46fi ORDKtt 10.— COMPOSITE. 



81. XERAN'THEMUM, (Gr. grjpog, dry, avtfoc ; on accouut of its dry, 

 imperishable flowers.) Heads discoid ; involucre hemispherical, with 

 radiant, colored, opaque, scarious scales ; receptacle paleaceous ; pappus 

 paleo-setaceous. — Q) Native of S. Europe. 



X. annuum Willd. Eternal Flower. St. erect, branched ; lvs. oblong- 

 lanceolate, obtusish, alternate, entire ; lids, large, terminal, solitary ; scales of 

 the involucre obtuse, scarious, inner ones of the ray spreading, lanceolate, obtuse. 

 — A singular plant, half hardy, of easy culture. Stem 2 — 3f high. The radi- 

 ant, involucre scales are of a rich purple, but there are varieties with red, 

 white, blue and yellow scales. The flowers retain their beauty for years. 



82. HELICHRY'SUM. (Or. golden sun) is another genus of fadeless 

 flowers, of which several species are occasionally cultivated. The 

 spreading scales are of various colors. H. bracteosum is the finest 

 species, having yellow scales, heads on long stalks ami lanceolate 

 leaves. 



83. ERECH'TITES, Raf. Fire-weed. (Gr. t r pe%#GJ, to trouble ; the 

 species are troublesome weeds.) Flowers all tubular, those of the mar- 

 gin pistillate, of the disk perfect; involucre cylindrical, simple, slightly 

 calyculate ; receptacle naked; pappus of numerous, fine, capillary 

 bristles. — (T) Lvs. simple, alternate. Fls. corymbous, whitish. 



E. liieracifolius Raf. St. paniculate, virgate; lvs. oblong, amplexicaul, acute, 

 unequally and deeply toothed with acute indentures; invol. smooth ; ach. hairy. 

 — A rank weed, growing in fields (Can. and U. S.), particularly in such as have 

 been newly cleared and burnt over. St. thick and fleshy, branching, 3f high, 

 roughish. Lvs. of a light green, largo, irregularly cut into many deip and acute 

 teeth. Fls. terminal, crowded, destitute of rays, white. Invol. large and tumid 

 at base. Aug., Sept. (Senicio liieracifolius L.) 



\ 



84. CACA'LIA, L. "Wild Caraway. Tassel Flower. (An an- 

 cient Gr. name of an uncertain plant.) Flowers all tubular, £ ; in- 

 volucre cylindric, oblong, often calyculate with small scales at the base; 

 receptacle not chaffy ; pappus capillary, scabrous. — Mostly 21 . Smooth. 

 Lvs. alternate. lids, of lis. corymbed, mostly cyanic. 



§ Scales of the involucre united, about 12. Flowers GO to S'\ scarlet No. 8 



§ Scales of the involucre distinct, — about 12. Flowers 20 to Si), white No. 1 



— 5 only. Flowers o. — Leaves cordate or lobed. . .Nos. 2 — 4- 

 — Leaves never cordate Nos. 5— T 



1 C. siiaviolens L. Glabrous; st. striate-angular ; lvs. petiolate, hastate-sagit- 

 tate, serrate, smooth, green on both sides ; lis. corymbed, erect ; invol. many- 

 flowered. — U Western N. Y. to Conn. (Robbins), to Ga. and 111. Stems 4 — 5f 

 high, striate, leafy. Radical leaves on long stalks, pointed ; cauline ones on 

 winged stalks. Flowers whitish, in a terminal, compound corymb. Scales and 

 peduncles smooth, with setaceous bracts beneath the involucre, and beneath the 

 divisions of the peduncles. Aug. 



2 C. reniforrnis Muhl. St. sulcatc-angkd ; lvs. palmately veined, nearly smooth, 

 green, both sides, petiolate, lower ones reniform, tipper flabelliform; corymb com- 

 pound, fastigiato ; hds. 5-flowered. — Woods, Ind., 111., Penn., S. to Car. St. 3 to 

 61* high, nearly' simple, glabrous. Lvs. 3 to 12' by 5 to 18', repand-dentate, lower 

 petioles very long. Scales of involucre 5, obtuse, whitish. Jl. 



3 C. atriplicifolia L. St. terete; lvs. petiolate, smooth, glaucous leneath, palm- 

 ate-veined, angularly lobed and dentate, the lower subcordate; fis. corymbed, 

 erect; invol. 5-flowered. — N. Y. to Ga. and 111. St. 3 to 5f high, leafy. Lvs. 

 alternate, the lower ones as largo as the hand, with large, unequal teeth or lobes. 

 Hds. small, ovoid-cylindric, whitish, loosely corymbous at the top of the branches. 

 JL — Sept. 



