




)SaLens OF —— 
EUPHORBIA SPLENDENS-——Crown-of-Thorns. Exceedingly 
showy orange scarlet “flowers.”’ Each 40c. 
BILLBERGIA NUTANS—Delightful and easy plants with 
rich green, slender, rush-like leaves. Clusters of pretty, un- 
usual pendant blossoms in a tricolor of sharply bounded and 
vivid red, green and blue. Long in bloom. Tolerant of adver- 
sity.. Each 35c. 
BRYOPHYLLUM TUBIFLORUM—Slender pencils of leaves, 
marbled chocolate on ground of pale roseate olive, each leaf 
frilled with secondary leaflets at its tip, are carried along 
high stems. Terminal, tubular, drooping orange red flowers. 
Of easiest culture. Each 25c. 
ECHEVERIA ELEGANS—This is a beauty. Crispy and thick, 
succulent leaves of polished, blue-toned white, in great 
rosettes. Graceful flowers of apricot color. Each 30c. 
EUPHORBIA MAMMILLARIS — A Cactus-simulate, though 
not in that relationship. Cylindrical, ribbed, spiny stems, 
branching with age. Purple-bracted flowers. Each 30c. 
SEDUM STAHLI—Red Beads. The oval shining leaves are 
olive green, overlaid burnished red-brown. Yellow flowers. 
A tender Mexican. species that makes a highly desirable pot 
plant. Each 15c. 
SELENICEREUS MACDONALDIAE—Queen_ of the Night. 
Twining plants with five-angled stems, needing support of 
stakes or trellis. Pure white flowers of enormous size, up to 
fifteen inches across. The _ finest Night-blooming Cereus. 
Each 40c. 
CRASSULA TETRAGONA—Plants like miniature pine trees. 
Thick spike-leaves of rich emerald green. Each 25c. 
NIEREMBERGIA COERULEA — Chalice-shaped flowers in 
varied blue and purple tones, from sky blue to deepest and 
richest of purples, usually with touch of yellow in deep 
throat. Rounded, compact, fine-leafed plants, but the foliage 
is quite literally hidden by the massed over-lapping bloom. 
The most floriferous plant of which we know, and highly 
satisfactory for winter bloom. Each 30c. 
NIEREMBERGIA GRACILIS—Rather like the last, but of 
more graceful, almost trailing habit, and flowers are soft 
blue, never purple. Each 30c. 
LINARIA VENTRICOSA—Upright sheafs of slender stems 
and as slender linear leaves, all silvery, almost blue-silvery. 
Close spikes of flowers in rich brown orange, with coppery 
tones and touch of lemon yellow. Each 40c. 
CRASSULA ARGENTEA—Jade Plant. Leaves ovate, very 
thick, green and shining. Decorative specimens. Each 30c. 
EUPHORBIA CAPUT-MEDUSAE — Very many sinuous, 
snake-like tuberculate branches that may be two _ inches 
through. A bizarre affair. Each 35c. 
PORTULACARIA AFRA—Thick and glossy rounded leaves 
are paired along the many branching, succulent stems. 
Quickly makes large decorative specimens. Each 25c. 
ALOE VARIEGATA—Tiger Cactus or Partridge Breast. Tri- 
angular, serrate leaves, thick and solid, are marbled and 
margined silver on dark green. Red flowers. Hach 40c. 
HELONIAS BULLATA—From low, fat rosettes rise stout 
stems that end in spikes of pretty starry flowers, pink-opal 
with anthers of purest blue. A really handsome plant, and 
one that resembles no other. Give plenty of water. Each 75c. 
HEREROA DYERI—Battle-axes. Rosettes of strange, out- 
spraying leaves that are shaped like blunt hatchets. Showy 
yellow flowers. Each 25c. 
CRASSULA PERFORATA—tThe twisting stem seems to be 
threaded right through the thick rounded leaves. Dainty pink 
blossoms. Each 25c. 
ECHEVERIA GLAUCA — Enormous rosettes of succulent 
leaves, blue-glaucous with purple suffusion. Flowers pink 
outside, yellow within. Each 30c. 
EUPHORBIA GRANDIDENS — Triangular, three-flanged 
stems, edges spine-set. Branches picturesquely. Each 30c. 
CRASSULA CULTRATA—Attractive plants with thick green 
leaves, each turned at a different angle to the stem. Pan- 
icles of little green flowers. Each 25c. 
ANACAMPSEROS TELEPHIASTRUM—Love Plant. Rather 
showy flowers of rich, bright rose over thick leaves of purple- 
toned olive, these irregularly piled and compressed. Each 25c. 
NAMES OF FRIENDS—wWe shall appreciate having the 
hames and addresses of any of your flower-loving friends 
sO we can mail them our catalog. You know the more we 
Gp piasr soa kinds we can afford to grow, and there are 
of species, new and rare, that ; i 
Ee witatine tore e at we would like to 
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