218 JOURNAL OF THE KOYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 



AnnuaL An interesting species with very narrow leaves, easily 

 raised from seed. 



An interesting hybrid between this species and thyrsoides was 

 raised at Kew in 1897 ; character exactly intermediate between 

 • the two. See specimen in the Kew Herbarium. 



Spruneriana.— Hampe in "Fl." xxv. 1842, i. 76. 

 Hab. : Thessaly. 



A fine species in the way of linifolia. Calyx segments very long 

 and filiform. 



Stansfieldi.— The " Craven Nursery Cat." 1906. 



A very beautiful small Campanula sent out recently by the above 

 nursery, said to be a hybrid between Tommasiniana and 

 carpatica. Vide "The Garden" Aug. 9, 1902. There is, 

 however, nothing of carpatica in it ; it is like a glorified 

 Waldsteiniana with the flowers and leaves much larger ; it is an 

 easily grown species, divides well, and grows from cuttings of the 

 young growth in the spring. I find in the Kew Herbarium a 

 dried specimen of what appears to be the same plant without 

 a name, collected by D. K. Vandoz on hills at Plasa, near 

 Jablinsca, Herzegovina. This is not far from the localities for 

 Waldsteiniana. This Campanula will become a popular one 

 for pot culture. 



Stenocodon.— B., "Keut. Diag." ser. ii., iii. 112. 

 Hab. : The Alps. 



Very near rotundifolia, probably a delicate form of that 

 species. 



stenosiphon. — Boiss. & Held., "Diag." ser. vii. 18 = gflomerata. 

 Steveni.— M. Bieb., "Fl. Taur." iii. 138. 



(Syn. infundibtUitm, Vest, ex Roem. & Sch. " Syst." v. 106 ; sim- 



plex, Steven in "Mem. Soc. Nat. Mosc." iii. 255, 1812 ; altaica, 



Ledeb., "Ind. Sem. Hor. Dorpat," 1824, 2.) 

 Hab. : Armenia, Mt. Vitosha, Bulgaria ; Caucasus, Persia. 

 A valuable small but little known species. A perennial which 



spreads and divides well, a pretty pot -plant, a pan with ten or 



twelve seedlings trained up little sticks being a fascinating 



object ; it seeds well and germinates freely. 

 Stricta.— L., "Sp. PI," 2nd ed., 288 (fig. "Ann. Mus." ii. 13). 

 Var. lihanotica, smaller and stunted. Syria. 

 Hab. : Asia Minor, Erzeroom, Armenia : 4,800-6,000 feet. 

 A fine, tall, woody species ; large flowers ; very narrow, scabrous 



leaves. 



StrigOSa.— Vahl., " Symb. Bot." iii. 34 (fig. " Bot. Mag." 5068). 



Hab. : Palestine, Taurus Mountains, Asia Minor, Mersina, near 



Tarsus ; Mesopotamia. 

 A pretty little hairy plant ; leaves linear, lanceolate, scabrous ; 

 flowers large ; very common in Palestine. 

 SUbpyrenaica.— Timb. in "Mem. Acad. Toul." ser. iv., v. (1855), 387. 

 Hab. : Spain. 



Leaves very long, linear ; flowers few, terminal, very large. 

 stthramulosa. — Jord. in Grev. & Godr. "Fl. Fr." ii. 418 = caespitosa. 



