. 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. 2342. Solanum 'Wendlandii. Much reduced. or less across: fr. 2 in. or more across, flattened on the ends, corrugated, scarlet, showy. Porto Rico. 19:1988. 1871:521. 20, p. 249. 18a8, p. 78. Perhaps a form of S. aculeatissimum, Jacq.—S. cornw(w7?i,. Lam. (S. Fontanesia- uum, Hort.). Annual, 1


. 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. 2342. Solanum 'Wendlandii. Much reduced. or less across: fr. 2 in. or more across, flattened on the ends, corrugated, scarlet, showy. Porto Rico. 19:1988. 1871:521. 20, p. 249. 18a8, p. 78. Perhaps a form of S. aculeatissimum, Jacq.—S. cornw(w7?i,. Lam. (S. Fontanesia- uum, Hort.). Annual, 1-2 ft., very spiny, with pinnatifid Ivs., the lobes again lobed and obtuse; fls. golden yellow: fr. small, spiny. Mex. III. 22:311.—S. cHspum, Ruiz & Pav. Erect or half-climbing woody shrub, with simple ovate-oblong entire or undulate and large clusters of pale purple red-ribbed fls. an inch across. Chile. 3795. 18:1516. :1959. Gn. 44:919; 51, p. 230. Half-hardy very beautiful climber.—S. Dulcamara, Linn. Bittersweet. Scrambling vine of the Old World, but naturalized about dwellings and along roads and even in swamps: Ivs. cord ate-ovate, some of them ear-lobed at the base : fls. small, nodding, star-like, blue, succeeded by showy oblong red shining berries.—A', pensile, Sendt. Climber, allied to S. Dulcamara: Ivs. cordate-ovate, simple and entire: fls. blue, 1 in. across, deeply lobed, in long panicles or racemes: berry globose, size of a pea. purple. Guiana and the Amazon. 7062.—"iS. Pierreanutn. South America. Very interest- ing and pretty for its fruits striped different ; Fran- ceschi. L. H. B. S0LDAN£LLA (Latin, a small coin; referring to the shape of the Ivs.). Pritmddrew. About 4 species of alpine plants 2-3 in. high, with nodding, funnel-shaped, fringed flowers of violet or purplish blue, and about %- Ya in. across. Soldanellas are amongst the most famous flowers of the Alps, though not the commonest. S.


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