26 
POTENTILLA, L.—P. Norvegica, L.; common; N. Y.—P, Canadensis, L.; 
very common; N. Y.; Var. simplex, Zorr. & Gray; common; 
N. Y.—P. argentea, L.; common; N. Y.—P. recta, Willd. ; Glen Cove, 
Coles ; Palisades, Wilbur; an escape.—P. Anserina, L.; Glen Cove, 
Coles; salt marshes of Long Island, State Flora; shores of 
Newark Bay, W. H. L.—P. fruticosa, L.; in meadows, Wehawken, 
Torr. Cat.; Morris Co , N. J., Austin.—P. tridentata, Ait.; northern 
New Jersey, Austin.—P. palustris, Scop.; New Jersey, Torr. Cat.” 
FRAGARIA, Tourn.—f, Virginiana, Ehrhart. Austin, Le Roy, T. F. Allen; 
Glen Cove, Coles ; rare in the neighborhood of New York, and 
on Long Island, State F'lora.—F, vesea, L.; very common; N.Y. 
RUBUS, Tourn.—R, odoratus, L.; not uncommon; N. Y.—R. triflorus, 
Richardson ; not uncommon; N. Y., Zorr. Cat.—R. strigosus, 
Michx.; not uncommon.—R, occidentalis, Michx,; common; N. Y 
R. villosus, Ait.; very common; N. Y.; Var. humifusus; common. 
—R. Canadensis, L.; common; N. Y.—R. hispidus, L.; common.— 
R. cuneifolins, Pursh; Long Island? State Flora; South Amboy; 
Tottenville, Staten Island, W. H. L.; East New York, J. W. 
Congdon. 
ROSA, Tourn.—R. Carolina, L.; very common; N. Y.—R. lucida, Ehr- 
hart; common.—R, rubiginosa, L.; not uncommon by road sides; 
N. Y., O. W. M-—R. micrantha, Smith; Hoboken: Austin ; Sands 
Point, L.1L, W. H. L. 
CRAT AGUS, L.—t. coccinea, L.; not uncommon; N. Y.—C. tomentosa, L.; 
Harlem River, N. Y., W. H. L.; Var. pyrifolia, on rocks, in 
woods, Jorr. Cat.—f. Crus-galli, L.; in woods, N. Y., Torr. Cat. 
O. W. M.; and elsewhere not uncommon, 7. F. A., W. H. L., 
though perhaps from cultivation.—(, parifolia, Ait.; New Jersey; 
Tottenville, Staten Island, W. H. L.—. oxyeantha, L.; is fre- 
quently spontaneous about old grounds, N. Y. and elsewhere.— 
C. cordata, Ait.; in Torr. Cat. is said to grow “in woods and on 
the banks of rivulets among rocks, New York and New Jersey,” 
but it is not mentioned in the State Flora, and we only know 
_ of it in old hedges. 
PYRUS, L.—P. coronaria, L.; in woods, New Jersey, Torr. Cat., but pro- 
__ bably an error.—P, arbutifolia, L.; Var. erythrocarpa; Var. melano- 
carpa; both common; N. Y. 
AMELANCHIER, Medic.—A, Canadensis, Torr. & Gray; common.—Var. 
or tagages common; Var. oblongifolia; N. Y., O. W. M.; Denslow; 
67. Lysimachia Fraseri, Duby; (L. lanceolata, Pursh, non Nutt. )— 
Among the interesting plants which I collected on Lookout Mt. 
(Tenn. & Geo., June 18—20, 1870,) was a showy Lysimachia, which 
both Dr. Torrey and Prof. Gray refer to the above species; but 
which differs so widely from the descriptions hitherto recorded, | 
that I venture to offer the following. This showy plant grows — 
abundantly, in company and flowering at the same time with (no- _ 
thera glauca, Mchx., on and around the point of the mountain; itis 
rank and stout, has a beautiful thc of flowers, reddish stem, 
and an exquisitely delicate red border to the leaves, bracts, and — 
