533 
distinguish between the black and the white. Tho variety culti- 
ated in Java (var. ee e Piers) is Faro as being 
probably the same as the Sudan var. nigr s growing at 
Kew from Zaria Sag P. Lamb, 1913) probabl 7 ‘belong E eed 
hev 
e var. al ba, 
Ref.—* Le Hanbal (Coleus tuberosus, Benth.) ; PEE 
et Propagation au Gabon. n-Congo,’’ Paillieux et Bois, in Revue des 
pp. 684-686." Coleus tuberosus ”’ in Gard. Chron. Aug. 12th, 
“ Coleus dysentericus, Coleus tuberosus, Pleo. 
transits ternatus, in ‘‘ Tuberous Labiatae,” in Kew Bull. 1894, 
10-14. * No 
a : 
Rendus, cxxx. 1900, pp. 1268- 71.——Sur L'Ousounifing du 
Soudan (Coleus Coppini), Heckel, in Ann. Inst. Col. Marseille, 
viii. 1901, 2nd fasc. pp. 1—15, illustrated. i 
. Vé . Trop. 6. 1. 
fasc. 1, ue po pP. rte Pp: TRA pp. 130-132, 
ated.——' i 
Hyreris, Jacq. 
Hyptis pectinata, Poit.; Fl. Trop. Afr. V. p. 448. 
^ —Ann. Mus. Paris, vii. (1806), t. 30. 
rnac. names—Kunbar dawaki Lite Se Dalziel) ; see 
Tee MacGregor, Doo); Quinbumbo, Quinbungu, 
mbo or Quimbumba (Angola, Welwitsch) Bamniitéabsd- 
volihy (Madagascar, Parker, Heckel). 
Lagos, Idda, Katagum and Abinsi, widely spread in Tropical 
Africa. Native of Tropical America. Used as a medicine for 
vens 1, 4.6 ft. high, found on old farms, =, N. Nigeria 
(Dalziel, To on hedges in villages, Madi (Gra Herb. Kew dis 
open grass and low bush, Sierra Leone (Scott Elliot Herb. Kew), 
in sandy soil, N.W. Rhodesia (Rogers, Herb. Kew). 
