174 
LABIATSS. 
Teucrium occidentale Gray, Syn. Fl. ii, pt. i, 349 (1878). 
Amoug bushes: Forks of Middle Loup River, July 27; 15 miles south of Whitman, 
August 3; 3 miles northeast of the same, July 31 (No. 1610), 
Mentha canadensis L. Sp. PI. ii, 577 (1753). 
In wet places: northeast of Whitman, July 31; Cody’s Lakes, August 11 (No. 1628). 
Lycopus virginicus L. Sp. Pl. i, 21 (1753). 
The leaves in my specimen are subsessile and the stem more acutish-angled, pubes- 
cent. Among bushes,near Thedford, August 17 (No. 1830). In open places the plant 
becomes lower and more strict. Grant County, August 3; Cody’s Lakes, August 9 
(No. 1641), 
Lycopus lucidus Turez.; Benth. in DC. Prodr. xii, 178 (1848). 
Cody’s Lakes, August 10; South Dismal River, August 14; Mullen, August 17 
(No. 1658). A form of the same with inconspicuous bracts, which, as also the 
calyx lobes, are slender and subnlate, and with the perennial part of the rootstock 
much thickened-swollen, was found at Thedford, August 19 (No. 1702). 
Lycopus sinuatus Ell. Bot. 8. Car. & Georg. i, 27 (1816). 
Mullen, July 17; Cody’s Lakes, August 9 (No. 1655). 
Keellia lanceolata (Willd.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. ii, 520 (1891); Brachystemum lan- 
ceolatum Willd. Enum. 623 (1809). 
Banks of Middle Loup River, Mullen, July 17; South Dismal River, August 14 
(No. 1560). 
Hedeoma hispida Pursh, FI. ii, 414 (1814). 
Not common: Thedford, June 16 and 20 (No. 1312), 
Monarda fistulosa L. Sp. Pl. i, 22 (1753). 
Forks of Dismal River, July 11; Mullen, J uly 17; Forks of Middle Loup River, 
July 26 (No. 1531). 
Monarda citriodora Cerv.; Lag. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 2 (1816). 
On dry prairies: Thedford, June 21; Dismal River, June 27 (No. 1387). 
Prunella vulgaris L. Sp. Pl. ii, 600 (1753). 
. On moist hillsides: Thedford, June 21; Mullen, July 20 (No. 1347). 
Scutellaria galericulata L. Sp. Pl. ii. 599 (1753). 
On the river banks and in wet meadows: Plummer Ford, July 3; Forks of Dismal 
River, July 11; northeast of Whitman, July 31; Cody’s Lakes, August 11 (No. 1490). 
Scutel laria lateriflora L. Sp. PI. ii, 598 (1753). 
River banks: South Dismal River, August 14; Thedford, September 4 (No. 1691). 
PLANTAGINACEZ. 
Plantago purshii Rem. & Schult. Syst. iii, 120 (1818). 
Prairies: Thedford, June 15 (No. 1310). In very dry places, e. g., in prairie-dog 
towns, the plant becomes very delicate and less woolly, with oval few-ftlowered 
heads. Thedford, June 14 (No. 1294). 
NYCTAGINACES. 
Allionia hirsuta Pursh, F1. ii, 728 (1814). 
Under this I place several forms, of which, perhaps, one or two good varieties 
might be made; but as I have not seen them from other localities, it is not advisable 
to separate them at present. These forms are as follows: 
1. The more typical form with lanceolate or oblong leaves and the stem little 
hairy except at the nodes. Ihave collected a similar form, but with still narrower, 
