HOFFMANN: FLORA OF BERKSHIRE COUNTY. 343 
GNAPHALIUM. Cudweed. 
G. decurrens Ives. Everlasting. — Dry hillsides and dry open 
woods; frequent in the valley. 
G. polycephalum Michx. Common Everlasting. — (G'. ohtusi- 
foUmn 111. Fl. ed. 2.) 
Dry open hillsides; common. 
G. uliginosum L. Low Cudweed. — Roadsides in low ground 
and old fields; common. 
HELENIUM. Sneezeweed. 
H. autumnale L. Sneezeweed. — Banks of streams; frequent 
in the valley. 
H. nudiflorum Nutt. — Dry bushy pasture, Great Barrington. 
HELIANTHUS. Suxflower. 
H. annuus L. Common Sunflower. — In waste ground ; occa- 
sional. 
H. decapetalus L. Wild Sunflow^er. — Open woods, thickets 
and clearings; common in the valley. 
H. divaricatus L. Wild Sunflower. — Rocky woods, clearings 
and dry open soil; frequent in the valleys and on the southern 
Taconics. 
H. giganteus L. — A small clump at the edge of a swamp. Stock- 
bridge. Perhaps introduced. 
H. strumosus L. Wild Sunflower. — Dry roadside thickets, 
clearings and open woods; frequent in the valley. 
H. TUBEROsus L. Jerusalem Artichoke. — Roadsides in low 
ground, waste ground; frequent. 
HELIOPSIS. Ox-eye. 
H. helianthioides (L.) Sweet. — Dry woods, Lenox. 
H. SCABRA Dunal. — Roadside, Lenox; adventive beside trolley 
track, Stockbridge. 
HIERACIUM. Hawkweed. 
H. aurantiacum L. Orange Hawkweed; Devil's Paint- 
brush. — Fields; common, especially on the plateau, where the plant 
has become a pest in mowing-fields. 
