\ THE STANDARD CYCLOPEDIA OF HORTICULTURE THE MACMILLAN COMPANY NEW YORK • BOSTON • CHICAGO ATLANTA • SAN FRANCISCO MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED LONDON • BOMBAY • CALCUTTA MELBOURNE THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD, TORONTO THE JH^L STANDARD CYCLOPEDIC OF HORTICULTURE A DISCUSSION, FOR THE AMATEUR, AND THE PROFESSIONAL AND COMMERCIAL GROWER, OF THE KINDS, CHARACTERISTICS AND METHODS OF CULTIVATION OF THE SPECIES OF PLANTS GROWN IN THE REGIONS OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA FOR ORNAMENT, FOR FANCY, FOR FRUIT AND FOR VEGETABLES; WITH KEYS TO THE NATURAL FAMILIES AND GENERA, DESCRIPTIONS OF THE HORTI- CULTURAL CAPABILITIES OF THE STATES AND PROVINCES AND DEPENDENT ISLANDS, AND SKETCHES OF EMINENT HORTICULTURISTS BY L. H. BAILEY Illustrated with Colored Plates, Four Thousand Engravings in the Text, and Ninety-six Full-page Cuts IN SIX VOLUMES VOL. VI— S-Z AND SUPPLEMENT PAGES 3043-3639. FIGS. 3516-4056 THIRD EDITION THE MACMILLAN COMPANY LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO., LTD. 1919 The rights of reproduction and of translation are strictly reserved ** **< ' • " •- • ' ' '". » •* • " e* ? 2 c'*e i."8 ' V. fo COPYRIGHT, 1902 BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY REWRITTEN, ENLARGED AND RESET COPYRIGHT, 1917 BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY Set Up and Electrotyped. Published March 28, 1917 Reprinted May, 1917; March, 1919 AGRJC. DEPT, J. HORACE MCFABLAND COMPAHY HARBISBURO, PENNSYLVANIA FULL-PAGE PLATES Facing page CI. Well-filled mixed border, with lilacs predominating (in color) . Frontispiece CII. Sambucus canadensis, the American sweet or summer-flowering elder . . 3068 CIII. Greenhouse group of parent and hybrid sarracenias . . ... . . 3084 CIV. Seed-growing in California. — Drying and turning lettuce stalks on the sheets; cutting onion heads (Photographs by C. C. Morse & Co.) . . . 3134 CV. Solidago ulmifolia, one of the Common goldenrods 3187 CVI. Spinach. — A plant of Long Season variety; spinach field near Norfolk, Virginia. 3205 CVII. Effective shrubbery border. — Spireas in good form 3235 CVIII. Strawberry.— The Climax variety (in color) - . . 3260 CIX. Sweet peas of the Spencer or waved type 3284 CX. Commercial field of sweet potatoes in the Middle South 3296 CXI. Syringa (lilac), Madame Lemoine 3325 CXII. A good type of commercial tomato. — Brinton Best (in color) .... 3352 CXIII. Tsuga canadensis. — The hemlock spruce of the northeastern United States and Canada 3383 CXIV. Tulip varieties bf the Tulipa Gesneriana type (in color) 3402 CXV. A market-garden of the modern type nea"r a city, with overhead irrigation . 3437 CXVI. Viburnum tomentosum . . . . . . . . .. . 3458 CXVTI. Victoria and nymphaea in a good setting 3480 C XVIII. Washingtonia filifera var. robusta . .~ ....... 3506 CXIX. Wisteria sinensis hi a striking effect 3517 CXX. Zinnia, Giant Yellow and Scarlet . . . . 3549 SUPPLEMENT Page General statement; statistics of the Cyclopedia 3553 Collaborators in the making of the Cyclopedia 3555 Cultivator's guide to the practice articles . 3562 Additional species 3565 New combinations in Latin names 3574 Finding-list of trade names 3575 Index to the six volumes, of synonyms, vernacular names, and others not in regular alphabetic sequence , 3611 (v) 497722 SABAL (possibly a native name in South America, but the author of the genus does not explain). Pal- maceae, tribe Coryphese. Spineless palms, low, tall, or almost stemless. Trunk slender or robust, ringed or nearly smooth, creeping or erect, ascending at the base, clothed above with dead If .-sheaths: Ivs. terminal, orbicular or cune- ate at the base, flabellately multifid; segms. linear, bifid, filamentous on the margins, induplicate in the bud; rachis short or long; ligule short, adnate to the rachis; peti- ole concave above, the margins smooth, acute ; sheath short : spadices large, elongated, decom- pound, at first erect, the branches and branchlets slender, recurving, pendent; spathes sheathing the branches and peduncles tubular, oblique at the throat: bracts and bractlets minute: fls. small, glabrous, white or green: frs. small, globose, black, the short style basal . — Spe- cies probably 20, if Inodes is not sepa- rated. Fla. to Ven- ezuela, and in Mex. Here belongs the palmetto or cabbage palm of the south- ern states. The best botanical ac- count of the genus is Beccari's, Le Palmae Americane della tribu delle Coryphese, pp. 10- 83 (1907). Most of the species can be cult, in the tem- perate house, but any that may come into the trade from S. Amer. would re- quire stove condi- tions.