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ALBERT R. MARK 
LIBRARY 
CORRELL QNIV. 


ALBERT R. MANN 
LIBRARY 


New YorK STATE COLLEGES 
OF 
AGRICULTURE AND Home ECoNomICcs 


AT 


CoRNELL UNIVERSITY 


wii 


Cornell University 


Library 


The original of this book is in 
the Cornell University Library. 


There are no known copyright restrictions in 
the United States on the use of the text. 


http://www. archive.org/details/cu31924002823742 


2 BY gk or 
'W. S. BLATCRLEY 


i 


New Hark 
State Callege of Agriculture 


At Gornell University 
Ithaca, NB. 


Library 


Tue InpiaNaA WEED Book ° 


By W. S. BLATCHLEY 


Author of ‘‘Gleanings from Nature,’’ ‘‘A Nature Wooitg,’’ ‘‘Boulder Reveries,"* 
‘*Woodland Idyls,’’ ‘“The Coleoptera of Indiana,’’ etc: 


*“Up there came a flower, 
The people said, a weed.”” 
—Tennyson. 


INDIANAPOLIS: 
THE NATURE PUBLISHING COMPANY 
1912. 


“Tf I knew 

Only the herbs and simples of the wood, 
Itue, cinquefoil, gill, vervain and agrimony, 
Blue-vetch and trillium, hawkweed, sassatras,' 
Milkweeds and murky brakes, quaint pipes and sundew, 
And rare and virtuous roots, which in these woods 
Draw untold juices from the common earth, 
Untold, unknown, and I could surely spell 
Their fragrance, and \their chemistry apply 

a hd By sweet affinities to human flesh, 

‘ Driving the foe and.stablishing, the friend— 
O, that were much, and I could be a part 
Of the round day, related to the sun ~! 
And planted world, and full executor 
Of their imperfect functions. 
But these young scholars, who invade our hills, 
Bold as the engineer who fells the wood, 
And travelling often in the cut he makes, 
Love not the flower they. pluck, and know it not, 
And all their botany is Latin names.”—Hmerson. 


SB 
Co I oe. 
Us {5 


pee 


ETE) 


Copyright, 1912. 
By W. S. BuatcHury. 


@ 20616 


Pe \“How ineffably vast and how hopelessly infinite is the study of na- 
ture! If a mere dilletante observer like myself—a saunterer who gathers 
posies and chronicles butterflies by the wayside for the pure love of them 
—were to tell even all that he has noticed in passing of the mariners and 
habits of a single weed—of its friends and its enemies, its bidden guests 
and its dreaded foes, its attractions and its defenses, its little life history 
and the wider life history of its race—he would fill a whole book up with 
what he knows about that one little neglected flower; and yet he would 
have found out after all but a small fraction of all that could be known 
about it, if all were ever knowable.”’—Grant Alien, 


PREFACE. 


“Tough thistles choked the fields and killed the corn, 
And an unthrifty crop of weeds was borne.”—Dryden. 


Long has it been said that ‘‘An ill weed grows apace,’’ yet few 
are the books that tell us how to check that growth. The wild 
plants which dwell most closely with us, those with which we are 
most familiar, are many of them ‘‘weeds,’’ yet of them and their 
history we know but little. Whence came they? How did they 
get here? What, if any, are their uses? What is their place 
among other plants in the great scheme of Nature?’ How can we 
best control or get rid of them? ‘Those are the questions which 
we endeavor to answer in this book on Indiana weeds. 

By the U. S. Department of Agriculture it has been estimated 
that to crop and meadow lands weeds cause an average annual 
loss of one dollar per acre. As at least two-thirds of the area of 
Indiana is comprised of such lands it follows that the annual loss 
in this State is $15,509,330 from weeds alone. This great loss 
falls almost wholly upon the farmer. and it is for him, therefore, 
that this book has been especially written. In the simplest man- 
ner possible we have endeavored to describe the worst weeds of 
the State, show their place among other plants and give the most 
practicable methods for their control or eradication. 

While the average farmer spends most of his years in fighting 
weeds, he knows too little about them. A man is not considered 
much of a carpenter unless he knows the different kinds of lum- 
ber and the uses to which each can best be put; nor can he be- 
come much of a printer unless he gets acquainted with the dif- 
ferent forms of type and learns how hest to set them for the most 
effective display. Why, then, should not the farmer strive to un- 
derstand the true character of each of those plants which it is his 
especial duty to either cultivate or extirpate? The close study of 
soils, fertilizers, weeds, live stock and other factors of the farm 
is rapidly raising the science of husbandry to a plane where it is 
no longer regarded as irksome drudgery, but as one of the highest 
callings of a free and intellectual people. Just as the old Roman 


(8) 


4 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Emperor, Diocletian, was most ‘content while fighting the weeds 
in his cabbage patch, so all other gardeners and farmers are ‘per- 
forming man’s noblest duty, when they are endeavoring to make 
two blades of grass grow where but one has grown before. And 
especially is this true if that one was only a weed. 

Not only for the farmers but also for the schools, where the 
future farmers will be educated, has the book been prepared. A 
farm-boy and a teacher has the writer been, and knows somewhat, 
therefore, the needs of both. {| While to the minds of most people 
weeds and poetry may seem to have little in common, the average 
boy or girl of 15 or thereabouts delights in an apt quotation, a 
legend or a bit of history which will illuminate the subject in 
hand. (A little poetry and folk-lore, therefore, has been added 
here and there to give a zest to the work. The farmer, if he be a 
disciple of Gradgrind and so content only with facts, can blow 
this off as froth and drink in only the more substantial draught 
which lies below. 

In this connection we cannot do better than to once again quote 
Grant Allen, who says: ‘‘Our thoughts about nature are often 
too largely interwoven with hard technicalities concerning rotate 
eorollas and pedicellate racemes; and I for my part am not 
ashamed to confess that I like sometimes to see the dry light of 
science diversified with some will-o’-the-wisp of pure poetical imag- 
ination. After all, these things too are themselves matters for the 
highest science; and that kind of scientific man who cannot recog- 
nize their use and interest. is himself as yet but a one-sided crea- 
ture, a chemical or biological Gradgrind, still spelling away at the 
weak and beggarly elements of knowledge, instead of skimming 
the great book of nature easily through with a free glance from 
end to end. Surely there are more things in heaven and earth 
than are dreamed of in Gradgrind’s philosophy !’’ 

* ‘ * 


“Wayside songs and meadow blossoms; nothing perfect, nothing rare; 
Every poet’s ordered garden yields a hundred flowers more fair; 
Master-singers know a music richer far beyond compare. 


Yet the reaper in the harvest, ‘mid the burden and the heat, 
Huis a half remembered ballad, finds the easy cadence sweet— 
Sees the very blue of heaven in the corn-bloom at his feet.” 

—Van Dyke. 
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA, Feb, 20, 1912, 


ON WEEDS IN GENERAL. 


From the day that man with a crooked stick first tickled the 
ground about the roots of some favorite plant which he desired to 
grow more rapidly, and pulled from around it other plants that it 
might have a better supply of air, moisture and sunshine—from 
that dav weeds have existed upon the face of earth. Before that 
day each and every plant was on an equality, fighting its own 
battles in its own way, spreading far and wide by rootstocks and 
seed its kind, evolving year by vear some property, some character 
which would the better enable it to succeed in the great struggle 
for existence. But when man for the first time began to domesti- 
eate certain plants—te help them fight the battle of life—to set 
off certain areas in which he wished them alone to grow—all 
plants which were in any way harmful to his plans he called 
“‘weeds.’’ From that day to this he has had to fight them, and 
from as far back as the time of Juno—according to old Homer— 
whenever he begins to get the better of them 


“Old Earth perceives and from her bosom pours 
Unbidden herbs and voluntary flowers.” 


Many of the plants which that first gardener called weeds pos- 
sessed hidden virtues, properties of excellence, which other men, 
far down the vista of the vears, discovered. These plants they 
began to cultivate, to utilize. and so removed them from the cate- 
gory of weeds. Meanwhile some of the first of cultivated plants, 
when carried to other parts of the earth, have either lost those 
properties which rendered them useful to man or have, through 
a change of soil and other environment, become so successful, so 
aggressive, that they spread and intrude upon the areas set aside 
for other plants favored by man, and have become the most com- 
mon of weeds. So the list of weeds is ever changing, some being 

,added here, others subtracted there, until it is different in every 
country, state or nation on earth and is nowhere settled or stable. 


(5) 


6 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


DEFINITION OF A WEED. 


As a result of the conditions stated there are many definitions 
of a weed, among them being: 

(a) “A plant out of place or growing where it is not wanted.” 

(b) “A plant whose virtues have not yet been discovered.”—Hmerson. 

(c) “An herb which is useless or troublesome and without special 
beauty. 

(d) “Tobacco.” 

(c) “A plant which contests with man for the possession of the soil.” 

(f) “A useless plant growing wild, of sufficient size to be easily no- 
ticeable and of sufficient abundance to be injurious to the farmer.” 

(g) “Any injurious, troublesome or unsightly plant that is at the 
same time useless or comparatively so.” 


The reader, be he student, teacher, poet or farmer, can choose 
from the abové definitions or others the one which suits best his own 
taste, fancy, belief or experience. Suffice it to say that whether 
a plant is a weed or no depends wholly upon the point of view. 
Many a plant, which is among the worst of weeds to a farmer, is 
to the poet or naturalist a flower of surpassing beauty. The list 
of Indiana weeds which fellows is hased upon the standpoint of the 
farmer, and comprises the 227 of the 2,000 and more plants grow- 
ing wild in the State* which are thought to be the most harmful 
to his interests. During its compilation definitions (f) and (q), 
above given. have been the ones considered. 

Those plants which have hecome the most common or ‘‘worst 
weeds’? are those which have been most successful in evolving 
‘methods or properties of defending themselves against being de- 
stroyed by nlant-eating animals; in devising means for ready and 
rapid cross-fertilization, either by wind or insects, and in provid- 
ing for themselves effective means of distributing their seeds or 
other ways-of propagation when the seeds are difficult to ripen. 
Under the head of the Nettle Family, in the list which follows, 
are mentioned some of the ways by which plants defend them- 
selves from browsing animals. The ox-eve daisy and related weeds 
of the Compositae Family have been most successful in devising 
methods for fertilization of a large number of flowers in a short 
time by insects, while the grassés and plantains are adepts in pro- 
ducing means for wind fertilization. 


‘ 


*OF these, 1,783 are listed in Sianley Coulter’s “Catalogue of the Flowering Plants and Ferns and Their 
Allies Indigenous to Indiana,” published in 1899. In various papers published since that date in the Proceedings 
of the Indiana Academy of Science, 177 additional species have been recorded, 


METITODS OF WEED SEED MIGRATION. 


-} 


DistRIBvUTION of WEED SEEDS. 


Our worst weeds are in general those which have devised the 
most successful ways of distributing their seeds to fields and pas- 
tures. new, where the competition will not be so great as in the 
immediate vicinity of the parent plant. Many are the methods 
used and a number of agents or factors enter into this seed dis- 
semination, chief among which are wind, water, birds, animals and 
man, his machinery and methods of commerce. These different 
methods of seed distribution should be of especial interest to the 
farmer, for 4 knowledge of them will often enable him to trace the 
source of some noxious migratory weed which has appeared upon 
his land, and will cause him to be on the lookout for it from the 
same or similar origin. Moreover, some of the factors of seed dis- 
tribution are partly or wholly under his control, while others, such 
as water and wind, are wholly beyond his power to lessen. 

SEEDS CARRIED BY WIND.—The wind is one of the most potent 
factors in the wide distribution of wced seeds. Many weeds, as 
those of thistle, dandelion, fireweed, prickly lettuce, etc., have each 
seed enclosed in a little case to the top of which is joined a tuft of 
downy hairs, thus enabling them to be lifted and carried several 
miles by the wind; in the case of the milkweeds the tuft is attached 
to the seed itself. Some of the grasses have long hairs upon the 
chaff surrounding the grain, which serves the same purpose, while 
some of the docks, the actinomeris and others have the seeds or 
achenes winged or expanded on the sides so that they are easily 
lifted and borne onward by a passing breeze. (Fig. 1, a and f.) 

The seeds of many weeds are blown long distances over the 
surface of snow, ice or frozen ground. The ragweeds, velvet-leaf, 
docks, pigweeds, chickweed and different weeds of the grass family 
are examples of those whose seeds are so distributed. 

Some plants after ripening their seeds are broken off near the 
ground and rolled over and over by the wind, the seeds dropping 
off at intervals along the way. These ‘‘tumble-weeds’’ as they are 
called, include our Indiana weeds known as old-witch grass, Rus- 
sian thistle, two species of amaranth and the buffalo bur, besides 
a number of others. 

SEEDS CARRIED BY WATER.— Water is an important agent in the 
dispersion of the seeds of many weeds, especially those which grow 
in flood plains or along the banks of streams. The great ragweed, 
smartweeds, bindweeds and others depend largely upon the an- 
nual overflows for the wide spreading of their seeds. The seeds 


8 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


of many weeds growing on uplands are continually being washed 
down the slopes into lowland soils where many of them germinate 
and flourish. So long as careless farmers on the higher grounds 
allow the seeds of noxious weeds to ripen, just so long will the 
farmers on the lowlands have weed seeds scattered over their fields 
by countless thousands. Many weeds bearing ripened seeds and 
growing along the banks of streams are washed bodily into the cur- 
rent when the banks cave off, aud are carried for miles down 
stream, finally lodging in bed of silt or bottom tietd, in soil well 
suited to the future plant. 

BirDS AS SEED CARRIERS.—T'he berries or seed pods of certain 
weeds are eaten by birds for the nutriment found in the outer pulp 
and the hard seeds pass undigested. The nightshades, poison ivy, 
pokeweed, blackberry and pepper-grass are some weeds whose 
seeds are thus distributed. The seeds of thistles, ragweeds, dande- 
lions, knot-grass and other weeds are often eaten in such quantities 
by sparrows and other birds that many of them are doubtless un- 
digested and are distributed in new localities. 

Water birds often carry seeds long distances in mud which 
has become encased or hardened on their feet. Darwin, in his 
‘‘Origin of Species,’’ states that he took in February, 3 tablespoon- 
fuls of mud from 3 different points beneath water on the edge of 
a little pond. This mud, when dried, weighed only 63 ounces and 
in the viscid state was all contained in a breakfast cup. He kept 
it in his study for six months, pulling up and counting each plant 
as it grew; the plants were of many kinds and were altogether 537 
in number. It is very easy, therefore, for birds to distribute many 
seeds in this way. 

A bird also sometimes catches up a sprig of a plant and carries 
it where the seeds can be eaten without molestation, the act re- 
sulting in a wide scattering of the seed. 

ANIMALS AS SEED CARRIERS.—Many weeds have developed spines 
or small hooks on their seeds or seed vessels by which they become 
attached to the fur of every passing animal, and especially to the 
wool of sheep, manes of horses and clothing of man, and are then 
borne far and wide before being dislodged. Thus we have the 
burs of burdock, cocklebur and bur-grass; the hooked achenes of 
the buttereups; the barbed hairs of the fruits or seed vessels of 
wild carrots; the prickly nutlets of hound’s tongue and beggars’ 
lice; the bristly pod-joints of the seed-ticks or ‘tick-trefoils and 
the barbed achenes of the bur-marigolds, beggar-ticks and Spanish 
needles. The seeds of the mustards, when moistened, exude’a mu- 


RAILWAYS AS CARRIERS OF WEED SEEDS. 9 


cilage which causes them to adhere to every passing object. Live 
stock taken from one farm or one locality to another often carry 
many of these seeds or burs in wool, manes or tails, and many a 
clean farm has from this cause suddenly produced crops of weeds 
whose origin doubtless puzzled and dismayed the owner. The 
parts of seeds or fruits which have been evolved as clasping organs 
are thus seen to be varied in form 4nd structure, but each has 
enabled the plant to which it belongs to migrate time and again 
to a new home where it could the better fight the battle of life. 
MAN AS AN AGENT OF SEED DISTRIBUTION.—The plants which 
have become the most successful weeds of the farm have had their 
seeds spread more widely through the agency of man than through 
all other methods combined. His roads and trails wind everywhere 


Fig. 1. Ill:strating methods of seed distribution: a, seeds (achenes) of dandelion with pappus attached, 
several of them still borne on the receptacle: b, fruit of beggar-cicks showing the barbed awns; c and d, burs or 
fruits of cocklebur and burdock, showing the grappling appendages; e, fruit of wild carrot, showing the clutching 


spines; f, winged fruit of wafer-ash. (After Kerner and Beal.) 


through plain and forest; his railway lines bind every State to- 
gether and connect with steamship lines from across the seas, and 
along all these avenues of commerce weed seeds are constantly 
travelling, sometimes as paid passengers in company with grain 
and other farm seeds, but more often as hoboes in hay, bedding, 
packing, shipments of fruit, ete. 

The great east and west trunk lines of railways are responsible 
for the wide distribution of many a weed, such as the Russian 
thistle, prickly lettuce, Canada thistle and Texas nettle, which 
first appear in any locality along a railway. The seeds are carried 
either in the coats of cattle or sheep, in the hay which supports 
them on their journey, or in the bedding on the floor of the car. 
Dropping at intervals all along the line the seeds find excellent 


10 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


beds in the bared soil along the tracks where they sprout and grow 
until ready. to take another step in advance. The botanist has 
learned their ways of migration and knows that if he wishes to. 
find new and interesting species his best pathway will be alongside 
the railways. 

Many seeds are introduced in the packing about crates of china 
or glassware, shipments of nursery stock and in baled hay. Many 
more are distributed by being mixed with commercial seeds, such 
as those of clover, wheat; flax and grasses. 

On his harrows, plows and cultivators the farmer often carries 
pieces of rootstocks, bulbs, etc, from one. field or farm to another. 
Perennial weeds such as couch-grass, trumpet-creeper, bouncing 
bet, bindwecd and ox-eye daisy are the ones most generally scat- 
tered in this manner. Wagons, self-binders and especially thresh- 
ing machines are responsible for the distribution of many weed 
seeds which are jostled from them as they pass along the roadways 
or over the fields from farm to farm. Many a well managed farm 
often becomes infested with noxious weeds in this way. Barnyard 
manures, and especially manures hauled from cities and towns 
where much of the feed-stuffs have heen purchased from a distance, 
are also active agents in the spread of weed seeds. 

The above are some of the indirect ways in which man has 
brought about the wide distribution of noxious weeds. He is also 
directly responsible for the spread of many weeds by introducing 
them into his gardens or fields, cultivating them for a time and 
then allowing them to escape. Such well known weeds as wild 
garlic, purslane, tansy, bouncing het, oxe-eye daisy, chicory, wild 
carrot, butter and eggs, catnip and motherwort have been widely 
spread in this way. Suffice it to say that many of our most com- 
mon weeds are those which have been introduced directly or in- 
directly by man into some locality, have there been allowed to 
grow for a few years in his cultivated fields or under his care, 
and have thus become acclimated and better adapted for a wide 
and successful migration throughout the land. 

Those weeds which are most common and successful in culti- 
vated fields are in general those wiHfich by reason of a quick growth 
are enabled to produce and ripen an enormous number of seeds. 
Careful estimates made hy the Towa and Kansas Experimental 
Stations show. that the number of seeds produced by a single aver- 
age full grown specimen of 15 of our most common weeds is as 
follows: 


WEED ASSOCIATIONS BASED ON ENVIRONMENT. 11 


Crab-gvass ..........e eee 89,600 Velvet Leaf ............05. 31,900 
Yellow Foxtail ............ 118,600 Purslane Speedwell ........ 186,300 
PIS WOOO. ba ieee ace dresses oe 85,000 Dandelion ............0..06 1,729 
Tumble-weed: ............4. 14,000 Ragweed sina seccascen wees ae 23,100 
PPUPSTAMNG: ic cciesers: sessalerraiataecs ae 69,000 Oocklebur ........ cee eee 9,700 
Pepper-grass ...........0.005 12,225 Beggar-ticks ............... 10,500 
CHAPIOGIE 4. gis desea auarsaniacea ane 9,800 Ox-eye Daisy ...... cece eee 6,750 
Shepherd's Purse .......... 17,600 


WEED CoMMUNITIES OR ASSOCIATIONS. 


Many weeds, like misery, love company. Certain species when 
they travel go together and settle down in a little community on 
a tract of land having an environment especially suited to their 
taste and manner of growth. Thus along roadsides and cow-paths 
one finds the knot-grass, black medic, wire-grass, dog-fennel, rib- 
wort and prickly sida; in barnyards the jimson-weed, mother- 
wort, burdock, catnip, water-pepper and yellow dock; in lawns and 
country yards the dandelion, common plantain, shepherd’s purse 
and round-leaved mallow. The most of these are so-called ‘‘social 
weeds,’’ forming company not only for themselves but for man 
and accompanying him everywhere in his march across the conti- 
nent. On the half-barren slopes of old fields there usually occurs 
a little community made up of the evening primrose, mullen, field 
sorrel, pennyroyal, cinquefoil, steelweed and ox-eye daisy, with 
usually a few blackberry briers and a clump of fragrant. everlast- 
ing to bear them company. In rich soil along the borders of up- 
land thickets occurs the figwort, ground ivy, blue lettuce, wood 
nettles and trefoils; in open woodland pastures, the common 
thistle, iron-weed, actinomeris, pokeweed, hawkweeds and Indian 
tobacco; on river banks, especially near towns, the white sweet- 
clover, bouncing bet, teasel, wormseed, milkweed, and prickly let- 
tuce; while in rich alluvial lowlands grow the great horse-weed, 
willow aster, cocklebur, bindweed, smartweed and wild sweet po- 
tato. Numerous other plant associations could be mentioned but 
the above are more than sufficient to show that weeds are gregarious 
and that those which have similar tastes tend, like birds of a 
feather, to flock together. 


THe Origin oF INDIANA WEEDS. 


Having noted the various ways in which weeds are distributed 
over the earth it is not surprising to find that in Indiana the great 
majority of.our very worst. weeds are aliens from a foreign shore. 
They are the ones which have suceeeded best in crowding out and 


12 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


displacing our wild and cultivated native plants and in taking, if 
unmolested, complete possession of the soil. Most of these foreign 
weeds possess that. “ingrained coarseness, scrubbiness, squalor and 
sordidness, that stringiness of fibre, hairiness of surface or prickly 
defensive character’? which marks them as masters of the plant 
world, as weeds par excellence.” 

Of the 150 species of plants which are hereafter listed as being 
most harmful to the farmers of the State, 77 are natives of Indiana, 
that is, indigenous tc her soil, while 73 are introduced species. Of 
the latter 58 came from Europe, 2 from Asia, 8 from tropical 
America and 5 from the plains of the Western States. 

These 150 weeds are grouped in 3 classes. Class I. comprises 
our worst weeds, those which are fighters from start to finish, not 
only holding the soil in which they grow but ever striving to gain 
a hold on new territory. Of the 150, 46 belong to this class, and 
of the 46, 34 are introduced and only 12 are native to the State. 
Of the 84 foreign species 27 came from Europe, 2 from Asia, 4 
from tropical America and 1 from the West. 

Class II. comprises those weeds which are less aggressive, but 
are yet annoying to the farmer and the gardener. All have a 
weedy character and many of them seem to be waiting only for 
the proper conditions to arrive before jumping over the line into 
Class I. This Class is evenly divided, 32 species being introduced 
and the same number native to the State. Of the 32 outsiders, 24 
are from Europe, 4 from tropical America and 4 from the West. 

To Class III. belong those weeds which in Indiana occupy for 
the most part waste farm lands, rarely encroaching upon cultivated 
fields, or if they do being easily subdued by hoe or scythe. A 
number of them yield more or less forage for grazing stock, while 
some are cut for hay when other crops are short. Of the 40 
species belonging to this group 33 are native to our soil. while 7 
came from Europe. 

It must be borne in mind that this grouping is only from the 
view-point of the writer, based upon long observation of the weeds 
of the State. The reader may, from personal experience, have a 
widely different opinion as to which class a certain weed should 
be assigned. Moreover, this grouping refers only to the weeds of 
Indiana. Some of those in Class III. are doubtless members of 
Class IT. or even I, in other States, while some of the worst of 
Class I. may there do little harm. 

In addition to the 150 weeds listed and described, 77 Pies 
are, in their proper order, mentioned and briefly characterized, 


LOSSES ENTAILED BY RAISING WEEDS. 13 


They are closely related to or sometimes only varieties of those de- 
scribed, and the differences in habits being small and remedies for 
eradication practically the same, space was not taken for their 
more extended mention. Some of them, however, are bad weeds, 9 
belonging to Class I., 36 to Class II. and 32 to Class III. Of the 
77, 31 are introduced and 46 native to Indiana, 7 of the 9 worst 
ones being foreigners. 

If to the 46 worst weeds listed we add the 9 briefly charac- 
terized, we have in the State 55 of the most aggressive of weeds. 
Of these 41, or 75 per cent., are of foreign origin. About the same 
proportion of alien weeds is seen by anyone who travels through 
the Eastern States. In fact, America seems to be not only the 
‘home of the oppressed of all nations’’ but her soil seems to suit 
exactly those weeds which are the offscourings and refuse of civil- 
ization in all countries. As Grant Allen has well said: ‘‘In eivi- 
lized, cultivated and inhabited New England, and as far inland at 
least as the Mississippi, the prevailing vegetation is the vegetation 
of Central Europe, and that at its weediest. The daisy, the prim- 
rose, the cowslip and the daffodil have stayed at home; the weeds 
have gone to enlonize the New World. For thistles and burdock, 
dog-fennel and dead-nettle, hound’s tongue and stick-seed, catnip 
and dandelion, ox-eye daisy and cocklebur, America easily licks all 
creation. All the dusty, noisome and malodorous pests of all the 
world seem there to revel in one grand congenial democratic-orgy.’’ 


How WeeEps LESSEN THE OUTPUT OF THE Farm. 


The greatest question on earth to-day is, How long will the 
soil feed the human race? Any factor which will serve to increase 
that time, even in small degree, is of great economic importance. 
The population of Indiana is ever increasing. The number of 
acres of land within her bounds will be the same as long as those 
bounds remain as they are. To increase the output of the land 
and make the gain in vield of farm products to some extent keep 
pace with the increase in population is at present the leading 
problem which the more intelligent farmers of the State are trying 
to solve. One of the greatest factors in this problem is that of 
weeds. It is a self-evident fact that in all parts of the State they 
are in many. ways a source of constant and heavy loss in the out- 
put of the farm. Some of these ways are briefly set forth in the 
following paragraphs: 

a. They rob the soil of much of that plant food so necessary 
to the proper growth of cultivated crops. As a single example of 


14 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


this robbery it has been shown by the Massachusetts. Experiment 
Station that ‘‘one ton of ox-eye daisy withdraws from: the soil 25 
pounds of potash, 8.7 pounds of phosphoric acid, 22 pounds of 
nitrogen and 26 pounds of lime. To restore the stated amounts 
of the first. three constituents to the soil it would be necessary to 
apply about 50 pounds of muriate of potash, 65 pounds of super- 
phosphate and 140 pounds of nitrate of soda.’’* It. will thus be 
seen that this, as well as all other weeds, feed upon precisely the 
same foods as do wheat, corn and other cereal crops. They de- 
prive the crop with which they grow, or one which will come after 
it, of exactly the same amount of plant food as they withdraw, 


Fig.2. Mixture of weed seeds commonly found in low-grade alsike clover seed: a, alsike clover; b, white 
clover; c, red clover; d, yellow sweet-clover; e, Canada tbistle; f, dock; 9, field sorrel; h, buckhorn; i, rat- 
tail plantain; &, lamb's-quarters; J, sheplierd’s purse; m, dog-fennel; 7,.acentless. camomile; 0, white, campion; 
p, night-flowering catch-fly; g, ox-eye daisy; r, small-fruited false flax; s, cinquefoil; ¢, two kinds of pepper- 
grass; u, catnip; », timothy; 2, chickweed; y, Canada blue-grass; z, cloyer dodder; 1, mouse-ear. chickweed; 
2, knot-grass; 3, tumbling pigweed; 4, rough pigweed; 4, heal-all; 6, lady’s thumb. (After Hillman.) 


and if allowed to grow with other crops will take their due pro- 
portion of any fertilizer that may be applied. 

b. They rob the soil of moisture which they waste by evapora- 
tion, thus increasing the evil effects of droughts. 

c. They crowd out and shade cultivated plants, thus greatly 
decreasing the vield of the latter. Most weeds have better. devel- 
oped roots which penetrate to a greater depth than those of the 
plants with which they grow. ‘They therefore gather food: and 
moisture more readily and usually soon out-top many crops, 
shutting ont the sunlight so necessary to perfect maturity of the 
cultivated plants. 

"Far. Bull. No, 103, 


WEEDS POISONOUS TO STOCK AND CHILDREN. 15 


d. ‘They inerease the cost of any crop not only by taking the 
time of labor to keep them in subjection, but by retarding, espe- 
cially in cereal crops, the work of preparing the ground, seeding, 
harvesting, threshing, cleaning the grain and marketing the out- 
put. 

e. They cause a greater wear and tear on farm machinery, 
especially mowers, binders and threshing machines, often causing 
them to clog and break. : 

f. They frequently necessitate an unprofitable change in the 
rotation of crops, causing the farmer to produce some crop of little 
profit in order the more quickly to get rid of a certain weed. 

g- Some weeds such as corn cockle and wild garlic are espe- 
cially injurious to wheat, as when ground with it they render the 
flour poisonous and unpalatable. Others, as buckhorn, dodder and 
field sorrel, produce seeds which are very difficult to separate from 
the seeds of clover, thus greatly increasing the cost of the latter. 

h. Very few weeds furnish pasture or food for stock and some 
of them, as the water hemlock, sneezeweed, ete., are very poison- 
ous when eaten by them. The burs of others are very annoying 
in wool, the manes of horses or the tails of horses and cattle. 

4. Weeds such as the nightshades, water hemlock, bitter sweet, 
pokeweed, jimson, etc., often cause the death or serious illness of 
children. 

j. Many weeds furnish food or hibernating places for injurious 
insects. Examine carefully the winter rosettes or root-leaves of a 
mullen, or note the melon lice on shepherd’s purse and pepper- 
grass, and be convinced. Others are propagating plants for rusts 
and mildews which attack vegetables and small grains of many 
kinds. 

k. Finally most weeds are unsightly objects, being at some or 
all stages of their existence cyesores whose presence not only in- 
dicates a negligent and slovenly farmer but damages the appear- 
ance and lessens the value of any land which he may wish to sell. 


BENEFITS OF WEEDS. 


To the practical farmer, who delights in a highly productive 
and clean farm, weeds offer apparently little of value to offset their 
many disadvantages. Yet they possess some virtues and are not 
to be considered wholly as enemies. 

When plowed under they of course add some humus and fer- 
tility to the soil, while if allowed to grow after a crop has been 
harvested they shade the ground thus conserving many forms of 


16 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


plant food. Their greatest benefit, however, lies in the fact that 
they induce frequent and thorough cultivation of the soil, thus 
increasing largely the output of any crop which may be grown. 
On this point L. H. Bailey maintains: ‘‘That weeds always have 
been and still are the closest friends and helpmates of the farmer. 
It was they which first taught the lesson of the tillage of the soil, 
and it is they which never allow the lesson, now that it has been 
partly learned, to be forgotten. The one only and sovereign rem- 
edy for them is the very tillage which they have introduced. When 
their mission is finally matured, therefore, they will disappear, be- 
cause there will be no place in which they can grow. It would be 
a great calamity if they were now to disappear from the earth, 
for the greater number of farmers still need the discipline which 
they enforce. Probably not one farmer in ten would till his lands 
well if it were not for these painstaking schoolmasters, and many 
of them would not till at all. Until farmers till for tillage’s sake, 
and not to kill the weeds, it is necessary that the weeds shall exist, 
_ but when farmers do till for tillage’s sake, then weeds will dis- 
appear with no effort of ours.”’ 


Tur WEEDS OF CITIES AND Towns. 


Weeds are not only a curse to the farmer but the city resident 
is also greatly troubled with them. Many an hour does he spend 
on his lawns, grubbing dandelions and other pests which are fight- 
ing the blue-grass, while in his alleys and backyards many an un- 
sightly species is constantly attempting to grow and ripen its 
seeds. In all cities, and especially in and about country towns, 
there are numerous vacant lots-and commons which each year pro- 
duce nothing but a big crop of the vilest of weeds. The largest 
patch of Canada thistle which the writer ever saw was on one of 
these waste places in the city of Indianapolis. Prickly lettuce and 
sow-thistles, cockleburs and horse-weed, burdock and bull thistles, 
spiny amaranth and pigweed, dog-fennel and Mexican tea, sweet- 
clovers and wild mustard, jimson-weeds and wild carrots grow 
rankly on these lots and form dense thickets through which a per- 
son can scarcely force his way. Being for the most part level these 
city or town lots have at some time been cultivated and the orig- 
inal growth of grass and trees removed, leaving a surface excel- 
lently adapted to these worst of migratory weeds. Their seeds are 
introduced in many ways, more easily indeed than in the open 
country, for here rubbish of all kinds. is dumped, such as bedding 
from stables and stock cars, packing from about china and glass- 


WEEDS OF CITIES AND TOWNS. “17 


ware, sweepings from elevators and grain stores and refuse from 
kitchens. In many instances the lots are low and the owners have 
them filled with the material mentioned, thus furnishing an excel- 
lent seed bed already planted for many a weed. Oftentimes these 
weed patchs are wholly or partly surrounded by high bill-boards, 
thus hiding the weeds from sight and allowing them to flourish 
without molestation. 

These city and town weeds, as long as growing vigorously, are 
somewhat beneficial in that they serve to purify the air by using 
carbonic acid gas and throwing off oxygen. As soon as they die, 
however, they begin to decay and reverse this process, absorbing 
the oxygen and throwing off the gas, and should be at once mowed 
and removed. They gather dust and harbor bacteria and various 
injurious fungi; shade the soil and keep it damp and sour; while 

- certain species produce great quantities of pollen which is often 
_. very irritating. Growing as they do where many children congre- 
gate, the poisonous species, such as pokeweed, nightshade and jim- 
son are very apt to be eaten. The three-leaved ivy, with its at- 
tractive foliage and poisonous juices or exhalations, often occurs 
along the borders of these city lots and causes blisters on the skin 
of many a youngster. 

Instead of raising noxious weeds these vacant lots should be 
put to more important uses. In most of the cities and larger 
towns there are many poor people who would be glad to utilize . 
them for gardens. Such use would not depreciate their value for 
building purposes and would greatly lessen the cost of living of 
the needy and the amount necessarily bestowed in charity upon 
them. In many places the weeds and rubbish can be removed at 
a small cost, the surface leveled and sown to some perennial grass, 
and the plot then used as a’playground for children. Such play- 
grounds are always welcomed in the crowded portions of the larger 
cities, where open places for that romping and running so dear to 
a child’s heart and so necessary to its health, are often few or 
absent. 


CLASSIFICATION OF WEEDS AccorpING TO Lire PERIOD. 


Weeds, like other plants, are grouped, according to the length 
of time they live, into three classes, viz., annuals, biennials and 
perennials. 

ANNUALS.—An annual weed is one that rounds out its cycle 
of existence within a single year. Of these there are two sub- 
classes, ordinary or ‘‘summer annuals’’ and ‘“‘winter annuals.’’ 


[2] 


18 ; THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Ordinary annuals spring from the seed in spring, mature, blossom 
and ripen their seeds before the frosts of autumn. Ragweed, fox- 
tail, purslane and crab-grass are 4 of our worst weeds which are 
examples of this group. As a rule these summer annuals have 
small fibrous roots and produce many seeds. 

Winter annuals spring from the seed in late summer or au- 
tumn, produce a growth of root-leaves before the ground is 
thoroughly frozen, then in carly spring send up a flower-stalk and 
ripen their seeds usually by May or June. Shepherd’s purse, 
pepper-grass, white-top and prickly lettuce are among our worst 
of winter annuals, while winter wheat and rye are cultivated ex- 
amples. Some of these weeds are both winter and summer an- 
nuals, a part of the seed germinating in the spring and the flowers 
appearing much later in the season than those of the same species 
from the.winter annuals. : 

In dealing with annual weeds the one general and obvious 
method is to destroy them in some manner before their seeds ripen. 
This can best be done by mowing, pulling, cutting with the hoe 
or smothering with the cultivator. If this be kept up for a few 
years and the work thoroughly done they will be completed eradi- 
cated from a farm. They would all be destroyed the first season 
were it not for the fact that the seeds of many species possess 
great vitality and often remain in the ground for years without 
impairing their power of growth. When brought close enough to 
the surface, if the conditions of moisture and temperature are 
right, they usually sprout at once. Any method of cultivation, 
especially in late fall or early spring, which will cause these buried 
seeds te germinate will thus go far towards getting rid of annual 
weeds, provided, of course, the young ones are killed as they ap- 
pear. The voung plants of ragweed, wild mustard, lamb’s quar- 
ters, black bindweed and many other annuals are easily uprooted 
and killed by harrowing in autumn the growing crop of wheat, 

oats or rye with a light slope-tocthed harrow. After the crop is 

well up, and there is no danger of covering the blades too deeply, 
few if anv grain plants will be dragged out if the work is done 
when the land is in proper condition for harrowing 

Brenniits.—A biennial is a two-year plant, that is, one which 
springs from a seed and spends the first season in storing up a 
supply of nourishment in a large root or tuber, this heing used 
the second season in promoting a rapid growth and producing 
flowers and seeds. Among our worst biennial weeds are the com- 
mon thistle, wild carrot, mullen, burdock and hound’s tongue. Bi- 


THE USE OF THE SPUD. 19 


ennials grow for the most part along roadsides, borders of fields 
and in pastures, as their roots will not withstand thorough culti- 
vation. 

Any method of destroying the root or the top of the plant be- 
fore the seeds ripen will eventually get rid of this class of weeds in 
cultivated. ground. <A single mowing which is sufficient 
for most annuals will, however, not do with biennials, for 
the thick root will immediately send up new stems. In 
pastures and other places where cultivation is not. prac- 
ticable, deep cutting below the crown of bud of the root 
is the best: method of getting rid of. biennials. This can 
best be done with a heavy hoc or spud, the latter being a 
large chisel set on the end of a long handle.* 

PERENNIALS.—These are plants which spring up year 
after year from the same or adjacent root systems. They 
grow from seeds, creeping underground stems or root- 
stocks, or from bulbous or tap-roots. When once started 
they continue in the same spot or spread gradually from 
it in all directions. Among our worst perennial weeds 
which spread, by rootstocks. are the Canada thistle, bind- 
weed,. horse-nettle and couch-grass; while examples of 
those with ordinary or tap-roots are plantains, curled dock 
and steelweed. 

Perennials are by far the most troublesome weeds to 
ai, eradicate and require in some instances the cultivation of 
ae a special crop to get rid of them. Before attempting to 

‘kill out eny one of them a careful study of the under- 
ground portion should be made as, until this is done, effective 
eradication is impossible. As the leaves, like those of all plants, 
are the special organs which manufacture and store food in the 
roots and underground stems, several successive mowings each 

year will so weaken the roots and stems of many perennials that 
they will gradually die out. The task of mowing a perennial, such 
as iron-weed, from a large tract several times each season is at 


*In- Canada and some of the northern states the spud is extensively used in effectively get}ing rid of many 
weeds, but in Indiana it seems to. be almost unknown. “It consists of a light, round handle, resembling that of a 
broom, and of a blade shaped somewhat, like that of a chisel, but more tapering from the end of the blade to the 
handle on which it is itted like a common hoe. Its length is about 5 feet from end to end.- The blade is about 
8 inches long, 214 inches. broad at the cutting end.and 54-inch broad at the-shoulder. It should.be thin, not 
more than }4-inch thick at shoulder and thinning gradually to the cutting edge. In using the spud in a wheat 
field one walks astride a row of grain and cuts below the surface all noxious weeds within 6 feet on either side 
thus clearing.a strip of 12 feet in width. A small file should always he carried.for sharpening the blade. The 
spud, is designed rather to maintain than to secure cleanliness, and is used most effectively to prevent the seeding 
of scattered winter annual and biennial plants in cultivated fields, along fence-rows and roadsides.” Shaw. 
“Weeds and How to Eradicate Them.” 103-105. 


20 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


first a laborious one, but each year gradually lessens until in time 
it takes but a few hours, whereas at first it may have taken a 
week. A perennial with running rootstocks close to the surface can 
often be in great part eradicated by several shallow plowings and . 
harrowings in summer, thus allowing the sun to reach and dry up 

the underground parts; or it may be killed by covering deeply 

with soil in early spring and so smothering out the perennial por- 

tion, that is, preventing it from forming leaves to store up future 

nourishment. Another method of dealing with perennial weeds is 

to crowd them out with clover, rye or some early and rapidly grow- | 
ing crop. Many weeds are killed out more easily in this than any 

other way. 


GENERAL RULES FOR EXTERMINATING WEEDS AND KEEPING 
THe Farm CLEAN. 


1. Sow cLEAN sEED.—-Examine carefully all seeds purchased, 
especially those of clover and grasses, to see that they do not have 
weed seeds mixed with them. It is far better 
at any time to pay a high price for clean seed 
than a low price for seed that will stock the 
farm with weeds. If the farmer cannot buy 
clean seed he should raise it upon a tract of 
ground especially prepared and kept clean 

See for the purpose. In the list which follows a 
Fig. 4. Linen tester. brief description of the seeds of each of the 
. worst weeds is given. A linen tester, which costs about 40 cents, 
will enable one to recognize, after a little practice, 80 per cent. of 
the seeds of Indiana weeds. A pocket 
Coddington lens of one-half inch focus, 
costing ahout $1.50, is still better and 
will enable one to see the finer points 
of all seeds. These lenses can be had of 
the Bausch & Lomb Optical Co., Ro- 
chester, N. Y. 

2. RotTaTe THE cRoPS.—Too many farmers of Indiana keep on 
year after year ‘‘raising more corn to feed more hogs to buy more 
land to raise more corn,’’ ete. Not only this, but they raise corn 
on the same land, especially if it he hottom ground, for 10 or more 
years in succession. The weeds get used to this sort of thing and 
know just what to expect and what to'do to survive most success- 
fully. Surprise them once by changing the program and note the 


Fig. 5. Coddington lens. 


RULES FOR EXTERMINATING WEEDS. 21 


good results. A systematic short rotation of crops with regular 
seeding down at short intervals to grasses or clover will do more 
to solve the weed problem than any other rule which can be laid 
down. In the same way that weeds crowd out crops and reduce 
the yield, so may weeds themselves be choked out by these more 
vigorous and thickly seeded crops which will prevent them from 
getting light and air. 

3. KEEP WEEDS FROM RIPENING SEEDS.—Each farmer owes it 
not only to himself but to his neighbors to obey this the ‘‘golden 
rule’’ of weed prevention. One slovenly farmer who neglects his 
weeds is a bane to any neighborhood, for all surrounding him must 
suffer for his neglect. Such a farmer lets the weeds grow and 
ripen on the spots in his wheat fields where the corn shocks have 
stood. He lets the jimson grow in the barnyard, the thistle by the 
roadside, the burdock in the fence corners of his orchard. Each 
of these weeds is a placard on which the word ‘‘slovenly”’ ap- 
pears in autumn to every passer-by. 

Nothing is truer than the old adage 


“A weed that runs to seed 
Is a seven year’s weed.” 


Especially is this true of the first specimen of any strange weed 
that appears in a neighborhood., Then, if ever, should the old 
Ovidian phrase, ‘‘Principtis obsta,’’ be acted upon by the farmer. 
‘‘Nip the first buddings of evil’’ is a free translation. Cut with 
a hoe or spud the stem of the stranger before it opens its bud and 
perchance future generations will rise up and call ye blessed. Do 
not think that because there are only a few weeds in a field that 
you can afford to let them go. Each one which seeds this year will 
perhaps be represented by 5,000 next year. The one can be de- 
stroyed in a few seconds, the 5,000 will require a day’s hard work. 

4. BURN OVER STUBBLE OR FALLOW FIELDS.—The seeds of a 
myriad weeds can be easily destroyed in this way. Not only fu- 
ture weeds but many injurious insects will also be killed. Almost 
any field can be burned over in autumn without much danger by 
running a couple of furrows around it and setting fire when the 
wind is not too high. 

5. Pow in autumN.—The plowing and harrowing or other- 
wise cultivating stubble and other fields in early autumn will cause 
many seeds, especially those of annual weeds, to germinate. The 
young weeds will mostly be winter-killed and those which survive 


22 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


a 


ean be easily controlled by cultivation in early spring. The fall 
plowing should not be done until the land has been burned over, 
for weeds with ripened seeds should never be plowed under. Fall 
plowing is also one of the best remedies for destroying wire-worms, 
cut-worms, white grubs-and many other larval fornis of noxious in- 
sects. 

6. Do AWAY WITH MANY FENCES.—The removal of permanent 
fences from between fields and the cultivation of the ground thus 
redeemed will aid much in clearing the farm of weeds. Unless a 
large amount of stock is kept on a farm but few inside fences are 
really necessary. In many instances.a temporary fence of wire 
which can be shifted from place to place can be used to control 
the stock. There is no more prolific breeding place for many 
noxious weeds than along the fence-rows of cultivated fields. Es- 
pecially is this true of the old Virginia rail. fences. Many a plant 
destined. to become a scourge to the farmer ripens its first seeds 
within the projecting and protecting angles of these. old fences. 
There, safe from the plow and. the hoe, the future weed succeeds 
in its struggle with its associates, ripens its seeds by scores or 
thousands and sends them forth, borrie by the winds of heaven or 
the wings of birds to cultivated and fallow fields. Thousands of 
acres of the richest land in the State are rendered useless by un- 
necessary fence-rows. Redeem this land and do away with the 
seed beds of many weeds. 

7. Do Not ATTEMPT TOO MUCH.—To use a slang expression, the 
average Indiana farmer, each spring, ‘‘bites off more than he can 
chew.’’ He attempts, single-handed, to tend 60 or 80 acres of. corn 
and. raises more weeds than corn-stalks, whereas if he had at- 
tempted 30 or at most 40 acres his.yield, would have been more and 
of better quality. The tendency everywhere in the future will be 
fewer acres, bigger crops. Intensive farming of small tracts is the 
one principal solution of the great question: How shall the earth 
feed its people? Therefore break up no more acres each year than 
you can keep.clean, and keep at keeping it clean. 

8. KEEP THE FARM MACHINERY CLEAN.—A threshing machine 
taken from one farm or one locality to another should be thoroughly 
cleaned before being set to work. They carry many weed seeds 
which are scattered along roadsides and over the fields. Th 
should also at first be run empty for a few min I 
that are caught in the grain box destroyed 
other farms should be shaken over some rece’ 


RULES FOR EXTERMINATING WEEDS. 238 


Self binders and grain drills should also be cleaned before using, 
as they are apt to carry many weed seeds. Harrows and cultiva- 
tors should be examined to see that no bits of the underground 
stems of perennial weeds are attached to them. The man with a 
clean farm will look after these things, for where comparative 
cleanliness has been once secured, ‘‘an ounce of prevention is worth 
a pound of cure.’’ 

9. USE SHEEP AS AN AID IN WEED FIGHTING.—There is no more 
efficient help in keeping down the weeds on a farm than a flock 
of sheep. There are few pasture weeds that they will not keep 
grazed down if they can get at them when they are young and on 
a freshly cut stubble field, where other forage is scarce, they will 
destroy young ragweeds and foxtail by thousands. If turned into 
a timothy meadow containing white-top for a few days before the 
hay is cut they will eat out the weed and do little damage to the 
hay. In a corn-field in early antumn they will destroy many weeds 
without injury to the ears. Where annual or biennial weeds are 
very plentiful on a tract of land there is no more effective way 
of fighting them than by growing two or three crops, such as rye 
and millet or rape in a single season and grazing them off with 
sheep. It will be necessary to have the tract divided into plots 
so that there may be alternation in grazing and growing. Remem- 
ber the old saying ‘‘all flesh is grass’’ and modify it to read ‘‘some 
flesh is weeds,’’ by feeding the sheep upon them. 

10. INCREASE THE FERTILIZATION OR DRAINAGE.—Many weeds 
are soil indicators, their presence being evidence that the soil is 
lacking in fertility or is too wet. Such weeds are most easily con- 
trolled by changing the conditions. Thus cinquefoil, mullen and 
field sorrel growing together on the slope of some old field proves 
conclusively that the soil is half barren and should be improved by 
lime and fertilizer. Wet places should be drained to get rid of 
such weeds as sedges, spearmint and tickseeds. Proper fertiliza- 
tion and the raising of good crops will in many instances cause the 
weeds to give way wholly to field crops, as the spread of weeds is 
usually much more rapid on half barren lands than on rich ones. 
Soiling crops, or those such as rape, peas, soy beans, ete., which are 

tut green for feed and partly plowed under, not only aid in fertiliz- 
ing the land but smother out many weeds. In Indiana in the past 
too much land has been deveted solely to the raising of cereals and 
too little to more diversified and partly fertilizing crops. Since the 
cereals faite almest always wholly removed from the land the re- 


24 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK, 


sult has been that much of it has become impoverished and weed 
ridden, and-is therefore cultivated at a minimum profit. Feed the 
crops and smother the weeds. 

11. ‘TRY SPRAYING FOR SOMT WEEDS.— Within recent years it has 
been proven that many weeds, especially those with comparatively 
broad leaves, such as wild mustard, ox-eye daisy, white-top, horse- 
nettle, wild carrot, yarrow, ete., can be practically eradicated from 
timothy, wheat, oats and rye and from pastures by the use of 
chemical sprays. The success of this method depends largely upon 
the fact that cereals and grasses are narrow-leaved plants with a 
single seed leaf, whereas the weeds mentioned and many others are 
broad-leaved plants with two ‘seed leaves. This fact enables one to 
use the chemical for weed killing without much injury to the 
cereals or grasses. 

The three spray solutions most used and the quantity applied 
are: (a) Iron sulphate (copperas) solution, formed by dissolving 
100 pounds of copperas in 50 gallons of water and used at the rate 
of 50 to 60 gallons per acre A granular form of iron sulphate can 
at present be bought for $8 to $10 per ton. (b) Copper sulphate 
(blue vitriol) solution, containing 8 to 10 pounds of blue vitriol 
dissolved in 50 gallons of water and applied at the rate of 40 to 
50 gallons per acre. The vitriol in barrel lots of 480 pounds costs 
5 to 6 cents per pound. (c) Sommon salt solution. containing 3 
pounds of salt to the gallon of water and used at the rate of 50 to 
60 gallons per acre. A barrel of salt, 280-300 pounds, costs about 
$1.15. 

For spraying large tracts a good spraying machine of consid- 
erable force is necessary, while for small areas hand or knapsack 
sprays may be used. Both should have good spray nozzles whieh 
will deposit the solution as a fine mist upon the leaves of the weeds. 
Special weed-spraying outfits are now on sale in almost any large 
city. The following directions, as given by the Wisconsin Experi- 
ment Station for spraying oat fields with a solution of iron sulphate 
for the killing of wild mustard, will apply to the treatment of al- 
most any grain or grass field: 


“The spraying should be done on a calm, bright day, after the dew 
has disappeared, as the work is more effective if the solution is put on in 
the warm sunlight. When rain follows the spraying within a few hours 
the extermination of the mustard will not be complete. 

The grain fields should be sprayed when the mustard plants are in the 
third leaf, or before the plants are in blossom, in order to have the spray 
do the most effective work. The day following the spraying the tips of 


BIRDS AS WEED SEED DESTROYERS. 25 


the blades of the grain may be somewhat blackened but no detrimental 
effects can be noticed, either to the crop or grasses seeded with it, two 
weeks after spraying. 

Daisies, cocklebur, bindweed, ragweed, chicory, sheep sorrel, yellow 
dock, wild lettuce and many other weeds were partially or wholly eradi- 
cated from the fields where tests were made for the extermination of 
mustard.” 


In Ohio Selby has found the common salt solution best for 
dandelions, Canada thistle, poison ivy and horse nettle, and either 
the iron sulphate or salt solution effective on timothy meadow 
weeds such as wild mustard, white-top, yarrow, ete. The copper 
sulphate solution is poisonous to stock and should therefore not be 
used in pastures. The use of sprays for weed killing has not yet 
passed the expvrimental stage, but enough has been done to prove 
its effectiveness on the worst weeds of meadows, pastures and road- 
sides. 

The application of salt, coal-oil or some acid to the roots of 
perennial weeds immediately after they have been cut close with 
scythe or hoe has proven effective in many instances. In pastures, 
where salt alone should be used, the stock often aid materially in 
keeping down the weeds, by attempting to secure the salt from 
about the roots. 

12. PRorect THE SEFD-EATING BIRDS.—Were it not for the aid 
given him by seed-eating birds the subjugation of many of our 
worst weeds would be for man a hopeless task. Each fall and 
winter they flock by thousands to the farms and gardens and live 
upon the ripened seeds of weeds. The birds which are most bene- 
ficial as seed eaters are the sparrows and finches of the family 
Fringillide, 38 of which are known to occur in Indiana, 17 of them 
being found here in winter. The chief character which distinguishes 
this family is a thick, cone-shaped bill which is shorter than the 
head and abruptly angulated or drawn down at the corners of the 
mouth. With this they can crack the hard outer shell of most of 
the smaller seeds and feed upon the rich nutritious kernels within. 

Twe of the most common and most beneficial of the sparrows 
which winter with us are the tree sparrow and the junco or snow- 
bird. These two nest far up in. British America but arrive in 
numbers from the north about mid-October and remain till April 
Ist or later. They live almost wholly upon the seeds of such 
annual weeds as foxtail, ragweed, smartweed, bindweed, crab- 
grass and pigweed. Prof. F. L. Beal of the U. 8. Department of 
Agriculture examined the stomachs of many tree sparrows, finding 


26 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


them entirely filled with weed seeds. He 
estimated that each bird consumed at least a 
quarter of an ounce of such seed daily. Mak- 
ing a fair allowance for the number of tree 
sparrows to the square mile, he calculated — 
that in the State of Iowa the tree sparrow 
alone destroys each winter about 1,750,000 
pounds or 875 tons of weed Seeds. In the 
stomach of a single one of these birds was 
found at one time 700 seeds of foxtail. 

All the sparrows deserve the especial pro- 
tection of the farmer as they feed not only 
upon weed seeds in autumn, winter and early 
spring, but destroy many forms of noxious in- 
sects in summer. Among the most numerous 
and beneficial of the sparrows in Indiana be- 
sides the two mentioned are the goldfinch or 
thistle bird, the field, fox and song sparrows, 

Fig.6. Weed seedscomnonly the chewink and cardinal or redbird, ‘the 
pine nee white crowned, white throated and chipping 
eke chet ae sparrows, the dickcissel, grasshopper sparrow 
lion. (After Judd.) and lark finch and the bay-winged and indigo 

buntings. 

In addition to the sparrows the chief seed eating birds occur- 
ring in the State are the mourning dove, quail, blackbirds, bobo- 
link, cowbird and horned and meadow larks. Some of these feed 
largely upon grain as well as weed seeds, but the good that they 
do far outweighs-the bad. No less than 50 different kinds of birds 
act as sced destroyers. During cold weather they require an 
abundance of food to keep their bodies warm, and it is the habit 
of the sparrows that then flock to the weed patches to keep their 
stomachs and gullets heaping full. In time of deep snows, when 
the weeds are covered, many of.them starve and then especially 
can the farmer reward and protect them by scattering wheat and 
other grain where they can easily find it. 

