1 62 The Ottawa Naturalist, [October 



Viola vagula, Greene, Pittonia, vol. iv, p. 67. 



Larger than the last, with dark green glabrous rather notably 

 fleshy herbage : leaves at time of petaliferous flowering, about an 

 inch in diameter, somewhat deltoid-cordate, the length equalling 

 or surpassing the breadth, the margin lightly crenate: peduncles 

 surpassing the leaves, obscurely angled or semiterete,bibracteolate 

 in about the middle, the rather obtuse bractlets with a few obscure 

 glandular teeth : sepals oblong, obtuse : corolla nearly an inch in 

 diameter, the breadth commonly greater than the length ; petals 

 deep violet, at base darkly venulose on a white ground, all obo- 

 vate-spatulate, obtuse or notched, the odd one especially broad 

 and often obcordate, the pair next to it bearing each a dense tuft 

 of ralher long and slender not in the least clavellate hairs ; style 

 not prolonged beyond the anthers : apetalous summer flowers aer- 

 ial, but their peduncles short and more or less horizontal ; their 

 capsules short and thick, not dotted. 



Throughout the whole extent of the Beaver Meadow, W. of 

 Hull, Que., 1899. [J. M. Macoun.) A very beautiful species in- 

 termediate between V. ciicullata and V. veniistiila. 



Subularia aquatica, L. 



In fresh water ponds, Attu Island, Aleutian Islands, Behring 

 Sea, Aug. 29th, 1891. (J. M. Macoun.) Not before collected in 

 that region. 



Stellaria aquatica, Scopoli. 



Common at Chelsea, Que. 



Sph^ralcea munroana, Spach. 



Dry clay '• benches," Osoyoos Valley, B.C., 1898. (C. de B. 

 Green. ) New to Canada. 



Acer rubrum, L. 



Little Turtle River, Rainy Lake, Ont., long. 93" W. ( W. 

 Mclnnis. ) The western limit for this species. 



Trifolium inxarnatum, L. 



Cultivated for fodder and now becoming extensively natura- 

 lized in Ontario, 



