26 
base, thin, divaricate, smooth on both sides, serrate with short 
‘spreading teeth, or the upper pair almost entire; inflorescence an 
open thyrsus, secund, the long peduncles as well as the pedicels 
and lanceolate bracts more or less glandular-pubescent; pedicels 
as long or slightly longer than the capsule; calyx-lobes lanceo- 
late, half to two-thirds the length of the tube of the corolla, 
usually somewhat pubescent or glandular, scarious-margined ; 
corolla large, 114’ long, %4’ or more wide, bright pink purple, 
with whitish stripes on the inside, abruptly tubular-campanulate 
above the tube proper, gibbous on the upper side, sometimes resin- 
ous-dotted, the upper lip entire, a third shorter than the three- 
lobed lower one; lower lip densely bearded within with yellow 
hairs, especially above; sterile stamen bearded to the base with 
yellow hairs, very densely so above; capsule ovate, mucronate, 
tipped by the stiff base of the persistent style, which in dehiscence 
_ splits into four parts, each tipping a segment,of the capsule. 
Collected by the writer on Blowing Rock Mountain, Caldwell 
county, N. C., July 21, 1890, at an elevation of 4,000 feet. Only 
two or three flowers were seen, but good fruiting specimens ob- 
tained. Early in June, 1891, the locality was again visited in, 
company with Mr. John K. Small, to whom the plant is dedicated.* 
A few plants were also observed at one place along the road be- 
tween Blowing Rock and Linville. Fresh specimens were again 
obtained at Blowing Rock during the past summer. Mr. Thomas 
Hogg has collected it at Asheville, N. C., and Prof. F. Lamson- 
Scribner at Knoxville, Tenn., where it grows from crevices of 
rocks along the river banks. 
Urricuraria juncea Vahl, Enum. 1: 202 (1804). 
Utricularia personata LeConte, Ann. Lyc. N. Y. 1: 77 (1824). — 
Collected August 22d, in wet ground a short distance from — 
the beach, just north of the Life Saving Station south of Virginia 
Beach, Princess Anne county. Its cited range is from “ E. North 
Carolina to Texas.” 
SoLipaGo Monticora T. and G.; Chapm. FI. S. States 209 (1860). 
This has been considered a rare plant, and specimens are rare 
in herbaria. In Western Virginia, on Mt. Rogers (Elliott’s Knob) 
Augusta county, it is very plentiful, ranging from 2,000 feet at the — 
foot to 4,000 near the summit. It is most plentiful between 3,500 — 
and 4,000 feet, and was not found on the summit, which is— 
* Mem. Torr. Bot. Club, iii. No. 1, 4 ( 1892). 
