16 ERYTHEA. 
Navarretia tagetina, Greene, Pitt. i, 137. Pericarp thin, 
transparent, indehiscent; seeds two, agglutinated, notably 
pitted. The characters of the mature fruit, now known, will 
cause the transfer of this to the first group, “Pericarp hyaline 
and indehiscent,” in the monograph of Navarretia, Pitt. i, 
130. South fork of the Eel River. 
Navarretia mellita, Greene, Pitt.i.134. Near Kelseyville. 
Navarretia atraciyloides, H. & A. Bot. Beech. 368. Near 
Lower Lake. 
Lemmonia Californica, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. xii, 162. 
On the ridges south of Uncle Sam Mountain. The original 
station is the “desert region of San Bernardino County.” 
Navarretia mitracarpa, Greene, Pitt. i, 135. Near Uncle 
Sam Mountain. 
Pentstemon Lemmoni, Gray, Bot. Cal. i, 557. One of the 
most common and widely distributed of Pentstemons in the 
mountains of Solano, Lake and portions of N apa and Sonoma. 
Penistemon corymbosus, Benth. in DC. Prodr. x, 593. 
On rocky cliffs near base of Elk Mountain grade. 
Pogogyne Douglasti, Benth. Lab. 414. Very abundant; 
empurpling meadows in Big Valley. 
TWO NEW CALIFORNIAN PLANTS. 
By F. T. Bronezrrt. dae 
Gnaphalium bicolor. Shrubby at base, about 2 or 3 feet 
high, branching, leafy up to the infl rescence; very strongly 
scented: cauline leaves about thee long, acute, linear- 
lanceolate, with broad, cordate or somewhat auricled, slightly 
decurrent base; floral leaves smaller, cordate-acuminate : 
upper surface of leaves deep green, densely covered with 
short glandular hairs, a little wool only at the base of the 
mid rib; lower surface and stems densely white-woolly: © 
glomerules compact, hi somewhat fastigiate, loose 
or close panicles; -heads 24‘ lines long, about 75-flowered; 
involucre pearly becoming sordid; outer bracts oval, acute, 
ees gem ‘ Fra i 2 
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