K&ls&y's Hea;dy American 
Sarracenia psittacina (see page 33) 
1'hotO^raphed .it Highlands Nursery 
Hardy Americun Herbaceous perennials, continued 
SEDUM telephloides. American Orpine. 6 to 12 in. 
June. Flesh color. Rockery or damp places. 
Very fleshy leaves. 
telephium. Orpine. 6 to ro in. July. Purple. 
ternatum. Wild Stonecrop. 3 to 8 in June. 
White. 
SHOItTIA galacifolia. Sec under Ground-covering 
Plants. 
SILENE stellata. Starry Campion. 2 to 3^ ft. 
Panicles of white showy flowers in summer, 
vlrginlca. Fire Pink, i to 2 ft. One of the showi¬ 
est herbaceous plants. June to Aug. Deep crim¬ 
son. 25 cts. each, $1.75 for 10, #15 per 100. 
SMILACINA raccmosa. See Vagnera. 
SOLIDAGO canadensis. 2 to 4 ft. One of the most 
showy and satisfactory species known. Yellow 
flower-heads, large and dense. 
Other §pecios—bootii, bicolor, crccta, blomcr- 
ata, lancifolia, nemerocalis, odora, patula, 
pallida, pubens, rugosa, ruprcstrls, virgaurca. 
SPARGANIUM ramosum. For hog garden. 
Spigelia marilandica. 1 5 ^ A 
scarlet flowers with yellow centers in one-sided 
cymes. 30 cts. each, £2.50 for 10, JC20 per 100. 
Stenanthium robustum. „J EAT ? ER 
it Tall, with extremely 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. 
1 to 2 ft. Purple or greenish flowers. April and 
May. Elegant cut foliage. 
Thermopsis caroliniana. |™™ re E IS R * 
to 3 ft. Yellow flowers in terminal racemes. May 
and June. Extremely showy plant for massing, 
montana. 25 cts. each, $2 for 10. 
rhombifolia. 25 cts. each. $2 for 10. 
THEROFON aconitifolium. Aconite Saxifrage. 
Foliage of 7 species of Pitcher Plants 
Photographed at Highlands Nursery 
STAOHYS aspora. 
STEIRONEMA clllatum. Fringed Loosestrife. 
1 to 4 ft. Bright yellow flowers in July. 
STOKESIA cyanoa. ,j to 8 in. Light blue; re- 
Hcmbles a passion flower. 
Snrraccnia purpurea (sec page 33; 
TRADESCANTIA pilosa. Zigzag Spiderwort. r to 
3 in. Blue. June to August, 
montana. 
TRAUTVETTERIA carollnensis. False Bugdane. 
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. White or pink, 
ercctum. Erect Wake Robin. 8 to iO irf. Large, 
red fruit, very ornamental. Brown-purple, often 
greenish. April and May. 10 cts. each,'-*75 cts. 
for 10, £5 per 100. , - iNaj-; 
crectum album. 20 cts. each, $1.50 for io y 
Trillium grandiflorum. 
8 to 18 in. The finest and largest species. Flowers 
2 to 3 inches across, in April and Maj f .\ One of 
our best early spring flowers. White, turning rose- 
color or marked with green. 10 cts: each, 75 cts. 
for 10. #4 per 100, $2 5 per 1,000. 
ovatum. A rare Pacific coast species. Flowers 
much like T. grandiflorum. Large, ovate leaves. 
IS cts. each, 75 cts. for 10, #5 per 100. 
nivalc. 20 cts. each, $1.25 for 10, £io per 100. 
rccurvatum. 
sessile callfornicum. White. A beautiful Cali¬ 
fornian species, 
sessile, var. Snow Queen. 
Prices. 
Unless otherwise indicated, tho prices of nil herbaceous perennials are, 15 cts. each, Si for 10, 
S7 per 100. All offer .d aro strong plnrtts. 
3 i 
