AMERICAN POLEMONIACER. 187 
July 10, 1884, C. R. Orcutt, No. 1113. Related to the last, 
but sufficiently distinguished by its clamminess and different 
inflorescence, as well as by its larger corollas. 
19. N. BnEWERI — Gilia Breweri, Gray, ll. ec.—As small 
as N. minima, but of the present group, and distinguished 
from its allies by yellow corollas, and few-seeded capsules. 
Itsrange is from the middle Sierra Nevada of California, 
eastward to Utah and Wyoming. 
20. N.sUBULIGERA. Stout and rigid, a span high, simple 
or paniculately branching, very minutely whitish-puberulent 
but not glandular: leaves pinnately parted, the segments 
 Subulate and rigid : bracts ovate-dilated and spinose-toothed : 
calyx-tube somewhat constricted above, the two principal 
Segments equal entire, as long as the tube, the other three 
reduced to small pungent teeth : ovary with several ovules ; 
capsules and seéds unknown: corolla slender, exceeding the 
calyx, apparently white. 
Amador County, California, May 25, 1886, Mrs. Curran. 
The fruit of this, when known, may demand for it a place 
hear N. intertexta. The constricted calyx, hairy in the 
sinuses, and the general aspect of the plant suggests this ; 
B the foliage and bracts are more like those of N. atracty- 
oides. 
21. N. raGETINA. Stems mostly strict and simple, rather 
stout, a foot or more high, and sparingly leafy : glabrous or 
nearly so, and wholly glandless : leaves pinnately parted into 
1—9 linear segments which are spinulose-toothed or -pin- 
hatifid : bracts acerose-multifid, very rigid, whitish-pubescent 
below : segments of ealyx very unequal, the two larger pin- 
nately, the 3 smaller somewhat palmately parted into rigid, 
acerose-filiform divisions: corolla very slender, $ inch long, 
seemingly white: ovary many-ovuled. 
First collected by the writer, in Siskiyou Co., Cal., 1876; 
also near Folsom, July, 1883, Mrs. Curran. In foliage this 
Species recalls the genus Tagetes. 
