202 Rhodora [NOVEMBER 
shore of Quaboag Lake (where it is almost hidden by larger plants), 
August 20. 
* Scirpus pungens, Vahl. A few specimens along the north shore of 
Lake Quacumquasit, August 13; very abundant along the north shore 
of Quaboag Lake (and extending some distance out into the water), 
August 20. 
Hemicarpha subsquarrosa, Nees. Sandy shore of Lake Quacum- 
quasit, August 13; gravelly shore of Quaboag Lake, August 20. 
Carex utriculata, Boott. Wet meadows and bogs, Southbridge, 
May 26; Webster, June 11. 
Carex bullata X utriculata, Bailey. A group of perhaps two or 
three dozen individuals of this supposed hybrid was found in a sphag- 
nous meadow in Southbridge, in flower May 26, and apparently mature 
June 14. C. utriculata was a few rods away, but I saw no C. bullata 
in the vicinity. 
Carex scabrata, Schw. |. * Gulf Woods” (May 20), and other wet 
places in Southbridge. 
Carex torta, Boott. One specimen or clump found growing on the 
bank of an artificial canal near the Quinebaug River, Southbridge, 
June 6. Probably originated from seed transported from some station 
farther up the river. 
Carex tenella, Schk. Wet woods, Southbridge (two stations), June 
8 and 27. Associated with C. polytrichoides, Muhl., which it resembles 
in its filiform leaves and culms. 
Carex foenea, Willd. Dry thicket. Southbridge, July 15. 
Carex albolutescens, Schw. Dry woods. Southbridge, June 14. 
Orontium aquaticum, L. Three or four specimens, without fruit, 
in a muddy ditch near the Quinebaug River, Dudley, July 30 (eleva- 
tion, 400 feet). . 
Funcus Greentt, Oakes & Tuckerm. Dry sandy soil. Near Qua- 
boag Lake, Brookfield, August 20 (elevation, 630 feet), September 4 
(elevation, 680 feet) ; near Quinebaug River, Dudley, August 27 (ele- 
vation, 400 feet). 
Stellaria graminea, L. Roadside, Dudley, June 11. Closely re- 
sembles S. Zongifolia, Muhl., which grows near it. 
Berteroa incana, DC. Three or four depauperate specimens of 
this new weed were found in a dry hayfield in Southbridge, August 17. 
One specimen was sent to Prof. L. H. Dewey, assistant botanist of the 
U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, who confirmed my identification. 
