50 
EVERGREEN LODGE, 
GENERAL COLLECTION OF PLANTS 
SUITABLE FOR GREENHOUSE OR OUT DOOR CULTURE. 
Anthericura Variegatum. 
ANTHERICUM VARIEGATUM. 
A most striking novelty, introduced from 
tiie Cape of Good Hope. Very valuable as a 
decorative plant, beingsultable either for the 
greenhouse, parlor, or dining table ; the foli- 
age is of a bright grassy green, beautifully 
striped and margined with a creamy white. 
30 cents each. 
ASPARAGUS TENUISSIMUS. 
We cannot praise too highly this beautiful 
pew plant. Its tine 111 my foliage equals in 
delicate beauty the Maiden-Hair Ferns. First 
size, 50 cents; second size, 25 cents; small 
plants, 10 cents. 
ACHRYANTHUS. 
Any of the following are suitable to form 
ribbon lines in contrast with Centaureas, 
Cineraria, Candidissima, etc. 50 cents per 
dozen ; $1.00 per 100. 
Aurea Reticulata. Foliage beautifully reticu- 
lated with bright gold; stem of a very bright 
semi-transparent carmine. 
Emersonii. Bright red, lance-leaved. 
Llndenii. Rich dark red color, well adapted 
for either ribbon rows or the edging of 
flower beds. 
Amaryllis. 
AMARYLLIS. 
The Amaryllis are an interesting class of 
bulbs, desirable for growing in pots, produc- 
ing showy flowers that are very attractive 
and handsome. 
Vlttata. These magnificent varieties ere vig- 
orous in their growth, and produce a free 
supply of flowers, are flaked and striped 
with the most striking tints, and are justly 
esteemed the most beautiful of the Amary- 
llis family. 75 cents each. 
Johnsoni. An elegant pot plant, with crimson 
flowers five inches in diameter; each petal 
striped with white. Flower-stalk two feet 
high, with clusters of three to five blooms. 
75 cents each.; 
ASPIDISTRA LURID A. 
Curious plants, remarkable for producing 
their fiowers under the surface of the earth ; 
ABUTILON— Fairy Bells. ^ ^ 
Hard wooded greenhouse shrub, blooming 
almost the entire year ; well adapted for house 
culture, and fine for bedding out in Summer. 
15 cents. % . 
Boule de Neige. A pure white bell-shaped 
flower, blooming without intermission. 
Davwinii. Orange scarlet and pink veined 
flowers ; blooms in clusters very freely. 
Mesopotanicum. Trailing habit, bearing pend- 
ant flowers in great profusion. 
Vexlllarium Picta. Foliage small, mottled yel- 
low and green ; flower scarlet and yellow ; 
of drooping habit. 
Arthur Belsnam. Flowers large and of a dark 
crimson color. 
Thompson! Variegata. Leaves mottled with 
yellow. . mi 
Thompson! Plena. This is a sport from Thomp- 
son! Variegata; the foliage has retained the 
same variegation, but the flowers are per- 
fectly double. 
Golden Fleeoe. A bright yellow ; very profuse 
bloomer. 
AGAPANTHUS UMBELLATUS. 
A noble plant belonging to the bulbous- 
rooted section, with evergreen foliage; the? 
flower stalks grow nearly three feet high, 
crowned with a head of twenty or thirty blue 
flowers. 35 cents. 
ASTERS. 
Plants grown from choicest seed. 50 cents 
per dozen. 
ALOYSIA CITRIODORA. 
Lemon Verbena. A favorite garden plant, with 
delightfully fragrant foliage; fine for bou- 
quets. 10 cents. 
AGAVE— Century Plant. 
Americana. Very picturesque plant for out- 
door decoration on the lawn, or growing in 
vases. 25 cents to $1.00 each. 
Americana Variegata. Similar to the above 
variety, with leaves banded with yellow. 
These plants stand any amount of heat and 
drouth, and are therefore admirably adapt- 
ed for center plant of vases, baskets, rock 
work, etc. Small plants, in four-inch pots, 
25 to 50 cents; large, one or two feet high, 
$1.00 to $5.00. 
