735* ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS. 



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



Page 75. P. graveolens. Said to range 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. Buffalo, N. Y. 

 (Clinton)', Youngstown, Ohio (Ingraham). (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. SCOPARIUS. At Osterville, Mass. (Miss S. Minns). 



Page 140. D. sessilifolium. Also at Norwich, Conn. (Graves), and in 

 Plymouth Co., Mass. (Boott). 



Page 152. P. SPINOSA. The garden Plum, a thornless derivative from var. 

 INSITITIA, rarely occurs as an escape. Add P. AVIUM, L., the Bird 

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

 spreading petals, and sweet fruit and P. CERASUS, 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, unequally 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. Pennsylyanica 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. (Tntrod. from Eu.) 



Page 164. Add R. CINNAMOMEA, L (CINNAMON 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., N. Y., etc. 



Insert P. MALUS, L., the Apple, and much more rarely the Pear, P. 

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



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



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



Page 181. M. SCabratum. Keweenaw Co., Mich. (0. A. Farwell). 



Page 185. Under A. COCCinea read west to S. Ind., N. 111., Kan., etc. 

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

 axillary cymes; capsule \" 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. 



