AGAIN THE WINTER WINDOW 
Here are attractive plants, not bulbs, for the window 
garden, the sun-parlor, the conservatory. All are of fairly 
easy handling, most of them will thrive even in apartment 
conditions. Shipped with roots packed in moss, ready for 
potting. 
AEONIUM HAWORTHI — Rosettes of thick delta-shaped 
leaves, all of a rich sueculence, and a finish as of silver 
powder laid over blue-green glossiness, end each of the very 
many short crooked branches. Each plant will become a 
mound of the irregularly piled polished rosettes. Each 25c. 
GAZANIA—Rosettes of thin foliage, green above, cottony 
below, are dominated by very large daisy-blossoms, wide- 
petalled, that may be anything from lemon to _ richest 
orange, always with a precisely serrated band of red- 
brown or blue-black at the base. Vividly showy. An almost 
continuous bloomer. Each 30ce. 
FAUCARIA TIGRINA—The Tiger’s Jaw. Exceedingly thick, 
deep, triangular leaves, edge-set with long, curved inter- 
locking teeth. A strange, but interestingly attractive plant. 
Rather showy yellow flowers. Each 30c. 
CYANOTIS SOMALIENSIS—A trailing or hanging basket 
plant with leaves that are hollow triangles, polished emerald 
within, but downy, fuzzy, about the edges and in reverse. 
Little lavender flowers. Each 25c. 
SALVIA GRAHAMI—Dwarf, compact plants with dense, 
shining foliage of dark green. Coral red flowers in short, 
tapered spikes, open from white-bracted buds. An attractive, 
long-blooming pot plant. Each 30ce. 
STAPELIA VARIEGATA — Many thick, jagged, upright 
green stems, usually tinged with purple. Big three-inch 
flowers with center disk and five wide blunt-pointed petals, 
buff-yellow with big brown-purple spots. Each 25c. 
ZYGOCACTUS TRUNCATUS—The Christmas Cactus, re- 
puted to bloom then, and sometimes it does, but often a bit 
later on. Flattened truncate lobes, lobe on lobe, branches 
forked and reforked. Showy flowers of salmon red. Each 35c. 
PACHYPHYTUM COMPACTUM—Very thick, rounded blue- 
glaucous leaves. Charming little bell-shaped flowers in a 
blending of green, violet and red. Each 30c. 
KALANCHOE BLOSSFELDIANA—Branching plants with 
bright, shining leaves. Exceedingly showy in flower, many 
big cyme-clusters of brilliant scarlet blossoms. Each 35c. 
KLEINIA ARTICULATA — Candle-plant. Stems built of 
many short, fat joint-sections that separately look like 
pieces of of tallow candle, but at flowering time they bear a 
crop of jagged, shining leaves. Flowers are white tassels, set 
with golden brown anthers. Each 35c. 
EUPHORBIA CEREIFORMIS—As close to a Cactus in ap- 
pearance as a plant quite unrelated to Cactus could well be. 
An oddity. Each 25c. 
LINARIA TRIORNITHOPHORA — Three-birds. Branching 
plants that carry large and showy flowers like long-spurred 
Snapdragons in richest of purple, each with touch of orange 
on lip. Long in bloom. A fine thing. Each 40c. 
LEONOTIS LEONURUS—Lion’s Ear. The branches are 
encircled by whorl after whorl of showy flowers, almost 
scarlet in the bud, but opening to brilliant orange. The 
plants need a bit of pinching back, but given this, they 
will make fine, bushy rounded specimens. Young plants not 
quite large enough to flower yet, but you won’t have to wait 
too long. Each 25c. 
NYCTOCEREUS SERPENTINUS — Decorative, cylindrical, 
bristly stems that branch and _ twine. Fragrant starry 
flowers, three inches across, white with pink shadings. A 
vine Cactus that needs a stake or small trellis in the pot for 
support. Each 35c. 
GRAPTOPETALUM PARAGUAYENSIS—Polished pink-suf- 
fused silver are the deep, thick leaves that make up the 
solid, informally carried rosettes, the whole in mother-of- 
pearl effect. One of our own particular favorites. Each 25c. 
HAWORTHIA MARGARITIFERA — The  Pearl-bearer. 
Rosettes of fat pointed leaves, these of darkest green, but set 
thickly with little white ‘‘pearls.”’ Each 25c. 
KLEINIA MANDRALISCAE—Handsome plants with leaves 
like fat, blunt, blue-green pencils. Each 30c. 
OXYPETALUM CAERULEUM—Clusters of blossoms, rather 
large fiat stars, in pure peacock blue, a most unsual, and 
delightful, tone. Long in bloom Each 30c. 
ALOE BREVIFOLIA—An Aloe miniature with short and 
thick gray-green leaves, near triangular, and piled in sev- 
eral radiating vertical planes. Red flowers. Each 25c. 
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