CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 193 
and Birmingham, certainly spontaneous; also along roadsides, 
New Lisbon and Juliustown—Miss Willmarth. Hunterdon: 
Along the Delaware—Best. Warren: Along the Delaware— 
Porter. Elsewhere commonly escaped from cultivation. 
TECOMA, Juss. 
Trumpet Creeper. 
T. radicans (L.), Juss. 
Cape May: In swamps—Martindale. Cumberland: Abund- 
ant in swampy thickets at Haleyville—Britton. Salem: Com- 
mon along roadsides on fence-posts and through the woods, 
probably indigenous—Mrs. M. A. Lawrence; and commonly 
escaped from cultivation in the middle counties. 
PEDALINEA. 
MARTYNIA, L. 
Unicorn-plant. 
M. PRoBoscipEa, Glox. 
Monmouth: Abundant near the light-house on Sandy Hook, 
1856—Lockwood; noticed alse in 1887—Britton. Camden: 
In ballast—Martindale. Adventive from the West. 
ACANTHACE. 
RUELLIA, L. 
Ruellia. 
R. ciliosa, Pursh, var. hybrida (Pursh), Gray. 
Cape May: Cape May Court House, abundant on the border 
of a pasture for fifty yards, 1886—Burk. 
DIANTHERA, L. 
D. Americana, L. 
Mercer: In a pond near Trenton, 1880—L. Schumacher. 
N 
