ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS. 7o5 b 



Page 201. D. CAEOTA. Flowers occasionally purple or reddish. 



Page 207. Under B. angustifolia read Mass. (1), Mich., N. 111., and 

 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 a . 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 l a . N. biflora, Walt. Leaves smaller than is usual in 

 n. 1 (1-3' 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 this 

 species loosely panicled, in Q. VERI:M densely so. 



Page 233. Enter 43 a . Franseria. As Ambrosia, but fruit 1 -4-cellecl, 

 1 -4-beaked. 



Page 250. S. neglecta, var. linoides. At Turner, Maine ( J. A. Allen). 



Page 252. S. OMoensis. Head central N. Y., and from Ohio to Wise? 



Page 269. G. purpureum. At Youugstown, Ohio (R. H. Ingraham). 



Page 273. Add 43 a . 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. tomentosa, Gray. Low, erect and rather stout, densely silky- 

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

 entire. Macpherson, Kan. (Kcl/erman), and southwestward. 

 Page 275. H. scabra. Reported from Oxford Co., Maine (Parlin). 

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



(Dudley). 

 Page 297. Under C. NTGRA read black or brown pectinately-ciliate fringe ; 



rays usually wanting. 



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. Peun. to S. 111. and Ark. 



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

 Page 361. ASPERUGO PROCUMBENS. At New Bedford, Mass. (Hervey). 

 Page 378. Enter 7 a. 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). 



