RMPG1AY4–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. 5. LONG STALKED STOPPER —Eugenia longipes Berg Although usually a low shrub, this rarely becomes a small tree up to 4 meters high, with a trunk i dm. in diameter. It grows in sandy or rocky soil in southern Florida and the Bahama islands. The twigs are slender, slightly hairy, reddish brown to gray. The leaves are thick and leath- ery, oblong to oval, i to 3 cm. long, sharp or blunt-pointed, narrowed or rounded at the bas
RM2CF5P8F–. The American flora : or history of plants and wild flowers : containing their scientific and general description, natural history, chemical and medical properties, mode of culture, propagation , &c., designed as a book of reference for botanists, physicians, florists, gardeners, students, etc.. are serrated, veined, divided into five,and sometimes seven lobes, of a pale green color, and stand upontapering footstalks, which are about the length of the leaves, and some-what hairy near the base ; the bractece are small, oval, pointed, andplaced at the base of the leaf stalks and peduncles; the
RF2GDRB7N–Mimulus luteus ‘Magic Mixed’ monkey flower / musk – deep pink funnel-shaped flowers with white margins and speckled throat, July, England, UK
RF2F63XN1–Epimedium pinnatum subsp colchicum Colchian barrenwort - sprays of small yellow spurred flowers with heart-shaped leaves, March, England, UK
RMPG1DMB–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. 236 The Hickories for a few light-colored warts, dark brown or gray. The terminal bud is ovoid, blunt, about 15 mm. long, its scales 6 to 8, imbricated, the outer reddish brown and leathery, the inner hairy and continue to grow when the leaf expands, becoming 2.5 to 3.5 cm. in length. The leaves are 2 to 3 dm. long; leaf- stalk stout and channeled; leaflets 5 to 7, oval, ob- long or ovate, 6 to 14 cm. long, narrowed or ro
RM2CE38T7–. Plants and their uses; an introduction to botany . Fig. 10.3.—Mu.>kmelon. Fruit, much reduced. (Baillon.) D ^^ -^ ^ ^^ 4. -^.:. -cL -^t 96 VARIOUS FOOD-PLAXTS. Fi<;. 104.—Waterincloii (Ctlrulliis riili/nri.s, (loiird Family, CiirurJiitacefp).Xiiic Ixariiijr leaves, flowers, and very .i)uii}i fruit; a. staniinateflower: b, pistillate flower, fXirholson.)—Plant an annual herbaceou.svine; leaves hairy or smooth; flowers yellow; fruit greenish with palemarkings, smooth, globular or oval, sometimes 60 em. long.
RF2F63XN9–Epimedium pinnatum subsp colchicum Colchian barrenwort - sprays of small yellow spurred flowers with heart-shaped leaves, March, England, UK
RMPG0GHN–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. 462 The Thorn Trees 21. BUSH'S THORN — Oratsegns pyriformis Britton Bush's thorn occurs in rich bottom lands of southeastern Missouri. It is a tree 8 to 9 meters high, with spreading branches forming a broad crown; the twigs are Hght green and long-hairy when young, becoming gray and smooth, and have an occasional sUm, chestnut-brown spine 2 to 4 cm. long. The leaves are broadly oval or obo- vate-oval, 3 to 7 cm. long, 2
RM2CF00AB–. The first book of botany : designed to cultivate the observing powers of children. PLANT DESCKIPTIOJST. 139 Description of Fig. 249. EooTS fasciculated. Stem slender, weak, round, herbaceous, hairy. Leaves radical and cauline. Radical leaves,petiolate, exstipulate, entire, deeply twice ternatelylobed ; petioles long, hairy. Cauline leaves sessilealternate, shaped like the radical leaves, but muchsmaller. Inflorescence solitary, terminal. Flowee. Calyx ; sepals 5, polysepalous, regu-lar, spreading : corolla ; petals 5, polypetalous,regular, oval, spreading: stamens many; filamentsthreadlike ;
RF2F63XMK–Epimedium pinnatum subsp colchicum Colchian barrenwort - sprays of small yellow spurred flowers with heart-shaped leaves, March, England, UK
RF2F4P4C1–Epimedium pinnatum subsp colchicum ‘Black Sea’ Colchian barrenwort Black Sea – spray of yellow pink-veined flowers with yellow spurs, March, England,
RMPG0GR6–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. Oregon Crab Apple 435 round-headed tree; the bark is 8 to lo mm. thick, brown-gray, and broken into small irregular thin flat plates. The twigs are rather stout, densely hairy, light green, becoming reddish or purphsh brown, finally smooth and dark gray-brown; the winter buds are large, blunt and hairy; the leaves are thick, somewhat fleshy, broadly ovate to oval, 2 to 5 cm. long, blunt or ab- ruptly pointed, rounded or s
RM2CE1DC3–. Trees of Texas; an illustrated manual of the native and introduced trees of the state . Fig. 26. Moi^us alba. The trunk is short and low branched, forming a round toppedcrown. Bark thin, light gray, furrowed into rough ridges.Leaves thin, firm, ovate or ovate oval, sharp-pointed at theapex, lieart-shaped or rounded at the base, serrate, sometimeslobed, smooth, light green above, paler and hairy along theveins below. The staminate aments are slender, drooping, The Trees of Texai 91 the pistillate, ovate, shorter. The fruit is white, or pinkish,,sweet, edible, insipid. Introduced from Europe,
RF2F4P4E2–Epimedium pinnatum subsp colchicum ‘Black Sea’ Colchian barrenwort Black Sea – spray of yellow pink-veined flowers with yellow spurs, March, England,
RF2F5BJFK–Epimedium pinnatum x warleyense ‘Orangekonigin’ Barrenwort Orange Queen - spray of peach pink-veined flowers with yellow spurs, March, England, UK
