Veratrum viride Aiton.
The green hellebore forms considerable clumps, three or four feet high. It is frequent on moist slopes in Paradise Park.
Stenanthium occidentale Gray.
Goat Mountains, Allen, 233. Also collected on Mount Rainier by Rev. E. C. Smith, in 1890.
Xerophyllum tenax (Pursh) Nuttall.
The so-called pine-lily or bear-grass is not rare in gravelly soil in rather open woods. Straggling specimens are found up to 5,500 feet altitude.
JUNCACEAE. (Rush Family.)
Juncoides glabratum (Hooker) Sheldon.
Dry, grassy slopes at 5,000 feet.
Juncoides majus (Hooker) Piper.
(Luzula arcuata major Hooker.)
(Juncoides piperi Coville.)
The plants referred here occur at 7,000 feet altitude, in springy places. Allen, No. 44, and Piper, 2172, are identical with Tolmie's Mount Rainier specimens.
Juncoides parviflorum (Ehrhart) Coville.
Common on dry slopes up to 5,000 feet elevation.
Juncoides spicata (Linnaeus) Kuntze.
Rather rare in damp places in the pumice fields, at 8,000 feet altitude.
Juncus subtriflorus (E. Meyer) Coville.
Common at 5,000 to 6,000 feet elevation.
Juncus parryi Engelmann.
Much like the preceding, and growing along with it.