BILTM-ORE BOTANICAL STUDIES 



145 



on October 3, 1901. This point is in the red clay country and 

 at least two hundred and fifty miles from the coast. 



Fothekgilla major Lodd. Bot. Cab. 16: 1. 1520, 1830. 



Collected along the rocky banks of the stream above Toccoa 

 Fails at Toccoa, Georgia, thus adding one more station to the 

 few already known for this shrub. 



Prunus cuthberti Small. Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, 28 : 290, 1901. 



Collected at Warm Springs, Meriwether county, Georgia, also 

 a single specimen noted at Hawkinsville, Georgia, the past season. 



Berberis canadensis Mill. Diet. ed. 8, No. 2, 1768. 



While at Augusta, Georgia, I was shown a locality where, in 

 rather thin, rocky soil in shady woods, quite a quantity of this 

 shrub was growing. This station marks, possibly, the southern 

 limit of its range. Elliott 78 notes a point on the Santee river 

 near Eutaw Springs, in about the same latitude as Augusta. So 

 far as I know the Augusta station has never been published, 

 although it has been known for some time to the Messrs. Berck- 

 mans, on whose land it occurs, as well as to Mr. A. Cuthbert 

 of Augusta. 



Rhus michauxi Sargent, Gard. and Forest, 8 : 4.0.1, 1895. 



Found in abundance at a station in Moore county, North 

 Carolina, in light sandy soil. Pieces of the characteristic stolons 

 could be pulled up, several meters in length, with the short 

 upright stems (2~3 dm long) attached. Hardly in bloom June 12, 

 1901. A few plants were also seen on the edge of a cultivated 

 field near Roswell, Cobb county, Georgia, during the season of 

 1900. 



Kalmia cuneata Michx. Flora, I : 257, 1803. 



A new station for this rare kalmia was found in Moore county, 

 North Carolina. It was not common, although a few plants were 

 found at several points some miles apart, growing along the 

 margins of swamps. In bloom June 12, 1901. 



7 8 Bot. S. C. and Ga. I : 412, 1821. 