RMPG0G91–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. Sloe 495 appearing before the leaves in April or May, are 1.5 to 2.5 cm. across, in 3- to 5-flowered umbels on smooth, red pedicels i to 2 cm. long; the calyx-tube is ob- conic, usually red, the lobes lanceolate, glandular-toothed, hairy on the inner surface; the petals are obovate, rounded and irregularly erose, white, fading to pink. The fruit, ripening in August or September, is oval or subglobose, 2.5 to 3 cm. long, o
RM2CF0166–. The first book of botany : designed to cultivate the observing powers of children. PLAKT DESCEIPTIOIS^. 127 Description of Fig. 243. KooTs fibrous.Stem a scaly bulb. Leaves radical, petiolate, exstipiilate, digitatelytliree-fingered; leaflets sessile, featlier-veined, entire, obcordate; petiole long, slender. Inflorescence a loose terminal umbel. Flower. Calyx ; sepals 5, polysepalous : corol-la ; petals 5, regular, polypetalous, obovate, muclilarger than the sepals : stamens 10, of unequal length,hairy; fllaments awl-shaped, flattened below, growntogether; anthers short, oval, two-celled: p
RF2F5BJFR–Epimedium pinnatum x warleyense ‘Orangekonigin’ Barrenwort Orange Queen - spray of peach pink-veined flowers with yellow spurs, March, England, UK
RF2FJNN1P–Epimedium pinnatum x warleyense ‘Orangekonigin’ Barrenwort Orange Queen - spray of peach pink-veined flowers with yellow spurs, April, England, UK
RMPG0GGN–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. 466 The Thorn Trees tree from 6 to 8 meters high, with spreading branches forming a flat-topped head; the bark is dark gray, scaly; the young twigs are reddish, long-hairy, becoming gray and smooth, and armed with stout brown spines from 3 to 7 cm. long; the trunks are often provided with numerous, much-branched spines, from 15 to 20 cm. long. The leaves are obovate-oblong or oval, from 2 to 6 cm. long and from 1.5 to 5 c
RM2CDJMT8–. Insects . roject distinctly on the upper surface, are somewhat smooth though sometimesslightly hairy, rounded elevations and on the under surface are indicated mostlybj corresponding oval depressions filled, or nearly filled with a mass of yellowishor whitish plant hairs. Hodgkiss refers this to Eriophyes n. sp., adding that asingle specimen, apparently new to science, was found in this material. Eriophyes species, labelled Cecidomyia (?) galls on leaves of creeping Salix,August 16, 1915, rearing 92. Locality, Bernard harbour. Northwest Territories. The leaves were badly browned and discolou
RF2FJNN20–Epimedium pinnatum x warleyense ‘Orangekonigin’ Barrenwort Orange Queen - spray of peach pink-veined flowers with yellow spurs, April, England, UK
RMPG235D–. Plants of New Zealand . Botany. THE VERBENA FAMILY 351 Teucpidium parvifolium (The Small-leaved Tcucrtdium). A shrub, 2ft.-5ft. in height, forming close thickets ; branches and leaves slightly hairj'. Leaves roundish or oval, (tin. long. Cal>'x bell-shaped, with 5 sharp teeth. Corolla hairy, bell-shaped, Jin.-Jin. long. PI. Dec.-Jan.. Fig. 114. Vitex lucens (^ nat. size). Genus Aviceimia. Maritime trees, with branching roots. Leaves opposite, entire, hoary. Flowers in capitate panicles, sessile, surrounded by bracts. Cal)-x 4-5-parted Corolla leathery, small, 4-5-lobed. Stamens 4, short.
RM2CF01B9–. The first book of botany : designed to cultivate the observing powers of children. PLANT DESCEIPTION. 125 Description of Fig. 24=2. Roots fibrous. Leaves radical, petiolate, exstipulate, palmate-veined, entire, acutely three-lobed; base cordate,surface hairy. Bracts hairy, in a whorl of threenear the flower. LsHFLORESCENCE solitary, on a slender hairy scape.^ Flower. Calyx ; sepals 8-12, oblong spread-ing : COROLLA none: stamens many; filamentsthreadlike; anthers oval, two-celled: pistil ; car-pels many; style very short; stigma continued downthe inner face of the style. * Scape, a peduncle
RMRDK0NR–. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions, from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia, and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102d meridian. Botany; Botany. A branching shrub, 4°-iS° high, the twigs glabrous or sparingly pubescent. Leaves oval, elliptic or sometimes obovate, wider and shorter than those of the preceding species, permanently more or less soft-canescent and pale beneath and stiff-hairy or pubescent on the veins, varying to nearly glabrous, the margins ciliolate-serrulate; pedicels glandular; flowers
RMRE0498–. Veterinary studies for agricultural students. Veterinary medicine. POISONOUS PLANTS. 103 Treatment.—The only practical and satisfactory treatment is to remove the animal entirely from the range where he can secure the plant. BATTLE BOX, (Crotalaria sagittalis), Description.—This is an annual, growing three to eighteen inches high ; the plant is hairy ; the leaves are oval or lanceolate, with very short stems, simple and undivided; flowers resembling somewhat those of the common pea. The pods are very dark m color or nearly black, and about one inch in length. When dried they are rather hard
RMRDRYBR–. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions : from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102nd meridian. Botany. A branching shrub, 4°-l5° high, the twigs glabrous or sparingly pubescent. Leaves oval, elliptic or sometimes obovate, wider and shorter than those of the preceding species, permanently more or less soft-canescent and pale beneath and stiff-hairy or pubescent on the veins, varying to nearly glabrous, the margins ciliolate-serrulate; pedicels glandular; flowers rose-co
