Contributions to Canadian Botany. 467 



LlGUSTICUM Grayi, C. & R. ; Macoun, Cat. Can. Plants, 

 Vol. II., p. 327. 



Woods on the mountains at Ainsworth, Kootanie Lake, 

 B.C., alt. 5,000 feet. (John Macoun.) 



LlGUSTICUM scopulorum, Gray. 



Specimens collected by Prof. John Macoun, at Roger's 

 Pass, Selkirk Mountains, B.C., in 1890, have been doubt- 

 fully referred here by Prof. Coulter. Not before recorded 

 from Canada. 



Helianthus grosse-serratus, Martens. 



Along the Grand Trunk Railway, near Stamford, Ont., 

 1895. (R. Cameron.) Introduced from United States. 



Cladothamnus campanulatus, Greene, Ery threa, Vol. III., 

 p. 65. 



Shrub 3 to 5 feet high, with few and stoutish ascending 

 branches ; leaves lanceolate, 1 to 3 inches long, tapering 

 to a short petiole, which, together with the veins beneath, 

 is more or less strigose-hirsute with red hairs ; flowers 

 solitary or in pairs or threes, from lateral buds, on pedicels 

 h inch long, those setose-hispid with red hairs ; sepals 

 ovate-oblong, densely ciliate with short gland-tipped hairs ; 

 -corolla light salmon colour, campanulate, the petals joined 

 -at base into a short tube ; anthers opening only by a pair 

 of large round terminal pores. 



Credited to British Columbia by Dr. Greene, but all our 

 specimens, both from Vancouver Island and the mainland, 

 are C. pyrolceflorus, Bong. The new species should be 

 looked for by collectors in British Columbia on the higher 

 mountains of the Coast Range. We have specimens of 

 C.jpyrolmflorus collected at Sitka by Bongard himself. 



