SARRACENIACE-ZE. 
SAKRACENTA, Tourn. 
49. S. purpurea, L. Side- Saddle-flower. Water Pitcher. Hunts- 
man’s Cup. 
Swamps. May — July. 
Rogers Park. Cassella, Indiana, and south to limits ; frequent. 
PAPAVERACEOUS. 
SANGUXNAUXA, Dill. 
50. S. canadensis, L. Blood-root. Blood-wort. Red-root. 
Moist rich woods; frequent. April — May. 
Niles. Glencoe. Evanston. Palatine. Riverside. South Chicago, 
and southward. Washington Heights, Williams. Elsewhere 
seemingly rare. 
STYLOPHORUM, Nutt. 
51. S. diphyllum, Nutt. Celandine Poppy. 
Damp rich woods; infrequent. May. (B.) 
Berry Lake and Pine Station, Indiana. Miller’s, Indiana, near 
Calumet River. 
Note. — Papaver somniferum, L., has been noted at Evanston and Hyde 
Park, where it had seemingly escaped cultivation. As it is not persistent, how- 
ever, it cannot be included in our Flora. 
Two or three specimens of Eschscholtzia californica have been reported 
growing on the University Campus at Evanston, where they had evidently 
escaped from cultivation. The Argemone mexicana, L., is frequently met with 
but is not sufficiently persistent to rank among the species of our Flora. 
FUMARIACEJE. 
ADLTJMIA, Raf. 
52. A. cirrhosa, Raf. Climbing Fumatory. 
Egondale. Near Lincoln Park, Chicago, Babcock. 
Probably introduced. 
DICENTRA, Borkh. 
53. Do cueullaria, D C. Dutchman’s Breeches. 
Woods; not common. April 20th — May. 
Evanston. Rose Hill. North Branch. Riverside, Bastin . Engle- 
wood and Forest Hill, Brennan. Washington Heights, Williams 
Flowers tinged with pink, Stony Island, Hill / Very rarely, plants 
are found with pale blue flowers. 
54. D. canadensis, D C. 
Rich moist woods of the Calumet Region and southward; rare. May. 
Forest Hill, Brennan. 
