Temple City, Calif. 
Page Fifteen 


Pleiospilos bolusii 
P. neliz. Smoother and more colorful flowered than 
above species .20 
P. simulans. Broader leaves than above, kecled on the 
lower side. Flowers pale yellow to orange .20, larger 
branched clusters .50 
PORTULACARIA afra. Shrubby plants with round 
shiny small leaves, attractive in small bowls .20 
P. afra variegata. “Rainbow Bush.” Variegated form. 
Plant stem purplish-red, leaves cream and pate green 
with a red margin. Worthwhile .25 
RHOMBOPHYLLUM-= rhomboideum. — Gray-green 
leaves with whitish edges forming tufts of stemless 
rosettes close to ground. Flowers yellow .2) 
RIMARIA gigantea. Rare South African .25 
SEDUM adolphiiz. Low shrubby with thick lemon 
yellow leaves of colorful appearance .15 
S. album. A dainty trailing kind .10 
S. altissimum var. lattfolium. 
sort .15 
S. confusum. Attractive golden-green foliage .15 
S. guatemalense. ““Xmas Cheer.” Fast growing dense- 
ly branched with shiny green, red tipped leaves .15 
S. moranense. Tiny low growing, red in sun .15 
S. morganianum. “The Burro’s Tail.’ Leaves pastel 
creamy-yellow-green. Good for hanging baskets. Small 
branched plants .35 
Gray-green clumping 

Sedum adolphi 
S. multiceps. “Baby Joshua Tree.’ Unique for land- 
scape effects in bowls .20 
S. pachyphyllum. Similar to S. guatemalense but has 
gtay-green leaves with pinkish tips .15 
S. stahlii, “Boston Bean.” 
leaves .15 
S. treleasei. Resembles S. adolphii, but has bluish- 
green leaves with a trace of pink on tips .15, crests .35 
Rosette of pale gray-f 
SEMPERVIVUM calcareum. 
gteen, reddish tipped leaves edged with white .15 
S. arachnoideum. Cobwebby .15 

SEDUM COLLECTION. Eight of these colorful suc- 
culents for the window box garden, our selection .75 

Sedum multiceps 
S. brauni, Similar to foregoing but with smaller, 
darker leaves .15 
S. tectorum 15 
SINOCRASSULA maculata. Small rosettes resembling 
Echeverias with leaves spotted with brown dots .15 
STOMATIUM falleri. Thick, small toothed leaves 
grass-green with pale gray dots forming clumps, 
blooms at night which is rare among the succulents .25 
TITANOPSIS schwantesiz. Interesting mimicry plant 
from South Africa. Water lightly .50 
STAPELIEAE 
In order to definitely identify the members of this 
most unique plant family, the following 11 genera are 
listed in alphabetical order under this heading. For 
accurate descriptions and excellent illustrations, see the 
3 volume set of ‘The Stapelieae’”—White and Sloane, 
1937, $12.70 postpaid in U. S., foreign $14.00. 
CARALLUMA baldratii .35 
C. dalzielii 25 
C. hesperidum from Morocco .30 
C. knobelii var. langit .20 
C. lutea. Yellow starfish .35 
C. melanantha. Black starfish .30 
Reddish-brown Peanded ere 

Caralluma umdausensis 