RMRDFG4J–. Trees and shrubs : an abridgment of the Arboretum et fruticetum britannicum : containing the hardy trees and schrubs of Britain, native and foreign, scientifically and popularly described : with their propagation, culture and uses and engravings of nearly all the species. Trees; Shrubs; Forests and forestry. VIII. CISTA CEiE : HELIa'ntHEMUM. 61. Sj^ec. Char .J-c. Stem suffruticose, ascending. Branches hairy-tomentose. Lower leaves oval; upper ones oblong-lanceolate, green on both surfaces, flat, hairy. Calyxes hairy. Petals imbricate. (Don's Mill.) A sub- evergreen suffruticose undershrub, w
RMRDFG4D–. Trees and shrubs : an abridgment of the Arboretum et fruticetum britannicum : containing the hardy trees and schrubs of Britain, native and foreign, scientifically and popularly described : with their propagation, culture and uses and engravings of nearly all the species. Trees; Shrubs; Forests and forestry. Sj^ec. Char .J-c. Stem suffruticose, ascending. Branches hairy-tomentose. Lower leaves oval; upper ones oblong-lanceolate, green on both surfaces, flat, hairy. Calyxes hairy. Petals imbricate. (Don's Mill.) A sub- evergreen suffruticose undershrub, with the branches ascending. Ori>'i-
RMRE0NTR–. Flowers of the field. Botany. Pastinaca Sativa (Common Parsnip) 26. Heracleum (Cow-parsnip) I. H. sphondylium (Common Cow- parsnip, Hog-weed).—A very tall and stout plant, with a channelled, hairy stem, 4-6 feet high, large, irregularly cut, rough leaves, and spreading umhels of conspicuous white flowers. In spring the plant is remarkable for the large oval tufts formed by the sheathing base of the stem-leaves, which contain the d3 flower-buds. This, with many other ' umbelliferous plants, is often con- founded by farmers with Hemlock, and great pains are taken to eradicate it ; but cattle
RMRH07B9–. Bulletin. AMERICAN MEDICINAL FLOWERS, FRUITS, AND SEEDS. 9 1£ to 2 inches long, with somewhat pointed apex and wavy-toothed or unbroken margins; they are dark green above and paler green underneath. The leaflets are somewhat hairy when young, but later they become smooth or, at least, are only slightly hairy. About April or May, before the leaves are out, the greenish yellow flowers appear, crowded together in small stemless clusters in the axils of the branches. The seed capsules are roundish or somewhat oval, wrinkled or pitted, green- ish red, and with a lemon odor. One or two shining bla
RMRDBGFT–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. Planer Tree 35^ are rough-hairy and green, but soon become gray or brown and are smooth or nearly so after their first season. The leaves are ovate, oval, or sometimes obo- vate, usually long-pointed, firm in texture, 7 to 18 cm. long, the upper surface exceedingly rough-papillose and dark gxeen, with the veins impressed, the under side usually densely covered with whitish hairs; their edges are sharply and usually coarse
RMRDN0WA–. Cocoa and chocolate; a short history of their production and use. Cocoa; Chocolate. EARLY USE OF COCOA AND CHOCOLATE 29 Amongst the four sorts the chiefest is Quathuitl, of an indifferent heighth, and full of sharp-pointed Leaves, which are fast to the Boughs without Stalks, and bears a great Flower of a yellowish colour, which falling off, leaves long, tough and hairy Threds behind them, out of which grows the Cacavently, a Fruit which is oval, heavy like a Melon, of niiiiliSlllMiiliKiiilii 1111 11 r I fat and thick Juice, a bitterish, yet pleasant Jaste, and very cooling ; being dry'd in t
RMRDBFB8–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. Mahaleb 501 The bark is about 8 mm. thick, usually smooth and dark gray; the twigs are slender, hairy, becoming smooth and gray- brown. The leaves are thick-membranous, oval to obovate, 4 to 9 cm. long, blunt or more or less pointed at the apex, narrowed and 2-glandular at the base, margined by gland- tipped teeth, dark green with impressed mid- rib above, paler and woolly beneath; leaf-stalk slender, channelled and hairy
RMRE2D45–. Plants and their uses; an introduction to botany. Botany; Botany, Economic. 96 VARK )rS FOe)D-PLANTS. Fig. 104.—Watrrnii'Itni {('itnillns nilaaris, (lourd F:unil-. Cudirhitaccw). Vine heariutr Icavc-^, IIdwits, and very youny; fruit; o, staniinate flower; h, pistillate fiuwer. (Nicholson.)—Plant an annual herbaceous vine; leaves hairy or smooth; flowers yellow; fruit greenish with pale markings, smooth, globular or oval, sometimes 60 em. long.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearan
RMRDKC70–. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions, from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia, and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102d meridian. Botany; Botany. Sparingly hairy, 4'-i2' high from slender rootstocks. Basal leaves long-petioled, 3-parted, the broadly wedge- shaped divisions obtusely lobed or crenate, those of the involucre nearly sessile, similarly lobed; flower i' in diam- eter or less; sepals oval, very obtuse, white; head of fruit short-oval or globose; achenes densely woolly. I Labrador, Newfoundland
RMRDK3HC–. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions, from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia, and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102d meridian. Botany; Botany. SCROPHULARIACEAE. Vol. III. 2. Euphrasia americana Wettst. Hairy Eye- bright. Eyebright. Fig. 3841. Euphrasia americana Wettst. Mon. Euph. 127. 1896. E. canadensis Townsend, Journ. Bot. 36: 1. 1898. Annual, stem pubescent with crisped hairs, often at length much branched, 4'-io' high. Leaves gla-. brous, or sparingly pubescent, ovate to oval, obtuse or acutish
