. 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. Gardening. 1210 PAPHIOPEDILUM bud. Pax writes iu Engler & Prautl's Pflanzenfamilien that the "ovary is completely ;^-loculed, or 1-loculeti lie- low and only the tip divided into 3 ; The species have not been revised and will be found under Cypripe- diura and Selenipedium. P. barbdtum. Pfitz. (Cyprip
. 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. Gardening. 1210 PAPHIOPEDILUM bud. Pax writes iu Engler & Prautl's Pflanzenfamilien that the "ovary is completely ;^-loculed, or 1-loculeti lie- low and only the tip divided into 3 ; The species have not been revised and will be found under Cypripe- diura and Selenipedium. P. barbdtum. Pfitz. (Cypripedium barbatum. Lindl.).âP. Bixalli, Pfitz. (Cypripedium Boxalli. Reichb. t.).âP. Cauda- turn, Pfitz. {Selenipedium eaudatura, Reichb. f.). Heinrich Hasselbring. PAPPOOSE ROOT or BLTJE COHOSH is Caulophylliim tlinlictroirles. a native plant that does not appear to be in the general trade. PAPfRUS antiqudrum (Fig. 1640), the Egyptian Paper-plant, is Vyperus Papyrus, which see (or tech- nical description. It is a tall-growing, graceful aquatic, bearing an umbel of long and slender branchlets. It does not endure frost. It is much used for bedding out about ponds in the summer. The plants for bedding are. 1640. Papyrus antlquorum propagated in January and February, by division of the roots that were brought in from the open in autumn. The plants are kept quiet until the roots are divided. The roots are divided into small pieces, and the divi- sions are started in a warm sand propagating bed. As the plants grow, they are potted. By late spring the plants should be ready for use iu shallow pools in the PARACHUTE FLOWER, adv. by Blanc, 1900, is Cero- pegia Siiii' Dii'riisne, from So. Africa. Asclepia- d^cew. It K :i iiiing plant with fls. of most un- usual KliM|ic â .m.\ ,-trnrtiire. It is figured in 5792, from wliirh tin- foilnwing extracts are taken: "Stems stout, succulent, as thick as a goose-quill. . Lvs. small and distant for the size of the plant,
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