Suppli m. ntary List. ,-, i 



i '• i 



1 -'7 Pofygala sanguinea L Atkinson and Neligh, (B . ) 



l IfBSLLIFBR 1 . 



Cicuta hull; (\;<, L. Cherry Co. Not in fruit, (B.) 



129. Osmorrhita claytoni (Michx.) B. S. P. Cass Co., (Sw.) 



130. Musenium divarica turn Natt. Harrison, (B.) 



lf ' / : "" ki "<" Watson. This, possibly, should beincluded in the 



genus PseudocymopterusCoult. and Rose, as the dorsal ribs are 

 more or less winged. Scott's Pass, July 22, 1891, il. 



Sa.MFRA' , I 1 



132. Ribes setosum Lindl. Dawes Co., (Sw.) 

 LoASACi: i 



133. Mentzelia albicaulis (Hook.) Dougl. Scott's Bluffs Co., (R.) In the 



specimens collected the seeds are muricate. but the leaves are 

 nearly entire or more rarely sinuately toothed. 

 Halorage.k, 



'34. Callitriche vernal.. Kennedy, July 1891, (B.) 

 Rosai i:.k. 



135- Crataegus mbvillosa Schrad. Sarpy and Cass counties, (Sw | 

 136. Rosa nutkana Presl. Curtis, Frontier Co., June 22. McColligan 

 canon, Deuel Co., June 2G, 1891, (R.) 



Leguminos.e. 



137- Desmodium illinoense Gray. Reported from Cass Co., by Professor 

 Swezey . 



138. OxytropismulticepsKvM. Hills of upper Lawrence Fork, Kimball 



Co., Aug. 10; in fruit, (R.) 



139. Astragalus bisulcatus Gray ■. Dakota Junction, May, 1S91, (B.) 



140. (?) Astragalus pubenltssimusTorr. and Gray. Canon in Gosper Co., 



June 20; Hills near Curtis, Frontier Co., June 22; Lawrence Fork, 

 Banner Co., July 8; near Kimball, Aug. t2, is,, r , (R.) 

 i.)i Amorpha microphylla Pursh. Fragments covered with rust seen in 

 the possession of Mr Schofield, and said to have been collected near 

 Lincoln, Sept. 1891, (R.) 



POLEMONIACKI . 



142. Gilia sp . Glandular pubescent; root biennial, possibly per- 

 ennial, stem branched above, 1 foot high or higher; leaves some- 

 what irregu'arly pinnatifid; lobes linear, not wider than the rachis, 

 somewhat fleshy, mucronate; flowers in a branched panicle; coroll 1 

 violet or blue with a whitish tube, somewhat funnel-form 2 lines 

 long; stamens exserted; calyx with prominent ribs. The plant is 

 more or less glandular all over. Mr. John I Iolzinger of the Depart- 

 ment of Agriculture has named it Gilia pinnatifida, which without 

 any doubt, it is not, as the plant is more branched, more glandular, 

 the division of the leaves few and longer and narrower, and the 

 corolla smaller and not at all salverform. It stands nearer G. in- 

 conspicua, from which (if distinct) it differs in being more robust, 



