NEW LABIATZ. 341 
SracHys INGRATA. Stout and tall perennial, 3 feet high 
*or more, scarcely canescent, but loosely villous throughout, 
and eovered with small sessile yellow glands under the 
pubescence, the thin and soft fresh herbage intolerably fetid : 
leaves 3 to 6 inches long, ovate-lanceolate and ovate-oblong, 
serrate-toothed, obtuse, short-petioled : spike terminal, dense, 
leafy-bracted at base, the upper bracts small and obscure : 
calyx very villous-hirsute, the triangular-subulate teeth 
nearly as long as the tube and merely pungently acute: 
corolla short and small, apparently white or very pale. 
Frequent at middle or lower altitudes of the Californian 
Sierra Nevada; the type specimens from Miss Emma 58. 
Harrison, June, 1887. 
Sracuys STRIATA. Herbage greenish but soft-pubescent 
as in the last, but the more slender stems only 1 or 2 feet 
high; leaves smaller, less obtuse, not glandular underneath 
the hairiness: spike elongated and more interrupted: calyx 
thin, only sparsely villous, the tube finely many-striate, the 
teeth subulate, nearly as long as the tube, pungently acute: 
corollas pinkish or purplish, rather broad, but the tube 
scarcely equalling the calyx. 
From Plumas County, California, July, 1882, Mrs. Austin ; 
also by the same on shores of Goose Lake, Modoc Co., 1895, 
STACHYS LITTORALIS. Tall and strict, the stem 2 or 3 feet 
high, with few pairs of leaves and long internodes; whole 
plant green and nearly glabrous: leaves oblong, obtuse, 
coarsely crenate, all but the small lowest ones subsessile : 
spike elongated and interrupted : fruiting calyx almost 
campanulate, the short almost deltoid pungently acute teeth 
much shorter than the tube, and this rather distinctly striate 
somewhat as in the preceding. 
Rocky shores of Egg Lake, Modoc Co., California, 25 July, 
1893, Milo S. Baker; also in a reduced and more pubescent 
state on the banks of the Truckee River, by the author, in 
July, 1895. 
