176 
Cumberland Mountains, Tennessee, Prof. Kirby Smith. 
Mountains of North Carolina, Mr. G. R. Vasey. 
Habersham County, Georgia, Mr. Buckley. 
Warren County, Georgia, Dr. Chapman. 
Stone Mountain and vicinity, Georgia, various collectors. 
WALDSTEINIA FRAGARIOIDES (Michx.) Tratt. Ros. Mon. 3: 107. 
1823. 
Like Anemone tifolia this is normally an Alleghanian species, 
but I have found quantities of it in the central part of North Caro- 
lina growing in dark ravines which branch from the cafion at 
the Falls of the Yadkin. The altitude of the locality is little over 
150 feet. 
OXALIS RECURVA E]I. Bot. S. C. & Ga. 1: 526. 1821. 
During the summer of 1895 I collected a few specimens of 
this beautiful and strongly characterized: Ova/is at Stone Mountain 
and in the vicinity of Augusta, Georgia. 
Monotropsis oporaTA Ell. Bot. S. C. & Ga. 1: 479. 1817. 
This rare plant has lately been rediscovered by Mr. A. M. 
Huger on the mountains of Polk County, North Carolina. 
SCUTELLARIA CAMPESTRIS Britton, Mem. Torr. Club. 5: 283. 1894. 
In former papers of this series I have reported a number of 
typically prairie plants which occur east of the Appalachian 
mountain system ; Scutellaria campestris must now be added to 
the increasing list. In April, 1896, I found several patches above 
the bluffs at the Falls of the Yadkin River, North Carolina. The 
latest record of its distribution is given by Drs. Watson and 
Coulter* as southern Illinois and Kansas. Both Prof. Bain and. 
Mr. Bicknell have collected specimens in Tennessee. It is an ex- 
cellent species and doubtless has a considerably wider range than 
our present material indicates. 
3. NOTES ON EPILOBIACEAE. 
The genus Ludwigia as it is now generally interpreted has 
always seemed to me to contain too many distinct generic vee 
* A. Gray, Man. Ed. 6. 418. 
