286 Proceedings of Indiana Academy of Science 



Associated with Mains ioensis (Wood) Britton, No. 814, tree 2^/^ 

 inches in diameter, 12 feet high, apples 1% inches in diameter, 

 1% inches high, short peduncled. Also associated with the next. 



Crataegus mollis (T. & G.) Scheele. Red-fruited or downy thorn. No. 

 813. Fruit abundant, % inch in diameter. 



Rubus pergmtus Blanchard. Square blackberry. No. 712. This species 

 has not been reported for Indiana. Rydberg in Flora of North 

 America gives its distribution as Maine to Ontario to Iowa. Speci- 

 men taken from a sandy ridge at edge of a woods about one mile 

 northeast of Reynolds. In flower May 27. 



Rosa blanda Ait. Smooth or meadow rose. No. 730. This rose forms 

 several hybrids. My No. 722, according to Rydberg, seems to be 

 R. blanda Ait. X R. Carolina L. R. Carolina L. is the R. humilis, 

 Marsh, of Gray's Manual. It is also the same as jB. perviflora Ehrh., 

 R. pennsylvanica Wang., R. caroliniana Michx., R. pratensis Raf.? 

 It is not the R. Carolina L. as described in either Gray's Manual 

 or Britton and Brown's Illustrated Flora. These should both be 

 R. ]>alustris Marsh. For explanation see Rydberg: Contributions 

 from the New York Botanical Garden, No. 220, Notes on Rosaceae, 

 1920, or the same in Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 47:45-66, 

 Mar. 10, 1920. My report of R. humilis Marsh. (Proc. Ind. Acad. 

 Sci. 1920:224) in accordance with the above should in name be 

 changed to Rosa Carolina L. 



Rosa rubiginosa L. Sweetbrier or eglantine. No. 731. 



Pninus virginiana L. Choke cherry. No. 724. This is the species de- 

 scribed in Gray's Manual. This species and P. serotina Ehrh., which 

 are merged in Britton and Brown's Illustrated Flora, are consid- 

 ered distinct species by the writer. 



Leguminosae. 



Cassia marilandica L. Wild or american senna. No. 806. This species 

 was reported for Indiana long ago (Coulter's Catalog, 1899, with 

 references from many counties). Neither Britton and Brown, 2nd 

 edi. 1913, nor Gray 7th edi. 1908, credit it to Indiana. 



Baptisia leucantha T. & G. Large white wild indigo. No. 825. In 

 flower Sept. 3, 1922. 



Trifolmm arvense L. Rabbit-foot, old-field or stone clover. No. 816. 

 On steep, hard, dry bluff of Tippecanoe river just below bridge at 

 Norway. Associated with Campanula rotundifolia L. 



Cracca virginiana L. (TepJirosia virginiana (L.) Pers.) Catgut, wild 

 sweet-pea or goat's rue. No. 763. 



Lespedeza hirta (L.) Hornem. Hairy bush-clover. No. 763. 



Lespedeza cajntata Michx. var. stenophylla Fern. & Biss. This variety 

 is new to the state. The variety is described by Fernald and Bissell 

 in Rhodora Vol. 14:92:1912. The specimen here reported was 

 checked at the Gray Herbarium. Specimen taken from along the 

 Pennsylvania railroad, east of Reynolds, growing in dry, sandy 

 soil. No. 739. 



Vici(L americana Muhl. American or purple vetch. No. 721. 



