1902 J Greene New Northwestern Plants. 39 



both faces, but the margins finely pubescent : cauline leaves few 

 and scattered, subulate-lanceolate, acute : bracts of the hemis- 

 pherical involucre more numerous, less acuminate, more distinctly 

 g-landular-pubescent : rays many, rather broad, pink or rose- 

 purple. 



Growing on rocky slopes, dry at time of collecting but wet 

 earlier in season; altitude 6,000 feet, being Mr. Macoun's number 

 26,470; from the Chilliwack Valley, B.C , 29 August, 1901. 



Pentstemon Gormani. Less than a foot high, the firm basal 

 leaves spatulate-oblong, obtuse, entire, 2 inches long including 

 the short petiole, glabrous, the cauline oblong linear or spatulate- 

 oblong, sessile, the uppermost of these, as well as the inflores- 

 cence villous or hirsutulous with gland-tipped hairs : sepals lance- 

 olate, acute, villous-hairy : corolla purple, about 3^ inch long, 

 little bilabiate, their rounded lobes spreading, the orifice verv hir- 

 sute within ; the sterile filament strongly bearded almost through- 

 out. 



Dry gravelly slopes of hills in Yukon Valley, 9 June, 1899. 

 M. W. Gorman. 



Lappula anoplocarpa. Annual, erect, with the numerous 

 ascending branches loosely racemose and bracteate ; herbage cin- 

 erous and softly hirsute : nutlets ovate, with rounded base, the 

 dorsal disk very small, ovate-lanceolate, circumscribed by a thick 

 obtuse cartilaginous entire and wholly unarmed margin, the sur- 

 face of it, however, muricate-tuberculate ; that of the dorsal part, 

 or disk, minutely so. 



Spence's Bridge, B.C., 25 May, 1889, collected by Mr. John 

 Macoun ; number 17,038 of the Canadian Survey Herbarium. 

 This is allied to L. motitatia, Greene, Pitt, iv., 96. 



