. Wild flowers every child should know : arranged according to color with reliable descriptions of the more common species of the United States and Canada . CANADA GOLDEN-ROD. Solidago canadensis. BLACK-EYED SUSAN. Rudbeckia hirta WILD FLOWERS white and greenish and trees in moist woods and thickets, where it blos-soms from May to July. The slender stalk is roundand grooved, and grows from two to seven inches inheight. The alternating, broad-oval leaves have ashort-tipped, blunt point and are heart-shaped witha narrow slit at the base where they are either claspingor short-stemmed. The surface


. Wild flowers every child should know : arranged according to color with reliable descriptions of the more common species of the United States and Canada . CANADA GOLDEN-ROD. Solidago canadensis. BLACK-EYED SUSAN. Rudbeckia hirta WILD FLOWERS white and greenish and trees in moist woods and thickets, where it blos-soms from May to July. The slender stalk is roundand grooved, and grows from two to seven inches inheight. The alternating, broad-oval leaves have ashort-tipped, blunt point and are heart-shaped witha narrow slit at the base where they are either claspingor short-stemmed. The surface is smooth and shin-ing, and the veinings are parallel. They are yellowish-green in colour, becoming stained and rusty with tiny, fragrant, waxy-white flower has four spreadingpetal-like parts, and four cream-tipped are crowded on a short terminal spike, and arefollowed with round, grayish or creamy white red-speckled berries, which finally become dark, shining,ruby red in colour. There is not the slightest resem-blance to the Lily of the Valley of our gardens, andthis name is therefore misleading. This rather daintyspecies occurs in scattered or dense colonies fromCan


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectflowers, bookyear1909