374 ORDER 62. HAMAMELACE^E. 



perfect fls. aro central and much smaller. It thrives in larjo pots of peat mixed 

 with loam, abundantly watered. The flowera endure several months, f 



13. DECUMA'RIA, L. (Lat. dccem, ten ; from the 10-parted flowers.) 

 Fls. all fertile ; calyx 7 to 10-toothed, tube adherent to the 5 to 10- 

 cclled ovary ; petals as many as calyx teeth, oblong-spatulate, valvutc in 

 the bud ; stamens 3 times as many as the petals, in one row, cpigytious ; 

 stigma as many as petals, radiate, capsule urn-shaped, many-ribbed, 

 crowned with the style, oo-seedcd. A shrub creeping or climbing by 

 rootlets, with opposite Ivs. and cymes of white, fragrant Us. 



D. barbara L. A beautiful climber, in damp woods, N. Car. to Fla. and La., as- 

 cending trees 15 to 30f. Lvs. ovate or oval, entire or obscurely serrate, acute or 

 acuminate, very smooth, those of the young creepers elliptical, irregularly 

 toothed. Cymes terminal on the divergent branches, with numerous fls. Caps, 

 persistent, exhibiting in winter their curious structure. May, Jn. 



14. PHILADEL'PHUS, L. FALSE SYKINOA. (To Philadelphia, king 

 of Egypt.) Calyx 4 to 5-parted, half superior, persistent; corolla 4 to 

 5-petaled ; stj'le 4-cleft ; stamens 20 to 40, shorter than the petals ; 

 capsule 4-cellcd, 4-valved, with Joculicidal dehisccncc; seeds many, 

 arilled. Handsome flowering shrubs. Lvs. opposite, cxstipulatc. 



1 P. inodorus L. Glabrous; Ivs. ovate, acute or somewhat acuminate, triple- 

 veined, entire, or with few obscure teeth; sep. acute, scarcely longer than the tube; 

 sty. united. Va. to Ala. in the upper country (Buckley). Fls. small, several at 

 the end of each branchlot, inodorous. May, Jn. 



2 P. grandiflorus "Willd. Lvs. ovate, acuminate, sharply denticulate, 3-veined, 

 axils of the veins hairy; sep. acuminate, much longer than the tube; stig. 4, linear; 

 sty. united. A very showy shrub, Cf high, native at the South, cultivated in 

 shrubberies. Branches smooth, long and slender. Fls. large, in a terminal um- 

 bel of 2 or 3, white, nearly inodorous. Jn. The upper Ivs. aro often entire and 

 quita narrow, f 



3 P. coronarius L. MOCK ORANGE. Lvs. ovate, subdentate, smooth ; sty. 

 distinct. Native of S. Europe. A handsome shrub, often cultivated in our shrub- 

 beries. The fls. are numerous, cream-colored, showy, resembling those of tho 

 orange both in form and fragrance, but aro more powerful in the latter respect. 

 It grows 5 to 8f high, with opposite, smooth, ovate, stalked Ivs. and opposite, red- 

 dish twigs bearing leafy clusters of llowers. f 



15. DEUT'ZIA gracilis and D. scabra, are two handsome shrubs 

 occasionally cultivated in parks. The genus is readily recognized by 

 the filaments, which arc 3-cuspidate at the top, bearing the anther on 

 the middle cusp. 



D. scabra Thunberg, has ovate, acute, sharply serrate, pilous leaves, with 

 terminal, downy racemes of handsome, bell-shaped, white llowers, each usually 

 with 3 pistils, f Eastern Asia. 



ORDER LXIL HAMAMELACEJE. WITCHHAZELWORTS. 



Shrubs or trees with alternate, simple leaves and deciduous stipules. Flowers in 

 heads or spikes, often polygamous or monoecious. Calyx adherent. Petals linear, 

 valvate or convolute in bud or wanting. Stamens twice as many as petals (tho op- 

 posite sterile and scale-like) or QO. Ovary of 2-carpels, 2-celled and 2-styled, ovules 

 1 or Co in each cell Fruit a woody capsule, 2-beaked, 2-celled and 2-seeded. 



Genera 14. specie* 20, widely diffused. Various species of Liqtiidarnbnr yield the pungent r- 

 fcin called storax. Otherwise the products of this order are unimportant. 



TRIBES AND GENERA. 

 1. HAMAMELK*. Flowers dichlamydeous. Ovule solitary in each cell. Calyx 



4-partcd; pe'.aU ligu'.atc, long. Shrub HAMAMKLIS. ; _ 



