164 The Ottawa Naturatist. [October 



that species. These fruiting specimens of O. deflexa were also 

 probably included in giving- the range of O. foLiolosa. 



O. foliolosa is from 4 to 7 inches high, occasionally somewhat 

 decumbent; legumes 3-5 lines long, clothed with black hairs, 

 pendent, but when as in flower forming a compact head ; 

 otherwise as described by Hooker. From its habit and range it 

 is evidently a high alpine and northern species. 



Our herbarium specimens are from Northern Labrador, Herb. 

 No. 18,668. {A. P. Lo-w.) Rocky Mountains. (John Macoun. ) 

 Arctic North America (Z>r. Richardson.) 



These latter are young flowering specimens and were dis- 

 tributed from the British Museum as O. foliolosa. 



Cassia Marilandica, L. 



Two or three plants near the Thames River, east of Thames- 

 ville, Ont., 1892 ; on flats of Cornwall's Creek, Howard Town- 

 ship, Kent Co.; Aug. 15th, 1892, well established; around the 

 mouth of a government ditch. Tilbury, Ont., 1894. {J. Deaniess.) 

 New to Canada and perhaps indigenous in S. W. Ontario. 



Lathyrus maritimus, Bigel. var. Aleuticus, Greene. 



A not rare variety on the Labrador coast and on both sides of 

 Hudson Bay. Described from Alaska where, as on Hudson Bay, 

 it is not mixed with, but in many localities takes the place of L. 

 maritimus. The smaller size of the variety is not in my opinion 

 due to habitat as L. mariiimus of large size is found in equally ex- 

 posed situations in the same latitudes. 



Dryas integrifolia, Vahl. 



Summit of Moose Mt., Elbow River, Rocky Mts. Alt. 7,500 ft. 

 Herb No. 20,001. {John Maconn.) Southern limit in Rocky 

 Mountains. 



Alchemilla vulgaris, L. 



Metis, Que., 1897. {Mrs. Brodie.) Not recorded west of Nova 

 Scotia. 



Rosa pratincola, Greene, Pittonia, vol. iv, p. 13. 



One of the commonest, if not the most common, roses on the 

 Canadian prairies, extending from Manitoba west to the Rocky 



