561 
Oregon: 
“Eastern Oregon,” T. T. Howell, 1880. 
Union County, JV. C. Cusick, 1878 (No, 635, in part). 
Josephine County, Grant Pass, 7. 7. Howell, 1884 (No. 172), 
Idaho: 
Clearwater, H. H. Spalding. 
Nez Perces County, near Lewiston, J. H. Sandberg, 1892 (No. 268); near Lake 
Waha, L. I’. Henderson, 1894. 
Montana: 
Custer, J. W. Blankinship, 1890. 
Wyoming: 
Uinta County, La Barge, E. Stevenson, 1894. 
Yellowstone National Park, near Mammoth Hot Springs, F. H. Rurglehaus, 1893. 
Colorado: 
Without locality, Hall and Harbour, 1862 (No. 353). 
Durango, Alice Eastwood, 1891. 
Gunnison County, Alice Eastwood, 1889. 
Fremont County, T. S. Brandegee, 1874. 
Middle Park, C. C. Parry, 1864. 
‘Head waters of Clear Creek,” C. C. Parry, 1861 (No. 70). 
Soda Springs, 7. S. Brandegee, 1874. 
Utah: 
Great Salt Lake, Thomas Meehan, 1883. 
Stansbury Island, altitude 1,300 meters, Sereno Watson, 1869 (No. 715, in part). 
“Southern Utah, northern Arizona, ete.,” Edward Palmer, 1877 (No. 291). 
Nevada: 
Reno, FH. Hillman, 1890, 1894. 
Unionville Valley, Sereno Watson, 1868 (No. 715, in part). 
Carson City, C. L. Anderson, 1865. 
Washoe and Pleasant valleys, Stretch, 1865. 
California: 
Sierra County, J. G. Lemmon, 1874 (No. 131). 
San Bernardino Mountains, Bear Valley, Parish Brothers, 1882 (No. 1459); S. B. 
Parish, 1894 (No. 3048). 
Inyo County, Julian Rixford, 1892. 
Mendocino County, Elk Ridge, H. N. Bolander, 1867 (No. 6498). 
Mountains east of Round Valley, Volney Rattan, 1884, in part. 
Summit of Mount Sanhedrin, J. W. Blankinship, 1893. 
Mount Hamilton, W. HI. Brewer, 1860-62 (No. 1304). 
Siskiyou County, near Yreka, l’. L. Greene, 1876 (No. 811). 
San Benito County, Cantua Creek, Alice Lastwood, 1893. Possibly Crepis suba- 
caulis. 
Arizona: 
Without locality, Edward Palmer, 1869. 
CREPIS BAKERI Greene. 
‘“‘Stoutish and low, seldom a foot high, neither woolly nor even cinereous, the 
pubescence rather scanty and mostly hirsutulous: leaves half as long as the stem, 
deeply pinnatifid into oblong and spatulate spreading lobes, or merely coarsely 
toothed, or in small plants quite entire: stem parted from the middle, or below it, 
into three to six pedunculiform monocephalous branches: involucre three-fourths of 
an inch high, with both long and short slenderly acuminate bracts: achenes acutely 
costate, tapering from the middle. 
‘‘In pine woods, near Egg Lake, Modoc County, California, June 8, 1894, Milo 8. 
Baker. A member of the group to which C. occidentalis belongs, but exhibiting none 