13. MAINTAIN THE CLEANLINESS.—After a farm has once been 
comparatively cleared of weeds it should he kept in that condition. 
With the proper care this can be done with little labor and small 
cost. Meadows and grain fields should be gone over just before 
the grass or grain is ripe and all weeds such as white-top, dock, 
buckhorn, corn cockle, ete., pulled or cut with hoe or spud. This 
work should be thoroughly done so as to prevent any seeds. from 


IMPORTANT PROBLEMS WHICH WEEDS MUST SOLVE, 27 


ripening. If the grain fields have been seeded ‘down to grass or 
clover they should be gene over a second time in Septeniber and 
any visible weeds removed. If fall cultivation is to be done this 
will not be necessary. Permanent pastures, fence-rows, borders of 
woodlands, roadsides and other uncultivated tracts should also be 
carefully looked after in late summer to prevent seeds from ma- 
turing. When a farm has once become fairly clean'a farm hand 
should be able to go over it with hoe or spud at the rate of 10 acres 
aday. If the hand receives $1.50 per day and goes over a 100 acre 
farm twice each year, the entire cost of keeping the weeds in sub- 
jection will not be over £30 to $40 per annum. With short rota- 
tion of crops the whole farm will not have to be gone over twice, as 
the necessary eultivation, if properly done, will take care of the 
weeds in certain fields. The cost of maintaining cleanliness de- 
_pends altogether on how thoreughly the work is done. If done 
properly both work and cost will decrease rapidly from year to 
year. 

14. ‘Srtupy THE wWeEEDs.—No person can successfully fight weeds 
or anything else without knowing the nature of that which he is 
fighting. Strive to learn thoronghly ‘their methods of growth and 
ways of spreading. After these are known any weed on a farm 
can be controlled if fought constantly and in the proper manner. 
Remember that the weed itself has many problems to solve, many 
enemies to avoid. Before it can have fulfilled its mission on earth 
—that of produemg another weed like itself—the seed whence it 
sprung must have escaped the attacks of birds, mice and other 
enemies, else it would never have become a weed. The young 
shoot must have escaped the hoe or scythe, the jaws of grub or 
locust, the maw or hoof of cattle or horse. The flowers must have 
opened and secured their fertilization; the fruit must have set and 
ripened the seeds. They in their turn must have been scattered far 
and wide to proper soil and place of growth. If the weed fails, 
no matter how little, in any one of these things it is lost. Its chance 
of reproducing its kind is gone. Take advantage of some one of~ 
these problems which the weed has to solve and prevent its solu- 
tion. Know the wecds first, then knock them out. 

15. Makk BOTANY A COMMON SCHOOL stupy.—The chief busi- 
ness of the farmer is to raise cultivated plants, with the leaves, the 
seeds or the roots of which he feeds himself and the world. True 
he feeds part of them to animals bnt—‘‘all flesh is grass.’’ The 
plant must ever precede the animal and gather from the soil for 
the latter the food and store from the sun for it the energy neces- 


28 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


sary to its existence. Yes, farmers grow plants, but how many of 
them know the parts of a flower, the duties of each part? How 
many of them can take a book and determine for themselves the 
name and place of a new plant which has appeared on their farms 
and so know whether it is harmless or aggressive? Our most 
noxious, our vilest weeds can now never be wholly eradicated, but 
can only be subjugated and kept in partial control. They are here 
and here to stay. Had the farmers of the past known their real 
character and recognized the plants on their first appearance they 
would have postponed all other business until they were déstroyed. 
As it is, the farmers of the future must wage an eternal warfare 
against them, for they have secured a foothold which cannot be 
entirely overcome. True, a new species possessing characters which 
will enable it to crowd them out may, in time, appear, but such a 
change would very likely be for the worst. 

There was a time when but one, two or a dozen plants of each 
of these foreign weeds existed in the State. Then was the time to 
have successfully quarantined that species by destroying those 
pioneers. The few persons on whose land they appeared neglected 
them, and every gardener, every farmer, yea, every land owner in 
the State must. henceforth, now and forever, pay the penalty for 
that neglect by continued hoeing, plowing and mowing to keep these 
alien weeds in subjugation. As long as the rudiments of botany 
are not taught in the common schools the average farmer will be 
unable to tell whether a new plant which has made its appearance 
upon his land should be allowed to grow or not; in fact, in many 
instances he will not know that a new plant is there until it be- 
comes too abundant to be easily overcome. Put a high school into 
each township in the State; teach the elements of botany therein 
and then, and not till then, may we hope that the farmers of the 
future will be on the lookout for all new plants; will be able at 
once to judge their relative injuriousness, and will destroy, before 
they have time to ripen their seeds, those species which, if allowed 
to spread, will become a curse to the State. 


MEDICINAL PROPERTIES OF WEEDS. 


A number of our most noxious weeds possess valuable medicinal 
properties and have been used for centuries in the manufacture of 
drugs. Although the weeds so used were most of them introduced 
from Europe and the American farmer has had to fight some of 
them for nearly four hundred years, he has not been thrifty 
enough to gather them for the drug trade. In Europe, where 


SOME WEEDS USED IN MEDICINE, 29 


everything that can be turned into an honest penny is put to ac- 
count, these weeds are gathered in large quantities and to the value 
of hundreds of thousands of dollars, are shipped to America each 
vear. Here the same weeds are allowed to encumber the farm and 
impoverish the farmer, whereas they might be made sources of 
profit. ; 

Among the more common weeds growing in Indiana which for 
drug purposes have a value sufficient to justify their gathering are 
the couch-grass, curled and broad-leaved docks, black mustard, 
pokeweed, wormseed, poison hemlock, pleurisy root, silkweed, In- 
dian tobacco, catnip, mullen, two kinds of jimson-weeds, dande- 
lion, boneset, white snakeroot, horse-weed or fleabane, elecampanc, 
tansy, burdock and yarrow. Many a dollar can be earned by farm 
boys and girls in gathering and properly preparing the parts of 
these weeds used in medicine. Markets for them will be found at 
Madison, Terre Haute, Evansville, Fort Wayne, Indianapolis and 
other cities where buyers of roots and herbs are in business. Sulzer 
Bros., of Madison, who are the largest dealers in roots and herbs 
in the State, bought in 1911, 114,000 pounds of the medicinal parts 
of the above weeds, paying therefor about $3,600. The price paid 
for them is not large but the collecting can mostly be done in late 
summer at a time when farm work is not pressing. The small in- 
come thus derived will be so much gained while the farm is at the 
same time being cleared of the weeds. Under the name of the 
weed, in the list which follows, the part used of each of those above 
mentioned is given in proper order, and brief directions are also 
given for its collecting and curing. In general it may be said that 
whatever the parts gathered, they should be thoroughly dried in 
the shade on clean floors, racks or shelves, being spread out thinly 
and turned frequently. If dried out of doors they should be pro- 
tected from dew at night and at all times from rain. Roots should 
be throughly cleaned, washed and, if too large, sliced. Much care 
should be taken to have all parts free from foreign matter, espe- 
cially earth and fragments of other plants, and the leaves and 
stems, when dry, should retain their bright green color. 

When ready for sale the name of the nearest dealer should be 
obtained and a few ounces of each part, properly labeled, sent him 
as a sample. State the amount on hand and how soon it can be 
supplied. In shipping, the crude drugs should be tightly packed 
in clean dry barrels or gunny sacks, and plainly marked or tagged, 
both with the name of the sender and the person to whom they are 
consigned. 


30 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


‘NamES OF WEEDS. 


The first thing that a farmer or other person asks about any 
‘weed which attracts his attention is, ‘‘What is its name?’’ or 
‘What kind of a weed is it?’’ In other words he wants some 
handle to carry it with and-if no one can give him one he makes it 
for himself. Hence there are many common names for the same 
weed, sometimes half a dozen or more in the saine community. 
This is unfortunate, for one of the most important things in the 
warfare against weeds is to know a weed when it is seen and call 
it by its true name, that is, the one by which it is most widely 
known. In the list of 150 Indiana weeds each one has several of 
these common names given after the scientific name, the one in 
most general use being first mentioned. 

Fach weed is known to botanists by one and the same scientific 
name and it would be well for the farmer to learn these and then 
there would be no mistake about the weed he has in mind, provided 
he has it correctly identified. Hach scientific name is made up of 
two -Latin words, the first one, always begun with a capital letter, 
corresponding to the surname of a man and the second one, be- 
ginning with a small letter, to his given name. Thus the scientific 
name of the common yellow or curled dock is Rumex crispus L. in 
which the second name, crispus, corresponds to the given name, as 
‘‘John’’ or ‘‘Charles,’’ and the first, Rumez, to the'sur- or family 
name, as ‘‘Smith’’ or ‘‘Jones.’’ The scientific name is therefore 
of the same nature as that given a man but is in Latin and is writ- 
ten backward, as Smith John. There may be any number of kinds 
of Rumex or docks, but there can only be one-of them named 
erispus, Just as in the same family we find but one John. The sur- 
name of the man who first describes a plant-or weed and gives it a 
Latin name is always associated with it. Thus the L. after the 
name Rumea: crispus L. is the abbreviation for Linnseus who was 
the first botanist to give scientific names to plants and who gave 
the Latin names to the most of :onr worst weeds. 

The first part of a scientific name, as Rumez, is called the gen- 
erié name, a genus heing a group of kinds or species of plants which 
are alike in a number of characters. In this case it includes: all 
true docks. The second name, crispus, is the specific name and 
always refers té the one kind of dock which, wherever it is found, 
has certain characters distinguishing it from all other kinds of 
Rumer, When one has learned to know well any one individual 
plant of a certain weed he is therefore also acquainted with all 


THE ROOTS OF WEEDS, 31 


other individuals of the same species. The generic and specific 
names given to a plant or animal usually have some well defined - 
meaning, Rumezx in the case mentioned meaning ‘‘a spear,’’ from 
the shape of the leaves of the little sour dock or field sorrel, while 
crispus refers to the curled or wavy margins of the leaves of the 
eurled. dock which bears the name. 


Parts or A WEREp. 


In order that the farmer or other person may be able to distin- 
guish from the descriptions given anv one of the 150 weeds listed 
it will be necessary for him to know the names, structure and uses 
~ of a few of the principal and more prominent parts of a weed. As 
all of our weeds are constructed on the same general plan the parts 
of one will serve to illustrate the others with only certain differences 
in some particulars. Let us take, therefore, the corn cockle which 
is a common weed in wheat fields and examine carefully its differ- 
ent organs and the uses to which they are put. 

If an entire specimen of corn cockle be pulled up after it has 
been in blossom for some time it will be seen to have five general 
parts or divisions which are well known to all farmers. These are 
roots, stem, leaves, flowers and fruit or ‘‘seed pods,’’ and they will 
be considered in the order mentioned. 

‘THE ROOTS OF WEEDS.—Roots of weeds vary greatly in forn, 
size, length of life, ete. They grow downward or spread.out below 
the surface thus avoiding the light. Their chief duties are to sup- 
port-the plant in position and to gather for it moisture and food 
from the soil. As already noted, the roots of annual plants like the 
cockle live for but a single year. They are for the most part fibrous 
and spreading, and annual weeds can usually be easily pulled by 
hand. The roots of both annuals and perennials are usually greatly 
divided in order to secnre a firm hold upon the earth and to have 
as large an absorbing surface as possible in contact with the soil. 
Tn most weeds all the nourishment, except carbonic acid gas, comes 
from the soil and must. be in liquid form before it can be taken up 
by the little hairs which are found in numbers upon the smaller 
divisions of the roots. The plant foods such as potash, phosphorus, 
nitrates, silica, ete., before they can he absorbed by these root 
hairs must therefore be dissolved in the moisture of the soil, just 
as we disselve crystals of sugar or salt in water. Some roots, as 
those of clover and most plants of the pea family, prodjice small 


32 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


nodules caused by bacteria. 
(Fig. 7.) These bacteria have 
the power to fix the free nitio- 
gen of the air and develop ni- 
trogen salts. The clover platit 
uses part of these nitrogen 
salts as food and leaves some 
of them in the ground. Weeds 
of the pea family are thus to 
some degree beneficial in that 
they help enrich the soil. 
The roots of most biennial 
weeds, as well as those of some 
perennials, are often thick or 
fleshy, being composed largely 
of starch which has been stored 
to be used in giving the flower 
; ; ; stems of the second or succeed- 
Pie Taogen storing nodules. ‘(After Per) =—=Ss«an’=«Year nourishment for a 
quick growth in spring. Such 
weeds often have one large central tap-root extending straight 
downward, with a few smaller roots branching from its sides. The 


roots of a weed extend downward or outward in search of a suf- 


ficient supply of moisture; if this be lacking the weed, like all other 
plants, ceases growth, shrivels and in time dies. 

THE STEMS OF WEEDS.—The stem is the main axis of the plant 
and is supposed to bear the roots below ground and the leaves and 
flowers above. Most stems of weeds are more or less branched, 
some of them very much so; if not at all branched thev are called 
simple. If the stem dies down to the ground each year the plant 
is called an herb, or if it twines, an herbaceous vine. Almost all 
weeds are herbs. Stems with a woody texture which survive the 
winter above ground are woody vines, shrubs or trees. One shrub 
and two woody vines are included in the list of Indiana weeds, viz., 
the blackberry, poison ivy and trumpet-creeper, while the common 
elder might with propricty also have been included. 

In structure stems of weeds and other flowering plants are di- 
vided into two great classes. In one class, called endogens, or in- 
side growers, the woody or vascular tissue is usually scattered in 
bundles through the stem, and there is no visible distinction of 
bark, wood, ete. By cutting across the stem of a dry cornstalk one 
can readily find these bundles running like fibres lengthwise 


weneennnnanees 


THRE LEAVES OF WEEDS. 33 


through the pith. Only a few of our weeds belonging to the grass, 
sedge, lily and rush families have stems of this kind. In the other 
class called exogens, or outside growers, the stem is composed of 
distinct layers which surround one another in circles, and are 
usually known as bark, wood and pith. All our weeds except those 
of the four tamilies above mentioned belong to this class. 

The direction of growth of the stem is an important distinguish- 
ing character of weeds. If, like the corn cockle, it stands upright 
it is said to be erect; if arising obliquely from a prostrate base it 
is called ascending. Stems which grow along the ground without 
rooting are prostrate (purslane) or trailing (ground ivy). The 
stems of some weeds, as the plantain and dandelion, are very short, 
the leafless flower-stalk springing from the midst of a clump of 
basal or so-called root-leaves. Such a flower-stalk is called a scape. . 

Some perennial weeds produce both ordinary erect and creep- 
ing underground stems, the latter being called rootstocks or 
rhizomes. They may be known from true roots by their bearing 
buds at short intervals. When the conditions are favorable these 
buds produce erect above-ground stems. Such perennials are the 
most. difficult of all weeds to eradicate. The stems of some weeds, 
as the cinquefoil, produce above ground and near the base runners 
or offsets which take root and form new plants. 

THE LEAVES OF WEEDS.—Leaves are among the most important 
parts of a weed, as it is in their cells that all the food of the plant 
is assimilated or fitted for growth and for forming the flowers and 
seeds. It is the leaf also which has the sole power of absorbing 
carbonic acid gas from the air and by the aid of the sun’s heat 
and light, in the presence cf the green coloring matter (chloro- 
phyll), changing it into starch, this being used in forming other 
tissues such as wood or seeds or tubers. In these tissues the energy 
from the sun’s heat and light is stored and when the tissues are 
burned or used us food by animals the energy is set free and can be 
controlled by man. Most of the energy used by man and animals 
in performing the work of the world was at one time thus gathered 
by leaves and stored in the roots or stems or fruits of plants. 
Leaves are the principal organs of respiration or breathing which 
the weed possesses. It is through them also that the excess of water. 
gathered by the roots passes off. Constituting as they thus do the 
organs of digestion, breathing and transpiration or sweating, it is 
very plain that,if one can prevent a weed from producing leaves it 
will soon die. 

The broad expanded part of a leaf is called the blade and the 


13] 


34 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


narrower portion by which it is joined to the stem or branch is the 
stalk or petiole. Leaves which have no stalks, the blades being 
joined by one end directly to the stem, are sessile. In position on 
the stem they are opposite or in pairs as in the corn cockle; alter- 
nate or scattered singly along the stem, one above another on op- 
posite sides, as in the mullen, or whorled if three or more come off 
in a circle at the same level. 

In shape the leaves of weeds vary greatly, some of the forms 
being ovate or egg-shaped; lanceolate, narrower and more elongate 
than ovate and tapering to a point like a lance; cordate or heart- 
shaped; reniform or kidney-shaped, that. is heart-shaped at base 
but broader than long and not pointed; hastate or halberd-shaped, 


BVO ae 


Fig. 8. Showing forms of leaves: a, ovate; 5, cordate or heart-shaped; ¢, sagittate or arrow-shaped? 
d, hastate; e, reniform or kidney-shaped; f, rounded or orbicular; g, spatulate or spoon-shaped; 4A, oblong and 
obtuse; 4, linear; j, lanceolate; &, 3-parted or 3-divided; J, with apex notched or emarginate. ‘(After Gray.) 


with the lobes at base pointed outward ; oblong or narrowly ovate 
and usually dull at tip: spatulate or spoon-shaped, that is broader 
toward the apex; orbicular or rounded, and linear or long and nar- 
row as those of the corn cockle. The linear leaves of endogens like 
grasses, sedges and lilies have only long straight parallel veins, 
while those of exogens have netted veins which interlace and run 
together so as to form a network. (Fig. 15 b, d.) 

The edge or border of the leaf is either entire or variously 
toothed, lobed or deeply parted. When the lobes are divided clear 
to the midrib or the main vein at center, the leaf is said to be 
compound, otherwise it is simple. Each of the leaflets or divisions ' 
of a compound leaf may be divided into segments and these again 


THE FLOWERS OF WEEDS. 35 


subdivided, as in the dissected leaves of yarrow, dog-fennel, etc. 
The tip of a leaf may be acute or pointed, acuminate or longer 
pointed, obtuse or dull, emarginaie or notched, ete. Both leaves 
and stems may be clothed with hairs, as in the corn cockle, or 
glabrous, without hairs. The hairs, when present, differ greatly in 
length, stiffness, abundance, etc., in the various weeds. 

The leaves of many weeds bear on the stalk near the base a 
pair of leaf-like expansions called stipules (Fig. 15, d), which are 
usually green but often colorless. The margins of sessile leaves 
may sometimes extend down along the stem as in mullen. Such 
leaves are said to be decurrent and the stem winged. Bracts, scales, 
glumes, ete., are only leaves reduced in size which are mainly used 
to protect the flowers. The seed leaves or cotyledons, are small 


Fig. 9. Illustrating the parts of a flower: a, flower of poppy showing the 4 sets cf floral organs, ieee the 
sepals, together called the calyx; c, the petals, together called the corolla; a, the numerous stamens; g, the 2 ‘pis- 
them, a groqp of stamens and’ large reeeptarle bearing merous smal pt Buery-ahaped ower o 
nee = d, same spread to show the parts; & the as Me the wings, k, the keel, (After Strasburger and 
leaves which exist. in all seeds. In some plants, as the squash and 
beech-nut, they arise above the ground when the seed sprouts. 
Endogens have but one seed leaf while all exogens have two. 

THE FLOWERS OF 4 WEED.—The flower is that part of a plant 
whose chief duty it is to produce seeds or the young of future 
plants. A complete flower consists of the floral envelope, (Fig. 9,. 
a), or calyx and corolla, and the essential or sexual organs, the 
stamens and pistils. If any one of these four divisions of a flower 
is absent it is said to be incomplete. The calyx or outer floral en- 
velope is composed of several modified leaves called sepals which 
‘are usually green in color, and arranged in a circle so as to cover 
and protect all the other parts of the flower when in bud. In the 
corn cockle the lower parts of all 5 sepals have their edges united 


so as to form a tube, while the upper part of each sepal is separate. 


36 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


elongated and pointed. In the calyx of many -weeds the sepals 
are wholly separate and distinct one from another. In the differént 
weeds they also vary gteatly in shape, size and degree of union, so 
that the calyx may be shaped like a cup, bell, saucer, urn, tube and 
many other objects. In some weeds the calyx is colored like the 
corolla while in some it is wholly lacking. However, if but one 
set of floral envelopes is present it is the calyx, whatever its color, 
and the flower is said to be apetalous; while if both calyx and 
corolla are absent the flower is naked. 

The inner floral envelope when present is called the corolla. 
It is also made up of several leaf-like parts arranged in a whorl 
or circle and called petals. The petals are usually brightly colored 
and larger than the sepals. They also vary greatly in the different 
weeds in number, form, size, color and degree of union one with 


Fig.10. Illustrating forms of corollas: a, polypetalous flower of houncing, bet showing the 5 petals with long 
elaws or stalk-like bases; b, gamopetalous bell-shaped corolla of bell-flower; c, salver-shaped corolla of phlox; 
d, wheel-shaped corolla of nightshade; e, same of potato, the lobes less divided; f, funnel-form corolla of morning- 
glory; g, strap-shaped corolla of a Composite. (After Gray.) 


another. In the corn cockle the petals are 5, purple-red, separate, 
broader and slightly notched above and narrowed into wedge-like 
claws below. When the petals are wholly distinct one from another 
the corolla is said to be polynetalous 3; when more or less united, 
gamopetalous. If the petals are all alike, as in the cockle, the 
corolla is regular; if one or more of them differ in size or shape 
-as they do in many weeds, especially those of the pea and mint 
families, the corolla is irregular. 

The form of the corolla varies much and, like that of the calyx, 
is often described as being bell-, funnel., wheel-, tube-, or other- 
wise shaped. In the weeds of the bell-flower, mint and figwort 
families the corolla is more or less two-lipped, the petals being so 
united that two of them form an upper or overhanging portion, 
while the other three form the lower lip. In the dandelion, ox-eye 
daisy, dog-fennel and other weeds of the Chicory and Composite 


STAMENS AND THEIR WORK. 37 


families some or al! of the small tubular corollas appear as if 
split part way down on one side and then flattened. Such a corolla 
is said to be ligulate or strap-shaped, the split portion being called 
a ray. 

The corolla is often wrongly called the ‘‘flower.’’ This is be- 
cause it is usually the showy or attractive part to humans. How- 
ever, it was not made handsome to attract man but insects, so as 
to bring about a better pollination or cross fertilization of the es- 
sential organs. Jt also serves to some extent to protect those or- 
gans in the bud. In endogens the sepals and petals are, when pres- 
ent, 3 each in number and often colored alike to form what is 
known as the pertanth. 

- The duty of the stamens. or outer set of essential organs of a 


Fig. 11. Illustrating stamens and pollen grains: a, stamen of henbane, /, filament, p, aniher; 6, flower of 
mallow with calyx and corolla cut away, showing the monodelphous stamens united in a column around the styles; 
c, stamens of pea in two groups (diadelphous) 9 and 1; d, stamen with versatile anther as in grasses and evening- 
primrose; e, stamen of horse nettle, the pollen escaping by terminal pores; f, stamens of a Composite showing 
the anthers united in a tube: g, same with tube split and spread out; A, a 3-lobed pollen grain of evening-prim- 
rose; i, a pair of pollen masses of a milkweed flower attached by stalks toa gland. (After Gray.) 
flower when both are present, is to produce pollen grains or spores. 
These grains are the male or fertilizing agents of the flower. A 
stamen usually consists of a stalk or filament and an anther, the 
latter being made up of 2 sacs or cells in which the pollen is 
formed and held until it is ready for use. When the pollen is ripe 
the sacs open by slits or pores and the pollen is scattered by the 
wind, inse¢ts or other agencies. The stamens vary greatly in num- 
ber, length of filament, form of anther, degree of union one with 
another, and mode of insertion or connection with other parts of 
the flower. All of the filaments may be joined together as is the 
case in the velvet leaf and other weeds of the mallow family, or 
they may be united in sets as in the St. Johnswort and many plants 
of the pea family. In the weeds of the Composite family the an- 


thers are united to form a ring about the style. 


38 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


In a number of weeds, as the common ragweed and field sorrel, 
the stamens and pistils are borne in separate flowers. Those flow- 
ers with stamens only are called staminate or sterile flowers, 
whether the calyx or corolla be present or not, while those with 
pistils only are pistilate or fertile flowers. In the ragweed these 
two kinds of flowers are borne on the same plant and when so 
borne the plant is said to be monecious (of one household). In 
the field sorrel they are on separate plants and in this and similar 
cases the weed is called diawcious (of two households). If both sta- 
mens and pistils are absent, as in the ray flowers of some Com- 
posite weeds, the flowers are neutral. In the corn cockle the sta- 
mens are 10 in number, separate, and borne on the stalk of the 


Fig. 12. Showing forms of pistils and ovaries: a, b and c, simple pails; a, pistil of a single leaf, the ovary 
cut across with the ovules borne on the central] suture; 5, pistil ou marsh marigold which has opened and shed ita 
seeds; c, 3 simple opens of one flower; d-i, compound istils; d, of common St. Johnswort, satire the three 
separate styles and 3 cells of ovary; e, of sbrubby St. ohnswort, showing the styles united, but the cells the 
same; Jf, of spiderwort showing the 3 cells each with a single ovule; g and h, of chickweed showing 8 styles, 1 cell 
and ovules on a central column; #, a pistil showing the ovary, f, the style, g, "and the stigma, n. (After Gray.) 


ovary, and the anthers open by lengthwise valves to discharge tie 
pollen. 

The pistils, or ae parts of the flower, which produce the 
young or unfertilized seeds called ovules, form the innermost set 
‘of the essential organs. In number the pistils vary greatly ac- 
cording to the species of plant. The flowers of some plants, as those 
of the pea or clover, have a single simple pistil, while a buttercup 
has many. Such simple pistils consist of a single modified leaf, the 
carpel, folded together and containing one or many ovules. A 
compound pistil, as that of the corn cockle, consists of two or more 
earpels joined together. Each pistil is made up of two or three 
parts. The two parts always present are the ovary or enlarged 
~ part at base which contains the ovules, and the stigma which is 


PISTILS AND THEIR PARTS, 39 


viscid or sticky so as to catch the pollen grains. Sometimes the 
stigma is borne directly on the ovary but more often it is at the top 
or on the side of a slender stalk called the style, which is an elonga- 
tion of the upper part of the ovary. In corn the styles are very 
long and form the so-called ‘‘silk.’’ 

The ovary of a simple pistil when removed and cut crosswise is 
seen to have but a single cell or cavity to contain the ovules, while 
that of a compound pistil may have a number of cells, their par- 
tition walls being formed by the carpels which compose the ovary. 
The number of these carpels can usually be told by the number of 
styles or stigmas present. In the corn cockle there is one com- 
pound pistil with 5 styles, a stigma heing attached along the in- 
side of each, so that 5 carpels were united to form the pistil. 
When cut crosswise the ovary is seen to be only 1-celled, the car- 
pels not having fermed complete partitions or walls though traces 
of such walls are seen at the base. The ovules are many and are 
joined to a central column which extends from the bottom to near 
the top of the ovary. The ovules of different weeds are arranged 
in the cells in different ways, sometimes being joined to one or 
more seams (placentew) on the sides of the cell and sometimes at- 
tached to a central column as in the cockle. If single they may 
be attached at base to the bottom of the cell. 

The number of cells in the ovary is used as a very important 
character in distinguishing the families of plants and can usually 
be readily determined by carefully removing the ovary, cutting it 
crosswise with a sharp knife and then gently squeezing the ovules 
from one of the halves. Ry looking closely with a lens the number 
of small cavities can then be easily counted. (Fig. 12, d, e,f.) It 
is also important to know whether the ovary is in any way united 
to the calvx or not. In the corn eockle the two are wholly sepa- 
rate, the ovary being above the calyx, and when so placed it is 
said to be superior or free. In the evening primrose and many 
other weeds the calyx is partly or wholly united to the ovary and 
the latter is then said to be inferior. 

Within each ovule is a little embrvo sac containing a minute 
ege or germ. When a pollen grain falls on the sticky stigma it 
develops or sends out a very slender tube containing numerous 
microscopic sperm or male cells. This finds its way down through 
the tube of the style and entering the ovule through a minute open- 
ing empties the sperm cells into the embryo sac. One of the sperm 
cells unites with the egg and the fertilization of the latter re- 
sults. From the fertilized egg the young or embryo plant is pro- 


40 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


duced within the ovule. The coats of the latter thicken and eii- 
large and in time form the ripened seed which with the future 
weed enclosed is ready to be borne to some new spot where it may 
sprout and begin for itself the hattle of life. 

The manher of inflorescence, or arrangement of the flowers on 
the stem, is often an impcrtant distinguishing character of weeds. 
Flowers are either solitary or clustered. Solitary flowers are either 
borne in the axil or angle which the leaf makes where it joins the 
‘stem, when they are said to be axillary and solitary, as in the money- 
wort; cr are borne on the ends of the stems or branches, when they 
are terminal. In the corn cockle the flowers are solitarv on the 
ends of long axillary peduncles or flower-stalks. If the flower is 


Fig. 13. Showing focms of inflorescence: a, spike of plantain; b, igre Canads thistle, 2¢ natural size: ¢, a 
Jerigi a 4 bellets. 


raceme; d, a corymb; e, an umbel; f,a p wmbel wit (After Gray.) 


without a peduncle or stalk of its own it is said to be sessile. The 
end of each stem or peduncle which bears the flower or on which 
the different parts rest is the receptacle. 

In most weeds the flowers are in clusters on the ends of the 
branches or stems, rarcly in the avils, as in tumble-weed. In form 
the clusters may be: a head where numerous sessile flowers are 
bunched closely together on a common receptacle, as in the thistle 
or dandelion; a spike in which the flowers are also sessile but ar- 
ranged around the sides of a long central axis, as in plantain and 
mullen ; a raceme having each flower on its own stalk and arranged 
loosely along the sides of a common stalk or central axis, as i 
shepherd’s purse and moth mullen; a corymb which is a flat-topped 


THE FRUITS OF WEEDS. 41 


raceme, the lower peduncles being lengthened to raise their flowers 
or heads to the same level as those above, as in yarrow; a cyme 
which is only a corymb with all the blossoms from terminal buds, 
the one on the main stem opening first, followed by those on the 
side shoots, as in chickweed; an wmbel, as in milkweed and wild 
onion, where all the flower-stalks seem to arise from a single point 
like the ribs of an umbrella, whence the name. 

Compound flower clusters of each of the above kinds are fre- 
quent, as the compound umbel of the wild carrot where the stalks 
of the first or lower umbel become themselves umbels and bear uim- 
bellets. A compound raceme which branches loosely and irregu- 
larly is called a panicle and is seen in oats and most grasses. A 
head, umbel or other flower cluster is often surrounded by a whorl 
or circle of bracts or small leaves called an inmvolucre. These are 
present in the thistle and other Composite as well as in nee and 
many other weeds. * 

THE FRUITS OF WEEDS.—In botany the word fruit is used to 
designate the mature or ripened ovary or seed vessel with the en- 
closed seeds, whatever its nature and whether it is edible or not. 
It also includes any appendages of the flower which are perma- 
nently attached to it, such as the calyx of an apple or the fleshy 
receptacle at the center of a blackberry. The fruits of weeds, like 
those of other plants, are therefore exceedingly variable in struc- 
ture and -form. 

In general, fruits are either fleshy or dry. Not very many 
weeds have fleshy fruits. However the drupe or stone-fruit, hav- 
ing the outer part fleshy and the inver fart hard and stony and 
enclosing the seed, is represented in the blackberry, where the little 
drupes are massed together around the fleshy receptacle, and also 
in the fruit of the poison ivy. The berry is another form of fleshy 
fruit in which the hard coated ‘seeds are enclosed in and directly 
surrounded by the fleshy pulp. The fruits of pokeweed, horse 
nettle, ground cherry, etc., are therefore true berries. When eaten 
by birds and other animals the hard seeds of;both drupes and ber- 
ries are not digested but are passed with the excrement and thus 
gain wide dispersal. 

Dry fruits are of two kinds, viz., the indehiscent which do not 
open at maturity and the dehiscent which split open, usually along 

“regular lines, and scatter the seeds. Of the numerous kinds of 
indehiscent fruits but three are commonly met with among weeds. 
The achene is a small dry one-seeded indehiscent fruit often so 
seed-like in appearance that it is taken for a naked seed. However 


42 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


the achene always has two scars, one at the base showing where it 
was joined to the flower-stalk, and the other at the top where the 
style or stigma was united to it, whereas the seed has but one scar 
indicating the point where it was joined to the ovary. The ripened 
pistils of the buttereups and the so-called seeds of the dandelions; 
catnip and hound’s tongue are examples of achenes. The utricle 
is an achene with a thin Joose outer covering, as seen in pigweed, 
lamb’s quarters, etc. The caryopsis or grain is a dry indehiscent 
fruit in which the seed is firmly united with the wall of the ovary, 
so that both fruit and seed form one body, as in wheat, corn and 
the weeds of the grass family. 

The dry dehiscent fruits are also numerous in kind. Among 


Fiz. 14. Illustrating forms of fruitss, a, single drupe of blackberry split to show pulp, stone and inner seed;- 
5, a berry; c, pycis of p.rslane, the lid upraised; d,.uiricle of Jamb’s quarters; e, utricle of pigweed opening all 
around; f, achene of buttercup; g, same split lengthwise to show the enclosed seed; h, a follicle; i, silique of a mus- 
tard; j, capsule of a St. Johnswort; k, a pod or legume; 1, loment or Jointed pod of a tick-trefpil. (After Gray.) 


them are the pod of the weeds of the pea family, which splits along 
both sides into two valves; the follicle of the milkweed, which splits 
down one side only: the capsule or fruit of a compound ovary, 
which usually splits lengthwise into several valves, as in the corn 
cockle, but sometimes discharges its seeds through ‘chinks or pores, 
as in the velvet leaf, or hursts irregularly as in the lobelia; the 
silique of the mustard family, a pod which splits into two valves 
leaving a thin partition wall with the seeds attached, and the 
pyxis, a pod which opens with a little circular lid as in the plan- 
tain and purslane. - 

The duty of all these different forms of fruit or seed vessels is 
to retain and protect the ripened seeds until they are ready for 


distribution to fields and pastures new. Of the seed, which is the. 
{ 


HOW TO USE THE FAMILY KEYS. 43 


final product of the weed—the one object of its existence—enough 
has been said or will be said in the pages which are to follow. Hav- 
ing thus described the parts of a weed we see that while they are 
numerous they are not difficult to learn. Anyone with a corn 
coekle or some other wecd by his side can soon learn these parts 
so that he should be able, with the aid of the family kevs and de- 
scriptions which follow, to locate any one of the 150 weeds which 
are listed. Onlv a little time, a little patience, a little labor are 
necessary and a knowledge which will open up a new world of value 
and of interest will be his. 


Keys to Famiiirs oF WEEDS. 


‘Weeds which have a number of different characters in common 
are grouped into a family by themselves. The 227 species of In- 
diana weeds hereafter considered belong to no less than 38 dif- 
ferent families. Hach of these families has both a common and a. 
scientific name. Keys or tables leading up to each family have 
been prepared. A person by aid of these keys can locate the weed 
at hand in its proper family and then, by comparing the descrip- 
tions of the weeds grouped under that family heading with the 
one in hand, will soon be able to tell whether it is one of the de- 
seribed and listed species or not. Jt must be remembered that 
there are other plants, 1,800 and more, growing wild in Indiana 
which are not described in this bock and it is, therefore, very prob- 
able that one of them may be the supposed weed which the per- 
son is trying to locate. If so, he may or may not be able to locate 
it in the family to which it belongs. by the keys given, for those 
keys are designed only for the species of weeds listed and there are 
many other families of plants besides those including the weeds 
which are represented in the State. 

How to USE THE KrY.—Gather a complete specimen of the sup- 
posed weed, roots and all. Be sure and get one in flower and if pos- 
sible also partly in fruit. Have a pocket lens or magnifying glass, 
such as a linen tester, a sharp pocket knife and a long needle at 
hand. First examine the leaves and a cross section of the stem to 
see whether it is an endogen or erogen. (Fig. 15.) If an endogen, 
go to the ‘‘Key to the Families of Endogen Weeds’’ and compare 
carefully the plant with the characters mentioned after a. If it 
agrees with these go to ) and compare with the characters there 
given; if it does not fit them, go to bb and again compare. If it 
fits b or bb go to the family whose name and page are given after 
the letter it fits, and read over the family description carefully to 


44 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


see that it agrees with the weed in hand. If it did not fit a go to 
aa and compare. If it is an endogen and listed, it belongs either 
under a or aa. If it fits aa go to e, ete. 

If the weed is an-exogen, turn to the ‘‘Key to the Divisions of 
Exogens,’’ and examine the plant for petals to see whether they are 
present or not. If not present, go to the ‘‘Key to the Families of 
Apetalous Exogens’’ and try that. If the petals are present see 
whether they are wholly separate one from another ; if so, go to the 
“Key to the Families of Polypetalous Exogens.’’ If they are 
more or less united the plant is gamopetalous and the family should 
be sought for under the ‘‘Key to the Families of Gamopetalous 
Exogens.’’ Remember that whenever the plant fits a of a key it 
will run to some family whose name is given between a and aa. If 


d a, cross-section of corn-stalk, the dots 


and 
showing the tops of the long strands of woody fibre scattered irregularly through the pith; b, parallel seined leaf 
of an endogen; c, cross-section of stem of an endogen, showing the 4 stem regions, e, the epidermis, c, cortex or 
bark, w, the wood, p, the pith; d, netted veined leaf of exogen with stipules at base. (After Coulter and Gray.) 


Fig. 15. Illustrating the differences b 


it fits a and b it will run to a family between b and bb. Whenever 
it does not fit a letter go to the double of the same letter, and from 
there on down the key, never backward. If it fits the characters 
given after a letter, as c, and there is no family name following c 
then go to d and so on down the key until] a family name occurs 
after a letter. 

As with the endogens, when it runs to a family name turn to 
the page given and compare carefully the weed with the descrip- 
tion there given. If the weed agrees with this description then 
read the descriptions of the different weeds under that family 
until you find one with which your plant agrees. If the family 
description does not fit the weed a mistake has more than likely 
been made in running it into that family. In a work of this kind, 
where the family descriptions and descriptions of species are neces- 


REY To FAMILIES OF HNDOGEN WHEDS. 4 


ou 


sarily brief, it is more than probable that some of the characters 
given will not agree with the plant in hand. All plants vary more 
or less, no two individuals being exactly alike. “If the most of the 
more important characters agree it is very probable that the plant 
has been correctly traced. 

All of the weeds listed belong to the sub-kingdom of plants 
known as Spermatophyta or seed-bearing plants in which the pol- 
len grains develop into pollen tubes which find their way to embryo 
sacs in ovules and there fertilize the germ cells or microscopic eggs, 
which remain enclosed in the ovules until they ripen into seeds. 
All of them also belong to the class Angiospermae or flowering- 
plants in which the ovules are enclosed in an ovary which becomes 
the fruit. 


KEY TO SUBCLASSES OF ANGIOSPERM A. 


a. Leaves with parallel veins, mostly alternate, entire, linear or grass- 
like and sheathing the stem at base; stem without distinct layers 
of bark, wood and pith; embryo of the seeds with one seed-leaf, 
the first leaves of the sprouting plant alternate; parts of the flowers 
usually in 38’s or 6’s. ENDOGENS, p. 45. 

aa. Leaves with netted veins; stems formed of circular rings of bark, wood 

and pith; embryo and young plant with a pair of opposite seed- 
leaves ; parts of the flowers rarely in 3’s or 6’s. EXXoGEns, p. 46. 


KEY TO THE FAMILIES OF ENDOGEN WEEDS.* 


a. Ovaries simple, distinct, 1-celled, 1-seeded, formed of a single carpel ; 
flowers without sepals or petals, borne in the axils of dry chaffy 
scales (glumes) and arranged in spikes or spikelets. 

b. Stems (culms) mostly hollow, cylindrical; sheaths split to the base; 


glumes in pairs; fruit a grain. Grass FaMILy, p. 50. 
bb. Stems solid, often triangular; sheaths closed; glumes single; fruit 
an achene. SEDGE FAMILY, p. 57. 


aa. Ovaries compound, formed of 2 or more carpels; flowers complete, 
their parts in 3’s or 6’s. 
c. Sepals and petals (perianth) green or brown; stems rush-like with 
grass-like leaves; flowers small (stamens 6 and leaves all basal 
in our weeds.) RusH FamMItLy, p. 59. 
ce. Petals or inner part of the perianth colored; fruit a 3-celled capsule 
splitting down the back of each carpel; plants mostly springing 
from bulbs; our weeds witb an onion-like odor. 
LILy FAMILY, p. 60. 


*The keys as given include only the families to which the weeds hereafter listed belong. 


46 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


KEY TO THE DIVISIONS OF EXOGENS. 


a. Petals wholly wanting; calyx present, except in some spurges. 
APETALOUS EXOGENS, p. 46. 


ad. Petals and sepals both present. ; 
bd. Petals all separate and distinct one from another, except in the 
pea family where the lower two are often united. (Figs. 9; 

10, a.) POLYPETALOUS EXoGENS, p. 46. 


bb. Petals more or less united into one piece. (Fig. 10, b-g.) 
GAMOPETALOUS EXOGENS, p. 47.* 


KEY TO THE FAMILIES OF APETALOUS EXOGEN WEEDS. 


a. Fruit an achene, 1-celled, 1-seeded; ovary 1 only, superior. (Nettles. 
docks, smartweeds, etc.) 

b. Herbs with small clustered greenish flowers, and, in our weeds, with 
stinging hairs; stipules not forming a, circular sheath about 
the joints; achenes compressed, ovate or oblong. 

NETTLE FaMILy, p. 61. 

bb. Herbs without stinging hairs but usually with a sour or very acrid 

juice; stipules forming a cylindrical sheath about the joints of 

stem; achenes 3-sided or 3-angled. BuckWHEAT Famiry, p. 63.* 

aa. Fruit not an achene; ovary 1 only, superior. (amb’s quarters, pig- 
weeds, pokeweed, spurges, etc.) 

c. Leaves without milky juice; fruit not 3-seeded. 

d. Leaves not in whorls; fruit not a capsule; stem usually erect. 
e. Fruit a utricle, 1-celled, 1-seeded (Fig. 14, d, e.) ; stipules none. 

f. Flowers not surrounded by dry pointed bracts; sepals 
green or greenish; leaves and stems usually white-mealy 

or glandular. GoosEFooT FAMILY, p. 69. 

ff. Flowers each surrounded by 3 dry persistent awl-shaped 
bracts; sepals brown or colorless; plant not mealy or 
glandular. AMARANTH FAMILy, p. 72. 

ee. Fruit a fleshy 10-seeded berry; styles and stamens 10 each; 
ovary 10-celled; flowers numerous in terminal racemes; 


leaves alternate, entire. POKEWEED FAMILy, p. 75. 
dd. Leaves in whorls of 5’s or 6’s; stem prostrate, spreading; fruit 
a 8-celled capsule. CaRPET-WEED FAMILY, p. 76. 


ce. Leaves with a milky acrid juice; staminate and pistillate flowers 
of our weeds separate but on the same plant, the pistillate ones 
enclosed by a cup-shaped involucre or a leaf-like bract; fruit 
3-seeded. SpPurGE Famity, p. 91. 


KEY TO THE FAMILIES OF POLYPETALOUS EXOGEN WEEDS. 


a. Stem leaves opposite, entire. 

b. Leaves not punctuate with pellucid and dark dots; stamens not 
over 10, separate; ovules borne on a central column; corolla 
not yellow. PINK FaMILy, p. 77. 
bb. Leaves and petals with numerous very small round pellucid or dark 
dots; stamens very numerous united in 3 or more sets; ovules 

borne on the walls of the ovary; corolla yellow. 
St. JOHN’sworT FAMIty, p. 98. 


KEY TO FAMILIES OF EXOGEN WEEDS. 47 


aa. Sy" “aves ot our weeds either alternate or clustered at the ends of 
the branches. 
c. Stem prostrate, succulent, spreading; leaves mostly clustered at 
the ends of the branches; sepals 2; corolla regular, yellow. 
PURSLANE FAMILY, p. 76. 
ce. Stem rarely prostrate, or if so not succulent and the sepals 
more than 2. 
d. Ovary superior or wholly free from the calyx. 
e. Stamens numerous, at least more than 10; corolla regular. 
f. Stamens all separate and distinct; ovaries simple, 1- 
celled. 

g. Sepals all separate and distinct; petals -and stamens 
borne on the receptacle at the base of the ovaries; 
stipules none; our weeds with simple more or less 
lobed leaves and yellow corollas. 

CrowFoor FaMILy, p. 80. 
gg. Sepals more or less united at base; petals and sta- 
mens borne on the calyx; stipules present; our 
weeds with compound, 3-5 foliate leaves and white 
or yellow corollas. Rose FAaMILy, p. 85. 
ff. Stamens all united in a column and connected at base 
with the short claws of the petals (Fig. 11, b.); 
ovaries compound, several celled, often united in a 
ring. MALLOW FAMILY, p. 95. 
ee. Stamens not more than 10. 

h. Petals 4; stamens 6, 4 long, 2 short, rarely only 2; 
fruit a silique; herbs with a pungent watery juice. 
MUSTARD FAMILY, p. 81. 
hh. Petals 5, the lower 2 often more or less united; stamens 

never 6 or 2; fruit not a silique. 

4. Herbs; fruit a legume or pod; flowers mostly irreg- 

£ ular and shaped like those of a pea (regular in 
Cassia or wild senna). PEA FAMILY, p. 88. 

ii. Shrubs or woody vines; fruit a small drupe; flowers 
regular; our included species with milky poisonous 
sap. Sumac FamIty, p. 94. 

dd. Ovary inferior or partly or wholly united with the calyx. 
j. Flowers not in umbels, yellow, nocturnal; leaves simple; 
stamens in our weeds 8; ovules numerous in each cell 
of the ovary. EXVENING-PRIMROSE FAMILY, p. 99. 
jj. Flowers in umbels, white or yellow, diurnal; leaves in our 
weeds, compound; stamens 5; ovules 1 in each cell of 
ovary. PARSLEY FAMILY, p. 100. 


KEY TO THE FAMILIES OF GAMOPETALOUS EXOGEN WEEDS. 


a. Ovary superior or wholly free from the calyx. 
db. Corolla not thin dry and colorless; leaves not all basal; flowers 
not in spikes on leafless flower stalks. 
ce. Herbs with milky juice; leaves mostly opposite; fruit a follicle; 
seeds bearing a long tuft of white hairs; ovaries 2, separate. 


Pine. “A WEED BOOK, 
48 THE INDIXNA WEIS 
“> slen- 


= acc wT 
d. Stamens distinct; pollen in ordinary grains ; follicles*ve. 2 
der, cylindrical, pointed. DoeB4 NE FAMILy, p. 104° 
dd. Stamens united by their filaments to form a tube; pollea 
grains united into waxy masses; follicles robust. 
MILK WEED FAmIty, p. 105. 
cc. Stems and leaves without milky juice; fruit not a follicle; seeds 
without tufts of hairs; leaves opposite or alternate; ovary 1, 
compound. : 
e. Corolla regular (slightly irregular in blueweed of the Borage 
Family). 
f. Ovary not deeply 4-lobed; fruits not separating as 1-seeded 
nutlets when ripe. 
g. Stamens 5; flowers not in terminal spikes; leaves alter- 
nate. 
h. Twining or trailing vines; fruit not a berry or a large 
prickly capsule. ; 
i. Stems white or yellowish, leafless, twining, para- 
sitic vines. Dopper Fai y, p. 110. 
di. Stems green, leaf-bearing vines; flowers of our 
weeds large, funnel-form or bell-shaped. 
Morninc-GLory FAMILY, p. 107. 
hh. Erect and branching herbs, not vines; fruit a berry 
or a large prickly capsule; corolla either bell- or 
wheel-shaped, or large funnel-form and ill-smelling. 
POTATO FAMILY, p. 124. 
gg. Stamens 4, 2 long, 2 short; flowers of our weeds white 
or blue in erect spikes terminating the stems or 
branches; leaves opposite. VERVAIN FAMILY, p. 115. 
ff. Ovary deeply 4-lobed around the style; fruit separating as 
nutlets, those in our weeds mostly armed with barbed 
prickles; leaves and stems rough hairy. 
BoraceE FAamIty, p. 112. 
ee. Corolla irregular, more or less 2-lipped (nearly regular in the 
miullens and true mints of the Figwort and Mint Families). 
j. Ovary 4-lobed around the style, the lobes ripening into 
smooth 1-seeded nutlets; stem 4-sided; leaves simple, op- 
posite, when crushed emitting an aromatic odor. 
MINT FAMILY, p. 117. 
jj. Ovary 2-celled; fruit a many-seeded capsule; stems rarely 
4-sided; leaves mostly alternate, not aromatic. 
k. Herbs with rather small flowers; stamens mostly 2 or 4 
(5 in the mullens) ; seeds borne on a central axis, not 
winged. Fiewort FaMIcy, p. 129. 
kk. Woody vines with large trumpet-shaped orange flowers ;” 
stamens 5; fruit a long pod-like capsule; seeds borne 
on the margins of the partition separating its cells, 
winged. TRUMPET-CREEPER FAMILY, p. 134. 
bb. Corolla thin, dry and membranous, withering on the pod; leaves 
of our weeds all basal; flowers in dense spikes on slender leaf- 
less flower stalks. PIANTAIN FAMILY, p. 185. 


nN 
KEY TO FAMILIES OF EXOGEN WéEDS. 49 


aa. Ovary inferior or more or less united with the calyx. 
1. Flowers not closely bunched into a head which is surrounded by a 
leafy involucre; those of our weeds mostly 2-lipped, blue or 
bluish ; stems with an acrid and usually milky juice. 8 


BELL-FLOWER FAMILY, p. 140. 
Wu. Flowers closely bunched into a head surrounded by a leafy in- 
volucre. 


m. Flowers of head all ligulate or split into flat rays (Mig. 10, Gg); 
mostly yellow; juice of stems and leaves milky. 
Cutcory FPaMILy, p. 142. 
mii. Flowers all tubular or only the outer ones of the head with 
rays; juice not or rarely milky. ; 
nv. Stamens not united by their anthers into a ring or tube 
around the style. 

o. Leaves all opposite, their ribs and the flower-stalks 
prickly ; heads very large, oblong-cylindrical, with nu- 
merous long spiny-tipped awns; flowers all perfect. 

TEASEL FAMILY, p. 139. 

oo. Leaves alternate, mostly divided or lobed, not prickly; 
staminate and pistillate flowers of our weeds in sepa- 
rate heads on the same plant, the latter without a 
corolla. RAGWEED FAMILY, p. 149. 

nn, Stamens united by théir anthers into a tube or ring about 
the style; fruit or so-called seed an achene, usually bear- 

ing a tuft of hairs or several awns. (Figs. 10, 9; 11, f, 9.) 
THISTLE FAMILY, p. 153. 


* 
* * 


The arrangement and names of the weeds listed are mainly 
those of Britton and Brown’s ‘‘Iustrated Flora of the Northern 
States and Canada.’’ This is a work of three volumes published 
by Chas. Scribner’s Sons, N. Y., and is the only systematic botany 
in which all species described are figured. Twenty-five of the 
illustrations used in this book were taken from it. The others are 
from the works of the various authors whose names are mentioned 
under the respective figures. ; 

At the end of the descriptions will be found a list of the princi- 
pal books or papers which have been used in the preparation of 
this work, and also a glossary of the more important botanical. 
terms which have been used. 

The first letter in the parenthesis after the common names of 
each weed listed shows whether the plant is an annual (A.), a bi- 
ennial (B.) or a perennial (P.). The second letter denotes whether 
it is introduced (I.) or native to Indiana (N.). The figure 1, 2 or 
3 shows the class to which the weed has been assigned by the 
writer, (See p. 12). Thus, 1 denotes that the weed belongs to 
Class I., 2 a weed of Class II. and 3 a weed of Class III. 

14} 


A DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE OF INDIANA 
WEEDS. 


Tue Grass Fammy—GRAMINEA. 


Annual or perennial herbs having the stems (culms) usually: 
hollow, their joints closed; leaves alternate, linear and sheathing 
the stem, the sheaths split or open on the side opposite the blade; 
roots fibrous. Flowers usually in panicled spikes, composed of little 
spikes called spikelets; calyx and corolla absent but they and their 
involucre represented by chaffy scales or bracts, known as glumes;. 
stamens usually 3, anthers attached at middle at the point of the 
filament (Fig. 11, d) and swinging loosely thereon, thus enabling 
the wind to easily pollenize the hairy or feather-like stigmas; 
ovary 1-celled with a single ovule., Fruit a seed-like ‘‘grain.’’ 

A very large and most important family furnishing the food- 
grains (cereals) of man, and the principal food of cattle. About 
175 species of grasses are known to grow wild in Indiana, the ma- 
jority of them being tufted, turf-forming plants, marked by under- 
ground rootstocks which branch and creep beneath the surface of 
the soil. Their flower clusters vary greatly in form and size, 
ranging from the solid spikes of timothy and foxtail to the loose 
and straggling clusters of the panicums and blue-grass. Among 
them are many forms which, though at times furnishing grasses for’ 
stock, are enemies of cultivated crops, being introduced into the 
fields by the sowing of their seeds with grain or other grass seeds. 
Ten of the worst of these are herewith described as weeds while 5 
others are mentioned. 

‘‘Grass is the most widely distributed of all vegetable life, and 
is at once the type of our life and emblem of our mortality. Lying 
in the sunshine among the buttercups and dandelions of May, 
scarcely higher in intelligence than the minute tenants of that 
mimic wilderness, our earliest recollections are of grass, and when 
the fitful fever is ended and the foolish wrangle of the market and 
the forum is clesed, grass heals over the sear which our descent into 
the bosom of the earth has made, and the carpet of the infant. be- 
comes the blanket of the dead. a 

‘“‘Grass is the forgiveness of nature—her constant henedictiall 


(80) 


WEEDS OF THE GRASS FAMILY. 51 


Fields trampled with battle, saturated with blood, torn with the 
ruts of cannon, grow green again with grass and carnage is for- 
gotten. Streets abandoned by traffic become grass-grown like rural 
lanes, and are obliterated. Forests decay, harvests perish, flowers 
vanish, but grass is immortal. It bears no blazonry of bloom to 
charm the senses with fragrance or with splendor, but its homely 
hue is more enchanting than the lily or the rose. Should its har- 
vest fail for but a single year, famine would depopulate the 
world.’’—J. J. Ingalls. 


1. ANpDROPOGON vViRGINicus L. Virginia Beard-grass. Broom Sedge. 
(P. N. 2.) 


Erect in dense tufts, smooth, 2--+ 
feet high; culms with numerous short 
branches, light green when young, 
brownish-yellow when mature; leaves 
6-12 inches long, acuminate, rough on 
the margins. Spikes in pairs or some- 
times 3 or 4, about 1 inch long, and 
protruding from the side of the in- 
flated leaf which surrounds the flower- 
stem, the latter slender, jointed and 
pubescent with many long spreading 
silky hairs; spikelets in pairs, one of 
them sessile and perfect, the other 
wholly wanting or represented by a 
mere scale. Seeds oat-like, $ inch long 
with a straight 4 inch awn at tip. 
(Fig. 16.) 


