. Miscellaneous papers on oenothera. Oenothera; Primroses. 146 BRADLEY MOORE DAVIS report that their cultures came from seeds received unnamed from Texas. Now we have no evidence to dispute the statement that these seeds came from Texas and we certainly have reason to feel hope-. Fig. 1. Sheet in the Gray Herbarium of Harvard University. An Oenothera grown by Dr. Asa Gray at Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1862, and probably de- rived directly or indirectly from the cultures of Carter and Company of London, which were distributed under the name of 0. Lamarckiana. ful that if these plants grew in


. Miscellaneous papers on oenothera. Oenothera; Primroses. 146 BRADLEY MOORE DAVIS report that their cultures came from seeds received unnamed from Texas. Now we have no evidence to dispute the statement that these seeds came from Texas and we certainly have reason to feel hope-. Fig. 1. Sheet in the Gray Herbarium of Harvard University. An Oenothera grown by Dr. Asa Gray at Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1862, and probably de- rived directly or indirectly from the cultures of Carter and Company of London, which were distributed under the name of 0. Lamarckiana. ful that if these plants grew in Texasiurther back than 1860 they will still be present in the It is of course possible that the seedsmen made some mistake ^nd that their seeds came not. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Vries, Hugo de, 1848-1935. Berlin, Leipzig, etc. , etc.


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