735" ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS. 



Add — 7^ PAULO WT^IA, Sieb. & Zucc. 



Calvx deeply 5-cleft, woolly. Corolla declined, funnelform, with 5 rounded 

 obliquely spreading lobes. Stamens 4, included. Pod turgid, thick, loculi- 

 cidal. Seeds small, winged. — A tree with large opposite cordate entire or 

 3-lobed pubescent leaves, and large terminal panicles of showy violet flowers. 

 (Named for Anna Paulowna, daughter of Czar Paul I.) 



P. ijiperiXlis, Sieb. & Zucc. A handsome tree resembling the Catalpa ; 

 cult, from Japan. — Growing wild in N. J, and Del. 



Page 388. — B. Americana. Also found in S. E. Penn. and southward. 



Page 391. — Add — P. C. indivisa, Engelm. Winter-annual; leaA'es lin- 

 ear-lanceolate, entire or with 2 or 3 slender lateral lobes ; bracts and calyx- 

 lobes obovate, bright red. — Shannon Co., Mo. {S. M. Tracy). May- June. 



Page 396. — U. clandestina. Reported from mountain bogs, central 

 Penn. [Porter). 



Page 397. — U. resupinata. Reported from Lake Co., Ind. (Hill), and. 

 Ionia Co., Mich. 



Page 401.— Add — 3. R. pedunculata, Torr. Slightly puberulent; 

 leaves ovate-oblong, short-petioled ; peduncles axillary, about as long as the 

 leaf, 1 - 3-flowered, bracteate ; calyx-lobes about equalling the narrow co- 

 rolla-tube. — Jefferson Co., Mo. {Hasse), and south to La. 



Page 405. — T. dichotoinuin. Western Maine {Parlin). 



Page 419. — P. Virgilliana. At Hanover, Maine (Parlin). 



Page 426 — P. argyrocoma. Whitecap Mt., Oxford Co., Maine (Parlin). 



Page 487. — P. heterophylla. This has 3-valved capsules and large 

 seeds, and probably dilated styles — and should therefore be placed in § 2. 



Page 502. — S. RorQanzoflB.ana. Reported from N. W. Penn. (Porter). 



Page 505. — P. aflB.nis. Also reported from E. Penn. (Porter). 



Page 525. — Under genus 13 read — ; cells 1 -2-seeded. 



Page 529. — Under L. Canadense read — flowers 1-16, usually few. 



Page 543. — J. pelocarpus, var. subtilis. Lake Hopatcong, N. J. 



Page 544. — J. acuminatus, var. debilis. At Rumford, Maine (Parlin). 



Page 545. — Under J. scirpoides read — Mich., Ind., Mo., and Tex. 



Page 563. — Under P. Hillii read — Mich., northern Ohio, and western 

 N. Y. — P. obtusifolius. Reported from Tower, Minn. (Hill). 



Page 564. — P. Tuckermani. Reported from eastern and central Penn. 

 (Porter). P. confervoides, Reichenb., appears to be an earlier name. — 

 P. Robbinsii. Reported from Lake Co., Ind., Marquette Co., Mich., 

 and Chesago Lake, E. Minn. (Hill). 



Page 574. — Under E. Engelmanni, for E. obtusa, read E. Engelmanni. 



Page 577. — P. spadicea. Also in Kankakee, Henderson and St. Clair 

 Cos., lU. (Hill). 



Page 589. — Under ■*- 4, Cryptocarpce read — stigmas 2 or 3. 



Page 590. — Under * 7 add — •*- 1*. FilifolicB. Spike one, androgynous. 



Page 599. — For C. vulgaris, Fries, read — C. rigida, Gooden., var. 

 Gooden6vii, Bailey — and at end insert — (C. vulgaris, F/'ies.). — For 

 Var. hyperborea, Boott, read — Var. Bigel6vii, Tuckerm., — and at 

 end substitute the synonym — (C. vulgaris, var. hyperborea, Boott.). 



Page 601. — Add — 41 ^ C. verruc6sa, Muhl. Glaucous, stout and stiff, 

 2-4® high: leaves long, rough-angled, becoming revolute ; spikes 3-10, 



