œ i ; 
Marcu 27, 1915] Two HUNDRED Twenty Six New Sprecies—I 2551 
corolla tube, ascending, of 2 unequal opposite pairs; fila- 
ments compressed, gradually tapering from the base, crisply 
hairy along the inner side, the shorter ones 2.5 mm long, 
the accompanying pair twice as long; anther basifixed, when 
spread out cordately lobed at the base, apex rounded, 2.5 
mm long, nearly as broad at the base; style slender, 2 to 
3 cm long, hirsute, provided with hairs along the inner 
side toward the distal end; stigma apparently of few short 
digitate lobes; ovary 5 to 6 mm long, elongited and ellip- 
soid, subcompressed, 2 mm thick, glabrous except the tuft- 
ed apical portion. 
Type specimen number 13610, A. D. E. Eli Ca- 
badbaran (Mt. Urdaneta), Province of Agusan, Mindanao, 
August, 1912. 
Gathered in wet stony ground of a very humid depres- 
sion at 8500 feet altitude and right at the base of Cawi- 
lanan peak. It was nowhere else seen. ‘‘Tayungung’’ is the 
Manobo vernacular name. Very pretty in its natural state 
and in its native place, and is here named fòr our son 
Anton D. Elmer. 
Somewhat related to Strobilanthus BEA Clk. in herba- 
rum Kew. Our leaves are more membranous not coriaceous. 
ARALIAGEAE 
/ Arthrophyllum pulgarense Elm. n. sp. 
Shrubby; stem branches at least 1 cm thick, glabrous. 
Leaves alternatingly clustered toward the ends of the thick 
branchlets, the upper ones ascending, those farther down 
horizontal, 2 dm long, imparipinnate, 9 to 11-foliate; pet- 
iole thick, glabrous, terete, ater when dry, at the base ex- 
panded and partly extended around the stem, the rachis very 
similar; leaflets evenly scattered, about 1.5 cm apart, rigid- 
ly coriaceous, similarly spreading, dirty brown beneath, some- 
what lighter brown on the upper more or less shining sur- 
face, the entire margins recurved upon the nether side when 
: dry, the basal leaflets a trifle shorter and orbicular, the ter- 
e minal ones rotund, folded, the short acute apex of the lar- 
: ger blades very strongly recurved, base rounded or more ob- 
