No. 14.] FLOWERING PLANTS AND FERNS. 211 



Rare. Fields and meadows: Norwich (W. A. Setchell), 

 Windsor (A. W. Driggs), Farmington (Andrews & Bissell, 

 Weatherby), Southbury and New Milford (Harger), 

 Bridgeport (Eames). June. 



Arabis Drummondi Gray. 



Aj-abis conRnis Wats., in great part. 



Rare. Dry wooded hillsides : Montville, Franklin, Ledyard 

 and Old Lyme (Graves), Lisbon (Harger), Branford (A. L. 

 Winton), West Hartford and Bloomfield (A. W. Driggs), 

 Canaan (C. K. Averill). May— July. 



Arabis hirsuta (L.) Scop, (hairy). 

 Hairy Rock Cress. Wall Cress. 



Rare. Rocky open woods and sandy ground : Old Lyme 

 (Graves), Bolton (A. W. Driggs), Oxford (Harger), Canaan 

 (C. K. Averill), Salisbury (Mrs. C. S. Phelps). Mid-May — 

 early June. 



Arabis laevigata (Muhl.) Poir. (smoothed). 

 Smooth Rock Cress. Wall Cress. 



Rocky woods and more open places. Rare in the south- 

 eastern part of the state: Norwich (Mrs. E. E. Rogers), 

 Franklin (Graves). Occasional or frequent elsewhere. Mid- 

 April — May. 



Arabis canadensis L. 



Sickle-pod. Turkey-pod. 



Occasional. Dry, rich, rocky and rather open woods. June 

 — Aug. 



CAPPARIDACEAE. CAPER FAMILY. 



POLANISIA Raf. 



Polanisia graveolens Raf. (strong-smelling). 

 False Mustard. Clammy-weed. 



Rare. Gravelly and sandy shores of the Hockanum River 

 at East Hartford (Weatherby), and of the Connecticut River 

 at Hartford (A. W. Driggs). July — Aug. 



Polanisia trachysperma Torr. & Gray (rough-seeded). 



Rare. Alluvial soil, Glastonbury (Mrs. F. W. Starmer), 



