; 5 () 
Edu'drd (liUeit, Soutkirick, ^^a,ss. — Hog (iardcn 
hi 
A colony of Cypripedium spectabile (soe pa^e .'>;>) 
CALTHA palustris (Marsh Marigold).',’ Six 
to 15 inches high. Flowers bright 
yellow in spring. A very showy plant in 
wet places, both in sun and shade. It 
can also be planted in brooks, water 2 to 
4 inches deep; for massing, plant 1 foot 
apart. It can also be grown in pots for 
• forcing. 10 cts. each, SI.00 per doz.; 
S(k00 per 100. 
CALOPOGON. See Orchids. 
CYPRIPEDIUM parviflorum. vSec Orchids. 
C. spectabile. See Orchids. 
DROSERA filiformis (Thread-leaved Sun¬ 
dew). A little bog plant; with long thread¬ 
like leaves, covered with short, red-colored 
hairs. Flowers rose-purple, along the up¬ 
per part of the stem. Four to 8 inches 
high. Wet, sandy soils. 10 cts. each, 
SI.00 per doz. 
D. rotundifolia (Round-leaved Sundew). 
Found in wet, sandy places near water, 
in Sphagnum moss, and in a bog. Leaves 
roundish, covered with red hairs. Flow¬ 
ers white. 10 cts. each, SI.00 per doz. 
D. longifolia. Similar to the above, only the 
leaves are narrower. Bog. 10 cts. each, 
SI.00 per doz. 
DION.^A muscipula (Venus Fly-Trap). A 
most wonderful plant. The flowers are 
small, white and quite pretty, but the 
wonder is centered in the hairy-edged, 
roundish leaves, which are so sensitive 
that they quickly close if touched on 
the inside. Insects arc quite often 
caught and closely held until they die. 
when the leaf-trap again opens and is 
ready for more game. It is easily grown 
in wet or very damp sand, either in pots 
or in the open ground, in damp moss or 
bog. 15 cts. each, SI.25 per doz. 
Sarraoonia Driuninoiulii (see ptJKt* .">7) 