RMRDCN1G–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. 678 The Buckthorns Its bark is thin and gray. The young twigs are green, more or less hairy, turning reddish brown and becoming smooth. The buds are not more than 2 mm. long, their scales hairy-fringed. The leaves are firm in texture, ovate to oval or nearly as wide as long, sharply toothed with bristle- tipped teeth, smooth or very nearly so, yeUow- green, blunt, pointed, or sometimes notched at the apex, blunt or narrow
RMRE2CWT–. Plants and their uses; an introduction to botany. Botany; Botany, Economic. Fig. 104.—Watrrnii'Itni {('itnillns nilaaris, (lourd F:unil-. Cudirhitaccw). Vine heariutr Icavc-^, IIdwits, and very youny; fruit; o, staniinate flower; h, pistillate fiuwer. (Nicholson.)—Plant an annual herbaceous vine; leaves hairy or smooth; flowers yellow; fruit greenish with pale markings, smooth, globular or oval, sometimes 60 em. long.. Fic. HI.',.—Aa(eriii('lon, fruil. I iclnilsou.). Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability
RMRDBRFC–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. Rough-Leaved Cornel 743 The branches are slender, stiff and ascending, forming a narrow head. The bark is thin, close, greenish or grayish brown, the twigs slender, round, reddish brown to purplish. The leaves are opposite, firm, eUiptic, oval to ovate, 4 to 12 cm. long, taper-pointed at the apex, narrowed or tapering at the base, slightly wavy or quite entire on the margin, green and shghtly appressed-hairy above, paler
RMRDHR9B–. Our northern shrubs and how to identify them : a handbook for the nature-lover . Shrubs. AMERICAN CRANBERRY CREEPING SNOWBERRY Chidgcncs serpyllifblia. Chidgenes hispidula. Chiogencs, snow born, in allusion to the white berries. A trailing: and creeping; evergfreen, with slender o loo' hairy branches and alternate two-ranked, oval or ovate, small leaves and solitary, axillary, small, greenish white flowers on short recurved peduncles. A na- tive of cold, wet woods, it ranges across the continent from New- foundland to British Columbia and southward to Michigan and North Carolina. The flowers
RMRDCPG6–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. Island Oak 3" small, close reddish gray or brown scales. The twigs are stiff and slender, hairy at first, becoming smooth or nearly so, and brown or light gray. The winter buds are broadly ovoid to oval, sharp-pointed, about 3 nrni. long and brown. The leaves are oblong, elliptic to lanceolate, 2.5 to 10 cm. long, sharp and stiff-pointed, heart-shaped, rounded or wedge-shaped at the base; the thick, revolute margin i
RMRDK3H5–. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions, from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia, and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102d meridian. Botany; Botany. SCROPHULARIACEAE. Vol. III. 2. Euphrasia americana Wettst. Hairy Eye- bright. Eyebright. Fig. 3841. Euphrasia americana Wettst. Mon. Euph. 127. 1896. E. canadensis Townsend, Journ. Bot. 36: 1. 1898. Annual, stem pubescent with crisped hairs, often at length much branched, 4'-io' high. Leaves gla-. brous, or sparingly pubescent, ovate to oval, obtuse or acutish
RMRE775B–. The Cottage gardener. Gardening; Gardening. Elegant Moussonia (Moussoida elegruis).—Flore des Serrcs, t. 489.—This stove plant was introduced by M. Van Houtte, in 1848, from the mountain districts of Guatimala. Stems and leaves hairy, tinted partially with red; leaves short-stallved, pointed oval, and with round-toothed edges. The flowers, about two inches long, are orange aud yellow, spotted inside with purple, and in umbels of tln-ee or fom-, springing fi'om between the leaf stalk and the stem. It is of the Natvu-al Order Gesnencorts (Gesneraceee), and is not unlike Ocsnera elunyata, upon
RMRJ7HD7–. Chase fruit and fowers in natural colors;. Fruit; Flowers; Nursery stock. 1922. by Chase Brolhers Co. cAlmond 'Double Flowering An old favorite bearing a weallh ot double pink flowers like Utile roses followed by soft, hairy leaves, wfiicti are bread, oval, often tfiree pointed. The Uouble Flowering Almond and Bridal Wreatti Spirea make a good pink and white combination in early Spring. 77. 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
RMRDBFTY–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. 22. ASHE'S THORN — Crataegus Ashei Beadle Ashe's thom is known in the clay soils about Montgomery, Alabama. It is a tree sometimes 6 meters high, with ascending branches forming an oval top; the bark is hght gray or red-brown, be- coming scaly with age; the twigs are orange-brown or reddish brown, hairy, becoming hght gray, smooth, and pro- vided with slender, nearly straight spines 3 to 4 cm. long. The leaves are oblong-
RMRDRADB–. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions : from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102nd meridian. Botany. I. Calycanthus floridus L. Hairy Strawberry- shrub. Fig. 1965. Calycanthus floridus L. Syst. Ed. 10. 1066. 1759. Bncltneria florida Kearney, Bull. Torr. Club 21: 175 A branching shrub, 2°-9° high, the branchlets and petioles pubescent. Leaves ovate or oval, acute or obtuse, narrowed at the base, soft-downy or pubes- cent beneath, rough above; flowers dark purple, abou
RMRDBRFX–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. Tupelo Gum 739 drooping, forming trees of variable outline; the bark is 2 to 4 cm. thick, deeply furrowed into longitudinal scaly ridges of a brown color. The twigs are slender, sometimes quite hairy, greenish yellow, soon becoming smooth and red-brown; the winter buds are 6 mm. long, blunt- pointed; the leaves are oval or obovate, rarely oblanceolate, 5 to 15 cm. long, blunt, sharp or taper-pointed, more or less rounded
