116 GENERAL COLLETT AND MR. W. B. HEMSLEY ON PLANTS 
Anisomeles candicans, Benth. ; Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. p. 673.—Shan 
hills terai, in dry forest at 1000 feet. 
Burma. 
A variety having the axes of the cymes remarkably elongated. 
Achyrospermum Wallichianum, Benth.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 
p. 673.—Shan hills at 4000 feet. 
Eastern India and Tenasserim. 
Colquhounia elegans, Wall.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. p. 674; Forest 
Fl. Burma, ii. p. 278.—Shan hills at 4000 feet. 
Burma. 
Colquhounia vestita, Wall.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. p. 674.—Shan 
hills at 4000 feet. 
North India, from Kumaon to Khasia and Mishmi. 
Leonurus sibiricus, Linn.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. p. 678.—Shan 
hills at 4000 feet. 
Central Asia, and now widely spread in tropical Asia, Africa, 
and America. 
Leucas lanata, Benth., var.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. p. 681.—Shan 
hills at 4000 feet. 
Western Himalayas to South India and South China. 
The Shan plant is exactly like a specimen in the Kew Her- 
barium from Hainan. 
Leucas diffusa, Benth.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. p. 689.—Shan hills 
at 4000 feet. 
South India. 
Microtena cymosa, Prain; Hook. Ic. Pl. t. 1872; Hemsl. in 
Journ. Linn. Soc. xxvi. p. 306; syn. Plectranthus Patchouli, 
Clarke, Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. p. 624, et Gomphostemma insuaves 
Hance in Journ. Bot. 1884, p. 231.—Shan hills at 3000 feet. 
Eastern India, cultivated ; wild in Burma and Southern China. 
Gomphostemma strobilinum, Wall.; Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. p. 696- 
—Shan hills at 2000 to 4000 feet. 
Burma. 
Gomphostemma Hemsleyanum, Prain, MS., n. sp. 
Affinis G. parvifloro, a quo differt i brevioribus, foliis 
insigniter rotundato-crenatis, verticillastris densissimis, calycis 
lobis latis, nuculis nigris omnibus sz pius maturescentibus. 
Meiktila. 
