130 THE AMERICAN MIDLAND NATURALIST. 
September; flowers pale red. I had formerly called it G. 
dentata. Biennial.” 
I am unable to find that Rafinesque had made an earlier 
publication of the name “G. dentata,’” and I assume that it 
was a manuscript name, and one evidently transmitted to his 
European correspondents, as the name seems to make its first 
appearance in DeCandolle’s Prodromus in 1830. 
CLINOPODIUM ARKANSANUM (Nutt.) House, comb. nov. 
Hedeoma glabra Nutt. Gen. (1): 16. 1818. Not Pers. 1805. 
Hedeoma arkansana Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. N. S. (5): 186. 1834. 
Calamintha nuttalla Benth. in DC. Prodr. (12): 230. 1848. 
Rafinesquia angustifolia Raf. New FI, (8): 51. 1838. , 
Micromeria glabella var. angustifolia Torrey, Fl. N. Y. (2): 67. 1843. 
Satureia arkansana Briq. in Engl. & Prantl. Pflanzenfl. (4): Ab. 3, 
302. 1896. 
S. glabra Fernald, Rhodora (10): 85. 1908. 
The range of this little member of the Mint family reaches 
eastward to New York state, at Niagara Falls. 
VIBURNUM ERADIATYUM (Oakes) House, comb. nov. 
Viburnum pauciflorum Pylaie; Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. (2): 17. 
1841. Not Raf. Alsog. Am. 58. 18388. 
V. opulus var. eradiatum Oakes, in Hovey’s Mag. Hort. (7): 183. 1841. 
A subalpine species extending into the high mountains of 
northern New England and New York, and to northern 
Michigan and Minnesota. 
AGALOMA ELLIOTTII House, nom. nov. 
Euphorbia gracilis Ell. Bot. S. C. & Ga. (2): 657. 1824. Not Lois. 
1807, or Bess. 1816. 
Agaloma gracilis Nieuwl. Am. Mid. Nat. (2): 299. 1912. 
Tithymalopsis gracilis Small, Fl. SE. U. S. 716. 1903. 
Dr. Nieuwland (Am. Mid. Nat. 2: 299) has pointed out the 
fact that Agaloma Raf. is the correct generic name for the 
Euphorbiaceous genus heretofore called Tithymalopsis... The 
specific name, however, for this species is invalidated by the 
publication of two other species both called Euphorbia 
gracilis. 
AGALOMA MARYLANDICA (Greene) House, comb. nov. 
Euphorbia marylandica Greene, Pittonia (3): 345. 1898. 
An anamolous species of very limited range, known only 
from a few localities in the sandy region between Baltimore 
