132 ILLINOIS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE 



26. Fagus grandiflora. A clump of 5 trees in the midst 

 of an oak wood, northeast of Edgebrook. No other known 

 trees within 30 miles. Perfectly at home. (B. C.) 



27. Quercus Prinus. On the rocky banks of Apple river, 

 Jo Daviess county. Several trees and far from its home 

 center. (I). 



28. Morus rubra. Two trees in Apple river gorge near 

 the last. None other ever found in the county. (C). Com- 

 mon in Fulton. 



29. Oxybaphus floribundus, albidus, hirsutus. Common 

 along the Great Western railway, west of Stockton. Far 

 from home. (A). 



30. Nelumbo lutea. In the great Calumet, at Clark, Ind. 

 Many plants, but not in vigorous condition. Excessively com- 

 mon below Peoria. This is the plant, that wherever found, is 

 claimed by the natives "to grow in only one other place in the 

 world." (B). 



31. Cristatella Jamesii. Very abundant on the sand dune 

 bordering sand prairie, Jo Daviess county. Not in Gray, 7th 

 Edition. From the far west. (I-B?). 



32. Ribes triste. A single bush in the center of a dense 

 wet wood northwest of Chicago. Far northern and north- 

 eastern. (B-R). 



33. Primus angustifolia Watsoni. Two fine thickets on the 

 L. S. & M. S. railway, southeast of Chicago. (A. B.) 



34. P. hortulana. A single tree. Apparently native, on 

 margin of Little Calumet Valley, near Dune Park. Very 

 thrifty. (B-A.) 



35. Gymnocladus. A fine clump on a gravel knoll near the 

 Illinois river, north of Havana, in Fulton county. A few 

 fine trees in Apple river gorge, Jo Daviess county. Two sim- 

 ilar clumps were found in Van Buren county, Michigan. A 

 strange and exceedingly rare distribution. A single tree found 

 south of Red Wing, Minnesota. (B. or possibly A). 



36. Hosackia Americana. Abundant along C. B. & Q. rail- 

 way in Jo Daviess, western. (A). 



