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MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN. 



808. Oenothera Jamesii T. & G. L. 305. (New Braun- 



fels). Aug. 1850. (p. 189). 



809. 0. serrulata Nutt. var. spinulosa T. & G. L. 272. 



New Braunfels. May 1850. (238, 393). 



810. 0. sinuataL. L. 368. New Braunfels. April 1850. 



811. 0. SPECIOSA Nutt. L. 82. Comanche Spring. June 



1849. (55). 



812. O. TRILOBA Nutt. L. 522. New Braunfels. April 



1851. (392). 



813. Stenosiphon LiNiFOLiuM Britton. L. 100. Comanche 



Spring. Aug. 1849. (242). 



814. Eucnide bartonioides Zucc. L. 419. (New Braun- 



fels. March) 1850. (p. 191). 



815. Mentzelia nuda T. & G. L. 120. Cibolo River 



July 1849. (p. 191). 



A small-flowered form. 



816. M. OLiGosPERMA Nutt. L. 121. Comanche Spring 



June 1849. (396). 



817. Passiflora affinis Engelm. L. 174. Comanche 



Spring. Aug., Sept. 1849. 



The type collection; PL Lind. 2:233. 



818. Cucurbita foetidissima HBK. L. 406. (New Braun- 



fels. March) 1850. (398). 



The C. perennis of Gray and type locality; PI. Lind. 2:193. 



819. C. foetidissima HBK. L. 588. (New Braunfels May 



1851). 



820. C. texana Gray. L. 577. (New Braunfels. March 



1851). (400). 



Considered by Lindheimer as his C. texana and apparently from 

 the same region as his type, but most of these specimens approach 

 more nearly the normal leaf of C. Pepo L., of which it is probably 

 only a wild form. 



"The small, wild Texas pumpkin (Cucurbita texana) is excel- 

 cellent protection against mice and seed-eating insects. Its 

 narrow neck can be easily closed with a cork and the name of 

 the contents written on the outside."— Lindheimer, Aufsatze 

 u. Abhandlungen. 54. 



821. C. texana Gray. L. 135. (Comanche Spring). 1849. 



Leaves mostly divided as in the typical C. texana, but in part 

 lobed much as in C Pepo. 



