F. WEINBERG, WOODSIDE, L. I. 
ECHINOCEREUS. ECHINOCEREUS. 
15 
Berlandieri 10 to .50 
Blankii .50 to i. 00 
caespitosus, see pectinatus. 
E. C. pectinatus var. caespitosus. 
cinerascens 35 to .50 
ctenoides .50 
dasyacanthus ........... .15 to .50 
Fendleri .25 to i. 00 
Fendleri, spec. Grand Can- 
yon 50 to 1. 00 
Knippelianus i.oo 
Merkeri 25 to .75 
paucispinus 75 to 2.00 
pectinatus 15 to .75 
" var. adusta 20 to .50 
" var. centralis 20 to .50 
" var. rigidissima(rain- 
, bo:w cactus) 25 to i.oo 
" var. caespitosus 25 to i.oo 
" var rufispina , 25 to i.oo 
phoeniceus 25 to i.oo 
procumbens 15 to .75 
E. C. procumbens. 
Ehrenbergii 20 to .50 
Engelmannii 35 to i.oo 
" var. albispina , .35 to i.oo 
" var. variegata 35 to i.oo 
enneacanthus 15 to .50 
E. C. stramineus. 
Roemeri 25 to 1.50 
stramineus . 25 to 1.50 
tuberosus 25 to 1.50 
viridiflorus 15 to .50 
viridiflorus centrespinus . . .15 to .50 
ECHINOPSIS, Zucc. — Hedgehog-like or Sea-urchin Cactus. 
They afford many very satisfactory plants, are most easily grown, and 
their "trumpet" shaped flowers, distinctive of the family, are readily produced 
and beautiful in the extreme. They bloom at night and close the following 
day in the afternoon. Color of blossoms range from white to varied shades 
of pink and rose, and some are deliciously fragrant. Small plants have been 
known to produce blooms larger than the plant which bears them. Those 
marked with an * are hybreds. 
