BOTANICAL TULIPS 
(Wild Species) 
These wild varieties of tulips are extremely beautiful 
and will greatly enhance the charm of the rock garden, 
which is often lacking in colorful flowers. Plant them in 
masses, clumps, in deep-soiled pockets in the shaded 
or partly shaded parts of the rockery. 
Tulipa clusiana. The “Lady Tulip” “Candy-stick Tulip”. 
A charming vivid, upstanding beauty; small pointed flower of 
artistic form. White striped with Cherry-rose outside. Plant 
this tulip in masses or clumps or use as an edging. 3 for 30c, 
$1.00 per dozen, $7.50 per 100. 
CROCUS 
Crocuses should be planted close together in groups in the 
rock garden, or perennial border, or at the edge of the lawn 
where their short-stemmed cup shaped blooms are effective. 
Baron von Brunow. Deep purple. 
King of the Whites. Pure white. 
Sir Walter Scott. White, striped lavender. 
Yellow Mammoth. Extra large, yellow. 
60c per dozen, $4.25 per 100 
SNOWDROPS 
Ours is the newer, improved variety, Calanthus Elwesi 
with much larger dazzling white bells, and the earliest 
to bloom. The graceful flowers make most attractive 
groups under shrubbery or in rockeries. 
Galanthus Elwesi. Largest size bulbs —50c per dozen, $3.50 
per 100. 
MUSCARI 
(Crape Hyacinth) 
Very pretty little plants, with spikes of bloom re¬ 
sembling little bunches of grapes. Fine for planting un¬ 
der trees and shrubbery, in borders, and in rockeries, 
where they may be left undisturbed. They combine 
beautifully in beds with other spring flowers such as 
Daffodils and Hyacinths, or with Snowdrops, Freesias, 
etc. 
A rare collection of these little jewels. 
Armeniacum. Bright cobalt blue. 65c per dozen, $4.00 per 100. 
Elegans. Bright blue margined with white. 65c per dozen, 
$4.50 per 100. 
Heavenly Blue. The most popular for massing fine trusses 
of clear blue. 50c per dozen, $3.50 per 100. 
White. Glistening white. 65c per dozen, $4.00 per 100. 
Collection 
12 each of the four varieties, 48 bulbs 
$2.00 
Crow Lovely Flowers in Your Rooms 
See pages 2 and 11 
Besides the well known Chinese Sacred Lily, Paper White and 
Soliel d’Or Narcissus, grow King Alfred Daffodils and these 
other fascinating varieties in bowls: 
Narcissus — February Gold 
Narcissus — W. P. Milner 
Narcissus — Fair Alice 
Hyacinths 
Easy to do with Paul J. Howard’s mammoth, specially selected 
bulbs. 
— 18 — 
