CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 281 
. viscidum, Ell. 
In low grounds. Cape May: Dennisville, and Camden :— 
Parker. Gloucester : Occasional about Mickleton—B. Heritage. 
. Sphzerocarpon, Ell. 
Hunterdon: Rosemont—Schuh. Union: Plainfield—Tweedy. 
Sussex: High Point and Ogdensburg—Britton. 
+. Microcarpon, Muhl. 
“ New Jersey ”’—Leggett; station not reported. Specimen in 
State Herbarium. Camden:—E. Diffenbaugh in Columbia 
College Herbarium. 
. capillare, L. Old-witch Grass. ' 
Fields and roadsides. Very common throughout the State. 
. proliferum, Lam. 
- Borders of marshes. Bergen: Closter—Austin. Hunter- 
don: Rosemont—Schuh ; and common along the borders of salt 
or brackish meadows, middle.and southern counties. 
. MILIAcEUM, L. The Millet of Scripture. 
Atlantic: Landisville, introduced, 1883—C. A. Gross. 
Camden: In ballast—Parker. Hudson: Secaucus—R. G. 
Eccles; in ballast—Communipaw—A. Brown. Fugitive from 
Europe. 
. verrucosum, Muhl. 
Monmouth and Ocean: Sandy swamps near the coast, rare— 
Knieskern ; Sea Bright—A. Brown; Manchester and Forked 
River—Britton. Atlantic: Landisville—C. A. Gross. Glou- 
cester: Woodbury— Martindale; Mickleton, frequent—B. 
Heritage. 
. anceps, Michx. 
Hunterdon: Stockton, frequent—Best. Salem: Nikomis 
Run near Woodstown—Britton. Camden:—Parker. Glou- 
cester: Near Mickleton—-B. Heritage; and frequent in pine- 
barren swamps. 
. agrostoides, Muhl. 
Wet meadows and shores. Frequent throughout the State. 
