ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS. 735^ 



stout, scattered to loosely aggregated, then erect or ascending, usually 

 somewhat staminate above, variously peduncled ; scales thin, brown, emar- 

 ginate, shorter than the broadly ovate or obovate strongly few-nerved glau- 

 cous perigynium, but the hispid awn from 2-3 times longer to nearly 

 obsolete; beak short, entire; stigmas 3. (C. glaucescens, £"//.) — Swamps 

 and ponds ; extreme southern Va., Mo., and southward. 



Page 606. —C. Torreyi. Found in Hennepin Co., Minn. (Sandherg). 



Page 611. — Add — * 7. — ^_ p. Filifolice. 



84*. C. filifolia, Nutt. Culm slender, obtusely angled, smooth, 3-12' 



high ; leaves filiform, rigid ; perigynium broadly triangular-obovoid, thin, with 



a short white-hyaline entire beak, usually about equalling the broad hyaline- 

 margined clasping scale. — Ft. Lincoln, N. Dak. (Havard), and westward. 



Page 626. — Under 69. Festuca read — tip (rarely blunt), few-nerved. 



Page 635. — L. oryzoides. Reported as common in Oxford Co., Maine 

 [Parlin). — Z. miliacea. Reported at Poconoke City, Md. [E. Mears). 



Page 646. — S. heterolepis. Reported from S. E. Penn. {Porter). 



Page 650. — C. Porteri. Reported from Tompkins Co., X. Y. {Dudleij). 



Page 651. — A. arundinacea. Reported at Ocean City, Md {Mears). 



Page 652. — Under genus 37 read — in a contracted or open. — A. caryo- 

 phyllea. Lower flowers sometimes awnless. Accomac Co., Va. (Mears). 



Page 653. — A. striata. Reported from N. Penn. {Porter). — T. palus- 

 tre. Occurs in southern Conn. 



Page 657. — T. CUprea. Occurs in southern Conn. 



Page 658. — D. fascicularis. In saline localities in central X. Y. (,Owc?/e^). 



Page 659. — E. obtusata. Read — central N. Y. to Fla., etc. 



Page 677. — E. littorale. Banks of the Susquehanna, Penn. 



Page 682. — P. gracilis. Found in Lycoming and Sullivan Cos., Penn., 

 and in Iowa. 



Page 683. — W. angustifolia. Reported from S. Haven, Mich. {Bailey). 



Page 694. — B. simplex. Reported from Pocono Mt., Penn. {Porter), and 

 Ellicott's Mills, Md. (./. B. Egerton). 



Page 695. — L. SelagO. Add — and south in the mountains to Ga. 



Page 698. — Substitute — * * Leaves in 4 ranks, two lateral and spreading, and 

 tivo above, tvhich are smaller and ascending. 



Page 700. — Var. valida. On Salt Pond Mt., Va., in wet ground ( Canbij). 



Page 734. — Salsola Kali. At Madison, Wise. ; introduced (L. S. Cheney). 



In the Index add — Aquifoliace^, 107 — Asiraina, 50 — Franseria, 735*^-=-= 

 Pastinaca, 202 — Paulo^v^lia, 735° — Prunus, 151, 



Note. — "Western New York," as used throughout the Manual, is to be un- 

 derstood as including the lake-region of central Xew York. 



Several additional species are reported as rarely escaped or as growing wild 

 in cemeteries, about old gardens or deserted homesteads, etc., — as Lunaria 

 biennis, Moench, Honesty or Satin-flower — Lychnis Coronaria, L., Mullein 

 Pink — Levisticum officinale, Koch, Lovage — Lonicera Xylosteuvi, L., and 

 Lt. Tatarica, L., Honeysuckles — Valeriana officinalis, L., Valerian — A}-- 

 temisia Abrotanum, L., Southernwood — Vinca minor, L., Periwinkle, etc. 



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