\documentclass[9pt,letterpaper,twoside,openany,titlepage]{memoir} \usepackage{extsizes} \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} \usepackage{makeidx} \usepackage{graphicx} \usepackage{fourier} \usepackage{microtype} \usepackage{ninecolors} \usepackage{nicefrac} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %% Page setup %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \usepackage[ left=2cm, right=2cm, top=2cm, bottom=12cm ]{geometry} \raggedbottom \setlength{\parindent}{8pt} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %% Columns %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \usepackage{multicol} \setlength{\columnsep}{7mm} \setlength\multicolsep{0mm} \setlength{\columnseprule}{1pt} \def\columnseprulecolor{\color{gray8}} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %% Macros for uniform typesetting %%% \newcommand\genus[1]{\vspace{\baselineskip}\noindent{}\textsc{\textbf{{\LARGE #1}}}\par} \newcommand\family[2]{\textsc{#1}{. #2}} \newcommand\species[1]{\noindent{}\textbf{—#1}\par} \newcommand\common[1]{\MakeUppercase{#1}} \newcommand\initial[1]{\begin{center}\begin{Huge}—\textdurm{#1}—\end{Huge}\end{center}} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %% Document information %%%%%%%%%%%%% \title{On the Uses of Plants} \author{Kenneth John Odle} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %% Experimental %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \usepackage{duerer} % Font for initials \usepackage{scholax} % Font 'ScholaX' \begin{document} \maketitle \begin{abstract} This is the abstract. \end{abstract} \begin{multicols*}{3} Introductory text \initial{A} \genus{Abutilon} \family{Malvaceae}{Attractive tender shrubs grown for their beautiful flowers and handsome foliage. Good in the greenhouse or outdoors in California and the South. Best in loose, well-drained soil. Treat like geraniums or fuchsias, as they make good pot plants.} \species{Hybridum}``\common{flowering maple}''. Nodding, bell-shaped 2-3'' flowers in pastel shades of orange, red, white, and pink. Arching shrub to 10 feet, with broad maple-like leaves. Main blooming period is in the spring, but some colors are almost everblooming. Makes a nice tub plant in the North, and can be pinched to keep compact. Easy to grow from seed; germinates in one or two weeks. \species{vitifolium} Large blue and white mallow-like 2-3\nicefrac{1}{2} inch flowers. Half-hardy shrub or small tree to 1\nicefrac{1}{2} to 3 feet in cultivation; to 25 feet in the wild. Lobed 6'' leaves. Native to coastal Chile. Said to be hardy to zone 7. Good in the cool greenhouse. \genus{Acacia} \family{Fabaceae}{Some 1,200 warm-region species of great ecological and evolutionary interest.\par{}Their earliest fossils are in North American, from where they expanded worldwide, with an Australian center of diversity.} \species{Baileyana}``\common{cootamundra wattle}'', ``\common{golden mimosa}''. Spectacular masses of fragrant golden flowers in January and February, almost covering the tree. Feathery blue-grey bipinnate foliage on a small compact tree with arching growth, to 30 feet tall. One of the hardiest, and tolerates most any soil and full sun to part shade. Native to only a few stands in New South Wales, and would be endangered if not in cultivation. \species{complanata}``\common{silver wattle}''. Profuse bloomer forming a mass of bright yellow fragrant flowers in late winter. Elegant silvery green feathery foliage. Fast growing adaptable tree to 50-100 feet. SE Australia. One of the hardiest, standing considerable snow and low temperatures. Grown for perfumery, fuelwood, tannin, gum production, and florist material. \genus{Amsonia} \family{Apocynaceae}{Hardy perennials valued in the border or among shrubbery for their blue star-like flowers.} \species{hubrichtii}Starry blue flowers in clusters on a hardy perennial to 3-5 feet, with narrow needle-like leaves that turn bright yellow-orange in fall. Ozarks. Zone 5. \end{multicols*} \end{document}