Caution—We regret we cannot accept 
orders amounting to less than $2.50. 
Please read the Sections, ^^Orders,’^ ^^Ship¬ 
ments,and ^Prices” on Pages 6 and 7. 
Crocuses will always find a place in every garden because of their 
earliness. It is enough merely to see their cheerful blue and white 
and yellow in March or early April; the garden has indeed begun 
to be a thing of beauty. Whether Crocuses are planted as an edging 
to beds, in irregular breadths throughout the border, in careless 
patches in the grass, in masses among trees and shrubs, or, best of 
all, perhaps, on the slopes of terraces, their attractiveness is un¬ 
changed. In pots, planting twelve to fifteen corms in a 6- or 
7-inch pan, they are very lovely and a revelation to those who 
have not grown them in this way. Named sorts should be chosen, 
for mixtures are never satisfactory. 
The named varieties in the following list are all new seedlings 
far superior to most of the older kinds in size or color. 
Detailed planting directions are included with the shipment of 
the bulbs. 
No order accepted for less than 2 5 bulbs of any one variety. 
Prices of all varieties, except as otherwise noted 
25 bulbs, $1; 100 bulbs, $3 
AGNES. Very pale pinkish lavender. 
AMETHYST. Very pale lavender-blue with white edge. 
ANTIGONE. Lavender-blue with white edge; large flower. 
2 5 bulbs, $1.2 5; 100 bulbs, $4. 
DOROTHEA. Very soft lavender-blue; a fine self-color. 
EDINA. Striped mauve, on white ground, with white margin and 
purple base and stem; fine, large flower. 
2 5 bulbs, $1.2 5; 100 bulbs, $4. 
ENCHANTRESS. Porcelain-blue with purple base. 
Page One Hundred Four 
