5 
Azalea Indica. 
In addition to a large stock of many varieties of this beautiful and profuse-flow- 
ering class (for a description of which see General List), the following are worthy of 
special note : — 
Flag of Trocb. — Flower pure white, large, and very donWe; free bloomer, 
and continues long in perfection. Exti-a fine. $2 each. 
HoETENSB Verbane. — Salmon, spotted with deep crimson, and striped with 
bright red; flowers large, and very attractive. $2. 
Empress Eugenie. — Bright shining rose, with dark spots on the upper seg- 
ments; flowers large, good shape, fine. $1. 
Pkufection. — Bright rose, upper segments thickly spotted and veined with dark 
crimson ; good form and substance. Extra fine. $1. 
Hibiscus Cooperii. 
This now hard-wood Althica is beautifully variegated with shaded rosy-pink 
leaves. 
Price, $2 each. 
Irsine Herbstii. 
This striking new plant is also sent out as Aehyranthus Vcrschafeltii. It is of neat 
and compact growth, attaining .about a foot and a half in height, its stem and foliage 
being of a deep pink color, shaded with crimson ; making it a companion of the 
strikingly marked Coleus Vcrschafeltii. (See a description and illustration in the 
"American Agriculturist," February, 18G6.) 
Price, $1 each. 
Ageratum Variegatum. 
Very desirable on account of its variegated foliage, which is deep green, marked 
with broad golden edges shaded crimson. It has free trusses of blue flowers, like 
A. Mexicanum. 
Price, 30 cents ; $3 per dozen. 
AcJnlea Ptarmica — Plena. 
A hardy perennial plant, with a profusion of double white flowers through the 
summer and autumn months. Although not a new plant, we can recommend it 
with great confidence as deserving more general cultivation. 
Price, 25 cents each ; $2 per dozen. 
Tritoma. 
This is a beautiful class of bulbous plants, flowering in the summer and through the 
late autumn months, throwing uj) a tall flower-scajie, from three to five feet high, 
crowned with l)eautil'ul racemes of orange-red flower-tubes. One of the very best 
of the recently introduced bedding-plants. Uvaria is the freest-flowering and bright- 
est-colored vai'ioty of Tritoma. 
Price, 50 cents. ■ 
Madiera, or Mignonette Vine. 
A free-growing plant, well adapted to cover trellis-work ; flowers creamy-white, 
graceful, feathery, and fragrant. 
Price, 15 to 30 cent* each. 
