490 
Treucrium Nasuu Kearney, Bull. Torr. Club, 21: 483. 1894. 
Mr. A. H. Curtiss has added another station for Zeucrium 
Nashii. ‘The specimens are from near Jacksonville, Florida, and 
are numbered 5040. 
LONICERA Japonica Thunb. FI, Jap. 89. 1784. 
In a former note* I have spoken of the abundance of this 
foreign plant in certain localities. Mr. A. H. Curtiss now sends 
it from Florida (number 4690) saying, “In moist thickets where 
this gets a foothold it grows and fruits more freely than does ZL. 
sempervirens on dry land. I do not know that either grow from 
seed.” I may add that it has become a very troublesome weed 
in many parts of the country. : 
II. New SPECcIEs. 
Victa HuGert. 
Annual, very slender, bright green, minutely and sparsely pu- 
bescent, or glabrate in age. Stems ascending, decumbent or re- 
clining, solitary or several together, 3-7 dm. long, wire-like, more 
or less angled, sometimes branched above, rarely branched below ; 
leaves 4-8 cm. long, the tendril simple or forked ; leaflets usually 
10-12, linear, 2~3.5 cm. long, mucronulate, straight or slightly 
curved, short-petioled; peduncles 5-8 cm. long, ascending; 
flowers white or sometimes pinkish, 10-14 in secund racemes, 
small ; pedicels 1.5-2 mm. long; calyx campanulate,1.5 mm. long, 
the teeth triangular, 4%{-1% as long as the tube, acute; corolla 
about 5 mm. long; pods linear-oblong, 2 cm. long. 
In open woods, Georgia and Alabama. March to May. 
Lately several specimens of this peculiar species of Vicia have 
reached me from different points in the Southern States. The 
plant first came to my notice on the slopes of Stone Mountain, 
Georgia, in 1895. The species stands between Vicia Caroliniana 
and V. micrantha,possessing the general habit of the latter and the 
inflorescence of the former. 
From Vicia micantha it differs in its elongated many-flowered 
racemes, longer peduncles and glabrous or glabrate calyx with 
the segments as broad as long or broader, while from Vicia Caro- 
iniana it can easily be distinguished by its more slender habit, 
* Bull, Torr, Club. | 
