BARR’S DAFFODILS. 
THE FAVOURITE HARDY FLOWERS OF SPRING. 
DAFFODILS are the most graceful and beautiful of all Hardy Spring Garden Flowers, and 
withstand uninjured our severest winters better than any other flower. The cut blooms are always accept- 
able, and are in abundance out of doors at a season when other flowers are scarce. They supplement and 
associate admirably with hot-house flowers. 
We have received the following HIGHEST AWARDS for our EXHIBITS OF 
DAFFODILS, Spring, 1902. 
N. JOHNSTON! QUEEN OF SPAIN. 
February 26. 
March 11. 
» 
April 
26 . 
8. 
8 . 
9. 
16. 
16. 
22 . 
23. 
24. 
24. 
SILVER MEDAL (Highest Award), R.H.S., London. 
SILVER-GILT MEDAL (Highest Award), R.H.S., 
London. 
SILVER MEDAL (Highest Award), R.H.S., Londoa 
SILVER MEDAL (Highest Award), R.H.S., Londoa 
SILVER MEDAL (Highest Award), Brightoa 
GOI^_MED^ (First Prize for Competitive 
Group), Shrewsbury. 
GOLD_MED^ (Highest Award for Non-Competi- 
tive Group), Shrewsbury. 
SILVER MEDAL, Ipswich. 
SILVER-GILT MEDAL (Highest Award), R.H.S., 
Truro. 
SILVER-GILT MEDAL (Highest Award), R.H.S., 
Londoa 
SILVER MEDAL (Highest Award), Royal Botanic 
Society, London. 
SILVER-GILT MEDAL (Highest Award), Midland 
• Daffodil Society, Birmingham. 
SILVER MEDAL for the best new Trumpet 
Daffodil in the Show, Midland Daffodil 
Society, Birmingham. 
Numerous Awards and First-Class Certificates have also been 
given to individual varieties. 
PRESS NOTICES OF BARR^S DAFFODILS. 
Extract from “The Saturday Review,” April 26th, 1902. 
“IN THE LAND OF DAFFODILS. 
"... .4s we wonder at these delicious flowers, and the more we contemplate and curiously study them, we 
are filled with admiration and gratitude for what the horticultural art has accomplished in their cultivation, and 
is stiil year by year accomplishing. Each season brings with it some fresh development of form and hue. Not 
that the old forms and hues lose their charm and are displaced, but perpetually are they being added to. Even 
the most casual stroller through our parks is aware of this ; but really to appreciate what is being done we must 
give ourselves a few hours' holiday one bright day, and visit the very nursing-homes of these entrancing 
creatures— let us say Messrs. Barr and Sons’ spacious grounds at Long Ditton in Surrey, but ten minutes' walk 
or so from the Surbiton station, the easiest place in the world for a busy Londoner to run down to. Those few 
hours' holiday we shall be more than repaid for snatching; they will send us back to our work strangely 
refreshed. For indeed to wander up and down among these vast stretches of ' dancing daffodils ’ is to fancy 
oneself translated back into the flowery plain of Enna, or the very unsullied meads of Paradise itself. It is far 
different from your ordinary flower-show, however sumptuous, with its crowd of fashionables and its stifling 
