22 PLANTS BAKERIAN^. 



LABIATE. 



Family not strongly represented in the region, only the 

 following having been collected: Salvia lanceolata, Willd., n. 

 679; Scutellaria galericulata, Linn., nn. 465, 552, 815; 

 Mentha Canadensis, Linn., n. 547; Dracocephalum parviflorum, 

 Nutt., n. 599; Agastache urticsefolia, Rydb., n. 414; Stachys 

 scopulorum, Greene, n. 359. 



MONARDELLA PARVIFOLIA. Suffrutescent at base, the many 

 slender tufted stems a foot long more or less, decumbent at 

 base, or more depressed, subcinereous-puberulent: leaves 

 mostly ovate-lanceolate, some oblong-lanceolate, all entire, 

 obtusish, nerveless except as to the quite distinct mid vein, 

 obscurely puberulent, closely glandular-punctate, small, half 

 as long as the internodes, the largest seldom J inch long 

 including the short petiole: heads about } inch broad; 

 bracts scarcely colored, somewhat strigosely pubescent along 

 the veins and densely white-ciliate all around the margin : 

 nerves of the calyx strigose-hairy, the short teeth densely 

 but shortly setose-hirsute : corollas lilac-purple. 



Frequent in the canon of the Gunnison near Cimarron, 

 where it was first collected by myself in 1896, and now 

 again by Mr. Baker, n. 678. The species may probably in- 

 clude the so-called M. odoratissima of southern Utah. 



SCROPHULARIACE^;. 



CASTILLEIA COGNATA! Near C. linaridefolia, as tall and 

 as nearly glabrous, but in habit strict, the leaves both shorter 

 and suberect rather than spreading ; flowers only half as 

 long as in that species, and crowded, forming a spike both 

 narrow and dense : floral bracts less deeply trifid and their 

 segments very unequal, the middle one much the longest, 

 oblong, obtuse, the others both short and narrow, the whole 



