PASSIFLORA 



PASSION FLOWER P 



pastinAca I r ti 



1 1 



le 1 



for 



1 I a cool cl t t e 



I es 1 f, d fo r lee 



It was It at d b f 



r n w 1 1 f ro i 1 



1 Iti li 1 1 



PATCHOULI PLANT see 

 PATIENCE. Patiencp Do 



PATRINIA lE. L. ratrin, 1742-1814, French traveler 

 in Siln-rial. \'a leria iiacfii . About 10 sjjecies of yellow- 

 or wliite-Hil., raleriau-like. hardy herbaceous peren- 

 nials friiin t-\rra-tropical Asia. They grow a foot or so 

 lii^rii i,),,,,ni ill carlv Slimmer and may have about 20 

 Mil, ill lU III -ill-;, r- _' HI. a.-ross. Two species are of- 

 111. .1 I. . . . - I ■■ . ii . -r plants. 



r r I I I - i from the other 8 genera in 



th.i \ :ili n III iiiiii I I :iiiii. lis and mostly yellow lis. 



has piiqili- tls. Patni, - _ ;-",.r loosely villous : 



Ivs. oner <ir twin- i r r. the radical ones 



rarely entin.-; cynii^ ivnt i mii'led: bracts nar- 

 row, free, but sometimes a]i]ieiina^'ed with a large, 2- 

 nerved and iietted-veined bracteule which is appressed 

 to the fr. : corolla-tube very short: lobes 5, spreading: 

 sterile loi-ules of the fruit nearly as large or larger than 

 the fertile ones. 



A. Stem glabrous. 



scabiosaefdlia, Fisch. Radical Ivs. ovate or oblong, in- 

 cised-serrate and lyrate : cauline Ivs. pinnatifid, the 

 loljes lanceolate-linear, acute, terminal one longest: lis. 

 vellow: corymb looselv subpaniculate: fr. 3-cornered. 

 bahuria, L.B.C. 14:1340. 



AA. Stem villous. 



villdsa, Juss. Radical Ivs. villous, petiolate, auricled: 

 cauline Ivs. sessile, dentate: corymb pauicled. Japan. 

 — The plant offered by the Yokohama Nursery Co. is 

 said to have white fls. 



PAULLlNIA ( probably after Simon Paulli, 1608-1680, 

 priifiss..!- .if aiiat.iiny, surgery and botany at Copenha- 

 L'en I . s,ii,nnl,ir, ,f . P. thaUctrifoUa is a handsome stove 

 fiiliai;!- i.laiit. with much divided Ivs. somewhat resem- 

 bling a nie. maidenhair, or a davallia. The fls. are in- 

 conspicuous, pinkish and borne in autumn. In the early 

 seventies, when the interest in foliage plants was at its 

 height, this plant was widely distributed. It used to be 



PAL-LOWXIA ITl'i 



1 t 11 f r 1 1 rgr o tl p 11 r 



1 f e ol 1 tl o es 1 r r I t 1 o ce 



nt t r 1 1 "■ th top f gl tl) tul s II 



1 r tro g C ^\ Ol r t I \c 1 



tforl rge cj a 1 ta 1 les II Tl jo i t, 



I 1 f 1 t I tl ) re laded 



1 1 I I 1 1 c tt n^,s of ) ng 



I 1 1 tl c t 1 are p nel e 1 



1 I a I n ke hai dson e 



I I p tt f, 1 a Jnfe 



1 I I toft tl ri hlro 



II 1 tl a I b r 1 SI kl nt of 



t 80 pe tl t op 



cultivated 



Passion I 



PAULOWNIA I fi I \.i 1 lulowna, princess of the 

 \(tli ii I s ' I Ornamental decidu 



oils tt iinilar to Catalpa \vith 



ani) I and pale \ lolet large 



tls 1 \_lo\( in shape, in ter 



min il I I I the l\s The species 



m tultn tl 1 1 liiih birl\ in shiltered positions as 

 far north as Miss but the fl buds are usualh killed in 

 winter and it does not flovitr n giilarh north ot N(w 

 York city. As an ornamental foliage plant it may be 

 grown as" far north as Montreal, where it is killed to the 

 ground everv winter, but throws up from the root vigor- 

 ous shoots attaining 10-14 ft. .with Ivs. over 1 ft. and occa- 

 sionally even 2 ft. long. If used as a foliage plant and 



