SLLI8 BBOTSSRS' CATALO&UB. 
;)-> 
Vivand-Morel. This grand variety has literally leaped into popularity the past year, and has done 
much to restore confidence in Continentai varieties ; color, tender rose; of very silky texture ; peta^ long 
and straight, a fine grower; flower of large size and fine color, extremely beautiful. Puce lo as. 
Tuxedo Beautiful shade of blended old gold and amber, the most novel in color of any of the 
. . , ui Price 10 cts. 
varieties; a free bloomer. . - 
Bda Prass. A fine, bold, recurving flower, of great substance and depth. hen opening, of a 
delicate salmon, then changing to a creamy white, delicately shaded blush. One of the best for pot ralture, 
, , , , . Price 10 as. 
dwarf and bushy. . , ^ . c 
Golden Rod. Beautiful golden yellow flowers of fine shape, and borne in the greatest profusion, 
yielding more flowers than any yellow we ever grew. 
T Shrimuiou. Bright crimson, color similar to •• Cullingfordi,” florets strong and stifl, flower of 
r ^ r Price 10 CCS. 
largest size and most perfect form. 
FUCHSIAS. 
Bon Valoure. A remarkable free flowering variety with flowers of very large size. The plant is 
of compact, symmctrical)-growth, making fine shapely plants in quite small pots. Tube and sepals deep 
coral red, corolla white, veined'and suiTused carmine. A distinct and valuable new variety. 
Little Beauty. Said to have been named thus, on account of every one upon first seeing it, saying, 
isn’t it a little heauty.” The introducer says he has often counted 150 buds and blooms on one plant in a 
four-inch pot. Flowers single, 
about one and one-half inches 
long; sepals bright red, corolla 
purple; a fine bushy grower. 
(See cut.) Price 15 As. 
Sapley Freres. Erect 
grower; very large flower; co- 
rolla very double of rosy violet; 
long, recurving sepals of bright 
coral-red. Price 10 As. 
Autumn l,eaves. This 
remarkable fancy variety is said 
to have been brought from 
across the water by a sailor. 
We consider it. by far the most 
distinct and beautiful of its 
class. It is impossible for one 
not familiar with our eastern 
forests in autumn, to imagine 
the beauty of its foliage. In 
habit it droops, and is most 
charming when|stakcd and the 
branches allowed to fall natur- 
ally and gracefully down, form- 
ing streamers of green, red, 
^;urhstJitl\“rflowecs. Coloi„lubc Iiud.scpal, rosy sciiilel, corolla, acep^j-^.-. 
Flowers ^ “ A rtm^rowe;, and of; fine, drooping tree habit. The flowers are of a 
size an^fullness befLl unknown ; the color is a rosy heliotrope.'marked and veined in rose. Sepals bright 
J 1 . 1 ■ h , m.mher of the petals of the corolla are very curiously alhxed, owing to the extreme 
Toubirness rf 'the flower. Grand, long-pointed, rounded bloom, with sepals strongly recur^ved. TWs fine 
single, dark purple, golden.foliage; thecoutrast of color 
age-^mwirig to ,.,uiely new departure, difTeiing from all other large flower- 
when it’first opens, a deep, rich yiolet-pur.de, ^ ever g“own. Unlikrmost oi the 
Jirre E G Hill. This is one of the grandest 1 ' uchsias we have ever grow 
doubfe wM^Vthsias, it is a robust,’upright:grower. not coarse, but c-pact and very The 
tube and sepals are a bright, reddish crimson; corolla, pure white, extra large and double. P 
