MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN BULLETIN 
Missouri and adjoining states, I, 
35; II, 52; III, 57; IV, 63; V, 69; 
Vie 8h> Vil. 91; VIII, 1043 IX, 
10a: 3% 109s Xa, 217: XII, 119: 
MELT, 1273 SIV 129 
Nut orchard, establishment of, at 
Garden, 4 
Nymphaea “Mrs. Edwards Whita- 
ker,” awarding of gold medal for 
creation of, 95 
O 
Orchids: from seed, 23; lady’s 
slippers, 24; new hybrid raised at 
Garden, 23, 24 
P 
Palm: Bermuda, 115; Chinese fan, 
115; Coir, 115; date, 115; double 
cocoanut, 115; dwarf fan, 115; 
malacca cane, 116; palmyra, 116; 
panama-hat, 116; raffia, 116; sil- 
ver thatch, 116 
Palms used in hat making, 115 
Panama-hat palm, 116; flower stalk 
of, 113; specimen of, at the Gar- 
den, 1/3 
Panicum sanguinale, 27 
Papaver Rhoeas, 102, var. 
stead Cream Pink,” 103 
Paphiopedilum barbatum Crossii, 
24; “D. S. Brown,” 28, 24% Har- 
risianum, 24; villosum, 24 
Peck, Prof. Morton E. Plants of 
Oregon, 97 
Perennials, native: for growing 
with or among ferns, 92; for the 
hardy border, 69; for natural and 
wild gardens, 85 
Pereskia aculeata, 99, 99, var. God- 
seffiana, 99; Bleo, 99 
Petunias, 103 
Phaedranthus buccinatorius, 51 
Pines, 127 
Plantago Rugelii, 28 
Plantain, see Plantago Rugelii 
Propagating and growing houses, 
construction of new, 2 
Poppy, see Papaver Rhoeas 
Publications and papers published 
by staff and graduate students 
during 1919, 10 
R 
Raphia Ruffia, 116 
Research and instruction, report of 
for 1919, 7 
“Mun- 
137 
Rock gardens, native plants for, 35 
Rufus J. Lackland fellowships, ap- 
pointments to, for 1919, 9 
Ss 
Sabal Blackburniana, 115 
Saccharum officinarum, 113 
Salvia, 103 
Seymour, F. C. Plants of Hampden 
County, Massachusetts, 31 
Shaw, Henry, an early appreciation 
of, by St. Louis Chamber of Com- 
merce, 123; reproduction of testi- 
monial to, 123 
Shrubs, native: evergreen, 109; 
for mass planting, flowers in- 
conspicuous, 104; for unfavorable 
and smoky city conditions, 128; 
with bright colored foliage in 
autumn and conspicuous fruit and 
bark in autumn and winter, 105; 
with conspicuous flowers, 63 
Smoky conditions: resistance of 
holly to, 125; trees and shrubs 
for, 127 
Solandra grandiflora, 52; nitida, 52, 
bud and flower of, 52 
Statistical information for Decem- 
ber, 1919, 21; January, 1920, 30; 
February, 48; March, 60; April, 
68; May, 79; June-August, 96; 
September, 111; October, 121; No- 
vember, 131 
Stipa tenacissima, 113 
Sugar cane, see Saccharum offi- 
cinarum 
Suksdorf, W. N. Plants of Wash- 
ington, 48 
4 i 
Tarazracum. officinale, 28 
Test garden, 3; list of plants grown 
in, during summer of 1920, 100 
Thrinaxz argentea, 116 
Trachycarpus excelsa, 115 
Trees, native: arranged according 
to form of outline, 117; as a back- 
ground for a fern garden, 94; 
evergreen, 109; for unfavorable 
and smoky city conditions, 127; 
for street and avenue planting, 
119; with bright-colored foliage 
in autumn and conspicuous fruit 
and bark in autumn and winter, 
105; with conspicuous flowers, 63 ° 
Triticum tenaz, 114; vulgare, 114, 
var. aestivum, 114 
