CALCEOLARIA 



Prick 



will suit 

 pots. ']'! 



iinc til. 



hnncUf, into pons i 



1 lows 



rature i 



it 'I- on, provide 



iH rature of 50° 

 . and when the 



iiuniure may be 

 . ily is the only 



rail be kept in 



-Its thoroughly 



rM..nsiv,-iy in 

 ; plant, liut'the 



able for their i-ulturc, ki-. 



possible cliM iiii; iIm' w an 



anight I. ', , i i 



to 55°. \\ 



flower s|.ik. - M, L i'l i" -I 

 ■ frequeull> u.,..i ,w;li a. I 

 really troublu-sunie iii-sLci 

 check by the free distrih 

 the benches where the phi 

 ■established, evaporate tol 



The shrubby Calceolai 

 Europe, especially Britai 

 heat of an American suramei 

 Propagation is effected 

 taken there the end of August, struck, and wintered o\ 

 jn cold frames protected from frost 



Wm Scott of Tarrjtown 



The hril I nu t, ii 1 n f rms c f Cal i 1 in i uir 

 often 111 1 t I 1 I 1 1 I I il I II «. 



oft? Ill 



race C i i I I 



35 54) life Jli C cit 



impress most distinctly < 



erprove 

 iefly by 



CALCEOLARIA 



nied (the pptinlps winged at top), undulate and dentate, 

 '■'.iiH.iitnf^ ..).w,.,,r''lv lot. fit. rugose and pubescent, paler 

 i-M.- .11. ,.i ..ii |..ir|.i.-i. I... ardsthetip; stein-lvs.shorter- 

 . i I,, I , . . ile above : fls. in a forking 



. ' I ,1 Monger oblong-obovate, f ur- 



i..\...i .1 .1. iiai.. liaii'_ iii_', yellow, with orange-brown 

 dots. Chile. B.M. .'IL'.M.- From this species we seem to 

 have derived the spots of Calceolaria fls. 



corymbdsa, Ruiz & Pav. One-2 ft., the stem 4-angled : 

 radical 1 vs. ovate and sometimes cordate, obtuse or nearly 

 so, doubly crenate, rugose and hairy, whitish beneath ; 

 stem-lvs. smaller and narrower, somewhat clasping, op- 

 posite : fls. small (about half as large as in C. crenati- 

 ftora)t in a broad, somewhat loose corymb, the slipper 

 somewhat short-oblong, clear yellow outside and marked 

 with red lines inside. Chile. "B.M. 2418. 



amplezicaiilis, HBK. A ft. or two high: Ivs. cordate- 

 ovate to ovate-lanceolate, long-acuminate, pubescent, 

 woolly beneath and deep-rugose above, clasping : fls. 

 small, in an upright corjTnb, pale yellow and spotless, 

 the slipper hoof-shapec; Equador, etc. B.M. 4300. 

 cc. Fls. purple. 



purpiirea Grab Stems erect, pubescent, 1-2 ft. : radi- 

 cal h s spatulate and acutish, with a strong midrib, 

 sparseh hairy rugose dentate; stem-lvs. broad-cordate 

 and cKspmg less toothed fls. in loose corymbs, small, 

 purplish or leddish violet, the slipper somewhat fur- 

 rowed Peru B M 2775 — Supposed to have entered 

 largely into purple fld varieties. 



arachnoidea Grab Stem a foot or two high, terete, 

 branchy woollj with appressed hairs : Ivs. oblong or 

 Imgulate narrowing into long winged petioles, clasping, 

 obscurely toothed rugose, woolly on both sides : pe- 

 duncles in piirs forking fls. small, dull purple, the slip- 

 per ni irh gl but ir and furrowed. Chile. B.M. 2874. 



I / 

 scabiossfoha 



mpoiind 



essentially so. 

 ft., the stem terete, hf 

 with clasping petioles, cut iie; 



or t mpleteh to the midrib : 



late to broad oval acuminate, ciliate, .1. . . i y 



small in small hair\ corvmbs, pale y. ' i . \ \"T 



neaily < rbi< ular in outline. Peru. i'..M,_'l". hi . s- 

 I ti ll\|ureform this is sold by seedsmen as an annual 

 1, 1 1 1 lni„ plant 



pmnita I mn Often reaches 3 ft. or more : Ivs. pin- 

 II itifi I 1 ( jmpletely compound, the divisions short and 

 marly entire obtuse or nearly so: fls. small, sulfur- 

 yellow Peru B M 41 —The first known garden spe- 



still sold 1 



AA Shntbby Calceolarias. 

 integnfdlia Murr ( C. rugdsa, Ruiz and Pav. C. 

 1 1 / /( f 1 ers ) Two ft. or less high, branchy 

 I II 1 1 u li\ h glabrous, oval-lanceolate, crisped 

 an 1 1 lit iti the short petioles winged : fls. in ter- 

 minal clu ters small yellow. Chile. B.M. 2523.- 

 \ ariable Probably the chief source of shrubby 

 Calceolarias 

 thyrsifldra, Grab. More shrubby : Ivs. linear and 

 clustered, toothed, sessile, not hairy : fls. small, yel- 

 low, in a close, terminal cluster. Chile. B.M. 2915. 

 C. dlba, Ruiz & Pav. Shrubby : Ivs. linear, toothed above : 



41,-. 



315 Calceolaria arachnoideo crenatiflora 



A. Herbaceous Calceolaria.'!, parents of the florists' 

 varieties of this cotmtry. 



B. Lvs. simple. 



c. Fls. essentially yellow. 



crenatiflbra, Cav. (C. phidula, Sweet). One-2 ft., ilie 



stem soft-hairy, terete: radical lvs. ovate and long peti- 



\:<:-MM.-C. Heiiiici, Hook. f. Shnibby, 

 i-like, small-toothed : fls. panicled, clear 

 urge. Equador. B.M. 5772.— C. hyssopi- 

 ■ : lvs. crowded, small, lanceolate and 

 tern linear and entire, margins revolute: 

 any-tid. corymbs, pale sulfur-yellow, the 

 mate. Equador. B.M. 5548.— 

 C. lub&la. Cav. Herbaceous : lvs. triangular-ovate, palmately 

 5-7-lobed, dentate : fls. iu terminal clusters, clear, pale yellow. 



