SLD III IO YOY OI YI YN IOs APPL R RARE RRA RRARL ST LPAI LID 
Pelarganiums, or Geraniums. 
37% cents each—$4 per dozen. 
Atlanta. ! 
Alexandrina—pure white. 
Aspasia—top petals nearly black, with 
rose belt lower petals. 
ich rose, pencilled with carmine, 
extra fine. 
Belle of the Villaze—light, with crimson 
spot, free bloomers. 
Bridegroom—upper petals light, dark 
blotch. 
Duke of Cornwall—shaded pink. 
Elegans—rosy purple, margined with 
crimson. 
Fanny Kemble. 
t-me-Not—rosy salmon, dark spot. 
t—Gasth’s Perfection—light pink, dark spots 
Hebe—light pink, shaded with crimson. 
Lambertii—bright red. 
Miss-Percival—white and crimson. 
t—Rebecca—delicate salmon, clear dark spot. 
Rachel. 
Rollo. 
\--Sunrise—clear bright red. 
—Sylph—light pink. 
u—Triumphans. — 
Scarlet Geraniums, 
For bedding out, or flowering in pots 
and vases, are worthy of notice for their 
brilliant colors and continued succession 
of bleom. 
_ Price 25 cents each ; $2 per dozen. Large 
plants, 50 cents each. 
| mass of bloom until frost. 
like perfume. Those marked with a * 
are new varieties, recently introduced. 
*Corymbosum—compact, dwarf, 
bushy habit, (25 
*Gem—deep blue purple, large 
white centre, fine, 50 
Grandiflorum— very large, head of 
bloom, 20 
érmedia—common sweet scented 
Heliotrope, 15 
*Lilacena—lilac, large trusser, free 
bloomer, 25 
*Reptans—exquisite violet like, per- 
fume, 50 
seuvenir de Liege—large, robust 
grower, 20 
ottarianum—dark violet purple, 
beautiful, 20 
Small plants for bedding out, from $1 50 
_ |gto $2, per dozen. 
Petunias. 
There are no plants more desirable for 
bedding out than the above, remaining one 
The following 
are desirable new varieties. 
Price $1 50 per doz., in assortments. , 
Crimson King—large,dark crimson, throat 
jet black. 
Candida—white veined, purple throat. 
ijpse—rich mulberry, veined with pur- 
ple. 
Enchantress—peach;blotched with rose, 
very large. 
‘NMadam Sontag—peach blossom, with 
crimson throat. 
{—Captain Darley—dark shaded leaf, large .@Minerva—crimson, veined with dark pur- 
’ ple. 
ve ey ee e-shoe | North London—bluish lilac, finely shaded 
: eth) 
leaf, bright cherry. 
Clifton Scarlet—dwarf scarlet, crimson 
truss. 
cia Rosea—bright rose, fine for bedding 
out. 
Princess Alice—rosy pink, white eye. 
{—Qieen of Summer—dark scarlet, free 
bloomer. 
Searlet Defiance—bright scarlet, fine. 
%—Fom-Thumb-—very dwarf, bright scarlet. 
Heliotropiums. 
No tribe of plants succeed better in our 
‘climate than the Heliotrope, especially for 
bedding out in the summer; they are 
equally desirable for the hot-house in the 
winter, being constantly in bloom, and a 
general favorite for their sweet vanilla- 
with purple. 
Prince of Wales—light purple, large and 
fine. 
NwEcosea~alba—white and rose, beautiful. 
Fuchsias. 
There is not amore splendid tribe of 
summer flowering plants than the Fuchsia, 
commonly called ‘ Lady’s Ear-Drop.” 
The improvement made in*their culture 
within the last few years in England and 
France, has made them universal favorites. 
Their management is quite simple, re- 
quiring mainly in summer a protection 
from the noon-day sun; they strike freely 
from cuttings, and should be grown ina 
mixture of leaf mould, rotted manure, and 
sods, broken up finely with a spade, but 
not sifted, give the pots plenty of drainage 
