BELLIS. — INULA. 
2Q3 
/3. E. unijloruiii, (Sm. mt L.) has a shorter and more erect ray 
and a rather more hairy involucre. E. B. 2416.— Highland 
mountains. P. VII. VIII. S. 
6. (15.) Bel'lis Linn. Daisy. 
1. B. peren'nis (L.) ; 1. obovate-spathnlate crenate-dentate. 
—E. B. 424. — St. a short procumbent rhizome producing 1. 
only at its end. Stalks simple, each bearing a single head. 
Sometimes all the fl. are ligulate ; rarely all are tubular. — 
Banks and pastures. P. III. — X. E. S. I. 
7. (9.) Solida'go Linn. Golden Piod. 
1. S. Virgaih-ea (L.) ; st. erect slightly angular, 1. lanceolate 
narrowed at both ends, lower 1. elliptic stalked serrate, raceme 
erect simple or compound, phyll. lanceolate acute, fr. downy. — 
E. B. 301. R. xvi. 911.— St. usually 1—3 feet high, leafy, 
nearly simple, ending in a long cluster of yellow heads. — /i. an- 
gilSti/olia (Gaud.) ; 1. all lanceolate [entire or obscurely serrate]. 
— 7. S. cambrica (Huds.) ; st. 2 — 6 in. high, 1. ovate-lanceolate, 
heads larger. — Woods and thickets. 7 on mountains. P. VII. 
-IX. E.S.I. 
8. (6.) Linosy'eis Cass. vm. DC. Goldilocks. 
1. L. vulgaris (DC.) ; herbaceous, 1. linear glabrous entire, 
headscorymbose,inv.lax. — Chri/socomaLinosyris L. E. .6.2505. 
Aster Linosyris (Bernh.). — St. 12 — 18 in. high, simple, leafy. 
L. single-ribbed, smooth or rough, very many, more or less 
dotted. Fl. yellow. — Limestone cliifs, rare. P. VIII. IX. E. 
Tribe IV. Imdcoi. 
Heads never dicecious. Fl. of ray female or neuter, ligulate, 
in one row, or wanting ; of disk perfect, tubular. Anth. with 
slender tails. Style-branches broadened upwards and rounded. 
L. alternate. 
9. (10.) 1'nula Linn. em. Gaertn. 
+1. L Ilelenium (L.) ; outer pht/ll. ovate, inner ohovate, 1. un- 
equally dentate downy beneath cordate-ovate acute clasping, 
root-1. stalked elliptic-oblong, fr. quadrangular glabrous. — Sy. 
E. B. 766. — St. 3 — 4 feet high, round, furrowed, solid, leafy, 
branched above. Heads few together or solitary, terminal, very 
