ORDER LXV. LOBELIACE^E. ORDER LXVIH. AQUIFOLIACE.E. 117 



ylos), and Pyrola, flg. 21, and sometimes narcotic and poisonous, as in the 

 ododendron (Hose JBay, Swamp fink), and Kalmia (Laurel). Others are 



Fig. 20. 



ORDER LXV. LobeHacese. 



Herbs, or shrubby plants, often with a milky juice. Leaves 

 .alternate, without stipules. Flowers often showy, axillary and 

 terminal. Calyx-tube adherent to the ovary ; limb 5-cleft, per- 

 sistent. Corolla irregularly 5-lobed, often somewhat bilabiate, 

 cleft on one side nearly or quite to the base, inserted in the calyx. 

 Stamens 5, inserted with the corolla, above the ovary, united 

 into a tube. Style 1. Stigma fringed. Fruit a 2 3, rarely 1- 

 celled, many-seeded capsule. 



An order embracing many splendid ornamental species, and distinguished 

 by acrid and narcotic properties. These are especially developed in the Lobe- 

 lia inflate, which forms so important an article in the Materia Medica of Botanic 

 Physicians. 



ORDER LXVI. Campamilacese. 



Herbs with a somewhat milky juice. Leaves alternate. Sti- 

 pules none. Flowers usually blue and showy. Calyx-tube adher- 

 ent to the ovary ; limb usually 5-cleft, persistent. Corolla regu- 

 lar, campanulate, usually 5-lobed, withering. Stamens 5, distinct, 

 inserted on the calyx, alternate with the 5 lobes of the corolla. 

 Anthers 2-celled. Ovary 2 5-celled. Style furnished with 

 collecting hairs. Capsule crowned Avith the persistent calyx- 

 tube, opening with loculicidal dehiscence, many-seeded. 



An order remarkable chiefly for the beauty of its flowers. The rarious spe- 

 cies of Campanula, such as the Harebell, Canterbury Bell, and Bell-flower, are 

 examples. 



GROUP III. 

 ORDER LXVII. Ericaceae. 



Shrubs ; or evergreen or leafless herbs. Leaves simple, alter- 

 nate, rarely opposite, often evergreen. Stipules none. Calyx- 

 tube usually free from the ovary, sometimes adherent ; limb 4 6, 

 usually 5-cleffc, rarely entire. Corolla regular, or sometimes irre- 

 gular, 4 6, usually, 5-cleft, rarely with 5 distinct petals. Stamens 

 inserted with the corolla, 5, 8, or 10. Anthers 2-celled, opening 

 by pores, often appendaged at top. Ovary 2 10-celled. Style 

 1. Stigma 1. Fruit a berry, drupe, or capsule. 



A large order consisting chiefly of fine- flowering shrubs, one tribe of which, 

 l.lie Heaths, overspread immense tracts of the temperate zones in the old world. 

 The bark and foliage are bitter and astringent, as in the Be&r-berry (Arctosta- 



Fig. 21. 



stimulant and aromatic, as in tho Gaultheria (Checker-'berry, or Partridge* 

 lierry), Jig. 22. The berries of the Whortleberry (ffaylussacia), and the Blue- 

 berry and Bilberry ( Vaccinium), are edible and delicious. 



Fig. 22. 



ORDER LXVIII. Aquifoliaceae. 



Shrubs, or trees. Leaves simple, alternate, or opposite, often 

 evergreen, exstipulate. Flowers small, white or greenish, axil- 

 ary, clustered or solitary, often dioecious or polygamous. Calyx- 

 ube free from the ovary ; limb 4 6-cleft. Corolla regular, 4 6- 



