288 BOTANICAL GAZETTE [APRIL 
This was first collected by Mr. T. S. Brandegee in Kaweah Canyon, Tulare 
County, California, July 26, 1892. The type is 4407 of C. K. Baker’s distri- 
bution collected by Culbertson in the south fork of Kaweah River, 1800™ alti- 
tude, July 22, 1904. 
This species is distinguished from allied species by the peculiar foliaceous 
calyx described above. The corolla in the dried specimens cannot be satis- 
factorily described, as in both collections the specimens are a little old. 
“ Orthocarpus Copelandi, n. sp.—Stems about 1% high, simple 
or divaricately branched, minutely scabrous with short, curved 
hairs: lowest leaves narrowly linear-lanceolate, obtuse, 3-4°™ long; 
upper on main stem as long but twice as broad; uppermost on 
branches falcate, alternate or opposite: spike short and dense; 
lowest bracts green, the middle division like the broadest leaves, 
the lateral divisions spreading and very slender, about one-third 
as long as the middle; upper bracts shorter and broader, ellip- 
tical, rose-tipped: calyx thin and membranous, becoming globular- 
inflated, pink with green ribs, cleft half in front, deeper in the back, 
villous. with short gland-tipped hairs, 7™™ long, 4™™ broad, with 
divisions triangular attenuate; corolla minutely glandular, 13™™ 
long, galea straight, obtuse, rose-color, ciliate, 6™™ long, lower 
lip yellow, the three sacs inflated somewhat, 5™™ long, middle 
tooth much larger than the other two: capsule bright brown, 5™™ 
long, 3.5™™ wide, obovate with obcordate apex, with few (appar- 
ently only two) seeds.—Fic. 1. 
Collected on Mount Eddy, August 18, 1903 at an altitude of 2130" by Dr. 
Edwin Bingham Copeland, in whose honor it is named. It is a beautiful species 
related to O. imbricatus and that group which contains so many closely related 
species. H.E. Brown’s number 449 from the north side of Mt, Shasta is the 
same but very immature. 
v Veronica Copelandi, n. sp.—Perennial from slender, running root- 
stocks, about 1% high, simple, glandular-villous throughout: leaves 
five or six pairs, crowded on the lower part, sessile, oblong-ellip- 
tical, entire, acute, veinless, 1-1.5°™ long, 4-8™™ wide: racemes 
sometimes becoming 8°™ long, 5-15-flowered, the highest leaves 
often with one or two axillary flowers; bracts lanceolate, the lowest 
opposite, others alternate, shorter than the pedicels; peduncles 
1-2°™ long, sometimes scarcely apparent; pedicels filiform, 5™™ long, 
a small bractlet immediately below the calyx appearing like another 
