The Garden Magazine, June, 1920 
247 
Photographed in middle Wisconsin 
NO ONE CAN EVER TAKE THIS PLANT TO BE ANYTHING BUT JUST ITSELF 
Uncommon though it is save in its own cool sphagnum bogs, the strange, beautifully veined leaves 
of Sarracenia purpurea announce it as the Pitcher-plant — why not copy them for cream-mugs? 
Photographed in northern Wisconsin 
A FASCINATING QUARTER DOMINATED BY THE GHOSTLY INDIAN PIPE 
Four stalks of Ledum groenlandicum keep close company with pale Monotropa uniflora in the centre, thin-leaved Andro- 
meda glaucophylla rises taller behind, while Chiogenes hispidula rests on the sphagnum which floors this Tamarack swamp 
