72 BOTANICAL GAZETTE ; (yuLy 
fold between, glandular-puberulent and viscid, not at all lanate: corolla 
salverform, the tube 4™™ long, slightly surpassing the spine-tipped: tri- 
angular divisions of the calyx; border sapphire blue, throat yellowish, 
lobes broadly obovate to orbicular, retuse at apex, 7™™ wide, 10™™ long; 
filaments and anthers white, exserted about 7™™, the anthers oblong, 
sagittate, 3™™ long: style longer than the filaments but not equaling the 
anthers; stigmas 3 or 4, short, narrowly linear: capsule barely surpassing 
the calyx lobes, usually with only one seed in each cell, the other ovules 
present but abortive. 
Type collected November 1903 by Mrs. Blanche Trask, in the San 
Jacinto Mountains, California. Specimen 2630 of H. M. Hall’s collection 
from the same mountains, distributed as G. virgata Steud., is the same 
but is much younger than Mrs. Trask’s specimen. Neither can be prop- 
erly referred to G. virgata if the figure in Hooker’s Icones 200 represents 
that species. The paniculate instead of virgate habit, the glandular 
instead of white-lanate pubescence, the distinct and broad membranous 
sinus of the calyx, the broad retuse lobes of the corolla, the few seeds in 
the capsule, all serve to distinguish them.—Auice Eastw oop, California 
Academy oj Sciences. San Francisco. 
