362 MEMOIRS OF THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN. 



Shaw; Gallatin Qo., Mrs. Mary L. Alder son; Helena, 1894, E. 

 Douglas; Bozeman, 1895, Rydberg & Besscy, 2^88; Great Falls, 

 1890, R. S. Williams, ^^ ; Judith Gap, 1882, Canby : Grasshopper 

 Valley, 1880, Watson. 



Yellowstone Park: 1893, A. Brazen; Mammoth Hot Springs, 

 1884, Tweedy, ^j ; Lone Star Geyser Basin, Aug. 7, 1897, Ryd- 

 berg & Bessey, 4^7 j ; Lake, 187 1, Hay den Survey. 



*Orthocarpus tenuifolius Benth. Scroph. Ind. 12; DC. Prod. 



10 : 536 [Syn. Fl, 2" : 300 and 453 ; Bot. Cal. i : 577] ; O. line- 



arifolitis Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. 19: 95 [Man. R. M. 286]. 



Differs from O. luteus in the purplish floral leaves, which are un- 

 like the rest, broad, entire or with some lateral lobes, and more or 

 less petaloid. In valleys, up to an altitude of 2000 m. 



Montana: Columbia Falls, Mrs. J. J. Kennedy : Gallatin Co., 



Mrs. Mary L. Alderson; Spanish Basin, June 25, 1897, Rydberg 



& Bessey, 4-<pyo; Blackfoot River, 1883, Canby, 26J ; Smith River, 



1883, Scribner, 200; Big Hole Valley and Bitter Root Valley, 1880, 



Watson. 



*Orthocarpus pachystachyus Gray, Syn. Fl. 7> -. 300 and 452. 



Like the preceding, but with still broader floral leaves and rose- 

 colored corolla. On dry plains, up to an altitude of 1500 m. 



Montana : Deer Lodge and Gallatin Counties, Miss Ware and 

 Miss Hodgman ; Bozeman, 1895, Rydberg, 2'/8y: Trout Creek, 

 R. S. Williams, j2. 



Adenostegia ramosa (Nutt.) Greene, Pittonia, 2 : 180; Cordylan- 

 thus raniosus Nutt. ; DC. Prod. 10 : 597 [Syn. Fl. 2' : 303 ; Man. 

 R. M. 286 ; Bot. Cal. i : 580] . 

 In dry places, at an altitude of 1000-2000 m. 

 Montana: Grasshopper Valley, 1880, Watson. 



Elephantella. 



Galea produced into a filiform beak which is soon upturned ; throat 

 with a tooth on each side ; corolla-tube almost included in the 5- 

 toothed calyx ; lips very broad ; otherwise as in Pedicularis. 



The following, together with a few others, constitute a very well 

 defined group, very unlike typical Pedicularis, and I believe it de- 

 serves generic rank. The name is given in allusion to the form of 

 the corolla, which strikingly resembles the head of an elephant, the 

 produced beak of the galea forming the trunk, the lateral lobes of the 

 lip, the ears, and the stigma the finger-like appendage of the trunk. 



