NEW CEANOTHUS. 67 
specimens in U. S. Herb., being a sheet from San Bernardino 
Mountains, by G. R. Vasey, 1880. In 1891 Coville & Funston 
took good material from Frazier Mountain to the westward of 
the San Bernardino range, listing it as C. integerrimus; but our 
finest specimens are from Mr. Parish, nn. 3083 and 3385, taken 
from altitudes of 4000 and 5000 feetin the San Bernardino 
Mountains in 1894. The pubescence is permanent, being as 
obvious on mature fruiting specimens as on those young and 
barely in flower. 
C. MYRIANTHUS. Leaves subcoriaceous, oval-oblong, 14 to 2 
inches long, very obtuse at both ends, deep-green and glabrous 
above, glaucescent beneath, sparsely pubescent on the prominent 
whitish nerves of which two are prolonged, yet not making the 
leaf conspicuously triple-veined : flowering branches angular, 
light-green, not warty or glandular : thyrsiform inflorescence 6 
to 8 inches long, rather rigid, paniculately branched and dense 
with innumerable small white flowers. 
Fort Huachuca, Arizona, May, 1890, Dr. Edward Palmer. 
Related to C. Palmeri; remarkable for large rigid leaves and a 
notably compound inflorescence for this group. It might 
— as well be described as a close panicle. 
C. Mogoxttonicus. Allied to C. Mevadensis, smaller, more: 
slender, with smaller foliage, the oval obtuse leaves mostly less 
than an inch long, the largest 14 inches, deep-green, triple- 
nerved, paler beneath, nearly or quite glabrous, the margins 
usually entire, often 3-toothed at the summit, rarely with a few 
lateral teeth: inflorescences short for this group, simple and 
few-flowered. 3 
On Mogollon Creek, in the Mogollan Mountains, New 
Mexico, at 8000 feet, 16 July, 1893, O. B. Metcalfe, 
C. PEDUNCULARIS. Leaves firm, oval-oblong,, obtuse at base, 
mucronately acute at apex, triple-nerved, pubescent on both 
faces, an inch long or more: thyrsus short and simple, only 2 or 
3 inches long, on a terete and pubescent leafy-bracted peduncle 
of 6 or 7 inches; bracts of the peduncle } inch long, oblong or 
elliptic, acute, appressed-pubescent above, silky on the veins 
beneath ; bracts of the umbellules ovate or lanceolate, acumi- 
nate, silky-villous. 
nr Ay 