Common in the southern half of 
State and gradually spreading 
northward. July—-Sept. Occurs in 
poor clayey or sandy upland soil, 

‘ ; aa especially on hill slopes where the 
Fig. 16. a, a spike; 6, sessile spikelet; c and d, 
first and second glumes. (After Scribner.) rocks come close to the surface. 
Spreads both by wind-carried seeds 
and rootstocks and apt to become a serious pest. Remedies: grub- 
bing out the first bunches which appear; burning the land over in 
early autumn to destroy the seeds; thorough cultivation; seeding 
with clover or cow-peas. 

The broom beard-grass (A. scoparius Michx.) is also very com- 
mon in dry soils in southern Indiana and becoming frequent north- 
ward. It differs in having the joints of the flower-stem. (rachis) 
thickened or club-shaped at the ends; the spikes solitary, loose and 
distant and the awn of the seed bent at base. Remedies the same. 


, 


52 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


2. SyNTIIERISMA SANGUINALIS L. Crdb-grass. 


Finger-grass. (A. I. 1.) 


Suberect or spreading, often rooting 
at the lower joints, 1-3 feet long; leaves 
smooth or sparitigly hairy, 2-6 inches 


long. 


cultivated grounds. 
ter midsummer in wet seasons one 
of the worst of lawn weeds often 
erowding out the blue-grass. When 
eut or pulled and thrown aside its 
stems quickly take root from the 
joints and are soon as luxuriant as 
before. Dry sandy fields in which 


inches long, 


Spikes 3-10 in number, linear, 
often purplish, 2-6 
whorls dnd spreading like fingers from 
the top of the ctilm; spikelets in pairs, 
4 inch long, one sessile or nearly so, sec: 
4 ond seale half as Jong; flowering stem 
Uf . flat and winged. Seeds straw-color, 1/10 
r \ inch long (Fig. 17.) 


in 


Abundant in gardens, lawns and 


June—Oct. Af. 


Fig. 17. a and 6, spikelets; c, flowering melons and other early crops are 
: cultivated are often over-run in late 


aglume. (After Scribner.) 


autumn with this foreign grass. 
The small crab-grass (S: linearis 
Krock.), differmg in having the 
spikelets shorter, 1/12 inch long, the 
second scale about as long, the leaves 
and stems shorter, is also quite com- 
mon in similar places. Remedies: 
for lawns, pulling and burning; 
clean grass seed; for gardens and 
fields, late hoeing and thorough cul- 
tivation; burning over in autumn. 


3. PANICUM CRUS-GALLI L. Barnyard 
Grass. Cockspur Grass. (A. I. 3.) 

Stems erect, stout, often branching 

at base, 14 feet high; leaves 6 inches 
to 2 feet long, rough-margined. Spikes 
or branches of the flowering panicle 5 
to 15 in number, erect or reflexed ; spike- 
lets in 24 rows, green or purple, 
crowded on one side of the flowering 
stem; glumes of the neutral flowers 


glumes. 


wn . s 
Fig. 18. aand b, spikelets; cand d, flowering, 


(After Scribner.) 


WEEDS OF. THE GRASS FAMILY. 53 


awn-pointed. Seeds § inch long, pale brown, flat on one side, rounded on 
the other. (Fig. 18.) 

Frequent in barn-yards, orchards and rich moist waste places. 
June-Sept. Often ent for forage when other grass is scarce. Seeds 
distributed in clover and millet seed, also by wind. Remedies: 
mowing before the seeds are ripe; clean clover seed. 


4. PANICUM CAPILLARE L. Old-witch Grass. Tumble-weed. Tickle-grass. 
(A. N. 2.) 


Irrect or suberect, 1-2 feet high, 
much branched from the base; sheaths 
hispid or hairy; leaves 6-12 inches long, 
more or less hairy. Flowers in a 
spreading panicle; spikelets, single, 
scattered, borne on very slender stalks; 
lower glume half the length of the 
empty upper one. Séeds straw-color, 
very small, smooth and shining. (Fig. 
19.) 


Common in old cultivated fields, 
especially those with a dry or sandy 
soil. July—Oct. The spreading tops, 
being very brittle, break off in au- 
tumn and are blown into fence cor- 
ners or against some barrier where 
they form great piles. Remedies: 
mowing and burning to prevent 
seeding. About 30 species of Pani- 
cum grow wild in Indiana, all of 
Fig. 19. a, b and ¢, spikelets; d, flowering which are more or less weedy in 

glume; ¢, palea. (After Scribner.) character, though some of them are 
cut for hay when other grass is scarce. 


5. IxopHorus eLaucus L. Yellow Foxtail. Pigeon-grass. Pussy-grass. 
(A. I. 1.) 

Stems several, erect, more or less branched, 1-3 feet high; leaves 2-6 
inches long, smooth. Spikes straw-yellow, cylindrical, dense, 1-4 inches 
long; spikelets cval, much shorter than the cluster of 6 to 11 yellow 
bristles which spring from beneath them, these roughened or barbed un- 
ward. Seeds brownish, § inch long, flattened on one side, much wrinkled 
crosswise. (Figs. 6, g; 20.) 

One of our worst weeds, occurring everywhere in cultivated 
grounds; also in meadows, lawns and pastures. July—Sept. The 
seeds in grain fields mostly ripen after the corn has been laid by or 
the oats and wheat cut. They are much relished by birds and poultry 
and are sometimes destroyed by a smut. When buried they retain 


54 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


‘their vitality for years, ready te 
spring up whenever conditions are 
favorable. Remedies: use of clean 


State. 


seed; smothering when young; mow- 
ing and burning stubble, followed by 
fall plowing ; cultivation throughout 
the scason; sheep grazing in pas- 
tures, old fields and the aftermath. 
of meadows. A flock of sheep will 
soon clean out all the weeds in a corn 
field, without injury to the corn, if 
turned in for a few days in early 
autumn. 

The green foxtail or bottle-grass 
(I. viridis L.) is a closely allied 
species which is also common in the 
The spike is green, more 
loosely seeded and tapers at the end, 


Fig. 20. @ and }, spikelets, a showing the and the bristles are longer and also 


bristles which spting from beneath. (After 


Caen) greenish. Remedies the same. 


6. CENCHRUS TRIBULOIDES L. Sand-bur. 


(A. N. 1.) 

Suberect or spreading. branching free- 
ly, 8 inches to 2 feet long; sheath loose, 
compressed; leaves flat, 3-5 inches long, 
smooth. Spikelets enclosed, 1 to 5 to- 
gether, in a globular bristly or spiny 
cover, which hardens and falls off with 
them as a rigid bur. (Fig. 21.) 

Common in sandy soil throughout 
the State. July—Oct. The points on the 
spines of the burs have barbs directed 
backwards so that the bur sticks very 
closely to wool, fur or clothing and 
thus distributes far and wide the en- 
closed seeds. They are said to be 
more injurious in wool than the burs 
of any other weed. Old Linneus 
must have pricked his finger on one 
of the barbed spines when he named 
this grass tribuloides. It is a tribula- 
tion indeed to barefooted boys. Very 
troublesome also is it to wool-growers 


Bur-grass. Hedgehog-grass. 


Fig. 21. a, bur; 5, the same split to show 
the losed = apikeléts; c, spikelet with ° 
glumes. (After Scribner.) 


WEEDS OF THE GRASS FAMILY. 55 


Fig. 22. (After Vasey.) 


and a great nuisance in hay cut 
from sandy soil. Remedies: burn- 
ing over annually the area in- 
fested ; hoeing or other close culti- 
vation. 


7. TWRAGRosTISs MAJOR Host. Stinking- 
grass. Pungent Meadow-grass. 
(A. I. 2.) 

Erect or spreading at base, 6 inches 
to 2 feet tall, smooth ; leaves 2-7 inches 
long; sheaths shorter than the joints. 
Flowers in a compound panicle 2-5 
inches in length, its branches spread- 
ing; spikelets densely 8-35 flowered, 
very flat, whitish when old. Seeds 
pale red, very small, nearly round. 
(Fig. 22.) 


A showy ill-smelling grass, oc- 
curring in sandy soil, meadows and 
waste places. July—-Sept. The flat 


lead-colored heads make it easily known. Remedies: prevent seed- 


ing by late and thorough cultivation. 


‘The low meadow-grass (E. era- 
grostis L.) is a closely allied species 
with shorter stems and spikes and 
narrower spikelets. Also introduced 
and spreading rapidly. Remedies 
the same. 


os 


8. BROMUS SECALINUS L. Cheat. Chess 
(A. I. 2.) 


Erect, unbranched, 1-3 feet tall; 
sheaths shorter than the joints; leaves 
2-9 inches long. Flowering panicle 2-8 
inches in length, glabrous, its branches 
drooping; spikelets oblong-ovate, swol- 
len, G-10 flowered, the nerves of, the 
scales often awned or bristle tipped. 
Seeds resembling those of oats but 
darker and smaller, § inch long, the ad- 
hering glumes with a row of bristles 
down each side of the groove. (Fig. 23.) 

A winter annual, common in 
grain fields and often along fence- 


Fig. 23. a, spikelet. (After Scribner.) 


rows. June-Aug. The seeds when buried retain vitality for years 


. 


56 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


and then often spring up where clean seed wheat has been sown, 
giving rise to a common belief among farmers that wheat turns 
to cheat. Needless to say, the two are very distinct grasses and 
each comes always from its own seed. Remedies: preventing. the 
seed from ripening by pulling or mowing the cheat; sowing clean 
seed of wheat, oats or other cereal; cultivation with hoed crops. 

The downy brome-grass or slender chess (B. tectorum L.) oc- 
curs in the northern part of the State, and is liable to become a 
bad weed. It may be known by its weak stem and somewhat one- 
sided downy panicles. The lower empty scale is but 1-nerved. 
whereas in cheat it is 38-nerved. Remedies the same. 


9. AGROPYRON REPENS L. Couch-grass. Quack-grass. Dog-grass. Devil’s- 
grass. (P. I. 1.) 


Stems several, 1-8 feet tall, from a long jointed running rootstock: 
sheaths smooth; leaves flat, rough above. - Spike 2-8 inches long, not 
branched; spikelets in 2 rows, 3-7 flowered, the scales glabrous, acute 
or short-awned. Seeds slender, $ inch long, 5-7 nerved and short-awned 
at tip. (Big. 24.) 


A perennial grass, sometimes cut for hay but in most places 
a vicious weed, occurring in grain fields, spreading by its large, 
strong creeping rootstocks and 
crowding out the grain. June- 
Sept. The rootstocks run just be- 
neath the surface and are so strong 
and unyielding that they have been 
known to push their way through a 
potato.- Remedies: (a) in culti- 
vated fields, shallow plowing in 
early autumn, then harrowing to 
work the rootstocks free from the 
soil, followed by raking and burn- 
ing, or if too wet, throwing them 
into heaps and allowing them to rot. 
A second and deeper plowing, har- 
rowing and raking will often be 
necessary to thoroughly remove the 
deeper growing stocks. Such fall 
plowing, followed by thorough cul- 
tivation the next season, will usually - 
clean out the weed. (6) Shallow. 
plowing and harrowing in hot dry weather. (c) Plowing under 


Fig. 24. (After Vasey.) 


WEEDS OF THE SEDGE FAMILY, af 


deeply after the grass has been cut for hay. (d) In lawns, hoe- 
cutting and salting, burning or removing every joint. 

In Europe these underground stems are gathered and sold, be- 
ing used in medicine for kidney and bladder troubles. They are 
pale yellow, smooth, about 2 inch in diameter, with joints at in- 
tervals of an inch from which slender rootlets are produced. When 
washed, cut into short pieces, about 2/5 inch in length, on a hay 
or feed cutter and dried, these rootstocks (not the rootlets) are 
sold to the drug trade as dog-grass or triticum, the price ranging 
from 3 to 7 cents per pound. 


10. HorpeuM supatum L. Wild Barley. Squirrel-tail Grass. Skunk 
Grass. (P. N. 2.) 


Erect, simple, smooth, 10-30 inches 
high; sheaths shorter than the joints; 
leaves flat, 1-5 inches long, erect, rough. 
Spikes terminal, cylindrical, 2-4 inches 
long; spikelets in two opposite rows, 
usually in 3’s at each joint of the flower- 
stem, the central one containing a per- 
fect flower, the two side ones imperfect; 
the empty scales forming rough awns, 
barbed upwards, 1-3 inches long ; awn of 
flowering scale 1-2 inches long. Seed 
slender, 4 inch long, sharp-pointed, re- 
sembling that of rye. (Fig. 25.) 

Frequent in old fields and along 
fenec-rows and railways in dry and 
rather poor clayey or gravelly soil. 
July-Sept. It grows usually in large 
tufts from fibrous roots and is easily 
known by the grayish-green leaves 
and long, bearded nodding spikes. 

Fig. 25. a, spikelet. (After Scribner.) The barbed seeds and awns often 
penetrate the flesh surrounding the mouths of animals which at- 
tempt to eat it, causing ulcers, swellings, and, in some instances, to- 
tal blindness. Hay containing the grass is therefore almost value- 
less. It spreads only by seeds, which are widely scattered by wind 
and water, and can be controlled by cutting or pulling before the 
seeds ripen, or by cultivation. Isolated clumps should be destroyed 


wherever seen. 


Tue SEpGE Famtty—CYPERACEZ. 


A large family of grass-like or rush-like herbs, but having the 
stems slender, generally solid instead of hollow and often either 
triangular or 4-sided; leaves grass-like, with the sheaths closed; 


58 tie INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


roots fibrous. Flowers without petals or sepals, arranged in spike- 
lets and ‘usually solitary in the axils of each scale or glume; sta- 
mens 1-3; ovary 1-celled, producing a single seed which in fruit 
usually forms a three-cornered nutlet called an achene. 

About 160 species of the family are known from the State. For. 
the most part they grow in damp places, as the borders of streams 
and lakes, along ditches and the margins of sloughs They are com- 
monly known as_ sedges, cotton- 
grasses, spike-rushes, bulrushes, nut- 
grasses, etc., and have little or no 
economic value. A few of them on 
wet prairies and lake margins are 
eut for hay, but it is coarse-stemmed 
and of poor quality. Occupying 
waste places, as they generally do, 
they are given little attention by 
the farmer, and though many of 
them, did they grow in cultivated 
ground, are abundant enough to be 
called weeds, only a few have a ten- 
Ni I dency to spread. Like the grasses, 
\ | the sedges are mostly plants of open 
“ windswept places or marshy levels, 


hy ‘ “yas . cae. 
YY) where the facilities for wind fertili- 
zation are greatest and more usually’ - 
Fig, 26. (After Smith.) present. 


11. Cyperus ESCULENTUS L. Yellow Nut-grass. Galingale. (P. N. 3.) 
Stems erect, stout, triangular, 1-23 feet tall, shorter than the basal 
leaves, which are light green, 1/3 inch wide. Flowers in an umbel with 
4-10 branches and involucre of 3-6 leaves; spikelets numerous, straw- . 
colored, flat, their flower-stalk narrowly winged; style 3-cleft. Achenes — 
obovate-oblong, 8-angled. (Fig. 26.) : 
Common in lew eultivated ground which has been recently 
drained. July-Oct. Spreads by underground stems bearing small - 
pear-shaped tubers, $ inch in length, at intervals of a few inches; . 
seeds also carried in hay, and grass seed, and the tubers often on 
cultivating tools. The numerous tubers are edible, containing 
about 22 per cent. of oil, 28 per cent. of starch and 12 to 21 per 
cent. of gum and sugar. The oil when extracted is said to be most © 
excellent for cooking purposes. In rich sandy loams this sedge is 
often allowed to grow as a food for hogs, which are turned into 
the field in autumn to root up the tubers. Remedies: frequent 


WEEDS OF THE RUSH FAMILY. 59 


hoeing throughout the season; keep fence rows clean; thick seed- 
ing with clover or timothy. 

An allied species, the straw-colored sedge (C. strigosus L.) dif- 
fering in propagating by solid bulb-like tubers from the base, the 
spikes longer and more loose and achenes linear-oblong, is also a 
common weed in damp soils. Remedies the same. 


THe RusH Famity.—JUNCACE A. 


Perennial or annual grass-like herbs, often growing in tufts; 
stems usually simple, slender, cylindrical; leaf-blades terete, grass- 
like or channeled, the sheaths with free margins. Flowers small, 
clustered; sepals and petals 6, chaff-like, without scales or glumes 
beneath them as in the two preceding families; stamens 3 or 6; 
ovary 1- or 3-celled with 3 stigmas. Fruit a small capsule opening 
at the sides; seeds usually numerous. 

Only about 25 kinds of rushes are known from the State. They 
usually occur on the sandy beaches of lakes or along the borders 
of marshes and swamps and resemble sedges but have the parts 
of the small flowers in threes, like the lily family, but not showy 
as there. Neither the scouring rush nor the tall bulrushes belong 
to this family, so that their names are misleading. Only one of 
the true rushes is with us to be considered as a weed. 


12. JUNCUS TENUIS Willd. Wire-grass. Slender Rush. Yard Rush. (P.N. 3.) 


Stems erect. slender, tufted, wiry, 8-20 inches high; true leaves all 
basal, flat, linear, half the length of stem; leaf-like bract just below the 
fiowering portion Jonger than the latter. 
Sepals and petals green, lanceolate, acute, 
spreading, longer than the egg-shaped cap- 
sule; stamens 6. Seeds narrowly oblong 
with oblique ends, very small, delicately 
ribbed and cross-lined. (Fig. 27.) 


Common in dry or moist soil, espe- 
cially along woodland pathways, bor- 
ders of fields and roadsides. June— 
Aug. The stems are full of elasticity 
and after being trodden upon by man 
or beast spring erect, apparently un- 

: harmed. It is this property of upris- 
Fig. 27. Showing fruit and seed. (After ing after adversity which enables the 
Britton and Brown.) Z 
wire-grass to thrive along the path- 
ways and crowd therefrom the more valuable blue-grass which re- 
mains down when crushed beneath the heel or hoof. Remedies: 
sheep-grazing ; thorough cultivation where found in fields, 


60 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Tue Liny Fammy.—LILIACEA. 


Herbs with grass-like leaves, arising usually from bulbs or 
corms, rarely from rootstocks or fibrous roots. Flowers solitary or 
clustered, perfect, the calyx and corolla colored alike and forming.a 
perianth, their six divisions either distinct or more or less united 
to form a tube; stamens 6, borne on the tube of the perianth or 
at the base of its segments; ovary 3-celled. Fruit a capsule, open- 
ing lengthwise. 

As above defined the Lily Family comprises about 1,300 species 
of widely distributed plants, many of them producing the most 
showy and graceful of flowers. The different species of trilliums, ' 
wake-robins, smilax or green-briers and bellworts, bunch flowers, 
ete., have been separated hy modern botanists to form 38 distinct 
families, thus greatly decreasing the number formerly included 
within its bounds. As a result only about 20 species, belonging to 
the family as limited, grow wild in Indiana. These include the 
day and wood lilies, wild onions and garlics, adder’s-tongues and 
wild hyacinths. Of these but one is common and troublesome 
enough to be termed a weed. 

13.. ALLIUM vINEALE L. Wild or Field Garlic. Wild Onion. (A. or B. I. 1.) 

Stem 1-3 feet high, springing from 
an egg-shaped bulb; leaves 2-4, nar- 
rowly linear, hollow, terete, channeled 
above, borne below the middle of the 
flowering stem; the early basal leaves 
similar, 4-10 inches long. Flowers nu- 
merous, green or purplish, in a ter- 
minal erect cluster or umbel, often 
wholly or in part replaced by small 
bulblets which are tipped by long hair- 
like appendages; bracts below the 
flowers 2, lanceolate, pointed, soou 
falling off; flower stalks much longer 
than the flowers. Seeds black, flat, 
triangular, 1/16 inch long. (Fig. 28.) 

Common in rather thin clayey 
soils in southern Indiana. June- 
Aug. This weed has a strong 
onion-like odor and the numerous 
bulblets which it bears, like sets of 
common onions at the top of the 
ae i ene cuu MET in hiecdan ea ee at 
and same enlarged; d, cross-section of leaf. (After be harvested with wheat and spoil 
Dewey.) the flour. Where found in pas- 


WEEDS OF THE NBETTLE FAMILY. 61 


tures cows eat the stems and leaves, which impart their odor to the 
milk and butter, and the flesh of animals eating them is also tainted 
with the flavor. The bulblets are produced more often than the 
seed and must be destroyed or prevented from forming if the garlic 
is eradicated. Where the tops are not allowed to produce bulblets 
the garlic develops numerous small secondary bulbs or ‘‘cloves’’ at 
the base of the old underground bulb. In late autumn thes2 send 
up tufts of blue-green shoots which are apparently little injured 
by the cold of winter. By spring the small bulbs become as large 
as peas and soon develop a flowering stalk. In general both bulbs 
and bulblets spread slowly unless scattered by plow or harrow or 
some other device of man. ‘ 
The garlic was first introduced into Indiana near New Ross 
with bulbs of the grape hyacinth brought from New York. In 
the southwestern part of the State it was brought in by bulblets in 
impure wheat and in recent years much complaint cf it has been 
made by the wheat growers of the White and Wabash valley re- 
gions. Remedies: (@) late fall plowing at such a depth as to leave 
as many bulbs as possible close to the surface where they may be 
exposed to alternate thawing and freezing, the surviving shoots to 
be destroyed by early spring cultivation and the land then sowed 
to oats or put in corn. This process repeated for two seasons will 
destroy most of the garlic and the remaining plants can be pulled 
or treated with strong carbolic acid, a dozen drops of which, ap- 
plied by a machine oil can to a bunch of underground bulbs, will 
kill them all. (b) Increased liming and fertilization and short ro- 
tation of crops, crowding out with clover. (c) In pastures, salting 
and sheep grazing. (d) In lawns, applications of carbolic acid. 


Tae Nerrie Famiy—URTICACEZ., 


Herbs with watery sap, simple leaves, small greenish flowers 
and often armed with stinging hairs. Sepals 2-5, often united; 
petals none; stamens as many as the sepals and opposite them; 
ovary 1-celled, 1-seeded, when ripe forming an achene. 

But six species of the family are listed from the State, five of 
which may be classed as weeds, though only two are in places comi- 
mon enough to be troublesome. Those which sting have the stems 
and leaves provided with peculiar hairs which are hollow, very 
sharp-pointed and have swollen bases around which a cluster of 
cells form a cup-like gland. When these hairs strike and enter 
the flesh their tips are broken off and the glandular cells contract 
and inject through them a very irritating acid which produces the 


62 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


stinging sensation. This nettle sting is one of the highest devices 
by which plants guard themselves against the attack of .animals, 
Weeds, or shrubs with juicy tender leaves, are very apt to be 
eaten by rabbits, cows, shecp, ete. Many of the wild plants have 
therefore developed some means of protection, such as the spines 
or prickles of the blackberry, thistle, rose and hawthorne; the bitter 
taste or bad smell of hound’s tongue, dog-fennel and catnip; the 
many hairs of the mullen, and the acrid or poisonous juice of the 
buttercups, poison ivy, spurges and smartweeds. The nettle, how- 
ever, is not only defensive but even aggressive in its protection, so 
that when any herb-loving animal thrusts his tender nose against 
it the sharp points pierce his skin, the liquid is injected into his 
veins and he receives a lesson whieh prevents him from ever at- 
tempting to devour another plant of its kind. Only three of our 
nettles possess these stinging hairs. 


14. Unrrica cracitis Ait. Slender Nettle. Tall Nettle. (P. N. 3.) 

Stem slender, erect, simple or few 
branched, 2-6 feet high; leaves oppo- 
site, slender-stalked, ovate-lanceolate, 
acuminate, sharply notched. Flowers 
small, greenish, borne on slender pan- 
icled spikes from the axils of the 
leaves; sepals and stamens 4, the flow- 
ers dicecious, i. e., male and female 
flowers on separate plants. Achenes 
very small, oval, 1/20 inch long. 
(Fig. 29.) 


Frequent im fence-rows and 

along borders of cultivated fields, 
; ~ especially in moist soil. June—Oct. . 
Fig. 29. Showing a flower and fruit. (Afte Stinging hairs few and the plant - 
Britton and Brown.) . : 7 

spreading hoth by running root- 

stocks and seeds. Remedies: mowing in June and again in August; 

burning mature plants in autumn; grubbing or cultivation. 


15. Urnricastrum DIVARICATUM IL. Wood Nettle. Star Nettle. (P. N. 3.) 


Stem rather stout, erect, 2-3 feet high; leaves alternate, thin, ovate, 
long-stalked, sharply notched, pointed. Flower clusters large, loose; se- 
pals and stamens of male flowers 5, sepals of female flowers 4, unequal. 
Achene ovate, flat, oblique, twice as long as the calyx. 


Common in dense woods in rich soil and in moist shady places. 
July-Sept. Thickly clothed with stinging hairs. Remedies, same 
as for preceding species, 


WEEDS OF THE BUCKWHEAT FAMILY. 63 


Tare BuckwHeEat Famity.—POLYGONACE.®. 


Herbs or twining vines with alternate entire leaves, jointed 
stems and usually sheathing united stipules just above the swollen 
joints. Flowers small, regular, arranged in various forms of in- 
florescence; petals none; calyx free, often colored, 2-6 parted; sta- 
mens 2-9; ovary l-celled with 2 or 3 styles and a single ovule. 
Fruit an achene, usually either triangular or 4-sided, often com- 
pressed and winged, usually covered by the persistent calyx. 

About 35 species of the family grow wild in the State. Buck- 
wheat and rhubarb or ‘‘pie-plant’’ are cultivated members. Our 
wild species are known as docks, smartweeds, knotweeds and bind- 
weeds, and flourish in various localities. Many of them possess an 
acrid juice. The leaves of knotweeds are small and slender while 
those of smartweeds are larger and willow-like. The bindweeds 
have mostly arrow-shaped or heart-shaped leaves and twining or 
climbing stems. To the family belong two or three of our worst 
weeds and a number of others which are less troublesome. 


16. Rumex ACETOSELLA L. Field Sorrel. Horse Sorrel. Red Sorrel. 
Sheep Sorrel. Sour-weed. (P. I. 1.) 

Stem slender, erect or nearly se, 
6-15 inches high; leaves usually 
hastate and mostly from the root on. 
long slender stems, 1-4 inches long. 
Flowers numerous, dicecious in whorls 
of 3-6, nodding and borne on a 
naked panicle; calyx reddish-green ; 
pistillate flowers tipped with 3 tiny, 
crimson feathery stigmas. Fruit 
longer than calyx, not margined, 
covered with small granules. Seeds 
brown, triangular, 1/20 inch long. 
(Fig. 30.) 

Common in old cultivated 
fields, meadows and pastures, es- 
pecially those on sloping hillsides 
or with a sandy soil. May—Oct. 
eaves very sour, often picked 
and eaten. Spreading by run- 
ning rootstocks as well as by seed 
and often crowding out feeble 
2 ee | ecw LDS OF other crops. Its pres- 

ence usually indicates a poor, 
light soil, where little else will grow. This dock should not be 


64 THE INDIANA witb BOOK. 


confused with the yellow wood sorrel, often called ‘‘sheep-sorrel’? * 
(Oxalis stricta L.), which has clover-like leaves and belongs to a 
wholly different family. Remedies: use of lime or other fertilizers 
which will enable other plants, as clover or grasses, to grow and 
crowd out the sorrel; fertilizing and reseeding worn-out pastures 
and meadows with clean seed. 


17. Ru»ex crispus L. Curled Dock. Sour Dock. Yellow Dock. (P. I. 1.) 


Stem rather slender, erect, furrowed, simple or branched above, 1-4 
feet high, springing from a long yellow spindle-shaped root; root-leaves 
eblong-lanceolate, heart-shaped or obtuse at base, long-stalked and with 
wavy-curled margins; those of stem short-stalked and smaller. Flowers 
drooping, borne in whorls on a long, leafless wand-like raceme; calyx dark 
green, the inner sepals large, heart-shaped, each with a tubercle on the 
back. Seeds brown, triangular, smooth, shining, 1/12 inch long. 


Common along roadsides, fence-rows, in barnyards, dooryards 
and waste places generally. May-Sept. The root-leaves when 
young are often used for ‘‘greens’’ but the plant is an eyesore and 
a troublesome weed, difficult to eradicate on account of its long 
stout roots. Remedies: hand pulling, deep cutting or grubbing 
‘before the seed ripens; mowing several times during the season. 

In England it is common and is referred to by Shakespeare in 
the lines: 


“Nothing teems 
But hateful docks, rough thistles, kecksies, burs.” 


The phrase ‘‘in dock, out nettle’’ is used as an incantation in 
Northern England. If a person is stung with a nettle the affected 
part is rubbed with a dock leaf, the phrase being several times re- 
peated. The same words are there also much used to denote in- 
constancy or sudden change, whence the lines: 


“Uneertaine, certaine, never loves to settle, 
But here, there, everywhere, in dock, out nettle.” 


The roots of this and the next species, when collected in late sum- 
mer or autumn, washed, split lengthwise and carefully dried, are 
used for purifying the blood and as a remedy in skin diseases. 
The price ranges from 2 to 8 cents a pound. 


18. RuMex oprusirottius L. Bitter Dock. Broad-leaved Dock. (P. I. 2.) 


Resembles the preceding but has the lower leaves broader, ovate, more 
heart-shaped at base and the inner sepals with straight spine-tipped teeth 
on the margins and only one of them with an oblong tubercle on back. 
Seed slightly larger, darker and with a longer beak. (Fig. 31.) 


WEEDS OF THE 


Fig. 31. (After Vasey— 


Common in moist soil, 
especially that near the 
margins of lakes, ponds 
and marshes. July—Oct. 
Stems stouter than our 
other forms and when old 
very hard and _ woody. 
Seeds frequent in those of 
clover cut from lowlands. 
The leaves are often spot- 
ted with a reddish leaf- 
spot fungus and the heads 
are sometimes affected with 
a smut which destroys the 
seeds. Remedies: mowing 
before the seeds have rip- 
ened; hoeing, pulling and 
cultivating. 

20. PoLYGONUM PERSICARIA L. 
Lady’s Thumb. Spot- 


ted Smartweed. Heart- 
weed. (A. I. 2.) 


BUCKWHEAT FAMILY. 65 


Occurs in the same places as 
the curled dock, but less common. 
June-Aug. The seeds of both these 
docks are often found in clover and 
alfalfa seed which has not been 
properly cleaned. Where found in 
cultivated land, both can be eradi- 
cated only by short rotation or thor- 
ough cultivation with hoed crops. 


19. PoLYGONUM PENNSYLVANICUM L. 
Pennsylvania Smartweed. Gland- 
ular Persicary. (A. N. 2.) 
Erect, simple or branched, 2-6 feet 
high, the flower stems with numerous 
glands; leaves lanceolate, pointed, 2-11 
inches long. Spikes several, short, erect, 
cylindrical, dense flowered ; calyx dark 
pink or rose color, 5-parted. Seeds lens- 
shaped, % inch long, dark, shining. 
(Fig. 82.) 


Fig. 32. Showing the flower opened and spread apart and 
the fruit with its two styles. (After Small.) 


Stem erect or ascendirg, simple or much branched, glabrous, 6 inche= 
to 2 feet high; leaves lanceolate, pointed at both ends, often with a tri- 


15) 


66 THE INDIANA WHED BOOK. 


angular dark spot near the center. Spikes solitary or in panicles, pink 
or dark purple, 1-2 inches long, oblong, dense-flowered, erect on smooth 
stems. Seeds heart-shaped or triangular, black, smooth, shining, 1/12 


inch long. 

Common in gardens, barnyards, waste places and cultivated 
fields, especially those of moist clover-lands. June—Oct. The name 
lady’s thumb is given it on account of the dense oblong reddish 
spikes. According to Dr. S. A. Forbes it harbors the corn-root 
aphis, the louse appearing with the first leaves of the plant. Rem- 
edies, same as for the preceding. 


21. PoLYGoNUM HYDROPIPER L. Common Smartweed. Water-pepper. (A, 
I. 2.) ’ 


Stem erect, slender, simple 
r branched, often red or red- 
dish, 8-24 inches high; leaves 
Nanceolate, 1-4 inches long, 
‘|marked with pellucid punctures. 
Spikes slender, weak, drooping, 
1-8 inches long; flowers scat- 
tered, greenish-white; stamens 
4 or 6. Seeds either lens-shaped 
or 3-angled, oblong, opaque or 
dull not shining, 4 inch long. 
(Fig. 33.) 

Abundant in dooryards, 
barnyards, upland as well as 
lowland cultivated fields, 
ditches and borders of ponds. 
June—Oct. The leaves are 
very acrid and the juice 
when applied to the skin 
sometimes causes blisters or 

ulcers. Remedies: pulling or 

Fig. 38. Showing the flower and the fruit with cross- . « 
sections of latter. (After Small.) mowing; thorough cultiva- 
tion. ; 
The mild water-pepper (P. hydropiperoides Michx.), a peren- 
nial having the leaves narrower, not punctate, the stamens 8 and 
the seed shining, is often found with the preceding, while the 
swamp smartweed (P. emersum Michx.), also a perennial with 
much broader leaves and only 1 or 2 spikes of flowers, is common 
in moist lowlands. Altogether 12 species of true smartweeds are 
known from the State, but the five mentioned are the more widely 

distributed and the ones likely to be most, troublesome. 


WEEDS OF THE BUCKWHEAT FAMILY. 67 


22. PoLY@ONUM AvicuULARE L. Knot-grass. Door-weed. Goose-grass. (A. 
N. 1.) 

Stem prostrate or sub- 
erect, slender, dull bluish- 
green, 4-18 inches long; 
leaves oblong or linear, 
4-3 inch long, nearly ses- 
sile. Flowers axillary, in 
clusters of 1-5, small 
short-stemmed, greenish 
with white or pink bor- 
ders; stamens 5-8. Seeds 
dull black, 1/10 inch long, 
3-angled and minutely 
granular, (Fig. 34.) 

Very common, form- 
ing mats of spreading, 
wiry, jointed stems in 
yards and along path- 
ways and roadsides 
where the ground is 
much trodden; also in ~ 
cultivated lands. June— 
Nov. This is one of the 
social weeds, such as plantain, burdock, catnip, etc., which accom- 
panied the white man in his march across and conquest of the 
North American Continent. Holmes refers to it in the lines: 


Fig. 34. Showing the flower and fruit. (After Small.) 


“Knot-grass, plantain—all the social weeds, 
Man’s mute companions, following where he leads.” 


An infusion of it was formerly supposed to retard bodily growth 
and is referred to by Shakespeare in the lines: 


“Get you gone, you dwarf; 
You minimus, of hindering knot-grass made.” 


The erect knot-grass (P. erectwm I.) is also often found with 
the common form. It is erect or ascending, 1-2 feet high and has 
the leaves and often the flowers yellowish, the former 1-2 inches 
long. Both species are attacked by a mildew and sometimes by a 
smut, 

Remedies: pulling or mowing before the seeds ripen; thorough 
cultivation with hoed crops; cement and concrete walks for yards. 


68 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


23 PoLYGONUM CONVOLVULUS L. Black Bindweed. Wild Buckwheat. (A.° 


I. 1.) 


Tig. 35. Showing the flower and fruit. (After Small.) 


Stem twining or trailing, © 
6 inches-3 feet long, roughish,.? 
the joints naked; leaves ovate 
or arrow-shaped, pointed, long- | 
stemmed, 1-3 inches long, 
Flowers in loose axillary clus- 
ters, greenish-white, drooping; ~ 
ealyx 5-parted, adhering close- 
ly to the achene which is 
3-angled, black, granular, dull- 
pointed, 4 inch long. (Figs. 6, 
a@; 35.) 

Common in lowlands, es- 
pecially in corn- and wheat- 
fields, where it often twines 
about and pulls down the 
stalks or weeds. June—Sept. 
The leaves and seeds are 
similar to those of buck- 
wheat and the plant is dis- 
tributed widely by overflow 


of the flood plains and by birds and the droppings of cattle. Rem-. 
edies: mowing and burning before the seeds ripen; thorough cul- 


tivation with hoed crops; sowing 
clean seed; early fall plowing and 
harrowing to induce the seeds to 
sprout before winter. 


24. PoLyGoNuM scANDENS L. Climb- 
ing False Buckwheat. Bind- 
weed. (P. N. 3.) 

Stem climbing, 2-25 feet long, 
rather stout, branched. Leaves heart- 
shaped, pointed, 1-6 inches long. Flow- 
ers greenish-yellow, in numerous inter- 
rupted leafy panicles; calyx 5-parted, 
the three outer segments strongly 
keeled and in fruit winged. Seeds 
black, triangular, 1/6 inch long, blunt, 
smooth, shining. 


Common in moist soil, along 
fence-rows, borders of thickets and 
cultivated fields, climbing high 
over fences, shrubs, brush piles, ete. 
July-Oct. The seeds are often 


Fig. 36. Showing the fower and three-sided 
fruit. (After Small.) 


WEEDS OF THE GOOSEFOOT FAMILY. 69 


found with those of clover, but are easily separated by proper screen. 
ing. Remedies, same as for the preceding. 


25. PoLYGoNUM sAGITTATUM L, Arrow-leaved Tear-thumb. (A. N. 3.) 

Stem weak, 2-5 feet long, decumbent or climbing by recurved prickles 
which are numerous along its four angles; leaves arrow-shaped, pointed, 
nearly sessile, the stalks and midribs prickly. Flowers in dense terminai 
leads; sepals pale red with whitish margins, not. keeled. Seeds triangular, 
dark red, smooth, shining, jinch long. (Tigs. 8, ¢; 86.) 

Borders of ditches, ponds and moist places generally. July— 
Oct. Mowers and haymakers in low ground are familiar with this 
weed, its sharp prickles heing a sufficient excuse for its common 
name. Remedies: mowing and burning before the seeds ripen; 
draining and cultivation. The halberd-leaved tear-thumb (P. ari- 
foliwm L.), differing in the leaves being hastate and the seeds lens-- 
shaped, occurs with the preceding but is much less common. 


THE GoosEgoor F'ammy.—CHENOPODIACEZ. 


Annual or perennial weed-like or homely herbs, with mostly 
alternate leaves. Flowers small, greenish, very numerous, variously 
clustered but usually in panicled spikes or solitary in the axils of 
the leaves; petals none; calyx 2-5 parted; stamens as many’as or 
fewer than the lobes of the calyx and opposite them; ovary free 
from the calyx, 1-celled, 1-seeded. 
Fruit a utricle, the seed-vessel be- 
ing surrounded by a loose, thin 
wall or bladder-like sac. (Fig. 
14, d.)} 

Only about 16 species of the 
family grow wild in Indiana, but 
among them are several weeds 
which are rapidly spreading or 
occur throughout the State. The 
beet and spinach are cultivated 
members of the family. The com- 
mon name, ‘‘ goosefoot,’’ refers to 
the shape of the leaves. 

26. CHENnopopium aLpuM LL. Lamb's 


Quarters. White Goose-foot. 
Pigweed. (A. I. 1.) 

Stem pale green, often striped 
with purple, erect, usually much 
branched, 1-8 inches tall; lower 
leaves ovate, toothed or lobed; upper lanceolate, often entire; all white- 


Fig. 37. (After Vasey.) 


70 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


mealy beneath. Flowers in simple or compound terminal and axillary 
spikes; lobes of calyx strongly keeled, nearly covering the fruit. Seeds 
circular, lens-shaped, black, shining, 1/20 inch in ae (Figs. 6, 6; 
14, d; 87.) 

Abundant in gardens, yards, waste grounds and cultivated 
fields, especially those in which corn, potatoes, ‘etc., have been laid 
by. June-Oct. The name pigweed properly belongs to some of 
the members of the next family. The young plants and leaves are 
in some places used for ‘‘greens.’’ The striped: beet beetle* (Sys- 
tena teniata Say), both in the mature and larval stages, feeds upon 
it. It is also attacked by several species of fungi and in turn har- 
bors the melon lonse. Remedies: thorough and late cultivation 
with hoed crops; pulling or mowing and burning before the seeds 
ripen; harrowing growing crops of grain when the young cereals 
are about 3 inches high. 

The maple-leaved goosefoot (C. hybridum L.), leaves without 
mealy scales, broad and shaped like a maple leaf, and the upright 
or city goosefoot (C. urbicum L.), leaves also without scales, broad, 
triangular and truneate at base, both occur frequently in streets, 
alleys, waste places and borders of fields. They are usually con- 
fused with lamb’s quarters and should receive the same treatment. 
A fourth species, as yet listed only from Tippecanoe and Hamil- 
ton counties, is the nettle-leaved goosefoot (C. murale L.), also a 
European weed, whose leaves are ovate, thin, sharply and coarsely — 
cut-toothed, the spikes shorter than the leaves and loosely panicled 
in their axils. 


27. QOHENOPODIUM AMBROSIOIDES L. Mexican Tea. American Wormseed. 
(A. I, 2.) 


Stem ascending or erect, grooved, much branched, glandular-pubescent, 
strongly scented, 2-8 feet high; leaves oblong or lanceolate, edges undulate 
or entire, 14 inches long. Flowers in small dense, leafy axillary clusters; 
calyx 3-parted, completely enclosing the fruit. Seeds small, shining, 
kidney-shaped. 

Frequent in streets, alleys and along river banks in the southern 
two-thirds of the State. July-Oct. Remedies the same as for 
lamb’s quarters. 

The wormseed (C. anthelminticum L.), a closely allied species, 
strongly scented and having the spikes in large leafless terminal 
panicles, occurs with the Mexican tea and is often confused with it. 
The essential oils from the seeds of both this and the Mexican tea 
are used as an anthelmintic er vermifuge, hence the, common names 
of “‘wormseed.’’ One or the other or both these species are, in 
~~ *The No. 2260 ofthe Tndjana Catalogue of Beetles. 


WEEDS OF THE GOOSEFOOT FAMILY. 71 


the vicinity of towns, the prevailing growth along the immediate 
sloping banks of the Ohio, Wabash and other streams. The seeds 
of both are salable at drug stores, the price ranging from 6 to 8 
cents a pound. The oil distilled from the seeds is worth about 
$1.50 per pound. 


‘ 


28. ATRIPLEX PATULA L. Spreading Orache. (A. I. 2.) 

Stem much branched, half erect, spreading, dark green, glabrous or 
somewhat scurfy ; lower leaves lanceolate, slender-stalked, usually toothed 
or 3-lobed below the middle; upper ones linear, nearly sessile, often entire. 
Flowers in clusters arranged in interrupted leafy spikes, small, greenish, 
the two sexes separate; staminate flowers wi'th a 38-5 parted calyx and 
the same number of stamens; pistillate ones without calyx, but with 2 
more or less united leaf-like bracts at base which partly or wholly enclose 
the utricle. Seeds like those of lamb’s quarters. 

Frequent along railway em- 
bankments, roadsides and in waste 
places and old fields, especially 
about cities and towns. June-Aug. 
This is an Eastern weed which is 
gradually spreading westward. In 
Indiana it has been recorded from 
Steuben, Hamilton, Marion and. 
Tippecanoe counties and is very 
common about Indianapolis and 
Lafayette. The halberd - leaved 
orache (A. hastata L., Fig. 38) dif- 
fering mainly in having the lower 
leaves only once or twice as long 
as wide, triangular with pointed 
lobes at base, is also recorded from 
Wells and Madison counties. Both 
form broad masses 1 or 2 feet high 
and often several feet in diameter. 
They are vile weeds of the same character as lamb’s quarters and 
pigweed and when discovered should be destroyed at once. Rem- 
edies: pulling or deep hoe cutting before the seeds ripen. 


2: 


Fig. 38. (After Selby.) 


29. SALSOLA TRAGUS L. Russian Thistle. Russian Cactus. (A. I. 1) 


Stem bushy-branched, ascending or spreading, 1-3 feet high and twice 
as broad, the outer branches and leaves usually bright red when full 
grown; leaves when young linear, 2 inches or more in length and 3 inch 
wide, spine-tipped; these replaced on the later flowering branches by 
sharp stiff spines in clusters of 3. Flowers purplish, solitary in the axils, 
with a spiny bract each side; calyx membranous, very strongly veined. 


72 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Seeds light yellow, conical, about the size of clover seed and usually 
covered with a gray coating. (Fig. 39.) 

Oceurs sparingly in the north- 
ern third of the State; there in- 
troduced by the trunk-line rail- 
ways from the northwest, where 
it is a very troublesome weed in 
prairie grain fields. July—Sept. 
It is a tumble-weed, not a thistle, 
and when full grown becomés 
very large and spreading, form- 
ing a.top from 2 to 6 feet in dia- 
meter. When broken off it is 
rolled over and over by the wind, 
scattering far and wide its many 
seeds. Remedies: pulling, spud- 
ding or uprooting before seeding; 
cultivating hoed crops until Au- 
gust; burning wheat stubble and 
> other areas where it grows; sow- 
soft, 32, ox rang of theatre plat: eee Ing forage crops and peaturing 
front % seed; iA embryo removed from the seed. with sheep. Farmers living along 
iia railways should keep an especial 
lookout for the Russian thistle and should destroy at once every 
strange weed which bears any resemblance to the description given. . 
It is estimated that a single specimen produces from 20,000 to 30,- 
000 seeds, so that if only one matures its seeds the farmers for 
miles around will suffer in a year or two. 


THE AMARANTH Famitry—AMARANTHACE AI, 


Homely herbs with alternate or opposite simple leaves. Flow- 
ers: small, green or white, variously clustered, usually in terminal 
spikes or axillarv heads and differing from those of the preceding 
family in being surrounded by thin dry and membranous per- 
sistent bracts which are often colored; petals none; calyx 2-5 
parted, the parts usually distinct; stamens 1-5, mostly opposite 
the calyx lobes; ovary 1-celled. Fruit a utricle of which the cap 
comes away as a lid or bursts irregularly. (Fig. 14, e.) 

Only 11 species of the family are known from the State, all of 
which are weeds of high or low degree. The showy coxcomhs, 
prince’s feathers and ‘‘love lies bleeding’’ of the flower gardens 
are cultivated representatives. The name Amaranthus means 


WEEDS OF THE AMARANTH FAMILY. 73 


‘never fading’’ and was given these flowers by the Greeks on ac- 
count of the dry: unwithering nature of the showy bracts. In 
Europe they are regarded as emblems of immortality, a quality set 
forth by Milton in the lines wherein he speaks of the angels as- 
sembled before the Deity :. 
“To the ground, 

With solemn adoration, down they cast 

Their crowns, inwove with amaranth and gold. 

Immortal amaranth, a flower which once 

In Paradise, fast by the tree of life, 

Began to bloom.” 


30. AMARANTHUS RETROFLEXUS L. Rough Pigweed. (A. I. 1.) 

Stem stout, branched, light green, erect or ascending, 1-S feet high 
from a pink tap-root; lower leaves ovate, long-stemimed, the upper lanceo- 
late. pointed. Flowers green in dense sessile, terminal or axillary spikes 
which are often 3 inch thick; bracts awl-shaped, twice as long as the 5 
oblong, spine-tipped sepals. Fruit or utricle thin, slightly shorter than 
the sepais, the top falling away as a lid. Seeds very small, round, lens- 
shaped, dark brown, smootb and shining. 

Abundant throughout the State in gardens, waste places and 
cultivated fields. July—Oct. Occurring with the rough pigweed 
in gardens, and perhaps more com- 
mon, is the slender pigweed or red- 
root (A. hybridus L., Fig 40.) It is 
also known as careless weed and dif- 
fers in having the stem more slender, 
often purplish, and springing from 
a spindle-shaped purplish root, the 
leaves smaller, bright. green, wavy 
margined and long stalked, and the 
spikes much more slender, not over 
4 inch thick. somewhat spreading or 
drooping. Both species are often at- 
tacked by a white mold that also at- 
tacks beets. The seeds of both ripen 
in early autumn, occur with those of 
grain and grass, and are blown far 
and wide over the snow. Remedies: 

shallow cultivation ; thorough removal 
Fis. 40. 2 and 3, flowers; 4, utricle closed; before seeding of the weeds in corn 

5, same with lid off. (After Vasey.) and potato fields and gardens; burn- 
ing or pulling the sced-bearing plants from waste places, and 
from fields before fall plowing. 


74 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


31. AmMaARANTHUS sPINosus L. Spiny 
Amaranth. Red or Spiny Careless 
Weed. / Soldier-weed. (A. I. 1.) 
Stem more branched and spreading, 
14 feet high, often becoming red in age; 
leaves with a pair of stiff, sharp spines, 
3-1 inch long, in the axils. Flowers in 
both axillary clusters and terminal droop- 
ing spikes. Seeds round, lens-shaped, 
dark, very small, shining. (Fig. 41.) 


Common in waste places, borders 
of fields, alleys and roadsides in the 
southern two-thirds of the State. 
June-Oct. Occurs especially in and 
near towns and cities along the Ohic 
and Wabash rivers Remedies the 
same as for the common pigweeds. 


32. AMARANTHUS BLITOIDES Wats. Pros- 
trate Pigweed. Low Amaranth. 
(A. I. 2.) 

Stem prostrate or spreading, pale 
green, 6-24 inches long; leaves spoon- 
shaped or narrowed below into slender stalks. Flowers of this and the 
next species in small axillary clusters which are shorter than the leaf- 
stalks; bracts awl-shaped, but little longer than the sepals. Fruit a utricle 
opening by a lid as in the other species. Seeds rounded, lens-shaped, 1/16 
inch in diameter, dark brown, shining. 


Fig. 41. (After Vasey.) 


Frequent along railways and in waste places in cities and 
towns. June—Oct. Spreading like purslane and often forming 
mats. Remedies the same. 


33. AMARANTHUS GRzcIzANs L. Tumble-weed. White Pigweed. (A. I. 1.) 


Stem erect, bushy branched, whitish, G-24 inches tall; leaves oblong, 
spoon-shaped, slender stalked. Flowers as in the prostrate pigweed, the 
bracts much longer than the sepals. Seeds one-half as large and with a 
distinct wing-like border. 


Frequent throughout the State along roadsides, railways and in 
old fields. June-Oct. The leaves fall away in autumn and the 
branches bend in, forming a globular mass which is broken off and 
rolled along before the wind, thus widely scattering the seeds. One 
such weed, 5 feet 7 inches in circumference, was seen in Vigo 
County. From the Russian thistle, which has similar habits of 
seed distribution, this true tumble-weed may be known by its much 
wider leaves aud small, round and shining seeds. Remedies the 
same as for the rough pigweed. 


WEEDS OF THE POKEWEED FAMILY. 75 


THE PoKeweEeED F'amiy.— PHYTOLACCACE AL, 


Tall perennial herbs, with large alternate ovate-oblong leaves 
and small flowers in terminal racemes, which by the farther growth 
of the stem become opposite the leaves. Petals none; sepals 4 or 5 
white; stamens 10; ovary green, 10-celled, each cell with a single 
seed. Fruit a globose fleshy berry. 

Only one member of the family occurs in Indiana, though 85 
species are known, mostly from the tropics. 


84. PHYTOLACCA DECANDRA L. Pokeweed. Poke-berry. Scoke. Pigeon- 
berry. Ink-berry. (P. N. 2.) 


Stem stout, smooth, erect, branching, 3-12 feet high ; leaves entire, 
5-12 inches long. Berries in racemes like those of a grape, dark purple 
and filled with crimson juice. Seeds black, shining, roundish or kidney- 
shaped. (Fig. 42.) 

This large well known weed occurs throughout the State in rich 
soil along the borders of old fields, fence-rows, roadsides, ete. June— 
Sept. Its reddish-purple stems, 
dark green leaves, clusters of 
white flowers and dark purple 
berries make of it a handsome 
weed—if a weed can be so 
termed. I have often found 
the small, shining black seeds 
beneath logs and stones where 
they have been-carried by mice 
or shrews, and have frequently 
mistaken them for the heads of 
dead beetles. The stem springs 
from a large poisonous root, 
often 4-6 inches in diameter, 
and the young stems and 
leaves are sometimes used for 
ereens or eaten like asparagus. 
Tf so used, care should be ta- 

Fig. 2. ‘slawerial and fruiting branch. (After ken to separate all parts of the 

Cheanut) root and the water, in which 

the shoots are first boiled, should be rejected. The whole plant 

has a strong unpleasant odor and the pith of the hollow stem is in 

flat disks separated from each other by cavities. Remedies: grub- 

bing or cutting below the top of the root; repeated mowing and 
salting. 


76 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Both roots and berries of the pokeweed are used in medicine, 
A Kentucky boy whom the writer knew ate the berries for cramp 
in the stomach, claiming that they were a certain cure. If gathered 
for sale they should be collected in autumn and the clusters of 
berries dried in the shade, while the roots should be cleaned, cut 
crosswise into slices and carefully dtied. They act upon the 
bowels and eause in time violent vomiting. Extracts made from 
them are used for iteh, other skin diseases and rheumatism. The 
dried root brings from 2 to 5 cents and the berries about 5 cents 
per pound, 


THE CARPET-WEED Famity.-—AIZOACEA. 


Prostrate and branching herhs, with small whitish flowers 
berne in the axils of the whorled leaves. Petals none; calyx 
5-parted; stamens 3-5; ovary 3- 
celled, forming in fruit a capsule 
which splits lengthwise. Seeds very 
small, kidney-shaped. and marked 
with lines. 


35. MoLLuco verTicitLata L. Carpet- 
weed. Indian Chickweed. (A. 
“N. 2.) 
Stem spreading and forming circu- 
lar mats, sometimes 2 feet in diameter; 


Ni i) rN leaves in whorls of fives or sixes, 
Y= spoon-shaped or linear, entire. Sepals 
— NSS oblong, white on the inner side, shorter 


Fig. 43. Showing a flower and a cross-section than the egg-shaped capsules which are 
of fruit. (After Britton and Brown.) -many seeded. (Fig. 43.) 

Frequent in bare sandy spots, cultivated fields and gardens, and 
springing from the cracks between bricks in sidewalks. May—Oct. : 
Remedies: pulling or hoe-cutting before the seeds ripen; sowing 
winter annuals after corn and potatoes. 


Ti Pursbane Famiry—PORTULACACE.A. 


Fleshy tasteless herbs with entire leaves. Flowers regular, 
sepals 2; petals 4 or 5; stamens 5-20; styles 2-8 united below the 
middle. Pod 1-ceiled, with few or many seeds rising on stalks 
from the base. Only 6 species of the family are listed from the © 
State, two of which, called “‘spring beauties,’’ are among the earli- 
est and prettiest of our springtime wild flowers. Here belongs also 
the cultivated portulaca and the following common garden weed: 


WEEDS OF THE PURSLANE FAMILY. 7 


26. PorruLac, oteracza L. Purslane. Pussley. (A. L. 1.) 

Prostrate, smooth, freely branching from a deep central root; branches 
4-10 inches long; leaves alternate, wedge-shaped, rounded at apex. Flow- 
ers pale yellow, sessile in the axils. Pods globular, opening by a little lid. 
Seeds very small, black, kidney-shaped, marked with a fine network. 
(Pigs. 13, ¢; 44.) 

Very common in gardens, dooryards and cultivated grounds, 
especially in sandy and rich soils. May-Nov. Flowers numerous, 
opening only in the 
morning sunshine, then 
closing once for all. In 
England purslane is used 
extensively as a pot-herb 
and for salads, and serves 
as does parsley to garnish 
dishes of meats, etc. 
Ilogs everywhere are 
very fond of it. It is at- 
tacked by a white mold 
which in rainy seasons 
serves to keep it in check. 
Beneath its fleshy foliage 
it harbors insects of 
many kinds, among 
which are the melon 
plant louse and the corn- 
root louse. Onion and 

Fig. 44. 1, seed; 2, fruit or pyxis closed; 3, same open. melon raisers have much 

(After Vasey.) : : : 

tronble with it, as it 

grows rapidly and ripens its seeds after cultivation of the crops 

has ceased. Remedies: close hoe cultivation, especially very early 

and again late in the season; seeding with winter annuals after 
hocd crops. 


