MEDELOIDES—kt (3) 25. In Japan they call it the Wheel Lily, 
and consider it one of the better garden kinds. Flowers 
vary from apricot to scarlet. Pkt. 25c; 3 pkts. for 70c. 
NEPALENSE—kt(w) (3)30. Rather tender Lily from northern 
India. Flowers are pale yellow trumpets with wine stainings. 
Pot culture. Pkt. 25c. 
PARDALINUM—yt(2-8)60. The richly-hued Panther Lily is 
one of our own particular favorites. Spectacular flower- 
pyramids of orange and dominant crimson. Hardy and adapt- 
able. Pkt. 25c; Wg oz. 40c; % oz. T5e. 
PARRYI—yt(3)36. Exquisite lemon yellow trumpets, sweetly 
scented. Pkt. 35c; 3 for $1.00. 
PHILADELPHICUM—statkt(2-3)40. Flame Lily. Upfacing 
chalice-flowers of most fiery orange, shading to burnt orange 
at petal base. Pkt. 20c; 3 pkts. for 50c. 
PHILADELPHICUM HYBRIDS—kt(3)36. Mostly crosses of 
Davuricum and Philadelphicum, made by Canadian plant 
breeders. A most interesting race, showing pleasing varia- 
tions in form and coloring. Pkt. 25c; Wg oz. 70c. 
POMPONIUM—cebyt (2)40. Brilliant scarlet flowers, wax-like, 
reflexed, sometimes as many as ten or twelve on a stem. A 
showy species. Full sun. Pkt. 30c; 3 pkts. for 85c. 
REGALE—ekt(2)50. The King of Lilies, exceedingly easy, 
and none more beautiful. Glossily white and waxlike are the 
great, flaring trumpets, but within there is a lemon-tinting, 
the reverse showing rosy suffusions. Richly perfumed. Splen- 
did cut flowers. Seed germinates quickly. and quite strongly. 
Pkt. 15c; 4 oz. 80c; % oz. 50c; 1 oz. $1.80; %4 lb. $6.00. 
REGALE-GROUP HYBRIDS—ekt(2-3)60. An easy and hardy 
section with fine, large flowers that vary from wide funnels 
to long, open trumpets, from white with slight rose shading 
to .others deeply suffused without in pink, rose or brown 
purple. Within the flower there may be white, deepening to 
cream, or richer, more dominating tintings of lemon yellow. 
Mostly they bloom later than Regale, lengthening the season 
by some weeks. They are the results of varied hybridizations 
and intercrossings of Regale, with Sargentiae, Centifolium, 
Myriophyllum superbum, and perhaps others. For separate 
hybrid strains, see the TREASURE CHEST. Pkt. 20c; Ye oz. 
85c; % oz. 60c; 4 oz. $1.00. 
RUBELLUM—Rstatkt(2)20. Sweetly scented flowers of de- 
lightful rosy pink. An exquisite Lily, and reasonably winter 
hardy, but may also be grown in pots. Pkt. 30c; 3 pkts. for 85c. 
SARGENTIAE—kt(3)60. Handsome species with flaring 
trumpet flowers, waxy white within, rose-suffused outside. 
Fragrant. Pkt. 25c; 46 oz. 75c; % oz. $1.35. 
SPECIOSUM RUBRUM—yt(4)50. Waxen flowers of carmine 
pink, laid over sparkling white. Blossoms big and showy. 
Considered by many as the most beautiful of all lilies. Hardy 
and rugged. Pkt. 25c; 46 oz. 60c. 
SUPERBUM—yt(2)100. Stately plants that may tower to 10 
feet are hung with recurved blossoms in beautiful combin- 
ations and overlays of yellow, orange, scarlet and maroon. 
Seeds germinate first year but show no leaves until follow- 
ing spring. Pkt. 15c; % oz. 35c; % oz. 60c; 1 oz. $2.00. 
SZOVITSIANUM—styt(2)36. A beautiful, and unusual Lily 
from Armenia and the lower Caucasus, growing naturally in 
well-drained soils in open woodland. Rather large, bell-shaped 
blossoms of soft straw yellow, spotted with purple-black. Pkt. 
30c; 3 pkts. for 85c; 10 pkts. for $2.50. 
TENUIFOLIUM—(L. pumilum)—ekt(2)36. Coral Lily. Many 
recurved blossoms in glossy vermilion. Easy and quick. Some- 
times flowers first season. Illustrated page 41. Pkt. 15c; Ye 
oz. 85c; 1% oz. 60c. 
THOMSONIANUM—(Notholirion Thomsonianum).—k(3)36. 
Broad spreading flowers in a pleasing tone of pink to rose. 
Sweetly fragrant. Of somewhat doubtful hardiness, so per- 
haps best handled in pots. Pkt. 35c; 3 pkts. for $1.00. 
UMBELLATUM—kt (2)25. Cup-flowers in varied combinations 
of yellow, orange, scarlet, maroon. Pkt. 25c; 3 for 70c. 
W ALLICHIANUM—k(w) (3-4)75. Tender Lily from north- 
ern India, with 10-inch, fragrant flower trumpets, creamy 
with olive shadings in reverse. Pkt. 25c; 3 pkts. for 70c. 
WASHINGTONIANUM—yt(2-3)60. Beautiful species with 
wide funnel blossoms that open white, but gradually suffuse 
with a rose that deepens to violet. Pkt. 20c; 1% oz. 65c. 

