A GUIDE TO THE WILD FLOWERS 



(X) 



bluish beneath, i ^-3 inches long. Flowers in a stalked clus- 

 ter, yellow-green, tinged with purple. Quebec to Manitoba 

 south, mostly in the mountains to No. Car., west to Ohio and 

 Mo. May. A related species, Loniccra Sulliz'antii, with large 

 pale yellow flowers, is found from Ontario to Wis. and 

 Minn., south to Ohio and Tenn. 



196. Trumpet Honeysuckle. Lonicera sempervirens. High 

 climbing and with nearly or quite smooth stems. Leaves very 

 bluish-green beneath, dark green above. Flower with a long 

 tube, split at the top into 5 nearly regular parts, i-i^ inches 

 long, yellow or scarlet. Me. to Fla., N. H., Neb. and Tex. 

 Summer. Fig. 196. Sometimes the Japanese honeysuckle 

 Loniccra japonica, a very fragrant garden species, escapes 

 from cultivation on the Atlantic seaboard. Some of its flowers 

 are not terminal, and all its leaves are stalked. 



197. Uppermost leaves decidedly stalked. 



Leaves deeply lobed Hop no. 198 



Leaves faintly, or not at all lobed 



Flowers very numerous, in small compact heads 



Climbing hempweed no. 199 



Flowers not numerous, never in compact heads 



Lobes of the tubular flower nearly erect . . Sand vine no. 200 



Lobes of the tubular flower decidedly spreading 



Running Milkweed no. 201 



