RED OR REDDISH PURPLE 133 



and its bright berries with the brown of the 

 needles is so charming that one wonders that it 

 has not been copied for our indoor carpetings. 

 A low glass dish filled with wood earth and con- 

 taining a root or two of Ebony Fern, a little 

 Rattlesnake Plantain, and a few vines of the Par- 

 tridge Berry will serve all winter to shut-ins as 

 a most delightful reminder of the woods. 



The plant is named for Dr. John Mitchell, an 

 early Virginian botanist. 



RED-BERRIED ELDER 



Sambucus pubens. Sambucus racemosa 

 Honeysuckle Family 



Fruit — The red berry like drupes grow in 

 compact pyramidal clusters. Each fruit is glob- 

 ular and crowned with remnants of calyx and 

 style. The inclosed seedlike nutlets number 

 from three to five. June. 



Leaves. — The opposite leaves are compound 

 with five to seven ovate-lanceolate leaflets. These 

 are finely toothed and acute. 



Floivers. — The small cream-white flowers, 

 with their pale yellow stamens, grow in com- 

 pound pyramidal cymes. April, May. 



