No. 14.] FLOWERING PLANTS AND FERNS. 2H 



Rare. Fields and meadows: Norwich (W. A. Setchell), 

 Windsor (A. W. Driggs), Farmington (Andrews & Bissell, 

 Weatherby), Southbury and New Milford (Harger), 

 Bridgeport (E^mes). June. 



Arabis Drummondi Gray. 



Arabis cowdnis Wats., in great part. 



Rare. Dry wooded hillsides : Montville, Franklin, Ledyard 

 and Old Lyme (Graves), Lisbon (Harger), Branford (A. L. 

 Winton), West Hartford and Bloomfield (A. W. Driggs), 

 Canaan (C. K. Averill). May — July. 



Arabis hirsuta (L.) Scop, (hairy). 

 Hairy Rock Cress. Wall Cress. 



Rare. Rocky open woods and sandy ground : Old Lyme 

 (Graves), Bolton (A. W. Driggs), Oxford (Harger), Canaan 

 (C. K. Averill), Salisbury (Mrs. C. S. Phelps). Mid-May — 

 early June. 



Arabis laevigata (Muhl.) Poir. (smoothed). 

 Smooth Rock Cress. Wall Cress. 



Rocky woods and more open places. Rare in the south- 

 eastern part of the state: Norwich (Mrs. E. E. Rogers), 

 Franklin (Graves). Occasional or frequent elsewhere. Mid- 

 April — May. 



Arabis canadensis L. 



Sickle-pod. Turkey-pod. 



Occasional. Dry, rich, rocky and rather open woods. June 

 — Aug. 



CAPPARIDACEAE. CAPER FAMILY. 

 POLANISIA Raf. 



Polanisia graveolens Raf. (strong-smelling). 

 False Mustard. Clammy-weed. 



Rare. Gravelly and sandy shores of the Hockanum River 

 at East Hartford (Weatherby), and of the Connecticut River 

 at Hartford (A. W. Driggs). July — Aug. 



Polanisia trachysperma Torr. & Gray (rough-seeded). 



Rare. Alluvial soil, Glastonbury (Mrs. F. W. Starmer). 



