178 COMPOSITE. 



A stout perennial, 3 to 5 feet high. Leaves large, velvety-tomentose 

 Ijeneatb, denticulate, the radical ones ovate, tapering to a petiole, the cau- 

 line ones j^artly clasping. Heads solitary at the summit of corymbose pe- 

 duncles, yellow, a]3pearing late in summer. 



Habitat. — A native of the Eastern Continent, but naturalized here, 

 growing along roadsides and in waste places. 



Part Used. — The root— United States Pharmacopoiia. 



Constituents. — A little volatile oil, an acrid resin, a bitter principle, 

 ■waxy matter, and inulin, the last-named being a substance somewhat re- 

 sembling starch. 



Preparations. — It is generally administered in decoction, though there 

 are commercial extracts, etc. 



Medical Prop)erties and Uses. — Elecampane was formerly considered 

 diaphoretic, diuretic, expectorant, and emmenagogue, but at present it is. 

 little esteemed except among the laity. It is probably stimulant and tonic, 

 and given in hot decoction caj)able of producing some of -the effects attrib- 

 uted to it. 



AMBROSIA.— Rag-Weed. 



Character of the Genus. — Sterile and fertile flowers in different heada 

 upon the same plant, the former in spikes or racemes and the latter in the 

 axils of the leaves or at the base of the sterile racemes or spikes. Sterile 

 heads of 5 to 20, funnel-form, staminate flowers ; involucre flatfish or top- 

 shaped, of 7 to 12 scales united into a cup. Fertile flowers : involucre 

 globose-ovoid, oblong or turbinate, closed, pointed, usually armed with 4 

 to 8 tubercles or horns in a single series, 1-flowered. Achenia ovoid ; pap- 

 pus absent. 



Herbs, or rarely shrubby plants, with opposite or alternate, lobed or 

 dissected leaves, and inconspicuous greenish or yellowish flowers. 



Ambrosia trifida Linne. — Great Rag-Weed. 



Description. — Sterile heads in single or panicled racemes or spikes, the 

 involucre regular, 3-ribbed. Fruit with a conical-pointed apex, 6-ribbed, 

 the ribs terminating in cristate tubei'cles. 



Stem stout and hairy, 4 to 12 feet high. Leaves rough and hairy, 

 deeply 3-lobed, the lobes oval-lanceolate, serrate, acuminate. An annual, 

 blooming in August or September. 



Habitat. — In low rich grounds and along streams from Canada to Geor- 

 gia and westward. 



Ambrosia arte misiaefo I ia Linne.— 7?ar/-TT'eefZ, Hog-Weed. 



Desci'iption. — Sterile heads like the preceding, but with the involucre 

 not ribbed. Fertile flowers solitary or clustered toward the base of the sterile 

 spikes or racemes, or in the axils of the upper leaves. Fruit globose or 

 obovoid, nearly glabrous, pointed, armed with 6 short acute spines or 

 teeth. 



