LXXV. LABIATE 
405 
Leaves 1 in. broad, toothed. 
Leaves softly woolly. Whorlsaxillary . . .1. L.lanata. 
Leaves roughly hairy. Whorls crowded in globose, 
terminal heads . . . . . . . 2. L. Cephalotes. 
Leaves less than J in. broad, entire . . . 3. L. hyssopifolia. 
1. Leucas lanata, Benth. ; FI. Br. Ind. iv. 681. Perennial, 
12-18 in., clothed with soft, white, woolly tomentum. Leaves 
shortly stalked or nearly sessile, ovate or oblong, l-2x|-l in., 
crenate or sharply toothed. Flowers \ in. long, in numerous, 
small, axillary whorls. Calyx woolly. (Fig. 129.) 
Simla, common? on stony ground ; June-October. — Throughout India on dry 
hills, ascending to *8000 ft. — Burmah, S. China. 
2. Leucas Cephalotes, Spreng. ; FI. Br. Ind. iv. 689. Annual, 
1- 3 ft., roughly hairy. Leaves shortly stalked, ovate-lanceolate, 
2- 4x|-l in., toothed. Flowers 1 in. long, crowded in globose, 
terminal whorls 1-2 in. diam., surrounded by numerous, lanceolate, 
hairy bracts. Calyx hairy near the top, otherwise glabrous. 
Valleys below Simla, common in fields ; July-October. — Throughout India, 
ascending to 6000 ft. 
3. Leucas hyssopifolia, Benth. ; FI. Br. Ind. iv. 690. Peren- 
nial, 4-8 in., roughly hairy. Leaves sessile, linear, l-2xj— J in., 
entire. Flowers f in. long, in small, axillary and terminal whorls. 
Calyx glabrous. 
Valleys below Simla in grassy places ; flowers during the cold season. — 
N. India, ascending to 3000 ft. 
27. PHLOMIS. A Greek plant-name, probably of a Verbas- 
cum . — Temperate Asia, N. Africa, E. Europe. 
Phlomis bracteosa, Boyle ; FI. Br. Ind. iv. 693. An erect, hairy 
herb, 1-3 ft. Leaves cordate, ovate, 2-4 in., crenate. Flowers 
nearly 1 in. long, dull blue -purple, crowded in large, axillary 
whorls 1-1^ in. across. Calyx tubular ; teeth 5, linear-lanceolate, 
acute. Corolla-tube included ; limb 2-lipped, upper lip erect, 
hood -like, very hairy, lower spreading, 3-lobed, mid-lobe the 
longest. Stamens 4, in unequal pairs, ascending under the upper 
lip, outer or anterior pair longer than the inner pair. 
Simla, on Jako, Mushobra, in forest ; August-October. — W. Himalaya, 
5000-11,000 ft.— W. Asia. 
28. TEUCRIUM. From teucrion, the Greek -name of a spe- 
cies of this genus. — Most temperate and warm regions (Britain, 
Germander). 
Erect or ascending herbs. Leaves ovate or oblong-ovate. 
Flowers in pairs, forming erect racemes. Calyx bell-shaped, 
