| William Darlington - Botany - 1859 - 500 pages
...Pastures and cultivated grounds — especially in the Southern States. Fl. July. Fr. October. Obs. This is an exceedingly pernicious weed, — and so...monopolize the soil, — while its roots gradually extend aronnd, and to a great depth. It is a native of the Southern States, — but has found its way to several... | |
| Pennsylvania State Agricultural Society - Agriculture - 1877 - 542 pages
...Solanum Carolinense. This has a perennial root, and so tenacious of life, that, like the Canada thistle, it is almost impossible to get rid of it, when once fully rooted and grounded in the soil, as it penetrates to a great depth. It is a native of the Southern... | |
| Medicine - 1889 - 538 pages
...Common in the southern and western Hates, and becoming too frequent in the north. Darlington says: "This is an exceedingly pernicious weed, and so tenacious...it is almost impossible to get rid of it when once folly introduced. It grows in patches so thickly e to deter stock from, feeding among it, and even... | |
| Purdue University. Agricultural Experiment Station - 1888 - 1196 pages
...might well be remembered by every farmer of Indiana. "This is an exceedingly pernicious weed," he says, "and so tenacious of life that it is almost impossible...roots gradually extend around, and to a great depth. The farmers will do well, therefore, to enable themselves to know it when they meet it, and moreover,... | |
| 1887 - 908 pages
...Common in the Southern and Western States, and becoming too frequent in the North. Darlington says: This is an exceedingly pernicious weed, and so tenacious...roots gradually extend around and to a great depth. It seems to prefer sandy soil, at least in the North, where it is sometimes called sand-brier. As it is... | |
| |