July 1882. Page 10 (seq. 39)

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I have also put in press
a plant which I have
noticed lately, consisting of
a single sagittate leaf from
a root stock. I do not yet
know the name — Aug. 3rd It is a Nabalus.

Our walk was a delightful
one, just through a grove of
White and Red Pines, with
the ground covered with splin-
ters, there through a clearing
studded with young white
piens, and finally we
entered the woods. We
rested for a short time
by a brook and watched
the trout sporting in the

water. The path up the
hill through the trees
was lined with vegetation
of every kind. The checker-
berries were thick and large
and the bunch berries were
beginning to form their fruit.
We saw a good deal of the
Mountain Holly with its
young fruit still green and
in one place the ground
was green with the gold
thread, so called from its
bright golden roots — The
Indian Cucumber with its
two whorls of leaves occa-
sionally came in our way,
and we frequently saw the
Lady's Slipper whose withered
perianth told of its ripen-
ing fruit. On reaching
Bowls & Pitchers, we sat

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