O. sinuata L. var. grandt iflora Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 8: 
e. ~ 381. 1873. Not O. grandiflora Ait. 1789. . 
Collected at Mentone, at the head of the San Bernardino 
une, 1906, by the Rev. George Robertson. Here prob- 
longs my 2964, collected in fruit only, June, 1904, in 
}e canyon, at the eastern desert base of San Bernardino moun- 
tain. 
_ OENOTHERA LACINIATA Hill, var. MEXICANA (Spach) Small, 
Bull. Torr. Club, 23: 173. 1896. 
O. stnuaia L,. var. hirsuta T. & G. Fl. N. A. 1: 494. 1840. 
Collected with the foregoing variety, and occurring in 
greater abundance, at Mentone, by the Rev. George Robertson, 
LappuLA Myosotis Moench, Meth. 417. 1794. 
Echinospermum Lappula Lehm. Asperif. 121. 1818. 
Santa Monica, Dr. H. E. Hasse, in 1906. Perhaps merely 
a casual, but likely to become established. 
SOLANUM NIGRUM L,. Sp. Pl. 186. 1753. 
This widely introduced plant has not been reported from 
southern California, or with certainty from the State. It was 
collected in 1906, at Riverside, by Fred M. Reed. 
VERBASCUM THAPSUS L. Sp. Pl. 177. 1753. 
Well established in cultivated fields, on the south side of 
the Santa Ana river, above Colton, where it has escaped from 
plants cultivated for their reputed medicinal value. 
‘ ORTHOCARPUS ERIANTHUS Benth. Scroph. Ind. 12. 1835. 
San Fernando, Los Angeles county, Mrs. C. M. Wilder. 
ERIGERON LINIFOLIUS Willd. Sp. Pl. 3: 1955. 1798. 
While it is only within the past year that this plant has 
been observed in our region, it now comes from so many sources 
that it evidently must have been established for a considerable 
