66 LEAFLETS. 
The types of C. integerrimus were, of course, taken by 
Douglas in just that region whence we have the so-called C. 
Andersontt. 
And yet, in the original diagnosis, there is some indication 
that the broad-leaved species had in some shape confronted the 
authors referred to; for the phrase “foliis 3-costatis” is not 
true of the specimens to which I refer. That is a mark of the 
other shrub that has so often been collected and which has 
usurped the name C. iutegerrimus in the herbaria, and in the 
books. But the originals of the species so named, as preserved 
at Kew, and with leaves unvaryingly narrow-oblong, have only 
a delicate and strictly pinnate venation. The necessary dis- 
placement of the name C. Andersonit by its reduction to syno- 
nymy involves the restoration of Dr. Kellogg’s C. Mevadensis 
for the beautiful shrub that so abounds in the foothills of the 
interior of the State. 
C. INTEGERRIMUS, Hook, & Arn. Bot. Beech. 329, not of 
American authors. C. Andersonii, Parry. Proc. Davenp. Acad. 
v. 172; Greene, Fl. Fr. 81. Leaves thin, narrowly oblong or 
oblong-elliptic, very obtuse, delicately pinnate-veined, glabrous. 
C. NEVADENSIS, Kell. Proc. Calif. Acad. ii. 152. fig. 45. C. 
integerrimus, Greene, l. c., and of American authors generally, 
not Hook. & Arn. Leaves firm, oval, obtuse or acutish, obtuse at 
base but not subcordate, 1 to 14 inches long, veins beneath white 
and prominent, the lowest lateral pair long and nearly parallel 
with the midvein, both faces appearing glabrous, a very fine 
pubescence on the petioles and along the veins beneath. 
Chiefly of the Sierra Nevada, Calif., and at middle elevations; 
good specimens in U. 8. Herb from Grant Springs, Mariposa 
Co., L. F. Ward, 1895, Calaveras Big Trees, Brandegee, 1891, 
Placer Co., Mrs. Hardy, 1893. From the higher elevations of 
the Coast Range we have what appears the same in Bakers’ n. 
3004, and Heller’s 5841 and 5886. 
C. PUBERULUS. Nearest C. Mevadensis, the leaves as large, 
more oval and obtuse, finely and often even silkily pubescent on 
both faces, most so on the veins beneath, these far less promi- 
nent than in the last. 
Peculiar to the mountains of southern California, the oldest 
