POPULAR GARDEN PLANTS. 
485 
Comtesse de Choiseul. White. 
Dr. Masters. Dark-maroon. 
Duchess of Edinburgh. White, spotted. 
Duchess of York. White and carmine. 
Edward Perkins. Crimson-scarlet. 
Envperor of Russia. Purple and maroon, banded white. 
Empress of India. Rosy-scarlet. 
Gold Mine. Orange-scarlet. 
Kingston Beauty. White, spotted. 
Lady Isabel. Lilac, free, large trusses. 
La Ville de Caen. Cerise. 
Madame M. Knecht. White. 
Madame Thibaut. Rich-rose, eye 
and margin white, fringed. 
Magpie. White and purple spots. 
Marie Malet. Carmine. 
Master Richard. Deep-crimson. 
Mr. Coombs. Pure-white. 
Prince Henry. Crimson. 
Purity. White. 
Queen Victoria. Rich-vermilion, pale 
at margin, semi-double. 
Radiant. Scarlet-crimson. 
Rosetta. Rosy-purple. 
Rosy Morn. Rosy-pink. 
Spotted Beauty. Rose, dark ruby- 
red spots. 
St. Blaise. Deep-crimson. 
Cultivation .—As regards propagation and soil 
these require the same treatment as the Zonal 
section. A stock of these should be raised 
from cuttings every year, but instead of pruning 
them back for the next season it will be found 
better to grow them on, as they do not bear 
pruning nearly so well as the Zonals. Being 
of a semi-climbing or procumbent habit, they 
Fancy. 
Ambassadress. Soft lilac-rose. 
Delicatum. White and light rose. 
Dorothy. White with carmine, mar¬ 
gin prettily fringed. 
East Lynne. Crimson-purple. 
Ellen Beck. Soft carmine. 
Fanny Gair. Rosy-lake. 
Iona. Lilac-rose. 
Lady Curzon. White and purple. 
Lucy. Crimson and violet. 
Medina. Dark, white eye. 
Miss E. Little. Rosy-purple. 
Mrs. Douglas. Rose and purple. 
Mrs. Hart. Crimson-purple. 
Princess Teck. White, carmine spots. 
Queen of the Hellenes. White, rosy 
spots. 
Roi dcs Fantasies. Rosy-crimson. 
Sir Hugo. Rich-crimson, dwarf. 
Sybil. Rosy-crimson and white. 
The Shah. Deep crimson-purple. 
Thomas Ring. Carmine and white. 
Ivy-leaved Pelargoniums. 
These are descendants from P. pellatum and 
P. hedercefolium. The wonderfully improved 
varieties recently raised are said to have had 
their origin in a chance cross between an Ivy¬ 
leaved variety and a Zonal variety, which was 
obtained in a garden in Nice by M. Jean Sisley. 
Since then others have made the same cross, 
and we have now a large number of beautiful 
varieties which are of the greatest value in the 
garden and greenhouse. 
Pig 593.—Ivy-leaved Pelargonium in Hanging Basket. 
are excellent for training on screens or trellises, 
or as bushes with several sticks as supports. 
For covering walls or training up pillars in 
greenhouses or conservatories they are admir¬ 
able, being of rapid growth. For hanging 
baskets or large vases, too, they are most 
effective (fig. 593). 
List of Varieties. 
Anna Pfitzer. Salmon-rose. 
Beauty of Castle Hill. Rose, 
Edith Owen. Magenta. 
Flambeau. Scarlet. 
Galilee. Soft-pink. 
Gloire de Lorraine. Light-magenta. 
Jubilee. Reddish-crimson. 