RMRDRAEW–. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions : from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102nd meridian. Botany. Ranunculus parviflorus L. Sp. PI. Ed. 2. 780. 1763. Hairy, slender, diffuse, annual, branching from the base, 6'-io' high. Basal leaves long-petioled, the blade reniform or cordate-orbicular, i' broad or less, 3-cleft, the lobes broadly oval, obtuse, cut and toothed; upper leaves short-petioled or nearly sessile, 3-5-parted into linear-oblong lobes; flowers yellow. i&
RMRH07AE–. Bulletin. AMERICAN MEDICINAL FLOWEES, FRUITS, AND SEEDS. 11 Habitat and range.—This native forest tree is found in rich woods, especially along tbe mountains, from Canada to Georgia, west to Texas and Nebraska. Description.—The American linden attains great size, from 60 to 125 feet in height, with a trunk diameter of 2 to 5 feet, and spreading branches. The leaves are somewhat leathery in texture, smooth on both sides or sometimes hairy on the veins of the under side. They are obliquely oval in outline, with sharply toothed margin, pointed at the apex, and heart shaped at the base, and are
RMRFNAM3–. Seeds, plants & bulbs. Nurseries (Horticulture) New Jersey Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables seeds catalogs. Swainsona galegifoha alba. SAINTPAULI A. ntha. "African Violet." This is a valuable new addition to our winter flowering greenhouse plants, producing a profusion of beautiful blue flowers on slender stems. The individual flower very much resembles a single Violet. The leaves are fleshy, oval in shape, of a deep green color, the surface being quite hairy. 35 cts.. Linum trigynum. SCUTELLARIA. Mociniana. A ve
RMRDW94R–. Familiar trees and their leaves . Trees. 118 FAMILIAR TREES AND THEIR LEAVES. Western Black The Western black willow is WiUow. found from central 'New York Salixamygdaloides. ^..gg^ward to MisSOUri. The leaves are rather oval-lance-shaped, pale or often hairy beneath, and have long, slen- der stems; the little stipules (encircling the stems like leaflets) fall off when the leaves are yet young. This tree grows from 15 to 40 feet high* and is common on the banks of streams from Ohio to Missouri. Shining Willow. The shining willow may Saiixi-ucida. ^jg recognizcd at once by its bright leaf, wh
RMRDK2YH–. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions, from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia, and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102d meridian. Botany; Botany. 2. Ruellia ciliosa Pursh. Hairy or Long- tube Ruellia. Fig. 3890. Ruellia ciliosa Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. 420. 1814. Hirsute or pubescent, at least above; stem ascending, rather stout, i°-2i° high. Leaves hairy, ciliate, oblong, oval, or ovate, sessile or nearly so, obtuse or subacute at the apex, nar- rowed at the base, i4'—3' long; flowers clus- tered or solitar
RMRDXAX7–. Familiar features of the roadside; the flowers, shrubs, birds, and insects. Natural history. 204 FAMILIAR FEATURES OF THE ROADSIDE. ing from one to tliree feet liigh, bearing at the top a someTrhat flat flower cluster. The leaves are lance- shaped or oblong, acute, and sparingly coarse-toothed ; the uppermost leaves slightly clasp the stem. I have found this flower in bloom in northern ISTew Hampshii-e in August. Hieracium. scabru'm is a roughish, hairy stemmed species with a stout, simple stalk two to three feet high, having reversed egg-shaped or oval leaves without teeth, and a nar- row c
RMRDBFW3–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. 462 The Thorn Trees 21. BUSH'S THORN — Oratsegns pyriformis Britton Bush's thorn occurs in rich bottom lands of southeastern Missouri. It is a tree 8 to 9 meters high, with spreading branches forming a broad crown; the twigs are Hght green and long-hairy when young, becoming gray and smooth, and have an occasional sUm, chestnut-brown spine 2 to 4 cm. long. The leaves are broadly oval or obo- vate-oval, 3 to 7 cm. long, 2
RMRGD3AX–. The Bulletin of the North Carolina Department of Agriculture. Agriculture -- North Carolina. 14 The Bulletin Wild Carrot. Daucm Carota L. Also known as Queon Anne's Lace or Bird's-ncst Plant. A biennial plant. Grows about three feet high, rougli-hairy all over. Leaves much divided into narrow lobes. Root fleshy, conical. Flowers small, white, massed together into a large, flat-topped umbel. As the fruit ripens the umbel closes up so as to resemble a bird's nest. Fruit oval, flattened, having rows of weak spines which ^fi â f--yp ^. vi-''.«.,r»;.->,-. i-.'-'^i'-ict^'' "'''. are gene
RMRDJNFR–. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions, from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia, and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102d meridian. Botany; Botany. 27. Solidago rugdsa Mill. Wrinkle- leaved, Tall Hairy, or Pyramid Golden-rod. Bitter-weed. I'ig- 4-'39- 5. rugosa Mill. Gard. Diet. F.d. 8, No. 25. 1768. Solidago aspcra Ait. llort. Kew. 3: 112, 1789. Stem hirsute or scabrous, rarely glabrate, usually stout, l°-jh° high, simple, or branched at the summit. Leaves more or less pubescent or scabrous, oval, oblong-
RMRDBG6B–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. Oregon Crab Apple 435 round-headed tree; the bark is 8 to lo mm. thick, brown-gray, and broken into small irregular thin flat plates. The twigs are rather stout, densely hairy, light green, becoming reddish or purphsh brown, finally smooth and dark gray-brown; the winter buds are large, blunt and hairy; the leaves are thick, somewhat fleshy, broadly ovate to oval, 2 to 5 cm. long, blunt or ab- ruptly pointed, rounded or s
