130 
ELLWANGER & BARRY'S CATALOGUE. 
SUMMER AND AUTUMN FLOWER¬ 
ING BULBS. 
To be planted in spring, taken up in autumn, and 
kept from freezing, in a dry cellar. 
AMARYLLIS. 
A. formosissima. Jacobean Lily. 
Flowers large and deep red. 25 cents. 
A. longittora alba. White, of medium 
size, in clusters. 50 cents. 
A. longiflora rosea. Rose-colored. 50 
cents. 
GLADIOLI. 
Fine Hybrid Varieties. 15 cents each, $2.00 per dozen 
and upwards. 
Brencllleyensis. Rich scarlet. $1.00 per 
dozen. 
POLIANTHES TUBEROSA. Double Tuberose. 
One of the choicest summer flowering bulbs. The flowers are white, very fragrant and pro¬ 
duced on spikes 2 to 4 feet high ; indispensable for making bouquets. Plant about first of May. 
10 cents each, $1.00 per dozen. 
TRITONIA. 
T. aurea. A pretty flowering bulb from the Cape. 10 cents each, $1.00 per 
dozen. 
BULBOUS FLOWERING ROOTS, 
HARDY. 
The following should be planted in the fall. They can be planted in the spring, but are not 
so certain to bloom. 
AMARYLLIS. 
A. lutea. A hardy bulb with yellow crocus-like flowers 
in September. 20 cents each, $2.00 per dozen. 
LILIUM. Lily. 
L. auratum, or Golden-Banded Lily. Univer¬ 
sally acknowledged to be the finest of all Lilies. 50 cents. 
L. candidmn. The well-known white Lily; beauti¬ 
ful in the garden ; forces well. 25 cents. 
L. excelsum. Delicate buff color, very fragrant; 
grows 5 to 6 feet high. $1.00. 
L. eximeum. From Japan. Flowers snowy white. 
75 cents. 
L. Japonicum longifloruin. From Japan. Snowy 
white, trumpet-shaped flowers; fragrant. 25 cents. lilium candidum. 
L. laneifolium album. Pure white. 50 cents. 
