624 Order 112.— EUPHOREIACE^E. 



and berry-like, inclosing the 1-celled, 1-seeded achenium. Seed ascending, embryo 

 straight, albumen scanty. 



Gemra 4, species 30, thinly dispersed throughout the Northern hemisphere. 



1. SHEPHER'DIA, Nutt. (In honor of John Shepherd, curator of 

 the botanic garden of Liverpool.) Flowers $ $ . — $ Calyx 4-cleft ; 

 6ta. 8, alternating with 8 glauds. $ Calyx tube closely investing the 

 ovary, but not adhering to it, limb 4-lobed ; sty. 1 ; stig. oblique ; 

 berry globous, composed of the flcsliy calyx. — Shrubs with spinescent 

 branches, and opposite, deciduous leaves. Fls. aggregated. 



1 S. Canadensis Xutt. Lvs. elliptic-ovate, nearly smooth above, clothed beneath 

 with stellate hai?s and ferruginous, deciduous scales. — A shrub 6 — 8f high, found 

 iu Vt., N. Y. and "W. to Wis. (Lapham), and Can., by streams and on river banka 

 Leaves obtuse at each end, the upper surface green, with few, scattered, stellate 

 hairs, lower surface white, with rust-colored spots, densely tomentous, margin 

 entire; petioles 2 — 4" long, lamina 1 — 2' by I — 1'. Fls. minute, in small, late- 

 ral, nearly sessile clusters. Berries oval, scaly, consisting of the fleshy calyx in- 

 closing the achenia in its tube, sweetish to the taste. Jl. — A curious and orna- 

 mental shrub. 



2 S. argentea Nutt. Lvs. oblong-ovate, obtuse, both surfaces .smooth and 

 equally covered with silvery scales. — A small tree, 12 — 18f high, with thorny 

 branches. Leaves 1 — 2' by 4 — 9". Petioles V long, margin entire, the surface 

 of a light, silvery hue, sprinkled with rust-colored spots. Fruit tho size cf a cur- 

 rant, scailet, well-flavored. f Mo. 



2. ELjEAG'NUS, L. Oleaster. (Gr. eXaia, the olive ; the trees 

 having a resemblance to the olive.) Flowers perfect. Calyx 4-clcft, 

 campanulate, colored on the inner side ; sta. 4, alternate with the calyx 

 lobes; anth. snbsessile ; sty. short; fruit baccate, consisting of the 

 Rchcnium inclosed in the dry, farinaceous calyx tube, marked with 8 

 furrows. — Trees or shrubs, cultivated for the silvery foliage. Leaves 

 alternate. 



1 E. argentea Ph. Lvs. broad-ovate or oval, wavy, acutish at each end, both 

 surfaces, particularly the lower, silvery and shining, with ferruginous scales. — A 

 beautiful shrub, with reddish branches and small, roundish-ovate, cartilaginous 

 drupes, f Mo. 



2 E. angustifolia L. Lvs. narrow-lanceolate, acuto at each end, entire, al- 

 ternate, smooth, canescent; fls. axillary, aggregate. — A tree of middle size, culti- 

 vated for its beautiful foliage and pleasant date-like fruit. \ Eur. 



' 3 E. latifolia L. Lvs, ovale, evergreen. f E. Ind. 



3 HIPPOPH2E rhamnoides, with linear-lanceolate lvs., silvery white be- 

 neath, tetrandrous, dioecious flowers, and a crowd ,cf yellow, acid drupes, is a Euro- 

 pean shrub, occasionally seen in shrubberies. 



Order CXII. EUPITORBIACFLE. Spuegeworts. 



Herbs, shrubs or trees, usually with a milky, acrid juice. Flowers diclinous, some- 

 times enclosed in a cup-shaped involucre. Calyx inferior, sometimes wanting. Cor' 

 vlla scale-like or colored, often wanting. Ovary free, sessile or stipitatc, 2, 3 (or 

 more)-carpeled ; styles distinct or united. Fruit of 2, 3 (or more), 1 to 2-seeded car- 

 pels (rarely of 1 carpel) united to a common axis, at length separating. Embryo 

 in fleshy albumen. Fig. 371. 



Genera 200, species 2500 (Lindley), chiefly natives of 8. America, not more than CO specie* 

 being ftiunil in N. America, north of Mexico. 



Properties. — An acrid, stimulant and poisonous principle, residing chiefly in the milky jnic*, 

 pervades the whole order. This principle varies in activity from mild stimulants to the most 

 active poisons ; hut it is volatile and easily expelled hy heat. Tapioca is n Btarch-liko acenmn- 

 Utlon formed in the roots of the Jatropha Maaihot. When trash, :liis root is a vioh-ut poison, 



