JAMES VICK ; ROCHESTER , 7Y. K 
(37 
Dracaena terminalis, or Dragon Tree. Foliage 
dark crimson, marked with pink; fine for baskets, 
vases or house. 75 cents each. 
Indivisa, with narrow, grass-like foliage. 75 cents. 
DAPHNE. 
Daphne Indica, an evergreen shrub, with clusters 
of fragrant flowers ; white, tinged with pink, . 50 
ECHEVERI A. 
This interesting class of plants are now attracting un¬ 
usual attention. They arc well adapted for rockeries, 
carpet beds, or the outer edge of ribbon beds ; also 
excellent house plants that will succeed with almost 
any kind of treatment. The flowers are also quite at¬ 
tractive. 
Echeveiia rosacea, pretty roseate shaped plants, 
with silver gray foliage ; doz. $2.50,. 25 
retusa floribunda, leaves green, flowers rosy pink 25 
ERYTHRINA. 
The Erythrina, or Coral 
Plant, is a fine, robust 
plant, with broad leaves 
and large red flowers, an 
inch or two in length, and 
growing in long racemes, 
sometimes ten or twelve 
inches in length. The roots 
are thick and fleshy, but 
not exactly tuberous, and 
may be kept in a pit or 
cellar during the winter. 
Plants put out in the spring 
will flower during the sum¬ 
mer, and before hard frosts 
should be taken up, cut 
back and stored away 
until the following spring. 
Erythrina, roots, each 
EUONYMUS. 
A very handsome 
evergreen shrub, near¬ 
ly hardy here. The 
leaves are dark, glossy 
green, richly variegat¬ 
ed with yellow and 
white. It makes a very 
ornamental pot plant 
for the house, enduring 
the usual dry atmos¬ 
phere of our rooms as 
well as any plant we 
know of. It generally 
grows very symmetri¬ 
cal, forming a miniature 
tree. Sometimes sperts 
back to the original tj pe, with pure green leaves. 25<fts. 
Japonicus aureus, with large, yellow blotch in leaf. 
Argenteus, leaves with white margin. 
Radicans variegata, almost or quite hardy. 
leaves small with white margin. 
FARFUGIUM. 
A first-class ornamental plant for puts, well adapted 
for house culture. The leaves are thick and leathery, 
dark green and with yellow spots the size of a five cent 
piece ; quite hardy. 
Farfugium grande. 50 cents each. 
FERNS. 
These beautiful plants are now quite generally culti¬ 
vated. Some of them, especially the Pteris; the beau¬ 
tiful Japanese Climbing Fern, Lygodium scandens ;• the 
Sword Fern, Nephrolepis ; and the graceful Adiantums 
do exceedingly well with room culture. All do well in 
ferneries or Wardian cases. In summer they should be 
set out of doors on the shady side of the house or fence. 
Shower them frequently both in summer and winter. 
We have many very excellent varieties of Ferns not 
named below ; plants 25 cents each. 
Fine collection, 12 varieties, $2.00. 
Fine collection, 6 varieties, 51.00. 
Lygodium scandens, a beautiful climbing* Fern 
from Japan, growing from ten to twenty feet and 
succeeding admirably with common room culture. 
50 cents to $1.00 each. Sec engraving. 
Nephrolepis exaltata, or Sword Fern, very desir¬ 
able for house culture, especially for hanging bas¬ 
kets 50 cents each. 
FUCHSIAS. 
The Fuchsias, as all know, arc elegant flowers, deli¬ 
cate in coloring and exquisitely graceful in form. The 
usual plan is to obtain plants, flower them in the house 
a little while, and then consider them useless. This is 
all wrong. No flower will make a more benutifi 1 bed 
or screen near the house or on the borders of th«- 1 wn, 
than the Fuchsia, if partially shaded ; and it will even 
