24 THE AMERICAN BOTANIST 



scence. Mc Dougal seems to have secured the same thing 

 near Flagstaff, July 8, 1898, his number 251. 



Phlox Clutena. n. sp. The herbaceous stems sev- 

 eral from an inconspicuous but distinctly ligneous branches 

 base, very slender, wholly simple except for the 3-flowered 

 cyme, 1 dm. (more or less) high: pubescence fine, white and 

 gland-tipped, throughout except on the corolla and the lower 

 leaves (these more or less glaucous) ; leaves from narrowly 

 to broadly linear, 1-3 cm. long, inclined to coriaceous with 

 noticeable midrib; pedicels 4-10 mm. long, slender; calvx 8-12 

 mm. long, the very slender lobes more than half the length 

 and evidently carinate : corolla pink, drying more or less 

 whitish, its tube nearly twice as long as the calyx and dis- 

 tinctly longer than the obovate practically entire lobes. 



This species is allied to P. Stansburyi (Torr. ) Heller 

 but lacks the rough pubescence of that and in its simple cyme, 

 its flat leaves and slender stems is at once distinguishable 

 from that. 



It is known only from Mr. Clute's No. 18. from near the 

 summit of Navajo mountain. It was found in half shade 

 and is noted as abundant. 



Aquilegia Navajonis. n. sp. Stems 3-4.5 dm. high, 

 viscid-pubescent throughout, basal leaves quadriternate, long 

 petioled ; petioles and petiolules slender, viscid-pubescent : 

 leaflets small, narrow, cuneate at the base, 1-2.5 cm. long, 

 lobes acute or obtuse, viscid above, viscid-\ illous beneath; 

 flowers about 4 cm. long, acute, spreading horizontally or 

 slightly reflexed; laminae white (fading yellowish), 8 mm. 

 long, broadly roimded at the apex ; spurs white, slender, 

 about 2.5 cm long, straight or slightly incurved, knob of the 



