Kels^y*s Hea;ci>^ Amerioan Plcm ts 
Sarracenii psittactna (see pace 33) 
I'hotoiifaphed at Ilighlaiius Nursery 
Hardy American Herbaceous perennials, continued 
SEDUM telephioides. American Orpini:. 6 to 12 in. 
Juiu'. I'lesh color. Rockery or damp places. 
Very fleshy leaves. 
telephium. Orpine. 6 to lo in. July. Purple. 
ternatum. Wild Stonecrop. 3 to 8 in June. 
White. 
SHORTIA galacifolia. See under Ground-covering 
Plants. 
SILENE stellata. St.xrry Campion. 2 to 3 ft. 
Panicles ot white showy flowers in summer. 
Tirginica. Firk Pink, i to 2 ft. One of the sliowi- 
est herbaceous plants. June lo Aug. Deep crim- 
son. 25 cts. each, $i.-J5 for 10, ^15 per 100. 
SMILACINA racemosa. See Vagnera. 
SOLIDAGO canadensis. 2 to 4 ft. One of the most 
showy and satisfactory species known. Yellow 
flower-heads, large and dense. 
Other species — bootii, bicolor, erecta« blomer- 
ata, lanclfolia, nemerocalis, odora, patuli, 
pallida, pubens, rugosa, ruprestris, virgaurea. 
SPARGANIUM ramosum. For bog garden. 
Spigelia marilandica. m.^ a bni- 
scarlet flowers wilii yellow centers in one-sided 
cymes. 30 cts. each, ^2.50 for 10, $20 per 100. 
STACHYS aspera. 
STEIRONEMA ciliatum. Fringed Loosestrife. 
1 to 4 ft. Bright yellow (lowers in July. 
STOKFS1A cyanea. 4 to 8 in. Light blue ; re- 
sembles a passion flower. 
Ml. Feather 
Fleece. 3 to 5 
Stenanthium robustum, 
It lall, with extreiiLcly showy panicles often 2 
feet long. This is one of our recent introductions, 
and is. without doubt, a plant that will be used 
by thousands when known. The pure white flow- 
ers are borne on graceful compound panicles, often 
2 to 3 feet long, and a clump of these plants 
makes a show equaled by few herbaceous plants 
of any description. 
THALICTRUM dioicum. Early Meadow-Rue. 
I to 2 ft. Purple or greenish flowers. April and 
May. Elegant cut foliage. 
Thermopsis caroliniana. |,i^^r:,Io"siJ* 3 
lo > ft. Yellow flowers in terminal racemes May 
and June. Extremely showy plant for niassmg. 
montana. 25 cts. each, $2 for 10. 
rhombifolia. 25 cts. each. $2 for lO. 
THEROFON aconitifoUum. Aconite Saxifrage. 
I to 2 ft. White flowers and 
Sarracenia purpurea (see page 33) 
Foliage of 7 species of Pitcher Plants 
Photographed at lliglilands Nursery 
TRADESCANTIA pilosa. Zigzag Spiderwort. i to 
3 in. Blue. June to August, 
montana. 
TRAUTVETTERZA carolinensis. False Bugbank. 
2 to 3 ft. Alternate lobed leaves. Cymes of white 
flowers. Early summer, along streams. 
TRILLIUM cernuum. Nodding Wake Robin. 8 
to 10 in. Petals wavy, recurved. Large, broad 
leaves. April. While or pink. 
erectum. Erect Wake Robin. 8 to 16 in. Large, 
red fruit, very ornamental. Brown-purple, often 
greenish. April and May. 10 cts. each, 75 cts. 
for 10, $$ per 100. 
erectum album. 20 cts. each, ^1.50 for 10. 
Large - flower- 
ed Wake Rohin 
8 to iS in. Tlie finest and largest species. Flowers 
2 to 3 inches across, in April and May. One of 
our best early sjiring flowers. White, turning rose- 
color or marked with green. 10 cts. each, 75 cts. 
for 10, ?4 per 100, ^25 per 1,000. 
ovatum. A rare Pacific coast species. Flowers 
much like T. grand ijlorum. Large, ovate leaves. 
15 cts. each. 75 cts. for 10, ^5 per 100. 
nivale. 20 cts. each, $1.25 for 10, $10 per 100. 
recurvatum. 
sessile californicum. White. .\ beautiful CalL- 
fornian species, 
sessile* var. Snow Queen. 
Trillium grandiflorum. 
Prirpc Unless otherwise indicated, the prices of all herbaceous perennials are, 15 cts. each, $1 for 10, 
1 $y per xoo^ o£fej. ;d are strong plants. 
34 
