948 
fering from that species in having subentire leaflets. A 
small, handsome tree with blpinnate leaves, and terminal 
spreading clusters of yellow flowers. 
Lilium sp. (Lillaceae.) 41585. Seeds fr.om Bhutan, 
India. Collected by Mr. R. E. Cooper and presented by Bees 
Limited, Liverpool, England, at the request of Mr. A. K. 
Bulley. "Grows on turf in rock ledges at an elevation of 
13,000 feet. Flowers reddish green hanging bell-like on 
6-inch stem." (Cooper. ) 
..' Malws sargenti Rehder. (Malaceae.) 41572. Seeds from 
Tokyo, Japan. Presented by Dr. T. Watase, Tokyo Plant, 
Seed and Implement Company. "A shrub of bushy habit 3 to 
5 feet high; young shoots downy. Leaves ovate or oval, 2 
to 3 inches long,. 1 to 2 inches wide; pointed at the apex, 
rounded or slightly heart-shaped at the base, often three- 
lobed , sharply toothed; wooly when quite young, becoming 
nearly smooth before falling; stalks downy, 1/3 to 1 inch 
long. Flowers pure white, 1 inch across, produced in 
clusters of five or six, each on a stalk 1 to 1-^ inches 
long; calyx smooth outside, wooly within. Fruit orange 
shaped, inch wide, bright red, the apex marked by the 
scar of the fallen calyx. I only know this species by a 
small specimen sent to Kew by Professor Sargent in 1908, 
but it appears to be a pretty plant, and distinct among 
crabs by its purely bushy habit. It was originally dis- 
covered by Sargent in 1892 near a brackish marsh, Mororan, 
Japan, and was named in his honor by Mr. Rehder, In 1903. 
The author observes that it is most nearly related to P. 
toringo, but differs in its larger, pure white flowers with 
broad overlapping petals and in its larger fruits. From 
another' ally, P. zumi, It is distinguished by its broader, 
often lobed . leaves, the shape of the (broader based) 
petals, the glabrous calyx-tube and the habit." (W. J. 
Bean, Trees and Shrubs Hardy in the British Isles, Vol. 2, 
p. 293 . ) 
Meconopsis horridula Hook. f. & Thorn. (Papaveraceae . ) 
41582. Seeds from Bhutan, India. Collected by Mr. R. E. 
Cooper of Mr. A. K. Bulley. "A many stemmed plant 6 inches 
high, at an elevation of 14,000 feet on peaty turf over 
scree. Flowers blue, large; plant prickly." (Cooper.) The 
genus Meconopsis Is made up of poppy-like annuals and per- 
ennials with blue, yellow or purple flowers. They may suc- 
ceed in the mountain regions of the west. 
Meconopsis lyrata (Cumm. & Prain) Fedde. (Papaveraceae.) 
41592. Seeds from Bhutan, India. Collected by Mr. R. E. 
Cooper and presented by Bees Limited, Liverpool, England, 
at the request of Mr. A. K. Bulley. "A- yellow flowered 
herb three feet high at base of rock cliffs in soil similar 
