1911) 
Scrophularia, leporella, 218; 
nodosa, 115. 
Scudder, H., Similarity of Color in 
Bud and Leaf, 86. 
Seu Grass, 119, 124. 
Scutellaria galericulata, 146. 
Sedum roseum, 216, 237. 
Selaginella selaginoides, 115. 
Senecio, 116, 131; discoideus, 115; 
pauciflorus, 124; Pseudo-Arnica, 
123; Robbinsii, 183, 221; sylvati- 
115; 
cus, 183. 
Setaria, 174-176; italica, 176; verti- 
cillata, 88. 
Shepherdia canadensis, 138. 
Sideritis montana, 89. 
Silene latifolia, 21. 
Silver Birch, 207. 
Similarity of Color in Bud and Leaf, 
86 
Sisymbrium, 11; altissimum, 10; 
Erucastrum, 11; gallicum, 11; 
hirtum, 11; Loeselii, 89; Sophia, 
89 
Sium cicutaefolium, 146. 
Sixteenth annual Meeting of the 
Vermont Botanical Club, 237. 
Skunk Currant, 138. 
Smilacina stellata, 216; trifolia, 78. 
Smilax rotundifolia, 179. 
Societies, New England Federation 
of Natural History, 187. 
Society of Maine, Winter Meeting 
of the Josselyn Botanical, 90. 
Solanum carolinense, 89. 
Solidago, 19, 106; bicolor, 19; 
canadensis, 32;  Cutleri, 238; 
Elliottii, 78; floribunda, 107; 
graminifolia, var. Nuttallii, 107; 
juncea, 148; latifolia, 148; ma- 
crophylla, 125, 138, var. thyrsoidea 
71;  multiradiata, 119; poly- 
cephala, 106, 107, in Maryland, 
106; puberula, 19; racemosa, 183; 
Randii, 238; resinosa, 146; rugosa, 
139, 188, var. villosa, 131; squar- 
rosa, 141, 148, 161; ulmifolia, 183; 
unguiculata, 135. 
Solidago § Euthamia, 106. 
Some boreal Species and Varieties of 
Antennaria and Anaphalis, 23; 
fleshy Fungi of Stow, Massa- 
chusetts, 57; introduced Plants of 
Connecticut, 88. 
South Carolina, Plants in Flower 
February 8, 1911, at Clemson 
College, 91. 
Sparganium diversifolium, 148; hy- 
perboreum, 134, 160. 
Index 
267 
Spartina, 21; cynosuroides, 21, 22; 
` glabra, var. alterniflora,. 128. 
Species and Varieties of Antennaria 
and Anaphalis, Some boreal, 23; 
of Scirpus from Massachusetts 
and New Jersey, A new, 4. 
Speedwell, 124. 
Spergularia rubra, 135, 140. 
Sphagnum, 96, 220, 221. 
Spiraea, 18; latifolia, 18, 139, 146. 
Spiranthes Beckii, 8; Romanzoffiana, 
138. 
Spruce, 57; Black, 114; White, 114. 
Stachys ambigua, 151. 
Statice, 184, 216; sibirica, 118. 
Steinchisma, 174; hians, 67. 
Steironema ciliatum, 141, 148. 
Stellaria borealis, 78; crassifolia, 
122; media, 91; uliginosa, 237. 
Stenophyllus, 73; capillaris, 73. 
Stipa canadensis, 133. 
Stow, Massachusetts, 
Fungi of, 57. 
Strand Wheat, 122, 123. 
Streptopus amplexifolius, 125, 237; 
longipes, 237, An Addition to the 
Description of, 237; roseus, 237. 
Striking color Form of Viola pedata, 
172. 
Stump-healing in Pinus Strobus, 253. 
Suaeda, 18; linearis, 18, 180; mari- 
tima, 18. 
Subterranean Organs of Cinna arund- 
inacea, 9. 
Swamp Maple, 86. 
Sweet Birch, 206. 
Systematic Studies on Oenothera,— 
I. Oenothera Tracyi, sp. nov., 
209. 
Some fleshy 
Tamarack, 57. 
Tanacetum huronense, 127, 138, 218. 
Taraxacum ceratophorum, 117; ery- 
throspermum, 18. 
Taxus canadensis, 215. 
Tennessee, Notes on Botrychium 
from, 14. 
Teratology in Trillium ovatum Pursh, 
189 
Thalictrum, 18; alpinum, 117, 129, 
136, 223; confine, 147; dioicum, 
111, 146, 147, 218; divicum, 146; 
polygamum, 147; purpurascens, 
146, 147. 
Thistle, 116. 
Thlaspi arvense, 89. 
Thompson, E. J., Botanizing in 
central Connecticut, 77. 
