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Lilies are so beautiful, and many of them are so fragrant, that you 
may think they are hard to grow, but such is not the case with most 
of the following varieties—they are easy. 
Generally, they are best planted where their roots will be in shadow 
and their stems and leaves in full light. Ideal positions are amid 
shrubs or in the annual or perennial border, or in the companionship 
of ground-cover. Any good garden soil will serve, provided it drains 
well. Spade the Iand to a depth of 18 inches and work in our Bulb 
Fertilizer; plant the bulbs in groups of three or more of a kind, setting 
Amabile. Showy stem-rooting Lily that in 
June bears as many as six black-spotted 
vivid red Turk’s-Cap flowers on 3 to 4-foot 
stems. Of easy cultivation. Plant 6 inches 
deep in well-drained gritty soil with leaf- 
mold; enjoys partial shade. 45 cts. each, 
$4.25 for 10, $40 per 100. 
Canadense flavum. The Meadow Lily of 
fields and roadsides. In July, its tall stems, 
3 to 5 feet high, bear great sprays of nod- 
ding, bell-like pale yellow flowers dotted 
with maroon. It is stem-rooting, likes moist 
well-drained acid soil. Plant 8 inches deep 
in full sun or light shade and roots should 
be kept cool with a ground-cover. 40 cts. 
each, $3.50 for 10, $30 per 100. 
Canadense rubrum. Like above but has 
orange-red flowers. 40 cts. each, $3.50 for 
10, $30 per 100. 
Carolinianum. The Southern Swamp Lily. 
It grows 2 to 4 feet high, Itkes moist 
ground, but good drainage, and will endure 
almost total shade. The fragrant flowers 
are orange-crimson with a whitish throat 
and hang like bright red bells at the top 
of the stem. Plant 5 to 6 inches deep. 
Blooms in July. 45 cts. each, $4 for 10, 
$35 per 100. 
Concolor (Star Lily). Lovely star-shaped 
vermilion Lily 114 inches long, slightly 
fragrant, borne erect on 114-foot stems in 
June and July. Plant about 3 inches deep. 
45 cts. each, $4 for 10, $35 per 100. 
Davidi. Showy, nodding 3-inch cinnabar-red 
or scarlet blooms, spotted with black, on 
4 to 5-foot stems in July. Plant 6 mches 
deep. 50 cts. each, $4.50 for 10, $40 per 100. 
Grayi. Gray’s Lily. Modest-bell-shaped 
flowers of orange-brown outside and bright 
red-orange and yellow inside, thickly 
powdered with darker dots. Grows 2 to 
4 feet, likes slightly acid, moist, loamy 
soil and a sunny place, such as a stream- 
bank. July. Plant 4 inches deep. 55 cts. 
each, $5 for 10, $45 per 100. 
Kelloggi. Rare and beautiful Lily with 
recurved 2-inch pink flowers spotted with 
purplish black borne erectly on 3 to 4-foot 
stems in July. Very graceful and fragrant. 
Plant bulbs on their sides, about 5 inches 
deep, in shade. $1 each, $9.50 for 10, 
$90 per 100. 
HARDY LILIES 
Maxwill. L. Maximowiczi * L. Willmottiz. 
Reflexed bright red flowers, stamens orange- 
red, and have the habit of looking one 
straight in the face. Blooms in late July. 
Height 6 feet. Plant 8 inches deep. 50 cts. 
each, $4.50 for 10, $40 per 100. 
Pardalinum giganteum. Sunset or Giant 
Leopard Lily. Brilliant orange-red on the 
reflexed portion of the segments, the faces 
of the magnificent “‘turk’s caps” are rich 
yellow closely dotted with brown spots. The 
flowers are borne in clusters up to ten on 
strong 5 to 8-foot canes. An easy Lily to 
grow, succeeding in full sun or partia 
shade. Blooms in July and should be 
planted 6 to 8 inches deep. 35 cts. each, 
$3.25 for 10, $30 per 100. 
Parryi. The 4-inch pale Iemon-yellow, 
funnel-shaped flowers, slightly spotted in- 
side, delicately fragrant, are borne on 3 to 
4-foot stems in July. Plant 5 inches deep. 
$1 each, $9.50 for 10, $90 per 100. 
Philadelphicum. Wood Lily, Orange Cup 
Lily. Striking native plants, thriving indry, 
sandy places with partial shade. The 
short stalks are 1 to 2 feet high, with 
dark red, erect cup-shaped flowers in July. 
Plant 5 inches deep. 40 cts. each, $3.50 for 
10, $30 per 100. 
