— 19 - 
rosettes are formed very close to the mother plant. 
Calcareum of the true variety is one of the 
choicest sempervivums. 5 0 cts. each. Three for 
$ 1 . 00 . 
RUBICUNDUM HYBRIDUM— Thr’ee to four 
inches. From base of leaf to outer third deep red, 
tip and margin green. A striking and beautiful 
plant. 35 cts. each. Three for 90 cts. 
AMBER GREEN —Five to six inches. Foliage 
dark gray green, tinted purple, purple at base. A 
strong grower and a handsome plant. 3 5 cts. each. 
Three for 75 cts. 
ARACHNOIDEUM LAGGERU —or Arachnoi- 
deum Major, largest of the cobwebbed group. 
Rosettes one and a half to two inches, somewhat 
flattened, with a considerable red in the foliage. 
Densely cobwebbed during the growing season, 
but this effect largely disappears in winter. 25 cts. 
each. Three for 50 cts. 
FUNCKTI —Green tipped brownish rosettes, 
one and one half to two inches. A good propagator 
and desirable where massing of the rosettes is 
desirable. The offsets are produced on the ends 
of stolon, about an inch long and completely en¬ 
circle the mother plant. The wheel like effect is 
very novel. 15 cts. each. Three for 35 cts. $1.00 
per dozen. 
SOBOLIFERTJM —“The kind that the chicks 
leave home.” An inch and a half to two inch 
rosette, light green, changing to a dark bronze in 
winter. The offsets appear all over the mother 
plant, at a touch they roll away from the parent 
and take root where ever they come to rest. 15 
cts. each. Three for a quarter. 80 cts. per dozen. 
TECTORUM, The old fashioned house leek 
and probably the ‘original hen and chickens. 
Broad, pale green foliage, five to six inches and a 
strong propagator. The offsets grow rapidly and 
where the stock plants are set eight inches apart 
each way, there will be crowded mass of young 
rosettes half the size of the parents by the follow¬ 
ing fall. 15 cts. each. Three for a quarter. 80 
cents per dozen. 
HARDY CACTUS 
Because of the insistent calls for hardy cactus 
plants, we have added just a few varieties that 
have been fully tested as to hardiness here and 
further North. 
OPUNTIA—Arborescens. Tree or candelabrum 
cactus. Round, woody stems branching into tree 
like form to a height of two to several feet; flow¬ 
ers deep rose red. Two year plants, eight to twelve 
inches, branched. 5 0 cts. each. 
OPUNTIA—Leptocaulis. An erect shrub, two to 
four feet high with long, slender, flexible stems 
