CENTAUREA 



11. montina, Linn. Mountain Bluet. Perennial : 

 sts. low, stoloniferous, unbranched, 12-10 or rarely 20 

 in. high : Ivs. decurrent, the young ones silvery white, 

 oval-lance-shaped : involucre of 4 or 5 rows of scales, 

 black-ciliate along the margins; fls. blue, the marginal 

 ones 1 in. long, disc-fls. very short, becoming purple. 

 Europe. B. M. 77. Var. Alba, Hort. Fls. white. Var. 

 rdsea, Hort. Fls. rose-colored. Var. citrlna, DC. (var. 

 sulphured. Hort.). Disc-fls. brown, rays yellow. Ar- 

 menia. B.M. 1175. 



cc. Stetns erect, simple or brajiched. 



12. dealbata, Willd. Perennial : sts. sub-erect, 8-24 

 in. hij;h : Ivs. white-villous beneath, glabrous above, 



the lower ones 1-1 >2 ft. long, pet- 

 ioled, pinnate, the obovate lobes 

 ,^.; . coarsely cut-toothed or auricled at 



-- .-,>'- the base; steni-lvs. sessile, pinnate, 



with oblong-lance lobes : fl.-head 

 solitary, just above the uppermost 

 leaf : fls. red, those of the disc 

 rosy or white : outer scales of the 

 involucre with lanceolate tips, the 

 middle rounded, deeply fringed, 

 ciliate. Asia Minor, Persia. 



13. atropurpiirea, Waldst. & Kit. 

 (C. calociphala, Willd.). Peren- 

 nial : sts. erect, branched, about 

 2-3 ft. high, the branches white- 

 woolly at the summit : Ivs. bipin- 

 nate, lobes linear-lanceolate, acumi- 

 nate ; lowest Ivs. petioled, upper- 

 most pinnatifid: fl. -heads without 

 bracts ; invol. scales with fringed 

 ciliate white lanceolate tips, the innermostones rounded, 

 scarious-margined : fls. black-purple. Hungary. 



14. BabyWnioa, Linn. Silvery white perennial : sts. 

 simple, stout, erect, 6-10 or 12 ft. high : Ivs. long, coria- 

 ceous, strongly decurrent on the stem, the radical lyrate, 

 the lower stem-lvs. oval or oblong-acute, entire or undu- 

 late, the upper lance-acute : fls. yellow, the globular 

 heads almost sessile in the axils of narrow bract-like 

 Ivs.; 5^- J^ of the stem flower-bearing: involucre-scales 

 with ashort, recurved tip. Asia Minor, Syria. Gn. 2,p.73; 

 8, p. 263. R.H.1859,pp. 540-1. — Tall, stout and striking 

 P'*°'- Jared G. Smith and L. H. B. 



CENTATJElDITTM. See Xanthisma. 



CENTEADfiNIA (Greek for toothed gland, alluding to 

 the anther glands). Melastomdcece. Pour species in 

 Mexico and Central Amer., grown in warmhouses for 

 their showy-colored Ivs. and pretty fls. They are herbs 

 or shrubs, with angled or winged branches, petiolate, 

 opposite lanceolate or ovate-entire, ribbed Ivs., and fls. 

 with 4-lobed calyx, 4 petals, 8 stamens, and a 4-loculed 

 ovary. The blossoms are pink or white, in axillary or 

 terminal clusters. Prop, by cuttings. Very showy and 

 desirable plants. Stems often colored. Centradenias 

 like rich leaf-mold with sharp sand, and brisk heat. 

 Give a light but shady position. Strong plants are much 

 benefited by liquid manure, and such applications give 

 better colors in both flowers and fruit. Monogr. by 

 Cogniaux, DC, Monographite Phanerogamarum, 7: 116. 



grandifolia, Endl. Branches 4-winged : Ivs. ovate- 

 lanceolate, strongly 3-nerved, brilliant red beneath, 

 long-pointed and curving at the end: cymes many-fld., 

 shorter than the Ivs., the fls. light rose, rotate, the 

 petals very obtuse, the stamens unequal. B.M. 5228.— 

 The plant grows 2 ft. high, and blooms in winter. Very 

 showy. The cut branches hold their color a long time, 

 making the plant useful for decorations. 



iloribiinda. Planch. Branches obscurely angled, pu- 

 bescent, red: Ivs. narrow-lanceolate, tapering below, 3- 

 nerved, red-nerved below : fls. pink, in terminal pani- 

 cles. F.S. 5:453. -Smaller than C. grandifolia. 



in8EqmlaterS,Us, G. Don (C. rdscn, Lindl.). Lvs. ovate- 

 lanceolate, unequal-sided, entire, ciliate, reddish be- 

 neath: fls. pink, in terminal corymbose racemes: dwarf. 



