ALPHABETICAL LIST OF PLANTS 283 
T. Corallina. Coral-scarlet, 2 feet, July and August. 
T. Leichtlinii aurantiaca. Orange and yellow, 2 feet, August. 
T. Lemon Queen. Lemon-yellow, 2 j feet, August and 
September. 
T. Macowanii. Coral-red, 2 feet. Free flowering. 
T. Ophir. Orange-yellow. 
T. Tuckii. Greenish yellow and red. June. 
TROLLIUS, “Globe-flower.” (N.O. Ranunculaceae.) 
Handsome plants for border, with good foliage and fine globular 
heads of flowers. Either half shade or sun suits them, but they 
like moisture. Therefore deep cultivation should be given them, 
and they revel in a clayey subsoil with good fresh loam, decayed 
stable manure, and leaf-mould. Propagation by division. If seed 
is sown it takes a year to germinate. 
T. asiaticus fl. pi. (syn. japonicus fi. pi. and Fortunei jl. pi.). 
Bright orange with red stamens, some double. 2 feet 
high. Flowering April, and again in August. 
T. caucasicus. Orange globe, 2 feet. 
T. europceus. Pale yellow, 2 \ feet. 
T. albifiorus. A new variety, 9 inches, with creamy-white 
flowers. 
TULIPA, “Tulip.” (N.O. Liliaceae.) 
Spring-flowering bulbs of which the May-flowering such as 
Darwin and Cottage tulips are the most suitable for borders. 
T. gesneriana in good soil will flower undisturbed for some years. 
The others are better lifted after flowering, and either replanted 
at once in fresh soil in the border and after the small bulbs have 
been separated from them, or dried off carefully and replanted in 
October. Clara Butt, pink ; Hobbema, pink ; La Merveille, orange; 
Picotee, white, pink edge ; Mrs Moore, yellow, are all good. 
VERATRUM, “False Hellebore.” (N.O. Liliaceas.) 
A small genus of plants remarkable for the elegance of their 
branching racemes of inflorescence and the unique form of their 
leaves. It must not be confounded with the Christmas or Lenten 
rose family, and its leaves when dried and ground yield the 
poisonous hellebore powder sold to kill caterpillars and other 
insects. 
These veratrums are good background plants, and useful for 
subtropical effects, also for naturalising in shrubberies, and require 
