AND CORRECTIONS. 73 5 d 



stout, scattered to loosely aggregated, then erect or ascending, usually 

 somewhat staminate above, variously peduncled ; scales thin, brown, emar- 

 ginate, shorter than the broadly ovate or obovate strongly few-nerved glau- 

 cous perigynium, but the hispid awn from 2-3 times longer to nearly 

 obsolete; beak short, entire; stigmas 3. (C. glaucescens, Ell.) Swamps 

 and ponds ; extreme southern Va., Mo., and southward. 



Page 606. C. Torreyi. Found in Hennepin Co., Minn. (Sandberg). 



Page 611. Add * 7. i- l a . Fill/Mice. 



84 a . C. filifblia, Nutt. 'Culm slender, obtusely angled, smooth, 3-12' 



high ; leaves filiform, rigid ; perigynium broadly triangular-obovoid, thin, with 



a short white-hyaline entire beak, usually about equalling the broad hyaline- 

 margined clasping scale. Ft. Lincoln, N. Dak. (Havard), and westward. 



Page 626. Under 69. Pestuca read tip (rarely blunt), few-nerved. 



Page 635. L. oryzoides. Reported as common in Oxford Co., Maine 

 (Parlin). Z. miliacea. Reported at Poconoke City, Md. (E. Mears). 



Page 646. S. heterolepis. Reported from S. E. Penn. (Porter). 



Page 650. C. Porteri. Reported from Tompkins Co., N. Y. (Dudley). 



Page 651. A. arundinacea. Reported at Ocean City, Md. (Mears). 



Page 652. Under genus 37 read in a contracted or open. A. caryo- 

 phyllea. Lower flowers sometimes awnless. Accomac Co., Va. (Mears). 



Page 653. A. striata. Reported from N. Penn. (Porter). T. palus- 

 tre. Occurs in southern Conn. 



Page 657. T. CUprea. Occurs in southern Conn. 



Page 658. D. f ascicularis. In saline localities in central N. Y. (Dudley). 



Page 659. E. obtusata. Read central N. Y. to Fla., etc. 



Page 677. E. littorale. Banks of the Susquehanna, Penn. 



Page 682. P. gracilis. Found in Lycoming and Sullivan Cos., Penn., 

 and in Iowa. 



Page 683. W. angustifolia. Reported from S. Haven, Mich. (Bailey). 



Page 694. B. simplex. Reported from Pocono Mt., Penn. (Porter), and 

 Ellicott's Mills, Md. (J". B. Egerton). 



Page 695. L. SelagO. Add and south in the mountains to Ga. 



Page 698. Substitute * * Leaves in 4 ranks, two lateral and spreading, and 

 two above, which are smaller and ascending. 



Page 700. Var. valida. On Salt Pond Mt., Va., in wet ground ( Canby). 



Page 734. Salsola Kali. At Madison, Wise. ; introduced (L. S. Cheney). 



In the Index add AQUIFOLIACEJS, 107 Asimina, 50 Franseria, 735 b 

 Pastinaca, 202 Paulownia, 735 Prunus, 151. 



NOTE. "Western New York," as used throughout the Manual, is to be un- 

 derstood as including the lake-region of central New York. 



Several additional species are reported as rarely escaped or as growing wild 

 in cemeteries, about old gardens or deserted homesteads, etc., as Lunaria 

 biennis, Moench, Honesty or Satin-flower Lychnis Coronaria, L., Mullein 

 Pink Levisticum offidnale, Koch, Lovage Lonicera Xylosteum, L., and 

 L. Tatarica, L., Honeysuckles Valeriana officinalis, L., Valerian Ar- 

 temisia Abrotanum, L., Southernwood Vinca minor. L., Periwinkle, etc. 

 33 



