52 PITTONIA. 
bage, even to the subequal lanceolate obtuse segments of the 
calyx, almost hoary with a short hirsutulous or almost hispidu- 
lous hairiness; but the ovate obtuse blades of the leaves nearly 
glabrous beneath: corolla rather narrowly and deeply campanu- | 
late: anthers oblong. 
Wet prairies of eastern Washington, April, 1880, Thomas J. 
Howell; the specimens (in U. S. Herb.) labelled Hesperochiron 
pumilus; and of the three, one is indeed good C. pumila, the 
other two representing the above most distinct new species. — 
13. C. VILLOSULA. Rootstock apparently erect, but elongated — 
at least when young slender and distinctly moniliform: leaves 
elliptic-oblong, petiolate, glabrous beneath, sparsely strigulose 
above, not ciliate : pedicels and lanceolate obtuse sepals appressed- — 
villous over the whole surface, but not ciliate: corolla nearly — 
rotate, she Sewiy lobed, to vs baa broadly ovate, obtuse, 
glabrous ttened, naked except atthe very — 
base; anthers oval, 
Near Pullman, Washington, May, 1898, A. D. E. Elmer, (3. 
1001 of this collector’s set in the U. S. Herb.; the type). By its — 
fine and soft appressed pubescence, and deeply cleft though per- — 
haps quite rotate corolla this species is quite singular. 
14. C. CAMPANULATA. Dwarf; even smaller than C. pumila, 
the oblong obtuse leaves loosely hirsutulous over the whole sur- 
face, or more commonly only near the margin and there more 
densely so, appearing as if ciliate by projection of the hairs be- 
yond the margin: sepals ovate to ovate-lanceolate, strongly 
ciliate with long spreading hairs, some like hairs dispersed over 
the surface toward the base: corollas small, open-campanulate 
or almost rotate, the lobes as broad as long and very obtuse: 
anthers oblong, scarcely versatile on the short subulate filaments. 
At 7,500 feet (therefore subalpine) on the North Fork of 
King’s River, California, July, 1900, Hall & Chandler; being 
n. 550 of their set, as represented in the U. S, Herbarium. 
| 
