Shrubs and Trees of the Southern States.— II. 



By John K. Small. 

 I. New and Noteworthy Species. 



TsuGA Caroliniana Engelm. Coult. Bot. Gaz. 6: 223. 1881. 

 Last fall I received specimens of this very ornamental hemlock 

 from two new localities in North Carolina. Mr. A. M. Huger 

 found groves of it at Banner's Elk, Watauga County, at an eleva- 

 tion of 1 300 meters and in the Linville Gorge, Burke County, at 

 about 575 meters above sea-level, the latter station, together with 

 that at Tallulah Falls, Georgia, and the New River, Virginia, rep- 

 resenting the lowest altitudes at which the species has been found. 



HicoRiA GLABRA (Mill.) Brittou, Bull. Torr. Club, 15 : 284. 1888. 



Among the many unique things that Stone Mountain affords 

 are some dwarf hickory trees, usually less than two meters in 

 height, bearing quite an abundance of fruit. 



