C. Palraeri. A small species with bright lilac t^Boz. 
flowers. Ready August 1st, $2 00 
C. Macrocarpus. A striking'Iy beautiful species. 
Flowers a brilliant pale lavender, banded with green. 
The bulbs are very large. Ready September 1st, 1 00 
Group V— Meadow Mariposas. 
These are fine species from Oregon to Montana, growing in 
moist meadows and cold regions which promise exceptionally well 
for European culture. They are hardy, vigorous and little subject 
to disease. Flowers large and of handsome outline, stems flexuous 
and leafy. They have a capsule like the star tulips, and a single 
broad radical leaf. ■ 
C. Greeneii. A lovely species a foot or more. 
Petals lilac, barred with yellow, and deeply pitted. 
Lower half densely covered with long silky hairs. 
Supply not certain. Ready September 1st, 2 00 
C. Howellii. Taller and stilfer, light yellow. 
Supply doubtful. ' •> qq 
C. Nitidus. An exquisite species, with a grand 
lilac flower, having a large indigo blotch in middle 
of petal. A good grower. Supply good. 
Ready August 1st, garden grown, 1 00 
C. longibarbatus. Much like C. Nitidus, purple. 
Supply not certain. Ready September 1st, 1 .50 
Section II. Star Tulips. 
These have a single, long, shiny leaf often a foot long. The 
stalks are slender and usually branching. Few to many blossoms 
are borne, of the most delicate nature and graceful outline. In some, 
as C. albus, C. pulchellus and C. amoenus, the blossoms are beauti- 
ful, shiny, closed globes, while in the others the flower is like an 
open cup, half hanging or pendulous. The Star Tulips are the 
perfection of grace in every line and curve, and the coloring, while 
not always brilliant, is in the most delicate shadings and tints. All 
are plants of the woodland and delight in half shade and a loose, 
porous soil of which the principal part is leaf mold. 
C._ albus. Fairy Bell. A strong grower, often a 
foot high, and bearing as many as twenty globular 
blossoms. The flowers an inch in diameter. In color, 
pearly white, edged with silky hairs, and hanging like 
bells. Very large bulbs. Ready July 1st, 40c. 
C. amoenus, Greene, (C. albus var. roseus). An 
exquisitely beautiful species between C. albus and C. 
pulchellus. Glowing rose pink Ready August 1st, 100 
C. apiculatus. In habit resembling C. raaweaniis. 
Color a pleasing shade of straw color. 
Ready September ist, 1 OO 
C. umbellatu.4. Wood. (C. coUinus, Lemmon. 
Near 0. maweanus. Nearly pure white, not hairy. 
A vBi'v pretty, new species. Ready -fuly 1st. ] 00 
