46 



viscid: lowest leaves linear-lanceolate, long-acuminate, 3-4cm. 

 long, 2mm. wide, those of the middle part three-parted, broader 

 (nearly icm.) with cuneate base, the middle lobe a third longer 

 than the lateral ones: bracts of the rather lax spike broadly 

 cuneiform, 5-cleft into long-attenuate divisions, commonly a lit- 

 tle shorter than the flowers, all pubescent and ciliate as are the 

 leaves: flowers slender, bright yellow, 1.5cm. long, sacs 3mm- 

 wide, pubescent, especially on the tube and galea, which latter 

 is whitish, sharp-pointed, and slightly curved. 



No. 6907, collected in low grassy places at the lower end of 

 Donner Lake, Nevada county, California, July 10, 1903. Per- 

 haps a near relative of O. hispidiis Benth. 



Campanula Californica (Kellogg) 



Wahlenbergia Californica Kellogg, Proc. Cal. Acad. 3: 



158. 1863. 

 Campamtla linnaeifolia A. Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. 7 : 366. 



1868. 

 These two names plainly belong to the same plant, and as 

 Dr. Kellogg's name has priority, it should be used. 



Anaphalis occidentalis (Greene) 



Anaphalis tna^^garitai.ea var. occidentalis Greene, Fl. Fran. 

 399. 1897. 



This large flowered plant of the middle and northern Cali- 

 fornian seaboard is certainly distinct from the eastern species. 

 It differs in having a thick, coriaceous leaf, with a broad, auricu- 

 late-clasping base, the upper side glabrous, deep green and glossy, 

 while the flower heads are nearly twice the size of those of A. 

 viargaritacea^ which has a thinner linear leaf, white w^oolly on 

 both sides. The plant of the Sierras is also distinct, being A. 

 siibaipina (A. Gray) Rydb. 



