. 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. -will thrive in the driest, hottest situation, where many others would fail. The best known as a gar- den plant, and probably the showiest, is Golden Glow, which the under- signed considers the best peiennial of recen* intro- duction If cut back severely when through b


. 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. -will thrive in the driest, hottest situation, where many others would fail. The best known as a gar- den plant, and probably the showiest, is Golden Glow, which the under- signed considers the best peiennial of recen* intro- duction If cut back severely when through blooming and well watered, it often produces a 2213. Rubus invisus. the tivated form knowi Bartel Dewberry. See liiibus, page 158G, ally have yellow rays, though in one species (i2. atro- rtibens) the rays are all dark crimson, and in the other species the rays are occasionally more or less covered with purple-brown towards the base. Under Rudbeckia are'often included in nursery catalogues certain plants â which Gray refers to Echinacea and Lepachys. These three genera form an interesting floricultural group. Rudbeckia and Lepachys are typically yellow-fld. genera, Tvhile Echinacea contains a few forms with fls. ranging from flesh color and rose-purple to crimson. The chaff of the receptacle is usually persistent in Rudbeckia and deciduous in Lepachys. Among the hardy herbaceous species, there are sev- eral with striking habit and distinct foliage. There is a wide range of color among wild plants of the same spe- cies, and specimens with the brown-purple color at the base should be sought for. The rays may be few or many, short and broad or long and narrow, toothed in various ways, star-like or making a continuous limb, drooping or horizontal, and always set off by the disk, which may be purple, black or yellowish, high and col- umnar or "low and roundish. The season of bloom could be extended. The flowers of many of the kinds are ex- cellent for Leaf of Rubus i


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjec, booksubjectgardening