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A. B. DAVIS & SON, PURCK1.I.VI 1,1. K, VIRGINIA. 
New Ivy-Leaved Geranium. 
Variegated-leaved Geraniums. 
Pride of Ramona. Golden yellow, with broad 
red zone ; scarlet flowers ; good bedder. io cts. 
Happy Thought. Leaves creamy yellow in the 
center and edged with green ; scarlet flowers ; a pro- 
fuse bloomer, io cts. 
Silver Pheasant. Leaves a pale green, margined 
with creamy white ; flowers scarlet. 10 cts. 
Golden Gem. Leaves a rich golden yellow, ioc. 
Mad. Salleroi. A very compact variety of silver 
Geranium ; fine for massing. 8c. each, 6oc. per doz. 
Mrs. Pollock. Bright bronzy red zone, belted 
with crimson and edged with golden-yellow. 15 cts. 
Black Douglas. Golden yellow, with broad, red 
zone. 10 cts. 
Bismarck. Foliage yellow, dark chocolate zone. 
10 cts. 
Chieftain. Leaf a golden disc, surrounded with a 
bronze zone. 10 cts. 
Distinction. The leaves are encircled with deep 
black. 10 cts. 
Exquisite. Large chocolate zone, with golden- 
yellow center. 10 cts. 
Fanny. Leaves golden-yellow, with red zone; 
peach-colored blossoms. 10 cts. 
Marshal McMahon. Leavesgolden-yellow, with 
zone of dark chocolate. 10 cts. 
Zulu. A bright yellow leaf, with almost black zone. 
10 cts. 
New Double-Flowered Silver-leaved 
Geranium, Mrs. Parker. 
In this beautiful variety we have the only double- 
flowering variety in the silver-leaved section. While 
the foliaee is deep green, with a broad border and 
margin of pure snow-white, the flower is perfecly 
double, and of a clear, bright pink. In color it is an 
exact counterpart of that grand variety, “Centaur.” 
The foliage and flower together make it one of the most 
unique and beautiful plants lately introduced. 15 cts. 
Ivy-leaved Geraniums. 
These are fine plants for hanging baskets and gen 
eral pot-culture. Single and double kinds, bearing 
white, pink, salmon and scarlet blooms, to cts. each. 
Fragrant-leaved Geraniums. 
Apple-scented, Peppermint, Oak- leaved, 
lio.se. Pennyroyal, Shrubland Pet. Lemon, Vut- 
meg. Balm, Sycamore and Scarlet Rose (Mrs. 
Taylor). 10 cts. each. 
GNAPHALIUM LANATUM. 
A downy, white-foliaged plant of creeping habit, 
admirably adapted for the front lines of ribbon bor- 
ders ; also a fine basket plant. 8 cts. 
I 
HELIOTROPE. 
These plants are universal favorites on account of 
their delightful fragrance. They flower equally well 
as bedding plants in summer or as pot-plants in the 
house during winter. 
Price, 10 cts. each, 90 cts. per doz. 
Albert Delaux. Flowers bright lavenckr-blue ; 
foliage a golden yellow blotched with green. A gem. 
Douglas. Deep purple flowers. 
Mrs. David Wood. The new semi-double (al- 
though we cannot see any double to it) ; however, it 
is a fine, distinct Heliotrope, with large trusses of 
violet flowers with light center. 
Mad. Brtiant. Plant dwarf and exceedingly free- 
i blooming. Immense panicles of very large flowers ; 
! rich purple, with large white eye. 
Juliette. Large flower heads of rich lilac. 
White Lady. A strong-growing, free-branching 
plant, very profuse in bloom. The flower is large 
and of the purest white. . 
Swan ley Giant. The largest of Heliotropes ; rich 
lilac. 
Fleur d’Ele. A splendid new sort, having pani- 
cles of bloom of the largest size, the individual florets 
being a wide trumpet shape ; beautiful shade of blue, 
shading to white at the center. Very fragrant. 
CHINESE HIBISCUS. 
Large-growing tropical shrubs, with very glossy 
foliage. The plants under the hottest sun produce 
enormous flowers in great numbers, and make noble 
specimens. They can be grown in tubs, and kept for 
years. The blossoms average 5 or 6 inches in diam- 
1 ter, and are gorgeously colored. 
Price, except where noted, 10 cents each. 
Aurautiaca. Large and double, orange-colored 
I flowers. 
Carminatus perfectus. A full round flower of 
perfect shape ; rich, soft carmine rose, with deep- 
crimson eye. 15 cts. 
Heliotrope. 
Our Roses are all grown on their own loots. 
