REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST IQI2 eS 
Crataegus spissa Sargent 
N. Y State Mus. Bul. 122. 122 (1908). 
North Elba. 
Crataegus chateaugayensis Sargent 
N. Y. State Mus. Bul. 122. 121 (1908). 
Near Chateaugay lake. 
Crataegus harryi Sargent 
N. Y. State Mus. Bul. 122. 124 (1908). 
Richmond, Canadice lake and Honeoye lake. 
Crataegus neo-baxteri Sargent 
N. Y State Mus. Bul. 122. 74 (1908). 
Tuscarora. 
ANOMALAE 
Crataegus saundersiana Sargent 
Ontario Nat. Sci. Bul. 4. 66 (1908). 
Palmyra; also in southern Ontario. 
Crataegus brachyloba Sargent 
N. Y. State Mus. Bul. 122. 75 (1908). 
Buffalo. 
Crataegus fallsiana n. sp. 
Leaves obovate to ovate, acuminate, gradually or abruptly nar- 
rowed at the entire base, sharply and often doubly serrate above, 
with straight glandular teeth and divided above the middle into 
four or five pairs of short acute lobes; nearly one-third grown when 
the flowers open about the roth of June and then yellow-green and. 
roughened above by short white hairs and paler and glabrous below, 
and at maturity glabrous, dark yellow-green on the upper surface, 
light yellow-green on the lower surface, 6 to 10 cm long and 5 to 7 
cm wide, with stout midribs and slender primary veins; pétioles 
slender, wing-margined at the apex, glabrous, dark red in the 
autumn, 3 to 4 cm in length. Flowers 3 cm in diameter, on long 
slender glabrous pedicels, in wide lax mostly 6~-10-flowered 
corymbs, the elongated lower peduncles from the axils of upper 
leaves; calyx-tube narrowly obconic, glabrous, its lobes gradually 
narrowed to the base, long, slender, acuminate, entire or slightly 
dentate near the middle, glabrous on the outer surface, villose on 
