Eawana, Hltthell eo.. North Carolina; s 
Per loo Per 1 ,000 
CYPRIPEDIUM spectabile. The showiest of all Ameri- 
can Orchids. Strong crowns SiS 00 
Lighter crowns 10 00 
eYPKIPEDIUM acaule. Large, purple C. Medium 
crowns- 4 00 t30 00 
CYPRIPEDIU3I pubescens. Large yellow C. Medium 
crowns 4 00 30 00 
CALiOPOGON pulohcUus. One of the most showy of the terrestrial 
Orchids. Beautiful, large purple flowers. A mass of them is really a 
gorgeous sight. Strong bulbs, $4 per 100, 525 per 1,000. 
HABENAUI A oiliai'is. (Yellow-fringed Orchis.) This, with the four spe- 
cies named above, compose the best of the native Orchis family. Under 
cultivation they make a magnificent show, and compare most favorably 
with the finest exotic species. Add to this their extreme hardiness, easy 
culture and low cost, and we have a group that must soon become ex- 
tremely popular. Habenaria ciliaris, $4 per 100, $30 per 1,000. 
SARRACENIAS. 
Here we have a conspicuous class of plants that must soon enter largely 
into landscape work. 
They thrive in damp situations or in very wet bogs, and with their showy 
colored leaves and flowers, and peculiar, striking growth, give effects no other 
plant will produce. The writer has seen acres of the beautiful S.flava grow- 
ing in its native habitat, their erect, golden leaves 2 to 3 feel high making a 
brilliant and unique landscape eft'ect the entire summer, which is heightened 
at the time of flowering by the large drooping flowers. The leaves of all the 
species are so conspicuous that they are often taken for the flowers. .S. 
Drummondii is a species with green and purple leaves, variegated with 
white, and is considered one of the finest. 5. Psiltacina has short foliage, 3 
to 5 inches long, spotted with white. S. rubra, leaves 12 to 18 inches high, 
red-purple flowers. .S'. variolaris, 6 to 12-inch leaves, spotted with white near 
the yellowish summit ; yellow flowers. Lastly comes the more common .S'. 
}>urpurea, with low purple leaves and purple flowers on a stalk a foot high. 
We shall make a special collecting trip for the rarer varieties, and those inter- 
ested should not fail to take advantage of the e.xceptional opportunity offered, 
and avail themselves of this special coUecling trip and low prices. 