Philippinense formosanum (Price’s Va- 
riety). Hardy Easter Lily. Long white 
trumpets on 3-foot stems in July and 
August. Green throat adds to the pictur- 
esquejflower. Fragrance is mild but delight- 
ful. Plant 5 to 6 inches deep. 60 cts. each, 
$5.50 for 10, $50 per 100. 
Regale. The Royal Lily. Originally from 
western China, enormous alabaster trum- 
pets are tinged with rose outside and suf- 
fused with gold within. Most popular and 
the easiest to grow. Stem-rooting; plant 
6 to 8 inches deep in good well-drained 
soil. Grows 4 to 6 feet tall. Blooms July. 
Each 10 100 
Monster Bulbs...... $0 50 $4 50 $40 00 
Jumbo Bulbs........ A0M 375.9935) 00 
Mammoth Bulbs.... 30) AS BES (UD) 
Selected Bulbs...... 2 5 eee ee OOO 
Shelburne Hybrids. Bloom after other 
Lilies are over. Flowers vary in size 
and form and range from pure white to 
blush. Your garden needs them. 80 cts. 
each, $7 for 10, $65 per 100. 
ifolium | 6banadense 
them on a 1-inch layer of sand. This will aid soil drainage, and pre- 
vent the bulbs rotting through excess moisture. 
Many Lilies are ‘‘stem-rooters,’’ that is, they develop roots on the 
stem above the bulb, in addition to roots below the bulb. Other 
kinds are ‘‘basal-rooters,’’ depending on roots’ below the bulb only. 
Stem-rooters are planted deep enough that the top of the bulb ts 
covered by a thickness of soil twice the size of the bulb, from base 
to top; basal-rooters are planted shallow, overlaid by soil equal to 
one-half the size of the bulb. 
Superbum. The Turk’s-Cap Lily. It grows 
5 to 8 feet high, with an Immense, pyram- 
idal cluster of brilliant orange-red, turban- 
shaped flowers, yellowish inside and spotted 
brown. Plant 6 inches deep in_ well- 
drained, slightly acid, or neutral soil well 
filled with peat or Ieaf-mold; best in partial 
shade. Blooms in July. 25 cts. each, 
$2.25 for 10, $20 per 100. 
Tenuifolium. Coral Lily. Dwarf, very 
graceful Lily, with thread-like leaves and 
clusters of nodding, tiny, bell-like, recurved 
flowers of brilliant coral-red in June. Likes 
damp soil among rocks, with access to sun- 
light. Plant 6 inches deep. 25 cts. each, 
$2.25 for 10, $20 per 100. 
Tenuifolium, Golden Gleam. This beauti- 
ful golden yellow form of the above is a 
very welcome addition to your Lily col- 
Iection. Grows approximately 18 to 24 
inches high and blooms at the same time as 
the scarlet form listed above. 35 cts. each, 
$3.25 for 10, $30 per 100. 
Testaceum. Nankeen Lily. Grows 3 to 
6 feet tall and bears three to more than a 
dozen very charming, nodding, Turk’s- 
Cap flowers, white outside, dusky orange 
or pale apricot within. Plant 214 inches 
deep in sweet soil. Bloomsin June and July. 
$1.75 each, $15 for 10, $125 per 100. 
Tigrinum splendens. The Tiger Lily is 
well known; showy, spotted red-orange 
flowers In wayside gardens in August 
and later. Easy to grow, thriving in 
full sun in any soil. Plant 6 inches deep. 
35 cts. each, $3.25 for 10, $30 per 100. 
Tigrinum flore-pleno. The double Tiger 
Lily is even showier and more handsome. 
35 cts. each, $3.25 for 10, $30 per 100. 
Washingtonianum. Blooms open white, 
changing to shades of wine-color, slightly 
spotted deeper; fragrant. Blooms June and 
July. Grows 5 feet high. Stem-rooting. 
Plant 10 inches deep in partial shade and 
watch the drainage. 75 cts. each, $7 for 10, 
$65 per 100. 
Willmottiz. The 3 to 4-foot stem in July 
and August bears fifteen to twenty brilliant 
orange-red flowers measuring 3 inches 
across, with recurved petals freely dotted 
with brownish spots. Needs staking. 
Plant 8 inches deep. 50 cts. each, $4.50 
for 10, $40 per 100. 

“ye For best results with Lilies, be sure to follow the above directions 
66 Hardy Lilies on ; i br 
as to planting depth 
STUMPP & WALTER CO. 
