Colorado Springs, Colorado 
II 
LUPINUS. 
polyphyllus, Hardy Lupines, perennial, 
albus. White. 3 ft. 
blue. Clear deep blue, 
roseus. Shades of pink. 
Sutton’s Hybrids. The most beautiful of recent introduction. 
Sutton’s Lupins were magnificent in their Trial Grounds 
last year. We saw them! 
LYCHNIS, Campion or Catchfly. 
*alpina. Deep rose-pink in May. 6 inches, 
chaleedonica. Large heads of vivid scarlet, 
flos-cuculi. Rose-purple. 1 ft. 
viscaria splendens. Deep red; neat; early flowering. 8 inches. 
*LYSIMACHIA, Loosestrife. 
nummularia. Flat trailing stems, clean roundish leaves. A splendid 
ground cover; hardy, adaptable. 
MANFEIEDA virginica. Tall spikes of green fragrant flowers from 
fleshy leaves. 
MARIPOSA LILY. See Lilies, calochortus, page 10. 
MARGUERITE. See Anthemis, page 3. 
MARJORAM. See Origanum marjorana, page 12. 
MATRICARIA. Splendid for the cutting garden. 
*Golden Hall. Bright yellow buttons. A 10-incli gem. 
Silver Ball. Double white. 1 ft. 
* Snowball. A dwarf silver ball. 8 inches. 
* MAZES REPTANS. Dainty white-lipped lilac flowers. Prostrate 
creeper. 
*MELAMPODIUM cinereum, Colorado Rock Daisy. Clear white heli- 
anthemum-like flowers. Valuable for the sunny rock garden. 
June to September. 8 inches. 
MENTHA, Mint 
MERTENSIA, Blue Bells. 
*coriacea (alpina). Pikes Peak Forget-Me-Not. 
sibirica. Taller and more slender than virginica. 
virginica. Clusters of rich sky-blue. Blooms at daffodil time. 
MONARDA, Bergamot or Oswego Tea. 
didyma rosea. Heads of brilliant rose. 2 to 3 feet. Summer, 
didyama, Cambridge Scarlet. Showy rich crimson; free flowering. 
MONKSHOOD. See Aconitum, page 2. 
MICHAELMAS DAISY. See Aster, page 3. 
*MYOSOTIS, Forget-Me-Not. 
alpestris victoria. Deep blue; compact. 8 inches. 
palustris semperflorens. Clear blue forget-me-nots; continuous 
bloomer. 
