VOL. 2] Milliketi. California* Polemoniaceae . 43 



Type, Coyote Canon, El Toro Mt., Riverside Co., 5000 feet, 

 H. M. Hall. 



Var. tenuiloba. Qilia tenuilola Parish. Perennial, flower- 

 ing branches six inches long; leaves alternate, palmatelyjthree- 

 parted, much less rigid than the foregoing variety; flowers soli- 

 tary and terminal, one inch long or more, light yellow; lobes of the 

 corolla narrow-strap-shaped; anthers on filaments about their own 

 length, one-half line long. 



Type, San Jacinto Mt., Riverside Co., S. B. Parish. Seven 

 Oaks, San Bernardino Co., Mr. and Mrs. Grout. 



84. Gilia Schottii Watson. G. setosissima var. exigua Gray. 

 Navarretia Schottii Torr. Loeselia Schottii Gray. Lan- 

 gloisia Schottii Greene. 



Annual, two to six inches high, broader than high, with sev- 

 eral depressed branches, roughish-puberulent, stems white, herb- 

 age grayish; leaves broad at the apex, gradually tapering to a 

 narrower base, or nearly of the same width throughout, pinnatifid, 

 but the pinnae reduced to long white bristles except for a few 

 small lobes ending in bristles; inflorescence scattered or slightly 

 congested; calyx two to two and one-half lines long, lobes end- 

 ing in long bristles, exceeding the tube, hyaline portion narrow, 

 splitting in fruit; corolla slightly bilabiate, three and one-half 

 lines long, white, tube two and one-half lines long, one-half 

 line broad, cylindrical, throat almost none, lobes narrow, acute; 

 stamens inserted in the upper part of the tube, hardly exceeding 

 it; capsule strongly three-angled, equalling the calyx exclusive 

 of the bristles, seeds five in each cell, small, not white-margined. 



Palm Springs, desert base of San Jacinto Mt., Riverside Co., 

 500 to 700 feet; and elsewhere in the Colorado Desert region of 

 Southern California. 



35. Gilia Matthewsii Gray. Loeselia Matthewsii Gray. Lan- 

 gloisia Mattheivsii Greene. 



Annual, an inch to a span high, branched, more or less 

 matted, stems and foliage densely pubescent or nearly glabrous; 

 leaves about one inch long, narrow, pinnately divided, the lower 

 pinnae reduced to long white bristles, the upper ending in bris- 



