108 
That Mr. Sim's station for Tipularia is a notable one appears 
at once from an examination of the areas of distribution accorded 
the species in the manuals. Britton's Manual, 2d edit., 1905, 
says: "In woods, Vt. to Mich., south to Fla. and La. Local 
and rare." Gray’s Manual, 7th edit., 1908, restricts the range, 
thus: ““А southern species, extending northw. to N. J.; reported 
but unverified from farther north." Inthe Emendations to the 
Oidis е dome | Ж? 
[кф е, 
d ie “li 
лу 
сЕ 
мера rele j 
p BER Ес nd reves 
dio. Y er без wes 1 Q et.224493. 
d 3 4 ое жа Cro e S dais : 
Sie a IO —— ae d " ds ў Jeff, Ohio. 
Fic. r. The Crane-Fly Orchis (Tipularia discolor) as sketched from nature 
by Mr. R. J. Sim. Found growing in ‘ Andrew's Wood,” near Jefferson, Ashta- 
bula County, Ohio; flowers, каа I, 1903; leaves, October 22, 1903 
Seventh Edition of Gray's Manual.—I. Robinson and Fernald, 
Rhodora 11: 33-61. March, 1909, the data of distribution were 
again changed to “Woods, №. J. and e. Pa. to Fla. and La.; 
also Cuyahoga Co., О. (Bassett).’’ Regarding the localities 
recorded in eastern Pennsylvania, the present writer finds records 
of occurrence in only the extreme southeastern corner of the 
