bs 
Dona.p W. Stryxer, Langlois, Oregon 
(4) SPECIALLY SELECTED SEEDLINGS. 
6.00 cach 
(5) MEI LING—-Mr. Edgar Kline’s named clon. An open 
flower about three and a half inches wide, recurving 
tips, cream colored shading to old gold in the center. 
Established plants have stout stems to four and a 
half feet high with up to twenty five or more 
flowers. 7.50 each 
. BELLINGHAM HYBRID SEEDLINGS—lIdeal for group 
plantings at edge of woodland, or for bold clumps that 
may be left undisturbed. Colors vary from soft yellow, 
spotted red, to Tangerine Orange with maroon spots. July 
flowering. Three to six feet tall. Plant 4 to 5 inches. 
.(5 each; 7.50 dozen 
CERNUUM—Exquisite pale pink, fragrant turkscap 
flowers with wine purple spots, borne on slender stems 
eighteen to thirty inches high. June-July. Plant 4 inches 
deep. .80 each; 6 for 4.25 
COLUMBIANUM—WNative to the West Coast. Yellow- 
crange turkscap flowers, spotted purple Plant in weil- 
drained leafmold, in sun or part shade. Three to five feet 
high. July. eiant 5 inches deep 15 each: 6 for 4.00 
. FORMOSANUM—A late form of this well known white 
trumpet species. It blooms in August ana September, 
about four to six feet in height. Plant 5 inches deep 
.50 each; 6 for 2.59 
£ 
. “GALAHAD’—+ 1949 Introduction—Sulphur yellow 
trumpet lily from several generations of recrossings 
among L. regale, L. sulphureum, and L. Sargentiae. Strong 
and hardy, with as many as fourteen blossoms on pyra- 
midal raceme. July and August. Plant 6 inches deep. 
5.00 each 
