
Photo: Cottage Tulips can be semi-naturalized as in planting shown above. Fertilizing is needed. 

HERE'S PROOF OF 
HOW YOU SAVE... 
when you buy ftop-size bulbs 
This actual photograph shows two 
tulip bulbs of the same kind ex- 
actly. Only the size of the bulb was 
different . . . growing conditions 
were identical. You can see clearly 
the vast difference in the final re- 
sult... the larger bulb produces 
a bigger, healthier plant, and a 
very much larger flower. Ten BIG 
flowers will give you the same 
mass as twenty small ones... and 
at little more than half the cost. 
AA AADAAD DDD AAADAADAADA DADA DS 
MIXED DARWINS 
ALL COLORS 
10 to 11 cm. bulbs—usual “top- 
size” of most bulb houses. 
100 (minimum order)... $6.40 
MIXED 
COTTAGE TULIPS 
ALL COLORS 
10-11 cm. bulbs 
100 (minimum order)... $6.40 
ORDER Tulips NOW! 
Get the choice of this year's limited crops—at lowest prices! 
Big 11 to 12 centimetre bulbs—largest available commercially this 
year. Obviously the largest bulbs produce the biggest flowers. Some 
are imported from England, the rest from best American growers. 
Don't be misled by our lower prices—we concentrate on the best kinds 
that are in good crop—that’s why we are able to include in this low- 
price offer some types usually more costly. 
50 OR MORE 
ALL ONE KIND 
Darwin Tulips 
(May; 1!/, to 3 ft. Lift every 2 years.) 
The showiest tulips. Magnificently large 
blooms, strong vigorous stems. 
Baronne De La Tonnaye—Rose, blush 
margins. 
Betsy—flushed cream; yellow inside. 
Centenaire—deep rose, blue base. 
Clara Butt—clear pink, flushed salmon. 
Deep-toned inside. Blue base. 
Dream—tall, solid lilac. 
Giant—enormous flower. Tall. Reddish 
purple, shaded violet. White base. 
Harry Veitch—dark red-brown; blue 
base. 
Massachusetts—rose, tinted carmine. 
King Harold—deep ox-blood red, pur- 
ple base. 
Mrs. Krelage—lilac rose, paler edges. 
Mrs. Mandel—violet, white base. 
Phillippe De Comines—velvety dark 
purple. 
Princess Elizabeth—clear deep pink. 
Rev. H. Ewbank—shaded mauve. Su- 
perb with yellow tulips. 
Rose Copeland—deep rose. 
The Sultan—dark maroon, almost black. 
William Copeland—lilac rose. Early. 
Triumph Tulips 
(Late April-Early May. Lift every 2 yrs.) 
Algiba—purple mauve, paler edge. 
Lord Carnarvon—wine-pink, white rim. 
Mississippi—scarlet-red. 
U. S. A.—rosy red with orange edge. 
Zimmerman—showy pink. 
Page 4 
914¢ each 
50 or more, several kinds, lle each. 
Minimum tulip order, 50 bulbs. Not 
less than 10 of 1 kind. 
Cottage Tulips 
(May. Need not be lifted.) 
Long slender sturdy stems. Smaller than 
Darwins, but last year after year in bed 
or border. 
Argo—deep gold, pencilled orange. 
Bouton D’Or—showy yellow, striking 
black anthers. 
Caledonia—orange-scarlet, black center. 
Ellen Wilmott—large, fragrant. Soft yel- 
low. 
Golden Crown—yellow with red line 
edging petals. 
Grenadier—dazzling orange, yellow. 
Inglescombe Pink—bright salmon-pink; 
blue base. Tall as a Darwin Tulip. 
Inglescombe Yellow—Tall, large, showy. 
Glossy canary-yellow. 
La Merveille—orange-scarlet. Fragrant. 
Picotee—long pointed white, pink edge. 
Single Early Tulips 
(Mid-April. Lift every 2 years.) 
Gay, dainty, brilliant-hued. 
Artus—scarlet with yellow center. 
Chrysolora—large golden-yellow. 
Cottage Maid—deéep pink, globular. 
Crimson Brilliant—glowing scarlet. 
Diademe—deep rose-apricot. 
Fred Moore — deep ruddy _ apricot, 
orange-edged. 
Prince of Austria—bright orange-red. 
Rising Sun—large golden-yellow. — 
Rose Grisdelin—blush white. 
White Swan—large purple white. 
Yellow Prince—fragrant, clear gold. 
