366 BOTANICAL GAZETTE. 
48. C. rupestris All. 
49. ©. ustulata Wahl. var. minor Boott. 
50. C. vulgaris Fr. var. hyperborea Boott. Ae 
51. Alopecurus alpinus Linn. Specimens from 4 to 18 in. high. = ag 
t. alt. From 5 to 6 in. high. 
? ) Specimens from 2to 4 
in. high. Not the Aira aretica of Rothrock’s Flora of Alaska, nor Aira 
reviata R. B 
. P. alpina Linn. var. vivipara. 
» P.laxa Haenke. Specimens 3 to 8 in. high. 
P. cesia Smith, var. 
Festuca rubra Linn. var. From 3 to 5 in. high. 
gropyrum violaceum Hornm. From 2 to 7 in. high. 
uisetum variegatum Sch] 
E.a inn. Eee: 
. Cystopteris fragilis Bernh. Coast to 1,300 ft. From 3 to 6 in. high. 
“ Puccrnia CHEIRANTHI, Ellis & Everhart (n. sp.) On Cheiranthus py 
d 
FSVSSSRASHE 
meeus, Grinnell Land, 
“TIT. Sori hemispheric, brown, naked, } to } mm. in diam., thickly scat- 
ent. Spores oblong or clavate-oblong, light brown, constricted at the septum, 
35-53 15-22u, either consisting of two subequal cells or oftener the upper cell 
broader and shorter (subglobose) and the lower one tapering into the stout, 
rather persistent pedicel, which is about as long as or a little longer than the 
spore itself; epispore smooth or faintly but rather coarsely roughened above, 
thickened and lacerated at the apex so as to resemble somewhat the remains of 
the calyx on a currant or huckleberry. 
“T. and II. not seen. This appears to be sufficiently distinct from the 
other species on the Cruciferae.” 
I am indebted to Prof. Watson and Dr, Gray for the determination of 
some of the species included in the list.—Gro. VAsEY. 
Botanical Features of New Brunswick.! —There are two striking phy* 
ical features of the Province which affect its flpra in a marked degree. 1% 
opportunity to compare the flora of the hills about St. Johns, in lat. 45°, with 
3 inland mountain peak in the northern part of the Province, in lat, 47°, with 
an altitude of 2,240 feet. € flora in each case was strikingly alike, with 
advantage perhaps in favor of the top of the inland peak. Along the outer 
n the Bay of Fundy, and filling the clefts of oe 
are reddish colored tufts of Sedum Rhodiola. Chief among the plants 
ee es 
inn, 24 before the Botanical Club of A. A. A. 8., at the Ann Arbor meeting, Ang™s* 
