46 FLOWERING BULBS 
( 
The I. W. Scott Company, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
SUMMER-FLOWERING BULBS 
HARDY LILIES 
Showy garden flowers of the utmost beauty and stateliness, 
which are enormously popular just now. Plant them 6 to 8 
inches deep and as early as possible in well-drained unfertilized 
soil, and let them alone. 
Auratum (Gold-banded Lily). White flowers of enormous size 
with crimson spots and golden stripes produced in August. 
25 cts. each, $2.50 per doz. 
Henryi. The flower-stalk, 3 to 5 feet high, carries numerous 
flowers, each a rich apricot-yellow spotted with brown. 
35 cts. each, $3.50 per doz. 
Regale (The Royal Lily). Enormous, trumpet-shaped flowers, 
with waxen white petals suffused with gold inside and stained 
with purple outside; fragrant. It is very hardy and does well 
in almost any situation, growing 2 to 4 feet high and bearing 
its blooms in a whorl at the top. 35 cts. each, $3.50 per doz. 
Speciosum album. Pure white. 25 cts. each, $2.50 per doz. 
Speciosum rubrum. White, shaded with deep rose and spotted 
red. 35 cts. each, $3.50 per doz. 
Tigrinum splendens (Tiger Lily). A larger and more prolific 
flowering form of the old-fashioned Tiger Lily. It grows 4 to 
6 feet tall, bearing an immense cluster of showy orange-red and 
brown flowers, which last for weeks. Very easy to grow, and 
increases year by year in beauty and size. 25 cts. each, $2.50 
per doz. 
BEGONIAS, TUBEROUS-ROOTED 
These plants grow from hard, crooked bulbs, like flat potatoes, 
hollowed on one side. In planting, be sure that the hollow side 
is up. They make strong, fleshy stems a foot or more high, with 
big, bristly, very beautiful leaves, crowned by flowers of enormous 
size and almost unbelievable brilliance. Blooms 4K to 5 inches 
across are not unusual. They should be started in pots or pans 
indoors in February or March, and transplanted to the garden 
about the time that corn is growing well. They may also be 
started outdoors at the same time but will bloom later. Separate 
colors: Single varieties, white, scarlet, pink, or yellow 
flowers; Double varieties, red, salmon, rose, or orange 
flowers. All varieties, 25 cts. each, $2.50 per doz., $16 per 100. 
Lilium auratum 
Lilium regale 
GLOXINIA 
Beautiful velvety flowers of trumpet shape produced by 
tender, tropical bulbs which may be grown in pots or greenhouse 
benches. The large foliage is covered with plush-like hairs, and 
should not be wet. Keep them warm at all times. The flowers are 
violet, rose, crimson, white, or beautifully mottled. 
Mixed colors. 30 cts. each, $3 per doz., $20 per IOO. 
Caladium esculentum (Elephant’s Ear) 
For imposing masses of tropical foliage there is nothing so 
effective or so easily grown as the Elephant’s Ear. The plants 
grow from 3 to 5 feet high, with enormous bright green leaves, 
veined with lighter green, broad and thick and bearing a decided 
resemblance to elephant’s ears, whence the popular name. They 
thrive best in a moist, rich soil but can be grown in almost any 
situation. Plant the bulbs late in May, after all danger from frost 
is past, spacing them 2 to 4 feet apart and covering them a few 
inches deep. The larger the bulb, the larger the plant and the 
more space required. If extra-large plants are desired, start the 
bulbs indoors in pots or large boxes, in March or early April, 
and transplant to the open about June 1. Give plenty ol water 
throughout the season; liquid manure is very beneficial. The 
bulbs may be carried over winter by digging them up after frost 
has killed the leaves, drying them in the sun, and then storing 
in boxes with sand or dry soil in a frost-proof cellar. 
5 to 7 inches circumference 
7 to 9 inches circumference 
9 to 11 inches circumference 
11 to 13 inches circumference 
13 to 15 inches circumference 
Each 
Doz. 
IOO 
$0 05 
$0 
50 
$3 
50 
10 
I 
00 
7 
OO 
15 
1 
50 
10 
00 
25 
2 
75 
20 
00 
40 
4 
00 
30 
00 
TUBEROSE 
Old-fashioned flowers valued for their fragrance. Start the 
bulbs indoors in March and transplant to the open in early May. 
WHITE PEARL. The best variety. Flowers creamy white, 
large, and double. 
First-Size Bulbs. 5 cts. each, 50 cts. per doz., $3.25 per 100. 
Mammoth Bulbs. 10 cts. each, $1 per doz., $7 per IOO. 
All Bulbs sent postpaid at above prices 
