1911] Fernald,— Notes from the Phaenogamic Herbarium 181 
EUPHORBIA POLYGONIFOLIA L. is confined in Maine to the south- 
western coast, the northernmost stations apparently being on the 
sands of Brunswick (Kate Furbish), Phippsburg (Kate Furbish, M. L. 
Ferncld), and Georgetown (H. M. Noyes). 
EuPHorBIa HeELIoscoPIa L., common in northern Maine but rare 
southward, was collected by Miss Furbish at Brunswick in 1885. 
EUPHORBIA PEPLUS L., another unusual species, has been known 
as a garden weed in Brunswick for more than forty years (Kate 
Furbish). 
ConEMA Conrapit Torr. One of the earliest known stations for 
Corema was ''in rupestribus aridis, prope Bath, Mainensium."! 
'The plant was actually found in 1840 by William Gambel, a pupil of 
Thomas Nuttall, **on the rocky banks of the Kennebec, in the neigh- 
bourhood of Bath," ? and Redfield collected it August 5, 1884 on 
**barren rocky knolls on a wooded ridge 2 miles west of Bath." There 
are other stations in the Brunswick region: Gun Point, Harpswell 
(Kate Furbish); ‘‘every rocky place," Southport (M. L. Fernald); 
and dry ledges, Bristol (E. B. Chamberlain). In all these stations 
as elsewhere in its range the shrub grows in highly silicious soils and 
it will be interesting to determine to what extent it occurs in the 
region of the lower Kennebec and Androscoggin. 
Tiri corDATA Mill., one of the common European Lindens planted 
in America, seems to be established at Brunswick (Harding's) and 
at Foster's Point, West Bath, where Miss Furbish has several times 
collected it. 
HELIANTHEMUM CANADENSE (L.?) Michx. is much less common in 
Maine than H. majus which extends eastward into the Penobscot 
Valley. The most northeastly station for H. canadense represented 
in the Club Herbarium is ‘‘The Park," Brunswick (Kate Furbish, 
August, 1903). 
HUDSONIA ERICOIDES L., a local species in Maine, occurs at several 
stations slightly south of Brunswick: Small Point (Edith Boardman, 
1888), Cape Popham (M. L. Fernald), and Hunnewell Point (C. G. 
Atkins). 
HUDSONIA TOMENTOSA Nutt. is not represented in the Club Her- 
barium from east of the Kennebec. The easternmost specimens are 
from Fort Popham (M. L. Fernald, 1894) and from Hunnewell Point 
(C. G. Atkins). 
1 Gray, Chloris Bor.-Am. 4 (1846). 2 Gray, l. c. 6. 
