14 
E. C. ROBBINS, ASHFORD. NORTH CAROLINA 
HARDY AQUATIC AND BOG PLANTS, continued 
SARRACENIA flava. Trumpet Pitcher Plant. Interesting lo loo 
bog plant. Height i to 2 feet. Yellowish green 
trumpet-shaped leaf. Large yellow flowers. X strong 
minor. Hooded Pitcher Plant. Leaves erect, trumpet¬ 
shaped, 6 to 15 inches high, deciduous, spotted with 
white. Yellowish summit flowers in May. Strong.. 
purpurea. Common Pitcher Plant. Hardy plant 9 to 
15 inches high. Succeeds best in mossy bogs. Flowers 
purplish yellow. Strong. 
rubra. Sweet Pitcher Plant. Height 9 to 18 inches. Flow¬ 
ers crimson, with scent of sweet violet. 
Strong.. 
SAXIFRAGA virginiensis. Virginia Saxifrage. Height 6 to 
18 inches. Lettuce-like foliage. Flowers white. 
Damp locations. Strong. 
SYMPLOCARPUS foetidus. Skunk-cabbage. Leaves large, 
I to 2 feet long, heart-shaped. Flowers small, mot¬ 
tled purplish brown and greenish yellow, packed on 
fleshy stems. Blooms in early spring. Strong. 
VERATRUM viride. American False Hellebore. Height 2 to 
4 feet. Yellowish green plant with large leaves. 
Succeeds well in either dry or moist soil. Flowers 
greenish white, in early spring. X strong. 
VERNONIA noveboracensis. Ironweed. Deciduous. Stem 
leafy; usually tall. Leaves alternate. Flower-heads an 
• intense red-purple, loosely clustered. Strong clumps . . 
LILIUM canadense. Canada Lily. Slender stems 2 to 4 feet 
high. Flowers in various shades of orange, yellow, 
and red. Very ornamental. First size. 
Second size. 
carolinianum. Carolina Lily. A showy Lily somewhat 
dwarfer than L. superhum, with flowers a little lighter 
in color, but enriched with a delicate and pervasive 
fragrance. First size. 
Second size. 
grayi. Gray’s Lily. Height 2 to 4 feet. A beautiful Lily 
with deep reddish bell-shaped flowers, orange 
spotted within. Exceedingly showy and continues to 
grow in demand. First-size strong flowering bulbs. 
Second-size mostly flowering bulbs. 
XX largest. 
philadelphicum. Orange-cup Lily. Height i to 3 feet. 
Reddish orange flowers, with purple spots. 
Flowering-size bulbs. 
superbum. American Turk’s-cap Lily. Under favorable 
conditions it reaches 8 feet, bearing scores of 3 to 
4-inch flowers of brilliant orange-scarlet, shaded 
yellow and dotted and tinged with brown in the 
center. The petals form a turban-shaped flower which 
accounts for its common name, the “Turk’s-cap 
Lily.’’ It particularly likes to stick its head up through 
an opening in overhanging shrubs. Blooms in July. 
Early orders solicited. First size. 
Second size. 
Third size. 
XX largest. 
1,000 
^2 75 
$22 50 
$200 00 
3 50 
27 50 
2 75 
22 50 
200 00 
3 50 
27 50 
I 65 
10 00 
90 00 
3 00 
25 00 
I 80 
13 00 
120 00 
I 60 
12 00 
100 00 
r Specimens 
10 
100 
1,000 
$2 00 
I13 00 
$120 00 
I 10 
6 00 
50 00 
2 50 
18 00 
170 00 
I 30 
9 00 
3 50 
24 00 
220 00 
I 20 
10 00 
90 00 
5 00 
37 50 
I 80 
12 00 
no 00 
2 
00 
13 00 
120 
00 
I 
20 
7 00 
60 
00 
80 
4 50 
30 
00 
4 
00 
30 00 
1 to 14 plants at the 10 rate; 15 to 249 plants at the 100 rate; 250 plants and over 
at the 1,000 rate 
