tf 
ginia.”” Based upon Clayton n. 39 in the Gronovian 
Herbarium. The Linnean characterization certainly de- 
notes the plant here considered. 
Penstemon hirsutus (L.) Willd., Sp. Pl. 3: 227. 1800. 
Flowering from late May to early July, fruiting from July on. 
Dry fields, usually sandy, in potassic soil, occasional or local 
through the area above the Fall-line. Ranges from southern 
Vermont and southern Ontario to upland Virginia, Kentucky and 
southern Michigan.* 
3 CCBERLoNe Lop. Fi GLE 178s 
Type species, C. glabra L. 
. CHELONE GLABRA L., Sp. Pl. 611. 1753. ‘‘Habitat in Vir- 
ginia, Canada.”’ Based upon a plant grown in the Clif- 
ford garden in Holland. 
Chlonanthes tomentosa Raf., New Fl. Am. 2:20. 1837. ‘In 
the mts. of Virginia.’’ Leaves tomentose or pubescent 
beneath; a condition of more frequent occurrence south- 
ward, specimens noted from Monmouth, Burlington and 
Camden counties, New Jersey, and frequently through 
southeastern Pennsylvania. Here treated as a form, 
tomentosa (Raf.) Pennell, forma nova. 
Flowering from early August to early October, fruiting from 
mid-September on. 
Moist loam to sandy woodland, in potassic soil, frequent to 
common throughout above the Fall-line; frequent or occasional 
through the Coastal Plain, outside of the Pine Barrens. The 
leaves tend to be narrower in the Coastal Plain. Ranges from 
Newfoundland to Manitoba, northern Florida and Kansas. 
Lal 
4. SCROPHULARIA L., Sp. Pl. 619. 1753 
. . * ” 
Type species, S. nodosa L., ‘‘ Habitat in Europae succulentes. 
Petioles stouter, evidently wing-margined. Leaves 
to truncate at base, coarsely serrate to dentate. Inflores- 
cence narrowly elongate, 4-8 cm. wide, its branches rela- 
* PAULOWNIA TOMENTOSA (Thunb.) Baill. : 
A tree with lavender flowers, is an occasional escape from cultivation to road- 
sides, railroad-banks and thickets. Adventive from eastern Asia. 
