TWO NEW tUPINSS. 67 



flowers ill the axils only, tlie petiole and peduncle wholly dis- 

 tinct : bracts of involucres very short and somewhat spreading, 

 not equalling the undivided part of the calyx, the lobes of 

 this ovate, acuminate, distinctly parallel-veined : corolla 3/^ 

 inches long, cream-color, the cusps of the petals very promi- 

 nent. 



Wet pine barrens in the interior of Georgia, in Dodge Co., 

 between the railway stations of Copeland and Rhine, R. M. 

 Harper, 6 July, 1903, n. 1874 of his collection as in U. S. 

 Herb. 



Hibiscus Langloisii. Stems glabrous below, pubescent 

 in the middle : leaves equally soft-tomentose on both faces, 

 dark above, lighter but neither whitish nor even hoary 

 beneath, blades broadly subcordate-ovate, 3 or 4 inches long 

 and quite as wide below the middle, abruptly acute, serrate- 

 dentate, on rather spreading petioles 3 or 4 inches long : 

 flowers on peduncles distinct from the petioles and 2 or 3 

 inches long ; bracts of the involucre linear-acuminate, very 

 long, quite surpassing the calyx, this cleft scarcely to the 

 middle, the ovate acute lobes ending in a linear apiculation : 

 corolla 4 or 5 inches long, apparently cream-color. 



Banks of the Mississippi in extreme southern Louisiana, 

 June, 1882, Rev. A. B. Langlois; distributed for H. 

 Moscheutos , to which it is not allied so much as to the rather 

 enigmatic H. lasiocarpus, Cav., although a number of quite 

 different and distinct plants of our southern States have too 

 irresponsibly been concluded under that uncertain species, 

 about the habitat of which nothing seems to have been known. 



Two New Lupines. 



LupiNus APRicus. Annual, 1 to Ij^ feet high, with few 

 to several almost upright firm branches from near the base, 

 these and the long ascending petioles rather shortly and 



