REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST IQI4 51 
Stomoisia cornuta (Michx.) Rafinesque 
(Utricularia cornuta Michx.) 
Very abundant in the open sunny portions of the sphagnum bog 
known as “Lily marsh.” H. D. House, July 30, 1914, No. 5786. 
Potentilla recta Linn. 
Fields and waste places about Oswego. H. D. House, July 29, 
1914, No. 5785. 
Centaurium centaurium (Linn.) W. F. Wight 
(Erythraea centaurium Persoon) 
Roadsides and embankments about Oswego. H. D. House, July 
29, 1914, No. 5771. Introduced and naturalized about the port 
of Oswego many years ago (specimen in the Beck herbarium 
dated August 10, 1830) and spreading in various directions. It 
has been observed as far south as Fulton and Syracuse and several 
miles eastward. Possessing none of the obnoxious features of a 
weed, it forms an interesting addition to our emigrant flora. For 
many years Oswego was the only known American station for this 
species, but it is now known from many places throughout the 
eastern states. ° 
Lathyrus myrtifolius Muhlenberg 
Moist thickets near the shore of Lake Ontario, west of Oswego. 
H. D. House, July 29, 1914, No. 5783. 
Drosera intermedia Hayne 
Very abundant in the open, sunny portions of the sphagnum bog 
known as “Lily marsh.” H. D. House, July 30, 1914, No. 5788. 
Rhynchospora macrostachya Torrey 
Mud lake, Hannibal. Dr Herman Wibbe, September 1877. This 
specimen occurs in the Sheldon herbarium recently donated to the 
State Museum, and constitutes an outlying station for a species 
fairly abundant in the coastal plain region farther south.- The only 
other specimens in the State herbarium from this State were 
collected at Wading River and Smithtown, Long Island. 
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