. 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; Horticulture; Horticulture; Horticulture. LYCOPODira Obscurum, Linn. {L. ilenilroideum, Michx. i. Ja- pdnicHin, Thunb.). Stemsfr-12 in. high, much-branched: Ivs. loose, erect: spikes erect, 14-VA in. long. Tem- perate N. Amer. to Japan.—The common Ground Pine. LYCORIS 959. iUng, ilh erect CCC. Stems [main ones


. 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; Horticulture; Horticulture; Horticulture. LYCOPODira Obscurum, Linn. {L. ilenilroideum, Michx. i. Ja- pdnicHin, Thunb.). Stemsfr-12 in. high, much-branched: Ivs. loose, erect: spikes erect, 14-VA in. long. Tem- perate N. Amer. to Japan.—The common Ground Pine. LYCORIS 959. iUng, ilh erect CCC. Stems [main ones) wide-tr branches. annStinum, Linn. Stems trailing, often several feet long, with numerous ascending branches C-S in. high, which bear sessile, solitary spikes. Arctic and north temperate zones of both hemispheres. clavatum, Linn. Main stem trailing to the length of several feet, usually much branched : spikes I-i on an elongated peduncle. Arctic and north temperate regions of both hemispheres.—The common Club-Moss. AA. Lvs. 4-ranl-ed, on fan-like branches. complanitum, Linn. Pig. 1340. Stems trailing on the surface of the ground: branches spreading out in a horizontal plane: lvs. of the under side of stems re- duced to slender, spreading, cuspidate apices: first and second forks of peduncles approximate. Northern hemi- ;. Chamcecyparissus, R. Br., is an allied spe- cies, with stems growing underground. L. M. Underwood. LTCOBIS (named after anereid in Greek mythology). AmarylUd&cem. A genus of 5 species of remarkable bulbs from Chma and Japan, with large, 6-parted flow- ers. Four species are in cultivation, two of which are hardy in New England. Two bloom in summer and two in early autumn. Two have red fls., one has lilac or purple as., one yellow or orange. Three have the peri- anth segments more or less recurved and fluted or crisped at the margin. In all cases the fls. appear with- out foliage, being borne on a scape 1-3 ft. long, in um- 61 bels of 4-12


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