152 MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN. 
Texas as, ‘* reported from Gillespie Co.,’’ ‘‘Jermy,’’ etc. 
I have made but little mention of these here as I believe 
that a further examination of this interesting collection 
may justify the publication of a complete list. (3) A col- 
lection of about 200 plants from San Antonio, Tex., which 
were recently sent to the Garden for identification by Mr. 
E. H. Wilkinson. (4) Collections made in various parts 
of southern Texas by Dr. Trelease during the spring and 
autumn of 1897, 
Cesataa Carouina (L.) Britton. 
A desert form of this usually climbing species collected 
at San Antonio, Texas, by Wilkinson, has short ascending 
branches only 15-20 cm. high with leaves thicker than 
usual, 
SARRACENIA FLAVA L, 
Collected by Dr. Joor at Lakeland, in central Louisiana, 
which is probably the western limit of this species. 
STIPULICIDA sETACEA Michx. 
Collected on the Mississippi Gulf coast at Long Beach, 
by Dr. Joor. This has not to my knowledge been before 
reported west of Florida. The specimen is a poor one and 
may be Nash’s S. filiformis if the two species are distinct. 
Hrpiscus Lasiocarpos Cav. ? 
Stem slightly pubescent; upper leaves ovate lanceolate, 
subcordate, acuminate, dentate-serrate, glabrous above; 
petioles adherent to the pedicels; bracts somewhat ciliate 
hairy; calyx lobes acuminate, prominently nerved; petals 
distinctly yellow in dried specimens ; young capsules with a 
few short hairs. 
The above description characterizes two plants collected 
by Dr. Joor in Louisiana, one on the lake shore at West 
End near New Orleans, 1890; the other on the Sabine river 
opposite Orange, Texas, in 1884. This may be H. incanus 
Wendl., which is listed from Louisiana, in Riddell’s Cata- 
logus Florae Ludovicianae, but in the Synoptical Flora is 
