108 



THE INDIANA AYE ED BOOK. 



noonday sun. God pity him .who sees no beauty in a wild morning- 

 glory, fresh from its natal bud ! 



71. IPOMCKA PANDUKATA L. Wild. Sweet-potato. Man-of-the-Earth. (!'. 



N. 2.) 



Stems long and stout, 2-12 feet long, trailing or twining from a huge 

 fleshy r<x)t : leaves broadly ovate, pointed, heart-shaped at base, 2-0 inches 

 h.iig, sometimes constricted at sides so as to be fiddle-shaped. Flower- 

 stalks long, l-r> flowered; corolla funnel-form, 2-3 inches long, white or 

 with purplish stripes in the throat. Capsule egg-shaped, 2-4 seeded, the 

 setnls densely woolly on the margins. (Fig. 73.) 



Common in dry or sandy soils, especially in river bottom fields, 

 though often in uplands. May-Sept. The vine or visible part 



gives little sign of the great 

 amount of available food stored 

 in the fleshy root which is often 

 two or more feet long and some- 

 times weighs 35 pounds. Such a 

 root, buried deep in the soil, 

 sends out many runners where 

 the plant has fairly established 

 itself and makes it very difficult 

 to exterminate. Remedies : 

 deep cutting and salting ; re- 

 peated mowing for two or three 

 years. 



The true wild morning-glories, 

 of which there are three species 



Fig. 73. Flowering branch; a, root; b, fruit; c. seed 1H the State, are mudl leSS 



troublesome as weeds, though oft- 

 en occurring in numbers in lowland sandy fields. The most com- 

 mon of these are the small white-flowered species (7. lacunosa L.) 

 with heart-shaped leaves and white corolla about ^ inch long, and 

 the ivy-leaved morning-glory (/. hederacea Jacq.), the leaves deeply 

 3-lobed and flowers H inches long, light blue or purple with white 

 tube. Both are annuals and can be destroyed by pulling or cutting 

 before seeding. 



72. CONVOLVULUS SKPIUM L. Hedge Bindweed. Bracted Bindweed. 



Devil's Vine. (P. N. 1.) 



Stems widely trailing or twining, 3-10 feet long; leaves slender- 

 stalked, triangular or arrow-shaped, pointed. 2-f> inches long. Flowers 

 about 2 inches long, solitary on long axillary stalks, pink with white 

 stripes or wholly white ; calyx with two large bracts f inch long at base. 



a 



