FREESIA RAINBOW BLEND—Everyone knows how lovely 
Freesia can be, how easy it is to have them in bloom in 
every winter window. Be sure to plant them liberally. 
There is a splendid large-flowered strain. Beside the wax- 
trumpeted snowy whites, there will be pink, rose, lilac, 
lavender, caimine shadings, soft yellow, golden, blue, violet 
and the like, in shadings, suffusions and graduations of tone 
beyond anyone’s telling. Sweetly perfumed. TSO Zoe: 
feetor .p0e; 60° for $1.50. 
AVALON WINTER WINDOW OFFER—4 bulbs of Sparaxis, 
8 of Ornithogalum arabicum, 1 of Leucocoryne, 6 of Oxalis 
eernua, 6 of Oxalis variabilis, each kind with label, 20 
bulbs, no changes, for ONE DOLLAR in this collection. 
PEERLESS WINTER WINDOW OFFER—5 bulbs of Blue 
Star Flower, 1 of Cyrtanthus, 4 of Tritonia, 7 of Freesia 
Rainbow and 6 of Paper White Narcissus, each kind labeled, 
23 bulbs, no changes, for ONE DOLLAR in this collection. 
THE CALLA LILIES 
The Callas make excellent pot plants, rather easy, long 
in bloom. (Illustrated page 13.) GODFREY WHITE 
CALLA—Fragrant, purest white, waxy. Each 35c; 3 for 
90ec. PINK CALLA—Zantedescia Rehmanni. From faint 
blush suffusions, through pure pink, to deep rose, varying 
plant to plant. Alluring. Rare. Each 65c; 2 for $1.15. 
BLACK CALLA—Arum pictum. Within velvety  black- 
maroon. Outside, olive. Decorative. Each 40c; 2 for T75c. 
GOLDEN CALLA—Brilliant shining yellow, thick and wax- 
like. Must be forced rather slowly. Each 25c; 3 for T70ce. 
CALLA OFFER 32A2—One each of the four for $1.50. 
Note that Callas can be supplied all winter, save the Black 
which is rarely available after December. 

Vee eee, 
BLUE STAR FLOWER 
It is Triteleia coerulea, too, or at least quite usually 
ealled so. There are wide blossoms of china blue, varying to 
indigo, each an inch or more across, great multitudes of 
them in long succession. It winters without slightest pro- 
tection at Philadelphia, but in colder climates would need 
some winter mulching. No more satisfactory rock garden 
bulb, and it will fit many other garden places. Not only 
is it charming in the garden, you may have it in bloom 
during the winter, cont.nuously from January to April, for 
it is perhaps the easiest of all bulbs to force. It will 
bloom without being set away in the dark to form roots, 
though dark treatment assuredly does not harm it. In 
the spring you can plant the bulbs that you have forced 
of it, out in the garden. The bulbs are small, and a bit 
flabby, but that’s their nature, so don’t mind it. They 
will flower if you give them half a chance. From the 
Argentine. (Illustrated page 3.) 5 for 25c; 11 for 50c; 
23 for $1.00. 
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