. each 
COLLARETTE DAHLIAS 
Erica. Deep maroon-red, almost black. 
Mitzi. Carmine, shading to primrose-yellow and 
edged white. 
Tribune. Deep rich crimson-carmine with white 
collar, 
Roots of any of the above, 75 cts. each 
POMPON DAHLIAS 
Betty Anne. Soft rose-pink, inclined to violet-rose. 
Goldilocks. Gold, deepening at center. 
Sunny Daybreak. Lemon-yellow, tipped cardinal. 
Roots of any of the above, 45 cts. each 
GARDEN LILIES 
Since the beginning of gardens, Lilies have been 
prized among the choicest plants. The family is so 
large, so diversified in shape and color of the flowers, 
so varied in their habit of growth, that truly Lilies 
may be chosen for any situation, and to accommo- 
date any mood of the gardener. 
REGALE (Royal Lily). Plant the bulbs 6 to 8 
inches deep in rich well-drained soil and they will 
increase in strength and production year after 
year. The trumpets are waxy white with golden 
yellow throats and the reverse stained with dull 
purple. They are deliciously fragrant. New bulbs 
usually carry at least half a dozen flowers while an 
old established plant will bear two dozen or more. 
Heights vary from 4 to 7 feet. 
Selected bulbs. X. 8 to 9 in. 
45 cts. each; $4.50 per doz.; $30 per 100 
GARDEN LILIES, continued 
Batemanniz. Soft pinkish apricot. They come in 
clusters of two or three, held erect upon a stem 
about 3 feet high. Blooms in July and August. 
85 cts. each; $8.50 per doz. 
Browni. Its flowers are very large, nearly 10 inches 
long, of waxy texture, and very fragrant. The 
outside of the trumpet is stained with brown and 
purple. $1.50 each; $15 per doz. 
Croceum. A very showy, orange-red Lily, 3 to 
5 feet high, bearing clusters of erect, cup-like flow- 
ers. Blooms in June. $1 each; $10 per doz. 
Elegans Alice Wilson. Lemon-yellow flower with 
dark center. 85 cts. each; $8.50 per doz. 
Hansoni. Erect, stout plants, 3 feet or more high, 
with clusters of nodding, recurved flowers of yel- 
Jow and orange. It blooms very early, usually in 
June. 1 each; $10 per doz. 
Philippinense formosanum. A fine hardy Lily. 
A gorgeous large pure white trumpet, tinted rose 
on the outside. Of large size, splendid form and 
richly fragrant. Blooms from September to frost. 
Height 4 to 6 feet. 60 cts. each; $6 per doz. 
PARDALINUM GIGANTEUM (Sunset Lily). 
This is the finest of the Leopard Lilies, growing 5 
to 6 feet tall in full sun or partial shade. Flowers 
are large Turkscaps of vermilion and orange-red 
with yellow throats. 50 cts. each; $5 per doz. 
Superbum (American Turk’s Cap Lily). The crim- 
son flowers are sharply recurved, brighter, larger, 
and there are more of them. It usually blooms in 
July and August. $1 each; $10 per doz. 
Tenuifolium (Coral Lily). An attractive and color- 
ful hardy Lily for rock-gardens and _ borders. 
Drooping rich scarlet flowers. 
$5 per doz.; $35 per 100 
Tigrinum, Single (Tiger Lily). Extremely showy 
and very easily grown, producing immense quanti- 
ties of brilliant orange-red flowers, elegantly 
spotted with brownish black. Grows to 3 to 4 feet 
or more; blooms in August. 
75 cts. each; $7.50 per doz. 
Tigrinum, Double. A double form of the Tiger 
Lily and even more showy. Requires the same 
treatment. 75 cts. each; $7.50 per doz. 
Water-Lilies 
Mrs. C. W. Ward. Deep rosy pink blooms on Jong 
stems. $4 each 
Mrs. Edwards-Whitaker. Sky-blue in color be- 
coming lighter with age. $3 each 
Pennsylvania. Rich blue flowers of largest size. 
$3.50 each 
Night-Blooming Water-Lilies 
Dentata magnifica. Large, pure red flowers in 
great abundance. $3 each 
George Huster. A red Night Bloomer requiring 
much heat. $4 each 
HARDY WATER-LILIES 
Ready April 15 to June 1 
Attraction. Rich deep crimson suffused with 
amaranth-red. 4 each 
Aurora. Soft rosy yellow changing to deep red on 
the third day. 3 each 
Comanche. The largest and finest of the apricot 
tints. f $3.50 each 
Gladstoniana. Cup-shaped, massive flowers of a 
pure dazzling white. $3.50 each 
Hardy Nelumbium or Lotus 
Dormant tubers only. Ready for delivery 
May 1 to June l 
Speciosum (Egyptian Lotus). Deep rose-color, 
creamy white at base of petals. 4 eac 
Luteum (American Lotus; Water Chinquepin). 
$3.50 each 

28 WILLIAM M. HUNT & CO., Inc., NEW YORK 19, N. Y. 
