J57 BOTANICAL GAZETE. 



the divisions broadly cuneate, 3-5 cleft or toothed, the teeth ending 

 in a callous point ; scape smooth, racemose at summit ; pedicels as 

 long as the deep azure flowers ; spur incurved ; root a cluster of 

 thickened, fleshy fibres. 



Hill country between the Gila and San Francisco rivers. May 

 25, 1880. An interesting species, as combining the leafless stem of 

 the scarlet flowered Californian D. Jtudicaule, with the deep blue flow- 

 ers of D. azureum. I am informed by Dr. Gray that Prof. Newberry 

 obtained what appears to be the same, south of Diamond River in 

 Arizona. 



Draba Mogollonica. — Hirsute pubescent with branching hairs; 

 stem a foot high, sparingly branched, nearly leafless, except at base ; 

 leaves with a few large teeth, spatulate-oblong ; racemes elongated in 

 fruit; silicles oblong, as long as the pedicels (^ inch), twisted and 

 tipped with a long (i^ line) style; flowers very large, yellow. 



Northward slopes of the MogoUon Mountains, April 18, 1880. 

 With the habit and pubescence of D. cuneifolia, but perennial, very 

 large and showy ; the mountain sides being yellow with it in its flow- 

 ering season. 



Lepidium intermedium. Gray, var. pubescens. — Clothed with a 

 dense roughish pubescence throughout; stouter, less branching, with 

 longer racemes and larger silicles thaii the typical form ; petals smaller 

 or wanting. 



Mangos Springs, May 31, 1880, in marshy gronnd, flowering two 

 months later than the type which grows on the adjoining dry hills. 

 Intermediate forms occur on the upper Gila. 



RiBES PiNETORUM. — Without prickles; subaxillary spines solitary 

 (rarely 2-3) stout ; glabrous except the peduncles and petioles which 

 are minutely white-tomentose ; leaves 5-cleft, lobes incised ; peduncles 

 very short, erect, mostly i-flowered ; calyx somewhat campanulate, 

 pilose-tomentose, the lobes spatulate. reflexed, one third longer than 

 the stamens and petals; style glabrous, undivided; st-gmas two; 

 berry large, armed with many stout prickles. 



Bush 5 to 6 feet high, sj^aringly branched and few-flowered; the 

 flowers large and reddish yellow Those of R. leptanthum, to which 

 it is most related, are hardly half as large, and white (not "yellow," 

 as said by Mr. Watson in Bot. King). The fruit is one of the largest 

 and best flavored of our wild gooseberries. 



In woods o{ Pinus ponderosa, in the higher elevations of the Pinos 

 Altos and Mogollon Mountains, flowering in April ; fruit ripe in 

 September. 



Li'iHOSPERMU.M CoBRENSE. — Stems a foot or two high, and usually 

 several from the same root. Radical leaves linear spatulate, two or 

 three inches long, hirsute and more or less hispid with stinging hairs, 

 the cauline much smaller, mostly linear and smoother ; corolla pale 

 yellow, with ample limb deeply 5-cleft, no crests in the throat, and 

 glandular ring at base of the tube naked, or with a few short hairs; 

 flowers apparently nearly sessile, but fruiting calyces distinctly ped- 

 icelled. 



