460 BOTANICAL GAZETTE . [DECEMBER 
CHENOPODIUM LEPTOPHYLLUM Nutt., Mog. in DC. Prodr. 13?:71.— 
I have a specimen of this plant collected long ago at Lang, Los Angeles 
co., by Rev. J. C. Nevin. Subsequent collectors appear to have over- 
looked it. 
SAXIFRAGA PUNCTATA Linn. Sp. Pl. 401.—Dry Lake, Grayback Mt., 
about goooft alt., June 1904, Mrs. H. E. Wilder. Mt. Whitney, where 
it was collected by Coville, is the nearest recorded station, so that the 
present one becomes the southern limit of this species in the Sierra Nevada. 
SPIRAEA Dovuctasm Hook. Fl. Bor.-Am. I:172.—Near the electric 
power-house in the cafion of the Santa Ana River, San Bernardino Mts. 
Collected in 1903 by Miss Marguerite Graham. The southern limit of 
the species. 
Horkelia Wilderae, n. sp.—The whole plant sparsely pubescent: 
stems several from a perpendicular root, 24™ tall, slender, erect, much 
branched above: stipules lanceolate, entire or 1- or 2-toothed at base; basal 
leaves 6-8°™ long; leaflets 5 or 6 pairs, cuneate, 5™™ long, deeply incised, 
the few lobes oblong; upper cauline leaves unifoliate, deeply dissected: 
cyme diffuse: flowers numerous on slender pedicels, 3-8™™ long: hypan- 
thium glabrate, saucer-shaped, about 2™™ jn diameter; bracts linear- 
oblong, obtuse or acutish, r™™ long: calyx lobes lanceolate, 2™™ long: 
petals obovate, white, about equaling the sepals: stamens 10: achenes 
2 or 3.—Along the trail leading from Barton Flat to South Fork of Santa 
Ana River, 6000-80ooft alt., San Bernardino Mts., June 1904, Mrs. H. E. 
Wilder. The stems, and still more the calyces, are tinged reddish-purple, 
so that the whole plant appears of that color. Even the leaves soon become 
highly colored. Near H. Michneri Rydb., from which species it is well 
distinguished by its more diffuse cyme, smaller pedicellate flowers, and 
glabrous calyx lobes. 
Drymocallis viscida, n. sp.—Viscidly villous throughout, with inter- 
mingled straight one-celled and crisped glandular several-celled hairs, 
which are sparse on the stems and abundant on the peduncles: stems 
several, erect, tinged with purple, about 39™ tall: stipules semiovate and 
acuminate-pointed, more or less toothed; basal leaves tufted, about 1%™ 
long; petioles as long as the rachis of the pinnae, of which there are 3 pairs, 
5-15°™ long, orbicular to obovate, the terminal one cuneate, sessile; the 
lowest cauline leaves similar, the upper ternate to unifoliate, all coarsely 
incised-toothed: cymes rather condensed, few-flowered: bractlets narrowly 
lanceolate, 2™m long: sepals ovate-lanceolate, callous-tipped, 5™™ long: 
petals yellow, obovate, a little shorter than the sepals, both merely spread- 
ing in anthesis; stamens about 20; filaments r to 1.5™™ in the same flower.— 
. 
