CLIBRANS’ CATALOGUE OF INDOOR PLANTS. 
9 
Rex, or Ornamental Foliage Begon\?iS—contuiiied. 
General Collection. 
Purchasers’ selection, 4(1. each, 3 6 per cloz., excepting those priced. Onr selection of 12 fine 
varieties, 3,, '6 ; 24,/- per 100, for ferneries, &c. Larger plants, 6/- per doz. 
No. 
484 Arthur Malet, (lowers rosy-pink, leaves 
• bright rose, with metallic gloss. 6d. 
48c) Claudine Schmitt, bronzy-green, spotted 
white, zone silvery grey. 
510 Lady Annesley, silver-surfaced leaf, cen- 
tre tinged blue, broad zone of silvery 
grey. • 
517 Louise Closon, magnificent variety, great 
advance on Mdme. Henri Gache. 6d. 
537 Madame Lemoine, green, spotted silvery- 
white, very fine. 
524 Madame Champon, pure pearly-white, 
narrow dark-green margin. 
547 Madame Treyve, dark bronzy-green, 
flaked white, 
556 Mrs. John Laing, bronzy-green, reddish- 
white veins. 6d. 
No. 
576 Mons. Rene Jarry Desloges, pretty tint 
of rose, attractive. 
584 President A. Truffaut, bronze-green, flaked 
white. 
,i;88 President de Boureuilles, bronzy-red, 
silvery-])ink flowers. 
593 Princess Charles of Denmark, bronzy- 
white. reddish-brown markings along 
veins : the white portions change with 
age to rich carnnne. .A.M. R.H.S. fid. 
597 Prince Wallenstein, dark olive green, 
thickly covered with short reddish 
hairs, distinct, fid. 
604 Souv. de J. Marie, dark reddish-bronze, 
spotted white, handsome, fid. 
fio8 The O’Donoughe, dark .green, broad silvery 
zone. 
Bouvardias. 
The Bouvardia is a fine jilant for furnishing a supply of flowers, in flower for six or eight months 
in the year. The same treatment is re(]uired as firr Winter Flowering Pelargoniums. Fibrous 
loam, leaf soil, and sand in ecpial ])roporti(ms suits them w'ell with a small ([uantity of peat. 
Small Plants, Purchasers’ selection, 4d. each, 3 6 per doz. 
„ „ Our selection. 3/- doz., 20/- per i.oo. 
Larger Plants, in 4^ in. pots, fi/-. 9/- and i2/- per doz. 
Plants in bloom in .Autumn and AVinter, 12 - and 18,'- doz. 
No. 
2 Alfred Neuner, double white, and profuse 
bloomer. 
4 Bridal Wreath, line, with large trusses of 
pure white. 
8 Dazzler, bright scarlet, free and effective. 
14 Hogarth fl. pL, doidfle form of this well- 
known variety ; scarlet. 
22 King of Scarlets, .A.M. K.H.S., scarlet- 
crimson, white tube, large, handsome 
trusses, free. fid. 
17 jasminoides paniculata, white, dwarf and 
free. 
No. 
15 Humboldtii corymbiflora grandiflora, pure 
white, produced freely. 
25 Mrs. Robert Green, lovely salmon. 
28 President Cleveland, fine scarlet. 
27 President Garfield, double pink, profuse 
bloomer. 
2fi Pride of Brooklyn, white, rem.arkably free. 
33 Queen of the Roses, long-tubed, beautiful 
salmon-rose. 
31 rosea multiflora, bright rosy-pink, attrac- 
tive. 
' 36 Vreeiandi, pure white, good habit. 
I 37 White Bouquet, white, dwarf. * 
Cgcti. 
Cactaceous plants are unicpie in appearam^and many of them produce (lowers of the utmost 
brilliancy from wTnte to intense crim.son, mffWrpf them being fragrant, they are at once singular 
and beautiful. 
Ordinary IdBm and coamjH^d vet suits them ; sutficient of the latter should be used to 
secure drainage, as the plates ^en^^^thing approaching stagnation. .A temperature of about 
50 degrees in AVinter suits tha majori'^^during the Summer a higher temi)erature is required. 
I'he best spfflfcs and varieties ofCcrcu^ Echinocactus, Echinoccreus, Mammilaria and Phyl- 
locactus are olfereW; our selectic^ji as : — 
Six in 6 bc^^itiful and (listing ^rts,^/fi, 4/fi and 6/- ; 12 in 12 beautiful varieties, fi/-, 
9, -and 12/- 
Pilocereus Seni(i^.(i^ Old is one of the most interesting of all Cacti. The plant is 
covered w ith h^r tR silky-whi^Rairs, causing it to resemble the hoary head of an aged person, 
vvell-estalmWCFl plants, 2 '6 to 3,'fi each. 
