Archive image from page 497 of Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches cyclopediaofamer04bail4 Year: 1900 2654, Young plant of Verbena ve- nosa, too young to show the characteristic panicled ar- rangement of clusters (XH). Tubers may be kept indoors over winter, or species propagated by seeds sown in greenhouse in


Archive image from page 497 of Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches cyclopediaofamer04bail4 Year: 1900 2654, Young plant of Verbena ve- nosa, too young to show the characteristic panicled ar- rangement of clusters (XH). Tubers may be kept indoors over winter, or species propagated by seeds sown in greenhouse in January. 0. tnera, Spreng. (I', piilchilla, Sw., not Hort.). Herbaceous perennial: stems cespitose, decumbent, rooting; branches slender, 4-angled, ascending, sparsely hairy: Ivs. decurrent into the short petiole, 3-parted and again piunatifid into acute, linear, entire, subrevo- lute divisions, sprinkled with short hairs: spikes ter- minal pedunculate: calyx elongated, strigose pubescent or hairy, sprinkled at angles with short stipitate patella- fonn glands, twice as long as bracts; corolla rose-violet; anther appendages barely exserted, claviculate,'subre- curved. Southern Brazil and LaPlata region. 7. erinoides, Lam. ( V. midtUida, Ruiz and Pav. V. pulclUUa, Hort., in part). Moss Verbena. Annual or perennial: stem strigose hairy or somewhat hirsute, branching, decumbent, rooting: branches ascending: Ivs. ovate in outline, ciineate base decurrent into the petiole, deeply 3-parted and the divisions pinnatifid into narrow linear acute lobes, subrevolute on mar- gins, strigose especiallj on nerves: spikes terminal, solitary, pedunculate, soon elongating and relaxing, canescent hairy: bracts lanceolate, acuminate, spread- ing, one-half as long to as long or longer than the calyx; corolla rather small, shortly exserted, lilac, bearded within; anther appendages exserted, rather short.— Said by Dr. Gillies to be 'one of the commonest plants on the Alps of Clile and Mendoza . . .


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