NEW, RARE , AND SELECT PLANTS. 
71 
GREEN-LEAVED IVIES. 
Bossifera lutea, pale yellowish leaves. 
Cauarienses, the Irish or common variety; large. 
English Ivy, leaves smaller and deeper iobed. 
Palmata, palmated leaves. 
Regneriana, very large, roundish leaves. 
Price, 25c. to 50c. each; $2 to $4.50 per dozen. 
SUCCULENT PLANTS. 
Our collection of succulent plants is very extensive, numbering over five hundred 
species and varieties, and embracing several genera. The following are some of 
the leading kinds: — 
Alee arborea. 
brevifolia. 
albo cincta. $3. 
soecotrina. 
variegata. $i. 
Cotyledon orbiculare. 
Crassula lactea. • 
Echeveria agavoides. $ 2 . 
racemosa. 
secunda ramosa. 
gibbifiora. 
Euphorbia triangularis. 
Price, 30c. each, except those noted. 
Gasteria verrucosa. 
elongata. 
Greenovia aurea. 
Haworthia yetusa. 
Kleinia articulata repens. 
Pachyphyton aureum. 
bracteosum. 
Hookeri. 
Bhipsalis funalis. 
salicornoides. 
Rochea falcata. 
SEDUMS. 
These interesting and very pretty plants are too much neglected. They will thrive 
in almost any soil, or upon rocks, where many other plants would scarcely live. 
The flowers are of various shades of rose, yellow, orange, and white, and the leaves 
different shades of green. They are often beautiful as edgings Tor beds of fancy 
shapes or for carpet bedding, covering the ground with their compact verdure. All 
are hardy except those marked with a star (♦). Our collection comprises upwards 
of fifty varieties, among which are the following: — 
Acre. 
Aizoidium var.* 
Altaicum. 
Anglicum. 
Brevifolium. 
Carneum variegatum.* 
Corsicum. 
Dasyphyllum. 
Fabarium. 
Fabarium var. 
Glaucum. 
Hispanicum. 
Kamschaticum. 
Monstrosum. 
Neglectum. 
Populifolium. 
Pulchellum. 
Rupestre. 
Sexangulare. 
Sieboldi. 
Sieboldi var. 
Speciosum. 
Telepheum. 
Price, 30c. each; $3 per dozen. 
SEMPERVIVUMS. 
This is a remarkable and curious class of plants, of an infinite variety of forms 
and colors, and admirably adapted for cultivation in the greenhouse or parlor, and 
also for planting in beds or masses in the open ground, where they grow freely, and 
form one of the most novel and interesting groups, always attractive from their sym¬ 
metry of form or peculiarity of growth. Most of them are entirely hardy. The 
following comprise a few of our large collection of seventy-five sorts, well worthy 
of inspection by all lovers of these singular plants : — 
