CyPEIPEDIUM HIRSUTUM DELPHIN^IUM CONSOLIDA. 25 



Cypripedium hirsutum Mill. Orchid family (Orchidaceae). 



Synonym. — ( 'ypripedium pubescens Willd. 



Cypripedium; large yellow ladies-slipper; yellow moccasin-flowery American 

 valerian. 



Herb, 1 to 2 feet high, native in woods and thickets from Nova Scotia south to 



Alabama and west to Nebraska and Missouri. 

 Parts used. — Rhizome and roots (official). 



Cypripedium parviflorum Salisb. ' Orchid family (Orchidaceae), 



Cypripedium; small yellow ladies-slipper. 



Herb, 1 to 2 feet high; native in woods and thickets from British America to 

 Georgia, Missouri, and Oregon. 



Parts used. — Rhizome and roots (official). 

 Cypripedium pubescens Willd. Same as Cypripedium hirsiitum. 



Cytisus scoparius (L.) Link. Pea family (Fabaceae). 



Synonym. — SarofJiamnus scoparius Wimm. 

 Scoparius; broom; green broom; Scotch broom. 



Stiff, wiry plant, 3 to 5 feet high; naturalized from Europe; growing in dry, sandy 

 soil from Massachusetts to Virginia and becoming common in many places in 

 the northwestern United States. 



Part used. — Tops (official). 



Daisy, oxeye. See Chrysanthemum leucanthemum. 

 Daisy, white. See Chi-ysanthemum leucanthemum. 

 Daisy-fleabane. See Erigeron philadelphicus. 

 Damiana. See Tiirnerdmicrophylla. 

 Dandelion. See Taraxacum officinale. 



Daphne mezereum L. Mezereon family (Daphnaceae). 



Synony)ii. — Mezereum offichiarum C. A. Mey. 



Mezereum; mezereon; spurge-laurel; paradise-plant; spiirge-olive. 



A very hardy shrub, introduced from Europe and escaped from cultivation in 

 Canada and New England. 



Part used.— Bark of this and of other European species of Daphne (official). 

 Datura stramonium L. Potato family (Solanaceae). 



Stramonium; jimson-weed; Jamestown- weed; thorn-apple; apple-of-Peru. 

 Poisonous weed; annual, 2 to 5 feet high; introduced from the Tropics, and 



occurring in fields and waste places throughout the United States, with the 



exception of the North and West. 



Paus K.sfrf.— Leaves (official); seeds (official in U. S. P. 1890). 



Daucus carota L. Parsley family (Apiaceae). 



AVild carrot; Queen- Anne' s-lace. 



Biennial herb, 2 to 3 feet high; naturalized from Europe; common almost 

 throughout the United States, growing in old fields and along roadsides. 



Parts used.— B.oot, fruit, and leaves (nonofficial). 

 Deerberry. See GauUheria procumbens and Mitchella repens. 

 Deer-laurel. See Rhododendron maximum. 

 Deer's-tongue. See Trilisa odoratissima. 

 Deerwood. See Ostrya virginiana. 

 Deerwort-boneset. See Eupatorium ageratoides. 



Delphinium consolida L. Crowfoot family (Ranunculaceae) . 



Field-larkspur; knight's-spur; lark-heel. 



An annual herb, about 2 feet- high; naturalized from Europe, and found in waste 

 places from southern New Jersey and Pennsylvania southward. The indig- 



