. 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. ite, with a lemon-colored (never pure yellow orgolden) form. Canaries. II. 13:561. Gn. 12. ; 17, p. 5, and 26, p. into Eng. 1699. Thisis the popular florists Marguerite, which can be had inflower the year round, but is especially grown forwinter bloom. Var. grandifldrum, Hort., is the


. 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. ite, with a lemon-colored (never pure yellow orgolden) form. Canaries. II. 13:561. Gn. 12. ; 17, p. 5, and 26, p. into Eng. 1699. Thisis the popular florists Marguerite, which can be had inflower the year round, but is especially grown forwinter bloom. Var. grandifldrum, Hort., is the form. The lemon-colored form seems to haveoriginated about 1880. Under this name an entirely dis-tinct species has also been passing for about a century,yet it has never been advertised separately in the See No. 9. (JG. Foliage glaucous. 9. anethifdlium, Brouss. (<7. faeniculAceum, bipinnatlfidnm, BC). GlaucousMarguerite. Fig. 462. Rarer in cult, than No. 8 (whichsee), but distinguished by its glaucous hue and by theway in which the Ivs. are cut. The segments of No. 9are narrower, more deeply cut, and more distant. TheIvs. are shorter petioled. Canaries.—The dried speci-men in the Garden Herbarium of Cornell University. 462. Leaves of common and glaucous Mareuerites (.Chry-santhemum frutescens and anethifolium).Showing the difference. Glaucous kind on the right. Experiment Station from a plant long cultivated inSage conservatories was identified by L. H. B. with thepicture in Andrews Botanical Register 272, published CHRYSANTHEMUM early in the century, since when the plant has almostnever been mentioned in garden literature. This spe-cies is doubtless cult, in Amer. greenhouses as C. fru-tescens. A lemon-fid. formis shown in 1845:61but erroneously called FF. Hardy herbs: stem» usually unbranched : rays white or red, yelloiv. a. Foliage not glaucous: fls. sometimes double. 10. coccineum, Willd. (Pijrethrum rd


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