287 



liMiniiHiilus circiiiatus Sibi'tli. 

 I'utiiani County, three uiiles east of liussellville. It is abundant in a 

 bayou of Raccoon Creek. In flower May 22, 1911. Reported only from 

 Hamilton County. — (State Catab>g, p. 757.) 

 Conriui^ia orientalis (L. ) Dumort. 

 rutnam and Montgomery counties, along the Monon R. R. In flower 

 May C. 11)11. First reported by G. W. Wilson.— (I»roc. Ind. Acad. Sci. 

 1000; 171.) Becoming more abundant each year. 

 *Sisymbrium ofliciiiale leiocarpum DC. 

 Putnam County in cultivated grounds with the type, but far more 

 al)undant. 



*IIesperis matronalis L. 

 Montgomery County, along roadside near Crawfordsville, August 11, 

 1911. 



*Hydrangea cinerea Small. 

 Posey County, July 7, 1910 (C. C. Deam) ; Montgomery County (Deam 

 and Grimes), July 23, 1911. Putnam County, two miles northeast of 

 Bainbridge. on Knobstone shale along Walnut Creelv. In flower August 

 l.j, 1911. Flowering later than H. arborescens, this is the predominating 

 species wherever found. The range in Gray's Manual is South Carolina 

 and Georgia to Tennessee and Missouri. 

 *Pyrus loensis (Wood) Bailey. 

 Putnam County, two miles west of Greencastle, on embanlvment of 

 old Big Four Railway. Fruit was collected from a single individual about 

 eight feet tall, August 27, 1911. 



*Crataegns pruinosa (Wendl) K. Koch. 

 Putnam County, on dry wooded hillside along Raccoon Creek. This 

 is tlae first species in our area to ripen its fruit, mature fruit having been 

 collected July 30, 1911. 



*Geum flavum (Porter) Blcknell. 

 Putnam County, four miles soutli of Russellville, In moist wooded 

 ravine near Raccoon Creek. Taken at only one other station. Infrequent, 

 July 10, 1910. 



Rosa blauda Ait. 

 Putnam County, near Greencastle, on dry bank along Big Four Rail- 

 way, in full flower June 4, 1911. "In a few localities in the rocky hjJJs 

 of the southern counties." — (State Catalog, p. JS^,) 