RMREEDJC–. Common weeds of the Canadian Prairies;. Weeds. Androsace septentrionalis L. var. puberulenta (Rydb.) Knuth PYGMYFLOWER A low-growing annual with leaves less than H inches long, mostly basal. Found on eroded and dry soils and often plentiful on stubble fields and cultivated land in early spring. A common plant but so small that it is not gen- erally noticed. Apocyrmm androsaemifolium L. SPREADING DOGBANE. A husky perennial from horizontal rootstocks, to 4 feet high, much-branched, with a milky sap. Leaves opposite, oval or ovate, 1 to 3 inches long, lighter and slightly hairy on underside. Fl
RMREBGGN–. The drug plants of Illinois. Botany, Medical; Botany. GYPRIPEDIUM PARVIFLORUM Salisb. Yellow lady's slipper, nerve root, American valerian, yellow Indian shoe. Orchidaceae.—An upright, glan- dular hairy, ill-smelling herb 1 to 2i/ feet tall, perennial; rhizome horizontal, crooked, bearing tufted, thick, fibrous roots; stems hairy, leafy; leaves oval, 2 to 6 inches long, 3 or 4 in number, strongly parallel-ribbed, alternate; flower pale yel- low, lined or blotched with purple, much inflated and slipper- or moccasin-shaped, the "slipper" i/^ to 1 inch long, sepals purplish. Rhizome a
RMRDCMX8–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. 5. LONG STALKED STOPPER —Eugenia longipes Berg Although usually a low shrub, this rarely becomes a small tree up to 4 meters high, with a trunk i dm. in diameter. It grows in sandy or rocky soil in southern Florida and the Bahama islands. The twigs are slender, slightly hairy, reddish brown to gray. The leaves are thick and leath- ery, oblong to oval, i to 3 cm. long, sharp or blunt-pointed, narrowed or rounded at the bas
RMRDCCHJ–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. 236 The Hickories for a few light-colored warts, dark brown or gray. The terminal bud is ovoid, blunt, about 15 mm. long, its scales 6 to 8, imbricated, the outer reddish brown and leathery, the inner hairy and continue to grow when the leaf expands, becoming 2.5 to 3.5 cm. in length. The leaves are 2 to 3 dm. long; leaf- stalk stout and channeled; leaflets 5 to 7, oval, ob- long or ovate, 6 to 14 cm. long, narrowed or ro
RMRGW2K9–. Bulletin. Natural history; Natural history. Treks of Illinois 153 QUERCUS MUEHLENBERGII Engelmann Yellow Oak Chinquapin Oak The Yellow Oak. sometimes called also the Chinquapin Oak, is a tall tree, with a narrow, round-topped crown of small branches capping the tall, buttressed bole. The firm, yellow-green leaves. 4 to 7 inches long and 1 to 5 inches wid;^ and i)ale or white-hairy beneath, have coarse but uniform teeth with incurved points, and stand on slender petioles ^' to 1^^ inches long. The oval, chestnut-itrown acorns, Yi to 1 inch long, are half-bur- ied in deep, brown cups covered
RMRH9379–. Botany; an elementary text for schools. Plants. 448. Ubnus fulva. 449. Ulmus Americana.. 450. Ulmus racemosa. very rough above and softer beneath: samara ]4-% in. long, orbicular or nearly so, with the seed in the center: flowers in dense clusters. Common, aa. Leaves not very rough above: fruit oval, deeply notched at the apex. IT. Americd,na, Linn. Common or white elm. Figs. 91-95,146,449. Tall and graceful tree: leaves elliptic-oval, serrate: samara small, more or less hairy on the thin wing, the notch in the apex extending nearly to the seed: flowers banging on slender stalks. One of the
RMRGA55B–. Bulletin (Pennsylvania Department of Forests and Waters), no. 33-35. Forests and forestry. 76 Leaves simple. Flowers small, wliite or greenish. Termi- nal buds present. 181. Christmas Holly,—Hex opaca, Ait. Twists slender; fine-hairy at first, later smooth; light* brown. Buds small, blunt, slightly downy. lA^avc^ oval-aeute, leathery, evergreen; toaxy margins armed with mny teeth, petioles short Kare tree: usually below 20' tall m Pennsylvania.. Figure 22 WiNTKRHKHHY. 1. Twigs with berries. 2. Twig with leaves and berries. X Leaves showing upi)er and lower surfaces Teaberky. 4. Stalks with l
RMRH93GR–. Botany, an elementary text for schools. Botany. 448. Ulmus fulva. 449. Ulmvis Americana.. 450. Ulmus racemosii. very rough above and softer beneath: samara /i-% in. long, orbicular or nearly so, with the seed in the center: flowers in dense clusters. Common. aa. Leaves not very rough above: fruit oval, deeply notched at the apex. U. Americana, Linn. Common or ivhite elm. Figs. 91-95,146, 449. Talland graceful tree: leaves elliptic-oval, serrate: samara small, more or less hairy on the thin wing, the notch in the apex extending nearly to the seed: flowers hanging on slender stalks. One of the
RMRGTJPW–. Bulletin. Natural history; Natural history. 144 Illinois Natikai Histouy Sirvky Billktin QUERCUS ALBA Linnaeus White Oak The White Oak is a moderately large tree, with a tall, clear bole and a narrow crown of stout branches. The thin, bright-green leaves, 5 to i) inches long by 2 to 4 inches wide, have shallowly or deeply 7- to 9-lobed blades which, though paler, are not hairy beneath. The stout petioles are smooth and ^^ to 1 inch long. The staminate catkins are 'ijA to 3 inches long; and the bright-red pistillate flowers stand alone on very short stalks. The oval, light-brown, shiny acorns
RMREBGJ8–. The drug plants of Illinois. Botany, Medical; Botany. Tehon THE DRUG PLANTS OF ILLINOIS 27 ASGLEPIAS SYRIAGA L. Milk- weed, silkweed, cotton weed. Asclepia- daceae.—-An upright, unbranched, coarse herb with milky sap, 3 to 5 feet tall, peren- nial; rootstock horizontal, long, creeping; stems stout, simple, finely pubescent above; leaves broadly oval to oblong, 4 to 8 inches long, opposite, smooth and green above, downy and pale beneath; flowers purplish, in simple, many-flowered terminal and axillary peduncled umbels; fruit a hairy, soft-spiny pod 3 to 5 inches long, borne up- right on the r
