CYPRIPEDIUM HIRSUTUM DELPHINIUM CONSOLIDA. 25 



Cypripedium hirsutum Mill. Orchid family (Orchidaceae). 



Synonym.. — Cypripedium pubescens Willd. 



Cypripedium; large yellow ladies-slipper; yellow moccasin-flower; American 



valerian. 

 Herb, 1 to 2 feet high, native in woods and thickets from Nova Scotia south to 



Alabama and west to Nebraska and Missouri. 

 Parts used. — Ehizome and roots (official). 

 Cypripedium parviflorum Salisb. Orchid family (Orchidaceae). 



Cypripedium; small yellow ladies-slipper. 

 Herb, 1 to 2 feet high; native in woods and thickets from British America to 



Georgia, Missouri, and Oregon. 

 Parts used. — Ehizome and roots (official). 

 Cypripedium pubescens Willd. Same as Cypripedium hirsutum. 



Cytisus scoparius (L. ) Link. Pea family (Fahaceae). 



Synonym. — Sarothamnus scoparius Wimm. 

 Scoparius; broom; green broom; Scotch broom. 

 Stiff, wiry plant, 3 to 5 feet high; naturalized from Europe; growing in dry, sandy 



soil from Massachusetts to Virginia and becoming common in many places in 



the northwestern United States. 

 Part used. — Tops (official). 



Daisy, oxeye. See Chrysanthemum leucanthemum. 



Daisy, white. See Chrysanthemum leucanthemum. 



Daisy-fleabane. See Erigeron philadelphicus. 



Damiana. See Turnera microphylla. 



Dandelion. See Taraxacum officinale. 



Daphne mezereum L. Mezereon family (Daphnaceae). 



Synonym. — Mezereum officinarum C. A. Mey. 



Mezereum; mezereon; spurge-laurel; paradise-plant; spurge-olive. 



A very hardy shrub, introduced from Europe and escaped from cultivation in 

 Canada and New England. 



Part used. — Bark of this and of other European species of Daphne (official). 

 Datura stramonium L. Potato family (Solanaceae). 



Stramonium; jimson-weed; Jamestown-weed; thorn-apple; apple-of-Peru. 



Poisonous weed; annual, 2 to 5 feet high; introduced from the Tropics, and 

 occurring in fields and waste places throughout the United States, with the 

 exception of the North and West. 



Paris used. — Leaves (official); seeds (official in U. S. P. 1890). 

 Daucus carota L. Parsley family (Apiaceae). 



Wild carrot; Queen- Anne' s-lace. 



Biennial herb, 2 -to 3 feet high; naturalized from Europe; common almost 

 throughout the United States, growing in old fields and along roadsides. 



Parts used. — Eoot, fruit, and leaves (nonofficial). 

 Deerberry. See Gaultheria procumbens and Mitchella repens. 

 Deer-laurel. See Rhododendron 'maximum. 

 Deer's-tongue. See Trilisa odoratissima. 

 Deerwood. See Ostrya virginiana. 

 Deerwort-boneset. See Eupatorium ageratoides. 

 Delphinium consolida L. Crowfoot family (Ranunculaceae) . 



Field-larkspur; knight' s-spur: lark-heel. 



An annual herb, about 2 feet high; naturalized from Europe, and found in waste 

 places from southern New Jersey and Pennsylvania southward. The indig- 



