New SPECIES or Enr0GONUM. 
E. ANEMOPHILUM. Low, cespitose, the short branches of 
the caudex woody and very leafy, the whole herbage some- 
what softly but densely white-tomentose: leaves obovate 
to suborbicular, a half-inch long or less, obtuse, some abruptly 
tapering to the petiole, this about a half-inch long: scapes 
erect from a slightly decumbent base, mostly about 3 inches 
_ high, bearing a rather large terminal cluster of crowded in- 
.. volueres, these, even to their short erect teeth or lobes, em- 
.. bedded in a looser white wool: perianths cream-color, fading 
_ reddish, rather broad, not stipitately narrowed, deeply cleft, 
the segments broad throughout, somewhat, quadrate-obo- 
vate, obtuse or emarginate: filaments and ovary glabrous. 
... On bleak windy summits at the northern end of the West 
Humboldt Range, Nevada, collected by the author in July, 
1894. Related to E. Kingii, but of different habit, inflores- 
cence and floral structure, and somewhat intermediate be- 
tween that and E. ovalifolium. 
. .E. pumosum. Near E. umbellatum, but a large upright 
Shrub 5 or 6 feet high, all the ultimate branches, the pedun- 
3 el z LI 
. Tather larger than in that species, in structure not differing 
essentially, but the achene very prominently angled. 
_ A probably somewhat local species of the American Val- 
. ley, Plumas Co., California, collected and distributed by Mrs. 
Austin as * E, umbellatum,” it having been so identified for 
her by Mr. Watson. But E. umbellatum, even as growing 
Prrronta, Vol. III. ; Pages 199-214. Sept. 25, 1897. 
= Lr : Dok a T M 
