once are receipted by postal card. 
POSTAGE!—Orders of $1 or over postpaid 
west of the Rocky mountains. Less than $1 
add 10c for postage. East of the Rocky moun¬ 
tains, add 25c for postage regardless of size 
of order. Please try to make your order total 
at least $1. 
PRICE—Any variety listed, large bulbs, 5c 
each. To really enjoy a variety you should 
have more than one bulb, so you can have 6 
alike for 25c or 12 for 50c, or 25 for $1 or 100 
for $4. (Must all be one variety), EXCEPT¬ 
ING varieties marked with the asterisk (*) 
which are 5c straight, one bulb or 100. 
If you consider my prices too high, compare 
them with those of any reputable grower. Buy 
some bulbs and compare them—and the flow¬ 
ers. If you think prices too low remember 
that you aren’t paying for a fancy catalog or 
big ads, nor any middleman and that you 
don’t have to make up money lost on special 
bargains and on credit. You pay for what you 
get—and get what you pay for. 
“Every bulb a bargain.” 
A. E. Kundred. (Kundred) 32-3y2-5. Salmon 
pink, dark red plume. Heavily ruffled. Late. 
AFLAME (Hornberger) 42-5-6. Soft yet 
brilliant tomato or begonia red, white hair¬ 
line. Immense prim grand, early midseason. 
No. 17. 
AIDA (Pfitzer) 36-3%-4. Deep blue (Vio¬ 
let), dark red blotch, very early. About the 
best dark blue, very popular. No. 33. 
*ALBATROSS (Pfitzer) Very pure white, 
rather early, lily flowered, lacks vigor. No. 11. 
ALHAMBRA 28-4-7. Soft light scarlet, 
marking of brownish red over cream. Second 
early, soft substance, quite showy. Bulbs 
small. 
ALLEN V. BUNCE (Bill) 36-3%-5. Blend of 
yellow and orange, scarlet lines. Prim grand, 
the improved Alice Tiplady. 
ALTAIR (Kunderd) 40-3-4. Beautiful shade 
of pure saffron orange, the only one of this 
color, which is its greatest joy. Very early 
prim. 
*ANGELS DREAM (Ellis) 32-3-8. Soft La 
France pink, cream feather. Early ruffled, 
rosebud type. Makes the prettiest spike of 
any glad I’ve seen but it requires good cul¬ 
ture. Lacks vigor. 
ANNIE LAURIE (Brown) 40-3%-6. Pale 
pink to white center, lilac lines on lower 
petals. Ruffled prim grand. This surely is 
pretty and popular, 
*ANTIONE (Kunderd) 36-3%-4. Very deep 
pure yellow. Early ruffled prim grand. Bulbs 
small. 
APRICOT GLOW (Palmer) 48-4-5. Soft 
apricot orange, yellow throat. Second early, 
lightly ruffled prim grand. One of the finest 
of all for cutting. 
ARLON 30-2y2-5. Bright orange with red 
lines. Very early prim, rather small but the 
earliest orange, very pretty and decorative. 
ASHBURN (Kunderd) 30-3y 2 -8. Salmon 
with violet red bar and lines, generally flaked 
that color. 
AVE MARIA (Pfitzer) 38-4-6. Medium 
blue (light violet-blue), small rose purple 
feather, cream line. My favorite blue, it really 
has character and is a good grower. No. 32. 
*BAGDAD (Palmer) Smoky salmon rose, 
cream throat, red hair-lines. This is very 
much like Picardy excepting in color and is 
now considered to be the best smoky. One 
inch bulbs only. No. 13. 
’BALBOA (Briggs) I neglected to get a de¬ 
scription of this but remember it as a light 
orange pink with a real nice spike. 
BATTLE CREEK (Kunderd) 32-3-5. Vel¬ 
vety red purple (Violet-Red), with very dark 
plume. Medium early. A richly colored va¬ 
riety. 
;,: BEATRIZ MICHELENA (Diener) 32-4y 2 -6. 
Soft bright salmon red, white blotch peppered 
red, stems sometimes short, real pretty. 
BELINDE (Pfitzer) 34-5-6. Light yellow or 
deep cream without marking. Second early. 
The big round flowers get much attention. 
Sometimes crooks. 
BENGAL TIGER (Pratt) 38-3y 2 -5. Bright 
salmon red flaked or striped dark red, red 
plume over yellow, quite late. Quite popular. 
BERTY SNOW (Mair) 36-4-7. Pinkish lav¬ 
ender blotched white. Considered to be the 
best lavender by many. Second early. Exhi¬ 
bition type. No. 45. 
BETTY JOY (Bill) 38-3-7. White to blush 
pink, cream throat, red hair-line. The glad 
with the school-girl complexion. A bunch is a 
joy to behold. 
BETTY NUTHALL (Salbach) 48-5-7. Light 
orange, lower petals yellow with red hair¬ 
line. Quite late. A huge variety, one of the 
finest ever produced. No. 3. 
BIG BLACK (Kunderd) 30-4y 2 -5. Dark vel¬ 
vety red without marking. Often short 
stemmed and poorly placed but very dark and 
showy. 
BLACK PANSY (Kunderd) 42-3-6. Deep 
red flaked almost black, very dark blotch, 
white hair-line. Fine long stems. My best sell¬ 
ing red by mail order last season. 
BLANCHE BOLLINGER (Kunderd) 34-4-6. 
Deep rose lavender subdued with gray, deep 
purple plume. Second early, lightly ruffled. 
BLUE TORCH (Hornberger) 38-35. Light 
blue (Pale Blue-Violet), red violet feather, 
cream line. A good light blue. 
BOBBY (Kunderd) 34-4-3. Salmon rose 
with a deep red blotch, ruffled. Very pretty. 
BREAK O’DAY (Bill) 40-4%-5. Pink, yel¬ 
low blotch, red hair-line. One of the very best 
early cut flowers ever produced. 
BURBANKS MIX. After the death of 
Luther Burbank several of his selected seed¬ 
lings were put in a mixture and nationally 
advertised at 50c each. Mine are from this 
stock and contain about 14 varieties. There 
is a big early coral pink; a smoky salmon 
opening 14 or more florets at one time; some 
whites; a huge lavender pink, a light rose 
purple with very widely opened florets; a 
scarlet with a big yellow blotch; a true orange 
and several others. There are no prims and no 
yellows or blue. All seem to stand heat extra 
well. Can’t tell how many kinds you might 
get as they are grown mixed but if you are 
hunting a distinctive and interesting mixture 
this should please you. The price is 5c each; 
50c a dozen; $4.00 a hundred. 
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