NEW OR NOTEWORTHY SPECIES. SST 
short cymose panicle of nodding heads: leaves mostly alter- 
nate deltoid-subcordate, 1 to 2 inches long, short-petioled, 
evenly crenate-serrate, of firm texture, somewhat scabrel- 
lous-puberulent on both faces, the somewhat prominent 
veins as also the stem densely and more or less glandular- 
puberulent or pubescent: involucres about 4 lines high, 
subcampanulate; bracts from ovate-oblong and acute to 
oblong and obtuse, scarious-margined about the summit, 
strongly 3-nerved : achenes with about 10 scabrellous angles, 
but these unequally prominent and unevenly distributed, 
some closely approximate in pairs or threes, others rather 
widely separated. 
Gray’s Peak, Lincoln Co., New Mexico, at 6,500 feet, F. 
S. Earle, 25 July, 1900. A species to be compared with 
C. ambigens, Greene, and C. Fendleri, Gray ; this last now 
referred to Eupatorium. 
" ÜOLEOSANTHUS NEPETEFOLIUS. More herbaceous and less 
rigid than the last, also taller, quite as leafy, the leaves 
twice as large, thin, subcordate, acuminate, crenate-serrate, 
on slender petioles an inch long, variously alternate or 
opposite or in imperfect whorls of three: stem, petioles and 
veins of leaves hirsute-pubescent and viscid-glandular: 
heads in a rather ample leafy panicle: involucres erect, 
3 or 4 lines high, short-cylindrie; bracts from ovate, acute, 
to oblong, obtuse, the innermost linear, all more or less 
hirsute-ciliate; achenes either quite uniformly 10-ribbed or 
the alternate ribs less prominent. 
Salado Cañon, near Gray, New Mexico, 2 Sept., 1900. 
A species perhaps akin to C. floribundus rather than near 
V COLEOSANTHUS GRACILIPES. Herbaceous perennial near. 
C. grandiflorus, but less leafy and with much larger slender- 
