170 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. 
This is distinguished from 8. ballotaeflora by the very large, scarcely rugose, 
broad leaves, pale beneath because of the presence of abundant whitish pubes- 
cence, and by the denser and more ample inflorescence. The species has been 
collected at various times in southern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona. 
Salvia vinacea Wooton & Standley, sp. nov. 
A low, suffrutescent plant, about 30 em. high; stems slender, sparingly tomen- 
tulose above; leaves broadly ovate, about 30 mm. long and 25 mm. wide, rather 
obtuse, coarsely crenate, mostly truncate at the base or slightly decurrent, 
glabrous above and almost so beneath but slightly puberulent, of about the 
same color on both surfaces; petioles slender, half as long as the blades or 
more; flowers in short, congested spikes, numerous; calyx ampliate in age, its 
lobes very broad and obtuse, the whole calyx 12 or 13 mm. long, of a deep wine 
color, greenish at the base, on a short, deflexed pedicel; corolla dark blue, 20 
to 22 mm. long, its tube much exceeding the calyx, the upper lip oblanceolate. 
Type in the U. 8. National Herbarium, no. 499430, collected in the Florida 
Mountains at an altitude of about 1,950 meters, September 8, 1908, by E. A. 
Goldman (no, 1501). 
ADDITIONAL SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Florida Mountains, September 7, 1903, 
M. E, Jones; Martins Spring, Florida Mountains, 1895, Mulford 1067. 
Nearest S. pinguifolia, but differing in its much larger corolla with a nar- 
rower upper lip, wine colored calyx, and more congested inflorescence, and in 
not having its leaves conspicuously whitened beneath. 
Tetraclea angustifolia Wooton & Standley, sp. nov. 
Herbaceous perennial with several branching, obscurely 4-angled, ascending 
or spreading stems 40 to 50 cm. high from a woody root, the whole plant 
scabrous with short, stout, recurved, whitish hairs, these most abundant on the 
stems; leaves narrowly oblong, tapering into a short petiole, serrate-dentate with 
a few coarse teeth on each side, acute, the hairs mostly on the petioles, veins, 
and margins of the leaves; flowers in few-flowered axillary clusters with 
narrowly linear bracts; calyx campanulate, the lobes narrowly lanceolate, 
acuminate in flower, accrescent and persistent in fruit; corolla and stamens 
as in 7. coulteri but smaller and the tube narrower; nutlets slightly more 
reticulate and of the same size. 
Type in the U. 8S. National Herbarium, no. 330627, collected on the plains 
south of the White Sands, August 238, 1897, by E. O. Wooton (no. 403). We 
have one other specimen collected from the same locality, August 26, 1899, by 
EE. O. Wooton. 
This plant is more slender, taller, less pubescent and with shorter hairs, and 
has narrower calyx lobes, smaller corolla, and more reticulate nutlets than the 
only other species of the genus, 7. cowlteri. The leaves, too, are narrower and 
toothed. 
SOLANACEAE. 
Androcera novomexicana (Bartlett) Wooton & Standley. 
Solanum heterodowum novomexricanum Bartlett, Proc. Amer. Acad. 44: 628. 
£909. 
Type collected by Fendler in New Mexico, doubtless near Santa Fe, in 1847 
(no. 673). Although Solanum heterodorum has been reported from New 
Mexico at various times, it is to this species that all such specimens belong. 
The plant, while seldom abundant in any one locality, has a rather wide range 
in New Mexico, having been collected in the region about Santa Fe and as far 
south as Santa Rita. 
