430 PENNELL: STUDIES IN THE AGALINANAE 
the Soldiers’ Home grounds near Brookland, D. C., collected 
by Mr. Holm and the writer, 20 Oct., 1898.’’ No specimen of 
this date seen, but one in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard., of Dr. 
Greene’s collecting, from Brookland, D. C., dated Oct. 16, 
1898, may stand as the type. ; 
Flowers, late-August to mid-October. Fruit, mid-September 
to October. 
DIsTRIBUTION: Dry sandy pineland. Long Island to Florida 
and Alabama; irregularly distributed. Common in the pine 
barrens of New Jersey, sparingly in the middle district of the same 
state; common on thé Potomac formation between Baltimore and 
Washington; common in Wilmington pine barrens of southeastern 
North Carolina, and probably so near the coast to Charleston, 
South Carolina; inland probably in the fall line sand hills through 
South Carolina and Georgia, apparently into Alabama; at Tampa, 
Florida. Rather narrower-leaved and more setaceous in true 
pine barrens. Restricted to the coastal plain. 
PLANTS AND SPECIMENS EXAMINED: 
New Jersey: South River; Spotswood; Freehold; Tomlin; Frank- 
linville; Pasadena; Woodmansie; Jackson; Atco (3544, 3628); 
Malaga; Egg Harbor City; Absecon. 
Maryland: Glen Burnie; Riverdale; Lanham; Cherry Grove 
(2644); Sligo Mill Road (2657); Oxon Hill. 
District of Columbia: Takoma (2655); Lamond (2656); Terra 
Cotta (2680); Brookland (2662, 2669); Washington. 
North Carolina: Newbern; Wilmington (4904, 4023, 4929); 
Fayetteville. 
South Carolina: Columbia; Charleston (4864); Aiken. 
Georgia: Augusta; Burke Co.; Butler. 
Florida: Tampa. 
Alabama: , Metsner(?). 
13. AGALINIS SETACEA (Walt.) Raf. New Fl. Am. 2: 64. 1837 
Anonymos setacea Walt. Fl. Carol. 170. 1788. No type locality 
given, presumably should be from South Carolina, but appar- 
ently from farther west. Type in the British Museum iden- 
tified by Dr. A. B. Rendle as agreeing with my number 4757- 
