. 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. Juelans cordiformis. Natural Hort.). Common Rush. Fig. 1200. Stem soft, 1-4 ft. high, not leaf-bearing: cyme diffuse, 1-2 in. long, appearing lateral : sepals acute, equaling the short, refuse and pointless greenish brown capsule: stamens 3: seeds small, not tailed. North temperate zone. Used also for


. 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. Juelans cordiformis. Natural Hort.). Common Rush. Fig. 1200. Stem soft, 1-4 ft. high, not leaf-bearing: cyme diffuse, 1-2 in. long, appearing lateral : sepals acute, equaling the short, refuse and pointless greenish brown capsule: stamens 3: seeds small, not tailed. North temperate zone. Used also for weaving into mats, etc. Var. cougSstus. Hort. Cyme dense and capitate. Var. vitt4tu3, Buch. {J. effiisiis, var. aureo-striAtus, Hort. J. conglomerdtns rariegOitus, Hort.). Foliage striped with yellow. Var. spiralis, Hort. A curious form with stems spirally twisted like a corkscrew. conglomer4tU8, Linn. Very similar to the above: cymes congested and capitate, appearing lateral; cap- sule obovoid, obtuse or refuse, apiculate. North temp, regions. Differs mainly in the apiculate capsule. Prob- ably much of the trade material named this to be re- ferred to congested forms of J. effiisus. J. zebrlnus. Hort. = Scirpus Taberntemontanus. var. zebri- ""S- K. M. WlBGAND. JUNEBEREY. Amelanchier. JUNlPERUS (ancient Latin name). Coniferw. Juni- per. Ornamental evergreen trees and shrubs with oppo- site or whorled, needle-shaped or scale-like Ivs. often on the same tree, and with inconspicuous small fls.: fr. a berry-like small cone, usually globose. Ma species are hardy North, as J. yirginiami, eoinmunis, riijida, Sabina, Ckinensis, Pseudo-saf" ^i'. y/,.r,M^r. Daviiriea, recurva var. squamaia; oili i, â¢..-â¢â hili hardy, as J. Oxycedrus, macrocarpa, >â occidentalis, while some, as J. proeem. /../,;- .;imi, thurifera and the Mexican species, can only be grown South. All are valuable ornamen- tal plants, and the erect-growing species, mostly of pyramidal or column


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