TIGER'S JAWS 
• TONGUE LEAF. (Glottiphyllum.) 
Illustrated in color in the Strawberry 
Jar garden. (Upper left.) A novel 
plant with tongue-shaped leaves and 
large yellow blossoms. Easy to grow. 
G. llnguaefonne. 25c. G. Neilii. 25c. 
1 LIVING ROCK COLLECTION \ 
A group of 5 distinct kinds ) 
of mimicry succulents. I. Rock- ) 
face. I. Pebble Plant. 3 vari- J 
eties Living Rocks. $1.25. \ 
• TIGER’S JAWS. (Faucaria tigrina.) A pretty and curi¬ 
ous plant with odd jaw-like toothed leaves. The flowers are 
bright yellow, 2 inches across. A gem that you will enjoy. 
25c. Variety Superba with handsome speckled leaves. 40c. 
P. Bosscheana. A new compact variety. 35c. P. liybrida. 
These hybrids are all different. 
• ECHEVERIA. Handsome Mexican plants noted for their 
beautiful flowers and bright colored rosettes. E. Hoveyi. 
Beautiful rosettes striped pink, white and green. 35c. E. 
Peacockii. Silver white, small rosettes. 35c. E. setosa. The 
Mexican Fire Cracker. One of the best. 25c. E. nobilis. 
Blue-white leaves flushed with wine red. Fine. 2t>c. E. 
expatriata. Dwarf, green. 25c. E. simulans. Green tipped 
with red. 25c. E. venezuelensis. 25c. E. multicaulis. Red 
and green leaves. 25c. E. coccinea. 25c. E compacta. 25c. 
12 varieties all different our selection. $ 2 . 
o GHOST PLANT. 
(Byrnesia Wein- 
bergii.) Thick, white 
leaves in whorls. 
Looks as though it 
had been carved out 
of marble. A gem our 
patrons buy when they 
see it. Grows any¬ 
where. 25c. 
ARABS TURBAN. 
(Crassula colum- 
naris.) Thick, squat 
leaves wound like a 
turban with brush¬ 
like flowers. A real 
novelty. 35c. 
Pyramid Crassula. 
(C. Archeri.) Cone 
shaped, small plants 
with leaves so closely 
set no stem is visible. 
A novelty just out. 
30c. C. laticephala. 
Another rare one with 
4 rows of thick leaves. 
35c. C. pachyphylla. 
Rare. Thick 4 rowed 
leaves white flowers. 
35c. 
Partridge Breast Aloe 
MINIATURE CACTUS BOWL 
Collection of 6 toy succulents for a small bowl. 
Plant in a 6" blue or yellow glazed dish. Xmas Cheer, 
Prickly Pear, Echeveria simulans, Purple Q C 
Tree Sempervivum, Air Plant, Blue Sedum. . . OwU 
ORANGE BELLS. Clusters of powdery-white, thick, oval 
leaves and sprays of orange red flowers. 25c. 
SILVER CROWN. (Cotyledon undulatum.) The hand¬ 
somest and rarest Cotyledon. Bright, silvery, oval leaves 
with the edges beautifully waved or pleated. A gem. These 
have always sold at $5 each. A new supply direct from 
Africa. 50c each Yellow Bells. Clusters of blue 
leaves anri sp l ' lr ^« of fragrant 
yellow bells. Flowers last for 
weeks when picked. 25c. 
o ANDROMISCHUS CLAVATUS. 
Clusters of fat, variegated leaves 
that look like colored pebbles. If 
the leaves ar broken off they 
will sprout into new plants. 25c. 
• HEDGE HOG CACTUS. (Echi- 
nopsis multiplex.) Fine, pink, 
trumpet - like flowers 6 inches 
HEDGE HOG CACTUS long. Flowers much larger than 
the plant. Blooms freely all sum¬ 
mer long. Easy to grow. 25c. E. turbinata. Large, pure 
white double flowers. Good grower. 30c. E. Eyresii. Free 
bloomer with pink flowers. 25c. E. albiflora. White, always 
in bloom. 35c. E. hybrida. Hybrids all different. 25c. 
Blue Sedum. Silvery blue, thick, small leaves closely set 
on short stems. Good house plant. 20c. 
/ FANCIER’S SUCCULENT COLLECTION ( 
j 12 varieties of succulents our selection including ( 
( Tiger’s Jaws, Necklace Vine, Silver Hechtia, <JJ1 QC ( 
) Window Plant, Starfish Flower, Airplants, etc. S' A. %J\J / 
• Hardy Houseleeks or Sempervivums. Hardy succulents 
for the outdoor rock garden. Among them is the interest¬ 
ing Cobweb Sempervivum. Small rosettes each leaf joined 
by silky spiderwebs. 35c. S. Braunii. Reddish clusters. 15c. 
S. tectorum. Green rosettes tipped with red. 15c. S. cal- 
careum. The brightest with dark red-tipped leaves. 20c. 
S. globuliferum. Nice green rosettes. 15c. S. arenarium. 
15c. 6 varieties. 75c. 
• HAWORTHIAS. Form small clusters of leaves gener¬ 
ally spotted with white dots. Scarce and greatly prized by 
collectors. H. SUBFASCIATA. One of the prettiest. Hand¬ 
some white dotted leaves. A fancier’s plant. 25c. H. sub- 
lata. Smaller with bigger dots. 40c. H. rigida. Deep green 
pyramids. 35c. H. cymbiformis. A fine “window” plant. 20c. 
H. tesselata parva. As though engraved. 50c. H. pentag- 
ona. 50c. H. coarctata. 35c. H. setata. Cobweb variety. 50c. 
WINDOW PLANTS. The sunlight of African deserts is 
so intense many plants hide their chlorophyll inside the 
leaves admitting light through windows only. KLIENIA 
REPENS. Creeper with pickle shaped leaves and long win¬ 
dow. 20c. K. acaulis. Long narrow window. 25c. HAWOR- 
THIA CYMBIFORMIS. Reticuled windows. 25c. Lithops. 
Marbled windows. 25c. 
• SPINY GERANIUM. (Pelargonium echinatum.) A suc¬ 
culent, desert geranium with prickly stems that blooms 
all the year. Pink trusses of flowers with red eye. Each 
flower spike will bear several clusters. 50c. 
Partridge Breast Aloe. Green and w T hite mot¬ 
tled leaves and spikes of bright red flowers. 
An old favorite of fanciers. Photograph best 
describes it. 35c. 3 for $1. 
WINTER BLOOMING COLLECTION 
Five that may be depended upon to 
bloom during the winter. Something 
unique and different. Xmas Cactus. Crown 
of Thorns, Spiny Geranium, 
Starfish Flower, Airplant.... 
$1.35 
® GIANT STARFISH FLOWER. (S. gigantea.) 
The beautiful, huge stars we measured this 
year were 14 inches across! Enormous spotted 
flowers bigger than dinner plates on plants 
not a third the size! 50c. 
Stapelia bella. Large, hairy, purple stars. 50c. 
Stapelia incomparabilis. Flesh colored. 50c. 
Stapelia grandiflora. Yellow spotted stars 8" 
across. 75c. 
STARFISH FLOWER 
Startling animal-like fleshy flowers! Grow it 
on your window ledge and prove to your 
friends that it is real! A strange denizen of 
South African deserts that will grow perfectly 
in your home and give you no end of amuse¬ 
ment. Easily grown by anyone as a window 
plant. 35c. 3 for 85c. 
♦ 
Cactus May Be Shipped the Year Around 
♦ 
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