503 
with woolly hairs. The leaves are narrower than in the next, of which it may be 
amore hairy variety, and the bark of the branches is browner and pubescent. It 
may also be a narrow-leafed form of C. pubescens. 
Little Elk Canyon, altitude 1,200 m., June 28; Rochford, altitude 1,700 m., July 11 
(No. 735). 
Cornus stolonifera Mx. Fl. i, 92 (1803). 
The bark is purplish red, the pubescence silky. In fruit only: Sylvan Lake, alti- 
tude 1,900 m., August 17 (No. 736). 
CAPRIFOLIACES. 
Adoxa moschetellina L. Sp. Pl. 1, 867 (1753). 
Only a few small specimens in bud were secured, below Sylvan Lake, altitude 
2,000 m., June 8, and a few in fruit, badly damaged by rust, under a rock near Sips 
Spring, in the Limestone District, altitude 1,900 m., July 28 (No. 757). 
Sambucus racemosa 1. Sp. PI. i, 270 (1753). 
Three forms belonging here were collected. In one the annual shoot and the 
peduncles are more or less roughish-pubescent and warty; leaves oblong-lanceolate, 
long acuminate, closely serrate; cyme inany-flowered, roundish, The mature fruit 
was not seen. The cyme resembles that.of S. melanocarpa, but the leaves are more 
like those of 8. racemosa and the flowers are “dull white, drying brownish.” Canyon, 
north of Runkels, altitude 1,800 m., July 30; Custer, altitude 1,700 m., July 14 
(No. 738). 
A form which I think is more typical has the shoots perfectly smooth and light 
colored, leaflets ovate-lanceolate with shorter acumination, cyime longer, but smaller ; 
fruit bright red as in Shepherdia argentea. Sylvan Lake, altitude 2,000 m., August 17 
(No. 739). 
Together with this form was another in every respect like it, except that the ber- 
ries were amber yellow, resembling and being the analogue of the amber-colored 
variety of Shepherdia growing in western Nebraska (No. 740). 
Viburnum opulus L. Sp. PI. i, 268 (1753). 
Canyon north of Runkels, altitude 1,300 m., June 30 (No. 741). 
Viburnum lentago L. Sp. Vl. i, 268 (1753). 
The margined petioles are often rufous-pubescent as they should be in TV, pruni- 
folium, which is said to grow in the Black Hills. 1 think, however, that this has 
been mistaken for that. Little Elk, altitude 1,200 m., June 28; Runkels, altitude 
1,300 m., June 30 (No. 742). 
Linnea borealis L. Sp. V1. ii, 631 (1753). 
Common in the Northern Hills, but also seen in the Harney Range. Elk Canyon, 
altitude 1,200 m., June 29; Lead City, altitude 1,600 m., July 6 (No. 743). 
Symphoricarpos racemosus pauciflorus Robbins, Gray, Man. ed. 5, 203 (1867). 
Common: Little Elk Canyon, altitude 1,200 m., June 28; Elk Canyon, altitude 
1,300 m., June 29; Lead City, altitude 1,600 m., July 6; Rochford, altitude 1,700 m., 
July 12 (No, 744). 
Symphoricarpos occidentalis Hook. Fl. Bor. Amer. i, 285 (1834). 
Very variable; flowers few or many; style glabrous or sparsely villose; stout or 
slender; leaves entire or lobed, large and thick or small and thin. Some forms 
approaching the preceding. Elk Canyon, altitude 1,200 m., June 29; Hot Springs, 
altitude 1,100 m., August 9; Custer, altitude 1,700 m., August 12 (No, 745). 
A form with thin, ovate, acute or acuminate, or even pointed leaves, and a thin, 
less bearded corolla was collected at the last place, August 19 (No. 746). The same 
has been collected by Dr. Chas, E, Bessey in Colorado, 
Lonicera hirsuta glaucescens, var. nov.; Lonicera parviflora var.? Torr. & Gr. 
FI. ii, 7 (1840), partly; Lonicera douglasii Hook. Fl. Bor. Amer, i, 282 (1833) (?), not 
Caprifolium douglasit Lind]. Trans. Hort. Soc, vii, 244, which is L. hirsuta proper, 
