NO. PRICE 



1757 Lupinus Mufabills Roseus. A most beautiful variety, of a bright, rosy-carmine color, 



both buds and flowers ; whereas the old kind is white in bud, changing into lilac red 

 going out of flower. A most beautiful showy variety 25 



1758 Hybridus Atrococcineus. The most showy Lupin ever introduced. Large, 



handsome spikes of bloom ; color, bright crimson, scarlet, with white tip . . .25 



1759 CruicltshanUii Hybrid. One of the finest annual Lupins. Flowers veiy fragrant, 



presenting various shades of color on the same spike ; at first of a lovely blue, tinged 

 with white, and yellow in the centre, afterwards changing to purple ; very ornamen- 

 tal for groups or for cut flowers 25 



1760 Cruikshankii Variegated. Hardy annual. 2 feet 05 



1761 Pubescens Elegans. Violet rose ; hardy annual. 2 feet 05 



1762 Lychnis Haageana, Hybrida Mixed. A beautiful perennial, with large flowers of 



sparkling color ; the color ranging from the brightest scarlet to blood red, purple, 

 orange, white, or flesh-color 25 



1763 Grandiflora Gigantea. New; with flowers of double the size of the beautiful 



Lychnis Haageana, in all the colors of white, chamois, rose, scarlet, &c. . . .50 



1764 Machseranthera Glabra. A neat, hardy perennial, diffusely branched, and covered 



with Aster-like, violet flowers, with a yellow centre more than an inch in diameter, 

 and standing out in corymbs. Sown early, it flowers the first year. One and a half 

 to two feet high 1 . .25 



1765 Mairia Crenaia. A herbaceous composite, with large, rose-colored flowers, yellow in 



the centre ; a native of the Cape of Good Hope. Per packet 50 



1766 Malva Californicp. A beautiful shrubby species, with handsome foliage, and flowers 



like Malope Grandiflora. Flowers abundantly the first season, in the open ground, 

 and blooms in the greenhouse all winter. A valuable acquisition 25 



1767 Laterifia. A trailing perennial, with dark-green leaves, the whole plant covered 



with rosy Nankin flowers. Half-hardy, blooming abundantly the second year. Ele- 

 gant for rock-work , 25 



1768 Marigold Dwarf. Dark velvet ; double; fine; rich colored 10 



1769 Maurandya Emeryana. Bright pink; half-hardy annual. 10 feet 10 



1770 Melothria Pendula. Pretty, hardy climber, with handsome foliage and small fruhs ; 



black, on coming to maturity ; fine for trellises ; the fruit makes fine pickles. . . .25 



1771 Cucumerina. A species of Cucurbitacea, from China, with smooth foliage and 



yellow flowers ; fruit very smooth, of the thickness of the finger, and about one and 



a half inches long ; can be pickled like Gherkins 25 



1772 Mimulus, New Double Spotted. This beautiful variety is a fine acquisition for culture in 



pots, and remarkable for its double flowers, which are brilliant yellow, spotted, striped, 

 and mottled with crimson ; and remain in bloom much longer than the single sorts .50 



1773 Pardinus (Tigrinus) Flore Pleno, Superb Double. A new strain, obtained 



by the florists of Prussia, having all the variety of colors of the single, and come so 

 true from seed that there is but a small percentage of single flowers. These are 

 quite equal to any of the English varieties, and are now for the first time offered as 

 the most beautiful yet produced 50 



1774 Quinquevulnerus Robustus. A beautiful novelty of very vigorous growth, about 



a foot high, with large leaves of a brilliant green, blotched with black. The large, 

 handsome flowers are curiously mottled, and marked in all the rich coloring peculiar 



to this tribe of plants 25 



1775 Cupreus Hybridus. Of the great variety of Mimulus, none can surpass this for 



richness and diversity of color, and free blooming. The plants are dwarf, bushy, 

 and vigorous ; with large, fine-shaped flowers, spotted, stained, marbled, speckled, 

 and blotched in the most striking manner 25 



1776 Mirabilis Jalapa Foliis Variegatis Tricolor. Dwarf ; tricolored variety ; very beautiful .25 



1777 Mukia Scabrella. Another pretty climber, with lobed, heart-shaped, small leaves, and 



small scarlet berries 25 



1778 Myosotidium Nobile. The rare New-Zealand Forget-me-not, with broad, ovate-cordate, 



thick, fleshy leaves ; subglobose racemes of deep azure ; purple-eyed flowers, measur- 

 ing five inches across. A magnificent acquisition i.oo 



1779 Nasturtium, • om Thumb Rose. An entirely new color in Nasturtiums ; habits similar 



to scarlet Tom Thumb Nasturtium ; color, the exact counterpart of Treutham Rose 

 Geranium 25 



1780 Nemophlla Oculata Grandiflora. A seedling from the popular Maculata. The flowers 



are of the circumference of a crown-piece. Very showy 25 



1781 Discoidalis Elegans. Maroon, bordered with white ; half-hardy annual . . .05 



1782 Vittata. Chocolate; broad, white margin ; hardy annual 05 



1733 Nierembergia Frutescens. An entirely new species, from the Andes ; introduced by the 



Botanical Garden of Bordeaux. A hardy, small, shrub-like perennial ; it forms a very 

 graceful, rounded bush, its straight and upright stems branching at the top in every 

 direction, and throwing out a profusion of thread-like, drooping branchlets, covered 

 from May to October with an immense quantity of very pretty white and purple 

 flowers, larger than those of N. Gracilis. It is nearly hardy, and deserves to become 

 a general favorite, both for the open garden in summer, and greenhouse in winter . .50 

 1784 Nicotiana Macrophyila Var. Gigantea. Purple-Flowered. The most remarkable 

 of all the Nicotianas now cultivated. Its leaves are much larger than those of any 

 other variety ; it grows six to eight feet high ; and the plants are crowned with im- 

 mense bunches or corymbs of large purple flowers. The general habit of the plant, 

 its huge foliage, and stately aspect, give it the advantage over most other ornamental- 

 leaved plants, for lawns or groups in the flower-garden. (See engraving.) . . .25 