RMRGWE8A–. Bulletin. Natural history; Natural history. 116 Illinois Xatikai. Histoky Siuvky Bii.lkti.n QUERCUS SHUMARDII Buckley Red Oak This Red Oak is a tall tree, with a broad, open head of stout, spread- ing branches. The dark-green and lustrous leaves, 6 to 8 inches long by 4 to 5 wide, which are paler beneath and have tufts of pale hairs in the axils of their veins, are deeply divided into 7, less often 5, lobes. The slender, hairless petioles are 2 to 2^/^ inches long. The slender staniinate catkins are 6 or 7 inches long, and the pistillate flowers stand singly on hairy stalks. The long-oval ac
RMREF0GB–. Common trees of Ohio : a handy pocket manual of the common and introduced trees of Ohio. Trees -- Ohio. 60 Common Trees T CHESTNUT OAK Quercus Prinus, Engelmann HE Chestnut Oak, also called Rock Oak and Tanbark Oak, is an important forest tree. The leaves are simple, alternate, stiff, 5 to 9 inches long, 2 to 4 inches wide, coarse- ly toothed along margin. The flowers are similar and the wood ranks close to White Oak. The fruit is a large acorn, maturing in one season. The nut is 1 to 1 ^2 inches long, oval, smooth, glossy, chestnut- brown. The cup is thin, deep, hairy inside, covers one-thi
RMREEDJ5–. Common weeds of the Canadian Prairies;. Weeds. A husky perennial from horizontal rootstocks, to 4 feet high, much-branched, with a milky sap. Leaves opposite, oval or ovate, 1 to 3 inches long, lighter and slightly hairy on underside. Flowers pink, in clusters at ends of branches and in leaf axils. Fruits pods, tubular, in pairs about 4 inches long, containing hairy- tipped seeds. Common in woodlands and on light sandy soils. Apocynum sibiricum Jacq. CLASPING-LEAVED DOGBANE. A perennial 1 to 2 feet high, with tough, running rootstocks. Leaves 1 to 3 inches long, oblong to ovate, pale-green,
RMRDBFCP–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. Sloe 495 appearing before the leaves in April or May, are 1.5 to 2.5 cm. across, in 3- to 5-flowered umbels on smooth, red pedicels i to 2 cm. long; the calyx-tube is ob- conic, usually red, the lobes lanceolate, glandular-toothed, hairy on the inner surface; the petals are obovate, rounded and irregularly erose, white, fading to pink. The fruit, ripening in August or September, is oval or subglobose, 2.5 to 3 cm. long, o
RMRH934B–. Botany; an elementary text for schools. Plants. POLYGONACE.E—EUPHOEBIACE^ 319 walks and in yards, and commonly mistaken for sod: leaves small, mostly oblong, entire: sepals very small, green with a broad white margin: sta- mens 5 or more: stigmas usually 3. Annual. P. er6ctum, Linn. Taller knotivecd. One ft. or more high: leaves three or four times larger, oblong or oval and obtuse. Common annual. aa. Smartweeds; flowers in terminal spikes, mostly pinkish. b. Sheaths of leaves (surrounding stem) hairy on the edge, or the margin with a spreading border, P. orientals, Linn. Prince's feather. S
RMRGWC84–. Bulletin. Natural history; Natural history. 232 Illinois Nati i:al Histouy Sikvly Bti.lktin ROBINIA PSEUDOACACIA Lixxai-us Black Locust Acacia Yellow Locust The Black Locust is a tree of only moderate size, w ith a high, narrow head of small, uptilted branches. The large leaves, usually about a foot long, are composed of an odd number of oval leaflets, ranging from T to 1!», set oppositely in pairs along the slender, somewhat hairy, and un- l)ranched petiole, which bears a single leaflet at its ti]). The fragrant, nectar- bearing flowers, with their pure-white petals and red-blotched, green
RMRDBFT3–. North American trees : being descriptions and illustrations of the trees growing independently of cultivation in North America, north of Mexico and the West Indies . Trees. 466 The Thorn Trees tree from 6 to 8 meters high, with spreading branches forming a flat-topped head; the bark is dark gray, scaly; the young twigs are reddish, long-hairy, becoming gray and smooth, and armed with stout brown spines from 3 to 7 cm. long; the trunks are often provided with numerous, much-branched spines, from 15 to 20 cm. long. The leaves are obovate-oblong or oval, from 2 to 6 cm. long and from 1.5 to 5 c
RMRG3X9F–. California range brushlands and browse plants. Browse (Animal food); Brush; Forage plants. Leaves ovate, oval, or nearly round, % inch to 2 inches long (sometimes to 4 inches on sterile shoots growing in shade), dull green and smooth above, paler and smooth or slightlv hairy beneath, entire or lobed. Flowers bell- shaped, pinkish, Vs to )i inch long; May to June. Fruit a fleshy white berry, globose, about % to % inch wide; ripen in August and September. Distribution (map shown below). This species inhabits slopes and valley flats in the foothills of the Coast Ranges, the Sierra Nevada, and t
RMRD9MCM–. Plants of New Zealand . Botany. THE VERBENA FAMILY 351 Teucpidium parvifolium (The Small-leaved Tcucrtdium). A shrub, 2ft.-5ft. in height, forming close thickets ; branches and leaves slightly hairj'. Leaves roundish or oval, (tin. long. Cal>'x bell-shaped, with 5 sharp teeth. Corolla hairy, bell-shaped, Jin.-Jin. long. PI. Dec.-Jan.. Fig. 114. Vitex lucens (^ nat. size). Genus Aviceimia. Maritime trees, with branching roots. Leaves opposite, entire, hoary. Flowers in capitate panicles, sessile, surrounded by bracts. Cal)-x 4-5-parted Corolla leathery, small, 4-5-lobed. Stamens 4, short.
