(132) 
sub- a yellow, with 9 strong purple nerves. Disk corollas 
narrowly infu Sabie strongly purple- -nerved, - lobes short, 
triangular-ovate, exceeding the pappus. ature akenes not seen 
“Six feet high. Mychariapa, 3800 ft. alt., ee 9, foo2! 
(No. 194). 
Calea lanceolata sp. nov. 
ery scabrous throughout; branchlets slender, ae terete, 
striate; leaves opposite, the petioles 6-12 mm. long, c 
a narrow, thick line, the blades 5-12 cm. long, sane mm. broad, 
lanceolate, acute, obtuse at the base, aie etely serrate with 
minute salient teeth, the margin lightly revolute, thick, mid- 
rib white-pilose beneath, where th venation Is ver 
prominent and coarsely reticulate, the secondaries, of very irreg- 
ar number, strongl endin con ing cl to th 
peduncles 10-15 mm. long, erect; involucres 8-10 broad, nd 
inner " successively narrower, longer, and straighter, without foli- 
aceous ape oe areas 10-2 mm. as the involucre, 
ieee obtuse, entire; cee as 4- . mm. long, infun- 
broad; anthers stout, 3 mm. long, slightly exserted; disk-akenes at 
maturity 4-5 mm. long, ob lanceolate, lightly strigose, narrowly 
winged, the eal ciliate-serrate; pappus connate, the shorter 
bristles about 1 mm. long, the longest eau as long as the akene, 
the opposite one about two-thirds a ong. 
“Twenty ft. high and two and peer inches in diameter; 
Apolo, 4800 ft., July 9, 1902” (No. 1408) 
The same as Rusby’s No. 2138. 
Calea brevifolia sp. nov. 
scabrous; stems erect-branched, Pe branches elongated, 
slender} peti | mm. long ee bro ades 2-4 cm. lon 
ulate, the lowest scales only one-third the le ngth of the inner, 
some of them with very slight herbaceous tips; tubular flowers 
