(Reprint from Zor, Vol. II, October, 1891.) 
NEW SPECIES AND NOTES OF UTAH PLANTS. 
BY MARCUS E. JONES. 
STANLEYA ELATA Jones, has been reported by F. V. Coville as 
far west as the Inyo Mountains in California. 
LEPIDIUM ALYSSOIDES differs from L. montanum only in being 
perennial, and as the southern forms are perennial and the northern 
ones are not, I see no reason to keep up the species. 
CLEOME LUTEA Hooker. In my specimens from the Moencop- 
pa, Northern Arizona, the stipe is 3-16 inch long and the pedicel 
7-16 inch long; the stipe is glutinous-hairy, seeds very warty on 
the back, and pod an inch long. 
CLEOMELLA PALMERANA. Annual, erect and widely branching 
from the base, 2 to 10 inches high, glabrous throughout; leaflets 3, 
oblong-elliptical, obtuse, mucronate, petiole one inch or less long; 
bracts of earlier spikes often leaflike, simple, as large as the leaves 
and like them, and as long petioled. Flowers axillary and single, as 
well as spicate ; pedicels 3 to 4 lines long, reflexed in fruit; spicate 
flowers subtended by minute subulate bracts, which are attenuated 
into hairs, these bracts are also surrounded at base by 2 to 4 hair- 