[ 42 ] 

WILMOTTIAE—ekt(2)50. A quick Lily of much beauty, the 
arching stems carrying flowers of orange-tinted apricot, 
dotted red-brown. Pkt. 20c; Ye oz. 35c; 4% oz. 60c; % oz. 
$1.00. 
OFFER 138B—One pkt. each of the 57 Lilies for $12.70. 
OFFER 139A—One pkt. each of 10 Lilies, our selection among 
the easier kinds, for $1.75. 
SPECIAL LILY BLEND—Includes seeds of most of the Lilies 
listed here and in the Treasure Chest, but not, of course, in 
equal proportions. Nevertheless it is a wonderfully diversified 
and widely inclusive mixture. Pkt. 20c; Ye oz. 80c; % oz. 
50c; %4 oz. 85c; 1 oz. $3.00. 
BOOKS ON LILIES—Two good ones. GARDEN LILIES 
—The Macneils. 
specialists. 
New, and very good. Written by lily 
240 pages. Illustrated. $4.00. LILIES FOR 
AMERICAN GARDENS—Slate. Clear and comprehensive. 
Needed for constant reference. 274 pages. Illustrated. 
$5.00. 
1 LILY OF THE VALLEY—Lovely, per- 
fumed, single bells of snowy daintiness, 
in graceful sprays. Shade-tolerant peren- 
nial for rock garden, bedding, under-tree re 
colonies. Convallaria majalis, Illustrated ~ee 
opposite. Plants supplied as good, indi- 
vidual pips,, (not clumps), for outside 
planting only. 10 for $1.00; 25 for $2.25; 
100 for $8.00. Seeds, pkt. 15c; % oz. 50c. 
Also ean supply plants of the PINK LILY 
OF THE VALLEY at each 50c, 3 for 
$1.85; and of the DOUBLE PEARL va- 
riety, fully double white flowers, at each 
75c; 8 for $2.15. 
{ LUCULIA GRATISSIMA—w. Tender winter-flowering 
shrubs, grown North in pots under glass. Individual blossoms, 
pink or white, are an inch and a half across, carried in wide 
corymbs that may be a foot in diameter. Pkt. 25c. 
1 LIMONIUM (Statice) 
Called Sea-Lavender. Perennials that will add beauty to 
the mixed hardy planting. They cut. May be dried for win- 
ter bouquets—‘‘kt”’. LATIFOLIUM—(3)25. Wide, graceful 
sprays of little lavender flowers. Pkt. 15¢; Weg oz. 25c. 
SPECIOSUM—(3)30. Spreading, blue airiness over decora- 
tive rosettes. Pkt. 20c. MACROPHYLLUM VIOLACEUM— 
(4) 36. Largest flowers and deepest coloring, a rich blue violet, 
but will need some winter protection in cold areas. Pkt. 25c. 
5 THE DAINTY LINARIAS 1 
Exquisite blossoms like fairy Snapdragons. All Linarias 
will bloom first year from seed, and are treated as Annuals 
with exception of Canon Went and Macedonica which are 
usually handled as perennials, as are sOmetimes Cymbalaria 
and Triornithophora also. ALPINA HYBRIDS—6 inches. 
Rich purple, touched orange, but varying to cream, chestnut, 
roseash and the like. Pkt. 20c. CYMBALARIA—4 inches. 
Kenilworth Ivy. Pretty creeper with lilac flowers, touched 
yellow. For pots or porch boxes. Pkt. 15¢c. MAROCCANA 
4XCELSIOR—12 inches. Spikes of little Snapdragons in white, 
erimson-and-gold, lavender, chamois, blue-violet, rose. Mixed. 
Pkt. 10c; % oz. 25e. CANON J. WENT—20 inches. Attrac- 
tive perennial of full hardiness. Little pink blossoms fill high 
branchings. Pkt. 25¢. MACEDONICA SPECIOSA—380 inches. 
Rather large flowers of creamy yellow, marked golden orange, 
over blue-glaucous foliage. Hardy perennial. Pkt. 15c. Plants, 
each 45c. BIPARTITA—12 inches. Attractive annual. Pur- 
ple flowers, touched white and orange. Pkt. 20c. TRISTIS 
HYBRIDS—8 inches. Dainty everbloomers in buff, chestnut, 
gold, brown, purple and violet. Mixed. Pkt. 20c. RETICU- 
LATA CRIMSON AND GOLD—10 inches. Massed Snap- 
dragons in crimson-and-gold effects. Pkt. 15¢; 1% oz. 25c. 
TRIORNITHOPHORA—25 inches. Large blossoms like long- 
spurred Snapdragons, rise tier above tier, always in sets of 
three. True purple with orange lip. Good, everblooming pot 
plant. Pkt. 25ec. OFFER 142A—One pkt. each of above for 
$1.35. 

TWO UNUSUAL POT PLANTS 
2 IXORA COCCINEA—w. Dense corymb-clusters of slender- 
tuked, pleasantly scented flowers, usually in red, but varying to 
rose, orange scarlet and yellow. There are few showier, large 
pot plants for the conservatory. Pkt. 40c. 
2 DANAE RACEMOSA—w. Evergreen foliage plant, grown 
as a pot plant ornamental in the north. Big, red berries. 
Pkt. 25c. 