Tue PinK Famity.—CARYOPHYLLACEA. 


Annual or perennial herbs with the joints of the stems often 
swollen and sometimes sticky; leaves opposite, entire. Flowers 
usually either solitary on long peduncles or numerous in fiat- 
topped cymes; sepals 4 or 5, separate or united into a tube; petals 
as many as the sepals or none; stamens twice as many as sepals or 
fewer; pistils 1, 1-celled, the ovules united to a central column. 
Fruit usually a capsule opening by valves on the sides. 


78 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


About 30 species of the family grow wild in the State, and 
mostly belong to two groups, -VizZ. : (a) the cockles which have the 


sepals united into a tube, many of them being also called ‘‘catch-. 


flies,’’ on account of the sticky or viscid secretions on joints of 
stems or calyx which they exude to prevent ants, small beetles and 
other honey-eating intruders which cannot pollenize from creep- 
ing up the stalks; (b) the chickweeds and sandworts, small white- 
flowered herbs abundant in woods and along the margins of lakes 
and streams, and having the sepals distinct or united only at the 
base. With us only 4 members of the family are as yet trouble- 
some. : 
87, AgRosTeEMMA airHago L. Corn Cockle. Purple Cockle. (A. I. 1.) 
Stem erect, 1-3 feet high, simple 
or with few erect branches, clothed 
with long, soft appressed hairs; leaves 
linear, acute. Flowers solitary on long 
axillary peduncles; petals pink or 
purple-red, showy; calyx lobes linear, 
much longer than the petals. Seeds 
black, kidney-shaped, %$ inch across, 
prettily marked with spiny ribs. (Fig. 
45.) 


Common in grain fields, espe 
cially those of wheat and rye; alss 
along railways, fence-rows, ete. 
May-Sept. The seed contains a 
poisonous principle, and if bread 
be made of flour containing a high 
percentage of the ground seed it is 


animals, and in man produces 4 


Fig. 45. a, sprays showing fl d wri i j 1] 
seat eae y eae eee ere great irritation of the digestive or- 
(After Chesnut.) gans. Remedies for the weed: 


hand pulling or spudding from the wheat fields intended for seed; 
careful screening of seed wheat, using a screen of 8 meshes to the 
inch; proper rotation of crops. 


38. SILENE ANTIRRHINA L. Sleepy Catchfly. Tarry Cockle. “(A. N. 2.) 


Stem slender, erect or ascending, simple or branched above, 8-80 
inches high; basal and lower leaves spoon-shaped, narrowed into a stalk. 
1-2 imches long; upper leaves linear and gradually reduced to awl-shaped 
bracts. Flowers in a loose terminal eluster; calyx egg-shaped, much en- 
larged by the ripening pod,. its teeth acute; petals pink, broader and 
notched above. Seeds dark brown, kidney-shaped, marked with rows of 
minute tubercles. ai, j 


often fatal to poultry and domestic: 


WEEDS OF THE PINK FAMILY. 719 


Frequent in light or sandy soils, especially in grain fields or 
waste places. Apr.—Sept. The stem is dark and viscid or sticky at 
or just below each joint and the flowers open for a short time only 
in sunshine. The seeds are frequent among those of clover or 
grass and in southwestern Indiana the plant is very common in 
wheat and rye. Remedies: sowing clean seed; pulling when not 
too common, to prevent the ripening of the seed; increased fertili- 
zation. 

The sticky cockle or night-flowering catchfly (S. noctiflora. L.) 
having 3 styles and large yellowish-white or pinkish petals, and the 
white cockle or white campion (Lychnis alba Mill.) with 5 styles 
and pure white petals, are two other members of the family re- 
corded from the State which may develop into troublesome weeds, 
as they have done elsewhere. Both have sticky stem-joints and 
large blossoms which open only at night. 

‘In addition to the sticky gum the stem of these catchflies is 
more or less covered with fine hairs, both of which characters aid 
them in baffling unwelcome wingless visitors, while the long tubes of 
the corollas effectually keep out all flying insects except the few 
whose visits the plants desire. As if so many precautions were not 
enough the mouths of the tubes above the stamens are obstructed 
by five little valves or scales, one being attached to the claw of each 
petal. These scales can be easily bent down by the large and long 
proboscis of bees and moths but not by the little thieving flies 
against. whose incursions the flowers are so anxious to guard them- 
selves.’’—Grant Allen. 


29. SaPONARTA OFFICINALIS L. Bouncing Bet. Soapwort. Hedge Pink. 
(FP. I. 2.) 


Erect, smooth, sparingly branched, 1-2 feet high; leaves ovate or oval, 
2-3 inches long, 1 inch wide. Flowers large, showy, pinkish or white, in 
dense terminal clusters. Seeds black, smooth, kidney-shaped with a beak 
1/16 inch long. (Fig. 10, a.) es 

Throughout the State, escaped from gardens and rapidly be- 
coming an annoying weed, especially in sandy cultivated fields and 
along banks and railways. June-Sept. This buxom country 
cousin of the carnation spreads by underground stems and is 
therefore difficult to eradicate. The juice of the stem, when mixed 
with water, produces a soapy effect and has cleansing qualities, 
whence the generic name. -Remedies: mowing twice each season 
for a year or two just before flowering; salting in early. spring; 
cultivation, especially hoeing, 


80 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


40. ALSINE MEDIA L. Common Chickweed. (A. I. 2.) 

Spreading or half erect, tufted, much branched, 4-12 inches long. 
smooth except a line of hairs along the stem; leaves oval, 4 to 23 inches 
long, the upper sessile. Flowers very 
small, white, the petals 2-parted, shorter 
than the calyx. Capsule egg-shaped, 
longer than the calyx; seeds brown, 
kidney-shaped, flattened, 1/24 inch 
across, the sides coarsely tuberculate. 
- (Figs. 12, h and 46.) 

Frequent in rich moist soil in 
gardens, lawns, meadows and _ pas- 
tures. Jan—Dec. A winter annual, 
blooming at all seasons. In some 
places used as a barometer as it ex- 
pands its flowers fully when fine 
weather is to follow but ‘“‘if it 
should shut up, then the traveler is 
Fig. 46. "Bhavwing flower, fruit and seed. to put on his great coa 2? In Eu- 

Uses RE ED rope it is much used for feeding 
cage-birds, which are very fond of both seed and leaves. Remedies: 
early and thorough spring cultivation; reseeding lawns; crowd- 
ing out by some winter-growing crop, as rye or crimson clover. 


Tis Crow¥voct orn Burrercup Famiry.—RANUNCULACEA. 


Annual or perennial! herbs with acrid sap; leaves usually alter- 
nate, often compound. Flowers with the parts all distinet and 
unconnected; petals 3-15, sometimes wanting, in which case the 
ealyx is colored like the corolla; sepals the same number, often 
falling when unfolding; stamens numerous; ovaries 1-many, 1- 
celled, usually 1-seeded. Fruit of our weeds an achene. (Fig, 
14, f, g:) 

About 50 species of the family occur.in Indiana. Among them 
are many of our common wild flowers of early spring and summer, 
2s the liverworts, marsh-marigolds, larkspurs, columbines, bane- 
berries, anemones, clematis, buttercups and meadow-rues. Most of 
these are harmless plants, covering the bare places of mother earth 
with their green leaves and posies gay. With us only one may as 
yet be listed as a weed, though others of its kind occasionally 
spread in low, wet pastures. 


41. RANUNCULUS ABoRTIVUS L. Small-flowered Crowfoot. Kidney-leaved 
Crowfoot. (B. N. 3.) 


Stem erect, branching, glabrous; root-leaves thick, kidney- or heart- | 


WEEDS OF THE CROWFOOT FAMILY, 81 


shaped, long-stalked, toothed or crenate; stem leaves sessile, divided into 
3-5 oblong or linear loves. Flowers very small; petals yellow, oblong, 
shorter than the reflexed lobes of calyx. 
Tiead of fruit globose. 


Common in moist soil, in woods, 
meadows, gardens, lawns and culti- 
vated fields. March-Sept. Espe- 
cially troublesome to strawberry 
growers and owners of well kept 
lawns. Remedies: pulling and hoe 
cutting; drainage; thorough culti- 
vation. 

The hooked erowfoot (R. recur- 
vatus Poir.), having the. kidney- 
shaped leaves all lobed and divided, 
the plant more or less pubescent and 
the beaks of the achenes strongly 
hooked, is also common in woods and 
pastures. The tall or meadow but- 
tercup (&. acris L., Fig. 47), with 
the flowers large, showy yellow, 1 


Fig. 47. Tall or meadow buttercup. (After : ; 
Vasey.) inch broad, calyx spreading and 


roots fibrous, occurs frequently in moist meadows and pastures and 
is in some States a pernicious weed. Its juice is very acrid and 
stock give it a wide range. Remedies the same. 


Tue Mustarp Famity.—CRUCIFER2. 


Herbs, mostly annual or biennial, with a pungent peppery 
juice; leaves alternate, usually narrow and deeply lobed, often 
forming a rosette at the surface of the ground, from which spring 
the slender flower-bearing stems. Flowers usually in racemes, 
white or yellow in color; sepals 4; petals 4, generally narrowed at 
base and placed opposite each other in pairs; stamens usually 6, 
4 long, 2 short; pistils 1, 2-celled. Fruit a silique which varies 
greatly in form and size and bears numerous seeds. (Fig. 14, 7.) 

About 55 species of the family are known from the State, most 
of which are weeds. They may usually be easily recognized by the 
sepals and petals being in fours, in opposite pairs, thus forming a 
cross—whence the family name Crucifcre. On the long racemes 
the flowers are usually to be found in all stages, from the unopened 
buds above to the ripened seed-pods below. When crushed the 
feliage often gives off a decided odor, Those which are -weeds 


(6] 


82 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


eceur mostly in grain fields, gardens, lawns and meadows. Many 
of the seeds have an oily covering which prevents decay and enables 
them to retain vitality for years. Cultivated members are cabbage, 
turnip, cauliflower and radish. 


42. L&ePIDIUM VIRGINICUM L. Wild Pepper-grass. Tongue-grass. Canary- 
grass. (A. N. 2.) 

Erect, smooth, much branched, 6-15 inches high; leaves tapering to 
base, the upper linear or lanceolate, entire; lower spoon-shaped, more or 
less notched on sides. Flowers small, white; stamens only 2. Pods 
small, rounded or oval, notched at tip; seeds light brown, flattened, 1/10 
inch wide, half as long, egg-shaped with a very distinct border. (Fig. 48.) 


Common everywhere in dooryards, waste grounds, fields and 
gardens. April-Oct. Very troublesome at times in clover, espe- 
cially in light sandy soil after the 
first crop is cut; the seeds separable 
from those of the clover only by care- 
ful screening. Many of the seeds 
germinate in autumn forming flat. ro- 
settes with a single central tap-root, 
from which the flowers and seeds of 
early spring are produced. Spar- 
rows of all kinds are very fond of 
the pods and eat vast numbers of 
them. Remedies: thorough and con- 
tinuous cultivation; dise harrowing 
in late fall or early spring ; hand pull- 
ing from lawns; spraying. 

4 The apetalous pepper-grass (L. 
faitkad omic seta’ tant antes apetalum Willd.), basal leaves more 
and Hoyas) eut-lobed and petals minute or want- 
ing, and the field pepper-grass (L. campestre L.), downy or hoary 
pubescent, leaves clasping the stem, pod spoon-shaped, both occur 
in the State and will be more common. Remedies the same. 


43. SISYMBRIUM OFFICINALE L, Hedge Mustard. (A. I. 2.) 

Erect with rigid spreading branches, 1-3 feet high; leaves cut-lobed, 
the lower segments turned backward, the upper leaves nearly sessile. 
Flowers small, pale yellow. Pods slender, erect, awl-shaped, 4 inch long, 
pressed closely against the stem; seeds brown, oblong, cylindrical on back, 
grooved on the other side, 1/16 inch long, one-third as wide. 


Common in waste places and fallow or abandoned fields. April- 
Dec. The seed occurs in clover and grass seed and hay. Remedies: 
frequent mowing; increased fertilization and cultivation, It, as. 


WEEDS OF THE MUSTARD FAMILY. 83 


well as the next two species, are hosts for the ‘‘club-root fungus’’ 
which attacks cabbage and turnips and all three should therefore 


tty Prats be kept away from these vege- 
al . f tables. 
I < Differing in having cream 


colored flowers and much longer, 
widely spreading pods is a 
closely allied species, the tum- 
bling mustard (8. altissimam 
L., Fig. 49), a European plant 
which is a bad weed in the 
grain fields of Canada and the 
Northwestern States. In Indi- 
ana it has been recorded from 
six counties and will doubtless 
be found to be frequent in the 
northern portion, especially 
along the trunk line railways. 
The pods are 2-4 inches long 
7 and each one contains 120 or 
pare fe immbling mustard: a, hase of stem of sonal more seeds, On a single plant 
branch with flower and pods. (After Dewey.) 12,500 pods were once counted, 
so that that plant alone produced 1,500,000 seeds. When the seeds 
are ripe the whole head of the plant breaks off and, as a tumble- 
weed, it may in winter be blown for miles, scattering a few seeds 
in many places. It is liable to be introduced anywhere in baled 
hay, and is especially liable to be found about elevators and railway 
yards. Isolated plants should be pulled. before the seeds ripen. If 
‘in numbers they should be mowed or cut with hoe in June and 
again in August. 


44. BRASSICA ARVENSIS L. Charlock. Wild Mustard. (A. I. 1.) 

Erect, branching above, 1-2 feet high; rough with scattered stiff 
hairs; lower leaves stalked, cut-lobed; upper.ones mostly sessile, feebly 
notched or entire. Flowers yellow, fragrant. Pods long, cylindrical, 
knotty, borne on stout stems and with a long two-edged beak which is 
empty or 1-seeded; seeds 15 or more in a pod, spherical, larger than those 
of the black mustard. (Fig 50.) 


Frequent in the southern half of State, less so in northern 
counties. May—Sept. Occurs in meadows and grain fields, espe- 
cially those of oats, the seeds remaining with them when threshed. 
The seeds have great vitality, often remaining buried for years or 
until conditions are right for successful growth. It grows very 


84 


THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


rapidly and matures an immense number of seeds. Remedies: 
clean seed; surface burning in fall or spring; hand pulling and 


ERSteweotl dt, 


cultivation of hoed crops; spraying 
with iron sulphate (copperas) solu- 
tion; harrowing stubble as soon as 
crop is cut to start a rapid autumn 
growth of the weed, then feeding off 
with sheep; harrowing young wheat 
in autumn after it has a good start. 


45. BRAsstcA NickRA L. Black Mustard. 
(A. I. 3.) 

Erect, tall, 2-7 feet high, prickly with 
short stiff hairs; lower leaves with a 
large terminal and 2-4 smaller lateral 
lobes. Flowers yellow. Pods erect, closely 
appressed to stem, 4-sided, smooth, } inch 
long, ending in a slender beak; seeds dark 
brown, very pungent, 1/25 of an inch 


Fig. 50. (After Vasey.) 


Common in fields and waste places. 
as for charlock. 

The seeds of both this and the 
white mustard (Sinapts alba L.) when 
ground are used extensively in medi- 
cine for plasters, poultices, emetics, 
etc. More than 5 million pounds are 
imported each year, the price aver- 
aging about 5 cents per pound. The 
white mustard is a smaller plant, 1-2 
feet high, flowers larger and paler yel- 
low, the pods rough-hairy, with long, 
flat sword-shaped beaks; seeds pale 
yellow, smooth, larger and less pun- 
gent than those of the black mustard. 
In collecting the seeds for sale the 
tops should be pulled when most of 
the pods are ripe but before they be- 
gin to burst open, placed on a clean 
dry floor or shelf until: fully ripe, 
then shaken over a sheet or canvas. 


long, globular, finely pitted. (Fig. 51.) 


June-Nov. Remedies same 


Fig. 51. (After Henkel.) 


46. BURSA BURSA-PAsToRIS L, Shepherd’s Purse. Mother’s Heart. (A. I, 1.) 


Erect, branching, 6-20 inches high; lower leaves tufted, forming a 
rosette, cut-lobed or toothed like those of the dandelion; stem leaves few, 


WEEDS OF THE MUSTARD FAMILY. 85 


arrow-shaped. Flowers small, white. Pods heart-shaped or triangular, 
broad at top, notched at apex then narrowed to base, borne on slender 
stalks; seeds numerous, light brown, oblong, 1/20 inch in length, half as 
wide. (Fig. 52.) 

Common everywhere in waste places, gardens and old cultivated 
fields. March 10-Nov. 25. A winter annual whose green rosettes 
are véry pretty at that season, but 
whose spreading stems become an 
eyesore in early spring. It is also 
a host for the elub-root fungus. At 
all times of the year and every- 
where, when it is not actually freez- 
ing, this plant is growing. Each 
pod contains about 20 seeds. When 
put in water they, as well as those 
of most other mustards, produce a. 
large. amount of mucilage and a 
covering of rather long and very 
fine transparent hairs. This, by ad- 
hesion to passing objects, aids in 
their distribution. A single plant 
will ripen 20,000 of the seeds, so 
that it has enormous power of 
propagation. It will: thrive any- 
where, sometimes taking entire 
Fig. 62. a, seed natural size; b, same X 6. (After POSSession of the soil from which it 

Palys) draws a large amount of moisture. 
Remedies: constant hoeing and cultivation; hand pulling from 
lawns; plowing or disk harrowing in late autumn; spraying with 
iron sulphate solution; cutting out the fall rosettes with hoe or 
spud. 

The name ‘‘mother’s heart’’ is common in England. The chil- 
dren hold out the seed pouch to their companions inviting them to 
‘‘take a haud o’ that.’’ It immediately cracks, and then follows 
the triumphant shout ‘‘you’ve broken your mother’s heart.’’ In 
Switzerland the same plant is offered to a person with the request. 
to pluck one of the pods. Should he do so the onlookers exclaim: 
“vou have stolen a purse of gold from your father and mother.’’ 


THe Rose Famity—ROSACEA, 


Herbs, shrubs or trees with regular perfect flowers; leaves al- 
ternate, simple or compound, with stipules usually:present. Calyx 
5-lobed with the dise of the flower firmly attached ; petals equal in 


86 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


number to the calyx lobes and distinct, or none; stamens numerous, . 
distinct; ovaries 1-many, 1-celled. Fruit of various forms, mostly 
capsules opening by a single valve, or achenes. 

A large and important family which formerly included the 
apples, pears, cherries, etc. Recently, however, it has been divided 
into three families, the Rosacee as above restricted ; the Pomacen, 
including the apples, pears, June-berries and red-haws; and the 
Drupaces, comprising the plums, cherries and peaches. To the 
Rosacee, as now defined, belong the meadow-sweets, raspberries, 
blackberries, strawberries, cinquefoils, avens, agrimonies, roses and 
many other forms. About 50 members of the family are known to 
grow wild in Indiana, but only a few of them intrude upon culti- 
vated or pasture lands in such numbers as to be called weeds, and 
of those which do none belong to the weeds of the first class. 


47. RUBUS ALLEGHENIENSIS Porter. Wild Blackberry. Common Brier. 
Bramble. (P. N. 3.) 


Shrubby, branched, erect or recurved, 3-10 feet high, armed with 
stout recurved prickles; leaves compound; leaflets 3-5, ovate, pubescent 
beneath, coarsely toothed. Flowers white, terminal. Fruit a collection of 
small black drupes persistent on a fleshy receptacle, broadly oval, very 
pulpy. 

This and several closely allied species of high blackberries are 
found throughout the State, being much more abundant on the hill 
slopes of the southern half. They occur mostly in poor clayey soil 
along roadsides, fence-rows and in old neglected fields and pastures,’ 
often taking complete possession of the ground. It is only where 
by neglect the bushes are allowed to spread that they become a nui- 
sance and crowd out the blue-grass and other forage crops. <A rust 
and numerous insects that prey upon cultivated berries are har- 
bored by the wild canes, so that the two should not be allowed to 
grow in close proximity. Remedies: mowing several times in lata 
summer ; increased fertilization and cultivation. 

Flowering in June, the fruit of the blackberry is ripe in July 
and August, and where desired for the table a few of the bushes 
are a valuable asset to the farm. These berries are the fruit of 
the earth, an offering of nature in her generous moods, her dessert 
of wild fruit, freely given, than which there is no better. Out of 
the clay and other materials of poor hillside soils the blackberry 
canes do fashion through the chemistry of their cells, this juicy 
pulp, sweeten it to our tastes, then offer it free for the taking. Is 
it not a miracle of nature, a miracle greater than any accredited to 
man, this juggling of earthy ingredients, this producing of luscious 


WEEDS OF THE ROSE FAMILY. 87 


berrics by these thorny brambles? Moreover, they offer us a cure 
for over-eating, for a decoction made by steeping an ounce of the 
root in a pint of water is a valuable remedy in dysentery, cholera 
infantuin and other bowel troubles. 

However, it is not so much for humans as for birds that this 
fruit is produced by the blackberry canes. Each of the little fruits, 
which are clustered together around the fleshy receptacle, is in 
reality a nut which has clothed itself in an outer coat of sweet 
colored pulp. This pulp is a bonus which the plant throws in to 
induce the bird to swallow the nut. Within the nutlets, and pro- 
tected by their hard indigestible stones or shells, are the true seeds 
which are scattered far and wide by the birds. The same plan of 
surrounding the nut by juicy pulp is seen in the peach, plum and 
cherry, where it is more evident to sight on account of the larger 
size of the nut or so-called seed. 

The dewberry or low running blackberry. (R. procumbens Muhl. ) 
is very common in old meadows and dry upland fields in southern 
Indiana. Its long trailing stems often become mixed with the hay 
and so prove a great nuisance to haymakers and barefooted boys. 
Remedies the same. 


48. POTENTILLA CANADENSIS L. Common Cinquefoil. Five-finger. (P. N. 3.) 

Stems half erect or prostrate, 3 inches to 2 feet long, spreading by 
slender runners ; leaves composed. of 5 leaflets which are digitate or spring- 
ing from a common point; these ob- 
long, obtuse at apex, cut-toothed. 
Flowers axillary, solitary, yellow, 
showy; petals broadly oval; stamens 
about 20. Achenes numerous, smooth. 
(Figs. 9, 0; 53.) 

Common in dry soils, espe- 
cially in old ‘‘worn-out’’ fields in 
southern Indiana; much less so in 
the northern portions. May-July. 
Often called ‘‘wild strawberry,”’ 
which its foliage closely resembles, 
but the fruit not fleshy. It is 
especially prevalent on sloping hill- 
sides in company with the dew- 
berry, blackberry, mullen, etc. Its 
presence indicates that the soil is 
sterile or lacking in some element of fertility. Remedies: fertiliza- 
tion and cultivation with forage plants, as clover or cow-peas; 
sheep-grazing. 


Fig. 53. (After Watson.) 


88 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


The rough or tall cinquefoil (P.- monspeliensis L.), stem 1-3 
feet high, erect, rough-pubescent, leaflets 3, flowers small, yellow, 
pumerous in terminal cymes, is frequent in moist soils throughout 
the State, being especially troublesome in clover fields. It flowers 
from June to August. Remedies: close cutting in spring or early 
summer; cultivation. 


Tur Pea Fammy.—PAPILIONACESS. 


Herbs, shrubs, vines or trees with alternate, mostly compound, 
stipulate leaves. Flowers butterfly-shaped, like those of the sweet 
pea, mainly in spikes, heads or racemes; calyx 4-5-toothed or cleft; 
petals usually consisting of a broad upper one (the standard or 
banner), two side ones (the wings), and two lower or front ones, 
more or less united (the keel) ; stamens 5-10, all united at the base 
into one group (monodelphous); two groups (diadelphous)}, or 
separate; ovary usually 1-celled, containing 1 to many ovules. 
Fruit a pod, 1 to many seeded, usually splitting into 2 valves. 
(Figs. 9, ¢, d; 11, c; 14, k, 1.) , 

A large family, of which the peas, beans and clovers are fa: 
miliary and important cultivated members. All have the fruit in 
the form of legumes or pods which vary much in size and shape. 
Rarely, as in alfalfa, they are coiled like snail shells; again they 
are like the achenes of buttercups but differ m opening down both 
sides to release the seeds. In one group, the trefoils and bush 
clovers, they are broken up into joints, each joint containing a 
single seed; in most species, however, they are like those of the 
pea or bean. To the farmer the members of the pea family are 
especially important, since they harbor on the roots bacteria which 
produce small nodules (Fig. 7.) enabling the plants to gather 
and store nitrogen from the air. It is this stored nitrogen which 
renders clover, cow-peas, ete., such valuable fertilizers. About 90 
members of the family are known from the State, a half dozen or 
so of which may be classed as weeds. 


4), CASSIA MARYLANDICA L. Wild Serna. (P. N, 3.) 


Erect or spreading, often branched, 3-8 feet high; leaves pinnate; 
leaflets 12-20, oblong, obtuse, 1-2 inches long; flowers not butterfly- . 
shaped but nearly regular, yellow, showy, in upper axillary racemes; 
petals 5, nearly equal; stamens 10, separate, the upper 3 imperfect. Pod 
linear, curved, 83-4 inches long, + inch wide, Seeds hard, gray, 3/16 of an 
inch long, half as wide. (Fig. 54.) 


Abundant on moist hillsides, in lowland meadows and pastures 
and along sand and gravel bars in the southern half of the State; 


WEEDS OF THE PEA FAMILY. 89 


less common northward. June-Sept.- In the shape of the flowers 
the wild senna, partridgé pea, red-bud, Kentucky coffee tree and a 
few others differ in that the up- 
per petal or standard is en: 
closed by the wings in the bud, 
whereas in the pea family 
proper the standard overlaps or 
encloses the wings. The wild 
senna spreads by deep perennial 
roots and often densely covers 
large areas. Remedies: mow- 
ing before the flowers blossom, 
two or three times each season; 
cutting with hoe or spud and 
salting. 

The partridge pea (C. cham- 
ecrista L.) is another senna, 
which differs in its smaller size, 
much smaller leaflets which 
close when touched, petals often 
with a purple spot at base, and 
straight pods. It occurs in dry 
or sandy soil in the southern half of the State. Remedies: cutting 
and burning before the seeds mature. 


Fig. 54. 1, flower; 2, mature pods. (After Vasey.) 


50. MeEpiIcaco LuPULINA L. Black or Hop 
Medic. Prostrate Yellow Clover. 
Nonesuch. (A. I. 3.) 

Branched at the base, the branches 
prostrate and spreading, 1-2 feet long; 
leaflets 3, clover-like, obovate or oval, cre- 
nate. Flowers small, bright yellow, in 
dense oblong heads or short spikes; sta- 
mens 10 in two sets, 9 and 1. Pods 
black, curved backward upon the stem, & 
1-seeded. Seeds yellow, similar to but 
smaller than those of red clover. (Fig. 55.) 


Frequent in dry sterile soil along 
railways and roadsides and in waste 
places in towns and cities. May—Aug. 
Valued as forage, but much less so 
than the white and red clovers. An 
own brother to the alfalfa which be- 
longs to the same genus, and ‘its seeds Fig. 55. (After Sm:th ) 


90 PTE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


often mixed with those of alfalfa and clover. Remedies: crowding 
out with red clover or cow-peas; increased fertilization. 


51. Me.itorus ALBA Desv. White Sweet-clover. White Melilot. Tree 
Clover. (B. I. 2.) , 

Erect or ascending, 3-10 feet high, branching; leaves 3-parted; leaf- 
lets oblong, slightly toothed, rounded at tip, % of an inch long. Flowers 
white, in slender axillary racemes; standard slightly longer than the 
wings; stamens 10, in 2 sets, 9 and 1. Pod egg-shaped. 4 of an inch long. 
Seeds like those of red clover but smaller and flatter. (ig. 56.) 

Very common in hard, dry soil along embankments, roadsides, 
borders of fields and waste places generally. June-Oct. Some- 
times forms dense thickets which, when the 
plants are old, are difficult to penetrate. Often 
cut and fed green to stock and in some parts of 
the south regarded as a valuable forage p!ant. 
If used for hay it should be cut early before the 
blossoms appear or the stem becomes too woody. 
Remedies: repeated mowing; cultivation in late 
summer ; increased fertilization. 

The yellow sweet-clover (M. officinalis L.), 
2-4 feet high, the flowers yellow, the standard 
about equalling the wings, occurs in similar 
places but is much less frequent. The leaves of 
both are fragrant in drying, hence the name 
‘“sweet-clover.’’ Both are useful as soil indica- 
tors and where grown in old roadways or brick- 
yards and then turned under aid much in bring- 
ing the dry soil into good condition. 


: 52. MEIBOMIA CANESCENS L. Hoary  Tick-trefoil. 
Ries: tier Pagers Seed Ticks. (P. N. 2.) 


Erect, much branched, 3-5 feet high, covered with short dense hairs; 
leaves stalked, 3-parted; leaflets ovate, blunt-pointed, yellowish-green, 14 
inches long, the end one the larger; stipules large, ovate, persistent. 
Flowers purple in terminal compound racemes; stamens in two sets, 9 
and 1. Pod or loment lobed on both margius, more deeply below than 
above, +6 jointed, the joints longer than broad, very adhesive. Seeds 
lens-shaped, kidney-form, nearly 4+ of an inch long. (Fig. 57.) 


Very common along fence-rows, roadsides, borders of thickets, 
ete., especially in low, rich soil. June-Sept. The joints of the pods 
break apart easily and are roughened with minute hooked hairs by 
which they adhere closely to wool, clothing and fur, thus widely 
scattering the enclosed seeds. Remedies: mowing or hoe cutting: . 
cultivation. , : 


WEEDS OF THE PEA FAMILY. 91 


Seventeen species of these tick-trefoils are known from the 
State, two or three of which are trailing, the others erect. All have 
purplish flowers and jointed pods, the joints varying much in 
number, form, size and adhesiveness. (Fig. 14, 1.) All are vile 
weeds commonly known as ‘‘seed ticks,’’ though no one of them 
is as common as the hoary species 
above described. Of them Tho- 

reau has written: ‘‘Though you 
were running for your life they 
would have time to catch and 
cling to your clothes. They will 
even cling to your hand as you go 
by. They cling like babes to a 
_mother’s breast, by instinct. I 
have often found myself covered, 
as it were, with an imbricated 
coat of the brown seeds or a 
bristling chevaux-de-frise of beg- 
gars’ ticks and had to spend a 
quarter of an hour or more in 
Fig. 57. Single joint of pod shown below. (After SOME convenient spot picking 

prem eee Oent) them off; and so they get just 
what they wanted, deposited in some other place. Growing on some 
rough cliff side, how surely they prophesy the coming of the trav- 
eler, brute or human, that will transport their seeds on his coat.’’* 


THE SpurcE Famity.— EK UPHORBIACEZ. 


Herbs with a milky, acrid juice and small flowers, usually with- 
out petals, the sexes of which are often borne on separate plants or 
on different parts of the same plant: leaves variable in form; size, 
and position on the stems. Flowers, in most of our weeds, within 
oz above a cup-shaped involucre of leaf-like bracts which are often 
colored, these involucres usually bearing naked glands. Fruit: 
mostly a 3-lobed capsule, each cell of which contains a single seed. 

A large family, mostly represented in the tropics. The castor- 
oil plant and various species of crotons, grown for their showy 
leaves and bracts, are cultivated examples. About 20 species grow 
wikd in Indiana, several of them forming mat plants or disks of 
much branched vegetation similar to the carpet-weeds and purs- 
lanes but having a milky juice. Others are erect or suberect and 
all are separated mainly by the difference in shape and size of leaf. 


*Autumn, 38-39, 


92 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


smoothness or hairiness of stem and character of the surface of the 

seeds. Several of them are annoying weeds, especially in lawns. 

gardens and along walks. The milky juice of all spurges is said to 

“<eorrode and ulcerate the body wherever applied.’ As the flower- 

ing spurge is often gathered for decorations it-is doubtless respon- 

sible for many cases of skin poisoning. Coulter states that he has 

a record of 23 such cases. 

58. ACALYPHA vircinicA lL. Three- 
seeded Mercury. Wax-ball. 
Copper-leaf. (A. N. 2.) 

Erect or ascending, 3 inches to 2 
feet high; leaves dark green often 
turning purple, ovate, long-stalked, 

1-8 inches long, thin, coursely cut- 

toothed. Male and female flowers 

separate but in the same axillary 
cluster, the male or staminate ones 
included in a large leaf-like 5-9-lobed. 
bract; the female ones at the base of 
these. Seeds ovoid, reddish-gray, 
1/16 inch long with lengthwise wavy 
lines. (Fig. 58.) 


Common in low, moist, shaded 
places and in rich or sandy soil, 
soft: #8... Sind et stapioale on zititve especially about barns and out- 
(After Britton and Brown.) buildings. June—Oct. The seeds 
are easly crushed between the fingers, hence the name wax-ball. 
They are common in clover seed, from 
which they are difficult to separate. 
Remedies: pulling or cutting before 
the seeds ripen; thorough cultivation. 


54. Wupnorsta macuLtara L. Spotted 
Spurge. Milk Purslane. (A. N. 2.) 

Stem more or less hairy, branched 
from the base, the branch slender, pros- 
trate, spreading, often dark red, 2-15 


inches long; leaves opposite, oblong, ob- fee us ‘ 
tuse, very oblique at base, short-stemmed, are << 
usually with a brownish-red spot at cen- Sy _ aE ~ 

ter. Involucre entire. Seeds ovate, a wy = e Ne 
sharply 4-angled, 1/25 of an inch long, he SS We 
ash-gray with four shallow grooves across ASS ee va ve 


each side. (Figs. 6, e; 59.) ‘ 
Fig. 59. Leaf and pistillate flower below; seeds 


Commcn in waste places, espe- above. (After Britton and Brown.) 
cially along gravelly or sandy banks, sidewalks, roadsides, in gar- 


WEEDS OF THE SPURGE FAMILY. 93 


dents, ete. June—Oct. The plant often forms a handsome circular 
mat covering some naked place on the bosom of earth. Remedies: 
hoe-cutting or pulling when the first blossoms appear; thorough 
cultivation ; burning mature plants. : 

A closely allied but less common species is the hairy, spreading 
spurge (EZ. humistrala Eng.), which has the involucre split on one 
side, stem more hairy, leaves larger, more ovate and more numerous. 


55. EUPHORBIA NUTANS Lag. Large or Upright Spotted Spurge. Stubble 
Spurge. (A. N. 2.) 


Stem ascending or erect with many side branches, reddish-green, 6-24 
inches high; leaves opposite, ovate-oblong, often curved, unequally cut- 
tcothed, often with reddish margins and a red blotch at center. Seeds 
blackish, oblong-oval, 1/16 inch long with blunt angles and cross ridges. 


Common in dry pastures, along banks, roadsides and waste 
places, and especially in sandy stubble-fields. May—Oct. It is sup- 
posed to be one of the causes of the salivation or. slobbering of 
horses, so often noted in late summer. The pods of it and allied 
species, when dry, burst with a snapping noise and project the 
seeds to a distance of several feet. Remedies the same as for the 
spotted spurge; also mowing or burning over stubble fields. 


5G. EuPHORBIA CoRoLLATA LL. Flowering Spurge. White-topped Spurge. 
(P. N. 2.) 


Erect, 1-3 feet high, branched above, bright green; leaves linear or 
oblong, the upper ones whorled, the others alternate. Flower stalks 
forked and arranged in an umbel at top 
of stem; involucres terminal, bearing 
‘4 or 5 yellowish-green oblong glands and 
white petal-like bracts. Seeds gray, 
1/10 inch long, slightly pitted. (Trig. 60.) 

Frequent in poor, dry soils; espe- 
cially along sandy banks and road- 
sides. May-—Oct. When bruised it 
exudes a milky, poisonous juice. 
Spreads by long stout rootstocks as 
well as by seeds. Remedies: re- 
peated mowings before the seeds 
ripen; increased fertilization; thor- 

Fig. 60. (After Vasey.) ough cultivation until mid-summer. 

The cypress or graveyard spurge (E. cyparissias L.) is a peren- 
nial, propagating by rootstocks, which as an escape promises to 
spread widely. It is often planted for ornament about country 
cemeteries where it grows a foot high in large patches. The leaves 


94. THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


are linear and the flowers in a terminal umbel. The bracts are 
yellowish when in blossom and the plant is poisonous to stock when 
eaten in quantity. Wherever found it should be destroyed by re- 
peated cutting and salting as it crowds out grass and all other 
plants with which it comes in contact. 


Tus Sumac Famuuy.—ANACARDIACE-. 


Shrubs or woody vines with acrid, often poisonous, milky sap 
and alternate, mostly compound leaves. Flowers in axillary or 
terminal panicles; calyx small, 5-parted; petals 5, greenish or yel- 
lowish; stamens 5; ovary 1, 1-celled, 1-seeded. Fruit generally a 
small drupe. 

A small family with little or no economic value. Only six spe- 
cies are listed from the State, all sumacs belonging to the genus 
Rhus. Two of them produce a nonvolatile oil which is very irri- 
tating to the skin, producing blisters and ulcers. The other five 
are harmless to the touch. The foliage of one, the smooth sumac 
(Rhus glabra L.) is used to same extent in tanning leather. An- 
other, the fragrant or sweet-scented sumac, grows only on rocky 
banks or cliffs and its foliage gives off a very pleasing odor. No 
other plants rival these harmless sumacs in the rich splendor of 
their leaves and fruits in the Indian’summer of late autumn. Then 

“The maples blaze; the tangling sumac shrubs 

Of glowing spikes build crimson ladders up 

The wall.” 
They are then easily known by the red clusters of fruit, that of the 
poisonous species being grayish-white and the foliage much more 
dull. 


57. Ruus rapicans L. Poison Ivy. Poison Oak. Poison Vine. (P. N. 2.) 

Stem woody, either climbing by numerous air rootlets, or bushy and 
erect; leaves 3-parted; leaflets ovate, pointed, entire or toothed. Flowers 
green in loose axillary panicles. Fruit grayish-white, smooth, globular, 
1/6 of an inch in diameter. (Fig. 61.) 

Common along fence-rows, borders of fields and thickets. May- 
July. Two well known varieties of poison ivy occur in the State. 
One is a bushy shrub 2-6 feet high and occurs most commonly 
about old fences and rocky ledges; the other is a vine 30-150 feet 
in length, climbing often to the tops of the tallest trees and found 
mostly in dry, open woods. The foliage of both is poisonous to 
most persons, though some can handle it with impunity. Birds 
feed readily upon the fruit and seatter the seeds far and wide. 
The poisonous oil is found in all parts of the plant, even in the 


WEEDS OF THE SUMAC FAMILY. 95 


wood and roots. It is insoluble in water and cannot be washed 
from the skin with it alone. The best remedy for the poison is an 
alcoholic solution of sugar of lead. This is made by taking a small 
bottle of alcohol and putting in it as much of the powdered sugar 
of lead as it will dissolve The milky fluid should then be rubbed 

into the affected skin three or four 
times daily. A water solution of su- 
gar of lead will do no good and the 
alcoholic solution should never be 
taken internally as it is a deadly 
poison. 

Because the poison ivy is a vine of 
handsome foliage it is sometimes al- 
lowed to grow or is even transplanted 
about dwellings and parks. From 
the wocdbine or Virginia creeper, also 
‘an ornamental vine with 5 leaflets, it 
can be at once told by having only 3 
leaflets. Any woody vine or low 
climbing shrub with 3 leaflets should 
at once be destroyed. Remedies: 
grubbing and burning, handling the 
parts only with hoe or fork, or em- 


Fig. 61. a, spray showing aerial rootlets and ploying men who are immune to do 
leaves; b, clusters of fruit. (After Chesnut.) the work 


In the tamarack and other marshes of northern Indiana the 
second ‘poisonous sumac (R. vernix lL.) grows in abundance. It is 
a tall shrub or small tree with pinnate leaves of 7 to 13 leaflets and 
is, if anything, more poisonous than the 3-leaved ivy. The same 
remedy will cure the poison. 


Tue Mattow Famity.—_MALVACE Zs. 


Herbs or shrubs with alternate stipulate leaves. Flowers reg- 
ular, perfect, often large and showy; sepals 5, united at base, often 
with a whorl of bractlets beneath the true calyx; petals 5, usually 
twisted in the bud; stamens numerous, united at base and con- 
nected with the base of the petals; ovaries several, arranged in a 
ring or forming a several-celled capsule. 

A small family of imnocent, plants, possessing a mucilaginous 
juice, tough bark and having the flower stalks axillary and usually 
with a joint. They are easily known by having the bases of the 
stamens united in a tube which surrounds the pistils. The holly- 


96 THR INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


hock, cotton plant and okra are familiar or cultivated forms. The 
rose mallows which grow wild along the borders of marshes and 
streams produce some of the largest and most handsome of our 
wild blossoms. The most common one of these is the halberd- 
leaved rose mallow, 4-8 feet high and having the upper leaves 
hastate, the large bell-shaped flower pink with a purplish base and 
the fruit-pod surrounded by the bladder-like inflated calyx. Only 
a dozen species of the mallow family grow wild in the State, three 
of which are weeds. : 


5S. MALVA ROTUNDIFOLIA L. Round-leaved Mallow. Low Mallow. Creep- 
ing Charley: Cheeses. (P. I. 2.) 

Stem branched at the base and 
spreading from a deep root, 4-12 
inches long; leaves long-stalked, 
rounded or kidney-form, obscurely 
5-9-lobed, the edges scalloped. 
Flowers clustered in the axils, pale 
blue, 4 inch broad; petals oblong, 
notched at the end, twice the length 
of sepals; ovaries about 15, rounded 
on the back, arranged in a disk. 
Seeds brown, kidney-shaped, 1/16 
inch across. (Fig. 62.) 


Common along roadsides and 
in dooryards, gardens and waste 
places in cities and towns. May-— 
ay Nov. Children often eat the 

Fig. 62. (After Clark.) disk-shaped little fruit bodies, 
calling them ‘‘cheeses,’’ whence the following lines: 


“The sitting down when school was o’er 
Upon the threshold of the door, 

Picking from mallows, sport to please, 
The crumpled seed we call a cheese.” 


Like other weeds which flourish best in compact or trodden ground 
this mallow has a long and tapering root. Remedies: pulling or 
deep cutting with hoe or spud in lawns and yards; thorough culti- 
vation in gardens and fields. 


59. Spa spinosa L. Prickly Sida. Thistle Mallow. (A. I. 2.) 

Erect, much branched, soft downy, 8-20 inches high; leaves ovate-- 
lanceolate or oblong, scalloped, 1-2 inches long, the stems of the larger 
ones with a spine-like tubercle at the base. Flowers small, lemon-yellow, 
short-stemmed, axillary, Pods 5, combined into an ovate fruit, each split- 
ting at the top into two beaks. Seeds dark brown, triangular, smooth, 
not shining, 1/12 inch long. (Fig. 68.) 


WEEDS OF THE MALLOW FAMILY, 97 


Common in dry, upland, clayey soils in the southern two-thirds 
of the State, occurring especially along pasture pathways and road- 
sides and in dooryards and barnyards where the ground is com- 
pact. April-Nov. An emigrant 
from the south, ‘this’is fast becom- 
ing a common wayside weed. Often 
trampled upon by man and beast it 
yet survives and perpetuates its 
kind. Scrawny and rough in form 
it exemplifies a life of bitter strug- 
ele. Like the wire-grass, bravely 
it fights, its way, raising its head 
with new vigor after being pressed 
closely to earth by many a passer-by. 
Remedies: cutting plants wher they 
begin to blossom; in gardens, ete), 
cultivating with hoed crops. 


60. ABUTILON ABUTILON L. Velvet Leaf. 


Fig. 63. Showing flower and fruit. (After : ; Re ee 
Britton and Brown.) Indian Mallow. Butter Print. 


American Jute. (A. I. 1.) 

Stout, erect, 8-6 feet high, densely clothed with short, sdft hairs; 
leaves long-stalked, heart-shaped, pointed, 4-12 -inches wide. - Flowers 
yellow, solitary in the axils of the 
small upper leaves. Pods 12-15, 
pubescent, arranged in a circle to 
form a head 1 inch in diameter ; when 
ripe opening at the apex which is 
split to form two short beaks. Seeds 
numerous, kidney-shaped, dark gray, 
4 inch across. (Fig. 64.) 

Very common in gardens and 
cultivated fields, especially those 
of rich lowland’ soils in which 
corn and potatoes are grown. 
July—Oct. The leaves are in 
shape and size like those of the 
linn tree but are soft velvety in 
texture, hence the common name. 
The carpels or single pods are 
separated from each other by 
deep lengthwise grooves and the 
appearance of the ripe head has 


Tie. 64. Showing flowers and circle of fruits. 


been aptly likened to that of a (After Vasey.) 


(7] 


98 THEE INDIANA WEED BOOK, 


circle of little milk pitchers set close together with their lips point- 
ing outward. The many sceds are widely distributed by being 
blown over the snow and carried in hay and other crops. By some 
farmers it is considered one of the worst weeds with which they 
have to deal in bottom corn lands. Remedies: pulling or cutting 
before the blossoms appear; burning the mature plants before fall 
plowing ; cultivation of hoed crops. 

The bast, or inner. fibrous hark, of this-weed is a jute substi- 
tute which may be made into twine, rope and paper. In China 
the plant is cultivated for this fibre, which is exported under the 
name of China jute. The fibre from young plants takes dye readily 
aud is fine enough to work into yarn for carpet fillings and coarse 
fabrics. Experiments in the cultivation and manufacture of the 
fibre have been made in Illinois and New Jersey. The cultivation 
was successful but the enterprises failed on account of the lack of 
economical machinery for extracting the fibre.* 


Tue Sr. Joun’s-wort Faminy.—H YPERICACEA. 


Herbs or shrubby plants with opposite entire leaves which are 
always marked with glandular or small black dots, these pellucid 
when held against the light. Flowers in panicles or cymes at the 
end of slender stems; sepals : or 5, greenish; petals 4 or 5, yellow; 
stamens many, arranged in 3 or more clusters. Pod 1 to 5-celled 

- with numerous seeds. About 20 species 
oceur in the State, all natives but one, and 
it, like many other introduced plants, a 
vile weed. 


61. HyprericuM prrroratum l Common St. 
John’s-wort. Herb John. (P. I. 3.) 

Erect from a woody base, 1-2 feet high, 
much branched; leaves oblong or linear, ses- 
sile, less than an inch in length. Petals deep 
yellow with numerous black dots, twice the 
length of the lanceolate acute sepals. Pod 3- 
celled; seeds oblong, numerous, 1/20 inch 
long, surface with rows of pits. (Figs. 12, d; 
65.) 

Frequent in pastures and moist mead- 
ows. June-Sept. The crushed leaves are 
odorous and contain a very acrid juice. 
The name St. John’s-wort was given it by 
a | the peasants of France and Germany who 
Fig. 65. (After Vasey.) gather it with great ceremony upon St. 

*Dodge.—"'A Descriptive Catalogue of the Useful Fibre Plants of the World.” 1897, 


WEEDS OF THE EVENING-PRIMROSE FAMILY. 99 


John’s day and hang it in their windows as a charm against storms, 
thunder and evil spirits. In Italy it is known as the ‘‘deyil chaser’’ 
because it scares away those who work in darkness by bringing to 
light their hidden deeds. It spreads by runners from the base and 
by seeds in hay, clover and grass seed. Remedies: cutting or pull-: 
ing in meadows before mowing; digging or spudding; thorough 
cultivation with hoed crops. 


Tue EvEeNING-PRimrose Faminry.—ONAGRACEA. 


Herbs of varied size and appearance having the calyx tube 
united its full length with the ovary and often prolonged beyond 
it. Petals usually 4, twisted in the bud; stamens as many or twice 
as many as the petals and, with the latter, inserted on the top of 
the calvx tube; ovary usually 4-celled, with numerous ovules in 
each cavity. Fruit a capsule or small nut. 

A family of medium size whose members have the leaves either 
oppesite or alternate, and grow in various kinds of soil. The 
fuchsias, raised for ornament, are about the only cultivated forms. 
Among the 22 species listed from the State as growing wild are 
the water purslanes, willow herbs, fireweeds, evening-primroses, 
sundrops and enchanter’s nightshades. Of these only one is common 
enough to be included in this book of weeds. 


62. ONAGRA BIENNIS L. Common 
Evening-Primrose. (B. N. 2.) 

Stem erect, stout, usually un- 
branched, 1-9 feet high, often reddish ; 
leaves many, lanceolate, pointed, un- 
evenly and finely tcothed, 1-G inches 
long. Flowers in leafy bracted, terminal 
spikes, bright yellow, 1-2 inches broad; 
calyx tube slender, much longer than 
the ovary. Capsules oblong, narrowed 
above, erect, hairy. Seeds smal], brown. 
roughened, angular, 1/32 inch long. 
(Figs. 11 d, h; 66.) 

Common along streams and road- 
sides and in old, neglected fields, es- 
pecially those -with a sandy soil, 

. . | 
sometimes crowding out. all other 
growth and forming dense thickets. 
; June-Oct. This primrose and the 
Fig. 66. Showing flower-buds, flowers, and mullen are often found together on 


B : Ker- : : 
oe near the base. (After Ker dry sunny slopes, their petals vie- 


146 THR INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


ing with the evening sunshine in the brightness of their hue. Those 
of the former open only in late afternoon, but if the next day be 

cloudy or they are in the shade they often remain open until noon. 
They have a pleasingsdagrance and by it attract unto themselves 
“many night-flying moths. It is one of the few native weeds which 
has found its way to Europe in exchange for the many they have 
sent to us, and is said to be commonly cultivated in many English 
flower gardens. The first year it produces only a rosette of root 
leaves and is, therefore, a weed mostly in stubble or in crops sown 
in autumn, being especially notable in thinly seeded clover fields. 
Remedies: pulling, cutting or spudding in summer before the 
seeds ripen or in late autumn after the rosettes appear; burning 
mature plants; cultivation with hoed crops. When mown it is 
apt to stool and send up later stalks. Several successive mowings 
will, however, get rid of it. 

The young shoots and roots of the evening-primrose are eaten 
as a salad in Germany. A tea made from the leaves is, in the 
eastern States, much used for dysentery, cholera morbus and other 
summer diseases of the bowels. In the Hast and South the young 
roots are also grated fine and mixed with fresh lard, butter or tal- 
low to form a salve for burns, scalds, bunions, boils, felons, ery- 
sipelas, cuts, bruises, etc. In the South this salve is known as 
‘‘King’s cure-all’’ and by the negroes is used even for snake bites. 
The blossoms .placed in water form a mucilage excellent for sore 
eves.* . 


Tue Parstey or Carrot Fami.y.—UMBELLIFERA. 


Herbs usually with hollow stems and alternate, mostly com- 
pound leaves the stalks.of-which are often dilated at base. Flowers 
small, white, yellow, greenish or purple, borne in compound or 
simple ‘umbels’ (Fig. 13; e, g); calyx tube wholly united to the 
ovary, its top truncate or with 5 small teeth; petals 5, inserted on 
the margin of the calyx; stamens 5, borne on the disk that forms 
‘the top of the ovary; ovary 2- dalled, with 1 ovule in each cavity. 
Fruit composed of 2 seed-like dry carpels which are flattened or 
cylindrical and marked lengthwise with ribs. 

A large and very difficult family some members of which have 
very poisonous roots or herbage. The flowers are much alike in 
— all and the leaves very diver sified, even in the same genus, so that 
the mature fruit is necessary for correct determination of the spe- 
cies. There are usually oil tubes i in the fruit and the odor, of eara- 

*Vasey, “‘Report.of U.'S, Botanist,” 1887, 311. | } 


WEEDS OF THE PARSLEY FAMILY. 101 


way seeds accompanies most of the fruits or mature seed pods. 
Thirty-two species of the family are listed as growing wild in the 
State, among them, besides the weeds below mentioned, being the 
cowbane, butten snake-root, black snake-root, sweet-cicely, hone- 
wort, pennywort and that pretty little harbinger of spring, the 
turkey-pea or pepper and salt. The button snake-root differs from 
all the others in having the flowers clustered in dense bracted heads 
and the leaves lily-like. It is frequent in the wet prairies of west- 
ern Indiana. Among the cultivated members of the family are the 
carrot, parsley, celery, parsnip, coriander, fennel and caraway. 


GS. Daucus carota L. Wild Carrot. Queen Anne’s Lace. Bird’s Nest. 
Devil’s Plague. (B. I. 1.) 


Erect, bristly, 1-38 feet high, from a deep, fleshy conical root; lower 
and basal leaves 2 or 3 times divided, the smaller segments linear, toothed 
cr lobed; upper leaves smaller, less divided. Flowers white, in com- 
pound umbels, which in age turn inward, forming a bird-nest-like cavity. 
Fruit bristly on the winged ribs. Seeds brown, 4 inch long, oval, prickly. 
(Figs. 1, e; 67.) 

A handsome but vile weed which during the past 20 years has 
spread over most of Indiana. It occurs mainly along roadsides and 

in old neglected fields and meadows, espe- 

cially in poor, dry upland soil, and is much 
more common in southern Indiana, where 
such soil is prevalent, than in the northern 
counties. June—-Oct. It is the original 
form of the cultivated carrot and is a na- 
tive of both Kurope and Asia. The central 
flower of each umbel, and sometimes of 
each umbellet or little umbel, is often 
purple and the outer ones are sometimes 
partly or wholly pinkish. In the evening: 
the flowers droop their heads and the 
voung clusters of buds look especially 
Fig. 67. Flower and fruit above. WCATY, but in the morning all are standing 
(After Vasey.) up stiffly as if they had never thought of 

going to sleep. The seeds are very numerous, 50,000 having been 
counted on a plant of average size, and they are widely distributed 
by birds, railways, wind and water, so that if one slovenly 
farmer in a neighborhood allows the plant to grow all his neigh- 
bors will soon suffer for his neglect. Remedies: deep cutting with 
hoe or spud before blossoming; pulling when the ground is wet; in- 
creased fertilization; repeated mowing while in blossom. If mown 


102 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


but once they stool again and produce seed later on. By cutting 
with the scythe as often as they attempt to bloom all will be de- 
stroved in two years. Badly infested meadows should be broken 
up and then planted to corn or re-seeded. 


G4. FrerRACLEUM LANATUM Michx. Cow 
Parsnip. Masterwort. (TP. N. 2.) 

Stem very stout, erect, grooved, woolly, 
4-8 feet high, often 2 inches thick at base, 
leaves divided into 3 leaflets which are rather 
thin, very pubescent beneath, broadly ovate, 
stalked, sharply toothed, 3-6 inches broad. 
owers white in compound umbels which 
are 6-12 inches wide. Fruit broadly oval, 3 
inch long, 4 inch wide, notched at tip and 
with club-shaped oil-tubes extending only to 
middle. (Fig. 68.) 


Common in the northern counties in 
low meadows and pastures and about the 
borders of lakes, ditches, ete.; less fre- 
quent southward. June-Aug. Rem- 
edies: repeated mowing or grubbing; 
' cultivation. 


