48 Rhodora [MancH 
Page 483, line 42; add: Var уплӧѕА (Pers) Lehm. Branches, 
stipules, peduncles, and calyx densely villous and glandu- 
lar; leaflets silky above, at least the younger glandular- 
villous on the midrib beneath.— Throughout the St. 
Lawrence system from n. N. S. and e. Que. to L. Su- 
perior and L. Winnepeg. (Greenl., n, Eu.) 
Page 484, for lines 3-14, substitute: 
17. P. Anserina L. (Sitver WEED.) Spreading by 
slender many-jointed runners; the stolons, peduncles, 
petioles, and. rhachises more or less pubescent with as- 
cending or loosely spreading hairs; leaves all radical, 
interruptedly pinnate; leaflets oblong, oblanceolate, or 
obovate, sharply serrate, silkv-tomentose beneath, at 
least the younger lustrous; peduncles elongated; bract- 
lets often cleft; achenes thick-ovoid to subglobose, more 
or less corky, dorsally sulcate. (Anserina Rydb.)— 
Gravelly or sandy shores and banks, e. Que. to Alaska, 
s. to P. E. I, N. B., Me,, Vt., №. Y., Ind., centr. Ill. 
Ia., N. Mex., and s. Cal. June-Aug. (Eurasia.) 
Var. sericea Hayne. Leaflets silvery-sericeous on both 
surfaces. (Var. concolor Ser.; Anserina concolor and 
A. argentea Rydb.)— Of similar range, more abundant 
westw. 
17a. P. pacífica Howell. Similar in habit; stolons, 
peduncles, petioles, and rhachises glabrous or early gla- 
brate; leaflets white-tomentose beneath with opaque 
hairs; bractlets usually simple; achenes laterally com- 
pressed, firm, rounded on the back, not sulcate. (P. 
Anserina, var. grandis T. & G.; Anserina grandis, 
pacifica, and litoralis Rydb.)— Brackish and'saline soils, 
chiefly along the coast, Greenl. and Lab. tofL. І. also 
on the Pacific coast. (E. Asia.) 
line 17; for apparently read generally appearing 
line 19; for coast of Me. read Me. 
Page 485, at the end of line 5, add: Var. pENUDÀTA (Hayne) Maxim. 
Leaves green and glabrate beneath.— Locally established 
in N. E. (Introd. from Eurasia.) 
lines 34 and 41; before /eaves insert: basal 
Page 487, line 24; after Forma PÁLLIDUS (Bailey) Robinson insert: , 
n. comb. (R. occidentalis, var. pallidus Bailey, Cycl. Am. 
Hort. 1582) 
[This, it is believed, is the only new combination in 
the Manual. It was the intention of the editors to 
