HEATH FAMH^Y. 



213 



Procumbent Gaxjltheria. Tea-berry. Wintergreen. Checkerberry. 

 Boxberry. Ivory Plum. Partridge-berry. 



stem slender, creeping on or near the surface of the ground ; branches simple, 3-5 in- 

 ches high, naked below or with a few lance-ovate scales. Leaves few (4-6), an inch to 

 an inch and a half in length, rather crowded ; petioles very short. Flowers white, 1 - 4 in 

 the axils of the upper leaves, ou recurved pedicels )^ - 3^ an inch long ; fruit persistent. 



Canada to the mountains of Carolina. Fl. July. Fr. Oct. 



06s, The number of popular names which have been given to this lit- 

 tle plant, some of which are also bestowed on quite different plants, 

 shows the necessity of a precise botanical nomenclature. The leaves are 

 agreeably aromatic, and yield on distillation a very heavy volatile oil, — 

 the Oil of Wintergreen of the shops, — which is largely used for flavoring 

 confectionery, medicated syrups, &c. The fruit, which has the aromatic 

 property in a much less degree, is pleasant and edible, and is often 

 ^Drought to the markets of our cities. The real nature of the fruit can 

 be readily seen by dividing it lengthwise, when it will be found that the 

 edible portion is the enlarged fleshy calyx, while the proper fruit, i. e., 

 the ripened ovary, is enclosed within it. * 



5. ANDEOM'EDA, L. Andromeda. 



[Named in allusion to the exposure of Andromeda ; from its place of growth.] 



Calyx 5-parted, persistent. Corolla hypogynous, tubular, companulate, 

 or globose, — the limb 5-cleft. Stamens 10 ; anthers fixed near the mid- 

 dle, the cells opening by a terminal pore. Capsule ovoid or subglobose, 

 5-celled, many-seeded. 



1. A. Maria'na, L. Glabrous ; leaves oval, mostly acute at each end, 

 very entire, sub-coriaceous, paler and puncticulate beneath, deciduous ; 

 flowering branches nearly leafless ; pedicels fasciculate, bracteate ; calyx 

 naked at base ; corolla ovoid-oblong ; capsule pyramidal. 

 Maryland Andromeda. Stagger-bush. 



stem 2-3 or 4 feet high, with erect branches. Leaves 2-3 inches long ; petioles about 

 nnc-C'iurth of an inch long. Flowers in racemose fascicles on the old branches. Corolla 

 w!i t ■, or reddish-white. Capswie pentangular-ovoid, truncate at apex. Seeds numerous, 

 siiri!i, clavate. 



V\'i)iiill;U!(ls and sandy plains: New England to Florida. Fl. June. Fr. August- 



Obs. This shrub is very abundant in the sandy districts of New Jer- 

 sey ; and the farmers, there, allege that it is injurious to sheep, when the 

 leaves are eaten by them, — producing a disease called the staggers. I 

 believe the evidence is not conclusive, on this point ; but it may be well 

 to know the plant, against which such a charge is made. 



6. KAL'MIA, L. American LxVUrel. 



[Dedicated to Peter Ralm,—:i Swedish Bolani^L] 



Calyx .5-partcd. Corolla between wheel-shaped and bell-shaped, 5-lobed, 

 furnished with 10 depressions, in which the lo obliquely bifid anthers are 