Fig. 68. Branch with umbel and leaf; . F 
a, flower; b, fruit; c, cross-section of fruit. C5. PAsTmINAcaA sSaTIvA TL. Wild Parsnip. 


‘Aleee Wate Queen Weed. (B. I. 2.) 


Stem erect, grooved, hollow, branching, 2-5 feet high, from a long 
conic fleshy root; lower and basal leaves pinnate or once divided, the seg- 
ments thin, ovate, obtuse, sessile, sharply-cut-toothed ; upper leaves much 
smaller. Flowers yellow in compound umbels, without involucres, the rays 
and flower stems very slender. Fruit broadly oval, # inch long, the ribs 
not prominent but the oil tubes conspicuous. Seeds whitish, thin, 4 inch 
long. 


Common in waste places, especially in moist grounds along rail- 
ways, borders of marshes, roadsides, ete. June—Oct. The roots are 
poisonous even after cooking and are sometimes eaten by children 
with fatal results. Both it and the wild carrot harbor the celery 
fungus and neither should be allowed to grow anywhere near celery 
gardens. It is simply an escaped and degenerate form of the 
garden parsnip, which has become poisonous as a means of pro- 
tection. Remedies: frequent mowing; cultivation with hoed crops; 
deep cutting with hoe or spud in late fall or early spring. 

The meadow parsnips, Thaspium trifoliatum L., T. aurewm 
Nutt. and 7. barbinode Michx., resemble the wild parsnip but are 
much smaller, usually without grooved stems and with the fruit 


WEEDS ‘OF TIIE PARSLEY FAMILY, 103 


not flattened. They occur frequently along banks, ditches and 
rondsides. Ttemedies the sane. 


66. Crcura MACULATA i. Water Hemlock. Spotted Gowbane. Musquash 
Root. (P. N. 2.) 


Stout, erect, branching, 3-S feet high, the stem rigid, hollow, marked 
with purple lines, springing from several fleshy, oblong or spindle-shaped 
roots; leaves 2- or 8-divided, the lower long-stalked, often 1 foot long, the 
leaflets Jance-oblong, coarsely and sharply toothed, 1-5 inches long. 
Flowers white in compound terminal umbels, the umbellets many-flowered. 
Fruit ovate, $ inch long, with solitary oil tubes between the corky ribs. 
(Fig. 69.) 

Occurs throughout the State in swamps, ditches and low wet 
grounds. June—Aug. It is one of the most poisonous native plants 
in the State, the roots being espe- 
cially dangerous since they are aro- 
matic, their taste suggesting that of 
parsnips or sweet-cicely. Both chil- 
dren and adults sometimes get hold 
of them where they have become ex- 
posed in some manner, and their 
eating results in almost certain 
death. Many cattle and sometimes 
sheep are also killed by eating the 
tubers or by drinking water which 
has hecome poisoned by the juices of 
the crushed roots. In spring when 
other food is scarce they browse over 
the wet lands, find the new green 
shoots and easily pull out the roots 
which look and taste like those of 
parsnip, so that they are very 
pit,c2.. Sowing spindlestaped rool 20 aerceable to stock. A piece of the 
etter Cieza) root the size of a walnut is said to 
be large enough to kill a cow in 20 minutes. The symptoms of 
the poison in man are vomiting, colicky pains, staggering and 
frightful convulsions ending in death. When bruised the plant 
emits a disagreeable odor. Remedies: grubbing or cutting with 
hoe or spud in spring, then drying and burning the roots. 

The poison hemlock (Coniwmn maculatum L.) is another very 
poisonous species which has been introduced from Europe. It is 
algo a large branching form with spotted stem and differs from 
the water hemlock mainly in growing in dry waste places and in 


104 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


the fruit having no oil tubes. The juices from it furnished ‘the 
poison of which Socrates: was compelled to drink at Athens. In 
Indiana it has been recorded only from the southern counties. 

Drugs made from the leaves and fruit of the poison hemlock 
are used in neuralgia, asthma and rheumatism. If collected for 
sale the leaves should be gathered when the plant is in flower, and 
the fruit just before ripening. The former should be dried quickly 
in the sun, the fruit more slowly in the shade. After drying both 
should be kept in tightly closed vessels. About 20,000 pounds of 
the seeds and 15,000 of the leaves are imported annually, the price 
ranging from 8 to 4 cents per pound for each. 


Tar Dogpanu Famiuy —APOCYNACE.E. 


Perennial herbs, shrubs or vines with entire, mostly opposite, 
leaves and a milky, acrid juice. Flowers solitary or borne in cymes 
or panicles; petals 5, united at base, twisted in the bud; stamens 
5, alternate with the petals, inserted on the tube of the corolla; 
ovaries 2, distinct. Fruit usually a follicle opening at the side. 

A large family but mostly represented in the tropics, the 
oleander and periwinkle being familiar cultivated forms. Only 5 
species grow wild in Indiana. One of these is the periwinkle or 
blue myrtle, Vinca minor L., which has escaped from cultivation, 

@ and two others are weeds. 


C7, APOCYNUM CANNABINUM L. _ In- 
dian Hemp. Amy-root. (P. 
N. 3.) 

Stem erect or ascending, glabrous, 
much branched, 2-3 feet high; bark 
tough, fibrous; leaves opposite, oblong 
or oval, short-stalked or sessile, 2-6 
inches long. Flowers greenish-white 
in erect terminal many-flowered olus- 
ters; corolla bell-shaped, the tube not 
longer than the sepals. Pods (fol- 
licles) very slender, cylindrical, 4-4 
inches long. Seeds brown, slender, 
tipped with a long tuft of silky white 
hairs. (Fig. 70.) 

Frequent on slopes of old fields 
and along railways, roadsides and 
borders of thickets, especially in 
Fig. 70. a, flower; b, corolla split and spread moist soil. July—-Sept. It is often 


to show base of stamens; ¢, stamons; d, tuft of ‘: 
hairs attached to seed. (After Dodge.) “ ealled the ‘‘small-leaved milk- 


WEEDS OF THE MILKWEED FAMILY. 105 


weed’’ and its tough fibrous inner bark is easily separated from 
the straight stalks and is fine, long and quite strong. It is much 
used by the Indians for making bags, mats, small baskets, belts 
and twine for fishing-lines and nets. The milky juice is poisonous 
and the numerous rootstocks and wind carried seeds render its 
spreading easy. Remedies: hoe-cutting and salting; thorough culti- 
vation; repeated mowing. 

The spreading dogbane (A. androsemifolium L.) is a near rela- 
tive and is also frequent in dry soil along thickets and fence-rows. 
It is lower, 1-3 feet high, with more forking branches, wider leaves, 
larger and more showy rose-colored flowers in which the corolla 
tube is longer than the sepals. Remedies the same. 


Tue MirkweEep Famu.y.— ASCLEPIADACE®, 


Herbs or vines with milky jnice and mostly opposite or whorled 
entire leaves. Flowers usually in wnbels; calyx 5-parted, the tube 
very short or none; petals 5, more or less united; between corolla 
and stamens a crown of 5 hood-shaped nectar cups each contain- 
ing an incurved horn; stamens 5, inserted on the base of the 
corolla; pollen grains cohering to form a pear-shaped waxy wass, 
two of which are united like little ‘‘saddle-bags’’ by a prolonga- 
tion of their summits. (Fig. 11, 7.) Fruit a follicle composed of 
two valves, opening on the side. Seeds compressed and usually 
bearing a tuft of long silken hairs. | 

A large family whose main distribution is in the tropics. In 
Indiana it is represented by 17 species, 11 of which are true milk- 
weeds belonging to the genus Asclepias. They are perennial upright 
herbs with thick, deep roots and having the simple umbels of mostly 
purplish flowers borne on slender nodding stalks, which are either 

terminal or springing from the axils of the leaves. When a bee 
or other insect visits their flowers in search of honey its legs often 
become entangled in the grooves between the hoods and in at- 
tempting to escape a pair of the sticky pollen masses attach them- 
selves to its feet. The bees and flies are often unable to free their 
legs and are held prisoners until they die. Three of these milk- 
weeds are with us common enough to be termed weeds. 


(& ASCLEPIAS TUREROSA IL. Butterfly-weed. Pleurisy-root. Wind-root. 
(P. N. 3.) 
Stems erect, hairy. usually tufted, simple or branched near the top, 
1-2 feet high, very leafy and with little milky juice; leaves alternate, 
oblong or lanceolate, sessile or short-stalked, 2-G inches long. Ylowers 
orange-yellow, showy, numerous. Pods hoary, erect on bent flower stalks. 
Seeds flat, broadly winged with abundant silky hairs. 


106 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Common in dry or sandy soil, along railways, roadsides and in 
neglected fields June-Sept. One of the most handsome of our 
wild flowers, vet having a tendency to spread and crowd out more 
valuable plants. Remedies: grubbing or repeated cutting. Its 
bright orange hoods are very attractive to butterflies, especially 
the smaller blue ones known as ‘‘hair-streaks’’ and ‘‘coppers.’’ 
Scores of these may sometimes be seen flitting about a bunch of 
the flowers. The root of the butterfly-weed is an officinal remedy 
for colds, bronchitis, pleurisy and pneumonia, the dose being from 
20. to 40 grains of the powdered root, or a teacupful of the de- 
coction made with half an ounce of root to a pint of water, taken 
several times a day. When properly dried it brings 5 to 6 cents 
a pound. ; 


69. ASCLEPIAS INCARNATA L. Swamp Milkweed. (P. N. 3.) 

Stem slender, glabrous, branched above, 2-5 feet high, leafy to the 
top; leaves opposite, lanceolate or oblong, pointed, 3-6 inches long, 1 inch. 
wide. Flowers small, flesh colored, red- 
dish or rose-purple, in numerous umbels, 
the hoods shorter than the slender needle- 
pointed horns. Pods erect, slender, 2-3} 
inehes long. Seeds brown, flat, broadly 
winged and with the usual tuft of hairs. 
(Fig. 71.) 

Very common in marshes, ditches, 
low wet pastures and borders of lakes 
and ponds. July—-Sept. The fibre of 
the stem is tough, finer than that of 
hemp, soft and glossy, and possesses 
greater strength than the majority of 
bast fibres of wild growth. It can be 
used for all purposes to which hemp 
may be applied. Binder twine made 
from it has stood a breaking test of 
95 to 125 pounds. Since the plant 
grows best on lands subject to over- 
flow or too wet to be cultivated for 
grain, it might, with the proper attention, prove as valuable a fibre- 
producing plant* as hemp and so bring in returns from otherwise 
waste ground. The root is also on officinal remedy for asthma, 
catarrh, rheumatism, ete. The plant may be killed by draining and 
grubbing or repeated mowings. 


Fig. 71. (After Dodge.) 


*Dodge.—“Fibre Investigations,” No. 9. 


WEEDS OF TIE MILKWEED FAMILY. 107 


70. ASCLEPIAS syRiAca I. Common Milkweed. Silkweed. Wild Cotton. 
(BP. N. 2.) 

Stem stout, soft-downy, usually simple, 8-5 fect high; leaves opposite, 
oblong or oval, short-stalkeéd, densely hairy beneath, 4-9 inches long, 2-1 
inches wide. Flowers dull purple, the hoods 

Wh short, obtuse with a tooth each side of the short 
AN Y J horn. lods robust, 8-5 inches long, the outside 

——_ woolly and bearing numerous short soft tufts 
or warts. Seeds brown, flat, } inch long, with 
an abundance of silky hairs. (Fig. 72.) 

Common along roadsides, fence-rows 
and in blue-grass pastures. June—Aug. 
The milky juice is very plentiful, exuding 
whenever the leaves or stems are bruised, 
and is used by children as a remedy for 
warts. The root is used in medicine and 
when properly dried brings about 4 cents 
per pound. Where once started in a pas- 
ture the deep running rootstocks spread 
rapidly and send up numerous stems so 
that the area affected becomes much larger year by year. Rem- 
edies: repeated mowing or grubbing while in blossom; in cultivated 
lands, thorough hoeing and heavy cropping. 


Bea 
Fig. 72. (After Vasey.) 


THE MorNING-GLORY F'amiLy --CONVOLVULACEA. 


Mcstly twining, climbing or trailing herbs with alternate leaves 
and regular solitary or clustered axillary flowers. Sepals 5; petals 
5, twisted in the bud, usually united their full length to form a 
large bell-shaped or funnel-form corolla (Fig. 10, f.) ;,.stamens 5, 
inserted low down on the tube of the corolla; ovary above and not 
united with the calyx, 2—4-celled with a pair of ovules in each cell. 
Fruit a 2-4-valved capsule. 

A large family most abundant in the tropics, many of which 
are with us cultivated for ornament and one, the sweet potato, for 
its edible roots. Nine species, known as mofiing-glories and bind- 
weeds, grow wild in the State, three at least of which are trouble- 
some weeds. The glory of these wild morning-glories, how it en- 
trances us! ’Tis a flower whose beauty is without a peer. The 
eye of each blodm is set deep within the tube of the corolla and 
beams out at us with an expression of most tender good will if we 
but deign to give it passing notice. They are goddesses of the night 
and early morn—born in the former—reigning in the latter and 
closing forever their evanescent eyes before the fiercer beams of the 


108 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


noonday sun. God pity him who sees no beauty in a wild morning- 
glory, fresh from its natal bud! 


71. Ipomaa PANDURATA Jl. Wild Sweet-potato. Man-of-the-Earth. (DI. 
N. 2.) 


Stems long and stout, 2-12 feet long, trailing or twining from a huge 
fleshy root; leaves broadly ovate, pointed, heart-shaped at base, 2-6 inches 
leng, sometimes constricted at sides so as to be fiddle-shaped. Flower- 
stalks long, 1-5 flowered; corolla funnel-form, 2-3 inches long, white or 
with purplish stripes in the throat. Capsule egg-shaped, 2—t seeded, the 
seeds 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. Ee 
The true wild morning-glories, 
! of which there are three species 
Fig. 73. Flowering branch; a, root; 0, fruit; ‘¢,-seed in the State, are much less 

with woolly margins. (After Watson.) - . 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 (I. lacunosa L.) 
with heart-shaped leaves and white corolla about 4 inch long, and 
the ivy-leaved morning-glory (7. hederacea J acq.), the leaves deeply 
3-lobed and flowers 1} inches long, light. blue or purple with white 
tube. Both are annuals and ean be destroyed by pulling or cutting 
before seeding. 


72. OCONVOLVULUS sEPIUM IL, 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, 2-5 inches long. Flowers 
about 2 inches long, solitary on long axillary stalks, pink with white 
stripes or wholly white; calyx with two large bracts 3 inch long at base. 


WEEDS OF THE MORNING-GLORY FAMILY. 109 


Capsule globose, 2-4 valved. Seeds dark without hairs, $4 inch across. 
(Fig. 74.) 

Very common in cultivated bottom lands, moist uplands and 
along gravelly banks. June-Aug. It spreads by both seeds and 
creeping underground stems and 
is often called wild morning-glory 
or pea vine. From the annual 
morning-glories above mentioned 
this and the next are told by the 
flowers having two slender stig- 
mas, whereas in them the 1 or 2 
stigmas are globose or enlarged at 
tip. The bindweed often climbs up 
the stalks of corn or wheat and 
pulls them over, while potatoesand 
other low growing crops are liter- 
ally srnothered ‘by its vines and 
leaves. Its rootstocks bear numer- 
ous buds and. if cut up any small 
piece with a bud present will pro- 
y duce anew plant. Three remedies 
are given for itseradication 
in a recent bulletin,* viz, (a) 
Thorough cultivation every week or ten days between the spring 
and fall frosts, cutting out every piece of top growth that shows 
itself. (b) Pasturing with hogs which are very fond of the roots 
and rootstocks; the hogs of course should not have their noses 
ringed or slit, so that they may root deeply; if turned in just after 
the land is plowed the roots will. be near the top and the hogs, if 
not furnished much other food, will go after them greedily. (c) 
Sowing the land to alfalfa, which not. only tends to smother out 
the weed but by its necessary frequent cutting for hay serves in 
keeping down the top growth. The alfalfa should be followed by a 
cultivated crop to complete the work of eradication. 


Fig. 74. (After Cox.) 


73: CONVOLVYULUS ARVENSIS L. Field Bindweed. Corn-bind. (P. I. 1.) 
Resembles the preceding but the branches shorter, 1-3 feet long ; 
the leaves smaller with the lobes at base more pointed and projecting. 
Flowers less than 1 inch in length, white or tinged with red; calyx with- 
out bracts at its base. (Fig. 75.) 
In Indiana this introduced bindweed is much less common than . 
the native species and occurs in dry, usually sandy or gravelly 


*H. R. Cox.—Farm Bull. 368, U.S. Dept. Agr. 


110 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


soil, mostly in old neglected fields 
or along railways. May-Sept. It 
is propagated by spreading root- 
stocks, which form buds and send 
up shoots at close intervals. As 
with the hedge bindweed the top 
growth must be kept down and the 
roots starved out. Remedies the 
same; or, if in small] patches, hoe 
cutting and salting. 


Tir DoppER Famity.— 
CUSCUTACEA. 


Yellow or whitish twining para- 
sites with very slender stems and 
leaves reduced to minute scales. Flowers small, mostly white, 
borne in dense clusters; ealyx 5-lobed or 5-parted; corolla bell- 
shaped or cylindric, 5-lobed, the tube with small fringe-like scales 
between the lobes; stamens 5; ovary 2-celled. Fruit a 1-4-seeded 
capsule, or small globose pod, opening with a lid or bursting irreg- 
ularly. 

A small family of leafless annual herbs with thread-like twin- 
ing stems, known as dodders or strangle-weeds, and parasitic on 
other herbs and shrubs by numerous minute suckers put out from 
the stem. AH dodders are parasites by suicide. That is, each 
plant springs from a seed which furnishes it nourishment until it 
finds some suitable host about which to coil. In coiling it con- 
tracts and so pulls itself up by the roots. If not uprooted a por- 
tion of the stem a few inches above the ground soon withers, dies 
and breaks apart while the upper twinine portion with its numer- 
ous minute suckers continues to flourish on the juices of its host. 

If from the beginning one could trace its history he would 
doubtless find that like most other plants the dodder once had 
leaves but a weak stem, and desiring to reach the light began to 
twine. Tasting juices by chance it was nourished by them and so 
began a downfall which has continted until it presents the de- 
graded spectacle of a plant without a root, without a twig, without 
a leaf and with a stem so useless as to be inadequate to bear its 
own weight. Other plants with smaller beginnings have gone on 
to higher forms but the dodder, from a breach of the laws of 
evolution, has paid one of nature’s heaviest fines—lost the organs 


Fig. 75. Branch with flowers. (After Cox.) 


WEEDS OF THE DODDER FAMILY. 111 


which it once possessed and is a yellow creeping parasite almost 
its whole life long. 

Six species of dodder are recorded from Indiana and several 
others doubtless occur. Two of these which are the most harm- 
ful are herewith treated. 


74. Cuscura EPITrHYMUM Murr. Clover Dodder. Devil's Gut. (A. I. 1.) 

Stems thread-like, reddish-yellov. Flowers sessile in small dense 
clusters, pinkish-white; calyx more than one-half the length of the cyl- 
indric corolla tube: scales of the latter scalloped and strongly incurved. 
Capsule opening by a little lid. Seeds brown or dark ash-gray fearly 
spherical, finely pitted, 1/32 inch long or not larger than the smallest red- 
clover seeds. (Tig. 76.) 

While this dodder is not recorded in the State list of plants it 
has been noted in Ripley and Putnam counties and douhtless occurs 
elsewhere in many clover fields as it is 
widely distributed east of the Mississippi 
and is well known in Ohio. Like all other 
dodders it depends wholly upon its host 
plants, the red clover and alfalfa, for food. 
Its stems spread from one clover plant to 
another, forming a dense mat-like mass close 
to the ground, the flowering branches mean- 
while ascending and twining about those of 
the host. Their suckers soon reach and draw 
upon the juices, destroying the clover stems 
and leaves as if hy fire. Even if torn loose 
small pieees of the plant will remain and 
form new centers of growth. Remedies: 
sowing clean clover seed. As Selby has well 
said: ‘‘Dodder in clover means that the dod- 
der seed has heen sown with the elover seed, 
/ and further that no clover seed should be 
Fig. 76. a, flower; b, covolla saved from, a dodder infested field.’’* The 


spread apart to show scales on its 2 . 5 
inner side; c,matureseed-pod; d,seed yse of a sieve of 20 meshes to the linear inch, 


beg) nn ane te ade of No. 30 to No. 34 Washburn & Moen 
gauge wire, will allow the seed of clover dodder to pass readily 
through, but will intercept all but the smallest of red clover and 
alfalfa seed. The separation of seed from this dodder is thus ren- 
dered very easy. Plowing and thoroughly cultivating the infested 
field is the only remedy where the dodder has gained a hold. 
The field dodder (C. arvensis Beyr.) is also a common species 


*Bull. 175, Ohio Exp. Sta.,"p. 348. 


112 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


which preys upon both clover and alfalfa as well as many other 
plants. It is pale yellow, has the scales of the corolla tube fringed 
and the capsule bursts irregularly. Twining to the top of the clover 
stem or other host it throws out branches and rapidly spreads from 
plant to plant, often forming a dense yellow carpet of tangled 
threads which cover and weigh down the crop. The seeds are 
double the size of those of clover dodder and are therefore very 
difficult to separate from those of clover. They are gray, light 
brown or pale yellow in hue, rounded on one side and flattened or 
angléd on the other. 

Where found in small patches mowing or digging and burning 
is the only sure method of getting rid of this species. Where more 
widely spread, thorough cultivation should be. used. 


75. CuscuTa Gkonovir Willd. Common Dodder. Onion Dodder. Wild 
Dodder. (A. N. 38.) 

Stems bright yellow, slender, high climbing. Flowers short-stalked in 
dense clusters; corolla bell-shaped, lobes spreading, its scales thickly 
fringed about the summit of the tube. Capsule globose, short pointed. 

Very common along streams and marshes, climbing high over 
many kinds of herbs and shrubs, occasionally also in dry upland 
fields. July-Sept. Often attacking onions grown in the muck 
soils of northern Indiana. Along the streams its yellow yarn-like 
stems cover large clumps of the water willow and gleam in the Au- 
gust sunshine like some great mass of gold dropped down along 
the lowest levels where the placid waters flow. Remedies: mowing 
and burning. 

Other wild species there are, as the smartweed dodder, which 
attacks golden-rods and smartweeds; the button-bush dodder which 
preys mainly upon the shrub of that naine, and the massive dodder 
whose hosts are the larger Composite like the sunflowers, the great 
ragweed and wild lettuce. Its flowers and stems are twisted to- 
gether so as to form a rope-like mass sometimes an inch thick, 
whose coils encircle its hosts. All are confirmed parasites, sap- 
suckers of high degree, whose only redeeming quality is that some 
of them prey upon other weeds and thus aid somewhat in keeping 
in subjection these omnipresent foes of the farmer. 


THE Borage Famity.—BORAGINACE Zs. 


Chiefly rough hairy herbs with alternate entire leaves, and 
regular flowers borne mostly on one side of the branches of a spike 
or raceme which unrolls or straightens:as the flowers unfold. 
Calyx 5-parted; corolla gamopetalous, 5-lobed;:stamens 5, inserted 


WEEDS OF THE BORAGE FAMILY. 113 


on the tube of the corolla and alternate with its petals; ovary 
deeply 4-lobed forming in fruit 4: hard seed-like 1-seeded nutlets 
standing close together within the calyx. 

A rather large family of homely mucilaginous and slightly bit- 
ter plants, represented in Indiana by 20 or more species, among 
them, in addition to the weeds described below, being the wild 
comfrey, blue-bells, wild forget-me-nots, gromwells and puccoons. 
The heliotropes and true forget-me-nots are the only common culti- 
vated forms. 


76. CYNOGLOSSUM OFFICINALE L. Hound’s-tongue. Dog Bur. Wool-mat. 
Gipsy Flower. (B. I. 2.) 


Stem erect, stout, usually branched, leafy to the top, 1-3 feet high; 
basal and lower leaves oblong or tongue-shaped, slender-stalked; upper 
leaves lanceolate, sessile or clasping. Flowers reddish-purple or white, 
in panicles or more or less one-sided racemes; tube of corolla closed by 
5 small scales. Nutlets triangular, flat on the upper face, covered with 
short barbed prickles. (Fig. 77.) 

A vile ill-smelling weed common in dry soil along roadways, in 
shady pastures and waste places. May—Sept. The root leaves of 

thé first season’s growth form a 
dense tuft from the midst of 
which the flower stalk of the next 
season springs. The prickly burs 
adhere rather loosely to cloth- 
ing and the wool of sheep. Rem- 
edies: deep cutting in late fall or 
h early spring; repeated mowing be- 
fore the seeds ripen. 
The name Cynoglossum is the 
Greek for two words meaning ‘‘a 


\\ dog’’ and ‘‘tongue,’’ so given 
\ \ e Ae | ) from the form of the leaves. In 
UY \ ey pe VV Europe, from whence the weed 
z VS has been brought, it has been re- 


stan ng eT an orga ara a ’burike PUted to have the magical prop- 
nutlets. (After Britton and Brown.) erty of preventing dogs barking 
at a person if laid beneath the feet; and wild goats cr deer, ‘‘when 
they be wounded with arrows, do shake them out by eating of this 


plant, and heal their wounds.’’ 


77. LAPPULA VIRGINIANA lL. Beggar’s Lice. Virginia Stickseed. (B. 
N. 2.)- 
‘< Brect, much branched, 2-4 feet high; basal leaves broad, ovate, 


18] 


114 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


loug-stalked; stem lJeaves narrower, ovate-oblong, the uppermost sessile. 
Flowers small, nearly white, in racemes which are bracted only at base. 
Fruit globose, nearly 1/6 inch long, recurved; butlets with margins and 
usually the back thickly armed with prickles. 

Common in dry soil along borders of thickets, roadsides and in 
open woods and old fields. June-Sept. Occurring with it or in 
similar places and about as common is a European species, the blue 
bur or burseed (I. lappula L.). It is an annual, 1-2 feet high, 
clothed with short gray hairs and with the leaves linear or oblong, 
sessile or stalked; the flowers pale blue, in leafy bracted 1-sided 
racemes, and the fruit not eurved downward. Among the various 
fruits and seeds which rely upon animals for distribution, those of 
these two beggars’ lice are most troublesome, being especially: an- 
noying to horses, dogs, sheep and man. They are easily known by 
being in groups of four and shaped somewhat like a quarter of an 
apple. The tip of each little prickle is barbed upward like a har- 
poon so that the burs are very difficult to remove from clothing. 
Remedies: pulling or mowing and burning; thorough cultivation; 
late fall or early spring plowing. 

(TS. LITHOSPERMUM ARVENSE L. Corn Gromwell. Wheat Thief. Pigeon- 
weed. Redroot. (A. I. 2.) 

Brect, usually branched, 6-20 inches high. pale green clothed with . 
appressed grayish hairs; leaves linear or lanceolate, sessile without veins. 
Flowers sniall, dull white, solitary and sessile in the axils of leafy bracts 
along the spikes; corolla tube not longer than the calyx, without scales or 
folds. Nutlets hard, brown, conical, 1/10 inch long, wrinkled and pitted. 
(lig. TS.) 

Common in the northern half of the 
State along railways, roadsides and in 
cultivated fields; less common but 
rapidly spreading southward. April- 
Sept. Prefers dry, more or less sandy 
soil, and where abundant especially, 
harmful to winter wheat, rye, and 
meadows. The seeds often germinate 
in late autumn, the plant then being a 
winter annual, blooming and ripening 
the lowermost seeds the next spring 
before the winter cereals are cut. It 
is therefore very difficult to remove 
from grain fields. The seeds are frequent among those of wheat and 
hay and are also distributed by birds, threshing machines and 


Tig. 78... (After Shaw.) 


WEEDS OF THY PORAGE PAMILY. 115 


cattle. They are said to retain their vitality for years. Remedies: 
clean seed; burning wheat stubble in infested fields; if badly in- 
fested, plowing up the field in early spring; late fall plowing; pull- 
ing or cutting where occurring in small numbers. 


79. IcrrtumM vuLearr lL. Blueweed. Viper’s Bugloss. (B. I. 1.) 

Erect, branched, bristly-hairy, 1-3 
feet high; stem leaves oblong or lance- 
olate, sessile, entire, 2-6 inches long. 
Flowers bright blue, tubular, 2/3 to 1 
inch long, numerous in short, 1-sided 
spikes; lobes of the corolla unequal. 
Nutlets ovate, 4 inch long, wrinkled, 
their bases flat. (Fig. 79.) 

A European weed as yet re- 
corded only from the northern part 
of the State. Occurs along rail- 
ways, roadsides and in waste 
places generally, especially in poor 
or gravelly soils. June-Aug. The 
numerous hairs harden with age 
and form sharp prickles which 
come off easily like the spines of a 
eactus. Being a biennial it forms 
the first year a dense rosette of 
long leaves lying flat on the 
ground, blooms only the second year, and is especially harmful to 
pastures and meadows. In Canada it is accounted one of the worst 
of pasture weeds. Like the Russian thistle it should be killed on 
sight. Kemedies: deep cuttimg with hoe or spud in early spring; 
thorough cultivation when found in fields; repeated scythe mowing 
close to the ground. 


RGewingaa 
Fig. 79. (After Vasey.) 


Tur Vervai Faminy—VERBENACE. 


Herbs or shrubs with opposite or whorled leaves and perfect 
flowers usually in spikes or heads. Calyx 4-5 lobed or eleft; petals 
united into a more or less two-lipped, usually cylmdrical, corolla 
(this nearly regular in our weeds) : stamens 4, 2 long, 2 short, in- 
serted on the corolla and alternate with its lobes; ovary 2-4 celled, 
1 ovule in each cavity. Fruit dry, usually splitting when ripe into 
2 or 4 nutlets. : 

A large family, mostly represented ‘in the tropies. Only 8 
species are listed from Indiana, 7 of. which belong to the genus 


116 THE INDIANA WEED -BOOK, | 


Verbena, the other being the fog-fruit, a low ereeping form with. 
only 2 nutlets, which grows along river banks and,ditches. Four 
of them, known as vervains, are with us common enough to be 
classed as weeds, while another, V. officinalis L., is the European 
vervain or ‘‘herb-of-the-cross,”’ introduced widely throughout the 
United States and occurring in southeastern Indiana. In Germany 
a wreath. of this vervain is presented to the newly married bride, 
while in France it is gathered with secret incantations at different 
stages of the moon, and is then held to possess remarkable curative 
properties. lt was formerly much used for love-philtres and 
charms, and it and the rue were the two plants most used in the 
mystic cauldrons of the witches This vervain was also among the 
sacred plants of the Druids 4nd was only gathered by them ‘‘when 
the dog-star arcse from unsunned: spots.”’ .The. reasons for the 
names ‘‘herb-of- the-cross’’ and “holy herb’’, are set forth in the 
following stanza: 

“All hail, thou holy herb, vervin, 

Growing on the ground; 

On the Mount of Calvary 

There wast thou found; — 

Thou helpest many a grief, 

And staunchest. many a wound. 


In the name of sweet Jesu 
I lift thee from the ground.” 


80. VERBENA URTICIFOLIA L. White Vervain. Nettle-leaved Verve 
, (PB. N. 2.) 

Stem erect, slender, branched Ria: usually pubescent, 3-5 feet high; 
leaves ovate, mostly stalked, thin, pointed, coarsely saw-toothed. Flowers 
very small, white or purplish, borne on numerous erect or spreading very 
slender spikes. Seeds brown, ‘slender, 1/20 inch long, with 1 curved and 2 
straight sides. ‘ 


Our most common species, occurring along roadsides, among 
rubbish about old buildings and in open pastures, usually in dry 
soil. June-Sept. It is very often covered with the leaf mildew 
fungus which gives it a sickly white hue and renders it an eyesore 
to every passerby. In blue-grass pastures it often forms dense 
patches, especially in the angles of old rail fences. Remedies: re- 
peated mowing or grubbing; cultivation. 


81. VERBENA ITASTATA L. Blue Vervain. Simpler’s Joy. Wild Hyssop. 
(TP. N. 3.) 

Erect, roughish, branched above, 3-7 feet high ; leaves oblong-lanceolate, 

stalked, pointed, sharp-toothed, 3-6 inches long, the lower ones often 

hastate. Flowers bright blue in numerous rather slender erect spikes. 


WEEDS OF -fHE VERVAIN FAMILY. 117 


Fruit densely overlapping on the spikes. Seeds like the preceding but 
larger. (Fig. 80.) 
Frequent in moist meadows and open sandy fields, waste places, 
etc. June-Sept. Sometimes associated with it, but more often in 
dry, open pastures, is the hoary ver- 
vain (V. stricta Vent.) densely soft, 
_ hairy all over, leaves nearly sessile, 
spikes stout, often « foot long, densely 
flowered, the corolla larger, deep 
purplish blue. In both ‘the flowering 
begins at the base and progesses 
slowly upward so that often only an 
inch or two is in blossom at a:time. 
When in the height of the blooming 
_ period the seed pods, or fruit of the 
past, are below; the unopened buds 
. of the future above. Life, presont 
. Tig. Fa eee work, is then centered in the flower- 
; ing part; duty performed, work well 
done, in the seed. part; promises or hopes for the future in the buds. 
Only the blooming part, that which is active, is then beautiful. 
Both plants are, however, in many places too plentiful and the 
farmer needs their room. Remedies: repeated mowing before the 
first blossoms appear; cultivation. 

The narrow-leaved vervain (V. angustifolia Michx.) is regarded 
as a bad weed in the eastern States, but with us has so far ap- 
peared in only 3 or 4 counties, where it occurs on prairies and in 
light sandy soil along high banks of streams. It is low, 1-2 feet 
high, with very slender or at most willow-shaped leaves and blue 
flowers in dense, slender spikes. Remedies the same. . 


on, 


R 
t 
Re 


\ 


THe Mint Famity.—LABIATA. 


Chiefly aromatic herbs with 4-sided stems and simple opposite 
leaves. Flowers mostly in small clusters, spikes or racemes from 
the axils of the leaves; corolla with a short or long tube, more or 
less 2-lipped; upper lip usually 2-lobed, lower, 3-lobed; stamens 
usually 4, 2 long, 2 short, sometimes only 2, borne on the tube of 
the corolla; ovary deeply 4-lobed, forming a fruit of four 1-seeded 
nutlets in the bottom of the persistent calyx. 

A family of about 3,000 species, of wide distribution in tem- 
perate and tropical regions. The foliage is dotted with small 


118 rik INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


glands containing a volatile oil which yields the aroma or spicy 
fragrance common to most members of the family. If the plant 
belongs to the mint family, by rubbing one of the leaves between 
the fingers one can easily detect an odor akin to that of catnip or 
pennyroyal. If in addition the stem is 4-sided and the nutlets 4 
its location there is certain. Flere belong the sage and lavender, 
bergamot and hoarhotind, thyme and sweet majorum, balm and 
savory, sweet basil and hyssop of our country gardens. Here also 
belong about 65 species growing wild in the State. among them, 
in addition to the weeds below metitioned, being skull-caps, giant 
hyssops heal-all, dragon-head, hedge nettles, horse mints, wild 
basils, field balms, moufitain mints, pepper-mints and bugle-weeds. 
Mint extracts, distilled from the foliage of certain species, are used 
in perfumery, confectionery and in medicines and a number of the 
wild forms are gathered as house- 
hold remedies. While a half dozen 
_ or more of the family are weeds in 
that they are useless plants, no one 
of them possesses that dormant in- 
trusive character which marks a 
weed of the first class. 


82. TrucRIUM CANADENSE L. Wood 
Sage. American Germander. 
(P. N. 3.) 

Stem stiff. erect, downy, sétnewhat 
branched, 1-8 feet high; leaves lamce- 
olate or oblong, short-stalked, pointed, 
sharp-toothed. Flowers } inch long, 
pinkish or purplish in terminal bracted 
spikes; corolla tube short, the upper 
lip 2-lobed; stamens 4, exserted. Nut- 
Jets rough, attached by the sides. 
(Fig. 81.) 


‘side Common in grass lands along 


Tig. fl. je Peatch Seat tak spelget b c 
iew of a few flowers; ¢, bilabiate or “lips , _ 
Yower, enlarged, showing the arid pats, the en the borders of streams, marshes, 


flivisions of Tower lip and two of upper, the staniens : : : 
ind style protruding through the ht of upper lip. moist thiekets 
aAfter Briquet.) 


and fence-rows. 
( Jutie-Sept. The ovary is only 4- 
Tobed, not divided into 4 nutlets as in the other mint weeds treated 
below, and the stamens protrnde from the cleft between the lobes 
of the upper lip. Remedies: mowing and grubbing. 


83. NEPETA carArIA L. Catnip. Catmint. (P. I. 2.) 


Stem erect, rather stout, branched, pale green, very downy, 2-3 feet 
high ; leaves ovate or heart-shaped, deeply scalloped, paler beneath. Flow- 


WEEDS OF TUE MINT FAMILY. 119 


ers in whorled clusters about the spikes at the ends of the stems. and 
branches; corolla whitish dotted with purple, strongly 2-lipped, the upper 
lip concave; stamens 4, the upper pair the longer. Nutlets egg-shaped, 
brown, smooth, 1/16 inch long, the basal scar with a white eye-like cavity 
each side above. 7 

This is one of the best known of the social weeds being very 
common about the sites of old dwellings, along roadsides and in 
waste places in rather dry soil. June-Oct. It is a native of both 
Europe and Asia, and a tea made from its dried leaves is used the 
world over by old ladies who dea] in simples as a mild stimulant 
and tonic for colic in.infants, hysteria, etc. The flowering tops and 
leaves have a strong mint-like odor and a bitter taste and are sold 
by druggists. Jf gathered for sale they should be collected when 
the plant is in flower and then carefully dried. The price ranges 
from 2 to 8 cents per pound. 

The common name was given the plant on account of the old 
belief that cats ‘‘are much delighted with catmint, for the smell 
of it is so pleasant unto them that they rub themselves upon it 
and wallow or tumble in it and also feed upon its branches greed- 
ily.’’ That cats do eat the leaves the writer knows by having 
seen them, but only the cats know why, and they will forever keep 
the secret. Perhaps they suffer from ecat-colic and eat the catnip 
as a cure. As a weed on the farm the catnip is spreading both 
by seeds and rootstalks and it. gives the waysides and barnyards a 
slovenly appearance. Remedies: repeated mowing before the seeds 
ripen; digging or close hoeing. 


84. GLECOMA HEDERACEA I. Ground Ivy. Gill-over-the-Ground. (P. I. 2.) 

Stem creeping or trailing, 12-18 inches long, with upright flowering 
branches; leaves rounded or kidney-form, broadly scalloped, long stalked. 
Flowers in loose axillary clusters; corolla blue or violet, twice the length 
of the calyx, 2-lipped; stamens 4. Nutlets brown, smooth. (Figs. 8, f; 82.) 

A common and very pretty trailing herb occurring in shady 
grasslands, especially along bor- 
ders of thickets, roadsides, fence- 
rows and in back yards. March— 
Oct. In rich moist soil it often 
forms a dense growth of leaves 
and stems above ground and root- 
stocks below which crowds out the 
hlue-grass and other forage 
plants. In such places its leaves 
Fig. 82. a, a flower. (After Watson.) remain green all winter and its 


120 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


flowers have been seen as early as March 18. Then, while sitting 
on an old log, I have had 
Ivy flowers beside me peep 
Upward through the ether blue, 
Seeing stars which ever keep 
Hidden close from human view. 

It is common in Europe and among the Swiss, when worn on 
the person in company with rue, agrimony, maiden-hair and broom. 
straw, is thought to confer fine vision and to point out the pres- 
ence of witches. The foliage was used in England until the time 
of Henry VIII to clarify and give a flavor to ale, but at that period 
was replaced by hops. The odor of the leaves is exhaled freely and 
is strongly penetrating and peculiar, yet pleasing to him who, 
through long experience, has learned to expect it on his daily walks. 
The plant is very difficult to eradicate, and where found in lawns 
and yards, resodding or spading and reseeding must be done, while 
in fields fences should be removed and thorough cultivation used. 


S5. Lronurus CARDIACA Ju. Motherwort. (P. I. 2.) 

Stem rather stout, erect, somewhat branched, 2-5 feet tall; lower leaves 
rounded, slender-stalked, 2-5 cleft. Flowers in dense whorls, in the axils 
of the narrower 3-cleft upper leaves; calyx teeth spiny-tipped; corolla pale 
purple, upper lip concave, white woolly, lower one purple dotted; stamens 
4, the lower or front pair the longer. Nutlets 3-sided, 1/12 inch long, 
dark, smooth. (Fig. 83.) 

This is another common social weed, occurring ‘about the sites 
of old houses, barnyards, fence-rows and waste places in dry or 
sandy soils. June-Sept. Like the 
catnip and ground ivy it was 
brought from Europe, but is more 
unsightly and useless than either of 
them. It was once much used in 
nervous and hysterical complaints 
and an infusion of its leaves taken 
at bedtime is said to produce sleep. 
In March one often sees standing 
stiffly erect, like brown monuments 
of the past, the 4-angled stems of 
last year’s motherwort. On them 
the dry fruit is in dense sessile 
clusters an inch and a half apart, 


Fig. 83. Corolla split and spread to show 
lower lip and 4 stamens; fruit'on left above, calyx §S to 10 of these clusters along the 


on right. (After Britton and Brown.) 


tapering spike. From 6 to 12 fruits 
are in cach cluster and from each 5 needle-pointed spines project, 


WREDS OF THE MINT FAMILY. 121 


the calyx teeth of last year’s flowers. A sure protection they give 
the enclcsed nutlets from sced-eating bird and inquisitive human, 
until the old stem is ready to fall to earth. Then the nutlets are 
loosened and soon up from them new plants spring, the old winter 
one having been to them a literal ‘‘mother-wort.’? Remedies: cul- 
tivation; repeated cutting with hoe or spud and salting. 


86. LAMIUM AMPLEXICAULE L. Henbit. Dead-nettle. (A. I. 2.) 

Stems slender, weak, branched froin 
base, somewhat spreading, 6-18 inches long; 
lower leaves rounded, scalloped, slender- 
stalked, upper ones sessile, clasping. Flowers 
few, in axillary and terminal clusters; calyx 
teeth long, erect, not spiny-tipped; corolla 
purplish, small, slender, tubular, upper lip 
bearded, lower one spotted. Nutlets gray with 
whitish markings, curved, 3-sided, 1/20 inch 
long. (Fig. 84.) 

Frequent in southern Indiana, less so 
northward. ‘Occurs around dwellings in 
lawns and gardens and along roadsides 
and borders of fields. March-Oct. In 
most pla¢es a winter annual, forming its 
root-leaves in late autumn, flowering and 
ripening its seeds in early spring. Rem- 
edies: in lawns, deep cutting or hand 

Fig. 84. (After Atkinson.) pulling; in fields, thorough cultivation ; 
erowding out with clover or other winter growing crop. 


87. STACHYS PALUSTRIS L. Common Hedge Nettle. Rough-weed, (P. N. 2.) 

Stem erect,, slender, rough-hairy, 
somewhat branched, 1-4 feet high, the 
angles with stiff down-pointed hairs; 
leaves firm, lanceolate or oblong, sessile 
or short-stalked, toothed, pointed. 
Flower clusters in an interrupted spike, 
6-10 flowers in a whorl; corolla tube 
not longer than calyx, purplish or paie 
red, purple-spotted, the upper lip pubes- 
cent; stamens as in motherwort. Nut- 
lets egg-shaped, rounded above. (Tig. 
85.) 

Abundant in moist soil along 
ditches and streams and in marshes. 
June-Sept. The rough hedge nettle 
o woundwort (8. i aa d ichx ) Fig. 85. Single flower above; stamen below. 
occurs in similar places and differs (After Britton and Brown.) 


122 TUE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


mainly in having the leaves wider and slender-stalked, the corolla 
and calyx less hairy. Both are homely weeds which for the most 
part oceupy unused ground and therefore do little harm. Rem- 
edies: draining and then mowing for a year or two; cultivation. 


88. HEpEOMA PULEGIOIDES L. Pennyroyal. (A.N.3.) 

Stem slender, erect, much branched, finely and softly hairy, 6-18 inches 
high; leaves ovate to oblong, thin, short-stalked, few-toothed. Flowers in 
small rather loose axillary clusters; teeth of upper calyx lip triangular; 
corolla bluish-purple with darker spots, } inch long, the upper lip. notched ; 
perfect stamens only 2. Nutlets egg-shaped, finely wrinkled, 1/32 inch 
long. (Fig. 86.) 

A strongly aromatic and well known little herb, very common in 
old fields, open upland wooded pastures, along fence-rows and about 
old stumps. June—Oct. The average stem 
of pennyroyal bears 12 whorls or clusters of 
flowers, each whorl having 8 to 10 flowers. 
Counting 100 flowers to the stem and 4 seeds 
to the flower, each plant produces at least 
400 seeds. When it grows thickly there are 
at least 40 stems to the square foot, so that 
we have 16,000 seeds of a single plant pro- 
duced on each square foot of surface. Thus 
do the wild things of nature hold their own. 
A myriad are where one is yet to be. 

When the rambler through some old 
pasture in southern Indiana seats himself 
beneath the shade of oak or maple on a sum- 
mer day the first thing to greet him is 
usually the odor. of pennyroyal. The blos- 
soming plant is then everywhere abundant 
on the clay lands of the woodland slopes. 
Fig. 86. 4 for pad flower; b From the half sterile soil its rootlets gather 

; in the elements of the essential oi} which ex- 
hales the penetrating odor. Within the cells of leaf and stem those 
elements are sorted and combined and by a process of chemical 
changes the oil is there produced. The odor is so strong and lasting 
that it readily survives the winter and in March or April, in places 


where the plant has grown, it is mingled with that of the earth mold .... 


of spring to form a pleasing fragrance. 

An infusion of the leaves of pennyroyal is much used us a popu- 
dar remedy to promote perspiration, as a cure for colic and a tar- 
minative, and may be taken freely without much regard to quantity. 


WEEDS OF THE MINT PAMILY. 123 


Notwithstanding its fragrance and its medicinal value the plant is 

much teo common in places where the blue-grass ought to grow and 

is therefore included among this list of weeds. Remedies: in 

pastures, mowing; burning over in autumn; in fields, increased 

fertilization and fall plowing. 

$9. MenrHa spicata L. Spearmiut. Common Mint. Our Lady’s Mint. 
(P. I. 3.) 

Erect. branched, glabrous, 12-18 inches high, spreading by leafy run- 
ners; leaves lanceolate, sessile or short-stalked, pointed, sharply toothed. 
Flowers in dense whorls in narrow terminal, usually interrupted bracted 
spikes, the bracts linear, awl-pointed, often longer than the flowers; 
corolla regular, pale purple, 4-cleft; stamens 4. Nutlets egg-shaped, 
smooth. 

Very common in low wet places, especially about springs and in 
lowland pastures along streams. June-Sept. Along the borders 
of rippling streams, and often from the shallow water, spring the 
stems of this lowly, pungent semi-aquatic herb and its brother the 
peppermint. Jn the centuries that have gone by how many stomach- 
aches, both of babies and mature humans 
have their juices cured? At the base of 
damp shady banks in old woodland pastures 
they have their favorite abiding places. 
There their fragrance permeates unheeded 
the surrounding air. Do browsing cattle 
ever suffer from the stomach-ache and find 
relief in the juices of their stems and leaves? 

Both the spearmint and the peppermint 
(M. piperita l.. Fig. 87) were introduced 
from Europe, but the former seems to be the 
more aggressive and wide spreading. It is 
the species used in making that well known 
and seductive beverage of the southern 
States known as ‘‘mint julep.’’ It is also 
used extensively in medicine, and extracts, 
but much less so than peppermint, the latter 
being cultivated extensively in the muck soils of northern Indiana, 
Michigan and elsewhere for its essential oil. Both spread freely 
by underground stems which send up buds at short intervals, and 
where too plentiful can be kept in check by hoe-cutting and salt- 
ing, or drainage and cultivation. 


Fig. 87. Peppermint; a, flower; 
b, calyx. (After Watson.) 


124 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Tun Poratro Famm.y.—SOLANACEA. 


Chiefly herbs with alternate leaves and colorless juice. Flowers 
regular, usually in cymes; calyx attached to the ovary, 5-lobed; 
petals united into a wheel-shaped, funnel-form, bell-shaped or 
tubular 5-lobed corolla, the lobes folded in the bud; stamens 5, in- 
serted on the tube of the corolla and alternate with.its’ lobes. Fruit 
usually a 2-celled, many-seeded capsule or a berry. 

“A Jarge family in the tropics but- very few native to North 
America. Among cultivated forms are the potato, tomato, red pep- 
per, tobacco and egg-plant; all of these except the last natives of 
South or Central America and introduced from there to Europe. 
Potatoes from South America were introduced into England in 1586 
and into Ireland in 1610, where they long furnished three-fifths or 
more of the entire food of the people, and so gained the name of 
Irish potato. Of the tobacco, Dr. Wm. Darlington, a noted hotanist 
of Pennsylvania, wrote in 1847: ‘‘The extent to which this 
nauseous and powerfully narcotic plant is cultivated—its com- 
mercial importance—and the modes in which it is employed to 
gratify the senses—constitute, altogether, one of the most remark- 
able traits in the history of civilized man. Were we not so practi- 
cally familiar with the business, we should, doubtless, be disposed 
to regard the whole story of the tobacco trade,-and the uses made 
of the herb as an absurd and extravagant fable. In view of the 
facts and circumstances, it does seem like sheer affectation on our 
part, to pretend.to be astonished at the indulgence of the Chinese 
in the use of opium. The habitual use of tobacco is always more 
or less injurious to the system—especially the nervous system— 
and in many instances it is highly deleterious. I speak from long 
observation, and a personal experience of many years, having 
smoked and chewed the herb, until its pernicious effects compelled 
me to es-chew it altogether.’’ Although not a user of the weed, 
the writer heartily endorses every word of the above statement. 

About 20 species of the potato family grow wild in Indiana, 
several of which have escaped from cultivation. Among them are 
the ground cherries, nightshades, horse nettles and jimson-weeds. 
These include several weeds of the first class. 

90. Pirysais purrscens 1. Tow Hairy Ground-Cherry, Strawberry To- 
mato. (A. N. 2.) 


Stem spreading, angled, much branched, more or less velvety hairy; 
leaves thin, ovate, pointed, entire or sparingly toothed. Flowers solitary. 
axillary; calyx bell- -Shaped, 5-lobed, the lobes lanceolate, as long as the 
tube; corolla about $ inch broad, bell-shaped, dull yellow with a purplish 
center, Fruiting calyx rather small, cone-shaped, sharply 5-angled, sunken 


WEEDS OF THE POTATO FAMILY. 125 


at base, closed at tip and loosely surrounding the green or yellow berry. 
Seeds numerous, kidney-shaped, flattened, with a thin edge, finely pitted. 
(Fig. 88.) 

Very common in lowland sandy fields and waste places. June— 
Oct. This is the most abundant of the 8 species of ground cherries 
listed from the State. All ean be recognized by the much inflated 
bladdery calyx which encloses the small tomato-like fruit, They 

, are distinguished one from another by 
‘the smoothness or hairiness and shape 
of the leaves, by the color and size of 
the flowers and by the shape of the 
ealvx in fruit. The one above de- 
scribed’ is the only commen annual 
form. Among the perennial ones with 
underground. rootstocks the clammy 
ground-cherry; (P. heterophylla 
Nees.), having large heart-shaped 
leaves, 2 inches or more long, densely 
clothed with short more or less sticky 
hairs; the Virginia ground-cherry 
Fig. 88. Fruit enclosed in calyx. (After (P- virginiana Mill.), with ovate, 
Britton and Brown.) sparsely hairy leaves and fruiting 
calyx cone-shaped, 5-angled and deeply sunken at the base, and the 
prairie ground-cherry (P. lanceolata Michx.), leaves narrow, lance- 
olate or spoon-shaped, fruiting calyx rounded, egg-shaped, scarcely 
angled and little sunken at the base, are the comnion forms. Rém- 
edies: thorough cultivation; mowing or cutting the perennial 
forms two or three times each season. 


91. SovanumM cAROLINENSE L. Horse Nettle. Bull Nettle. Sand Brier. 
‘Fread-soft. (P. N. 1.) 

Erect, branched, 1-2 feet high, the branches, leaf-stalks and mid-ribs 
of the leaves armed with numerous short, stout, awl-shaped yellow 
prickles; leaves oblong or ovate, 2-6 inches long, cut-lobed or toothed, 
covered with numerous minute star-shaped hairs. Flowers in loose clus- 
ters; calyx lobes tapering; corolla wheel-shaped, purplish or white. Berry 
naked, orange-yellow, about 4 inch broad, closely resembling that of the 
potato. Seeds numerous, straw-color, flat, rounded or ovate, 1/10 inch 
long. (Figs. 10, d; 11, e, 89.) 


A very common and pernicious weed growing in both culti- 
vated ground and pasture land, especially in dry and sandy soils. 
May-Sept. It is a southern species which has spread widely both 
by strong rdotstocks and numerous seeds. In many places in the 
southern: two-thirds of Indiana it has, in recent years, become one 


126 


THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


of the most: troublesome of corn-field weeds. In pastures it is also 


Fig. 89. (After Vasey.) 


very common and annoying, 
often growing in patches so 
thick as to monopolize the soil. 
Nothing but sheep among live 
stock will eat it, and they feed 
mostly upon the berries and so 
scatter widely the seeds. It is 
attacked by a leaf-beetle (Lep- 
tinotarsa juncta Germ.) very 
similar to the Colorado potato 
beetle. This beetle also preys 
upon some of the ground- 
cherries, but unfortunately it 
is not very common. The plant 
is so tenacious of life that it is 
almost impossible to eradicate 
where it once gets a good start, 
as it never relinquishes any 
ground once occupied. One 


farmer in Lawrence County stated that he had proven “‘that their 
roots will live 10 years under a heap of sawdust and grow as soon 


as the dust is removed.’’ The first 
specimen on farms not already in- 
fested should be promptly de- 
stroved. Remedies: repeated cut- 
ting with hoe or spud and salting; 
alternate cultivation and heavy 
cropping with “lover. 


92. SoLANUM ROSTRATUM Dunal. 
Texas Nettle. Prickly Potato. 
Buffalo-bur. Prickly Night- 
shade. (A. N. 1.) 

Erect, branching, 1-2 feet high, 
very thickly armed with yellow, awl- 
shaped prickles and densely covered 
with 5-8-rayed hairs; leaves 2-5 
inches long, more or less divided or 
cut-lobed. Flowers in loose clusters 
of 38-5, yellow, about 1 inch broad; 
calyx densely prickly, surrounding and 
wholly enclosing the berry, its prickles 
becoming as long as the fruit. Seeds 


kidney-form, black or greenish, 1/10 inch long, strongly pitted. 


Fig. 90. a, spray of mature plant with flowers and 
fruit; , flower; ¢, seed. (After Dewey.) 


(Fig. 90.) 


