52 MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN. 
narrowly oblong, 3 to 6 cm. long, 5 to 20 mm. broad, 
coarsely serrate, the serratures often somewhat dentate, 
base and apex obtuse with two stipitate, saucer-shaped 
glands at the base; petioles 1 to 2cm. long; raceme 1 to 
3cm. long, the 2 to several pistillate flowers clustered at 
the base; calyx 5-parted; petals represented by subulate 
processes; styles 3, biparted; capsule subglobose, 4 mm. 
tall, trigastric, stellate ; seeds oval, 3 to 4mm. long, punc- 
tulate; calyx accrescent, nearly equalling the capsule at 
maturity; staminate flowers congested, short pedicelled ; 
bracts narrowly oblong and minutely glandular at the base 
(see fig. 1, 2, pl. 17); calyx 5- (4- to 6-) divided, the 
sepals oblong ovate; petals narrowly oblong; stamens 
6 to 11. — Plate 17. 
Specimens examined from Florida (Chapman; Nash, no. 579; Curtiss, 
nos. 2523, 4273, 4933, 5683; Simpson, 1890; Hitchcock, 1894; Webber, 
no. 504; Palmer, no. 490, Indian river, 1874, has more appressed 
pubescence and resembles the species very closely); Alabama (Buckley, 
1841; McCarthy, 1888; Earle and Baker, no. 11); Mississippi (Skehan, 
1895; Tracy, nos. 2889, 2890, 3440, 4726; Pollard, no. 1102); Louisiana 
(Hale, no. 471; Frank, 1837); Tennessee (Kearney, 1894); Georgia 
(LeConte; Grosvener, 1864; Small, 1893); South Carolina (Coville, no. 
124; Ravenel, 1869); North Carolina (Hymans, 1880; McCarthy, 1885; 
Kelly, 1891; Small, 1894; Gray and Carey, 1841); Virginia (Heller, no. 
1153); Illinois (Geyer, 1842; Bebb, 1861; Vasey; Patterson; Seymour, 
1886); Iowa ( Reppert; Hitchcock, 1889; Pammel); Kansas (Keller- 
man, 1888; Hitchcock, no. 994; McKenzie, 1895); Missouri (Engelmann, 
1870; Pech, 1861; Eggert, 1878, 1893; Letterman, 1882; Dewart, 1892; 
Bush, no. 123; 1892; 1893; Dean; Trelease, 1890, 1897; Savage and 
Steele, 1897); Arkansas (Engelmann, no. 6, 1835; Nuttall; Pitcher); Indian 
Territory (Palmer, no. 308a; Bush, no. 551); Oklahoma (Oliver, no. 116); 
Texas (Lindheimer, no. 6910; Palmer, no. 2056; Ness, 1897; Buckley, 
1882; Pammel, 1888; Heller, no. 4150; Ferguson, 1895 and 1899); and 
the following of uncertain locality: James, ‘ Source of the Canadian ”’; 
Bigelow in Whipple’s Expedition, 1858-4; Wright, no. 273 or 638. 
A form, reported as ‘‘Common below the Navy Yard, Philadelphia” 
(Diffenbough, 1864; Martindale, 1865; and Parker, 1866, 1867, “On 
ballast ground’), is C. glandulosus scordioides (Lam.) Muell. Arg. Also 
collected at Mobile, Alabama, by Dr. Mohr. 
C. GLANDULOSUS CRENATIFOLIUS 0. var. 
Leaves crenate or serrato-crenulate, elongated oblong, 
a ee 