CEPHALANTHUS 



275 



CENTEANTHUS (Greek, spurred flower). Valerian- 

 dcew. A few annual and perennial herbs of the Medi- 

 terranean region, with dense clusters of small red or 

 white fls. terminating the branches, and opposite entire 

 or cut lvs.: calyx cut into 5-15 narrow divisions, en- 

 larging after flowering; corolla slender-tubed. 5-parted, 

 spurred at the b:ise; stamen 1: fls. with a pappus-like 

 crest. Of easiest culture. 



rtiber, DC. Red Valerian. Jupiter's Beard. Per- 

 ennial, 1-3 ft., smooth and glaucous, forming a compact 

 and floriferous, bushy plant : lvs. ovate to lanceolate, 

 some of them toothed at base: fls. very numerous, deep 

 crimson.— A very handsome old garden plant, too much 

 neglected. It blooms all summer. Excellent for cut- 

 ting. Increased by division; also by seeds. There is a 

 white-fld. form (var. dlbus}. 



macrosiphon, Boiss. Annual, of easy culture in any 

 good soil: 1-2 ft.: lvs. ovate, glaucous, toothed: fls. 

 larger than in the last, red. Spain. — There are white- 

 fld. (var. dlbus) and dwarf (var. ndnus) forms. Excel- 

 lent for rockeries and borders; also good for lawn vases. 

 L. H. B. 



CENTKOPOGON (Greek kentron. spur, and pogon, 

 beard, referring to the fringed stigma). Campanu- 

 lAcew. About 36 tropical Amer. sub-shrubs or shrubs, 

 often scandent, with alternate, mostly dentate lvs., and 

 long, tubular fls. which are violet, purple, red, or orange, 

 and usually borne singly on long peduncles : bracteoles 

 very small or wanting. Warmhouse perennial, prop, by 

 cuttings. 



Lucyinus, Houllet. Height 1-2 ft. : stem somewhat 

 woody: Ivs. short-petioled, finely toothed: fls. rose, win- 

 ter; hemispherical, with lanceolate segments recurved 

 at the tips. R.H. 1868:290.-Said to be a hybrid of C. 

 fastuosus and Siphocampylus betul(pformis, but seems 

 to show little influence of the latter, which has longer 

 petioles and peduncles, more coarsely toothed lvs., 

 longer calyx-segments, and a yellow-tipped corolla. 



fastudsus, Scheidw. Lvs. peach-like, oblong, acute, 

 bordered with glandular teeth, very glabrous, short- 

 petioled: fls. rose-colored, winter ; calyx hemispherical, 

 •ith 5 lanceolate, denticulate segments. Mex. R.H. 



1853 :18L 



W. M. 



Mex. B.R. 29:: 



L. H. 



and H. A. Siebrecht. 



CENTEOSfiMA (Greek, spurred-sfandard) . Legu- 

 mindsw. Butterfly Pea. Twining herbs (at least 

 those in cult.), with pinnate, .3-7-foliolate lvs., and 

 showy white or reddish fls in the axils. Fl. papiliona- 

 ceous, the standard spurred on the back, the keel broad, 

 and the style bearded at the apex. Species nearly 40 in 

 tropical Amer. and 2 in U. S. 



Virginianum, Benth. Roughish, climbing, 2-6 ft.: 

 Ifts. ovate to linear, shining, stipitate : fls. 1^ in the 

 axil, 1 in. long, violet and splashed, showy: pod straight 

 and long-pointed, 4-5 in. long. Md. S., in sandy lands. 

 A.G. 13:649. — Int. to cult, many years ago, but again in- 

 troduced in 1892 (as C. grundiflorum) , and much adver- 

 tised. It is a hardy and desirable perennial vine, bloom- 

 ing the first season from seed. There is a white-fld. var. 

 L. H. B. 



CENTUEY PLANT. Consult Agave. 



CEPHALANTHfiEA (Greek for head and anther). 

 OrchidAcew, tribe Ifeittiew. About 10 species of small, 

 temperate-region terrestrial orchids, allied to Epipactis, 

 Pogonia, etc. Some of them are western N. American, 

 and others are European. Sepals 3: petals small, ovate: 

 lip saccate : lvs. (sometimes wanting) lanceolate or 

 oblong: fls. mostly small (sometimes showy), in an open 

 Bpike. The species are scarcely known in cult., but two 

 Japanese species have been offered by importers. These 

 are E. faloita, Blume, yellow, and E, erScta, Blume, 

 white. 



CEPHALANTHUS (Greek, head and flower; fls. in 

 heads). Subiacew. Button BusH. Shrubs with oppo- 

 site or whorled, entire, stipulate lvs. : fls. small, tubu- 

 lar, white or yellowish, 4-merous, with included stamens 

 and long, exserted style, in globular heads: fr. dry, sepa- 

 rating into 2 nutlets. Six species in Amer., Africa and 

 Asia, of which only the one North American species is 



