NEOPIIYTON. *>1 



caJix base villose, end smooth, tripartite, seg- 

 ments lanceolate— From Missouri and upper 

 Lakes, perennial, semipedal, flowers cinereous 

 or fuscate ; the A. canadensc differs from all 

 these by smooth reniform leaves, cahx reflex- 

 ed &c. 



224. AsARUM ROTUNDiFOLiuM R. caulcsceut 

 erect villose, leaves 4 opposite rounded cor- 

 date, flower terminal subsessile nodding smootli- 

 ish campanulate trifid. — Brought by Walton 

 from Origon mts. near A. europeum, which 

 differs by 2 broad reniform leaves, fl. pedun- 

 cled trilobe ^c, perennial, flower dark purple. 



225. Hedyotis geniculata R. smooth, stem 

 geniculate 4gone, leaves fasciculate lanceolate 

 acute, margin scabrous, pale beneath ; fl. axilL 

 solitary, segments of calix linear equal, tube of 

 corolla filiform twice longer than calix — Was 

 ioto hills of Kentucky, semipedal, annual, 

 leaves uncial, flowers purple, their limb cam- 

 panulate 4fid, appai-ently a true Hedyotis, al- 

 though I did not see the ripe fruit ; not a Siel- 

 mjotis the calix being equal. 



226. Galeopsis Montana R. dwarf glau- 

 cous, leaves few remote petiolate ovatoblong 

 acute serrate pilose, flowers terminal only 1 to 

 3 calix not pungent — Summit of Oquago mts. 

 near Utsiantha Lake in New York, small an- 

 nual, only 3 to 4 inches high, flowers incarnate, 

 Probably a deviation from G, tetrahit, but as- 

 pect very unlike. 



227. Eustacuya vel Leptandra oppositi- 

 FOLiA Raf; leaves opposite sessile ovate acute 

 (not acuminate) serrulate smoothish, equal to 

 internodes, spike simple — mts. Apalaches of 

 Virginia, perennial, sesquipedal, flowers white 

 small, very distinct from the narrow leaved, 

 whorled sp. of this Genus. 



