ton 
Piants New or RareE To InpDIANA. No. V. 
Cuas. C. DEAM. 
Specimens of the species reported are deposited in my herbarium under 
the numbers indicated. The Gramineze were determined by A. 8S. Hitchcock ; 
the Carices by K. K. Mackenzie; the Juncus by H. H. Bartlett; and the 
Antennarie by M. L. Fernald. 
Panicum Werneri Scribn. 
Floyd County, June 8, 19138. No. 13,256. In a sterile white and black 
oak woods on the “‘knobs’” about one mile west of New Albany. 
Muhlenbergia foliosa Trin. 
Grant County, September 4, 1914. No. 15,279. Low border of the 
lake located about five miles northeast of Fairmount. 
Whitley County, August 23, 1914. No. 14,562. Low border on the 
west side of Round Lake. 
The only reference to this species occurring in the State is in Rhodora, 
Vol. 9:19 :1907, in an article by Lamson-Scribner on ‘Notes on Muhlen- 
bergia”, in which he refers to “No. 68, by H. B. Dorner from Indiana.” 
Apera spicaventi (L.) Beauy. 
Orange County, August 1, 1914. No. 15,561. Frequent over an area 
of five or six acres about one mile west of Leipsic. Reported by Prof. M. 
L. Fisher of Purdue University. 
Bromus arvensis L. 
Jefferson County, May 28, 1911. No. 8,486. In a woods along the road- 
side about one-half mile south of North Madison. 
Bromus hordeaceus L. 
Laporte County, May 28, 1913. No. 13,031. Frequent along the road- 
side east of the water works at Michigan City. 
Carex Leavenworthii Dewey. 
Shelby County, June 8, 1913. No. 13,193. Collected by Mrs. Chas. C. 
Deam in a dry woods one and a half miles west of Morristown. 
