NEW APOCYNUMS. 57 
pair either horizontally extending or nearly or quite erect, never 
deflexed. 
The type specimens are from the vicinity of Southington, 
Connecticut, and were collected in July and August, 1903, by 
Mr. L. Andrews. The species has the habit of A. androsaemt- 
folium, the inflorescence, however, not of that but of A. medium, 
while its flowers are larger than those of the former, even. 
The foliage is remarkably elongated, and the pods are, as in no 
other known species, horizontal or suberect, the members of each 
` pair diverging at an angle of nearly or quite forty-five degrees. 
A plant common in Wisconsin and Minnesota, with erect 
pods, and less elongated foliage, is provisionally referred to the 
present species. 
A. ANDREWSII. Smaller than the preceding, 1 to 13 feet 
high; herbage light-green ; leaves elliptic-lanceolate, 3 inches 
long, 2 inch broad, subsessile, acutely mucronate, glabrous on 
both faces, those of the spreading branches smaller : cymes small 
and few flowered at the ends of all the branches: sepals lance- 
ovate: corolla small campanulate, flesh-color: follicles not seen. 
This also is from about Southington, Conn., by Mr. Andrews, 
copiously collected in flower in August, 1902, and July, 1903, 
by the collector taken to be 4. medium, Greene, from which its 
long narrow foliage completely distinguishes it. The plant has, 
by this character, much likeness to the 4. cannabinum group, 
though in mode of growth, position of branches, and character 
of flowers, it is wholly of the A. androsemifolium alliance. 
A. CALopHYLLUM. A foot high, stout, parted from near the 
base into several densely leafy spreading branches ending in a 
panicle of 3 or more stout-peduncled densely-flowered compound 
cymes: leaves firm, the lowest round-ovate or oval, 1 inch long 
or more and retuse, the others 14 inches or more and ovate, very 
obtuse, all saliently mucronate, glabrous, very glaucous and pale 
beneath, above of the darkest green but the veins and veinlets 
white; sepals ovate-lanceolate, short; corolla large, deep flesh- 
color, narrowly campanulate, deeply cleft, the segments ovate- 
oblong, very obtuse, somewhat spreading: follicles stout, 3 
inches long. 
