NARCISSUS PAPER WHITE—Perhaps the easiest of all 
bulb-flowers for indoor winter’ blooming. Clusters of 
snowy white, richly fragrant blossoms. Will bloom within 
a few weeks when planted in pebbles and water, or may 
be potted in soil. Make successive plantings of them 
every three weeks from the middle of October to the 
middle of March and you can have continuous flowers all 
winter long. 6 for 30c; 12 for 50c; 25 for 95c; 100 for $3.50. 
CYRTANTHUS LUTESCENS—tThe Ifafa Lily, though it is 
really an Amaryllis variant rather than a Lily. The flowers 
are tubular, flaring to trumpets, not large, but the glossy 
golden coloring is so intense, the fragrance so sweet, the 
whole carriage of plant and blossom so gracefully attractive 
that we are certain Cyrtanthus will be one of the desired 
of winter window bulbs as soon as more have opportunity 
to know it. It is an early forcer, coming quickly into 
bloom. Each 25c; 3 for 65c; 10 for $1.95. 
CYRTANTHUS MACKENI—Very like Lutescens save that 
the plants are little stronger growing, the flowers a trifle 
larger, and coloring clear white, trumpets wax-like. Un- 
usual; also quite scarce. Each 35c; 3 for $1.00. 
M 0 RUECA 32 O-E Nae 
ee = STACHYA—This is very 
much a favorite of ours, 
for either a late autumn 
garden showing, or as a 
pot bulb that responds 
rather readily to gentle 
winter forcing. The blos- 
soms, carried on thin 
wiry stems in big open 
sprays, are shaped like 
butterflies, soft mauve, 
marked with rich, dark 
Parma violet, and with 
bright yellow inset at 
base. The inner segments 
are pure lavender. 3 for 
40e; 9 for $1.00. 
TRITONIA CROCATA 
MIXED—Exquisite tones 
of sparkling pink, soft 
salmon, apricot, flaming 
orange and scarlet. Blos- 
soms of satiny sheen, 
earried in graceful sprays. 
As easy to bring in 
bloom as Freesia, and 
needs the same handling. 
It is, too, quite as love- 
ly as Freesia, but in a 
blossom form and color 
range quite different. 4 for 25c; 10 for 50c; 22 for $1.00. 
LEUCOCORYNE IXIODES ODORATA—The exquisite Glory 
of the Sun, a rare treasure from the hills of Chile, the 
most charming of all bulb flowers for the winter window. 
The 18 inch stems carry each several very large and starry 
soft blue flowers, with undulate petals and white centers. 
The blossoms are intensely fragrant and particularly long- 
lasting. Each 25c; 3 for 60c; 10 for $1.75. 



VELTHEIMIA ry 
ORNITHOGALUM AUREUM—In fortunate South Africa 
it grows wild, and there they name it the Golden Chinker- 
richee. It makes here a quick and rather easy winter 
bloomer, almost solid clusters of radiant golden orange on 
long stems, lasting, each spike for close on two months. 
3, Loresbe; shetor. 656. -2b2tormoae Us 
AMARYLLIS GIANT HYBRIDS—-No more spectacular pot 
plant than this. Magnificent Lily-like flowers that may 
be rose, searlet, crimson, all one color or splashed against 
a white ground. (Illustrated page 3.) Each 50c; 3 for 
$1.40. 
MONARCH OF THE EAST—Sauromatum venosum. i 
blooms from the dry tuber, see illustration, page 13. In 
late February or March place the tubers in an east or 
north window, just the unplanted tuber without soil or 
water. Soon great flower-spathes will unfold, these of rose- 
tinted, purple-streaked ivory. After blooming the tubers 
should be planted in the garden, to give there exotic sum- 
mer effects of marbled and oddly digitate foliage. Tubers, 
each 70c; 38 for $2.00. 
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