Shrubs and Trees of the Southern States.— I. 



By John K. Small. 



TsuGA Caroliniana 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 PUNGENS Michx. f. Hist. Arb. Am. i: 6\. pi. s- 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 caiion 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. 



Salix Wardii Bebb, Gard. & For. 8: 363. 1895. 

 At the Falls of the Yadkin river in North Carolina both Salix 

 nigra and Salix Wardii are plentiful, the black willow growing 

 along the water's edge on the south side of the river, while Salix 



* Bull. Torr. Club, 22 : 45. 



