34 JOURNAL OF THE 
the same size as in the above; calyx campanulate, rounded 
at base, the tube .7-lcm long, the lobes nearly equaling 
it in length, .8-icm wide at base; orange-purple. or pur- 
ple-brown without, brighter within; the very stout barely 
notched style much prolonged beyond the minute round 
stigma; capsule short, cvlindrous, barely as long as the 
stamens, scarcely distending the calyx; seed oval. 
Mountains of North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. 
Frequent. At once separated from the preceding species 
by the campanulate calyx, and from A. Memmingert by 
its open throat and longer calyx lobes. 
ASARUM HETEROPHYLLUM OCHRANTHUM, W. W. 
Ashe, Contrib. from Herb. No. 1. (1897). 
Calyx yellow or orange, oblong-campanulate, the 
spreading lobes as long as the lem long tube. No. 18,263 
U..S. Nat. Herb.; Kast: Tennessee : EH. E. Parry: 
(b) Calyx urceolate or somewhat contracted at the mouth, 
the oval stigma thicker than the slender deeply 2-parted 
projection of the style, and placed near the base of the 
style. 
4. ASARUM MEMMINGERI, W. W. Ashe, Contrib. 
from Herb. No. 1. (1897). 
Leaf-blades about the size of those of A. macranthuaa, 
nearly orbicular and retuse, or less commonly ovate, their 
margin entire; petiole often scarcely longer than the leaf- 
blade; calyx 1.2-1.5cm long; urceolate or urceolate-cam- 
panulate, the mouth 7mm or less wide, the short lobes 
barely 3mm long; the large oval stigma near the base of 
the style, the very slender, deeply bihd or rarely entire 
projection as long the stigma; capsule short-cylindrical, 
when mature vreatly distending the calyx; seed sharply 
triangular. 
West Virginia to North and South Carolina. Frequent 
above 700m altitude. Type locality: Mitchell county, N. 
C. Named for Mr. EK. R. Memminger. 
5. ASARUM CALLIFOLIUM Small, Bul. Tor. Cl. 24:7, 
Leat-blades ovate, crenulate on the margins; petiole 2-3 
