KUBIACE.fi. (MADDER FAMILY.) 171 



o? ovate lanceolate, tapering to the apex (2' long); corolla glabrous: 

 otherwise like the last. Woodlands; common northward. 

 ---*- Peduncles many-flowered : flowers in open cymes, dull purple : fruit smooth. 

 9. O. latifolimn, Michx. Stems erect (l-2 high), smooth; leaves 

 in fours, lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate, 3-nerved, the midrib and margins rough ; 

 flowers all on long and slender spreading pedicels ; corolla-lobes bristle -pointed 

 Dry woodlands, Alleghany Mountains from Maryland southward, July. 

 S. Penn. 



-*-- -i- Peduncles many-flowered, in close terminal panicles. 



10. O. boreale, L. (NORTHERN BEDSTRAW.) Stem upright (l-2 

 high), smooth ; leaves in fours, linear-lanceolate, 3-nerved ; panicle elongated ; 

 flowers white ; fruit minutely bristly, sometimes smooth. Rocky banks of 

 streams ; common, especially northward. June -Aug. (Eu.) 



11. O. VERUM, L. (YELLOW BEDSTRAW.) Stem upright, slender; leave* 

 in eights, linear, grooved above, roughish, deflexed ; flowers yellow, crowded; fruit 

 smooth. Dry fields, E. Massachusetts. July. (Adv. from Eu.) 



TINCTORIA, L., the cultivated MADDER, from which the order is 

 named, has a berry-like fruit; the parts of the flower 5. 



SUBORDER II. CmCHONEJE. THE CINCHONA FAMILY.* 



2. SPERMAC6CE, L. BUTTON-AVEED. 



Calyx-tube short ; the limb parted into 4 teeth. Corolla funnel-form or 

 salver-form ; the lobes valvate in the bud. Stamens 4. Stigma or style 2-cleft. 

 Fruit small and dry, 2-celled, 2-seedcd, splitting when ripe into 2 carpels, one 

 of them carrying with it the partition, and therefore closed, the other open on 

 the inner face. Small herbs, the bases of the leaves or petioles connected by a 

 bristle-bearing stipular membrane. Flowers small, crowded into sessile axillary 

 whorled clusters or heads. Corolla whitish. (Name compounded of o-rrep/ia, 

 seed find UKCOK^, a point, probably from the pointed calyx-teeth on the fruit.) 



1. S. glabra, Michx. Glabrous; stems spreading (9' -20' long) ; leaves 

 oblong -lanceolate ; whorled heads many-flowered; corolla little exceeding the 

 calyx, bearded in the throat, bearing the anthers at its base ; filaments and style 

 hardly any. 1J. River-banks, S. Ohio, Illinois, and southward. Aug 



3. DIODIA, L. BUTTON-WEED. 



Calyx-teeth 2-5, often unequal. Fruit 2- (rarely 3-) celled ; the cmstaceous 

 ca pels into which it splits all closed and indehiscent. Otherwise nearly as in 

 Spermacoce. (Name from SioSos, a thoroughfare; the species often growing by 

 the way -side.) 



* In several genera, such as Mitchella, Oldenlandia, &c., the flowers, although perfect, are of 

 two sorts in different individuals ; one sort having exserted stamens, borne in the throat of 

 foe corolla, and short included styles ; the other having included stamens inserted low iown IB 

 the corolla, and lung, usually exserted styles. Such we call dicuifouHy dimorphous. 



