BULLETIN 
TORREY BOTANICAL CLUB. 
Shrubs and Trees of the Southern States.—lI, 
By Joun K. SMALL. 
TsuGa CaroLintana Engelm. Coult. Bot. Gaz. 6: 223. 1881. 
I have already reported this rare hemlock from Georgia* and 
can now record a second station, at Tallulah Falls, several miles be- 
low the first one. At the second station the trees grow in a more 
accessible position and reach a better development, there being 
plenty of soil. The station is towards the lower end of the cafion, 
On the south side, where the bank slopes at an angle of 45° or 
more, and about 1000 feet above the river. Owing to a drenching 
rain which prevailed during my stay at Tallulah I could not ascer- 
tain the extent of this grove. 
Pinus puncens Michx. f. Hist. Arb. Am. 1: 61. /. 5. 1810. 
I can now report this most locally distributed of our mountain- 
inhabiting pines for the flora of Georgia, having encountered it in 
the lower part of the cafion at Tallulah Falls. For the same rea- 
son given in the foregoing paragraph, I am unable to tell the size 
of the grove, but it is extensive and the trees are larger than I 
have seen them elsewhere in the southern mountains. 
Satix Warpi! Bebb, Gard. & For. 8: 363. 1895. 
At the Falls of the Yadkin river in North Carolina both Sa/ix 
migra and Salix Wardii are plentiful, the black willow growing 
along the water’s edge on the south side of the river, while Sa/ix 
*Bull. Torr. Club, 22: 45. 
