350 - _BOTANICON sINICUM. 
Ch., XVIII, 4:—Hiang p‘u. Rude drawing. T; ypha 
is evidently intended. The figure in the Aiu huang [LIII, 4 
12, sub p‘w sun (sprouts) } is also Typha. ; : 
Lour., Fl. cockin., 675 :—Typha latifolia, L. In paludi- 
bus Chinze et Cochinchinee. Sinice: pu hoam. 3 
Tatar., Cat., 46:—Jliang p‘u, Typha Bungeana— > 
P. Swiru, 223. 4 
Typha angustifolia, 1.., is a common plant in the marshes 
near Peking. Popular name p‘u tsz‘. 
Cust. Med., p. 128 (109) :—P*‘u huang exported 1885 
from Chin kiang 4 piculs,—p. 204 (282), from Ning po 
0.47 picul_—p. 374 (466), from Canton hiang p'u ts‘ao 
0.05 picul.—P*u huang is also exported from Han kow. See 
Hank, Med., 34. 
Amen exot., 900 :—3§ fo, vulgo kamma, gramen cypeti- 
num palustre.—It does not seem that KaMprer means _ 
— Typha, although gamma is the Japanese name for Typha. : 
Phon zo, XXXIV, 18-20 :—3# F#¥, Typha japonica, Miqy — 
and 7. angustifolia, I, a 
Smes., Ccon., 7 :— Typha angustifolia, L. Japonice: 
gama. Sinice: ¥f§. Usus pro fomite. = 
197.— $k ku. P., XIX, 16. 2; aes 
Comp. Classics, 350. if 
Pie lu:—Ku. Only the name. The root, the sprouts” y 
and the leaves are used in medicine. ; a 
Han Pao-sugne [10th cent. ]:—The ku ken (root) ae: 
in water. The leaves of the plant resemble those of the : : 
sugar-cane, The old root is contorted and thick. In te a 
summer a fungus (( kan) is produced in it, which 
edible and is called ¥— JE ku ts‘ai (vegetable). In the 
