Archive image from page 381 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 cyclopediaofam03bail Year: 1900 '/ I88I. SacalineâPolyEonum Sachalii â â (X). andlll. 14:159 (in fr.). 31:170. V. 17 cently introduced (in in 1894) for forage and for ornament. It is inveterately persistent when once estab


Archive image from page 381 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 cyclopediaofam03bail Year: 1900 '/ I88I. SacalineâPolyEonum Sachalii â â (X). andlll. 14:159 (in fr.). 31:170. V. 17 cently introduced (in in 1894) for forage and for ornament. It is inveterately persistent when once established, and may easily become a pest. For forage it has little merit where other things can be grown, for it is too coarse. For planting in rough places, where a thick cover is required, it is one of the best of all her- baceous perennials. It is perfectly hardy in the North and seems to thrive anywhere. P. SiehohJi was once distributed as Sacaline, but that species is much smaller, with smaller, shorter and square-based leaves, and with more profuse bloom. .543; .iOl: 45, , up to ft. .159. L. H. B. POL'JMNIA (the muse Polyhymnia). About 10 species of American composites, mostly c viscid and heavy-scented, the North American species being perennial herbs, the South American shrubby or tree-like. They have loose panicles of yellow or whitish fls. borne in sunmier. For further description, see Gray's Manual, Britton aud Brown's Illustrated Flora, etc. Canadensis, Linn. Canada or Small-flowered Leaf Cup. Height 2-5 ft.: deltoid-ovate to hastate, thin, deeply angiilatc-loljed; lobes dentate, 4-10 in. long: lieails few in terniiiinl clusters, 4-6 lines broad: rays minute or none. .Iiiiic-Sept. Damp, rich, shaded places, western Ont. to Minn., south N. C. to Ark. 2:405. â Var. radiita, Gray, with whitish rays sometimes '2 in. lung, is also offered by one dealer in native plants. POLYPdDIUM (Greek, mnnii feet; alluding to the ex- tensive rootstoc


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