VIII—TsE FLORA oF NEWFOUNDLAND, LABRADOR AND ST. 
PIERRE ET MIQUELON: PAaRTII. By THE Rev. ARTHUR 
C. WAGHORNE, St. John’s, Newfoundland. 
(Read 13th May, 1895.) 
Circumstances have unhappily delayed the compilation of these 
notes. The tirst paper was read before the Institute on April 
10th, 1893, and was published in its Transactions of the 2nd 
series, Vol. I., beginning at page 359. That dealt with Polype- 
talze, as far as Leguminosz, inclusive. This second paper completes 
the Polypetalee and includes a supplementary list of plants 
belonging to the earlier portion of this division, which have been 
found by the compiler and others since it was published, or of 
whose claim to be included therein he has since been assured, 
The plants in this supplementary list are additions either to the 
Newfoundland or Labrador flora. . 
This fuller knowledge of our flora, which yields these supple- 
mentary plants, and which renders the whole list more complete 
and accurate, is derived from various sources, which are chiefly 
these :-— 
1. The writer’s own discoveries for 1893 and 1894, These 
mostly concern the Labrador, as the greater part of both these 
summers were spent on that coast, that of 1893 extending from 
the Strait of Belle Isle (the southernward point being Bradore), 
northwards through the Battle Harbour district, as far as Sand- 
wich Bay. Last summer his journeyings were confined to the 
Strait of Belle Isle. The Newfoundland plants were almost 
exclusively collected in Notre Dame Bay, on the North-east 
coast, chiefly about Exploits. 
2. Dr. Packard’s “The Labrador Coast” contains a list of 
Labrador plants extending over 22 pages, compiled for the author 
by Professor Macoun. This list affords a few additions to those 
plants included in Professor Macoun’s “ Catalogue of Canadian 
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