CATALOaUE OF CANADIAN PLANTS. 33Y 



(1293.) H. paniculatum, Linn. ; Macoun, Cat. II., 216. 

 In woods, western Ontario. (J. Dearness.) 



(3146.) H. ? 



A tall, coarse plant, with the general appearance of Crepis, growing 

 in clumps. The whole stem is more or less covered with dark hairs, 

 which increase so much on the peduncles and bracts as to make them 

 very dark colored. Leaves with only occasional teeth, rough, with 

 hispid hairs, which are more numerous on the under sidCj mid-rib 

 broad and white ; radical leaves nearly a foot long, tapering into the 

 petiole. Naturalized in meadows at Cedar Hill, Victoria, Vancouver 

 Island, 1887. (Macoun.) 



(3147.) H. cynoglossoides, Arvet. ; Gray, Synop. Fl. II., 428. 



A tall species over three feet high, quite smooth and glaucous, except 

 a few bulbous hairs at the base; leaves entire, lanceolate, not clasping; 

 panicle like Crepis virens ; involucre almost black, covered with 

 appressed glandular hairs. Collected 40 miles up the North Thompson, 

 beyond the settlements extending from Kamloops, B.C., June, 1889. 

 (J. M. Macoun.) Dr. Britton suggests the above name, but the speci- 

 men in our herbarium from Howell is unlike this. 



346. CAMPANULA. 



(3148.) C. aurita, Greene, Pittoniana, I., Part V., 221, 1888. 



" Eoot perennial ; stems several, a span high, erect, slender, leafy, 

 one-tlowored ; the whole plant pale and minutely scabrous ; leaves an 

 inch long, oblong, lanceolate, acute, sessile by a narrow base, entire or 

 with a few coarse teeth ; segments of the calyx lanceolate, each with a 

 pair of erect lobes or teeth at or near the base ; corolla violet, f inch 

 long, cleft to some distance below the middle, the segments lanceolate, 

 widely spreading." 



A well-marked and interesting species obtained on the table-lands 

 of the Yukon Mver, Alaska, Latitude 63°, late in August, 1881, by 

 Mr. Octavius S. Bates. {Greene.') 



(1344.) C- rotundifolia, Linn., var. arctica, Lange. ; Macoun, 

 Cat. III., 560. 



Greenland, Lat. 71°, 1888. {Hanson.) Little Charlton Island, 

 James Bay, July, 1887. {J. M. Macoun.) All the northern specimens 



