GO 
CLEMATIS — continued. 
39 lanuginosa (l), clear lavender, large. 
41 — — Candida (l), translucent pearly 
white, faintly flushed lilac, stamens 
rich cream. 
50 Lord Neville (l), bright heliotrope-blue, 
white filaments and chocolate 
anthers. 
52 lilacina floribunda (l), pale grey-lilac, 
deeply veined. 
52a Louis van Houtte (l), rich, deep violet- 
purple ; free. 
64 Madame Grange (j), crimson-violet, red 
bar in centre ; sepals very broad. 
55 Baron-Veillard (j), with a pro- 
fusion of bright lilac-rose flowers. 
57 van Houtte (l), splendid large 
white flowers. 
69 Marcel Moser (l), large flowers of 
silvery lavender-heliotrope, with a 
broad band of light carmine-violet 
down the centre of each sepal. 
63 Mrs. Bush (l), deep lavender, very fine. 
64 George Jackman (p), satin-white, 
creamy bar, white filaments, pale 
brown anthers. 
6G Hope (l), satiny mauve, broad 
overlapping sepals. 
69 Miss Bateman (p), white, semi-double, 
chocolate-coloured anthers. 
70 Crawshay (p), solferino-pink. 
56 montana (m), pure white, petals large ; 
very hardy. 
6Ga gran diflora (m), flowers larger and 
growth more vigorous than above. 
66b rubens (m), foliage and habit re- 
semble that of the species, except that 
the leaf stalks and stems are purplish. 
The flower is a pleasing shade of soft 
rosy red. 
72 Nellie Moser (p), silvery white, shaded 
mauve, centre of each sepal bright 
rosy carmine ; superb novelty. 
76 Oriflamme, large red flowers with a band 
of vermilion down the centre of each 
sepal. The whole flower is spotted 
with minute specks of white. 
7* Othello (j), dark velvety purple ; fine. ‘ 
80 paniculata (fl), lovely loose clusters of 
small white flowers. 
81 Queen Alexandra (l), pale lavender, 
with lilac-purple base, shading to 
silvery white down the centre of each 
sepal ; very beautiful. 
Red Jackmanni (see Jackmanni rubra). 
82 repens, a new species, resembling 
Montana in growth and floriferous 
habit, but the flowers are larger, 
being pure white and 2 to 3 inches in 
diameter ; blooms during August ; 
a fine climber for pillars, etc. 
87 Sensation (l), rich satin-mauve flowers 
of large size ; strikingly beautiful. 
88 Sir Garnet Wolseley (p), nearly 6 inches 
across, slatey blue ground, with 
showy bar of plum-red. 
150 Sir Trevor Lawrence, bright crimson, 
recurved at points ; free ; vigorous. 
89 Snow-white Jackmanni (j), the flowers 
are “ paper- white," about the same 
size as those of the old purple 
Jackmanni. 
106 Thomas Tennant (l), large, handsome 
white flowers, delicately flushed 
watery lilac. 
109 Venus Victrix (l), a double variety of 
delicate lavender colour, sepals very 
large, flat, and overlapping. 
113 Ville de Lyon (v), rich crimson, deepened 
round the margins of the sepals ; 
produced with the utmost freedom ; 
hardy and disease-resisting. 
114 vitalba (Traveller’s Joy) (fl), green- 
ish white, small, very strong grower. 
1 15 Ville de Paris (l), white, tinged lilac- 
rose, large flower, and of great merit. 
118 Viticella alba (v), pretty greyish white 
flowers ; effective. 
120 luxurians (v), transparent 
white, with the greatest of freedom 
from the end of June until autumn. 
Strong and vigorous. 
117 rubra (v), prettily netted, reddish 
purple flowers. 
116 grandiflora (v), bright claret- 
red. 
CLIBRANS’ IVIES (Hedera). 
For TREE IVIES, see Hedera arborea, page 28. 
GOLDEN-LEAVED VARIETIES. 
Prices, 2/6 to 3/6 each. 
8 angularis aurea, medium size leaves, of 
rich bright gold ; a fast compact 
grower, hardy and unaffected by 
smoke ; particularly suitable for 
high walls, with a sunny aspect. 
14 aurea densa, the largest-leaved of the 
true Golden Ivies, slow growing but 
very dense ; hardy and unaffected 
by smoke. 
16 spectabilis, medium size leaves, 
strong grower. 
29 canariensis aurea maculata, a sport of 
the Irish Ivy, richly splashed with 
primrose-gold ; rapid grower, and 
quite hardy 
34 chrysophylla, medium size leaves of 
a bright sulphur-yellow, free grower, 
hardy, and not affected by smoke. 
48 DENTATA AUREA VARIEGATA 
(A.M., R.H.S.), a beautiful golden 
variegated form of the largest-leaved 
Ivy ; is a rapid grower, of good con- 
stitution. 
88 Mrs. Pollock (syn. palmata aurea), 
leaves small, decidedly palmate, 
clear butter-yellow, with green veins; 
does best on a sunny sheltered wall, 
or for carpeting in the full sun. 
115 succinata, in spring a mass of Cowslip 
gold, grows slowly. 
