The century supplement to the dictionary of gardening, a practical and scientific encyclopaedia of horticulture for gardeners and botanists . tropical America. A. Warscewiczii is worthgrowing. It thrives in a rich soil of loam and peat, andmay be propagated either by seeds or by cuttings. A Warscewiczii O^^rscewiczs). jl. of a rich scarlet, spicate ;calyx of the male flowers cyUndrical; petals spreading, orbi-cular. Winter. I. petiolate, cordate, trifoliolate, dark green;leaflets stalked, the lateral ones somewhat hastate, the middleone obovate-oblong, all shortly acuminate,


The century supplement to the dictionary of gardening, a practical and scientific encyclopaedia of horticulture for gardeners and botanists . tropical America. A. Warscewiczii is worthgrowing. It thrives in a rich soil of loam and peat, andmay be propagated either by seeds or by cuttings. A Warscewiczii O^^rscewiczs). jl. of a rich scarlet, spicate ;calyx of the male flowers cyUndrical; petals spreading, orbi-cular. Winter. I. petiolate, cordate, trifoliolate, dark green;leaflets stalked, the lateral ones somewhat hastate, the middleone obovate-oblong, all shortly acuminate, , 1862. (B. M. 5304.) ANHALONIUM (from an, without, and helos^ anail or spike; in allusion to the spineless tubercles).Obd. Cactex. A genus embracing about a dozen speciesof greenhouse, succulent perennials, natives of the Andeanregions, from Northern Mexico to Peru. They are closelyallied to Mammillaria—indeed, are included under that A Hohenlohii (Hohenlohes). satviuinea. A intermedia (intermediate). A synonym of A. Madooxiana (Madoux). A garden hybrid, supposed to be between A. Ruckeri and A. unijiora. 1894. (L. 434.). Fig. 48. fissuratum. 52 The Dictionary of Gardening, Anhalonituix— by Engelmann and by tho authors of the GeneraPlantarum—but for garden purposes may well be keptdistinct. Seeds rather large, tubercled. Tubercles almostleaf-like, triangular, smooth, or warted and fissured culture of the species introduced, see Engelmanni (Engelmanns). A synonym of A. fissuratum (). Jl. rose-coloured, liin. wide, growingfrom the nikidle of the stem. September and October. Stemand rootstock shaped like a top, the rootstock being thickand woijdy; tubercles arranged in a thick layer, spreadingfrom the centre, rosette-like. Mexico, 1885. This speciesresembles some of the Gasterias. Syn. A. Enqdmanni. SeeFig. 48. A. furfuracea (scurfy), Jl. lin. long; sepals brownish; petalswhite or pinkisli.


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