MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN BULLETIN 
August, 122; September, 136; Octo- 
ber, 155, November, 165 
St. Bruno’s lily, see Anthericium 
Stevias, 152 
Stephanandra flexuosa, 130° 
Stocks, 29 
Sumac, sweet-scented, see Rhus aro- 
matica 
Sunday opening, during the winter 
months, 151; season of, 43 
Sunflowers, see Helianthus 
Sweet-Williams or hardy pinks, see 
Dianthus 
Sydow, H. “Fungi exotici exsiccati,” 
Fase. VII, VIII, IX, Nos. 301-450, 
92 
Syringa, 130, 134; or mock orange, see 
Philadelphus 
Ae 
Tamarix, 132 
Tamarie gallica, 132; indica, 132 
Thermopsis caroliniana, 53 
Thunbergias, 29 
Tickseed, see Coreopsis 
Tobacco, mosaic disease of, 159; 159 
Tomato, mosaic disease of, 159; 159 
Trees: as a background for gardens, 
118; varieties best grown about St. 
Louis, 118; and shrubbery, 38; 
pruning.of, 38; spraying of, 39 
Tritoma, 150 
Tritoma “Express,” 150; Pfitzerii, 
150; rufa, 150; Tuckii, 150 
Trustees’ annual banquet, 1914, 2, 22 
Tulips, 29, 30 
Tulip-tree, see Liriodendron 
U. 
Umbrella plant, see Phormium tenax 
V. 
Vanda coerulea, 153 
Vanilla, 109; cultivation of, in the 
Seychelles, 111; flowers and cluster 
of beans, 110 ; pollination of flowers, 
110 
Vanilla planifolia, 109 
Variegated leaves, 157; cause of, 158; 
175 
specimens of, 157, 159; types of, 
158 
Varnish-tree, see Koelreuteria panicu- 
lata 
Vegetable sheep, see Yareta 
Venus’ fly trap, see Dionaea 
Verbena, 29; lemon, 29 
Veronica, 150 
Veronica longifolia subsessilis, 54, 
150; repens, 53, 150; spicata, 150 
Viburnum acerifolium, 128; dentatum, 
127; lantana, 127; Opulus, 128, var. 
stertlis, 128; plicatum, 128; tomen- 
tosum, 128 
Viburnums, 1 
Victoria, 52 
Victoria Ziana, 105; Regia, 103, 
introduction and cultivation of, 103 
Viscum, 162 
Vitex agnus-castus, 134 
W. 
Wardian case, practical demonstration 
of, 113 
Water garden, plan of main, 101 
Water gardens, 99 
Weigel, T. O. “Plantae Kamerunen- 
ses,’ Cent. VI, Nos. 500-599, 76; 
Plants of the Philippine Islands, 
122 ite , 
Weigelia, see Dentzia Wann 
Weir, J. R. Fungi from Montana, 
Idaho, British Columbia, and 
Alaska, 76 
Wood, the lightest known, 107 
X. 
Xanthoceras sorbifolia, 128 
~: 
Yareta, description of, 47; fragment 
of, 48, two mounds of, 47; use of, 
48 
Yeast fungi in relation to animal dis- 
eases, 69 
Yellow-wood, see Cladrastis tinctoria 
Yucea, 150 
Yucca filamentosa, 150 