WEEDS OF TIE POTATO FAMILY. 127 


A weed of the western plains which, through seed in hay and 
by railways, is gradually spreading eastward. Occurs in dry up- 
land or sandy lowland soil. May-—Sept. It was first taken by the 
writer in Vigo County in 1888, and in the State catalogue of plants 
is listed from six other widely scattered counties. It has been re- 
corded as being one of the 34 worst weeds in the United States* 
and should be destroyed on sight. In some places it is called the 
‘‘potato bug plant,’’ as it was the original food of the Colorado 
potato beetle. When, about 1865, potato enltivation began in Colo- 
rado and Nebraska, the beetle found the new plant more to its 
liking and less spiny to crawl over, and practically forsook its old 
host, to the great detriment of potato growers throughout the land. 
The plant has been aptly described as appearing like a cross be- 
tween a thistle and a potato. Being an annual it can be easily 
controlled by pulling or cutting before the berries ripen. 


98. SoLANUM NigRUM L. Black Nightshade. Deadly Nightshade. (A. N. 2.) 

Erect, angular, much branched, glabrous or sparingly hairy, 1-2 feet 
high; leaves ovate, stalked, wavy-toothed, 2-4 inches long, bases oblique. 
Flowers white, drooping, in small umbel-like clusters. Berries globular, 
smooth, black, juicy, 1/3 inch in diameter. (Figs. 10, d; 91.) 

Common in gardens, old fields and 
shaded waste grounds, especially about 
dwellings and outbuildings. July—Oct. 
While probably a native it has been 
widely distributed in nearly all countries 
as a weed. It is a homely, ill-smelling 
poisonous plant which should be kept 
away from the vicinity of all dwellings as 
its grape-like berries are apt to be eaten 
by children with serious results, and 
calves, sheep and hogs are often poisoned 
by them. The principal symptoms of the 
poison are dilation of the pupil of the eye, 
stupefaction, staggering, loss of speech, 
feeling and consciousness. Like other an- 
nuals, the plant may be easily eradicated 
by pulling or cutting before the berries 
mature. 

PE, LEER The climbing nightshade or bitter- 
sweet (Solanum dulcamara UL.) is an introduced and tlosely allied 
species, whose stem is climbing or straggling, 2-10 feet long, with 

“Halstead, Bot. Gaz., April, 1889. 


128 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


ovate or hastate pointed leaves, blue wheel-shaped flowers and oval 
red berries. Jt is also said to be poisonous and should be kept down 
in the same manner. Another ‘‘bitter-swect’’ (Celastrus scandens 
L.) is a handsome wild twining vine of the Wahoo Family, which 
is ornamental and not injurious. 


04. DatTuRA sTRAMONIUM L. Jimson-weed. Thorn Apple. Devil's. Apple. 

(A. 1) 

Stem green, stout, widely branched, 1-5 feet high; leaves thin, ovate, 

scallop-toothed, pointed, 3-S inches long. Flowers large, solitary, erect, 

short-stalked; corolla white, funnel-form, 3-4 inches long; calyx tubular, 

4 the length of corolla. Capsule dry, egg-shaped, about 2 inches long, 

densely prickly, the lower, prickles shorter. Seeds black, ‘kidney-form, 
wrinkled and finely pitted, 4.inch long. (Fig. 92.) 

A common, very ill-smelling, coarse and homely weed, occurring 

in rich soil about barnyards, sites of old strawstacks and dwellings, 


other species, the purple jimson or 
purple thorn-apple (D. tatula L.), 
stem purple, more slender and usually 
taller, corolla violet or purplish, its 
tube nearly white, and prickles of cap- 
sule all long, occurs with it or in 
similar places and is equally common 
and stinking. The first named came 
originally from Asia and the purple 
species from Central America. The 
name ‘‘jimson-weed’’ is a corruption 
of Jamestown weed and was given 
both because they first appeared in 
this country about Jamestown, Vir- 
ginia. Both species are powerfully 
nareotic and poisonous and equally 
Tig. 92. a, flowering spray; }, fruiting capsule. obnoxious and unsightly weeds which 

(After Chesnut.) every farmer possessing the instinct 
of neatness should keep from his premises. Remedies: pulling or 
cutting before the seed matures; cultivation. 

Children are frequently poisoned by eating the leaves or seeds 
or sucking the flowers, and cattle are known to have heen poisoned 
by eating the leaves of young plants in hay. The poison causes 
headache, nausea and great thirst, followed by dilated pupils, loss 
of sight and, in extreme cases, convulsions and death. 

The dried leaves and seeds of hoth jimson-weeds are powerful 


manure heaps, ete, June-Sept., An- 


WEEDS OF TIIE FIGWORT FAMILY, 129 


anodynes and are much used in medicine, especially for asthma and 
kindred troubles. They are mostly imported, though they can be 
easily gathered and prepared for sale by farm boys and girls. The 
leaves should be stripped from the plant when the latter is in 
-flower, and carefully dried in the shade. In the collecting of the 
seed the capsules should be picked when they are quite ripe but yet 
green in color, and dried for a few days, when they will burst and 
allow the seeds to be shaken out. These should then be thoroughly 
dried. The leaves are sold under the name of stramonium at 2 to 
8 cents a pound: while the seeds bring 3 to 7 cents a pound. 


THE Ficwort Faminy.—_SCROPHULARIACE A. 


Chiefly herbs with perfect, complete and usually irregular flow- 
ers, having the calyx 4-5-toothed, -cleft or -divided; corolla jwith the 
petals united, usually 2-lipped; stamens 2-4, rarely 5, inserted on 
the corolla and alternate with its lobes; ovary 2-celled with many 
ovules. Fruit a 2-celled and usually many seeded capsule which 
splits lengthwise. : y 

A family of 2,500 or more known species widely distributed but 
most abundant in temperate regions. The flowers, which are mostly 
2-lipped, resemble those of the mints, but the plants are usually 
easily distinguished from the mints, by the cylindric stems and 2- 
celled, many seeded pods. Moreover the figworts are mostly’ bitter- 
ish whereas the mints are fragrant or aromatic. Among the more 
common of the 50 or more wild forms growing in the State are the 
mullens, toad-flaxes, turtle-heads, beard-tongues, monkey-flowers, 
speedwells, foxgloves, gerardias, painted-cups and louseworts. Only 
a half dozen or so are weeds and of these only the common mullen 
belongs to the first class. , 


‘$5. VeRBASCUM THAPSUS L. Common Mullen. Woolly Mullen, Velvet 
Plant. Aaron’s Rod. (B. I. 1.) 

Stem stout, erect, densely woolly, wing-angled by the bases of the 
leaves, 2-7 feet high; leaves alternate, cblong, thick, 4-12 inches long. 
Flowers yellow, sessile, in a long, dense cylindrical spike; corolla wheel- 
shaped; stamens 5, unequal, the 8 upper or shorter ones woolly. Gap- 
sules slightly longer than the calyx. Seeds rough, not winged. (Fig. 93.) 

A very common and well known weed, occurring in dry or 
sandy soil along roadsides and embankments, and especially on the 
slopes of old abandoned fields and in poor half-barren pastures. 
June-Sept. The plant produces the first year a broad, thick and 
very handsome rosette of root leaves which, during the winter, lie 


19] 


130 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


close to the ground. They, as well as the stem leaves, have much 

the feeling of flannel, being covered with fine branching hairs that 

interlace and form a felt-like surface. This rosette aids in con- 

serving the water about the roots, the felt covering protecting the 

leaves from cold in winter and the fierce heat rays in summer, and 
also rendering them unpalatable to sheep and 
cattle. The leaves in the rosette vary in 
length so as not to wholly cut off the sunshine 
one from another and those of the stem are 
directed upward so as to cast little shade on 

_ those below. From the center of the rosette 
springs the stout flowering stalk of the second 
season. 

The rosette furnishes shelter and protection 
to many an insect during the long winter 
months. On one January day the writer 
found snugly at home, between and beneath the 
leaves of a single mullen, 4 cutworms, 7 chinch- 
bugs, 3 tarnished plant bugs and a number of 
others less injurious, enough to have produced 
10,000 like themselves the next season. By 
keeping the farm and roadsides clear of mullen 
and similar plants, the number of injurious in- 
sects will be greatly lessened as they will lack 
suitable places to hibernate. In late summer, 
when the rosette and lower stem leaves are 

dead and the plant is nearly through its blooin- 
‘ing, the mullen stalk is a very rough and 
‘homely looking object, only the few golden 
(After Henkel.) yellow flowers at top showing a bit of beauty. 

There is no surer evidence of a negligent 
farmer than to see his fields overrun with these ungainly stalks. 
Producing as it does a vast number of seeds which will retain their 
vitality for years, the plant can only be kept down by killing be- 
fore its seeds ripen. This can best be done by deep cutting with 
hoe or spud in Jate autumn or early spring. 

The leaves and petals of the mullen are used extensively in 
medicine for coughs, catarrh, nervousness and inflammation. The 
dried leaves are said to be often smoked like tobacco to relieve nasal 
catarrh and affections of the throat, and an infusion of the roots 
is a popular country remedy for malaria. In gathering the leave: 
and petals for sale both should be collected: when the plant is in 


Fig. 93. 


WEEDS OF THE FIGWORT FAMILY. 131 


blossom and carefully and thoroughly dried. The petals absorb 
moisture quickly and when dry must be kept in tightly corked 
bottles. Both are sold under the name of verbascum, the leaves 
bringing from 3 to 5 cents and the petals 25 to 75 cents a pound. 

Although an immigrant from Europe, it is said to be much more 
common. in its adopted country—‘‘the land of the free’’— not only 
for humans but for weeds. John Burroughs in his ‘‘ October 
Abroad’’ says: ‘‘I have come three thousand miles to see the mul- 
len cultivated in a garden and christened ‘the velvet plant.’ ’’ In 
Europe it has more than 20 common names, one of which is ‘‘hag- 
taper,’’ as its stalks were once used for candle wicks and funeral 
torches and were supposed to be borne about by witches while 
tending their cauldrons of stewing herbs. 


96. VeRBASCUM RLATTARIA L. Moth Mullen. (B. I. 2.) 


Erect, slender, glabrous, simple, 2-4 feet high; upper leaves oblong or 
ovate, toothed, pointed, sessile or clasping, 4-2 inches long; lower and 
basal ones often short-stalked, sometimes 1 foot long. Flowers short- 
stemmed in a long slender raceme; corolla yellow or cream-colored with 
a brown or purplish eye; stamens with violet hairs. Seeds very small, 
6-sided, brown, pitted. 


Frequent in open pastures, timothy meadows and along road- 
sides in dry soil. June-Oct. Both it and the common mullen 
differ from other figworts in having wheel-shaped, not. 2-lipped, 
corollas and 5 instead of 2 or 4 stamens. The moth mullen is said 
to repel cockroaches, whence the specific name blattarie, the first 
name of the more common roach being Blatta. Ths odot of its 
flowers is delicate and pleasing, sufficient to attract unto themselves 
many a moth and other insect. One which is usually to be found 
on it and its larger cousin, is a small, thick-bodied, grayish snout 
beetle,* whose young live in the pods and feed upon the mullen 
seeds. As a weed of timothy meadows the moth mullen takes high 
rank since its seeds are very common among those of timothy. 
Remedies: hoe cutting in carly spring; cultivation; clean timothy 
seed. 


97. LINARIA LINARIA L. Butter and Eggs. Toad-flax. Ranstead. (P. I. 2.) 

Stems Slender, erect, pale green, 1-3 feet high; leaves very numerous, 
mostly alternate, linear, sessile, entire. Flowers in a dense terminal raceme; 
corolla 2-lipped, spurred at the base, pale yellow, the throat orange-colored, 
the awl-shaped spur darker and almost as long as the remainder of the 
corolla; stamens 4, 2 long, 2 short. Seeds numerous, black, winged, 1/12 
inch across. (Fig. 94.) 


*Gymnetron teter Fak, 


132 ‘THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Frequent. in dense tufts or patches along banks, roadsides and 
railways where it has escaped from cultivation. June-Sept. In 
ae the country it is a well known 
plant which a half century ago was 
grown for ornament much more 
commonly than now. In many of 
the eastern States it has spread 
over upland meadows and pastures 
until it is accounted one of the 
worst of weeds, and it is very likely 
to do the same in Indiana. It has 
a disagreeable odor and spreads 
both by underground stems and 
seeds, taking almost exclusive pos- 
session of the soil. Although the 
flowers are somewhat showy it is a 
weed which should be destroyed 
before it is too late to prevent ex- 
tensive spreading. Remedies: con- 
‘ Ns ‘a tinuous cultivation and heavy crop- 
Fig. 94. Showing flower and seed.. (After Vasey.) ping; cutting several times- each 
season and then salting or using coal-oil or sulphuric acid ‘on the 
rootstocks. : 


DS. SCROPHULARIA MARYLANDICA L. Pilewort. Figwort. (BP. N. 3.) 
Stem slender, 4-angled, erect, widely 
branched, 3-10 feet high; leaves ovate, 
long-stalked, pointed, sharply toothed, 
8-12 inches long. Flowers small, nu- 
merous, in loose, compound cymes; 
corolla irregular or somewhat 2-lipped, 
dull green without, brownish-purple 
within, the upper lip erect, the lower 
spreading; perfect stamens 4, the fifth 
represented by a deep purple scale on 
the roof of the corolla tube. Capsule 
egg-shaped, many-seeded. Seeds dull 
brown, 1/32 inch long, grooved and 
roughened. (Fig. 95.) 


Frequent, along fence-rows, bor- 
ders of thickets and damp woods in 


Fig. 95. Single flower above; fruit below. 
rich moist soil. June—Oct. It varies Cite Britton sad Broyn,) 


greatly in height and date of blooming. The name Scrophularia 
was given this or a closely allied plant because it is used as a remedy 
for scrofula and other skin diseases, also as an anodyne to allay 


WEEDS OF THE FIGWORT FAMILY, 133 


restlessness, insomnia, ete. The roots are the part used, and if 
gathered for sale should be thoroughly cleaned and dried. Rem- 
edies: pulling or grubbing; cutting several times. each season. 


99. VERONICA PEREGRINA L. Purslane Speedwell. Neckweed. (A. N. 2.) 

Stem erect or ascending, glabrous, simple or branched, 3-9 inches 
high; lower leaves opposite, oval or oblong, short-stalked; upper ones 
alternate, oblong or linear, sessile, each with a short-stalked flower in its 
axil. Flowers very sinall, nearly white; corolla wheel-shaped, shorter than 
calyx. Capsule nearly circular, notched above, many seeded. Seeds fiat, 
very small, 

Common in moist waste and cultivated grounds, along.roadsides, 
in lawns, etc. April-Oct. The name neckweed was given it from 
its formerly being used in scrofulous affections of the neck. This 
is the most common of a small group of weedy plants, known as 
speedwells or veronicas. All have only two stamens inserted at 
the base of the upper lobe of the 4-parted, wheel-shaped corolla. 
Most. of them are less than a foot high, and the leaves are in part 
or all opposite, the flowers pale blue or white and the capsule or 
pod fiat, usually heart-shaped or notched above. They are named 
for St. Veronica who, according to an old tradition, was a Jewish 
maiden who wiped with her handkerchief the drops of anguish 
from the face of the Savior when the latter was on the way to the 
cross. The sacred features remained impressed upon the linen and 
from the fancied resemblance of the blossoms of the speedwells to 
this hallowed relic, the name Veronica was given them. In Ger- 
many the speedwell is known as the flower of truth and the emblem 
of friendship. Its name, like the forget-me-not, is a good wish at 
parting. 

In addition to the one de- 
sevibed three others which are 
common throughout the State are 
(a) the corn speedwell (V. arven- 
sis L. j, annual, stem spreading, 
leaves pubescent, toothed, flowers 

-solitary in the axils, capsule heart- 
shaped, deeply notched; (b) the 
common speedwell (V. officinalis 
L., Fig. 96), perennial, prostrate, 

z flowers in. terminal spike-like ra- 
Fig. 96. Common speedwell; a, flower; b, fruit. C&Mes, leaves oval, stalked, hairy, 

aN RREOEY, capsule triangular, broadly and 
shallowly notched, and (c) the, thyme-leaved speedwell (V.: serpyl- 


134 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


lifolia I.), perennial, flowers in terminal spikes, leaves all opposite, 
glabrous, capsule broader than long, obtusely notched. All begin 
flowering in March or April and continue until frost. They are 
weeds in that they grow where grass or other crops should be found. 
Remedies: thorough cultivation; crowding out with clover; pulling 
or cutting from lawns and yards. 

Tue TRUMPET-cREEPER Fawity.—BIGNONIACE. : 

Woody vines or trees with opposite compound or simple leaves 
and large showy clustered or axillary flowers. Corolla funnel- 
form, bell-shaped or tubular, 5-lobed and somewhat 2-lipped; sta- 
mens 2 or 4, inserted on the tube of the corolla and alternate with 
its lobes; ovary 2-celled, many ovuled. Fruit a 2-valved capsule, 
opening lengthwise. Seeds flat, transverse, winged. 

Chiefly a tropical family represented in the eastern United 
States and Indiana by only 4 species, viz., the cross-vine, a hand- 
some woody vine of southern range, found in Indiana onlv in the 
lower Wabash valley; two species of-catalpa trees and the trumpet- 
creeper. The latter is often very troublesome and is therefore in- 
cluded in this list of weeds. 


100. Tecoma rapicAns L. ‘Trumpet-creeper. Trumpet-flower. (P. N. 2.) 

A woody vine, climbing to a height of 20 to 40 feet by means of air 
rootlets; leaves pinnate or T-11-divided; leaflets ovate, short-stalked, 
sharply toothed. Flowers in clusters of 2-9; calyx 5-toothed, leathery ; 
corolla orange and scarlet,:2-3 inches long. Capsules robust, 4-6 inches 
long, narrowed at both ends. Seeds broadly 
winged on the edges, the wings frayed. (Itz. 
97.) 

Frequent along fence-rows, borders 
of thickets, etc., especially in sandy allu- 
vial soils. June-Aug. Common in culti- 
vation in the northern part of the State 
but southward, where it is native, the 
numerous sprouts give much trouble in 
meadows and cultivated fields, where they 
spring up by hundreds in strips along 
the fences or wherever the old plant can 
get some sort of support, being espccially 
i annoying in the river bottom fields of the 
Fig. 97. Spray of flowers; a, pod; s, larger streams. Remedies: repeated grub- 
iamiwinged seed. (After Watson.) bing; abandonment of fences and thor- 
ough cultivation of the infested areas, 


WEEDS OF TITE PLANTAIN FAMILY. 135 


Where kept within bounds the trumpet-creeper is queen of all 
our twining or trailing shrubs. When in the prime of the bloom- 
ing period its large pinnate leaves ont-rival the emerald in their 
shade of green. Then, as one drives along some country lane or 
roadway, high in air it can be seen, clambering over fence stake 
and bushy shrub, its great orange and scarlet flowers conspicuous 
for rods away and attracting unto themselves many a humming- 
bird and bumble-bee. ’Tis in the angles of old rail fences that it 
finds a home most congenial to its taste. There rail and bush and 
shrub furnish a ready support to which its aerial rootlets freely 
cling, and there it forms many a snug retreat in which the nest 
of woodland songster is securely hidden. 


THe PLANTAIN Famity.— PLANTAGINACE A. 


Chiefly stemless herbs with basal leaves in clumps, and small, in- 
conspicuous flowers in dense terminal spikes or heads on leafless 
flower-stalks. Calyx 4-parted, persistent ; corolla 4-lobed, thin, dry, 
membranous, withering but remaining on the spike; stamens 4, 
rarely 2, inserted on the tube of the corolla; ovary 2-celled. Fruit 
a 2-celled several seeded capsule, which opens by the top falling 
away as a lid. (Figs. 13, a; 14, c.) 

A family of about 200 species, represented in Indiana by 8 
species of plantain or ribwort belonging to the genus Plantago. 
All have the leaves strongly ribbed and the small whitish flowers 
borne in a bracted spike or head on a leafless stalk which springs 
from the center of the basal tuft of leaves. Among the 8 two are 
weeds of the first class, while a third promises as bad. The stems 
of all are invisible, being short and underground, and as the flowers 
of all depend upon the wind to carry the pollen, the corolla is 
therefore almost useless and has lost whatever color it may have 
once possessed. The seeds of all plantains are more annoying than 
the weeds themselves, causing much extra expense in cleaning the 
seeds of grasses and clover, with which they are very common. 

To bring about that cross-fertilization so necessary to the suc- 
cess of plant life, the plantains have during the ages past evolved 
an ingenious method. Each plantain flower has both stamens and 
pistils but the pistils mature first and are fertilized by pollen 
blown to them from some neighboring plant. After the pistils 
have matured the stamens ripen, the anthers hanging out. on their 
long slender filaments or stalks so as to have their pollen discharged 
by every passing breeze. On each spike the lower flowers open 


136 THE INDIANA WEED BOOR. 


first and on one-half through blooming the stamens of the lower 
part are shedding their pollen while the pistils of the upper por- 
tion are being fertilized. Thus the pollen cannot fall from the sta- 
mens to ahother flower on the same stalk and self-fertilization is 
avoided. 


101. Pranraco MAdor L. Comnion Dooryard Plantain. Greater Plantain. 
(P. I. 1) 


Leaves spreading or half erect, 
long-stalked, broadly ovate, smooth 
or slightly hairy, dull pointed, 3-11 
ribbed, rounded at base, 1-10 inches 
long. Spikes several, dense, blunt at 
top, 2-10 inches long. Capsule egg- 
shaped, the top separating at about 
the middle, 8-16 seeded. Seeds 
‘angled, very irregular in shape, 
greenish-brown. to black, 1/16 inch 
long, about 4 as wide. (Fig. 98.) 


Very common in dooryards, 
along walks and roadsides and in 
enriched cultivated fields. May- 
Oct. This plantain delights in a 
‘ compact clayey soil, and with the 

Fig. 98. 4, flower; b, fruit, a pysis. (After  knot-grass combats most fiercely 

Watson.) ; 3 

for supremacy along the sides of 

narrow footpaths in unkempt country dooryards and the cow-paths 

of old pastures. It is one of the most common and best known of 

the social weeds and by the Indians was known as the ‘‘white man’s 

foot.’’ Longfellow refers to it by this name when in speaking of 
the English settlers in his poem Hiawatha, he says: 


“Wheresoe’er they tread, beneath them 
Springs a flower unknown among us, 
Springs the white man’s foot in blossom.” 
Hardy, tough and difficult to eradicate, its thick rootstocks and 
many seeds give it more than an average chance in the struggle for 
life. It is especially troublesome in manured land sown to clover, 
as its seeds are very common among those of clover. Remedies: 
continuous cultivation; crowding out with clover or rye; reseeding 
bare spots in meadows and pastures; hand pulling or cutting below 
the crown with sharp knife, hoe or spud in yards. 
The leaves of the dooryard plantain were formerly. much used 
as a convenient and popular dressing for wounds, blisters and other 
sores. ‘l'wo of the old English names for it are ‘‘wound-weed”’ and 


WEEDS OF THE PLANTAIN FAMILY. 137 


‘thealing blade,’’ and it was probably the first ‘‘shin-plaster’’ 

used by man. This property was known to Shakespeare, as in 

Romeo and Juliet, Act I, sc. 2, we find: 
“Rom.—Your plantain leaf is excellent for that. 
Ben.—¥or what, I pray thee? * 
Rom.—For your broken shin.” 


On account of its so persistently haunting the pathways of man 
the Germans have a story that the plantain was formerly a maiden 
who watched so patiently by the roadside for her absent lover that 
‘the fairies took pity on her and changed her into this wayside 
plant. 

Mingled with the common plantain in dooryards, especially in 
northern Indiana, is the pale plantain (P. rugelit Dec.) distin- 
guished by its brighter green and thinner leaves, less dense and 
more pointed spikes and the separation of the lid of the capsule 
much below the middle. The seeds are also much larger and fewer, 
there being only 4-9 in each pod. 


102. PrantTaco LANCEOLATA L. Buckhorn. Narrow Plantain. Ribwort. 
Rib-grass. English Plantain. (P. or B. I. 1.) 

Rootstock short, erect, the leaves with tufts of brown hairs at their 
bases; leaves oblong-lanceolate, erect or spreading, pointed, narrowed at 
base, 8-5 ribbed, 2-12 inches long. Flower-stalks several, slender, grooved, 
sometimes 2 feet or more tall; spikes very dense, cylindric, blunt, 14 
inches loug. Capsule oblong, blunt, 2-seeded, the top separating at about 
the middle. Seeds oval, deeply grooved lengthwise or boat-shaped on the 
inner side, chesnut brown, 1/10 inch long, smooth and shining. (Fig. 99.) 


a Very common along railways, in 
a fame @@ - waste places and especially in mead- 
: ows. April-Oct. In the last five 
years this rib-grass or buckhorn, as 
it is commonly called, has come to be 
one of the worst pests known in the 
clover and timothy fields of the 
State, especially those with light 
sandy or gravelly soil, or on clayey 
uplands. Its seeds are widely dis- 
tributed with those of clover, alfalfa 
and other hays and in manure, and 
its thick rootstocks give it an ad- 

: vantage over many weeds. It is es- 
Fig. 99. (After Clark.) pecially annoying to dealers in clover 
seed as it is very difficult to thoroughly separate its seed. Remedies: 


188 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


sowing clean seed; plowing under badly infested fields and culti- 
vating in some other crop until every plantain top has been de- 
stroyed; where but a few plants are present, deep cutting with hoe 
-cr spud; increased fertilization and crowding out with heavy crops 
of ‘clover; in lawns and pastures, digging and reseeding, or per- 
sistent mowing. In those favored localities where it is not yet 
known farmers should be on the especial lookout for it and quickly 
destroy every plant which comes to their notice. 

In Nngland, where it is Very common, this plantain has a score 
or more of common names among which are ripple-grass and kemp- 
seed. The name ‘‘kemps’’ comes from the old Danish kaempe, a 
warrior, and is applied to the heads of the plantain by children 
who play with the flower-stalks and try to knock off the heads of 
each other’s mimic weapons. The heads when they appear iv 
spring are blackish and the children, when they first see them, re- 
peat the following rhyme: 

“Chimney sweeper all in black, 

Go to the brook and wash your back, 

Wash it clean or wash it none; 

Chimney sweéper, have you done?” 
108. PLANTAGO sRIsTATA Michx. Bracted Plantain. (A. N. 2.)- 

Leaves linear, erect, pointed, dark 
“4 green, 3-ribbed, narrowed at base. 
W Flower-stalks erect, longer than the 
leaves, G-18 inches tall; spikes very 
dense, hairy, cylindric, 1-G inches long, 
the flowering bracts 3-10 times the 
length of calyx. Capsule 2-seeded. Seeds 
dark brown, 1/10 inch long, one side 
rounded and with a distinct groove 
across its middle, the other side flat 
and lengthwise grooved. (Fig. 100.) 


A western plant introduced in 
baled hay and seeds and becoming 
common along roadsides, railways 
and in meadows. May-—Oct. First 
noted by the writer in Vigo County 
in June, 1888. It is most commonly 
a winter annual and is becoming 
more abundant in meadows each 
ities Et holy plant with grass-like leaves oe By farmers x us often called 

acted spikes; b, top of fruit with corolla at- ““bristly buckhorn’’ to distinguish 


tached, the 2 seeds hanging in it; d, seed. (After ‘ 
Dewey.) it from the more common species. 


WEEDS OF THE TRASEL FAMILY. 139 


Its seeds are readily told by the cross-groove on the rounded side. 
Remedies: hand digging in late fall or early spring; cutting before 
the seeds ripen; thorough cultivation. 

The dwarf white plantain (P. virginica L.), leaves ovate or 
spoon-shaped, white hairy, stamens 4, corolla lobes erect and closed 
over the tops of the capsules, occurs frequently in dry or sandy 
soil, but does not promise to spread enough to do much harm. 


THE TEASEL FamMipy.—DIPSACACE A. 


Herbs with opposite leaves, mostly prickly stems, and perfect 
flowers in dense oblong heads surrounded by an involucre. Calyx 
cup-shaped, the tube attached to the ovary; corolla oblique or 2- 
lipped, 4-lobed; stamens 4, inserted on the tube of the corolla and 
alternate with its lobes; ovary 1-celled. Fruit an achene, its tip 
crowned with the persistent calyx-lobes. 

In the Old World this family is represented by 140 species, four 
of which have been introduced and now grow wild in the eastern 
United States. Of these only one occurs in Indiana. The sweet 
scabious is a cultivated member. 


104. DipsacUs syLvestrts Huds. Wild or Common Teasel. English Thistle. 
(B. I. 2.) 


Stem stout, 3-6 feet high, with numerous short prickles on the 
branches, midribs of the leaves and involucre; leaves sessile, lanceolate or 
oblong, the upper pointed, entire, often united at base, the lower blunt- 
toothed or somewhat divided, often 1 foot long. Flowers purplish, 3 inch 
long, in dense eylindric heads 3-4 inches long, each flower with-a bract 
or scale beneath it which ends in an awl-shaped barbed awn longer than 
the flower itself; leaves of the involucre linear, curved upward, as long 
as the head. (Fig. 101.) 


Kat) ; Common in dry soil in southern 
We Indiana along roadsides, waste places 
and barren slopes of old abandoned 
fields. July-Sept. The flowers be- 
gin to blossom in a ring about the 
middle of the head and gradually 
open towards both base and apex. 
The large heads, spiny involucre and 
prickly leaves make the teasel a strik- 
ine and rather handsome roadside 
plant when in blossom but an un- 
sightly weed when dead. Remedies: 
Fig. 101. (After Millspaugh.) mowing as often as the heads are 


140 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


formed; deep cutting in early summer; in old fields, increased fer- 
tilization and cultivation. 

The fuller’s teasel (D. fullonum L.) is generally regarded as a 
cultivated form of the wild plant. It has the points of the chaffy 
bracts hooked at the tip and the heads were formerly used by cloth 
manufacturers as a kind of card to raise the nap on woolen cloth. 

In Europe it is used to foretell the weather, it being said that 
‘‘tezils, or fuller’s thistle being gathered and hanged up in the 
house, where the air may come freely to it, upon the alteration of 
cold and windy weather will grow smoother, and against rain. will 
close up its prickles.’’ , 


Tur BELL-FLOWER Fammy.— CAMPANULACEA. 


Herbs with alternate leaves, acrid and usually milky juice and 
perfect scattered flowers. Calyx 5-lobed or parted, its tube at- 
tached to the ovary; corolla 5-lobed or more or less 2-lipped, the 
petals rarely wholly separate; stamens 5, free from the corolla, 
alternate with its lobes; ovary 2-5 celled. Fruit a capsule with 
very small and numerous seeds. 

By recent botanists the bell-flowers and lobelias have been com- 
bined into one family of 1,500 or more species of wide geographic 
distribution. It is represented in Indiana by 6 bell-flowers and 7 
lobelias, 3 of which are common enough to be termed weeds, though 
none of them are very aggressive. To the family belong some of 
our most handsome wild flowers. The tall bell-flower, with its blue 
bell-like blossoms in a long loose terminal spike, is frequent along 
the borders of moist woods and thickets throughout the State, while 
the little harebell and the marsh bell-flowers occur only in the 
northern counties. One of the lobelias is 

“The cardinal-flower whose heart-red bloom 


Glows like a living coal upon the green 
Of the midsummer meadows.” 


It waves its red pennons above the sedges of many a swamp and 
among all our wild plants which bloom froin August to October it 
is without a peer for brilliancy of color and gracefulness of form. 
The flowers of the lobelias resemble those of the mints and figworts, 
but the stamens or anthers are always more or less united and the 
corolla is split to the base on one side. 


105. Leeouzia PERFOLIATA L. Venus’ Looking Glass. , Clasping Bell- 
flower. (A. N. 8.) 


Stem very leafy, half erect or prostrate, often branched near the 
base, 6-24 inches long; leaves shell-shaped, scalloped, rounded or broadly 


WEEDS OF THE BRLI-FLOWER FAMILY. 141 


ovate, clasping the stem. -Flowers solitary or 2-8 together in the axils of. 
the upper leaves; corolla wheel-shaped, blue or violet, 4 inch or more 
broad; stamens 5, separate. Capsule oblong, opening just below the 
middle. (ig. 102.) : 
Common in dry or sandy rather 
poor soil in southérn Indiana; infre- 
quent northward. May—Sept. It oc- 
curs mostly in grain fields, thinly 
seeded meadows and waste places, the 
flowers closing ‘by noon or mid- 
afternoon. Those on the lower part 
of the stem are usually rudinientary, 
without corolla. The name was first 
given to a European species because 
of some fancied resemblance to an old- 
fashioned round mirror. Remedies: 
increased fertilization; pulling or 


Fig. 102. Showing 2 forms of flowers and sin- no a 
gle uit.” (After Brittontand Brows) cutting before the seeds ripen. 


106. LOBELIA SyPHILITICA L. Great Lobelia. (P. N: 3.) 

Erect, simple, rather stout, somewhat hairy, 1-3 feet high; leaves 
thin, numerous, oblong or oval, pointed, 2-6 inches long. Flowers in a 
dense, leafy bracted, loose spike, showy, bright blue, rately white, 1 inch 
long; corolla 2-lipped, split to the base on one side, the upper lip with 2 
erect lobes, the lower spreading and 3-cleft; anthers united into a tube or 
ring. Capsule 2-valved, opening at the top. 

Common in low moist grounds along ditches and borders of 
marshes, streams and thickets. July—Sept. Except in color its 
flowers are similar to but stouter than those of the cardinal-flower. 
A striking and handsome member of our late summer flora, and’ 
occupying for the most part only waste ground, it is doubtful if it 
should be classed as a weed. It spreads hoth by seeds and offshoots 
from the base of the stem and may be controlled by mowing several 
times for one season or hy vrubbing. 


107. Loperia 1InFLATA L Indian Tobacco. Asthma Weed. (A. N. 3.) 


Stem erect, leafy, usually much branched, 1-2 feet high; leaves thin, 
ovate or oblong, blunt-toothed, short-stalked or sessile. Flowers small, 
pale blue, 4 inch long, in loose, bracted, spike-like racemes. Capsule in- 
flated, 4 inch long, many seeded, cross-veined between the ribs. (Fig. 103.) 


Common in dry open woods, meadows, pastures and borders of 
fields. July—Oct. It contains an acrid milky juice, and the whole 
plant is poisonous when eaten, but its.leaves, flowering tops and 
seeds are much used in medicine as an expectorant, sedative and 


142 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


emetic. Horses and cattle seem to know of its acrid qualities, care- 


fully browsing the palatable herbage all about it, yet leaving its 
pa. stalk untouched. Reniailieas hand 


pulling or mowing before the seeds 
ripen; increased fertilization in old 
fields. 

In gathering Indian tobacco for 
sale the leaves and tops should be col- 
lected in late summer, dried in the 
shade and then kept in covered ves- 
sels. The seeds are very small, 400 
to 500 in each capstile. The dried 
leaves and tops bring from 3 to 8 
cents and the seeds 15 to 20 cents per 
pound. They are sold under the name 
of lobelia. 


Tre Cuyicory Famimy.— 
CICHORIACEA. 


ANNA Herbs usually with acrid or bitter 
Fig. 103.P5(After Vasey.) Xd milky juice, alternate or basal leaves, 
and yellow, rarely pink or blue flowers in dense compound heads on 
a common receptacle and surrounded at base with one or more 
rows of scale-like bracts called the involucre. Flowers all alike, 
perfect; calyx tube surrounding and firmly joined to the ovary 
and usually having on its top a pappus of scales or bristles to aid 
in the distribution of the seed; corolla with its petals united into 
a long or short tube and a strap-shaped, usually 5-toothed, upper 
portion called a ray; anthers united into a tube; ovary 1-celled, 
l-seeded. Fruit an achene. (Figs. 1, a. 10, g.) 

Until recently this family and the next were united with the 
great family of Composite, comprising over 11,000 species of known 
plants. By modern botanists the Composite family has been split 
up into three, of which the dandelions, ragweeds and sunflowers 
are respectively among the best known and typical members of 
each. The group, with all the flowers of the head rayed or ligu- 
late and the juice of stem and leaves milky, is separated from other 
Composite, having all the central flowers of the head tubular and 
the juice very rarely milky, under the name of the Chicery family. 
This separation is more for convenience in classification than for 
natural reasons The strap-shaped corolla (ig. 10, g) may be 
supposed to be formed by splitting a tubular one down one side 


WEEDS OF THE CHICORY FAMILY. 143 


nearly to the ovary, the five teeth at the end of the ray in the 
dandelion flower representing the five united petals of the original 
tube. Similar but usually much broader ray-flowers are found in a 
circle around the head of tubular ones in many of the true Com- 
posite. To the Chicory family belong about 30 species growing 
wild in Indiana, among them being the dandelions, sow-thistles, 
wild lettuce and hawkweeds. 


108. CricHorIUM InTyBUS L. Chicory. Wild Sueccory. (P. I. 2.) 


Stem stiff, much branched, 1-5 feet high, from a long deep tap-root; 
basal leaves spreading, spoon-shaped in outline, 3-6 inches long, narrowed 
at base, sharply cut-lobed, the segments 
turned backwards; upper ones much smaller, 
oblong or lanceolate, partly clasping. Flow- 
ering heads numerous, 1 inch or more broad, 
1 together in sessile axillary and terminal 
clusters; flowers several, bright blue, rarely 
white; pappus composed of 2 or 3 rows of 
short blunt scales at the top of the black, 
4-sided. achenes. (Fig. 104.) 


Frequent along roadsides and in pas- 
tures, waste places and gardens in nortb- 
ern Indiana; scarce in the southern por- 
tion. July-Sept. Occurs usually in 
patches in dry soil, its blue flowers add- 
ing a tinge of brilliant color along the 
Die: alee ak deni, bow tak wok roadways, though usually closing by 

root. (After Clark.) noon. The endive or garden succory, a 
closely related species, is in England said to open its petals at 8 
o’clock in the morning and close them at 4 in the afternoon, whence 
the lines: : 


“On upward slopes the shepherds mark 
The hour when, to the dial true, 
Cichorium to the towering lark, 
Lifts her soft eye, serenely blue.” 


Although a vile weed where growing wild, chicory under culti-” 
vation is a plant of many uses. The Romans used it as a salad and 
pot-herb and it is related that ‘‘the leaves of chicory are boiled in 
potage or broths for sicke and feeble persons that have hot, weak 
and feeble stomachs, to strengthen the same.’’ In Europe at the 
present time its young leaves when well blanched are much used 
for salad; the tender roots when boiled and served with butter and 
pepper are considered quite a delicacy, while the young leaves 
when boiled as spinach, using two waters, rival those of spinach 


144 THE INDIANA WEED BCOK,. 


or dandelion for greens. The tops and roots are grown there ex- 
tensively for stock-food. 

The principal use of the root, however, is as a substitute for or 
an adulterant of coffee and persons accustomed to its use main- 
tain that a mixture of 2 or 8 parts of good coffee to one of ground 
roasted chicory is superior to and more economical than coffee 
alone. More than 15 million pounds of chicory root are annually 
imported into the United States from Belgium and other European 
countries for the sole purpose of adulterating ground coffees. 
Where escaped as a weed the chicory can be controlled by deep 
cutting or grubbing with hoe or spud and prevention of seeding in 
gardens. , 


109. Taraxacum TaRAxacUM J. Dandelion. Blowball. (P. I. 1.) 

A stemless herb producing a cluster or rosette of spreading basal 
leaves from the midst of which the leafless flower-stalk springs; leaves 
oblong or spoon-shaped in outline, deeply and irregularly lobed or cut- 
toothed, hairy when young, 3-10 inches long. Heads golden yellow, 1-2 
inches broad, containing 150-200 flowers. Achenes or seeds greenish- 
brown,. spindle-shaped, narrowed above into a slender beak which in age 
supports a globular mass of white hair-like pappus. (Figs. 1, a; 6, h; 105.) 

Very abundant everywhere in 

grass-lands, as lawns, pastures, 
-meadows and along roadsides. In 
flower practically every day in the 
year that the weather’ is above the 
. freezing point, and when not in 
flower getting ready to.blossom. In 
cities it is by far the -worst weed 
which persons desiring neat lawns 
have to contend with. True, the 
star-like golden flowers at times 
shine forth from the green of blue- 
grass lawn with beautiful effect, 
but the aftermath in the shape of 
unsightly flower stalks is not so 


Fig. 105, 1, two flower stalks, one showjng the s 5 a 
head closed, with double jnvolucre, the inner erect, pleasing. The time from flowering 
the outer deflexed, the other the head open; 2, sin- ‘ : 
gle flower, showing seed, pappus, strap-shaped co- until the dispersal of the seeds is 
Tolla, and stamens united around the 2-parted style; ‘i 
3, achene; 4, pitted receptacle with single fruit. 8 to 10 days. As the myriad seeds 


(After Strasburger.) 
are wafted everywhere by: means 


of the pappus it is almost a hopeless task to keep the weed in sub- 
jection. Remedies: reseeding or resodding; digging with spud or 
an especial tool made for the purpose; in fields‘and gardens, thor- 
ough cultivation, 


WEEDS OF THE CHICORY FAMILY. 145 


Aside from its being a nuisance in lawns, the dandelion is not 
a bad weed, as its leaves are eaten by most stock and form the 
basis of many a mess of greens for the dinner of the human. In 
Europe the young leaves are often eaten in early spring as a salad 
and near, the larger cities of the Eastern States the plant is at 
present extensively cultivated for greens. One of the best known: 
of the social weeds, it has followed man the world over, its short 
underground stem and leaves being able to withstand his constaut 
tread. Ever a favorite of children, it is the 

“Dear common flower that blooms beside the way, 
Fringing the dusty road with harmless gold.” 

Many an hour of childhood has been happily spent in making 
eurls and necklaces from its hollow stems. The common name is 
from the French dent-de-lion, meaning ‘‘lion’s tooth’’ and is said 
to have been given it because the edge of the leaf looks like a row 
of teeth on the jaw of a lion. In England it is often called the 
‘“peasant’s clock’’ because its flower opens very early in the morn- 
ing and only in fair weather, while to dream of it is deemed a mis- 
fortune as it is said to bring bad luck. 

The root of the dandelion is thick, tapering, bitter, sometimes 
20 inches long. It is used in medicine under the ‘name taraxacum 
as a tonic in diseases of the liver and in dyspepsia. For sale it 
should be dug from July to September at which time the milky 
juice is thicker and the root more bitter. After, careful washing 
and thorough drying it should be sold as soon as ‘possible, as_ its 
medicinal virtues decrease with age. More than 100,000, pounds 
are imported each year, the price ranging from 4 to 6 cents per 
pound. As common as the plant-is in-this country many. a boy: or 
girl ought to make good wages by collecting it for-sale. 


110. Soncuus asprr L. Spiny Sow-Thistle. (A. I. 2.) 


Stem leafy, succuleni, seldom branched, 1-7 feet -high; leaves alter- 
nate, spiny-edged, sometimes lobed or divided; lower. and. basal ones spoon- 
shaped, upper oblong or lanceolate, clasping by a rounded base. Heads 
numerous, many-flowered, 1 inch broad or less; bracts in several over- 
lapping rows, glabrous; receptacle flat, naked; flowers pale yellow. 
Achenes flat, truncate above, ribbed lengthwise, topped with a copius 
pappus of soft’ fine white bristles. (Fig. 106.) 


Common in waste places about cities and towns, along roadsides, 
railways and the borders of old fields. May-Nov. The leaves are 
very prickly along the margins, the ears at the base of the upper 
ones being rounded and the seeds or achenes not ribbed crosswise. 
In these respects it differs from another annual species, the com- 

[10] 


146 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


mon sow-thistle (8. oleraceus L.), in which the lower leaves are 
often divided, the margins toothed but not prickly, the ears at base 
pointed and the seeds with both cross and 
lengthwise ribs. Both species are eaten 
by sheep and: infested pastures can be 
cleared of them in that way. The young 
leaves of the unprickly one are often used 
as greens or eaten as salad. In corn-fields 
which lie fallow for a year and in the un- 
seeded shock rows of corn stubble wheat- 
fields they are often abundant. Remedies: 
eutting or pulling before the seeds ripen; 
burning mature plants. 
ies In England the common sow-thistle is 
Fig. 106. (After Millspaugh.) known as ‘‘hare’s lettuce’’ or ‘‘hare’s 
‘palace’’ from the shelter it is supposed to afford that animal as, 
‘if the hare come under it he is sure that no beast can touch hym.’’ 
Another superstitution is: ‘‘When hares are overcome with heat 
they eat of an herb called hare’s lettuce, and there is no disease in 
this beast the cure whereof she does not seek for in this herb.’’ 
The perennial sow-thistle (S. arvensis L.) has not yet been re- 
corded from Indiana, but is one of the worst weeds of Ontario and 
some of the eastern States, and occurs in northern Ohio. It has the 
bracts of the involucre glandular-hairy, the heads of flowers larger 
and brighter yellow and spreads by deep running rootstocks as 
well as by seeds. Remedies: deep cutting or digging; crowding 
out with clover; sheep-grazing. 


111. Lactuca scariona L. Prickly Lettuce. Milk Thistle. (A. I, 1.) 


Stem stiff, leafy, glabrous, usually much branched, 2-6 feet high; 
leaves oblong or lanceolate, toothed or deeply cut-lobed, sessile or clasp- 
ing, their margins and midribs strongly prickly, the lowest sometimes 10 
inches long and 3 inches wide, upper much smaller. Heads 4 inch broad, 
very numerous in a broad open panicle; flowers 6-12, yellow; involucre 
cylindric, its outer bracts 4 the length of inner. Achenes flattened, brown, 
oblong, widening upward then suddenly contracting into a narrow neck, 
ribbed lengthwise, 4 inch long; pappus of fine soft white hairs. 


Abundant in waste places along railways, streets, alleys and 
roadsides; also in old fields and gardens. June-Sept. From the 
sow-thistles this and other forms of wild lettuce are separated 
by having the upper end of the achenes or seeds tapering or beaked, 
whereas in the sow-thistles they are truneate or squared off. The 
prickly lcttuce, like the majority of owr vile weeds, came to us 


WEEDS OF THE CHICORY FAMILY. 147 


from Europe, reaching Massachusetts about 1863 and Indiana in 
1884, since which time it has spread over the entire State. Each 
plant produces from 8,000 to 10,000 seeds, which by aid of the 
abundant pappus are wafted far and wide by every passing breeze, 
and are ready to sprout and grow wherever and whenever the 
proper conditions of soil, moisture and temperature are present. 
The numerous prickles and bitter milky juice prevent all animals 
but sheep from feeding upon it. They eat it, especially the young” 
leaves, greedily and in pastures it can be kept down by them alone. 
Its most aggressive character is its ability to grow anywhere and 
everywhere that its seed can secure a covering of earth and so 
from crevices in gutters into which a little soil has drifted, ‘‘from 
stone heaps, weed-choked corners of fences and yards, roadways 
and beaten paths it flourishes. But such poverty and ill usage are 
by no means essential factors to its success, for it also springs up 
in gardens, meadows and cultivated fields. Still the power to ex- 
tract sufficient moisture and food from compacted and sunbeaten 
earth, and thus to overtop competitors, and in the less favorable 
‘ spots to grow where few plants could live, 
place it in the front rank of noxious an- 
nual weeds.’’* Remedies: repeated mow- 
ing before the seeds ripen; burning ma- 
ture plants; thorough cultivation. 

A closely allied species, the ‘‘strong 
seented lettuce’’ (ZL. virosa L., Fig. 107), 
is very common in clover fields. It dif- 
fers in having the leaves all entire and 
lanceolate, the prickles on midribs and 
edges shorter, and also in being a winter 
annual, springing from the seed in au- 
tumn and reaching maturity in May or 
June of the next season. Both plants 
when cut or broken stool freely, sending 
up numerous spreading branches from 
the lower part, so that they must be cut 
1 Biagine Oe ee with a hoe or pulled to prevent the ripen- 
Pry eshte ea pepo at oud of a ing of the seeds. Both are compass 
head of flowers. (After Atkinson.) plants,’’ having the leaves twisted on the 
stem so that their edges point up and down or vertical instead of 
horizontal, and the ends for the most part point north and south. 
The larger area of the leaves is therefore toward the east and west, 


Fig. 107. 


*J.C. Arthur, Bull. 52, Purd. Univ. Agr. Exp. Sta., 103. 


148 THE INDIANA: WEED BOOK. 


and they are protected from the fierce rays of the sun which can- 
not beat directly down upon them. 


112. LacrucA CANADENSIS L. Wild Lettuce. Tall Lettuce. (A. or B. 
N. 3.) 

Stem very leafy up to the flowers, branching above, glabrous, 3-12 
feet high; leaves without prickles, the lower 6-12 inches long, sinuate 
toothed .or lobed, pale beneath; upper lanceolate, entire, sometimes clasp- 
ing. Heads numerous, } inch broad, flowers about 20, pale yellow. Achene 
oval, very flat, about as long as the hair-like beak; pappus white. (Fig. 
108.) 

Common, especially in moist soil, along borders of woods, 
thickets, fence-rows, roadsides and cultivated fields. July—Oct. 
While not an aggressive weed it is an 
‘unsightly one and should be cleaned out 
of fence-rows and roadsides.. Associated: 
_ with it are several other species of wild: 
lettuce, most common of which are the 
arrow-leaved lettuce (L. sagittifolia, 
Ell,) having the leaves all entire, the 
flowers purplish-yellow, and the achene 
longer than its beak; and the tall blue 
lettuce (L. spicata Lam.) with deeply 
lobed leaves, blue flowers and brown 
pappus: The latter occurs frequently 
" in moist soil along the borders of up- 

land thickets and fence-rows and is 
among the tallest of our annual herbs, one specimen taken in Vigo 
County measuring 14 feet, 4 inches in height. Remedies: mowing 
before the seeds ripen; abandoning fences and cultivating the land 
thus redeemed. 


Fig. 108. (After Millspaugh.) 


113. HureracrtuM scABRUM Michx. Rough Hawkweed. (P.N.3.) 


Stem stout, leafy, densely rough-hairy below and glandular-hairy 
above, 1-4 feet high; leaves oval or spoon-shaped, 2-4 inches long, sessile 
or the lower short-stalked, finely toothed. Heads 2/3 inch broad, 30-50- 
flowered, numerous in a rather broad panicle; bracts of involucre in one 
row, linear, glandular. “Achenes blackish, cylindrical, truncate; pappus a 
single row of rather stiff brown bristles. 


Commen in dry soil in open woods, thickets and recent clearings. 
July-Sept. This and a half dozen other hawkweeds are found in 
the State, occurring for the most part on the slopes and ridges of 
high dry woodland pastures where the grass is thin. There in late 
summer their ray flowers strive to outdazzle the sunlight with their 
limpid yellow. Seldom noted except by the botanist they add their 


WEEDS OF THE CHICORY FAMILY. 149 


mite of beauty to the woodland at a time when other flowers are 
searce. In no place are they numerous 
enough to be very troublesome and in 
general they can be kept down by close 
grazing with sheep, or by mowing and 
salting. 8 
Full 300 species of these hawk- 
weeds are known in various parts of 
the world, 15. of which oceur in the 
eastern United States. Of these but 
one, a European species, the golden 
hawkweed or devil’s paint brush (H. 
aurantiacum L., Fig. 109), is an ag- 
gressive form but it has not been re- 
corded from the State. In New Eng- 
Fig. 109. Golden hawkweed. (After Clark.) land it is a serious pest in pastures and 
meadows and is spreading westward, having reached northeastern 
Ohio some years ago. From the rough hawkweed it may be known 
by having the leaves all basal and the heads nearly 1 inch broad, 
with the flowers reddish-orange in hue. It spreads by runners as 
well as by seeds and should be exterminated wherever a single 
stalk appears. This can be done by grubbing or heavy salting. 


THE RaGweep Fammy.— AMBROSIACEZ. 


Annual or perennial herbs with alternate, rarely opposite, 
leaves and small heads of greenish or white flowers surrounded at 
base by an involucre of few bracts. In our weeds the male and 
female flowers are in separate heads, the staminate (male) ones 
above. Female or pistillate flowers without corolla, or this re- 
duced to a short tube or ring; calyx attached to the 1-celled ovary ; 
pappus none; involucre of the heads bur-like or nut-like. Sterile 
or male flowers usually with an inconspicuous funnel-form or 
tubular 4-5 lobed corolla; stamens 5, separate or nearly so. 

A small family of about 55 species, mostly native of America 
and many of them weeds. Formerly included with the Compositx 
but, like the dandelions, now separated for convenience. Only 8 
species, known commonly as ragweeds and cockleburs, are recorded 
from Indiana. Of these 4 are weeds of the first class. 


114. AmeBrosia TRIFIDIA L. Great Ragweed. Horse-weed. Giant Rag- 
weed. Kinghead. (A. N. 1.) 

Erect, branched, rough-hairy, 3-19 feet high; leaves opposite, stalked, 

deeply 3-5 lobed, lower often 1 foot wide; upper sometimes undivided, 


150 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


sharply toothed. Sterile or male heads in racemes 8-10 inches long, their 
involucres saucer-shaped, 3-ribbed; receptacles naked ; fertile heads 1-3 
together in the axils of the upper leaves. Fruit top-shaped, 4 inch long, 
5-7 ribbed and with 5-7 tubercles on the upper side. (Fig. 110.) 
Abundant in alluvial or moist rich soil, often forming dense 
thickets along the borders of streams, roadsides and bottom fields. 
July-—Oct. The name Ambrosia means 
“*food for the gods.’’ Why it was used 
as a generic name for the ragweed no 
one knoweth. The man who first used 
it may have had the equine god in 
mind, for horses are very fond of this 
species, often forsaking other food for. 
its juicy leaves and branches. Among 
the poorer classes about the larger 
towns and cities quantities of it are 
gathered in August and September to 
be used instead of hay. Growing, as 
it mostly does, in lowlands, the seeds 
are scattered far and wide by over- 
flowing waters. It is not a very ag- 
gressive weed and can usually be easily 
subdued by cultivation or by mowing 
as iit Lee iweng tent geek. OE pulling before the flowers open. 

(After Dewey.) As one walks or drives along 
streams or through low ground woodlands in early autumn he 
whiffs its peculiar odor which is exhaled readily, bounteously, to 
all comers. ‘To some persons it is doubtless disagreeable, but to 
the writer it is rich, strong, powerful—fit odor for the gods. The 
plant itself is one of the largest of our annuals, often reaching, in 
rich alluvial soil, a height of 16 or more feet in a single season. 
Both it and the common ragweed harbor a small ash-gray, long- 
horned beetle (Dectes spinosus Say), the larvie of which hibernate 
in their stems. On the horse-weed the beetle is usually to be found 
in June and July, resting in the angles between the leaves and stem. 


115. AMBROSIA ARTEMISIZFOLIA L. Ragweed. Roman Wormwood. Hog- 
weed. (A. I. 1.) : 

Erect, much branched, finely hairy, 1-5 feet high; leaves thin, mostly 
alternate, once or twice divided, the lobes oblong. Racemes of sterile 
heads numerous, 1-G inches long, the receptacle chaffy. Fruit globular, 
armed with 4-6 short acute teeth or spines. (Figs. 6, f; 111.) 


