C7 



2 inches long:, little reduced above ; flowering- pedicels 6-8 lines 

 long, in fruit 18 lines long, erect, rigid; calyx truncate, with 

 minute and subulate teeth ; flowers ample 1 inch long, purple 

 ; nd pilose-ciliate. This differs from G. aspera especially in 

 the long pedicels and minute calyx teeth. Marsh Lake, Sierra 

 Madre Mts., Chihuahua, Mexico, growing under pines at 7000 

 ^eet altitude. September 19, 1903, and also in San Pedro Can- 

 non, September 16, 



Pedicularis Jonesii Brandegee n. sp. 

 "Stems less than 2 dm. high, glabrous; leaves 5-6 cm. 

 long, mostly clustered about the base, the ovate-lanceolate 

 and sinuate blade equaling the petiole, pinnae linear and pin- 

 natif:d; bracts lanceolate, serrate or denticulate, shorter than 

 th- flowers: spike one-third the length of the stem; calyx 

 '-'lightly cleft anteriorly, 5-toothed, the teeth minutely ciliate ; 

 galea more than twice as long as the calyx, narrow, falcate, 

 a^^tenuate into a somewhat upturned beak; lower lip one-third 

 shorter than the upper, deeply parted into 3 lanceolate lobes 

 of equal length, the middle one the narrower, all lanate- 

 pubescent below. Collected bv Prof. Marcus E. Jones at La 

 I'alma Jalisco, Mexico. June 9th. 1892. Type in the herbaria 

 of T. S. Brandegee and Marcus E. Jones." 



Scrophularia nodosa L. the type has ovate, acute, and 

 simply and finely serrulate leaves. 



Scrophularia nodosa var. Marilandica (L.) Gray. The 

 leaves ovate-lanceolate, truncate to cordate at base, deeper 



Scrophularia nodosa var. lanceolata (Pursh Fl. 2 419 

 (1814) as species). Leaves lanceolate, acute at base, long, 

 simply and low-serrate. This is S. montana Wooton. 



Scrophularia nodosa var. Calif omica (Cham. Lmn. 2 58 j 

 as species). Leaves coarsely and doubly serrate to 

 iaciniate. mostly with acuminate teeth. All these pass by im- 

 perceptible gradations into the type. The Utah forms are just 

 intermediate. The shape of the sterile filament of which much 

 has been made amounts to nothing as a character. 



Castilleia stenophylla n. sp. . , 



Tall, not shruby, corymbosely branched above,, perennial ; 

 leaves nearly filiform, entire, 1-2 inches long, the upper linear- 

 subulate, the floral ones narrow and short; spikes short, dense 

 in flower, open in fruit ; bracteal leaves similar to the others 

 l>ut a little broader below, the upper bracts narrowly oblong, 



