REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST IQI3 35 
Carex suberecta Britton 
Sandy exsiccated swamp, Whitestown. Dr J. V. Haberer, August 
22,1912. No. 3760. 
Centaurea maculosa Lam. 
Abundant along roadsides, eastern part of the town of New 
Hartford, 5 miles south of Utica. Dr J. V. Haberer, September 16, 
1912. No. 3757. A native of Europe and apparently well estab- 
lished in many places. (See Annual Report of State Botanist 1911, 
page 23.) 
Dryopteris simulata Davenport 
Sylvan Beach. H. D. House. Nos. 1183 (1905) and 5259 (1913). 
This rare fern was first reported from central New York in the 
Fern Bulletin and in Torreya several years ago and seems not to 
have been discovered in any other central New York locality since 
then. At Sylvan Beach the fern grows in low, moist thickets of 
hardwoods in sandy soil overlaid by a thin black humus. Its com- 
pamion species are Dryopteris noveboracensis, D. 
Eneiypteris, Osmunda, cinnamonea, Vaccinium 
TEnmmeoecciiin. Cornus: stolonifiera, Acer rwbrtm, 
Pentila populitoliay Alows., rugosa; etc, “The-only 
other New York localities are Long Island (G. D. Hulst) and 
Staten Island (P. H. Dowell). 
Galium verum Linn. 
The European yellow bedstraw seems to be common and well 
established in fields south of Utica. Dr J. V. Haberer, July 5, 1912. 
No. 3629. 
Hypericum ascyron Linn. 
Alluvial clay banks of the Mohawk river near Marcy and Whites- 
town. Dr J. V. Haberer, August 2, 1912. No. 145. 
Lychnis alba Mill. 
Common in thickets on sand hills and meadows, Whitestown. 
Dri V. Haberer; July 21912. -No- 3574: 
Lepidium campestre (L.) R. Br. 
Meadows, fields and along railroads near Utica. Dr J. V. Haberer, 
May 25, 1912. No. 2506. A recent introduction and becoming 
very common. . 
