23 
ously recorded only from the Southern States, Chapman giving 
its range from North Carolina to Florida. 
ZORNIA BRACTEATA (Walt.) Gmelin, Syst. 2: 1096 (1796). 
Anonymos bracteata Walt. Fl. Car. 181 (1788). 
Zornia tetraphylla Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. 2: 76 (1803). 
Hedysarum tetraphyllum Poir. in Lam. Encycl. 6: 405 (1804). 
Plentiful in a dry sandy field at Franklin, Southampton county, 
in the rear of the “peanut factory.” Previously cited range, 
Florida to North Carolina and westward. 
MEIBOMIA RHOMBIFOLIA (Ell.) A. M. Vail, Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, 
Ig: 113(1892). ' 
Collected at Northwest, Norfolk county, September 6th. The 
plant is referred to this species with some doubt, but agrees with a 
glabrous form collected in Louisiana by Dr. Hale. 
CyRILLA RACEMIFLORA Walt. Fl. Car. 103 (1788). 
Collected on the edge of a swamp at Franklin, Southampton 
county, June 29th. Also observed at several other localities near 
the railroad. Known before from the coast region of the Southern 
States, all the herbarium specimens seen by me being f-om Florida. 
Linum FLoripanum sie) Te Trans. St. Louis Acad. 5: 
13 (1887). 
Prof. Trelease doubtfully records this species from S. Illinois. 
It also appears to be scattered all over Southern Virginia, as 
it was collected at five different stations, representing the whole 
southeastern part of Virginia. 
Lecuea TorreEyI Leggett, Bull. Torr. Club, 6: 250 (1878). 
Hitherto unrecorded from the northern range, this plant grows 
rather abundantly in a strip of grassy woods between the tracks — 
of the Atlantic and Danville and the narrow gauge railroad, at 
Suffolk, in company with L. racemulosa. It was also collected on 
the southern boundary of Virginia, near Margarettsville, N. C. 
In Isle of Wight county a Gaylussacia (No. 992) was collected, 
which, although related to G. resinosa, seems to be distinct. Itis 
seldom more than sixteen inches high, very strict from a creeping 
base, and the fruit is invariably clustered on the main stem, gen- 
: ed below the leaves. p Page glossy. red-black, without bloom, 