Probably the most common and widely distributed weed in the 


WEEDS OF TI 


State, occurring everywhere i 


Fig. 111. 1,a staminate flower; 2, a fruit. 
(After Vasey.) 


harvest when other plants are 


B® RAGWEED FAMILY. 151 


n both cultivated and pasture land, 
but especially abundant in stubble 
fields after the crops have been har- 
vested. July—Oct. The slender ra- 
cemes of little green staminate flow- 
ers, like knots or beads along the 
stem, produce a bounteous crop of 
yellow pollen which thickly coats 
the clothing »of whoever passes 
through a eluinp of ragweed on an 
Augnst day. Both it and the great 
ragweed are known as ‘‘hay-fever 
plants,’’ their pollen spores when 
inhaled being popularly supposed to 
germinate. in the nostrils and irri- 
tate the nasal membranes of persons 
subject to the disease. The seeds or 
fruit are common in clover seed and 
retain their vitality for years when 
buried in the soil, springing up 
wherever the land is plowed or after 
absent. Remedies: mowing or burn- 


ing over stubble in September; 


early fall plowing followed by 
harrowing: use of clean seed; 
cultivation in hoed crops; s 


grazing when the plants are young. 
A prairie form, the lance-leaved 


ragweed (.4. bidentata Michx. 


curs frequently in the western 
counties of the State. From the 
common form it differs in having 
the sterile heads sessile, not short- 
stalked, and in the leaves being 
lance-shaped, sessile, with one or 
two sharp teeth near the base. 


116. XANTHIUM sPINOSUM L. Spiny 


Cocklebur. Dagger Cock] 
Burweed. (A. I. 1.) 


disk BSN 
late ' 
hheep 


) oe- 


ebur. 


Stem erect. much branched, 1-3 
feet high; leaves lanceolate, pointed, Fig. 112. a, mature plant; }, branch showing 


spines and burs; c. bur; d, cross-section of bur 


usually lobed or cut-toothed, shining, showing 2 seeds. (After Dewey.) 


152 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


dark green, whitish woolly beneath; axils each with a short-stalked, 3- 
pronged, yellow spine nearly 1 inch long. Bur oblong-cylindric, 4 inch 
long, hairy and with 1 or 2 short, awl-shaped beaks and numerous short 
hooked spines. (Fig. 112.) 

This cocklebur has invaded Indiana from the south, where it is 
very troublesome, and is recorded from a number of the southern 
counties. Aug.—Oct. It is one of the most spiny of the American 
weeds, and the hooked spines on its burs provide for wide distribu- 
tion by every: passing animal. It is a native of tropical America 
and, unlike the other cockleburs, occurs mostly in grass-land, as 
pastures, meadows, and along roadsides, spreading even in strong 
sod. The two seeds in the thick-walled bur retain their vitality 
for yedrs and care should be taken to destroy the first plants which 
appear before the burs mature. Remedies: mowing several times 
in late summer; deep cutting with hoe or spud in May and June; 
thorough cultivation for two or three successive seasons. 


117. XANTHIUM GLABRATUM DC. Common Cocklebur. Clotbur. (A. N. 1.) 

Erect, rough, branching, 1-6 feet high; leaves heart-shaped or ovate, 
long-stalked, the lower often 8 inches wide, margins toothed or lobed; 
axils without spines. Burs oblong, nearly glabrous, } inch long, with 2 
straight 2-toothed ‘beaks and numerous smooth hooked spines. (Figs. 1} 
e; 118.) 

Abundant everywhere in rich cultivated soils, barnyards, waste 
places and along roadsides. Aug.—Oct. 
One of the worst of corn-field weeds in 
river bottoms, and in pastures especially 
annoving in wool and the manes of 
horses. The burs with their two en- 
closed seeds are widely distributed over 
lowlands by annual overflows, and on 
the uplands by animals to which they 
closely adhere. It is said that only one 
of the 2 seeds will germinate the first 
season, the other lying dormant for a 
year. Another species, the American 
cocklehnr or hedgehog burweed (X. 
canadense Mill.) is known from central 
Indiana. and probably occurs over most 
of the State. It differs in having the 
burs somewhat hairy or glandular with 
the beaks hooked or incurved. Rem- 
.edies: thorough cultivation; pulling be- 
fore the burs are formed; burning mature plants before plowing. 


’ Fig. 113. (After Dewey.) 


WEEDS OF THE 'THISTLE ‘FAMILY. 155 


Tur THistte Fammy—COMPOSITA. 


ITerbs, rarely shrubs, having the flowers in a close head on a 
common receptacle and surrounded by an involucre of few or many 
scales or bracts arranged in one or more rows; leaves varied in: form 
and position; receptacle naked or with chaffy scales, smooth or 
pitted. Calyx tube of each flower firmly united to the ovary and 
usually bearing on its summit a pappus of bristles, awns, teeth or 
scales; corolla tubular, usually 5-lobed or 5-cleft, those of the mar- 
ginal flowers often split to form a ray; stamens 5, borne on the 
corolla, their anthers united into a tube. Fruit an achene, con- 
sisting of the persistent wall of the calyx surrounding a single seed 
and usually crowned with some sort of a pappus. (Figs. 10, g; 11, 
f, g; 18, 6.) 

A vast family comprising, as above defined, not less than 10,000 
species of wide geographic distribution. Since the asters form an 
important group, the members of the family are often called Aster- 
worts. The name Composite is given to the family from the fact 
that its members have their small yet perfect flowers densely 
crowded together into a head, which is enclosed in an involucre or 
cup formed of several circles of modified leaves called ‘‘bracts;’’ 
this involucre performing the same protective function for the com- 
pound mass that the calyx or outer green envelop does for the ordi- 
nary separate flowers of other families. The object of this massing 
together of a great number of small flowers into a large head is that 
they may more easily and certainly attract the attention of insects 
and thus secure their fertilization. ‘Taken singly, the flowers are 
too small and inconspicuous to attract separate attention, but by 
huddling themselves together into a showy mass they have proven 
themselves very successful plants; so much so, indeed, that the 
family is by far the largest known in the vegetable world. 

About 205 species of wild Composite are known from Indiana, 
194 being listed in Coulter’s Catalogue. Among them, besides the 
weeds described below, are the blazing-stars, golden-rods, asters, 
everlastings, leaf-cups, rosin-weeds, cone-flowers, sunflowers, worm- 
woods, Indian plantains and ragworis. It is preéminently a family 
of weeds as, except from an acsthetic point of view, but three or 
fonr of the 200 species are of the least benefit to the inhabitants 
of the State. The few exceptions are used in medicines, a dose of 
boneset or yarrow tea being occasionally given by some grand- 
mother or quack doctor for a fancied ailment. But the lover of 
nature, whose eye is ever on the search for the pleasing and the 


154 THE INDIANA WELD BOOK. 


beautiful, blesses the existence of these Composite, for the hues of 
the asters, golden-rods, sunflowers, etc.,-absent, our late summer 
and autumn scenery would lose much of the charm due to their 
variety of color. 

Since the number of species of Indiana weeds in this family arc 
so many they are divided into three groups, separated by the fol- 
lowing simple key or table. This grouping is for convenience only, 
and necessitates the changing of the order of these weeds as they 
occur in the botanies. 


KEY TO GROUPS OF INDIANA COMPOSITA WEEDS. 


a. Heads without visible ray-flowers around the margins, the flowers 

rarely yellow, all discoid or tubular or the rays very rudimentary. 

Group A., p. 154. 

aa. Heads with one or more rows of prominent ray-flowers about the mar- 
gins, those of center all tubular. 

b. Rays yellow. Group B., p. 168. 

bb. Rays white, blue or pinkish. Group C., p. 175. 


Group A. 


To this group, having the flowers of the head all tubular, belong 
our weeds known as iron-weeds, bonesets or snake-roots, everlast- 
ings, wormwoods, fireweeds, burdock and thistles. With them are 
also included the horse-weed, foetid marigold, tansy and two or 
three species of beggar-ticks or Spanish needles, which have the 
rays rudimentary or shorter than the disk flowers. 


118. VERNONIA FASCICULATA Michx. Western Iron-weed. (P. N. 1.) 

Erect, branching, glabrous or sparingly hairy, 2-6 feet high; leaves 
thick, alternate, lanceoiate, pointed, 3-6 inches long, sharply toothed. 
Heads numerous, short-stalked, 20-30 flowered; receptacle flat, naked; 
flowers reddish-purple ; involucre bell-shaped, the bracts in several rows 
all closely overlapping. Achenes cylindric, glabrous, 8-10 ribbed; pappus 
of 2 rows of brownish bristles, the inner hair-like, the outer shorter, 
chaffy. (Wig. 114.) 

Very common throughout the State in permanent grass-lands 
and along roadsides. July—Sept. One of the worst of pasture 
weeds, crowding out the blue-grass, and in places taking almost 
complete possession of the soil. The form above described is that 
most commonly found in dry soil in open upland wooded pastures. 
Associated with it in moist, rich bottom pastures are the tall iron- 
weed (V. maxima Small) 5-10 feet high and having the leaves thin, 
finely toothed, achenes hispid and inflorescence loosely branched 
and open; and the eastern iron-weed (V. noveboracensis lu.), 3-12 


WEEDS OF THE THISTLE FAMILY. 155 


feet high with the bracts of the involucre brownish-purple, tipped 
with spreading awns. 

The perennial roots of all 
these are stout and fibrous, and 
each autumn are filled with a suf- 
ficient supply of nourishment to 
give the stalk of the ensuing year 
a good start in life. They radiate 
in all directions from the base of 
the stem, spreading over an area 
of several square yards and pene- 
trating the soil in search of 
moisture to such a depth as to 
render abortive any attempt of 
man to pull the plant up bodily, 
roots and all. The leaves are so 
innutritious that none of the 
higher animals, not even sheep, 
will feed upon them. 

: The only insect enemies of the 
Fig. 114. Western Iron-weed. iron-weeds, so far as hoticed, are 
the margined and black blister beetles* which attack the leaves 
when other food is scarce, and a small gall-fly whose larve feed 
upon the juices of the flowering branches. They are also preyed 
upon at times by the leaf and downy mildews and by several rusts, 
but none of these serve to retard their growth to any great extent. 

Many species of bumble-bees and biitterflies visit the blossoms in 
search of nectar and pollen, and thus aid materially in their fertil- 
ization. The flowers in each head number, on the average, 25, 
each of which produces a single seed. On one specimen of medium 
size were counted 743 heads, so that 18,575 seeds, each capable of 
becoming a fully developed iron-weed, were borne by that plant 
alone, and the majority produce as many, or more. To Secure a 
broad dissemination each of these seeds bears at maturity a tuft or 
pappus of light brown bristles, and by its aid the seed may be 
wafted by the wind miles away from the parent plant. Again, as 
the iron-weed grows in greatest Iuxuriance in the lowland pastures 
near small streams, many of the seeds fall upon the water and are 
horne onward till they lodge against some bank or are buried in 
the sediment deposited by an overflow; places well suited for their 
future growth. In these ways the weed is continually spreading 


*Epicouta marginata Fab. ahd E. pennsylvanica DeG. 


‘156 “THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


into pastures which have heretofore been entirely free from it. 
Taking into consideration that it is a native plant and therefore 
well suited to our soil; the character of its roots; the immense 
number of seeds produced; the modes of their dissemination, and 
‘its almost total exemption from the attacks of injurious insects, it 
is no wonder that it is so well able to hold its own in the struggle 
for existence, and also to increase in numbers from year to year. 
Remedies: mowing or hoe-cutting four times (in May, June, July 
and August) each season, thus preventing the leaves from storing 
nourishment in the roots; deep hoe-cutting and salting; thorough 
cultivation where practicable. The first remedy will, if kept up 
for two or three years, practically eradicate the weed. 

It has been said that all things in nature have their use—that 
nothing exists but for a purpose. It is the work of science to dis- 
cover and make known the use of nature’s objects, and day by day 
her secrets are gradually being exposed, thereby advancing man in 
civilization by enabling him to better control the ravages of those 
existing forms which are injurious to his interests.~ If, however, 
the iron-weed has a use, other than that shown in the beauty of 
its flowers, no one has yet discovered it. But there is time; ‘for of 
the thousands of plant forms which exist; we know. the‘uses of only 
a few, as corn and hemp, ginseng and blood-root: Let us’ hope that 
some valuable medicinal or other property will soon ‘be discovered 
in the iron-weed and a reason for its existence thereby poutied out 
to the doubting humanity of the-present. ”" Sag 

Meanwhile the naturalist will go-on. admiring the beauty of its 
bloom; for however coarse and repulsive the stem and leaves may 
appear, each head, with its 25 or 30 dainty florets so prettily 
grouped within their protective cup, reveals a striking’ beauty to 
the true lover of nature. And when in the glamour of an August 
morn the stands upon a hillside’ and views acre upon acre of the 
broad purple cymes waving in the valley beneath, all memories of 
the plant as a pernicious weed are blotted from ie mind by the at- 
tractiveness of the scene before him. 


119. Hopeniuie PURPUREUM L. Jo-pye-weed, arampet: aN Purple 
Boneset. (P. N. 3.) 


Stem erect, simple or branched at top, green or purple, 3-12 feet 
high; leaves thin, in whorls of 3-6, oval or lanceolate, stalked, pointed, 
sharply toothed, 4-12 inches long. Heads nwnerous in a more or ‘less 
elongated, branched cluster, 5-15 flowered; ‘involucre cylindrical, the 
bracts pink, oblong, in 4 or 5 closely overlapping rows; flowers pinkish or 
reddish-purple, Achenes 5-angled. (Fig, 115.) 


WEEDS OF THE THISTLE FAMILY. 157 


‘Common along fence-rows, borders of thickets, streams and 
lakes, especially in low moist grounds. July-Oct. The tall stem, 


seales. 


Fig. 115. Single flower on left; head of flowers 


whorled leaves and handsome heads 
of flowers make it one of the niost 
conspicuous of our Composite. Both 
it and all the other bonesets may be 
distinguished from the iron-weeds 
by the pappus which is made up of 
a single row of rough, hair-like 
bristles, while in the iron-weeds the 
pappus is double, the inner row be- 
ing of bristles and the outer of short 


The purple honeset is not 


an aggressive weed, being seldom 
found in open pastures, and ean be 
easily killed out by frequent mow- 


on tight. (After Britton and Brown.) ing or deep cutting. 


120. EuparorIUM PERFoLIATUM L. Common 


(P. N. 3.) 


Thoroughwort. Boneset. 


Stem stout, hairy, branched above, 2-5 feet high; leaves opposite, 
united at base and surrounding the stem, horizontal or half erect, lance- 


olate, long-pointed, finely toothed. Heads. 


crowded in a fliat-topped cluster, 10-16 
flowered ; involucre bell-shaped, the bracts 
lanceolate, pointed, in 2 or 8 overlapping 
rows; flowers white, rarely bluish. (Tig. 
116.) 

Very comimon in low moist mead- 
ows. along ditches, borders of streams, 
lakes, ete. July—Sept. A well known 
weed, much used in the country as 
a remedy for fever and ague, whence 
the names ‘‘feverwort’’ and ‘‘ague- 
weed’’ by which it is sometimes 
known; also for colds, dyspepsia and 
asa tonic. The leaves and flowering 
tops are the parts used, and if gath- 
ered for sale should be stripped from 
the stalk when the latter is in flower 


Fig, 116. 


sa Pytitey . 

rl Ne 

\YX ee Ss 
may, \ - 


«, mature head; }, fruit with pap- 
pus. (After Watgon.) 


and carefully dried. They bring froin 2 to 8 cents per pound. 
When their infusion is taken in large doses it acts as an emetic 
and cathartic. When too abundant, the boneset can be killed out 
by drainage, frequent mowing, or thorough cultivation, . 


158 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


121, Evurarortum aceratorpss L, White Snake-root. White Sanicle. 
(P. N. 3.) 

Erect, glabrous or nearly so, much branched, 1-4 feet high; leaves 
thin, opposite, broadly ovate, slender-stalked, pointed, coarsely and: sharply 
toothed, 3-6 inches long. Heads numerous in loose clusters, 10-80 
flowered; involucre bell-shaped, the bracts equal, linear, pointed, in 1 or 
2 rows; flowers white. ‘ 

Common in dense woods and thickets and along roadsides in 
shaded places, usually in rich moist soil. July—Oct. Supposed by 
many to be the cause of trembles in sheep, cattle and herses and of 
milk sickness in humans. While by most physicians and botanists 
this poisonous character is denied, Mr. E. L. Moseley has, by 
numerous experiments, recently proven* that it causes trembles 
and death when fed to cats, rabbits and lambs. He states that 
cattle and sheep will not touch the wecd when other forage is 
plentiful, but that when turned into a closely cropped pasture 
or one covered with snow they eat it and are soon affected with 
trembles: The milk from cows which have eaten it under such 
conditions has been known to cause milk sickness and death. While 
the weed is not aggressive it should be cleared out of woods used 
for pasture. This can be done by drainage or by successive mow- 
ings. The root is used in medicines and, when properly prepared, 
brings 3 to 4 cents per pound. 


By 


122. LEPTILON CANADENSE L. Horse- 
weed. Butterweed. Mare’s Tail. 
(A. N. 1.) 


j Erect, bristly-hairy, usually much 
branched, very leafy, 1-8 feet high; 
lower and basal leaves spoon-shaped, 
‘stalked, cut-lobed; upper linear, entire. 
Heads small, very numerous, in an 
open panicle; receptacle naked; invol- 
ucre bell-shaped, its bracts narrow in 2 
or 8 overlapping rows; flowers dull 
white; rays numerous but shorter than 
the pappus and therefore inconspicuous. 
Achene fiattened; pappus a single row 

ia of hair-like straw-colored bristles. (Fig. 

117.) 


Very common in fields, gardens 

Fig. 117, (After Watson.) and open waste places, especially in 
damp sandy soil. June-Oct. Occurs especially in old abandoned 
or fallow fields and in stubble. The sceds are very numerous, the 


“Ohio Naturalist, VI, 1906, 463-470; 477-483. 


WEEDS OF TIE THISTLE FAMILY. 149 


stem stout and the root small. In size it varies much according to 
the richness of the soil. Widely distributed in Europe and South 
America in exchange for some of the many weeds they have fur- 
nished us. Remedies: pulling before the seeds ripen; mowing or 
burning in carly autumn. 

The horse-weed is used in medicine as a remedy for dropsy, 
diarrhea, ete. Jt is sometimes called ‘‘blood stanch,’’ being used 
for stopping bleeding from wornds. The fresh herb when distilled 
yeilds a volatile oil known as oil of fleabane. When the plant is 
freely handled this sometimes causes a skin eruption, somewhat 
similar to that produced by poison ivy. The leaves and upper 
branches when gathered and dried during the flowering season 
bring from 6 to 8 cents per pound. 

123. ANTENNARTA PLANTAGINIFOLIA L. Plantain-leaf Everlasting. Mouse- 
ear. Indian Tabacco. (P. N. 2.) 


Low woolly herbs spreading hv offshoots or runners and having the 
male and female heads on separate plants; stems of fertile plants 6-18 
inches, of the sterile, 3-S inches high; basal leaves in rosettes, woolly, 
broadly oval or spoon-shaped, 3-ribbed, dark green above, silvery white 
below; stem leaves linear or oblong, sessile. Heads numerous in small 
crowded clusters or short spikes; receptacle naked, pitted; involucre bell- 
shaped, its whitish scales in several overlapping rows; flowers all tubular, 
cream-colored. Achenes cylindric, slightly flattened. Panpus a single row 
of hair-like bristles, in the female flowers more copious and united at 
base. 


Common in dry clayey, hali-barren soil on the slopes of open 
upland woods and old fields. April-June. Spreading both by 
numerons seeds and ruuners, it forms broad patches, those of the 
sterile and fertile plants often separate, crowding out or taking the 
place of blue-grass and thus greatly lessening the pasture value of 
the land. It is one of the earliest of the Composite to blossom, 
often appearing the first of April. The flower stems are then very 
low, but like those of the dandelion soon arise to a foot or more 
in height. Remedies: increased fertilization and reseeding in pas- 
tures; cultivation and rotation with clover in old fields. 

424, GNAPHALIUM oBTUSIFOoLIUM L. Fragrant or Common Everlasting. 
Sweet Balsam. (A. N. 3.) 


Stem erect, woolly, simple or branched, 1-3 feet high; leaves alternate, 
linear or lanceolate, tapering.at base, sessile, pointed, dark green above, 
densely white wolly beneath, 1-3 imches long. Teads numerous, in 
panicled clusters of 2-5; receptacle flat, naked; involucre cone-shaped, its 
bracts dry, whitish, in several overlapping rows; flowers few, dull white. 
Achenes giabrous, oblong-cylindrical; pappus a single row of hair-like 
bristles. (Fig. 118.) 


160 tii INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Cominon in dry soil.on the slopes of open woodland pastures 
and old fields. July-Sept. A homely but very fragrant herb oc- 
cupying waste places yet not aggressive enough to do much harm. 
Remedies: frequent mowing or pulling before the heads mature. 

As one travels along the country roads or wanders through 
the woodlands from mid-July to October he inhales many an odor 
but none more pleasing than that which 
comes from this Composite. There is 
nothing like it in the. rambler’s. cate- 
gory of smells. Once known it is never 
forgotten, and each season it is greeted 
_ with ever growing delight. If there is 
any other odor which it recalls it is that 
of the earth, earthy on the first days 
of the great awakening. Then the 
moistened leaves and mold give up 
from many a woodland surface the 
quintessence of herbs and grass and 
Fig. 118. Pistillate flower on left; central flowers long since dead and forgotten. 

ove onright. (After Britton and Brown.) But the odor of the everlasting is that 
of a living thing which one can gather and put into his pocket 
where for months it will exhale its fragrance. Where the plant is 
plentiful the odor penetrates the air for rods around and is often 
borne to the traveler by whom it is welcomed though its source be 
to him unknown. What combination of chemical atoms, what per- 
fect union of C. and H. and O. and other elements, must there be 
for its production? What a hidden secret must this herb possess 
that it is enabled to produce and exhale such a unique, pleasing 
and life-inspiring fragrance! 


125. Biprens connaTa Muhl. Swamp Beggar-ticks. (A. N. 1.) 

Stems erect, purple, glabrous, usually much branched, 1-5 feet. high; 
leaves thin, opposite, stalked, lanceolate or oblong, sbarply .and coarsely 
toothed, pointed, 2-5 inches long, the lower often 3-lobed. Heads num- 
erous, erect, stalked, about 1 inch broad; involucre bell-shaped, its bracts 
in 2 rows, the outer ones the larger; receptacle flat, chaffy; rays none or 
1-5 and inconspicuous; disk-flowers orange. Achenes wedge-shaped, flat, 
often keeled, edges bristly-hairy, top with 2-4 stiff downwardly barbed 
pappus-awns. (Fig. 1, 0.) 


Very common in swamps, borders of marshes.and low wet bot- 
tom lands. July—Oct. This is one of 8 or 10 species of trouble- 
some weeds occurring in the State and known as bur-marigolds, 
beggar-ticks, tick-seed sunflowers, pitch-forks, devil’s bootjacks, ete. 
Some of them have prominent yellow rays and will be treated on 


WEEDS OF THE THISTLE FAMILY. 161 


another page. All have the top of the achenes or seeds armed with 
Ww. * strongly barbed bristles or awns 
RN Kats’ by which they readily adhere to 
“} clothing, wool or hair of animals 
and thus are widely scattered. 
The awns are usually 2 in num- 
ber, whence the generic name Bi- 
dens, meaning two-toothed. A 
closely allied species is the com- 
mon beggar-ticks (B. frondosa 
L., Fig. 119), which is also very 
common in moist soil in fence 
corners, gardens, corn fields and 
waste places. It has the leaves 
5-5 divided, the outer bracts 
larger and achenes wider with 
more slender awns. The juices 
sometimes cause an itching or 
qi skin irritation when the plant is 
Fig. 119. (After Vasey ) handled. Both can be easily de- 
stroyed by mowing before the seeds ripen, thorough cultivation or 
improved drainage. 


126. BIDENS BIPINNATA JL. Spanish Needles. (A. N. 2.) 

Stem erect, 4-sided, branched, 1-5 feet 
high; leaves stalked, 1-3 times divided into 
oblong toothed or lobed segments. Heads 
numerous, long-stalked; involucre narrow, 
its bracts linear, the inner ones the larger; 
flowers few, dull yellow; rays none or 3-4, 
short, yellow. Achenes linear, 4-sided, § 
inch long, narrowed upward into a beak 
which bears 3 or 4 short downwardly barbed 
awns. (Fig. 120.) 


Common in gardens, cultivated fields, 
borders of thickets and waste places, es- 
pecially in rich moist soil. July—Oct. 
Hemedies: P aoe sae Bre before Fig. 120. Long inner fruit with barbed 
the sceds ripen ; burning over stubble wns; shorter and thicker outer fruit. 
fields and waste places in autumn. tayo Eaton Benen) 


127. Basera Parposa Vent. Feetid Marigold. Yellow Dog-fennel. (A. 
N. 2.) 
Erect, glandular, strong-scented, very leafy, much branched, 6-18 
inches high; leaves opposite, sessile, divided into linear bristle-toothed or 
{11] 


162 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


cut-lobed segments. Heads numerous, short-stalked on the ends of the 
branches; involucre bell-shaped, its 8-10 oblong, purplish bracts in one 
row; receptacle flat, chaffy; rays few, short, inconspicuous; disk-flowers 
} numerous, dull yellow. Achenes 4-angled, 
wider above, hairy, crowned by a ring of short 
hair-like brownish bristles. (Fig. 121.) 
Common along roadsides, banks of 
streams, railways and borders of fields, 
especially in gravelly or clayey soils. 
June—-Oct. <A migrant from the west 
brought in by railways and seeds in hay. 
Readily known by the large pellucid 
glands of the leaves and bracts which ex- 
hale a very disagreeable odor. In many 
places it seems to have taken the place of 
Fe Pee aay ied on left; the common dog-fennel (Anthemis cotula 
and Brown.) L.). The odor of the latter was bad 
enough but that of the foetid marigold is infinitely more disgusting. 
Remedies: mowing while in flower; cultivation, when practicable, 
of the land infested. 


128. TANACETUM vULGARE L. Tansy. (P. I. 3.) 

Stems stout, unbranched, 1-3 feet high; leaves twice divided into 
linear or oblong, cut-toothed segments. Heads numerous, small, in dense 
flat-topped terminal clusters; involucre saucer-shaped, its oblong bracts 
in several overlapping rows; receptacle flat, naked; flowers yellow, all 
tubular. Achenes angled and ribbed, with flat top and a crown or pappus 
of 5 short scales. (Fig. 122.) 

Frequent in dense clusters along fence- 
rows, embankments, waysides, ete. July— 
Sept. An ill-smelling herb, formerly much 
cultivated in gardens but escaped and 
spreading in many places. Remedies: suc- 
cessive mowings or grubbing; cultivation... 

For sale the leaves and tops should be 
collected when in flower, and carefully 
dried. The infusion is bitter and acrid 
and is used as a stimulant, tonic, vermifuge, 
etc. When taken in overdoses the oil of 
tansy is poisonous. About 40,000 pounds 
are imported annually, the price ranging 
from 3 to 6 cents per pound. In England fig. 122. a, disk-flower; b, ray-lower; 
P a c, fruit. (After Watson ) 
it was formerly thought that tansy laid to 
soak in buttermilk for nine days would ‘‘make the complexion very 
fair.’’ 


WEEDS OF THE TIUISTLE FAMILY. 163 


129. ARTEMISIA BIENNIS Willd. Wormwood. (A. or B. N. 2.) 

Stem erect, very leafy, branched, 1-4 feet high; leaves alternate, once 
or twice divided into linear or oblong, 
toothed lobes. Heads small, numerous, 
sessile in dense axillary clusters or short 
spikes; involucre cup-shaped, its bracts 
green with dry margins; receptacle flat, 
naked; flowers tubular, greenish. Achenes 
sinall, slender; pappus none. (Fig. 123.) 

Common along dry gravelly banks 
of streams, roadsides and waste places 
about cities and towns in southern In- 
diana; less so northward. July—Sept. 
It has a disagreeable, penetrating odor 
and a bitter taste. With us it is the 
most common of 6 or 7 species of so- 
called wormwoods, all of which are 
Fig. 123. Head of flowers below; single flow- homely, weed-like plants. Remedies: 

ers above. (After Britton and Brown.) pulling or erubbing ; mowing several 
times before the heads mature. 


180. ERECHTITES HIERACIFOLIA L, Fireweed. Pilewort. (A. N. 3.) 

Stem erect, branching, grooved, succulent, 1-8 feet high; leaves thin, 
alternate, lanceolate or narrowly ovate, cut-toothed, 2-S inches long. 
Heads rather large, in an open panicle at the ends of the branches; in- 
volucre cylindric, swollen at base, its bracts linear in one row; receptacle 
concave, naked; flowers white, all tubular. Achene linear-oblong, grooved; 
pappus 2 large tuft of smooth white hairs. 

Frequent in rich moist soil along borders of woods and thickets. 
Very common in newly cleared ground, especially where brush-piles 
have been burned. July—Sept. In a deadening caused by fire this 
weed is the first plant to spring up, often taking complete posses- 
sion of the soil for a year or two, then giving way to more hardy 
species. The foliage is often attacked by mildews and a small 
Carabid beetle (Antsodactylus terminatus Say) is sometimes found 
by scores feeding upon its ripening seeds. An ointment made from 
the essential oil is said to be a most excellent remedy for piles. It 
seldom occurs in cultivated fields and being an annual is easily 
controlled by mowing or pulling before the flowers appear. 


131. AReTIuUM MINUS Schk. Common Burdock. (B. I. 1.) 

Stem erect, grooved, fleshy, much branched, 1-5 feet high; leaves thin, 
alternate, broadly ovate, pale and somewhat woolly beneath, the lower 
often 15 inches long, their stalks hollow, grooved, margins wavy or 
toothed. Heads numerous in dense clusters; involucre } inch broad, sub- 


164 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


globose, its bracts glabrous, very numerous and tapering to long stiff 
points which become rigid and hooked at tip to form a bur, the inner 
ones erect and shorter than the flowers; receptacle flat, densely bristly; 
flowers purplish, all tubular. Achenes light brown, oblong, ribbed or 
8-angled; pappus of short bristly scales. (Figs. 1, @; 124.) 

Very common about the sites of old houses, barnyards, fence 
corners ae waste places generally. July—Oct. A coarse, un- 
sightly, ill-smelling social weed which 
has followed man over much of the 
continent, yet whose presence on any 
farm betokens a negligent and slov- 
enly owner. It produces the first year 
of its growth only a rosette of large 
root leaves resembling those of the 
common ‘‘pie-plant,’’ from the midst 
of which the flower-stalk of the next 
season springs. When ripe the whole 
flower head separates as a bur, which 
is very annoying in the wool of sheep 
and the manes of horses, and sticks 
closer than a brother to the clothes of 
man. These burs are almost ideal for 
seed distribution, the seed being widely scattered as the bur is 
carried along. Remedies: deep cutting below the crown with hoe 
or spud before flowering; burning the mature plants; repeated 
mowing. 

The seeds are very numerous, a large plant producing 400,000 
or more, and when dried both they and the roots are used in blood 
and skin diseases and the fresh leaves as poultices for swellings anil 
ulcers. The tap-root of burdock is large, fleshy. a foot or more long, 
and is sold under the name of lappa, the price ranging from 3 to 
8 cents per pound. It should be collected in the fall of the first 
year, washed, split lengthwise and carefully dried. The seeds,. if 
gathered when ripe or nearly so, have a value of 5 to 10 cents a 
pound. 


Fig. 124. (After Clark.) 


132. CarpuUS LANCEOLATUS L., Common Thistle. Bull Thistle. (B. I. 1.) 


Stem stout, branched, leafy to the heads, more or less woolly, 2-4 
feet high; leaves dark green, lanceolate, pointed, déeply cut-lobed, the 
lobes and teeth tipped with stout prickles, the base and margins, which 
extend downward along the stem, bristly. Heads mostly solitary at the 
ends of the branches, about 2 inches long and when fully open almost as 
broad; bracts of the involucre in many overlapping rows, lanceolate, 
pointed, tipped with slender erect prickles; flowers dark purple. Achenes 


WEEDS OF THE THISTLE FAMILY. 165 


gray, ribbed, 4 inch long; pappus of several rows of slender hair-like 
white bristles. (Fig. 125.) 

Very common in pastures, along roadsides, fence-rows and in 
old abandoned fields. June-Sept. One of the worst of pasture 
weeds, its long basal root-leaves 
of the first. season spreading over 
and smothering out the blue- 
grass. The tap-root runs deep 
and the plant can be easily killed 
by cutting below its crown. This 
should be done in the late au- 
tumn or early spring with hoe or 
spud; repeated mowing before 
the seeds ripen is a less efficient 
remedy. 

Armed below with many a 
stiff spine and prickly involucral 
scale, the purple head of this 
thistle is itself more soft and 
yielding than velvet. To an eye 
which appreciates solid beauty 
the first thistle blossom of the 

: vear, opening from the apex of 
slit 25. ig of main stom vith et: bower the central stall, is one of the 
eee eee ener) most attractive of our wild-wood 
flowers. Of what a number of cylindrical rays is it composed! 
_ How compactly and prettily are they grouped! What a soft and 
delicate expanse they unfold to view! The purple head is erect— 
a great eye, as it were, gazing up into the blue ethereal depths 
above— purple looking into blue—and mayhap gathering from the 
latter a deeper hue to add unto its loveliness. 

This thistle is the national flower of Scotland, adopted, so the 
story goes, because it frustrated the capture of that country by the 
Danes a thousand years and more ago. While stealing upon a~™ 
Scotch town after night, one of the Danes stepped on a thistle and 
cried out with pain. His ery awakened the Scots and saved their 
town. Beneath the Scettish emblem which bears the thistle there 
is often placed the motto: ‘‘No one injures me with impunity.’”’ 

In England the thistle was also sacred to Thor the god of 
thunder, and was supposed to be colored by the lightning. To 
dream of being surrounded by it was considered a propitious sign, 
foretelling that the person so dreaming would soon receive some 
pleasing news. ; 


166 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


133, Carpuus ALTIssImUS.L. Tall Thistle. Roadside Thistle. (B. N. 2.) 


Stem stout, branched, woolly, leafy to the heads, 3-10 feet high; 
leaves undivided, ovate-oblong or oblong-lanceolate, sessile, densely white 
woolly beneath, the margins with bristle-pointed teeth or cut-lobes, the 
lower 8-10 inches long, the upper narrower and smaller. Heads solitary 
at the ends of the branches, 2 inches wide; outer bracts of the involucre 
ovate, tipped with short spines and with a more or less prominent 
glandular spot along its middle, the inner bracts not spine-tipped ; flowers 
light purple or pinkish. Achenes as in the preceding. 


Frequent along roadsides and borders of thickets, pastures, etc., 
in moist rich soil. July—Oct. Usually taller and less branched than 
the common thistle. Associated with the tall thistle or growing in 
similar places is the field thistle (C. discolor Muhl.) having the 
leaves deeply divided into lanceolate or linear segments, the wool 
on their under side much thicker and the glands of the involucral 
scales larger. Both specics are easily subdued by deep cutting or 
repeated mowing. 

The glands on the bracts of these thistles exude a sticky sub- 
stance which is very attractive to insects and which often serves to 
entrap and hold them until they perish. On different occasions 
in September the writer has found many dead flies, ants, harvest- 
men, small butterflies and small. black snout. beetles so held.* A 
large Searabid beetle (Huphoria sepulchralis Fab.) is also very 
common at these glands. Though too big to be captured, it always 
appears dazed as if intoxicated by the secretion. Here and there on 
the stems numerous brown plant lice may often be seen, arranged in 
rows, their beaks deeply inserted inthe grooves, their heads always 
towards the ground or base of the plant. The stem doubtless yields 
a sweetish sap agreeable to these aphids. In late autumn these tall 
thistles add a mite of color to many a woodland pasture, blooming 
as they do long after the more common thistles have ripened their 
achenes. One clump of these thistles was measured and found to 
be over 10 feet high, o’er-topping all the iron-weeds and the tallest 
of the actinomeris with which it grew. 


184. Carpuus aRvENSIS L. Canada Thistle. Creeping or Cursed Thistle. 
(P. IT. 1.) 

Stems slender, grooved, 1-8 feet high, branched above; leaves lance- 
olate or oblong, green both sides or somewhat downy beneath, sessile, 
deeply divided into very prickly lobed or toothed segments, the basal 
leaves 5-8 inches long. Heads small, 1 inch or less broad, very numerous; 
male and female heads on separate plants, the former globose, the latter 
smaller, oblong, bell-shaped with shorter corollas and more conspicuous 
pappus; outer bracts of involucre ovate, appressed, tipped with short, 


“See ‘‘Cnicus discolor as an Insect Trap’ in Can. Bnt., 1892, 310, 


WEEDS OF THE THISTLE FAMILY. 167 


prickly points, inner bracts longer, linear; flowers purple, pinkish or white. 
Achenes light brown, smooth, } inch long, tipped by a copious white 
pappus. (Fig. 126.) 
Frequent in dense patches in northern Indiana in woodland and 
other pastures, old fields and waste places, and along roadsides; 
¢ scarce or wanting in the southern coun- 
ties. June-Oct. This thistle has gained 
the reputation of being one of the worst 
of weed scourges which Europe has fur- 
nished us, but in Indiana is less trouble- 
some than the common thistle or fox-tail. 
Many other weeds, especially the teasel, 
tall thistle and bull nettle are mistaken 
for it. Usually it is first introduced into 
a new locality by the seeds, and then 
spreads rapialy wherever it can find a 
foothold. From other thistles it is best 
known by its deep running perennial 
rootstocks, more slender stems and 
small compact heads. (See Fig. 13, b.) 
From the rootstocks, which lie usually 
far below the ordinary depth of the fur- 
- rows, branches are being continually 
ee ak Showing, horizontal roots, sent to the surface, oftentimes through 
{After Dewey.) 3 feet and more of hard packed soil. 
These branches produce basal leaves the first year and flowering 
stems the second ; these stems, like those of other thistles, appearing 
to die after their seeds ripen, but only dying down to the under- 
ground stem. Wherever it occurs the numerous branches and root- 
leaves soon cover the ground, smothering out the grass and pre- 
venting stock from grazing near them on account of their many 
prickles. Like other perennial herbs it can only be destroyed by 
starving out or otherwise killing the underground stems. Rem- 
edies: mowing or deep hoe-cutting three times each season, in June, 
August and September, then salting or applying ecoal-oil or 
sulphuric acid; repeated salting and sheep grazing for 2 years. 
Jn fields cut the thistles when in full bloom as close to the ground 
as possible, then plow deeply and sow to millet or Hungarian grass, 
seeding heavily and harrowing; in September cut the hay, plow 
again and seed with rye; the next May plow under the rye and 
plant to corn or some hoed-crop. Short rotation and thorough 
cultivation of almost any crop with hoe will eventually eradicate 
the thistle. 


168 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Group B. 


Here belong those weeds among our Composite which have one 
or more rows of conspicuous yellow rays around the margin of the 
head of flowers. These ray-flowers are in most species pistillate 
and fertile, that is, producing seeds, though in some they are neutral 
and sterile. To the group belong our weeds known as golden-rods, 
elecampane, cup-plant, ox-eyes, cone-flowers, sunflowers, actino- 
meris, bur-marigolds and sheezeweed. 


185. Sonipaco caNnapENsis L. Canada Golden-rod. (DP. N. 3.) 

Stem stout, rough-hairy, 2-8 feet high; leaves alternate, lanceolate, 
rough above, 3-nerved, pointed, the lower ones sharply toothed and stalked, 
3-6 inches long, the upper sessile, entire. Heads very numerous on one 
side of the spreading recurved branches of a large terminal panicle; in- 
volucre oblong, its linear appressed bracts in several overlapping rows: 
flowers bright yellow, the rays short, 9-15 in a single row. Achenes cyl- 
indrical, glabrous; pappus of numerous rough, hair-like bristles. 

Abundant along fence-rows, roadsides and in old abandoned 
fields, especially in dry upland soil. Aug.—Nov. This is probably 
the mest common and widely distributed of the 30 or more golden- 
rods recorded from the State. All are among the most handsome 
of our autumn wild flowers, being for the most part wand plants 
with small densely clustered yellow heads. For the botanist they 
form a difficult. group, being separated mainly by the size of the 
heads, their arrangement in flower clusters, and by the texture 
and shape of the leaves.’ ‘‘Hardly 
has the ‘last rose of summer’ departed 
when the early golden-rod appears 
and its later sisters brighten even the 
November landscape. Simple, hardy, 
every-day flowers, they are full of 
sunshine and good cheer, adding 
brightness to the dusty wayside and 
joy to the common paths of life.’’ 

Associated with the Canada 
golden-rod and more often found on 
old half sterile slopes is the field 
golden-rod (8. nemoralis Ait., Fig. 
127.) 1-2 feet high, the stem and 
leaves thickly clothed with short ash- 
gray hairs, the lower leaves spoon- 
shaped and toothed, the upper oblong 
and entire; heads in a dense one-sided cluster, the flowers very 


Fig. 127. Field golden-rod. (After Watson.) 


WEEDS OF THE THISTLE FAMILY. 169 


bright yellow with 5-9 rays. (Fig. 10, g.) Both species are too 
handsome to be called weeds, but if their room is needed they can 
be easily killed out by repeated mowing or by fertilization and 
cultivation of the soil. 


186. EUTHAMIA GRAMINIFOLIA L. Swamp Golden-rod. Bushy or Fra- 
grant Golden-rod. (P. N. 3.) , 


Stem erect, glabrous, much branched, 2-4 feet high; leaves numerous, 
linear-lanceolate, 3-5 nerved, pointed, the margins and nerves minutely 
rough-hairy. Heads small, numerous, sessile in a flat-topped terminal 
cyme or cluster; involucre club-shaped, its bracts oblong, appressed, over- 
lapping, slightly viscid; flowers golden-yellow, the rays 12-20, disk-flowers 
8-12. Achene top-shaped, velvety-hairy. 

Very common in low moist grounds along borders of marshes 
and streams. July—Oct. From the golden-rods belonging to the 
genus Solidago this one is now separated by thé rays being more 
numerous than the disk-flowers and by the receptacle being min- 

“utely fringed, not closely pitted as there. The flat-topped flower 
cluster and narrow leaves also distinguish it from most of the 
others. It spreads both by long running rootstocks and seeds and, 
if left undisturbed, soon forms large patches and becomes trouble- 
some as a weed in damp hay meadows, being the most common of 
all golden-rods in low grounds. Since the roots are near the surface 
it can be easily destroyed by cultivation or shallow plowing and 
also by repeated mowings. 


137. INULA HELENIUM L. Elecampane. Horseheal. (P. I. 3.) 

Stems stout, tufted from large thick rocts, simple or few branched, 
densely hairy above, 2-6 feet high; basal leaves broadly oblong, 10-20 
inches long, 4-8 inches wide, long-stalked, rough 
above, woolly beneath ; stem leaves smaller, 
ovate, alternate, sessile or clasping, pointed. 
Heads few or solitary, terminal, 2-4 inches 
broad; involucre saucer-shaped the bracts over- 
lapping in several rows, the outer ones ovate, 
leaf-like; flowers yellow; rays numerous, linear, 
3-toothed. Achenes 4-sided, 4 inch long, glab- 
yous; pappus of rough, hair-like bristles. (Fig. 
128.) 


Frequent in old fields, rich open wood- 
lands, along roadsides and about old dwell- 
ings. June-Sept. Elecampane is a large, un- 
gainly rough looking weed which was for- 
merly grown for ornament or for medicine 
and has escaped in many places. It has been in use as a medicine 


Fig. 128. (After Millspaugh.) 


170 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 

since the time of Hippocrates, the root being slightly aromatic. 
tonic and expectorant:and at one time much used in dyspepsia and 
chronic coughs. When properly dried it brings 4 to 5 cents a 
pound. Remedies: deep and repeated cutting with hoe or spud. 


188. SILPHIUM PERFOLIATUM L, Cup-plant. Indian-cup. (P. N. 3.) 
Stem stout, 4-sided, branched above, 4-8 feet high; leaves opposite, 
thin, the upper eutire, broadly united at base to form a cup-shaped cavity 


about the stem; lower long-stalked, 

WZ cut-toothed, 6-15 inches long, 48 

AAS inches wide. Weads rather few, 2-3 

‘ ] inches wide, in a fiat-topped open clus- 

Qe, : / ter; receptacle flat, chaffy; involucre 

ARS saucer-shaped, the bracts broad, ovate; 
Y Al 


Pts, SQ 


flowers yellow, the 20-30 rays linear, 
fertile, toothed; the disk-flowers pistil- 
late but sterile, 5-toothed. Achenes 


yf’ esis : ( 
i: broad, flattened, 2-winged, notched at 
top; pappus none. (Fig. 129.) 
Common in low moist grounds 
along roadways, ditches, marshes, 
and especially banks of streams. 
July-Nept. A large coarse weed, 
the cups at base of leaves being a 
striking character. These are often 
filled with water in which many insects are drowned. Whether 
the weed is, like the pitcher plant, partly carnivorous, is as yet un- 
known. Remedies: deep cutting with hoe or spud. * 


Y 
Mf t/ 1 
Fig. 129. Ray-flower and chaffy bract above. 
(After Britton and Brown.) 


139. H&LicPsis scABRA Dunal. Rough 


Ox-eye. False Sunflower. (P. 
N. 3.) , 
Stem rough, simple or branehed 


above, 2-5 feet high; leaves opposite, 
ovate, pointed, sharply toothed, firm, 
rough on both sides, 2-5 inches long, 2 
inches wide, short-stalked. Heads term- 
inal, few or solitary, long-stalked, 2 
inches broad; receptacle convex, chaffy; 
involucre cup-shaped, its bracts oblong, 
in 2 or 8 rows; flowers yellow, the rays 
10 or more, fertile, 1 inch long. Achene 
thick, 4-angled; pappus crown-like of 
1-3 sharp teeth. (Fig. 130.) 


Commen in dry soil along fenee- 
rows, borders of thickets, roadsides, 
ete. July-Sept. The name Heliop- 


Fig. 130. Ray-flower, natural size; disk-flower 
and chaff. (After Britton and Brown.) 


~ 


WEEDS OF THE THISTLE FAMILY. 171 


sis means ‘‘like the sun’’ and was given on account of the close re- 
semblance to the sunflower from which the ox-eyes differ by having 
a more conical receptacle and by the withered ray-flowers being 
persistent upon the thicker, less flattened achenes, instead of 
falling off as in the sunflowers. The smooth ox-eye (H. helian- 
thoides L.) is almost as common as the rough one and is found in 
similar places. It has the leaves smooth and the teeth of pappus 
dull or wanting. Remedies: repeated mowing or deep cutting; 
abandoning fence rows and cultivating the ground. 


140. Ruppeckra HirTA Ju. Black-eyed Susan. Darkey-head. Yellow 
Daisy. (B. N. 2.) 

Stem simple or sparingly branched, rough-hairy, often in tufts, 1-4 
feet high; leaves thick, alternate, lanceolate or oblong, tapering, entire or 
few-toothed. Heads numerous, terminal, 2-4 inches broad, long-stalked ; 

‘dite receptacle conic with linear chaffy scales; 
involucre cup-shaped, its bracts rough-hairy, 
spreading, much shorier than the rays; disk 
globose, its flowers brownish-purple; rays 
10-20, orange. Achenes brown, 4-angled, 
3/16 inch long; pappus none. (Fig. 131.) 

Common along streams, roadsides, 
fence-rows, borders of thickets, ete. 
June-Oct. Appears to be both an an- 
nual and a biennial; in the former case 
lower, more simple stemmed and bloom- 
ing in late autumn; asa biennial, stouter, 
more branched and blossoming early. It 
is sometimes troublesome in hay fields, 

Fig. 131, (After Clark.) from which it may be removed by pull- 
ing, repeated mowing or thorough cultivation. In everybody’s 
garden, along the gravelly banks of roadsides and streams, it is, 
however, most prevalent. There in July and August it is one of 
the most showy of our Composite and is a favorite with every one; 
for then the banks : 

“Are gay with golden-rod, 
There blooming grasses nod, 
And sunflowers small and yellow turn ever to the sun; 
Quaint darkey-heads are there, 
And daisies wild and fair, 
In everybody's garden each flower’s the loveliest one.” 


Two other ‘‘cone-flowers’’ belonging to the genus Rudbeckia 
are common enough to be called weeds, though they occupy for the 
most part waste land. They are the thin-leaved cone-flower (R. 


172 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


iriloba L.) having the stem branched, 2-5 feet high, the lower leaves 
deeply 3-lobed or 3-divided, the disk egg-shaped, dark purple, the 
rays 8-12, deep yellow or orange, and the tall or green-headed cone- 
flower (R. laciniata L.) with the stem 3-12 feet high, the leaves 
divided into 3-7 toothed or lobed segments, the disk. oblong- - 
eylindric, greenish-yellow, and the rays, 6-10, bright yellow. The 
former grows in low moist meadows and the latter mostly in al- 
juvial soil along the dense shaded banks of streams. Both are easily 
killed by repeated mowing or deep cutting. ‘ 
141. HentantuHus pDEcAPETALUS L. Wild Sunflower. Thin-leaved Sun- 
flower. (P. N. 3.) 

Stem slender, glabrous, branched above, 2-5 feet high; leaves thin, 
ovate, pointed, sharply toothed, roughish above, the lower all opposite, 
slender-stalked, the upper alternate. Heads numerous, 2-3 inches broad; 
involucre cup-shaped, its bracts linear-lanceolate, pointed, spreading, often 
longer than the yellow disk; rays 8-15, light yellow. Achenes thick, 
somewhat flattened, glabrous; pappus of 2 awl-shaped awns. 

Frequent along streams, borders of thickets, etc., in moist rich 
soil. July—Sept. This is probably the most common and widely 
distributed of the 16 species of wild sunflowers recorded from the 
State. All are weeds in that they grow uncultivated in waste 
places, yet no one of them is a weed of the first or even the second 
class. All agree in having conspicuous yellow rays which are 
neutral, that is, without pistils or stamens, in having the receptacle 
chaffy, the chaff arising from beneath the tubular disk-flowers, and 
in the pappus being represented by only 2 or 4 short scales or awns. 
The ray-flowers exist only for the purpose of attracting insects to 
the less showy. fertile flowers of the disk, thus indicating a high 
type of division of labor in plant life. The leaves vary much in 
size, shape, position on the stem, smoothness, length of stalk, etc., 
and by these differences the species are mainly separated. In a 
few the disk-flowers are brown or purple and the receptacle flat, 
but in most kinds the disk is vellow and the receptacle convex. 
The géneric name, Helianthus, means sunflower and probably refers 
to the popular belief that these flowers turn or change position on 
the stalk so as to face the sun most of the time. This belief is set 
forth by Thompson in the lines: 

“The lofty follower of the sun, 
Sad when he sets, shuts up her yellow leaves, 


Drooping all night, and, when he warm returns, 
Points her enamoured bosom to his ray.” 


And Moore, describing its faithful constancy, says: 


WEEDS OF TI TIISTLE FAMILY. 173 


“The sunflower turms on her god when he sets 
The sanie look which she did when he rose.” 


Another reason for the name is that the flowers of the larger species 
have a fancied resemblance to the orb of day. 

The two best known species of sunflower, both of which grow 
wild in Indiana, are the common sunflower (H. annuus L.) and the 
Jerusalem artichoke (H. tuberosus L.). The former is often culti- 
vated in gardens where it sometimes reaches a height of 15 feet and 
a head diameter of a foot or more. ‘‘Its flowers yield honey and 
a yellow dye; its leaves fodder ; its seeds an oil and food, and its 
stalks a textile fabric.’’* In some parts of the west and south it is 
a troublesome weed, but in Indiana the wild plants are escapes from 
cultivation. In the southeastern part of the State sunflowers are 
raised extensively for the secd, the average yield of the crop being 
800 to 1,000 pounds per acre. Sulzer Bros. of Madison purchased 
in 1911, 100,000 pounds of the seed at 2 cents a pound. The seeds 
there grown are used mostly to feed cage birds, chickens, horses 
and other stcck. In Russia and other European countries the seeds 
are grown on a much more extensive scale for their oil, which is 
expressed and used on the table like olive oil and also for lighting 
and soap making. The residual oil cakes have a high nutritive 
value and are used for feeding stock. 

5 The Jerusalem artichoke or 
‘earth apple,’’ (Fig. 182), with 
its large rough lower opposite 
or upper alternate leaves, was 
extensively cultivated by the In- 
dians for its oblong edible tubers 
which are offshoots from the 
fleshy thickened rootstocks. The 
plant is at present often grown 
for these tubers which are fed 
to stock or are pickled and used 
as a condiment. In many places 
in the State it grows rankly as 
a weed in alluvial or moist rich 
soil, reaching a height of 6-12 
feet, and blooming 10 days or a 
Fig. 132. Flowering facut root and tubers; a, ray- fortnight later than its -allies. , 
flower; b, disk-flower; ¢, fruit. (After Watson.) Both it and other sunflowers, 
where too abundant, can be destroyed by cultivation, repeated 
mowing, or by deep cutting and free use of salt. 


*Britton and Brown, IIT, 422. 


174 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


142, VERBESINA ALTERNIFOLIA L. Winged Iron-weed. Yellow Iron-weed. 
Actinomeris. (P. N. 2.) 


Stem slender, simple or branched near the top, winged by the down- 
ward extensions of the ieaf margins, 4-9 feet high; leaves alternate or 
the lower opposite, oblong or lanceolate, pointed, toothed or entire, rough- 
ish both sides, sessile or short-stalked. Heads numerous in an open 
terminal cluster, 1-2 inches broad; receptacle convex, chaffy; involucre 
of a few lanceolate, deflexed bracts; disk globose, yellow; rays 2-10, 
yellow, drooping, 1 inch long. Achenes wedge-shaped, flattened, broadly 
winged; pappus of 2 diverging awns. (Fig. 133.) 


Common in the rich moist soil of lowland pastures and along 
the borders of streams. Aug.—Sept. 
Easily known by its winged stem, pale 
yellow rays, and loose arrangement of 
the achenes in the ripening heads. 
Spreading both by seeds and perennial 
roots, it often forms dense patches. 
The 30 or more loosely bunched disk- 
flowers are larger than those of most 
Composite and have an odor neither 
very strong nor pleasing, resembling 
somewhat that of the sunflower. It 
furnishes the yellow, the iron-weed the 
purple, and the everlasting the creamy 
white of a trinity of color which en- 


Fig. 138. Winged fruit with awns; disk |, . 
and tay-fowers on right. (After Britton livens in August the lowlands of many 


and Brown.) * 
a woodland pasture. Remedies: same 


as for iron-weed. 


143. Bipens Lavis L. Larger Bur-marigold. Brook Sunflower. (A. 
N. 2.) ; 

Stem erect or ascending, glabrous, branched, 1-2 feet high; leaves 
opposite, sessile, lanceolate, toothed, pointed, sometimes united at base 
about the stem. Heads numerous, short-stalked, erect, 1-2 inches broad; 
involucre cup-shaped, its outer bracts linear or oblong, longer than the 
ovate inner ones; rays 8-10, showy, golden yellow, 1 inch long. Achenes 
wedge-shaped, both their margins and the 24 slender, stiff awns of pap- 
pus downwardly barbed. 


Very common in low grounds about swamps, marshes, borders 
of brooks and ditches. July—Oct. Associated: with it, almost as 
common and probably only a variety, is the smaller or nodding 
hur-marigold (B. cernua LL.) having the heads nodding after flower- 
ing and the rays shorter, sometimes wanting. Both belong to the 
group having the achenes called ‘‘beggar-ticks’”’ or ‘‘pitch-forks”’ 


WEEDS OF THE THISTLE FAMILY. 175 


mentioned on a preceding: page. These two species are notable for 
their yellow ray-flowers which in August often cover acres of low- 
lands with a flood of golden glory, but are succeeded in November 
by myriads of the 2-pronged seeds which clutch the clothing of 
the hunter for a free ride to pastures new. Remedies: mowing be- 
fore the flowers open; drainage and thorough cultivation. 


