The toad-flax may 
or may not be fragrant 
according to the season. 
The late autumn blos- 
soms are generally faintly la 
odorous, but a cluster of the Va 
earliest bloom is redolent. The ss 
larger Swelactna is also some- 
what whimsical. Perhaps the too / 
fastidious nostril might take ex- 
ception to the elder and the cor- 4 FRAGRANT GRoup (“‘PyROLAs”). 
al-root as hardly entitled to the 
attribute of fragrance, relegating them to a front seat, perhaps, 
among a scented group deservedly in bad odor, and which, more- 
