253 
the banks of the Raritan just north of New Brunswick, where it 
has been noticed for several years. 
F. L. STEVENS. 
NEw Brunswick, N. J., April 17, 1893. 
[The discovery of Triosteum angustifolium in Central New Jer- 
sey is of much interest because it connects the outlying station 
long known at Glen Cove, Long Island (BULLETIN, i. 41, ii. 2), 
with those in Pennsylvania and Virginia; Scw¢ellaria parvila and 
Sisymbrium Alliaria were both collected at New Brunswick by 
Miss Anna M. Vail in 1890, but the station does not seem to have 
been recorded ; the latter has long been known from Long Island 
(BULLETIN, i. 22, xi. 83) and Westchester county, N. Y. (BULLE- 
TIN, vi. 100), N. L. B.] 
Additions to the Tennessee Flora. 
Cimicifuga racemosa (L.) Nutt. var. cordifolia (Pursh.) Gray. This 
plant grows in rich soil on a wooded bluff of the Tennessee River, 
about one mile below Knoxville.’ It was first collected by me in 
September, 1890; and, again, in the same month of the following 
year. So far as I know, this Cimicifuga has never before been 
found outside of North Carolina. It differs considerably from C. 
vacemosa in its period of flowering, the latter being out of flower” 
here by the first of July, usually earlier. It it entirely odorless, 
and is readily distinguished from the type by its large, cordate 
leaflets. 
Metbomia ochroleuca (M. A. Curtis) Kuntze. I collected a 
single specimen of this Meisomia in a dry, open wood near Knox- 
ville, August 29, 1890. I have never seen it since. The range of _ a 
this species is thus extended west of the Alleghanies. 
Alchemilla arvensis (L.) Scop., is abundantly naturalized in dry 
fields about Knoxville, It grows with Zifolium procumbens, var. 
minus, Houstonia minima, Plantago heterophylla, etc., and appears 
as if indigenous. 
Antennaria plantaginifolia (Linn.) Hook, var. monocephala, 
Torr. and Gray.—Early in April, 1891, I came upon a peculiar 
form of Antennaria plantaginifolia growing on a bank in a wooded 
glen near Knoxville. 
