CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 53 
RAPHANDS, L. 
Radish. 
. Rapuanistrum, L. Wild Radish. Jointed Charlock. Rape. 
In cultivated fields frequent, and in places a troublesome weed. 
Naturalized from Europe. 
. sativus, L. Garden Radish. 
Occasionally persistent for a year or two in cultivated fields 
and waste places, hardly deserving a place in this Flora. 
CAPPARIDEZ. 
CLEOME, L. 
. PUNGENS, Willd. Spider Flower. 
Camden: In mud dredged from the Delaware river, abund- 
ant, 1882—Parker ; still quite plenty, 1887—-Martindale. Bur- 
lington: Burlington—J. Stokes. Adventive from the South. 
POLANISIA, Raf. 
Clammy-weed. 
. dodecandra (Michx.), B.S. P. (P. graveolens, Raf.) 
Bergen :—P. V. Leroy. Monmouth:. Long Branch—I. H. 
Hall. : 
CISTINEZ. 
HELIANTHEMUM, Pers. 
Rock-rose. 
. majus (L.), B.S. P.. (H. Canadense, Michx.) Frost-weed. 
Dry, sandy or gravelly soil; common throughout the State. 
In the Herbarium of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Phil- 
adelphia, is a specimen from Quaker Bridge, with large, nar- 
rowly-elliptical leaves, very hoary. 
. corymbosum (Poir.), Michx. Frost-weed. 
Sandy soil, in the middle and southern counties; rare. Ocean 
and Monmouth: Near the coast—Knieskern. Camden: Be- 
tween Camden and Longacoming—C. E. Smith; Haddonfield 
—Diffenbaugh. 
