ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS. 735* 



Page 201. — D. Carota. Flowers occasioually purple or reddish. 



rage 207. — Under B. angUStifolia read — Mass. (?), Mich., N. 111., aud 

 westward . 



Page 214. — C. circinata. Calyx-teeth minute; stone globular, not fur- 

 rowed. — C. sericea. Stone large, more or less acute at base, oblique 

 and irregularly sharp-ridged. — C. asperifolia. Stone nearly globular 

 or somewhat oblique, smooth or slightly furrowed. — C. Stolonifera. 

 Stone very variable, oblique, flattened or scarcely so, more or less furrowed 

 — C. stricta. Stone small, nearly globular, smooth. This species ap- 

 pears to include C. paniculata. C. candidissima, Marsh., is a little earlier 

 name, but the identification is somewhat doubtful. — Add — 

 5*. C. Baileyi, Coult. & Evans. Intermediate between nos. 5 and 6 in 



foliage and pubescence ; branches reddish-brown ; fruit white ; stone com- 

 pressed, truncate, furrowed on the prominent edges, broader than high. — 



About the Great Lakes (Erie to Superior) and westward. Perhaps a hybrid. 



Page 215. — Add P. N. biflora, Walt. Leaves smaller than is usual in 

 n. 1 (i-3' long); fertile flowers 1-3; stone decidedly flattened and more 

 strongly furrowed. — N. J. to Fla., Tenn. and southward. 



Page 226. — G. MoLLUGO. Occurs in eastern N. Eng. — Flowers in tliis 

 species loosely panicled, in Q. vkrum densely so. 



Page 233. — Enter — 43**. Franseria. As Ambrosia, but fruit 1 - 4-celled, 

 1 -4-beaked. 



Page 250. — S. neglecta, var. linoides. At Turner, JMaine {J. A. Allen). 



Page 252. — S. Ohioensis. Read — central N. Y., and from Ohio to Wise. 



Page 269. — G. purpureum. At Youngstown, (Jhio [R. U. Ingraham). 



Page 273. — Add — 43\ FRANSERIA, Cav. 



Resembling Ambrosia, but the fertile involucre enclosing 1-4 flowers, the 

 fruit 1 -4-celled and 1 -4-beaked, more or less bur-like with scattered prickles. 

 (Named for A . Franser, a Spanish botanist ) 



1. F. tomentdsa, Gray. Low, erect and rather stout, densely silky- 

 tomentose ; leaves very white beneath, more or less pinnately cleft or nearly 

 entire. — Macpherson, Kan. {Keller man), and southwestward. 

 VsigQ 275. — H. SCabra. . Reported from Oxford Co., Maine (Parlin). 

 Page 284. — B. COnnata, var. COMOSA. Reported from central N. Y. 



(Dud lei/). 

 Page 297. — Under C. nigra read — black or brown pectinately-ciliate frinefe • 



rays usually icanting. 

 Page 302. — P. altissima. Glabrous or somewhat hispidulous. 

 Page 320 — Under R. nudiflorum read — Swamps and open woods. 

 Page 329. — Under D. Meadia add — Var. Frenchii, Vasey. Often 



dwarf, glabrous or pubescent above; leaves ovate or ovate-elliptical, some- 

 times cordate at base. — Penn. to S. 111. and Ark. 

 Page 354. — L. trachyspermum. Reported from southern N. J. [Britton). 

 Page 361. — Aspercgo procumbens. At New Bedford, Mass. {Hervey). 

 Page 378. — Enter — 7^. Paulownia. Corolla tubular with spreading 



limb. Sterile stamen none. Seeds winged. A Catalpa-like tree. 

 Page 382. — P. albidus. Reported from S. W. Minn. [McMillan). 



