40 
SLLI8 BB0THEB8* CATALOGUE. 
Isaac Bachatiao, The best yellow variety grown; a great novelty. Price locfts. 
Snow White, The nearest pure white of any variety yet produced. Extra fine. Price 20 (fts. 
Lord Byron. Brilliant red, blotched white; a very showy sort. Price lods. 
Childsii. New, strong growing, large flowering varieties, mixed. A great improvement on 
Lemoine’s. Price, in mixed colors, io< 5 ts. 
Giadiolns (fine mixed). The bulbs are all fine varieties. We send them out without names. One 
of the finest lot of Gladiolus ever offered at this price. Price, 40 < 5 ts. per doz., by mail, prepaid. 
The old-fashioned orange and red sort, fine large bulbs, zo As. doz., mail, 10 As. doz., by express. 
JUSTICIA. 
Veintina. This new dwarf Justicia is really a much finer and dwarfer plant than our engraving 
suggests. It begins to bloom when the plant has only three or four leaves, and is never out of flower after- 
ward. If pinched back occasionally it makes avery 
dwarf, stocky plant, frequently covered with twenty 
to fifty large pink flower-hcads, lasting a long time. 
The foliage is also more persistent and highly or- 
namental, being heavy in texture and very velvety. 
(See cut.) Price 15 As. 
Biuva, A grand novelty, similar in growth 
and habit to above, but covered for months in suc- 
cession with splendid large feathery clusters of 
pure yellow flowers, surmounting dark velvety 
green foliage. V’^ery rare and handsome, and a 
good bloomer. Price 20 As. 
Bicolor, This pretty Justicia is new and 
scarce, and not much known. It is a hard wooded 
erect plant, growing twelve to fifteen inches high, 
with deep glossy green leaves, and bearing elegant 
clusters of lovely bluish purple blossoms. A fine 
Nvinter bloomer for house and conservatory, blooms 
nearly all the time. Price 30 As. 
Note.— T hese Justicias can be planted out in 
summer, by nipping growth once or twice they 
become bushy; pot them up by September ist, 
and they make fine winter bloomers. 
IMPATIENS. 
Sultani (sometimes called “Patience Plant*’), This is one of the most distinct and beautiful of 
flowering plantsof.reccnt introduction, either as a winter blooming pot plant, or forthe border in summer. 
It is of compact, neat habit of growth, ’.with 
good constitution, and a perpetual bloomer. The 
flowers are of a brilliant rosy scarlet, peculiarly 
distinrt, but most effective hue, about one: and 
one-half inches in diameter, and are produced 
singly or twos and threes from the axis of the 
leaves, especially toward the summit of the 
stems, but so freely that a well grownjspecimen 
appears to be quite a ball of fire. We recom- 
mend this highly. (See cut). Price 10 As. 
Queen Corola, For a blooming plant 
that will flower the full 365 days in the year, and 
thrive well as a window' plant, none equal [the 
w'ell known “Impatiens Sultani.” This new 
sort is identical in growth and free blooming 
quality, but having flowers in color a beautiful 
salmon, suffused w'ith rose, base of lower petals 
blotched white,;stamcns and pistils garnet and 
purple. The w'hole flower irregularly burnish- 
ed, as in tinsel. Price 10 As. 
Ruby, Same as above, except color, which 
is a very much darker shade than “Sultani” 
and fully as free flowering. Price 10 As. 
