Your Winter Flower 
Garden 
OULDN’T you be glad to 
have your living rooms filled 
with flowers during the win¬ 
ter months? It can be done 
with little trouble and small 
cost. It is a simple matter 
to make bulbs produce a profusion of flowers. 
In reality no flowers are so easy to grow, so 
showy, and none succeed so well under varied 
circumstances, as spring flowering bulbs. 
Bulb Fibre a Complete Substitute 
for Soil 
Carter’s Bulb Fibre is especially prepared 
and contains abundant plant food. 
The method of growing bulbs in fibre is 
comparatively new to this country, but has been 
practiced in England for some years. It has 
many advantages; among which are the elimi¬ 
nation of the unsightly flower pot and dirty soil 
and the substituting of the handsome China 
Bowl and Clean Fibre. 
Directions for Potting Bulbs in Fibre 
The Fibre when received is very dry and 
should be thoroughly moistened before using. 
Fill up the receptacle with Fibre, leveling off 
the surface without pressing it down. Then 
bury or cover your bulbs so that the top or 
crown just shows through the surface. Press 
down the Fibre to firm up the bulbs. They 
can then be given a thorough watering and 
placed in a dark, cool and airy room. You 
must keep careful watch over them, so that 
they will not suffer from either too little or too 
much water. 
In a few weeks, or after they show about 
two inches of growth, they may be removed 
from the dark room or cellar to a position offer- 
