730" ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS. 



Page 73. — L. ruderale. Reported at Buckfield and Orono, Maine (Parlin). 



Page 75. — P. graveolens. Said to rauge to the Chesapeake (Porter). 

 Add at bottom — R. alba, L. Leaves pinnate, undulate, glaucous ; flow- 

 ers white; sepals and petals 5 or 6, the latter all 3-fid. — Buifalo, N. Y. 

 (Clinton); Youngstown, Ohio [Tmjrahavi). (Adv. from Eu.) 



Page 83. — D, deltoides. Read — glabrous or roughish. — On the downs, 

 Martha's Vineyard [Edith Watson). 



Page 84. — S. antirrhina. A very slender form with much smaller apeta- 

 lous flowers, and capsules only 2" long, occurs at Rockford, 111. 



Page 85. — L. diurna. Flowers sometimes white. 



Page 87. — Under S. uliginosa read — veiny, often ciliate at base. 



Page 89. — S. procumbens. Leaves linear-lanceolate to narrowly linear. 

 — Champion Mine, Marquette Co., Mich. {E. J. Hill). 



Page 95. — Under genus 3 read — with small usually rather close clusters. 



Page 99. — M. angustum. Also found in W. 111. along the Mississippi. 

 Under S. Napsea read — along and near the Alleghanies. 



Page 107. — Under Order 25 insert — Stipules small or minute, usually soon 

 deciduous. — Add — The Aquifoliacece of previous editions. 



Page 108. — I. mollis. Common on the Pocono plateau, Penn. {Porter). 



Page 127. — C. scoPAKius. At Osterville, Mass. [Miss S. Minns). 



Page 140. — D. sessili folium. Also at Norwich, Conn. [Graves), and in 

 Plymouth Co., Mass. [Boott). 



Page 152. — P. spiNOSA. The garden Plum, a thoruless derivative from var. 

 iNSiTiTiA, rarely occurs as an escape. — Add — P. Xvium, L., the Bird 

 Cherry, with drooping pubescent acutely serrate leaves on long petioles, lax 

 spreading petals, and sweet fruit — and P. Cerascs, L., the garden Cherry, 

 with spreading glabrous crenate-serrate leaves on short petioles, firm sub- 

 erect petals, and acid fruit — are found by roadsides, etc., in N. Y. and Penn. 



Page 155. — To R. Canadensis add — Var. roribaccus, Bailey. Leaf- 

 lets triangular-ovate, uiiecjually and sharply doubly serrate, often nearly 

 lobed ; peduncles longer and straighter, overtopping the leaves ; flowers 

 very large, 1-2' broad, the sepals foliaceous and incised; fruit large. — 

 W. Va., and probably southward. Cultivated as the Lucretia Dewberry. 



Page 159. — After P. Pennsylvanica insert — P. recta, L. A tall 

 herbaceous perennial, sparsely villous and glandular-puberulent, with digi- 

 tate 5 - 7-foliolate leaves, incisely pinnatifid leaflets, and large yellow flow- 

 ers in a broad cyme. — Central N. Y. (Introd. from Eu.) 



Page 164. — Add — R. cinxam6mea, L. (Cixnamox Rose.) With brown- 

 ish-red bark, some straightish prickles, pale leaves downy beneath, and small 

 double pale red flowers. — An escape about old gardens and by roadsides. — 

 N. Eng , X. Y., etc. 



Insert — P. MXli'S, L., the Apple, and much more rarely the Pear, P. 

 coMMfjNis, L., occur self-sown in pastures, etc. 



Page 176. — R. rubrum. The garden form sometimes occurs as an escape. 



Page 177. — In tlie last line read — from western N. Y. to Ga. and S. Ind. 



Page 181. — M. scabratum. Keweenaw Co., Mich. [0. A. Faricell). 



Page 185. — Under A. COCCinea read — west to S. Ind., N. Dl., Kan., etc. 

 Add — 2. A. auriculata, Willd. Flowers smaller, in loose peduncled 

 axillary cymes; capsule 1" in diameter. (A. Wrightii, Gray.) — Fillmore 

 Co., Neb. [Rev. J. H. Wibbe). A Texan species, perhaps introduced. 

 Under L. Salicaria add — and central N. Y. 



