RuELi.iA. XC. ACANTFIACEiE. 395 



2. SESAMUM. 



Calyx 5-parted ; corolla campanulate, 3-cleft, the lower lobe the 

 longest ; stigma lanceolate ; capsule 2-celled, the cells divided by the 

 inflexed edges of the valves. — ® of India,. 



S. Indicum. DC. Oili/seed.—Lvs. lanceolate-ovate, lower ones 3-Iobed, up- 

 per ones undivided, serrate.— Native of E. India. Stem erect, about 18' high. 

 Leaves alternate, entire. Flowers axillary, subsessile. Corolla pale purple. 

 The seeds yield an excellent oil which will keep several years without injury. 

 It is used in cookery for all the purposes of sweet oil. Five pounds of the seeds 

 -ield about one pound of oil. The leaves are emollient. 



Order XC. ACANTHACE^l Acanthads. 



Herbs or shrubs with opposite, simple, undivided, exstipul;ite leaves. 



F/s. opposite or alternate, spicate, 3-br,icte:itc, showy. , ■, , ■ 



Cal. of 5 sepals united more or less, persistent. Vur. Slohed, suhequal or bilabiate. 



Sta 4, diilynamous, or more usually onlyi fertile with 2 rudimentary. 



Ova. 2-celled, with the placenta? parietal, adhering in the axis. Styles united. 



F/-.— Capsule 2-celled, cells 2 or many-seeded. .,.,,. 



Sds. roundish, supported by hooked, ascending processes of the placenta^, without albumen. 



Genera 103, species V50, chiefly tropical, only a few species ever extending into the United States. They 

 are mostly mere weeds, but many are highly ornamental. Properties mucilaginous and slightly bitter, but 

 of little importance to man. 



Gene7-a. 



stamens 2. Flowers in pedunculate, a.xillary clusters Dicliptera. 1 



Stamens 4, didynamous. Flowers sessile, axillary Rueliia. 2 



1. DICLIPTfiRA. Juss. 



Gr. Sii, double, Ka\vTrTrip, a cover; alluding to the 2 remarkable valves. 



Calyx 5-parted, often 2 — 3-bracteolate ; cor. bilabiate, upper lip 

 emarg'inate, lower 3-cleft ; fil. 2, each with a double anther ; stig. 1 ; 

 caps, attenuated below, half 2-celled, with 2 elastic valves ; dissepi- 

 ment growing from the centre of each valve ; seeds 4, lenticular. — 

 Herbaceous or shrubby. 



D. American.^. Wood, fjusticia pedtmculosa. Michx. Dianthera Ame- 

 ricana. Linn.) — St. simple; Ivs. linear-lanceolate, acute at each end; 

 spikes capitate, dense, on long, opposite or alternate, axillary peduncles. — %.On 

 sluggish streams. Can. to Ga., W. to Ohio! la. Plumvier! 111. Mead. Stem 

 l_3f high, grooved. Leaves opposite, 2—5' by J— 1', wavy, glabrous, contract- 

 ed to a short petiole. Peduncles about as long as the leaves. Flowers pale 

 purple, small. Valves of the capsule recurved elastically when mature, lower 

 half attenuate and abortive ; processes of the placentae ascending, supporting 

 the lens-shaped seeds in their grooves. Jl. Aug. 



2. RUELLIA. 



In honor of John Ruelle, physician to Francis I., and botanic author. 



Calyx 5-parted, generally bibracteate at base ; cor. subcampanu- 

 late with a slender tube and a 5-lobed limb ; sta. 4, didynamous, ap- 

 proximating by pairs ; caps, attenuated to each end, bursting by elas- 

 tic, tooth-like valves ; seeds few. — % ovh. Fls. axillary and terminal. 

 \. R. STEEPENS. (R. hirsuta. Ell. R. ciliosa. Willd.7 R. hybrida. Ph.7 

 R. oblongifolia. Mr. ?)— Hirsute, erect, branched ; Ivs. ovate, oval or ob- 

 long, acutish, margin entire, undulate, lower ones briefly petiolate, upper ses- 

 sile ; fis. subse-ssile, axillary, 2 — 3 together ; col. segvienls linear-subulate, his- 

 pid, half as long as the slender tube of the corolla.— In dry barrens and prairies, 

 Ohio ! Ind. ! 111. ! to Penn. and Southern States. Stem 8—24' high, often sim- 

 ple, clothed with white, bristly hairs. Leaves 1 J— 2§' long, J— i as wide. Calyx 

 segments 8 — 10" long. Corolla caducous, limb light bluish-purple, 1— H' broad, 

 fimnel-shaped, with a long and slender tube. July.- Varies to subglabrous. 

 34 



