216 



unequal; actually they are alike in each stamen but those 

 of the posterior stamens are smaller. However I am 

 convinced that ours must be the plant of Rafinesque, and 

 that such an error is due either to a lapse of memory in 

 recording his observation or more likely to confusing in 

 his dried specimen the sacs of two different stamens. 

 This opinion is confirmed by Rafinesque's inclusion in 

 his new genus of Michaux's plant. However for anything 

 less than a certainty and for an untrue name it may be 

 unwise to dispossess Bentham's well-chosen name. 

 TomantJiera auriculata (Michx.) Raf. 1. c. 66. 1837. 

 Otophylla Michauxii Benth. in DC. Prod. 10: 512. 1846. 



New name for Gerardia auriculata Michx. 

 Otophylla auriculata (Michx.) Small, Fl. S.E. Un. St. 1075, 



1338. 1903. 

 Agalinis auriculata (Michx.) Blake in Rhodora 20: 71. 



1918. 

 Aureolaria auriculata (Michx.) Farwell in Rep. Mich. 

 Acad. Sci. 20: 189. 1918. 

 Flowering from late August to mid-September, fruiting Sep- 

 tember and October. 



Old fields and railway banks, occasional in New Jersey and 

 Pennsylvania. Certainly introduced from the prairies of the 

 Mississippi Valley states. 



{To be concluded.) 



THE GRASSES OF SALEM, OREGON AND VICINITY 



By James C. Nelson 



The following list represents the result of five seasons' col- 

 lecting in the general region adjacent to Salem. Although the 

 work has been done in the all-too-brief moments that could be 

 snatched from arduous professional duties, and makes no claim 

 to completeness, the writer ventures to believe that most of the 

 grasses growing spontaneously in the territory under consider- 

 ation have been included. In the case of the introduced species, 

 there is the constant possibility of the establishment of new 



