CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 119 



ERICACEAE. Heath Family. 

 ANDROMEDA L. 



910. A. polifolia L. 



Sphagnoua bogs; fre(piont. May. 



ARCTOSTAPHYLOS Adans. Bearberry. 



911. A. Uva=ursi Spreng. Bearberry, 

 In dry sandy soil; occasional. May. 



Oak Hill Cemetery, City; hills about Burton Ave. Swanip(O.H.); 

 abundant on the E. shore of Silver Lake (H.W. Hyser); Sec. 

 33, Cannon; Upper River Road, near the school-house. 



CASSANDRA Don. Leather-Leaf. 



Ch(imfieda2>line Moench. 



912. C. calyculata Don. 



In niarslies and swamps; common. Mid-April-Mid-May. 

 Small swamps are frequently wholly overgrown by it. 



EPIQAEA L. TuAiLiNd Arf.utus. Ground Laurel. 



913. E. repens L. 



Abundant in low woods intermingled with pine. April. 

 Lobes of corolla varying from three to eight (S.O.L.). It sel- 

 dom fruits in this locality. 



QAULTHERIA Kalm. Aromatic Wintergreex. 



914. G. procumbens L. Creeping Wintergreen. 

 Low woods and borders of swamps; common. July. 



LEDUM L. Labrador Tea. 

 91.5. L. Qroenlandicum OEder. (L. latifolium Ait.) 



Sphagnous swamps; rare. First of June. 



Burton Ave. Swamp (L. S. Livingston), 1885 to '86; Saddle-Bag 

 Swamp (O.H.), 1893. No herbarium specimens have been pre- 

 served. 



VACCINIACEAE. Huckleberry Family. 

 CHIOQENES Salisb. Creeping Snowberry. 

 916. C. serpyllifolia Salisb. Creeping Snowberry. 

 C. h!sp!(h(Ja (L.) Torr. & Gray. 