I44. HELENIUM auTUMNALE LL. ' Sneezeweed. Swamp Sunflower. (P. 
Nw. 2) 

‘Stem rather stout, nearly smooth, narrowly winged, much branched 
above, 1-4 feet. high; leaves alternate, oblong or lanceolate, pointed, nar- 
rowed to the sessile base, few-toothed, 2-5 inches long. Heads numerous, 

<p about 1 inch broad, long-stalked; recep- 
Cy tS Wy & tacle convex, naked; involucre saucer- 
\e as 31) rg a wy shaped, its bracts linear, reflexed, densely 
12 \ i< ( : ree woolly; disk many-fiowered, yellow, glo- 
\ ANY ; iy bose; rays 10-18, drooping, bright yellow, 
IN | 


ZZ 


(as 
pistillate and fertile, 3-5 toothed or cleft. 
Achenes top-shaped, ribbed; pappus of 
5-8 ovate pointed scales. (Fig. 184.) 
Common in low moist grass-lands, 
borders of fields, swamps, roadsides, 
etc. Aug.—Oct. One of the most 
handsome of our  yellow-flowered 
Composite and, with the bur- 
marigolds and smartweed, competing 
for possession of many a swamp area. 
Remedies: drainage and cultivation; 
repeated mowings. 
Sneezeweed, when dried and pow- 
dered, causes violent sneezing when 
Fig. 134. (After Cheanut.) inhaled and is sometimes used in 
medicine to produce that effect. The heads are often sprinkled 
with bitter aromatic globules and the whole plant is more or less 
acrid and poisonous, especially to cattle, sheep and horses, which 
often die after eating it in quantity. Its symptoms are said to be 
an accelerated pulse, difficult breathing, staggering, extreme sensi- 
tiveness to touch and, if fatal, spasms and convulsions. 


Grovv C. 

In this group of Composite weeds the one to several rows of 
rays around the margin of the head are usually white, though some- 
times pinkish or bluish. Here belong the weeds known as asters, 
fleabanes or white-tops, yarrow, dog-fennel and ox-eye daisy. 


176 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


145. ASTER SALICIFoLIUS Lam. Willow Aster. (P. N. 2.) 

Stem erect, rather slender, very leafy, much branched, glabrous or 
hairy above, 2-5 feet high; leaves firm, alternate, lanceolate or willow- 
shaped, pointed, rough-margined, entire or few-toothed, sessile or slightly 
clasping. Heads numerous, % inch broad, in loose terminal clusters; re- 
ceptacle flat, pitted; involucre top-shaped, its bracts linear, green-tipped, 
appressed in 4 or 5 overlapping rows: disk-flowers many, yellow; rays 
nmnerous, bluish or violet, sometimes white, 4 inch long. Achenes flat- 
tened, minutely hairy; pappus of slender white bristles. 

Very common in low annually overflowed bottom lands of the | 
larger streams of the State, especially those which lig fallow for a 
season or two. Aug.—Oct. Associated with it in the lowlands, the 
two often forming a dense growth to the preclusion of other weeds, 
is a closely allied form, the tall white or panicled aster (A. panicu- 
latus Lam.) with thinner smoother leaves and chiefly white rays. 
They are but two of the 30 species of asters recorded from the 
State, all of them being distinctively flowers of autumn. They begin 
blooming the last of August and as late as December Ist can often 
be found in some protected nook, the last wild flowers of the dying 
year. The ray-flowers of these wild asters are in a single row and 
fertile. In color they vary from a pure white to a deep blue; a few 
are of a pinkish hue, but none are red or yellow. The disk-flowers, 
however, are yellow, but turn purplish-brown or red with age, while 
the pappus is usually a single row of hair-like bristles. ‘Those which 
live in woods and shaded places have broad and heart-shaped leaves 
while those of the fields and open places produce leaves that are 
slender or even awl-shaped. The name Aster, given them by Lin- 
neus in 1753, means a star, the numerous rays giving them a star- 
like appearance. Longfellow refers to their naming in the following 
lines; 

“Spake full well, in language quaint and olden, 
One who dwelleth by the castled Rhine, 
When he called the flowers, so blue and golden, 

Stars, that in earth’s firmament do shine.” 


He probably had in mind the New England aster (A. nopa-anglia 
L.), one of our largest and most handsome species, which is also 
very common in moist open grounds. It grows 2-8 feet high, is 
rough-hairy and has very numerous lanceolate clasping leaves and 
heads 1-2 inches wide, each with-40 or more long violet purple 
rays. It occurs usually in large clumps, often along roadsides, 
and is a striking member of our autumn flora. All these lowland 
asters can be destroyed by repeated mowings or thorough culti: 
vation. s 


WEEDS OF THE THISTLE FAMILY. 177 


146. ASTER ERIcoipES L. White Heath Aster. Frost-weed Aster. Steel- 
weed. (P. N. 1.) 


Stem glabrous, or (in the variety pilosus) rough-hairy, bushy or much 
branched, 1-3 feet high; leaves firm or rigid, the basal ones spoon-shaped, 
toothed, narrowed into margined stalks; upper ones linear-lanceolate, en- 
tire, gradually becoming short awl-shaped. Heads very numerous, 3 inch 
broad; involucre bell-shaped, its bracts linear, leathery, abruptly pointed, 
overlapping in about 3 rows; rays 15-25, white or pink tinged; disk often 
reddish-purple. (Fig. 135.) 

Abundant in southern Indiana in dry soil, especially on the 
slopes of partly es or abandoned fields and pastures; less fre- 
quent northward. Sept.Nov. Our 
most common upland aster, often 
taking complete possession of fallow 
fields, commons and old pastures and 
blooming until December Ist or 
later. The old stems are somewhat 
woody and the smaller branches and 
flowers are borne along one side of 
the larger ones. The hairy variety 
is more common than the type. 
Remedies: increased fertilization 
and thorough cultivation; crowding 
out with clover; sheep-grazing in 
Fig. 135. Diskower and leaf. (After Britton Pastures. 

and Brown.) The heart-leaved or blue wood 
aster (A. cordtfolius L.) is our next most common upland form, 
occurring in dry coarse soils along roadsides, fence rows and open 
woods. .It has broad, rough, thin, heart-shaped, pointed, sharply 
toothed. leaves and numerous small heads with 10-20 violet or blue 
rays. Remedies the same. 


147. EsiGeRoN ANNUUS L. White-top. Daisy Fleabane. Sweet Scabious. 
(A. N. 1.) 

Stem erect, branched above, clothed with spreading hairs, 2-5 feet 
high; leaves thin, lower and basal ones ovate or lanceolate, stalked, 
coarsely toothed, 2-6 inches long ; upper ones oblong, lanceolate or linear, 
pointed, sharply toothed at middle or entire. Heads numerous, 3 inch 
broad, short-staiked; receptacle flat, hairy; involucre cup-shaped, its 
bracts narrow, in but one or two rows, nearly equal, rough-hairy; disk- 
flowers-many, yellow; rays 40-70, in 2 or more rows, linear, white or 
purplish, pistillate, Achenes flattened; pappus double, the inner a row 
of slender fragile, tawny bristles which fall away, the outer of partly 
united slender scales. (Fig. 186.) 


Very common in clover and timothy fields, along fence-rows and 
roadsides. May-Noy, Assocjated with jt is the slender daisy flea- 
#12] 


178 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


bane (E. ramosus Walt.), distinguished by its smaller size, rougher 
or more hairy stem, narrower nearly entire leaves and smaller, 
longer rayed heads of flowers. Both are 
commonly known as ‘‘white-top’’ and are 
not separated by the average farmer. 
They are the most pernicious weeds with 
which the Indiana growers of timothy or 
clover have to contend; often occurring 
as winter annuals, producing a spreading 
tuft of coarsely toothed leaves from buried 
seeds in autumn, and blossoming the next 
May or early June. In elover fields these 
winter annuals are especially troublesome 
to the first crop, after the field has been 
in corn and grain for a year or two, being 
somewhat choked out by the heavier 
growth of succeeding years. In permanent 
timothy meadows many of the seeds ripen 
before the timothy is cut so that they are 
there a continuous nuisance. Remedies: cutting hay early before 
the white-top gets in full bloom; in timothy turning in a floek of 
sheep for a few days before mowing, as they eat the weed and leave 
the hay: if not too abundant, pulling from meadows while in blos- 
som; examining the young clover ficlds in autumn, and if badly 
infested plowing up for wheat or for spring cultivation. 

The Philadelphia fleabane (EF. philadelphicus L.) is quite com- 
mon in low damp grass-lands in southern Indiana. It is a perennial, 
1-3 feet high, its numerous heads with 100-150 long light rose- 
purple rays. Remedies: drainage and cultivation or repeated mow- 
ings. From the asters the fleabanes way be easily told by having 
the bracts in only 1 or 2 rows while the more slender ray-flowers 
are usually in 2 or more rows. 


GUIS S\ * 
Fig. 186. (After Clark.) 


148. ACHILLEA MILLEFOLIUM L. Yarrow. Milfoil. (P. I. 2.) 


Stem erect, simple or branched above, glabrous or somewhat hairy, 
1-3 feet high; leaves alternate, all finely divided or dissected into narrow 
segments, those of the stem sessile. Heads small, numerous in a large 
compound flat-topped cluster; involucre egg-shaped, its bracts oblong, 
hairy, in a few overlapping rows; disk-flowers whitish, fertile; rays 4-6, 
white or pinkish. Achenes gray, wedge-shaped, about .1/12 inch long; 
pappus none. (Fig. 137.) 


Common in old fields, meadows, pastures and along roadsides. 
June—-Oct. An ill-smelling homely weed which thrives as well by 
the side of the road in a hard dry soil and dust-ladén air as in 


WEEDS OF THE THISTLE FAMILY. "479 


moist spots at the edges of ponds or lakes. The odor is strong and 
the taste sharp and bitter. When eaten by cows it imparts its taste 
and odor to milk and butter. Often 
troublesome in meadows but readily 
destroyed by pulling, repeated 
mowing while in blossom or thor- 
ough cultivation. 

In medicine it is used as a stim- 
ulant and tonic, especially for blad- 
der troubles. The name Achillea is 
said to have been given the genus 
because Achilles used it in the Tro- 
jan war to Heal the wounds of his 
soldiers. If gathered for sale the 
entire plant should be collected when 
in flower and carefully dried, the 
coarser stems being rejected. The 
price ranges from 2 to 5 cents a 


fee ong ‘ne 
: ae The common name milfoil refers 

to its finely cut leaves. As some clovers with three leaflets are tre- 
foils and the five finger, cinquefoil, so the yarrow is milfoil or plant 
of a myriad leaflets. In England it is said to be-used as a love 
charm by maidens who pluck the plant from the grave of a young 
man, meanwhile repeating the stanza: . 

“Yarrow, sweet yarrow, the first that I have found, 

In the name of my beloved I pluck thee from the ground; 


As Jesus loved sweet Mary and took her for His dear, 
So in a dream this night I hope my true love will appear.” 


When carried about the person it was thought to drive away fear 
and was therefore worn in time of danger. 


149. ANrTHEMIS coTULA L. Dog-fennel. Mayweed. (A. I. 1.) 

Stem much branched, glabrous, glandular, ill-smelling, 6-20 inches 
high; leaves two or three times divided into narrow, almost thread-like, 
pointed segments. Heads numerous, on long leafless stems at the ends of 
the branches; involucre cup-shaped, its bracts oblong, appressed, over- 
lapping in several rows, their margins whitish; re¢eptacle oblong, conical, 
chatfy at top, the chaff bristly; disk-flowers numerous, fertile, yellow; 
rays 10-18, white, neutral, 3-toothed, reflexed when old. Achenes top- 
shaped, dirty yellow, 1/12 inch long, usually with 8-10 lengthwise rows 
of wart-like tubercles; pappus none. (Fig. 138.) 


Abundant in barnyards, lanes, commons of towns and along 
paths and roadsides. June—Nov. Jt is a vile, stinking, vet, with its 


i 


t 
180 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


daisy-like heads, a handsome weed, flourishing for the most part 
in dry, much compacted soils along pasture pathways and in 
country barnyards where men and hogs and cattle are wont to 
travel or congregate. Cow-weed would he 
a more appropriate name than dog-weed or 
dog-fennel, for it grows best about those 
spots where kine gather and ruminate. The 
juice is acrid and often poisons the skin 
when the plant is freely handled. Each 
year it springs up and holds its own, star- 
‘ ring the margins of the pathways with the 
yellow crowns and white rays. Seraping 
the mud from the swine which hurry past, 
trampled many times by slow-moving cows, 
though mud-bedaubed or broken in stem 
it succeeds in ripening its seeds and 
perpetuating its kind upon the face of 
earth. An alien from the byways of 
Europe, it triumphs where many of our 
native weeds would fail, mainly by its 
properties of perseverance and stubborn- 

Fig. 138. (After Vasey.) ness of spirit. Its seeds are often found 
mixed with those of clover or grass. Remedies: mowing roadsides 
and barnyards twice each year before the flowers appear; in fields, 
mowing or burning the mature plants; clean seeding and thorough 
cultivation. 


150. CHRYSANTHEMUM LEUCANTHEMUM L. Ox-eye Daisy. White Daisy. 
White-weed. (P. I. 1.) 

Stems erect or ascending, simple or few branched, often several from 
a single root, 1-2 feet high; basal leaves oblong or spoon-shaped, coarsely 
toothed or cut-lobed, narrowed into slender stalks; stem leaves alternate, 
sessile or partly clasping, linear or oblong, deeply cut-toothed or entire. 
Heads few or solitary at the ends of the stem or branches, 1-2 inches 
broad, on long leafiess stalks; receptacle flat, naked; involucre saucer- 
shaped, its bracts oblong, appressed, in several overlapping rows, their 
edges brownish; disk-flowers numerous, yellow, fertile; rays 20-30, white, 
spreading. Achenes gray or black, club-shaped, 1/12 inch long, angled 
or ribbed; pappus none. (Fig. 139.) 


Common in southern Indiana in old meadows, fields and along 
roadsides, usually in poor dry upland soil; less frequent north- 
ward. May—Oct. One of the most handsome and popular of our 
Composite: yet, where it gets a good start, one of the worst of weeds. 
In many of the eastern States it takes almost complete possession 


WEEDS OF THE THISTLE FAMILY. 181 


of the pastures, rendering them quite white when the plant is in 
blossom. It icace by the seeds, which are distributed in hay, 
manure, and various farm seeds, and also, when 
started in any spot, by short offshoots from the 
perennial rootstocks, which must be killed be- 
fore the plant can be wholly eradicated. In 
meadows it is a rank and aggressive weed soon 
choking out the grasses, yet experiments have 
proven that as far as the chemical composition is 
concerned, the ox-eye daisy is fully the equal ot 
timothy hay in food constituents. However, 
digestibility and the liking of live stock for it 
were not taken into account. Cutting the hay 
early and thus preventing the maturity of the 
daisy seeds is one of the best methods of clear- 
ing it out of meadows. At least 10 days are 
necessary after the blossoms open for the seeds 
to mature so that they will germinate. If the 
hay be cut during this period reseeding is pre- 
vented and many of the rootstocks die. As the 
Fig. 139. (After Shaw.) plant is shallow-rooted, fields and meadows can 
be readily cleaned of it by plowing, thorough cultivation and short 
rotation of crops. In permanent pastures its eradication is a much 
more serious problem, about the only remedies being repeated mow- 
ings, or grazing closely with sheep. Farmers not now troubled with 
the weed should be on the especial look-out for it, and isolated 
plants which appear in a new place should be quickly dug or 
pulled. : 

On account of its beauty the ox-eye daisy is often cultivated by 
florists and is much used in boquets and for decorations. Instances 
are on record where its spread has been traced to the throwing 
away of wilted flowers in which the seeds were almost ripe. With 
its conspicuous white rays to attract from far and wide bees and 
other insects to aid in the fertilization of its numerous and closely 
packed disk-flowers it is one of the highest of plants. The asters, 
the fleabanes, the dog-fennel and the ox-eye daisy, all have the ray- 
flowers thus differing in hue from the central.florets and, as Grant 
Allen has well said, form a group ‘‘of the commonest, most 
numerous and most successful of plants. They really stand to all 
other plants in the same relation as man stands toward other ani. 
mals.’’ It is well fitting, therefore, that this weed book should end 
with these, the highest and most successful of weeds among the 
great kingdom of plants. 


A List of the More Important Books and Papers Used 
in the Preparation of This Weed Book. 


ATKINSON, GEO. F.—“A College Text Book of Botany.”—1905. 


BLATCHLEY, W. S.—‘‘A Catalogue of the Uncultivated Ferns and Flow- 
ering Plants of Vigo Co., Ind.”—-From the 21st Ann. Rep. Ind. 
Dept. Geol. and Nat. Resources, 1896. 


BRITTON, N. L. & BROWN, ADDISON.—“An Illustrated Flora of the 
Northern United States and Canada.”—1896-1898. 


CHESNUT, V. K.—“Thirty Poisonous Plants of the United States.”— 
Farm. Bull. No. 86, U. S. Dept. Agr., 1898. 


CLARK, GEO. H. and FLETCHER, JAS.—“Farm Weeds. of Canada.”— 
1906. 


CLARK, GEO, H.—“Report of the Seed Conmissioner of the Dominion 
of Canada.”—1911. 


COULTER, JOHN M.—“Plant Structures.”—1900. 


COULTER, STANLEY.—“A Catalogue of the Flowering Plants and of 
the Ferns and their Allies Indigenous to Indiana.”—From the 24th 
Ann. Rep. Ind. Dept. Geol. and Nat. Resources, 1899. 


DARLINGTON, WM.—‘Agricultural Botany.”—1847. 


DEWEY, L. H.—‘‘Weeds and How to Kill Them.”—Farm. Bull. No. 28, 
U. S. Dept. Agr., 1905. 


GRAY, ASA.—“Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States.”— 
Sixth Edition, 1889. . 


HALSTED, BYRON D.—‘Preliminary List of the Weeds of Iowa.”— 
Bull. Bot. Dept. State Agr. Coll., Ames, Ia., 1888. 


HENKEL, ALICE.—“Weeds Used in Medicine.’—Farm. Bull. No. 188, 
U. S. Dept. Agr., 1904. 


MACMILLAN, CONWAY.—“Minnesota Plant Life.”—1899. 


SELBY, A. D.—A Second Ohio Weed Manual.”—Bull. 175, Ohio Agr. 
Exp. Sta., 1906. 


SHAW, THOS.—‘Weeds and How to Eradicate Them.”—1911. 


VASEY, GEO.—‘Weeds of Agriculture.”—Reps. of Botanist in Reps. U. 
S. Comm. of Agr., 1886, ’87, ’88. 


(182) 


Glossary of Terms Used in Text. 


achene.—A one-seeded fruit having the wall of the seed-vessel tightly 
fitting around the seed. 

Acute—Sharp pointed. 

Acuminate——Gradually tapering to a point. 

Alternate-—See p. 34. 

Anther.—The pollen-bearing part of the stamen. 

Apetalous.—Without petals. 

Appressed.—Lying closely against the stem or other organ. 

Ascending.—See. p. 33. 

Awn-—A slender bristle-like organ. 

Avril—The angle where the leaf meets the stem. 

Avtllary—Borne in an axil. 


Biennial.—See p. 18. 

Berry.—See p. 41. 

Bract.—A swall leaf which. surrounds or protects a flower. 
Bulh—aAn underground bud with fleshy scales. 
Buibous.—Bearing bulbs; springing from a bulb. 


Calyz.—-See p. 35. 

Capsule.—See p. 42. 

Carpel.—A modified leaf which forms part or all of an ovary. 
Caryopsis.—See p. 42. 

-Chaff—Thin dry scales. 

Chlorophyll.The green coloring matter of plants. yi 
Clefi—Cut about half way to midrib. 
Cordate.—Heart-shaped. 

Corolla.See p. 36. 

Corymb.—See p. 40. 

Cotyledon.—A rudimentary leaf of the embryo. | 
Crenate.—Scalloped ; with rounded teeth. 

Culm.—The stem of grasses and sedges. 

Cyme.—See p. 41. 


Decumbent.—Having the base prostrate, the apex rising. 
Decurrent.—See p. 35. 

Deflexed.—-Turned abruptly downward. 
Dehiscent.—Opening to emit the contents. 
Dentate.—Toothed. 

Diffiuse—Loosely spreading. 

Dicecious.—See p. 38. 

Discoid.—Composed only of tubular flowers. 
Disk.—The head of tubular flowers in Composite. 
Dissected.—Divided into many segments or lobes. 
Distinct.—All separate, one from another. 


(188) 


184 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Divided.—Cleft to the midrib; compound. 
Drupe.—See p. 41. 


Embryo.—A rudimentary plant in the seed. 

Endogen.—See pp. 32, 44. 

Eaxogen.—See pp. 33, 44. 

Exserted.—Protruding out of, as the stamens out of the corolla. 


Fertile-—Bearing seed. 

Fertilization-—The mingling of the contents of a male and female cell; 
application of plant food to soils. 

Filament.—The stalk of an anther. 

Follicle.—See p. 42. 

Free.—Separate from all other organs or parts. 

Frutt.—See p. 41. 


Gamopetalous—Having the petals more or less united. 
Glabrows.—Devoid of hairs. 

Gland.—A cell or group of cells which exudes a liquid. 
Globose.—Spherical or nearly so. 

Glume.—The scaly bracts of the spikelets of grasses and sedges. 


Hastate—Arrow-shaped with the basal lobes extending straight outward. 
Head.—See. p. 40. 

Herb.See p. 32. 

Ferbaceous.—Leaf-like; herb-like. 


Imperfect.—¥ lowers with either stamens or pistils, not with both. 

Indehiscent.—Not opening. 

Inferior.—See p. 39. 

Infleccd.—Bent abruptly inward. 

Inflorescence.—The mode of arrangement of flowers on the stem. 

Involucre.—A circle of bracts beneath a flower or flower cluster. 

Irregular.—A_ flower in which one or more of the petals or sepals are 
unlike the others. 


Ianceolate.—Much longer than broad and tapering to a point; lance-shaped. 

Leaflet—One of the divisions of a compound leaf. 

Lequme.—A pod; a simple dry fruit, splitting along both sides. 

Lens-shaped.—Having both sides curved; or with the form of a double 
convex lens, 

Linear.—Blongate and narrow with sides nearly parallel. 

Lobed.—Deeply cleft or divided. 

Loment.—A jointed pod, constricted between the seeds. 


Midrib.—The central vein or rib of a leaf. 

Monodelphous—United in one set. 

Moneecious.—Having the stamens and pistils in different flowers on the 
same plant. 


Naked.—Lacking both calyx and corolla. 
Nut.-A one-seeded fruit with a hard shell which does not split when 
ripe, 


GLOSSARY OF TERMS USED IN TEX. 185 


Oblong.—Longér than broad with the sides nearly parallel. 
Obovate.—Ovate with the broad end outtward; inversely ovate. 
Obtuse.—Blunt or rounded. 

Orbicular.—Nearly circular in outline. 

Ovary.—See p. 39. 

Ovate.—Egg-shaped. 

Ovoid.—Same as ovate. 

Orule.—A minute or unripe seed. 


Panicle.—See p. 41. 

Panicled.—Arranged in a_patiicle. 

Pappus.—The bristles, awns, teeth, ete., borne on the tops of the achenes 
of Composite and aiding in their distribution. 

Parasitic.—Growing upon other plants and absorbing nourishment there- 
from. 

Parted—Deeply cleft. 

Pcduncie.—The stalk: of a flower. 

Pellucid.—Admitting the passage of light; translucent. 

Terfect.—Flowers with both stamens and pistils. 

Perianth—Having the calyx and corolla so similar as not to be readily 
distinguished. 

Fersistent—Remaining on the plant until withered or after growth has 
ceased. 

Petal.—One of the parts of the corolla. 

Petiolc—rThe stalk of a leaf. 

Pinnate—Leaves divided into leaflets along a common axis. 

Pistil—See p. 38. 

Pistillate.-—Possessing pistils. 

Plumose.—Feather-like. 

Pollen.—The male fertilizing grains borne by the stamens. 

Polypetalous—With separate petals. 

Pubescent— Bearing hairs. 

Punctate—Marked with translucent dots. 


Raceme.—See p. 40. 

Ray.—The fiat strap-shaped corolla of a Composite flower. 

Receptacle-——The end of the flower stalk bearing the floral organs or 
flowers. 

Reeurved.—Curved backwards. 

Rootstock—An underground stem with buds. 

Rosette—One or more circles of leaves lying flat on the ground. 

Rugose—Wrinkled. 


Sae—A pouch or cavity as of anthers or embryo. 
Scale.—A minute leaf. 

Scealloped.—With rounded teeth. 
Sensitire—Closing or folding when touched. 
Sepal.—One of the parts of the calyx. 
Sessile—Without a stalk. 

Siliquc.—See p. 42. 

Spike.—An elongated cluster of sessile blossoms. 


186 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Spikelet.—A little spike. 

Spreading.—Nearly prostrate on the ground. 
Stamen.—See. p. 37. 

Sterile.—Without seeds or spores. 

Stigma.—See p. 39. 

Stipules —Appendages borne at the base of the leaf stalk. 
Stipulate—Bearing stipules. © 

Style.—The narrowed top of the ovary. 
Succulent—Soft and juicy; fleshy. 

Superior.---Said of the ovary when free from calyx. 
Suture.—A’' line of splitting or opening. 


Terminal.—Borne on the end of the stem or branch. 
Terete.—Circular in cross section. 

Truncate.—Cut square off. 

Tuber—A short thick underground stem. 
Tubercle—A wart-like grain or projection. 


Gmbel.—See p. 41. 
Umbellet.—A small or secondary umbel. 
Utricle-—An achene or one-seeded fruit with a loose outer covering. 


Whorl—A circle of three or more leaves or other organs arising from 
the same level. 
Wing—A thin expansion of a seed or stem. 


Index, 


Page 

Actinomeris ..... 0... 00... cee eee een si nendias Xe eiiagatahin sea.de tore Wile ee wea ea aaene 174 
Amaranth Family, weeds of......... 0. ccc cece ee cee eee e teen enone 72 
ANNUAL] Weeds a0 cra agus dade Ee Reem NER OH TeW Me TER eRe Teed oes 17 
ATtLChOKe; SErisaleMis 5.0. assseeadiewedue wana dia apne dae nied Aip: ouelscgowaobiaaerelnelens 173 
RS CIE as in eine mvc rine carci a aca dp taegy eos ea dale Hd hat ape OSE MRA ae NL Ree 17¢ 
Barley, Wildsais suv cenessagawse ee (Nee RENN S FORE OR ARR SEES ‘ 
Barnyard SYrasS....... 0... eee eee Sr snc ase este spn NGC esc sicne Ss Saeco ea cee 52 
© ENTE ASS shies sina Sven ea hese cg ha dete ca sacar ced wR ceceecdls naa AKER 51 
Beggars! WCCsse ses coe sie aargavne anaes Sibsnianey outed alaearine gig Sarerogerow Neusat 113 
Beggar-ticks: sasccsevecs ea eu cae A aeghiers Reon Ca ARS Se ae ee 160 
Bell-flower Family, weeds of... .. 2.0... ccc cece eee tee eee te tee cs 140 
BBV STM LAT WOM ass wissecss sayin issn cake csi ce adeno car wa tina bec avian olde aaa ah hneaaNanla ease WS 18 
Bindweed,, blacks: iscesedess cde ea conseds sh ree ea ie tweeaweseay acer 68 
DAC ssc cache tee esas an ae POSE a aR eee ORs 108 

Birds as weed-seed de@StroyerS..... 6... cece eee eee cette eens 25 
Bittersweet: sicceaieag rae decauce wea ate marie Moe Aa ee GS ee aE 127 
Blackberty; Wild) soc asaceestege genta gue aunyeneesed ere aa me Races 86 
RTA CI“EH ECL ES UISOTR: csc guaniersnoesiocyies aria auavav ooscedatannchudiie sanaohc dda aectow avaiigaees aie ansaiecelsepia punisaaae 171 
TBIWG: DUP sess saswnangged weggiacds agement Qin aheud dsa deen ede teenie decent e Gri atenoeraighee a thn ee 114 
Blueweed! sscisucveewes ch axaiae eevee wer egewecsdegiwenpaeenme bie keeles 115 
BONCSCC: eeecs scsce: sd aontaceis aretece YARRA AMAR see es HSE RTANS 156 
Borage Family, weeds of....... 0.0. ccc cece cence eta e cee en cee eenenes 112 
BOUNCING DO si: oss. -ssiss seesecsaacyanal wi wee Siaig pw We eee earn a aerere Geman orale 79 
Brier; COMMOMiss sever dase nse dose New LeeR ed eae Bee eRe ee SS 86 
BVO OUTSC GE? i ssciice. octet dca cesgugiiet sce aceue co sannsensran 95 GOR RR ed NRE AR ORAS MOA OUS E 51 
MET CI OF» eds hig neers ete sarchiah Haare ah alien SuchandetvAe aad evan dananas Geb ea ualiousn ates Grain augers 1387 
Buckwheat, climbing false.... 2.2... ce ce eee te eee eens 68 
Wild 22a dct ances ey ee noses ees Maes enao erate ae 68 

Buckwheat Family, weeds of. ...... 2... ce cece een ec e ee ee nee teens 63 
BU GEA O=DU I ieserocertiaws sarie le ssarthert eeesSrote Giwne wrfote tie A ea aR L ec an AUIS A ceed ee Rade avea 126 
Bullnetile: cassennendca ae Mase wwe s Gealwaue nana eueigg eae awaonsdianee mae 125 
PULGOCIE: cicsnaiy duicsrinasadane tients Mabie GOSS Dw ae TOES OS Owe DER aera eeRS 163 
DUTESEASS aio tach apo.s ava-ce Bled atnay wa a Den eldees dunner oaaleravetna dds SA SS Oe ee 54 
BUPSCEA sso cise Gicse a shasta caste eisai aisica sa tate ange ge aan ISSA ava Nw ENS Weary S Uanstenypcet sand Imdationeae 114 
Butter and, 6288... cca seese seg esd Sac dbe cer ehne Paes He Mee mews 131 
Buttercup Family, weeds 0f..... 0.6... ccc ce cece eee eee teens 80 
Butterfly-weed 0.0... 0.0 cece ccc cee ee eee eee e rene nee n eae 105 
Butterweed) +<siex pox wheres aeee a akiers Bese Nai eee ds He Ang RRS 158 
Canad a® thistle: os. acc n necks. wo Meee tees 4 Ses ERE we Ee Agee readies 166 
Carpet-Weed ...... cece ccc ce eee eee teen nee e eee eet ee ee tnanees 76 
Carrot Family, weeds of. .... 2... ccc cee cece cere eee een ene tee eens 100 
Carrot, Wild ccessiccwc kes cna awe ees ae EET Baa RE HEGRE pee Gore eee 101 
Catchfly, night-flowering 0.0... . 6. ce cece eee eee eee tenner teens 79 
STBQDY jancist eens. cesiadarec aigeahe era oanecarabcre wks ibaa adlp bilo sea Ine 78 
Catnip: ...c0cces n. oeates ae owt a iidoesteis Sioars atainer wl Sena ane emeh iaeeerinalansn als 118 
Charlock schaglsshabigs Sob udeqtn snacerdeacueunshaycerste Ae ACS ANON SUG RAe ai RNS NERA EAN: s 83 


188 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


% Page 

CHeAt ian cwntecapavacidaen aes Satan aes sath hicieron re 5B 
CHESS xceace eat hs a hes os ne Gb cceia am eadre EAE aise oe dae ee we Soe abealeca ads 55 
Chickweed, common ...........eeeeeeee Wiese Valin cides Beas caters ages neta 80 
CHLCORY, jos. siete atic Fo ah pew sed asain acne DA Mie Sg eis Bt oR sresons es 143 
Cinquefoil, ComMON ...... 6. ce eee eee tenet eee n en tenes 87 
TOUSD visscccedys ows cee tee ea dees eee Pe tae ee eH eee e es 88 

COCKIODIE «cca edaveses diseie aiisehe wae eared Shes TO MORAG CRM SEE FS .... 151, 152 
GOGKIGS 6.0). cig i aeae ees i as Gatun lesa lAbalevey's tuucaycateauan’ sau DaUS A ROS 78, 79 
Cone-flower, green-headed ......... cece cece cere ee eee nee teen eeeee 172 
thin-leaved ina iccceanccwe ve cd wer ee wale ied ers ea etais Hew aoe 171 

Corn gromwell ...........- Peacg iudgyh erie ARR SESE CARAS HEE YET Geass 114 
COU Ghz eT ASS) oops eciees is Ae aed ace, wey Rao tak i heal ig to gen evo te ie Beas eecec eee 56 
Cowbane, spotted 0.0... .. cc cece cece eee cere tenn tenn e ener re eenenes 103 
COW PEESTIP 2.00 .. cacic oaed ine ween sees ss Suess aee ene eeu gehen Rem De 102 
CrAD-BTASS 6. chi242 cee Aad Hae eae Mee AoA Ee eae ets 52 
Crowfoot Family, weeds Of ....... 0. ccc cece ce eee een eee e renee 80 
Cup plant. is0ig-ss- aia ies auawa seins ea Mb DER Oe Cee tee Vere eee oes 170 
DANG 4 see ei iecs os SS Cas Be Pe Ow Te AMEE SPN E TER Ota w ad oe ee gs 144 
TDAPIRS YAO aici 35a. ieeatidia ie.8 eccad ck. suse: Bod vay biaerae ecattausr-d esarguce ca Nt OSM SRS RNR SS 171 
Ded Nettle: 16. ciciyucos Ghee aaa outy cae tee WON Dat A Wott a Wales. cae Gane 121 
DOCK cer ecordhs 54Gtue yditend sore daveae musediaw Sake naerne Sane Marden Oe aS 64 
Dodder Family; weeds:0f)00 sos000 :2s06s sce ces eases saess HERE ae eee 110 
Dogbane Family, weeds of....... 0... cece ee cece cere ce ee te ee eee tenes 104 
Dow ennel: | owen seaiew.e saa dewaeh thaet tea een ye SG ta Meee eB inere os 161, 179 
AGIECAM PANG! secsreie's: eae ceue ¢ Ha stele b's Gee Hares wea Ae Oo eo eee eae .. 169 
Evening primrose, COMMON.......... 6... eee eee eee ce te teen ens 99 
Inverlasting, fragrant Or COMMON.......... 6. cee ee eee eee eee eee e eee 159 
. PlANtAID-16AE os ee de dares eee eee es daeew wee ypu euteeie 159 
Families of weeds, keyS tO... .. 0... cece cece ce er eee eee eee 43, 45, 47 
Figwort. Family, weeds Of.sis.c0scccesteeseerceticevasersoeres seas. 129 
SPUR OE: SIUS SS ois cia deseussee witecd Goats ie We Wala wcasles Havea ear emaiand eg Guanes 8D Guauae asin ded eee Bee 52 
TIPO W COG: (save isin arieincdst 4 sosagede catradiise With ini neal oak goecara ts gle aha weaken ew Oa 163 
Wi VGAN SOT cdi a006 iad ca sla aaa daw elerd whan Ox ecint pee alae a arsiada sew agen « 87 
Hleabane: sos on sons eae oa oe dew HET Laee eA es She eas ee Ree Rea 177, 178 
WIOWEES <Of “WEEMS: 2 5 péscoricia titeagcavess sana da arauet ov ar aban e vy upbeat deebwors Romaabueaieabielens 35 
Hoxtall  “SrOens gs cs akan od. ack Dune GS aia te Re nae hae Ra ees A 54 
Fellow ocawiekiagiad ish ited eared aes sd Weey i Mae sees eRe 53 

WyUlts: Of WEG0S: is seat wn vide PERM e ears eons Ge RRs a Ries one cess se 41 
Galingel Oe sn pce sig ating a pare Matera wale edd eax ewe Nea Oe ae e ORR es 58 
Garlic, wild .............4. biennale atency Ustee ans aes cites ewes . 60 
Germander, American sisscecvorsca te vveiow Conia erase ne eew ee eaeeS .. 118 
GOIGENTOO, Mis beac iad eee sb Gages ARO Ra atle A wae lwidaeaimade a gakaeaas 168 
Goose-grass ....5....4. chip oat 9 asa isa eT paNe ne @hater aha Nalana- to Soares evs” ateanr eis ose ets 67 
Goosefoot Family, weeds Of. .... 0.0... ccc ccc cece eect cece eee ueeeeeneee 69 
Grass Family, weeds Of......... 0. cece cece eee eee e eevee ee neeeens 50 
GLOUNMGGCH CU? 5275 sansazc:§ apnls bse-Sone eed Daud ee aha Ati tad aN atl Sig ue ORM RRS 124 
GYOUNGHAV SY “asin Greene dain snus s dees saitata'a 6 ehked oO vEAeR ota Re tae 119 
THAWIKWEGO, i ac suoatee da gem ee Sa wR Ee acade Sais ea ela space a daav welawas ae 148 
Fledge nettle: sa ciscucdegva ven sansa a waes wean Beatie her tactcr et ene 121 


Hemlock, poison ..........0cec scenes sue audnd anna reat Lenehan. 103 


INDEX. 189 


Page 

LGM LG socks csr gece atg escaahthsshatate gas aren beataianets we acaeee Rin Ra AHO SER a 121 
PROS WOOO cscs scion eaigon eae 4 sleet wanes Rates BAERS aie coccecaecs ease 150 
PLOTSE! MOECLS! extents sdusare Srvseraeepdainannecdvensein badueekd 8 Gaver wnat a you ants 125 
TIGESEWEEO). sate: csvsia gs arnialaemuaacd cnebraiieie a avoid Quai sok Sovieahies Seeatare ie wre’ 149, 158 
FROUNG’S=tON ZU ee eis sincere. sewers a niwie se aula wien, ¢ asoeuwe Rees ea eRe Y ew 113 
Indiana weeds, classes of ...... Spsbis 5 Gane RANE a CR Aho S eed wav eens deep 12 
OTIS OL} siesccsouse Sistas owned 3.4 daca Rinlauannlecradiravinlne nocatshaetenat 11 

PUA AM MAT OW 2. ca. encaald dea manele Seca dw a acyd any oaeains Do auied ates re sais 97 
100) Kee 141, 159 
Inflorescence of WeCUS........ 0. cece cee cece eet e net e eee ee eteeeece 40 
Trom-weed ..........0 eens wih fare cayacuset Ruauseautce a iacsnanw a aaeaas A Gupte hast 154, 174 
SVS5; POLSON! ais iecsuyn oerscess enrique: Seergisig: § Wayrti a gig aust gg seabars ¢aigns And ahaala eta . 94 
JIDOSON-W CO, ca .sie ss sehen ve ewse Rates ye mee eae x eRe Reta RS 128 
MODY EO WOOT: | cascades setse Barc cave sited oui nsae® tSou pane saabici den spina ielcauanrese Geveanaase heasaiy beadbsaSs 156 
Keys to Families of weeds... 0.0.0... cee cece eee ee 43, 45, 47 
KnOU-SLOSS) -oesiniye-s oases age eke Pek RHE wales eeeaby ees Rare eats 67 
Lady's thum)) «ssc ccows sscvaves ses ree ea hena ee taannd ceeweer seas ¥ sae 65 
TERS QUUTTETS) 355, cis isesg-ackuars) dance Seed a cepa dea meaymancen as cata anaeeanenand oanieun kane 69 
AVES OL WOES: sisiacanacuitwandar ais ce aredia aan Seine adnate ded a tunmas teas 33 
Lettuce; prickly’ sc scececanqsls re esmex aud esas: age prewbe ss ae were aces 146 
Wild! avec 22 kan st aersete shea ahem eweels Pease te aus Sees 148 

Lily amily; WECASIOR 5, ease scc arose Ggcacasd, aati,» tdpond eek uaa sa cenonvavs pdubu a awecenebee 60 
ODEGIIA, “BT CAT sci cioiwnen aia seeds neeine aa ba aw areas Peewee edema IETS 141 
Mallow Family; weeds) Ofss0scccne us view oe cee sa shes age eee eweN 95 
Man-of-the-earth, .2<accs tiie Gaia eee Se oe Shwe ae S cee TSS 108 
Mari sGld. (DUP sais cccusidnn mand ania bn adimiad geval heamiuin wana Sinaue aus 174 
POBGIOS: coe sclera olathe Sige eet ead Sat aa as cues SRR OR eee 161. 

Mayweed: sexccssriev<cew sa ware estas oe Wd s eaaee 2 ee ewolsw eee Seve 179 
Meadow-grass, pungent ......... 0. cee eee eee eee eee ee enenens 55 
MEGGIG,, HOP! is-sircndels scenes we Nate eee a ie eager clea secede mrcalopanactiuann Serene 89 
Medicinal properties of weedS. ...... 0.2... cece ee eee eens 28 
Mercury, three-seeded 2... ccc eee cee ee ee meee een e ene eneeees 92 
MGA CATE TOS cscs cairn hs dsacata duo ravadinn Sra nadie acd apenesd Goa Rasce SIMSON BA SY Sas Fle 70 
MATE OLN ig ses aces Seaecrcg earns Rrenar arcs wie Seale e ven tsar Segnsecien dF aeanennwe Ssaeceee Oe BAL 178 
Milkweed Family, weeds of. ...... 0.0... ce cee eee tee ene eee 105 
Mint Family, weeds of. 2.0.0... 2... c ee cee ee eee eee en eens 117 
Morning-glory Family, weeds of.. 2.0.0... 0... eee eee eens 107 
IN GEG EW OLE sack csusicevis aserenes aes & ae eral e Reta AndaGla See anes: SHS TEARS 120 
Mullen, Common ..... 6... cece ce ee ete eee ee te teen eee eee es 129 
THOU. «5. gcviesk acter ere wrod eae eeu eRe ee eae ed a a gtalatine Rua MIG RSH 131 
Mustard Family, weeds of. .... 6.0... 0-6 cee eee eee eee eens 81 
Mustard ........... sa prstaubhanin ie oes Leeks quia tia ewes sp wsecnttce nidccemes eng ieaene SE 82, 84 
Nettle Family, weeds of. ........00 06 cee cece eee eee eens 61 
INGEtIG, BUM os ecsie e scenes eicsne aie eugroraie ota eS GMS RETA OF Se Wertelecenatare gree 125 
TOG ES ove sisic's eustayidce wisieig ge etwas Boke Wa Saeepne ca ei npreN! F guerette PARSE ED 121 

HGOTSE sc cave nc nvews as onee S awiein e eunsints Sobtarge se arwalane msi aiaiaemumer ea een 125 

SION EL conc cceid ssccan. hod teed adele yeh SRRSCS TARE WERE PEGE See 62 

MOR NS: aussie s gnawarscse crea ain naa opines suse secaceis BSE S yom eeehn s gasles 126 
Nightshade ....... 0. cc ce ee cece tee eee ete eee ee ence en ee ee neees 127 


Nut-grass, yellow... ccc cece cece eee ete eater e ee een e ete eeees 58 


190 THE INDIANA WEED BOOK. 


Page 

Old-=Witeh eT ass ides fac eee ed ae dis ee Ode eee es ep NGA ets Mae 53 
Qnion, Wildscssscccasswae daa OOS Hes BONS HTS Cs KRHA eeN ECE we Pee Sea aLE 60 
OV UCHEE 5 ain sides. cd cd tatal & Sea aadone Poe Medias aia Sr pde DOK IaeAS RRS Sa TS CRED EA OTE 71 
Origin of Indiana weedS...........0 sce ence eee recente ete e teen ane 11 
OCC: bs ee ey nee ee see ae adwe ee Rea eaerE ose hatécehaciavans veacaemiews ea uate gd od 170 
Ox-eye: CaiSY) cscaceeesa wi trae ei coweryeuhww edness eed asen es a ie veda 180 
Parsley Family, weeds 0f....... 0.0. cece cece ree ee cee eect eect ence 100 
Parsnip; Wilds 2.4 caiacicuiaw sek die ede nan cee ee ee ae a eae ies 102 
Partridge: Pedic vyicwe eis siee kisses enins Reda e ee LOS Ee see se we Pa Cew 89 
Bea Wamily,,. “Weeds. Of % sis san cise enced 4G ocd oe SAA SR BAN Bie St SS 88 
PEUNYVLOVA: aus tuscan iad d ee sR Ee Ra ie Que ew ea ASHE 122 
Pepperterass;. Wald jogos spain oe wine en akg RES ees aa Weed aah Seed yalo ees oe 82 
Peppermint, v5 cic cneviss aes cece bee Rae Sod gee WOE EEG OE SUT Ede Re eee 123 
Perennial “WEES: cise seb sopetios Mave icaxscanicd Da auaneie Hadaiac ks aoteadeidaeend Geos eenepener ass 19 
POrsicany;, SlAnMUIAl ssccie cats v ae Reis wien anne dt aaa 65 
IPIgCOnsDOMry sisis secietnda delice weenie Ga Wis oe Me ee Epo Ree GELS Ga ea a hee Be 1d 
SSTASS) emgca Wis Ha ORME TE SRE R Eee EET ES Wet tee eee 53 

AWW COG inciesZicovg ssuee el Sutsiaecau cates boaserea uachrt saan x0ig abet dua ig idcxauineich Guava quiena Ianemoravaren hace 114 
Digweed Family, weeds Of........ 0.0 ccc cee ce cece cee ee nent eneees 72 
Pile Wort 2:2 use a eumisgiaa edad, va sched cute eed Re wee eh eae Beeerels 182, 163 
Pink Family; weeds: Of issisacs0-6-scisa co digo ca Saou ees ahs Gaeos wal ee tee ru 
Plantain Family, weeds of........ 00... c ccc cece ec cece eens 135 
PIGUTISY 2B OO siiccia cee Saat analy Saks wiht eoWNeRee A AGES eA eaR RUA Mio aaaany’s 105 
Poison: Nemloek ¢ isa ssa eon cece seats eee was see pains ecu ee aes 103 
IVY) Sa sedans Gah Sea al vod hag eee tee ease WA As eda uals 94 

SUMTIE Cages, ate hans eis mashes ous opts ark Wales et ee WA A celal a added a yar 95 
POKEWECE eats tae anced Came Ci ay MEE Y Raw deg Mima yee aS eas Seen vfs) 
‘Potato Family, weeds of ........0 0 ccc cece cee c ecu cece cn en eee eeeeens 124 
Prickly Potato: ons wy awe a ea kaise AS cred oo Nike One Monae AS EE Ses 126 
PIGKEIY S10 seincsscindsae:s na dea whoa he een ce WAR Dead Daley ANGLO Mies namie GoPets 96 
Primrose) EVENING cs vaw.s Cee die ved Geneseo tees HAE y onsets 99 
BUrslane: ajc: sai oramnes taney Gad ed noe Sek ree ea ee one eek Hoare: CO 77, 92 
Qual OT ASS es sdik wc eet fae vicars eeland anaes twa ena epee ean amare’ & aeaneled 56 
Queen Anne's LACE aia haan cWeeae lawd ae th aimed ahisdehs anneal eaten 101 
Ragweed Family, weeds of... 1.0... 0... cece cece ee cee eee teen eeeens 149 
Red-root: 4... sis sae aueyeahes dean b ed aes scams Gera de enlnedcsawss 73 
RiD-Qvass . 6. eee ee tne eee ee ees anGiaaccatusheven Gaius 6a Daeaee ds 137 
Ribwottn weavanataanico cance crane mete handed eeie en enees aos 13% 
ROOtS Of WeCdS ¢c0'6 oie 55 tie Vans ete Ne sae Se ERE CP AES MEO Ew WERE: 31 
Rose Family, weeds of. 1... 0... ccc cc ccc cee cece eee eee n nsec neeeenees 85 
Rush Family, weeds of. 0... 0.0... cc cc cece cece erat ee ee enececnsnceaes 59 
Russian thistle ....... 2... cc cece eee ees ‘iigtnieca ns “Suse era eladi's Baw ee AON Sis 7 
SANGEDTIERE:: J cccigs siawisinae vam aes Came see ae age aha eee sae 125 
SPOUTS ere a ttntsca tela ‘sineokinsn ecaewiend and aun ecaap mie ova anaudgatvatate aud Richtee teeadahal oe 54 
Sedge Family, weeds of.....0 0... ccc cc ccc ce eee eee ene eee enenes 57 
DOTA WH Cisse seed, 6 atmietelanlagie Hed Ros Gee HER Sea I Re oes 4 Bek ve 8&8 
Shiepherd’s purse’ ss oss ee vied ceca e ok 6k 6 6 vend te Smreea 4:4 ble Oe ene sate fo... 84 
BITES W COC Actin acess aneccan aloe ital dell ce cheat Seavapmnectn ales Soa a Geo ta oles aa eae yese 107 
SIMMALC WOU os. sree! si tiererentana hid tats a eetenon aaacaulns @isiole vardee xe bere Sain 66 


SNAKETOOE, WHILE: swine an ee vis vente eGo Bkiageew eee ieee sat eces 158 


INDEX, 191 


Page 
Sieezew eed audcigaevanausl ateni cen ecakee cen gnc ytd Sea a wees 175 
SOMDWOTE |e cso ux is wa aecina a circ aes sand ewreueraicn vada oe bem dig fu isuaoanslagidesting 79 
DOELE] MOA sek se sacac sige rauatacase dvmugia sigadoere wha as Re ateanues a oaaide dna es ieee 63 
POW EEINISEDE. seas carats Alsaray gaatese fchiten cay aye Foraceaba ngaes see Bea te Reread ibaa A oeu 145 
SPAHISH TEGAIES. « cca eeuige eae KEES CAS Gack Rw ued Sa nvelB ackuntne waevlane ware 161 
SPOAEMUNG? sees vee tee baie vis eek tuncdo weaustn: sb dead sn GarMal adalah b/astas Hie bowraia’s viece 123 
MSOC Wy CLM ceis chcisacs nau grcoaana venient Aedebseannaes, & ahs eacaals ack ants chonieren eensnerett Ag cle aeeeedie a lnce 133 
SPLAVING, POE WEEMS osc ecs a wie os grates arena a acl ase Rete cee 24 
Spurge Family, weeds of... 0.0.0... cc cece ccc cee ee cence cece aaeeees 91 
QUIT OL Ea tl eT Sy cao, ssesisd Sri cac la: eeasstaheos “erat bbol oe anaes haem artergeate ea aa aire eas wom 57 
Steel-weed ............ cc cee eee Vises clare Weadatae vanwiw ean aiea 4.8% 177 
Stickseed ; VAFZINIA. socwais)sunains a aiod $ aacala vou wees ne ee Sacer eee as 113 
Stinking-grass ia id Sista aie Rater AAR, Peaesn e sedeurepae dun eaenuaa a adlap anaes Sia Dneaow Muay soaAS 55 
St. John’s-wort Family, weeds of......... 0.0.0. ccc u cee cece cece e nee 98 
Sumac Family, weeds of.. 2.0.0.0... 0. ccc eee cece eee eee e ce eneeaees 94 
SunMOwer, COMMOD: seus ccsaes sao ee aes ea.ws Ya AN Na ee RES SN Gees Tene 173 
WAG sess aid eit Si aad Roiahaaes auch tuieouer ba aaa Ae DUG aw 172 
BSIWGELHCIOV OL Ssscccatia:d 2 cease a5 Rlceda annie iewacevedned alvayares. 2 ohn pues aie cka ab manic Sloe 90 
SWGel POLAtO AWG iecia we denis eatin nes a eGicis's amneih eauigniaaiadilars ays 108 
MANSY es sitessawaiy est Radiata weet isa dale thinset coal heehee heat Ages 162 
Year-thumb, arrow-leaved .......... Ry eae PER TNT AIRE Pee NS 69 
PLGA SEN. 5s: ous, aaauatraneh bt tvarseut eee lax neu vb d Guat y-Gnase aves dhaseey ase covb fanaa RNa nice Claws 139 
MHistle, Canada casi sce mucvwalsthe ls eolaes ebuleletomaants eda egaeeeinlens 166 
COMING, ca v eae due EE OO SS YOKE SS 6 Oa SRS EE KOO Re REV ROSE LOR 164 
Thistle Family, weeds of.. 0.0.0... cece cece cee ee ee te teen ee entene 153 
cl BY 05 CEE 0) 8) = ee on a ee 128 
MHOTOULN WORE gic josecteeewan wemak semana eadade saaadels uaealle weaned leas 157 
Tick-tretoil, hoary: as<neos cases ea.ckes se Me ene oa HORE Oe eae dea kee ee 90 
PPMGEUGL = EL ANG. ray gyal ccs tctyicas cade sayres usAnaceadae donee shiassa arpa ssa ea laegbbanas assay aestan ramadelsaia seseaanaun aren 131 
) Eg) 0g (set 4 bt ee ge ee ee 82 
TRUM pet: CROCPEN: scene sais wndie sea waded Vesa PERS Came auaes oe 134 
Tumble:weed. is:.cessce sewed vote. aA aete igdla een reas sR on 53, 14 
WOW CC TCA E 5c cic sacauasd guntngie Seca e.acapatiauioore Wikomeetin Si Siasthar ran are ueanctehs dhe 97 
Venus? 1O0king “class: 2.36 Mniade ose nag ee her wemea eaualys poama TaN taN ows 140 
Vervain Family; weeds of'. so« + causa cenge ve edaesa ences ores ae esaea we 115 
Water Demlocl a0 ss cai a sane aaled dodaci 4s are podbean oe tee ade ee aaa 103 
Water-POPPET aicceisig ca ierne aawatve ainae oe eunace seaeee we chart Aan fish Neen ats 66 
Weed, Géfinitions: Of -s.cg:0iiy eaaed cmaceieg s eases ooaes esiea ds Mad eee OES 6 
Weed extermination, rules for... ...... 0... cece cece en eee eee 20 
SECS, GIStVIDULIGI OE gai oie scones ersnedanecd.d hare snasblnes buehoresaiie’ sea dareeve a ale 
Weeds, losses caused DY. .... 0. ccc cece cece cece eee e eee e ee eneeeneee 18 
Of Cities: ANd TOWNS ::.cc5-veuins és eonie wien y cue ewAlawe weal os 16 
USed AN MEMICINE: oeosis ee hae eB Ras cede ees be Seeded wee we eee 29 
Wheat thief .............. ravaaayle Sascatalea sutiyind tata ied cet duotty eA ex Neate Bak Sete at 114 
WWD CEST OP) Sao. 25 oie w emer gk een stg to aha gun cea ats ee aed aati ew ws core ae te ies LTT 
Wire-oT ass: acads dunes oy ewe y Hawk 6 ENED eee FESS A SAMS PSOE Ew we BE 59 
NYG S51 Oss ceca acide sea ase ace re dacadet ds desi Eceen Sha oasoea eatin eee Spal dea eaten ON 118 
IWiGLINSCOU: 25.clots ai calio 4 ine. taton nin denalnn Mand ebea diate saan doeleatemauied & 70 
Worn wood: aaisiccacnd-s Se aew ouniianiwe mae laid ode sends Haare se eae ee 163 


Vatrow «2 saccades ewes eee yx oles ee weeG Naw OS ed ew ree es ame BEAN eS 178 


NATURE BOOKS BY W. S. BLATCHLEY 


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Special studies on the insects, fishes, reptiles, birds and plants 


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A series of sketches on the wild life of an old woods pasture in 


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Silk cloth, 230 pp., 10 pls. $1.10, postpaid. 


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