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Single and double earlies 
PLANT COMBINATIONS 
Purple T.—Alyssum, Basket of Gold 
Scarlet T.—Yellow primroses 
Orange T.—Blue forget-me-nots 
Breeder T.—Mahogany-red pansies 
Pale Pink T.—White English daisy 
Dark Violet T.—Yellow doronicum 
Tulips—Columbine and early iris 
White, Yellow or Pink T.—Dark yew 
Rose T.—Blue forget-me-nots 
Orange-scarlet T.—Yellow pansies 
Red T.—White Vanhoutte Spirea 
Pink T.—Blue Phlox Divaricata 
Deep Lavender T.—Bleeding Heart 
Plum Purple T.—Forget-me-not 
Red and Rose-Pink T.—White Lilac 
White and Pink T.—White dogwood 
Yellow T.—Father Hugo's Rose 
Pink T.—Pink flowering plum 
E. Single and Double T.—Daffodils 


: AL FIM! 
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Bright Julips 
Create pictures with tulips and 
flowering dogwood, cherries, 
almond, fruit trees, lilacs and 
azaleas. All but the deepest 
colors are displayed effectively 
in front of evergreen trees and 
shrubs. Dark colors look well 
against light backgrounds. 
Combine them with bleeding 
heart and blue phlox, prim- 
roses, pansies, doronicum, 
candytuft and other early per- 
ennials. Place tulips back from 
the front edges of beds and 
borders to permit perennials 
and annuals to conceal ripen- 
ing foliage. 
Single and double early varieties and, 
indeed, all tulips are attractive in groups 
and drifts in the foreground of the 
shrubbery border. Give the new Parrot 
tulip special locations for deserved em- 
phasis. 



Parrot tulips by the doorstep 
