REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST IQI2 IEA g at 
narrow mostly 8-10-flowered sparingly villose corymbs, the lower 
peduncles from the axils of upper leaves; calyx-tube narrowly ob- 
conic, covered at the base with long scattered white hairs, the lobes 
separated by wide sinuses, glabrous on the outer surface, slightly 
villose on the inner surface; stamens ten; anthers pink in the bud, 
fading white as the flowers open; styles three or four. Fruit ripening 
‘the end of September on slender pedicels, in few-fruited clusters, 
subglobose but often slightly longer than broad, crimson, lustrous, 
marked by large pale dots, I to 1.2 cm in diameter ; calyx little en- 
‘larged, with a broad shallow cavity and reflexed appressed lobes; 
flesh thin, dry and mealy; nutlets three or four, rounded at the ends, 
rather broader at the apex than at the base, ridged on the back with 
a high deeply grooved ridge 7 to 8 mm long and about 4 mm wide, 
the broad conspicuous hypostyle extending to just below the middle 
of the nutlet. 
A broad shrub 5 to 6 m high, with stout stems covered with dark 
scaly bark, erect spreading branches, and slender slightly zizag 
branchlets tinged with red and marked by numerous pale lenticels 
when they first appear, becoming dark chestnut-brown and lustrous 
at the end of their first season and ashy gray the following year, and 
armed with stout straight or slightly curved chestnut-brown shining 
spines 3 to 4.5 cm. long. 
Swampy hilltops south of Utica, rare; J..V. Haberer (no. 2412, 
type), June 4, September 22 and October 6, 1907, September 10, 
1912; Haberer, Dunbar and Sargent, September 28, 1912. 
This interesting species is named for Thomas Redfield Proctor, 
a public-spirited citizen of Utica to whose generosity the city owes 
its public parks, covering an area of some five hundred acres. 
Crataegus maligna n. sp. 
Leaves elliptical to slightly obovate, acute or acuminate, gradually 
narrowed and cuneate or rounded at the base, finely serrate with 
straight glandular teeth, and divided above the middle into three or 
four pairs of short broad acute lobes; nearly fully grown when the 
flowers open the middle of June and then yellow-green and rough- 
ened above by short white hairs and glabrous below, and at maturity 
thin but firm in texture, glabrous, dark yellow-green on the upper 
surface, pale on the lower surface, 4 to 4.5 cm long and 3 to 3.5 cm 
wide, with thin midribs and primary veins; petioles slender, slightly 
wing-margined at the apex, glabrous, occasionally glandular, 1.5 to 
2 cm in length; leaves on vigorous shoots ovate, rounded or abruptly 
