42 PETER HENDERSON & CO., NEW YORK.—BULBS FOR AUTUMN PLANTING. 
Tritonia. 
Exceedingly bright and free-blooming 
bulbous plants, highly valuable for both 
garden and pot culture. A dozen roots in 
a ten-inch pot will in the autumn make a 
beautiful display. The bulbs should be 
grown in pots in a cold frame during win- 
ter, and they can either be brought in the 
conservatory toward spring for blooming 
or the bulbs can be kept dormant and 
planted out in May, like Gladiolus, and 
then be lifted in the autumn for winter 
blooming. (See cut.) 
Mixed Colors. 3for10c., 25c. per doz., 
$1.50 per 100. 
Remember we deliver free to any P. O. 
or R. R. express office in the United States 
all Bulbs, Vegetable and Flower Seeds 
offered in this catalogue, except otherwise 
TROPEOLUM. 
Beautiful and graceful climbing 
plants for the conservatory or window 
garden, producing in the early spring 
months richly colored flowers. They 
can be grown in pots and trained over 
low trellises—or as a bracket plant in 
the window. (See cut.) 
Jarrattii. Scarlet, yellow and black. 
15c. each, $1.50 per doz. 
TRITELEIA. 
Unifiora. (Spring Star Flower.) A 
perfect little gem for either pot cul- 
ture or for borders. Each bulb pro- 
duces several pretty star-shaped 
flowers, one or two inches across, of 
a delicate milky white suffused with 
blue and emits the perfume of prim- 
roses. (See cut.) 
8 for 5c., 15c. per doz., $1.00 per 100. 
ZEPHYRANTHES. 
“Zephyr Flowers” and ‘‘ Flowers of the 
West Wind,” among our most beautiful 
dwarf bulbous plants, very effective for 
planting out in masses in May, flowering 
with great profusion during the summer. 
They are also most suitable for pot cul- | 
ture; 6-to 12 bulbs clustered in a 6-inch 
pot in the autumn willgivea fine display of 
bloom during the winterin the window gar- 
den orconservatory. 1lfoothigh. (See cut.) 
Atamasco. White suffused with flesh 
color, hardy. We know of borders of it 
as far north as Connecticut that have 
stood the colds of several winters. 3 for 
10c., 30c. per doz., $2.00 per 100. 
Candida. large-flowering, pure white. 
3 for 10c., 30c. per doz., $2.00 per 100. 
Rosea. Large flowers, 3 to 4 inches 
across, of the most exquisite rose-pink. 
4c. each, 40c. per doz., $2.50 per 100. 
Sulphurea. Large light yellow flowers, 
dark foliage. 5c. each, 50c. per doz., 
$3.00 per 1V0. 
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VALLOTA, 
SCARBOROUGH LILY. 
A valuable free summer and autumn 
bloomer; color, rich red. It does 
well planted in the ground in May, 
and when in bud can be potted and 
removed for conservatory or window 
decoration, or it can be grown con- 
tinuously in pots or tubs as it im- 
proves with age. Requires repotting 
but seldom and can be left to grow, 
blossom aud increase forseveral years, 
as well-established plants when in 
flower are simply magnificent. We 
know of no plant that will give more 
continued delight than this. It is one 
of the few reully good window plants. 
(See cut.) 30c. each, $3.00 per doz. 
URCEOLINA. 
(Urn Flower.) 
Bulbs with handsome showy, large. 
bright golden-yellow flowers, brilliantly 
tipped with green, produced in grace- 
ful, drooping, terminal e@lusters, in 
summer and autumn, thriving well in 
pots in the greenhouse, or the bulbs 
may be kept dormant and planted 
out in the open border in May, to be 
taken up in fall like Gladiolus. (See 
cut.) Price, $2.00 each. 
—— eS 
SELECT YOUR PREMIUM. 
See page 6. 
URCEOLINA, 
OR URN FLOWER. 
