‘CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 63 
mouth: Banks of Shrewsbury River, near Red Bank—Britton ; 
and frequent in rocky places in the northern counties, especially 
abundant on the Palisades and in the valley of the Delaware.* 
C. nutans, Raf. Sticky Chickweed. Powder Horn. 
Monmouth: Moist places—Knieskern. Camden :—Miss C. 
A. Boice. Mercer: Trenton—E. Volk. Union: Plainfield— 
Tweedy ; and frequent in woods in the northern parts of the 
State. 
STELLARIA, L. 
Chickweed. Starwort. 
8. Mepia (L.), Smith. Common Chickweed. 
Cultivated and waste grounds; very common. Naturalized 
from Europe. 
S. pubera, Michx. Great Chickweed. 
. Mercer :—Dr. Torrey in manuscript list to Dr. Willis; not 
since collected. 
8. gRaminEA, L. English Starwort. 
Rare. Essex: Orange Mountain, near Montclair—Randall 
Spaulding, 1882. Bergen: Roadside, near Little Ferry, abund- 
ant, 1887—Miss Maria O. Steele. Adventive from Europe. 
8. longifolia, Muhl. Long-leaved Starwort. 
In swampy ground. Camden: Atco—H. A. Green. Bur- 
lington: Pemberton—Miss H. A. Willmarth. Mercer: Tren- 
ton—Apgar; Princeton—Peters. Gloucester: Rare—B. Heri- 
tage; and frequent in the northern counties. 
8. uliginosa, Murr. 
In springy places; rare. Burlington: Along the banks of 
a brook, near Riverton—Dr. Joseph Stokes, 1882. Hunterdon: 
Byram Station and Sergeantsville, 1886—Schuh. Apparently 
confined to the Delaware valley. 
S. borealis, Bigel. Mountain Starwort. 
Sussex: In brook along roadside, western slope of High 
Point, and on the Kittatinny Mountains near Walpack Centre 
— Britton. 
*O. arvense, L., var. oblongifolium (Torr.), Hollick & Britton, reported from the 
Palisades on the authority of Austin and Le Roy, has not recently been collected 
there, and no specimens are extant to prove its former occurrence. 
