252 
COLLETOTRICHUM VERMICULARIOIDES. Spots variable, often con- 
fluent, border ash-colored with a dark center. Acervuli 
abundant with numerous black, rigid sete. Spores oval, 
hyaline, 12-15 by 4-5“. The dark hyphe at the base of the 
acervuli give the outward appearance of a Vermicularia, hence 
its name. On leaves and stems of Linaria vulgaris, Mill. New 
Brunswick, N. J., September, 1892. 
Entytoma ALsINEs. Spots indefinite, pale; conidia fasciculate, 
filiform, 50-90 by 2 +, spores globose, thin-walled, hyaline, 
smooth, 12-18 « On Alsine media. New Brunswick, N. J., 
July, 1892. 
Additions to the New Jersey Flora. 
Three species of plants, not heretofore recorded for the State 
of New Jersey, have been found in the vicinity of New Braneyic’ 
in considerable numbers during the two past years. 
The first of these was seen by Mr. J. A. Kelsey in 1891, but 
no attempt at classification was made till the following year, when 
it was determined as Sisymbrium Alliaria (L.) Scop. Only two 
small bunches of it were seen, one under a cliff close to the bank 
of the Raritan River, and the other near by on top of the cliff. 
Later in the season it was discovered that the plant was liberally 
distributed over an area of several square miles of the adjoining 
country, and in some places was so abundant as to be considered 
a weed by the farmers, who, recognizing its affinity to the Cruci- 
fez, had already christened it White Mustard. The Manual gives 
the locality of this plant as “ near Georgetown, D. C.” 
Triosteum angustifolium, L., credited by the Manual with grow- 
ing anywhere from Virginia to Illinois and from Missouri to Ala- 
bama, was found by the writer in abundance in moist woods near 
Milltown, N. J., in June 1892, and in August the fruiting plants 
were collected at Rocky Hill, N. J., where they were abundant and 
very conspicuous on account of the bright color of the drupes. 
Scutellaria parvula, Michx., was found in 1892 at Piscataway, 
N. J., in small quantity, and was very abundant on the cliffs om 
