110 NEW SPECIES OF SOUTH AMERICAN PLANTS 
“Erect, to four or five feet, the flowers deep blue. Local 
in clearings or open forest, 800 to 2,500 feet. September. 
Collected at Jiracasaca, 2,500 feet, December 2." (Herbert 
H. Smith, Colombia, No. 1370.) 
Apparently the same as Fendler's No. 876. 
Salvia viridifolia. 
erect, very leafy. Petioles 1 cm. long, slender. Blades 7 to 
10 cm. long, 2 to 3 cm. broad, regularly lanceolate, with acumi- 
nate base and longer acuminate and acute summit, finely serrate 
with erect teeth, thickish, deep-green, the venation very slightly 
prominent on both sides, the stoutish secondaries five on a side, 
d acuminate. Corolla 14 mm. long, puberulent below, the 
upper lip tomentose, erect, strongly concave, minutely two- 
ree | i 
“A shrub to five feet, with white flowers. In an open place 
near streams, Las Nubes, 4,500 feet, December 15.") Herbert 
H. Smith, Colombia, No. 1381). 
Salvia libanensis. 
oftly tomentose. Stems stoutish, but weak, brown-hairy, 
the tops of the hairs white and glistening. Petioles (only the 
B 
