Climbers 
11 
Ficus 
10 cts. each, 75 cte. for 10 
♦Repens. Evergreen; excellent for walls, rockwork 
or for covering rustic work in greenhouses. 
*Pumila. With smaller foliage and more compact 
habit. 
Ipomoea 
15 cts. each, $1.25 for 10 
fMacrantholeucum, or Moon-Flower. A rapid 
climber, with very large pure white flowers, which 
open in the evening and last all night: a valuable plant 
for verandas or arbors. 
♦Selowil. Flowers pink, convolvulus-shaped; roots 
tuberous, perennial; very desirable. 
tLearii. Flowers bright blue, with reddish rays and 
very large; a most conspicuous and valuable variety. 
Ivy ( Hedera) 
15 cts. each, $1.25 for 10 
♦Algerian. With very broad leaves; evergreen. 
♦Aurantia. With smaller foliage and producing scar¬ 
let berries. 
♦Irish. Evergreen; a well-known plant. 
* 
^Jasmine 
♦Double Carolina (Gelsemium). A variety of the ! 
native species with double flowers; a profuse bloomer ! 
and very desirable. 25 cts. each, $2 for 10. 
+CataIonian. Flowers white; very fragrant. 15 cts. 
*Kadsura Japonica 
25 cts. each 
A hardy climber, suitable for training against a wall; \ 
flowers whitish during summer. 
Manettia 
15 cts. each, $1 for 10 
♦Cordata. Produces innumerable scarlet tubular 
flowers; constant bloomer; roots perennial. Excellent 
for trellis. 
tBicolor. An old plant which deserves a place in any 
Greenhouse. Flowers tubular, half red and yellow; 
blooms profusely from fall until spring. 
Passiflora 
25 cts. each 
♦Arc-en-clel. Flowers large, center white and citron- 
colored, with outer circle dark; a rapid grower. An 
I excellent plant. 
* Constance Elliott. Similar to the above in growth, 
but flowers pure white. 
Pellionia pulchra 
15 cts. each 
A neat creeping plant; leaves small, bronzy green, 
tinted violet: excellent for hanging baskets. 
Pothos aurea 
15 cts. each 
Leaves dark green, marked by blotches of creamy 
yellow; of free growth. 
Rhynchospermum 
25 cts. each, $2 for 10 
♦Jasminoides (African Jasmine). Evergreen, with 
white fragrant flowers in April and May. A valuable 
hardy climber. 
♦Varlegatum. With variegated leaves. 
Senecio 
10 cts. each, 75 cts. for 10 
Scandens (German, or Parlor Ivy). Desirable for 
trellis work. 
Macroglossis. New, with foliage resembling En¬ 
glish Ivy. 
Solanum 
tAzureum, or Seaforthlanum. Of the same habit of 
growth as the Solanum Jasminoides , but producing 
numerous bunches of delicate blue flowers with golden 
anthers, and fragrant. While it produces an abundance 
of flowers if planted in open ground, these are not 
freely produced until midsummer, and are injured by 
frost. We recommend, therefore, to grow this beau¬ 
tiful climber in a greenhouse, where the great beauty 
of its flowers is best seen. 15 and 25 cts. 
* Jasminoides grandiflora. A new variety of more 
bushy habit; flowers white, large, and produced in 
numerous large racemes. 15 cts. 
tWendlandll. A rapid-growing climber, of deciduous 
habit; flowers large, pale lavender-blue, produced in 
large bunches. Should be planted in open ground in 
April, and in a sunshiny situation, where it blooms 
best. A superb climber of half-hardy habit here, but 
hardy in Florida. 25 cts. each. 
tStigmaphyllon ciliaturn (Golden Vine) 
25 cts. each 
Flowers canary-yellow, of rapid growth; a good 
bloomer. 
Swainsonia 
15 cts. each, $1 for 10 
tCalegifolia alba. Flowers pure white, produced in 
sprays of 10 to 15 each, and resembling a white sweet 
pea. Blooms nearly the whole year in a cool green¬ 
house. One of the best white-flowering plants. 
♦Galegifolla rosea. Rose-colored flowers. 
Tecoma, or Bignonia 
Strong plants, 25 cts. each, $2 for 10 
tCapensis. One of the most showy half-har&y varie¬ 
ties of this genus. Flowers deep orange, from August 
I until midwinter. Can be trained with single stem, and 
I makes a conspicuous winter bloomer. 
Jasminoides. Flowers white, with carmine center; 
a fine house plant. 
Vanilla aromatica 
25 and 60 cts. 
The true Vanilla Plant; requires a very warm green¬ 
house. 
