124 LILIACEAE 
5. L. campestris, (L.) DC. (Fig. 14, pl. 10.) Common Woop Rusu. 
Stem 4 to 20 in. high, rising from a grassy tuft of leaves and bearing 
1 or 2 stem leaves. Flowers in a terminal umbel, straw colored, the 
parts of the perianth bristle-pointed, longer than the rounded capsule. 
Common in dry woodlands. 
Famity IJ.—LILIACEAE, Lity Famity 
In our region, herbaceous plants or woody vines with flowers 
in clusters of various forms. Flowers regular, with 6 segments of 
the perianth, exceptionally united at base, in 2 rows, an outer 
and an inner, the outer series in fact representing the calyx. 
Stamens 6, the anthers mostly with their face inward. Fruit of 
3 carpels; style with an entire summit or divided into 3 lobes. 
Capsule usually splitting at the partitions. 
A. Herbs not having twining or woody stems 
Fruit not a round berry. 
Ovary with few exceptions, situated above the perianth. 
Flowers with 6 symmetrical petals, all uniformly colored 
and not united. 
Flowers solitary or in loose clusters, pistil not divided 
in 3 parts . . . . Limy Tree. (5) MITiltouiege 
Flowers few or solitary in more or less dense clusters. 
Styles divided into 3 spreading lobes. 
Flowers solitary. Genus Uvunarta (3). 
. Buncn Frower Tripe. (2) Melanthioideae 
Flowers in a rounded umbel. Style not divided. Stem 
springing from a bulb. ONnton Trrpe. (4) Allioideae 
Flowers with 6 petals all united at the base, forming a 6- 
toothed bell or tube, Hyacintu Tripe. (1) Hyacinthineae 
