8& Rhodora 



[April 



with Anychia capillacea, on a wooded hillside, Aug. (i, L883 (C. W. 

 Jenks). Probably adv. from Eu." Prof. B. L. Robinson in Rhodora 

 v. 236, 1903, states that this plant is 8. antirrhina L, var. divaricate 



Robinson. 1 



S. ARMERIA L. Waste places, occasional. 



S. DICHOTOMA Klnh. Fields and waste places, at nine scattered 

 stations. 



S. GALucA L. Reading (If*. //. Manning, July 12, 1882, specimen 

 in herb. N. E. Botanical Club). 



S. latifolia (Mill.) Britten k Rendle. Waste places, common 

 throughout. 



S. noctltlora L. Waste places, frequent throughout. 



S. Pennsylvania Michx. Dry sand and gravel, frequent in a 

 bell from Medford and Dedham west; "reported at Danvers, Andover, 

 and occasionally in other parts of the county," Robinson, Fl. Essex 

 Co. 38, 1880; Scituate (Mr*. Henry T. Bailey). 



SPERGFLA. 

 S. ARVENSIS L. A common weed in dry soil throughout. 



SPERGULARIA. 



S. canadensis (Pers.) Don. Mystic River marshes, Medford 

 (F. S. Collhtx, Aug. 21, 1SS1, June 21, 1885); Cambridgeport, salt 

 marshes, banks of Charles River (B. L, Robinson, Sept. 18, 1898); 

 within tidewater, W. Boston flats (C. IP. Swan, Sept. 26, 1882). 



S. leiosperma (Kindb.) F. Schmidt. (See Rhodora xii. 157-1(53, 

 1910.) Salt marshes, common all along the coast. 



S. rubra (I,) J. & C. Presl. Dry soil, common. 



S. salina J. & C. Presl. (See Rhodora xii. 157-163, 1910.) Salt 

 marshes, Cdoucester, Nahant, Revere, Charlestown, Cambridge, Bos- 

 ton, Dorchester, Quincy, Scituate. 



STELLARIA. 



S. APETALA Bernardinus. Weed in greenhouses, Cambridge (M. 

 L. Fernald, April 30, 1900; specimen in Gray Herb.). Adventive 

 from Europe. 



