Gormania Watsoni—A very pretty little trailing 
plant for the rock garden, with rosettes of 
fleshy leaves and heads of dainty cream col¬ 
ored flowers. Pkt. 25c; special pkg. 60c. 
Lewisia Rediviva—A deciduous species with suc¬ 
culent leaves. The great cup-like flowers are 
like rose-pink Water Lilies. Long-blooming- 
and handsome. Perennial. Likes full sun 
and good drainage. Pkt. 25c; spec. pkg. 60c. 
Lewisia Finchii (b)—Evergreen, with broad 
erinkly-edged leaves that take on tints of red 
in the sun. These are carried in close rosette 
form and from them are thrown several 
slender bloom scapes 10 to 12 inches high, 
each bearing 20 to 30 soft pink flowers, mar¬ 
gined with white or touched with orange. A 
plant in full flower is a lovely thing. Rare. 
Porous soil. Pkt. 25c; special pkg. 60c. 
Euphorbia Myrsinites (b)—Thick fat blue-green 
foliage. A semi-trailing prostrate grower, 
densely leaved, carrying profuse yellow bloom 
on 10-inch stems. Exceedingly ornamental. 
Entirely hardy. Pkt. 20c; special pkg. 50c. 
Talinum Calycinum—A splendid hardy succulent. 
Perennial, but will flower first year from seed. 
Makes tangles of fat tender leaf spikes, above 
which, on airy stems, are carried the rose 
colored flowei*s. Pkt. 20c; special pkg. 50c. 
Offer 62A4—One pkt. each of the above for $2.50. 
SEEDS OF INTERESTING SUCCULENTS 
The succulents, bizarre and exotic in appear¬ 
ance, and many of them with exceedingly attrac¬ 
tive flowers, are all easily grown from seed. 
They make unusual and easily handled house 
plants. 
Dudleya Pulverulenta—A soft-green leaf rosette, 
thickly silver-powdered, carrying a graceful 
panicle of coral bloom. Almost hardy, but 
recommended particularly for summer bedding, 
or as a winter pot plant. Pkt. 20; special 
pkg. 50c 
Euphorbia Obesa—The very oddest of succulents 
and almost rarest of Euphorbias. The plants 
are like living base-balls, with seamed and 
checkered covers. 2 seeds for 25c. 
Euphorbia Canariensis—Thick four-angled and 
deeply flanged branches of pure olive, edged 
with tooth-like spines. Very like a Cactus. 
Easily grown. Pkt. 20c; special pkg. 50c. 
Euphorbia Aphylla—Slender blunt-ended leafless 
branches, like green succulent pencils, in a 
confused tree-like tangle. 10 seeds for 20c; 
50 seeds for 90c. 
Aeonium Haworthi—A dwarf woody perennial, 
each twig topped with a rosette of clipped 
delta-shaped leaves, all of deep thick succu¬ 
lence and a finish as of silver powder laid 
over blue-green. Pkt. 25c; spec. pkg. 60c. 
Stapelia Variegata—Erect cactus-like stems, 
without leaves, green, or purple shaded. Large 
pale yellow flowers, stippled brown. Pkt. 25c; 
spec. pkg. 60c. 
Stapelia Blend—Easily handled quick growing 
succulents of most bizarre appearance in both 
form and flowers. They make excellent pot 
plants. Pkt. 25c; special pkg. 60c. 
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