RMRH11R4–. Bulletin. Gramineae -- United States; Forage plants -- United States. 98. Fig. 394. Panicum pauciflorum Kll. Sk. Bot. S. Car. i^ Oa. 1: 120.—A compuratively stout, usually tTcct, and fmally branch- ing perennial 3 to 5 dm. liigli, with hairy sheaths, narrow leaves, and small, few-llowered pan ides. Leaves smooth above, roughened beneath. .Spikelets (a, h, c) oval or oblong, 1 mm. long, the second and third glumes jiubrscent. Loose or more or less sandy and usually damji soils.—Georgia and .South ( aroliu.i. May-October.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images th
RMRDX0FX–. A spring flora for high schools. Botany. LEGUMINOSEAE (PULSE FAMILY) 83 leaflets 7 to 11, oblanceolate; flowers in a long raceme, purplish-blue; pods broad, very hairy with 5 or 6 seeds. Sandy soil. May, June.. TrifoUum; a. T. pratense, Red clover; 6, T. rcpens. White clover. TRIFOLIUM Tufted shrubs with mostly palmately, 3-foliolate leaves. Flow- ers in heads or spikes. Keel short and obtuse and the loth stamen more or less sep- arate from the others. Pods small, often included in calyx. T. pratense, Red Clover. Stems ascending, some- what hairy; leaflets oval or obovate, often notched at e
RMREFJ15–. Common weeds of the Canadian Prairies;. Weeds. Stellaria media (L.) Cyrill. COMMON CHICKWEED A prostrate annual with a line of fine white hairs on the recUning, trailing stems. Leaves broadly ovate, i to 1 inch long, on short stalks. Flowers white, i inch across, deeply cleft, the 5 petals easily mistaken for 10 separate petals. Introduced from Europe, common in lawns and gardens.. Symphoricarpos occidentalis Hook. WESTERN SNOWBERRY A perennial shrub 1 to 4 feet high, with creeping roots. Leaves almost round to oval or ovate, slightly soft-hairy beneath, 1 to 3 inches long. Flowers in dense
RMRDX0FP–. A spring flora for high schools. Botany. TrifoUum; a. T. pratense, Red clover; 6, T. rcpens. White clover. TRIFOLIUM Tufted shrubs with mostly palmately, 3-foliolate leaves. Flow- ers in heads or spikes. Keel short and obtuse and the loth stamen more or less sep- arate from the others. Pods small, often included in calyx. T. pratense, Red Clover. Stems ascending, some- what hairy; leaflets oval or obovate, often notched at end and marked on upper side by pale spots; stipules broad, bristly-pointed; flow- ers sessile in dense ovoid heads; corolla magenta to whitish. Fields and mead- ows. T. r
RMRDPNR1–. The Indiana weed book. Weeds. WEEDS OP THE MILKWEED FAMILY. 107 70. Asclepias sykiaca Jj. Common Milkweed. SilkWeted. Wild Cotton. (P. N. 2.) Stem stout, soft-downy, usually simple, -3-5 feet high; leaves opposite, oblong or oval, short-stalked, densely hairy beneath, 4-!> inches long, 2-1 inches wide. Flowers dull purple, the hoods short, obtuse with a tooth each side of the short horn, l'ods robust, 3-5 inches long, the outside woolly and bearing numerous short soft tufts or warts. Seeds brown, flat, } inch long, with an abundance of silky hairs. (Pig. 72.) Common along roadsides, fence
RMRJ1X5H–. Manual of the mosses of North America [microform]. Mosses; Mousses. â "TT 1 v^ i 1. t 170 BRYACE^E. [Or</io<rtc/m?n. -t 13. O. Hallii, Sulliv. & Lcsq. Plants small, loosely ccspi- tose; slo.ns siTn])le, divided l)y basilar iiiiiovations: leaves spreading, linear-lanceolate, Ijlunt at the apex ; borders revo- lute from the base to the middle; upper areolation dense, with round papillose cells; i)ericha!tial leaves similar: calyptra large, slin'htly hairy, covering the capsule to its base: ca])side sub- im.nK'ised, oval, on a short thick ])edicel entirely coveret- ))y the tube o
RMRGAEY1–. Bulletin (Pennsylvania Department of Forests and Waters), no. 33-35. Forests and forestry. 94. a 99 U 00 03 CO tS . w , a> fl o S ft PR'S « ^ TS fr4 93 a; .a -M . tl) p Pi fe . ^«H ^ S OJ A O O S5 O si â¢< be â <5 » en 95 239. Persimmon,âDiospyros virginiana, L. Twigs bitter-astringent, gray to red-brown, usually pale minute-hairy. Buds broad-ovate, acute, apprest, 2 glossy dark brown scales visible; terminal absent. Leaves oval-acute, entire; base cuneate to cordate; 4"-6" long; dark green glossy above, often hairy below; sears have one near-black bundle-scar. Flowers
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