loo PLANTS GROWING IN MOIST SOIL. 



the love of Heaven, have a look at some of your species and if 

 you can get me some seed, do." 



Professor Darwin did prove successfully what he believed. 

 In each flower the two sets of stamens and the pistil are of 

 different lengths ; and in order to effect fertilization, the 

 stigma must receive the pollen from stamens that are the same 

 length as itself. As in dimorphous flowers, this is one of the 

 most ingenious devices to guard against self-fertilization. 



The plant is not related, as its common name would imply, to 

 the other loosestrifes, which are members of the primrose fam- 

 ily. It is a European, very lovely in appearance, which has 

 taken kindly to our wet soggy soil. 



CARRION- FLOWER. CAT-BRIER. 



Smilax herbacea. 



Flowers: small; imperfect; growing in umbels. Perianth: bell-shaped, of 

 six divisions. Stamens : s\x. /'/j-^//; one, with three diverging stigmas. Frziit : 

 a blue-black berry ; glaucous. Leaves : almost round at the base, pointed at 

 the apex ; nerved. Stent : smooth ; erect ; climbing. 



In the season of its bloom the odour of this plant serves to 

 identify it with one of its common names. As the flowers fall, 

 however, it becomes less obnoxious and is one of the first to 

 foretell by its rich, changing colouring the approach of the au- 

 tumn. Its near relative, S. rotundifolia, is not so partial to 

 moist soil and is well-known along the roadsides and fields. 



HEADOW PARSNIP. 



Thaspiian bar'binbde. 



FAMILY COLOUR ODOUR RANGE TIME OF BLOOM 



Parsley. Yellow. Scentless. Northward to Mirm. May^ June. 



South to Arkansas. 



Flowers : very small : growing in umbels, or compound umbels. Leaves : al- 

 ternate ; twice or thrice compound, with long, narrow, coarsely toothed leaflets. 

 Stem : tall ; hollow ; with soft, fine hairs along the joints. 



The parsleys are a family that we should all learn to know, if 

 for no other reason than that the root and seeds of many of 



