(6) 
- ee 5-6 mm. thick; flowers in a leafy raceme; pedicels 
mm. long, br: acteolate ; sepals ovate, acute, unequal, the 
ioneest about half the length of the corolla; corolla scarlet, sharply 
5-angled, 18-20 mm. long, pubescent without, the lobes apiculate. 
Living specimens were collected by J. N. Rose and Walter 
Hough in Tomellin Cafion, Oaxaca, June 15, 1899, and flowered 
in the Washington Botanic Garden in April, 1900 (no. 4994, type). 
Herbarium specimens had previously been collected near the same 
locality by Mr. Pringle (no. 5641) and by Prof. C. Conzatti on 
Sierra de San Felipe (no. 107). This is a very singular species, 
with thick velvety leaves and bright scarlet flowers. 
EcHEVERIA PriIncLEI (S. Wats.) Rose. 
Cotyledon Pringlei S. Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 25: 148. 1890. 
Only known from type specimens collected by C. G. Pringle 
near Guadalajara, Mexico. 
Echeveria montana Rose, sp. nov. 
Caulescent; leaves in a dense rosette at the top of the stem, orbi- 
cular or obovate, somewhat narrowed below, glabrous, 5-6 cm. 
long; flowering stems somewhat granular-roughened above, rather 
densely leafy-bracted below, 2-3 dm. long, many-flowered ; inflores- 
cence an equilateral raceme; sepals ovate-lanceolate, 6-7 mm. long ; 
corolla 1 cm. lon 
Collected on ledges, trees, etc., by C. G. Pringle on the Sierra 
de San Felipe, June 16, 1894 (no. 4.706, type). Here seems to be- 
long Charles L. Smith’s no. 860 from the same locality. Resem- 
bling somewhat &. Pringlez, but not pubescent. 
Echeveria australis Rose, sp. nov. 
Caulescent, 2-3 dm. long, or 5-6 dm. including the inflorescence, 
glaucous; leaves é broadly aoe rounded at apex, 3-7 cm 
sometimes 3 cm. broad and spoon-shaped, somnew nat glaucous and 
long, or less, slender; flower-buds strongly 5-angled, acute; sepals 
unequal, the longer ones 12 mm. long, ovate-oblong, purplish, 
glaucous, nearly or quite free to the base; petals bright red, thick- 
ish, a little longer than the longest sepals, nearly distinct, cup- 
shaped at base; stamens 10, the 5 opposite ae sepals borne on 
petals about one fourth the distance above the base. 
