HORTICULTURAL SPECIALIST 33 
Each Doz. 
Bulbocodium Monophyllus. Little 
snowy white flowers of great beauty. 
Give no manure.25 2.50 
Bulbocodium Conspicuus. Rich golden 
yellow of hoop petticoat like form 
and fine rush like foliage. Likes 
sandy peat .10 1.00 
Canaliculatus. Dainty little gem, give 
full sunshine. Heads of 3—4 flow¬ 
ers have white perianth and yellow 
cup, very fragrant..15 1.50 
Circlet. Flat creamy white perianth, 
petals touching and overlapping, fine 
poeticus like disc covering 1/3 the 
area of the petals.40 4.00 
Cyclamineus. Rich yellow trumpet, 
perianth reflexed like a cyclamen. 
Likes a moist location and a sandy 
peaty soil.30 3.00 
Cyclamineus February Gold. A hybrid 
from cyclamineus, perianth golden 
yellow, trumpet tinged with orange .25 2.50 
Glitter. Perianth and cup deepest 
golden yellow with glittering red 
edge. A choice little mite on an 8 
inch stem.15 1.25 
Johnstoni Queen of Spain. Pure 
canary yellow, gracefully nodding 
trumpets of small size on 9 inch 
stems . 25 2.50 
Juncifolius. A miniature rush leaved 
daffodil, 4—5 inches in height, small 
rich very fragrant yellow flowers. . .25 3.00 
Minimus. Smallest of all trumpet daf¬ 
fodils and the first to flower. We 
had blooms fully expanded on Feb¬ 
ruary 25 outdoors in 1933, only 3 
inches in height with pure golden 
trumpets. Succeeds well in loam.30 3.00 
Minor. A very scarce variety, grows 
6 inches high, golden yellow peri¬ 
anth gracefully twisted, trumpet 
golden .50 5.00 
Moschatus of Haworth. A charming 
little daffodil from the Pyrenees, 
snowy white with a drooping peri¬ 
anth, likes a little shade.35 3.50 
Nanus. A miniature golden trumpet 
daffodil 4—5 inches high, about in¬ 
termediate between minimus and 
minor in size, very early.30 3.00 
Salmonetta. Very charming dwarf 
Leedsii, white perianth and salmon 
tinted cup often carries twin flowers .10 1.00 
Triandrus Agnes Harvey. A dainty 
daffodil of drooping habit, snow 
white, flowers carried 1—3 per stem, 
naturalizes finely.20 2.00 
Triandrus Calathinus. An exquisite 
little daffodil, the drooping clusters 
of new white flowers are carried two 
and three per stem.60 7.00 
Triandrus Albus. The dainty little 
“Angels Tears” narcissus, pure 
white flowers. Likes a rather gritty 
soil .10 1.00 
Triandrus Thalia. A hybrid with Tri¬ 
andrus as one of the parents, carries 
3—4 flowers per stem which are 
snowy white in eolor, sufficiently ro- 
