OF GEORGIA DURING THE SEASON OF 1902 23 
SARRACENIA PURPUREA L., 
After looking in vain for this species in Georgia for several 
years, I found a quantity of it in a sandy bog in Randolph County 
not far from Coleman (which is several miles outside of the pine- 
barrens) on October 28 (wo. 7783). About the same time Mr. 
Hyde obtained a flowering specimen collected by the late Mrs. 
Sarah Thompson in Lee County, May 11, 1895. 
Dr. Mohr in his “ Plant Life of Alabama” says nothing about 
this species being rare in that state, but it is certainly rare in 
Georgia, and very few stations for it are known in the other south- 
ern states. All of the seven known species of Sarracenia have 
now been found in the coastal plain of Georgia. With the. pos- 
sible exception of Florida, no other state is known to contain 
them all. 
CHRYSOBALANUS OBLONGIFOLIUS Michx. 
Specimens collected in Coffee County on July 22 (wo. 7433) 
showed a variation apparently hitherto unknown in this species 
and the genus and family to which it belongs. Many of the flow- 
ers had two or three carpels, and several specimens showed both 
or all three well on the way to maturity. The plants were per- 
fectly normal in other respects, and there is no reason for suppos- 
ing the extra number of carpels a freak. It is simply a variation 
which has been overlooked. 
CUBELIUM CONCOLOR (Forst.) Raf. 
Common on the bank of the Savannah River on Germain’s Is- 
land, Columbia County (in the metamorphic region), June 7 (xo. 
1297). Also seen among limestone rocks in woods near Grier’s 
Cave, Randolph County, October 23. Not previously reported 
from Georgia. My specimens differ from those which have been 
described, in being glabrous throughout, but seem to be otherwise 
identical. 
Eryncium _Lupovicianum Morong (£. integrifolium 
Ludovicianum C. & R.) 
Observations on this species during the season convince me 
that it is specifically distinct from £. integrifolium Walt. (£. virga- 
