Tennessee Flora. 175 



ADDENDA TO SYNOPSIS OF THE FLORA OF 

 TENNESSEE. 



Crataegus apiifolia Michx. Collected by T. G. Harbison at 

 Memphis. 



*Juncoides bulbosum Wood. Lookout Mt. S. M. Bain. 



Rudbeckia monticola J. K. Small. White Cliff Springs. T. 

 H. Kearney. Lookout Mt. H. Eggert. 



f Cornus Priceae J. K. Small. Bluffs on Cumberland River 

 at Nashville. 



*Juncoides bulbosum Wood. Base of plant accompanied by bulb- 

 lets; foliage, almost glabrous, or somewhat webby on the leaf margins 

 and at the top of the sheaths; stems, 1-4 dm. tall; spikes, shorter than 

 those of J. echinatum; sepals and petals, ovate-lanceolate or lanceolate, 

 2-2.5 mm. long, brownish, acuminate, neither manifestly soft nor hya- 

 line at the apex; capsule, broadly obovoid or globose-obovoid, surpass- 

 ing the sepals or sometimes about equaling them. 



t Cornus Priceae. A branching shrub 1-2.5 m. tall, with red and 

 flnely-pubescent twigs; leaves, numerous; blades, elliptic to ovate-ellip- 

 tic or ovate, 5-12 cm. long, rather leathery, usually acuminate, deep 

 green and roughly pubescent above, pale and more copiously, but rather 

 softly pubescent and prominently veined beneath; petioles, 1-2 cm. 

 long, pubescent like the twigs; corymbs, 2-3 cm. broad during anthesis, 

 4-6 cm. broad at maturity; peduncles and pedicels, closely and harshly 

 pubescent; sepals, triangular; corolla, white, about 7 mm. broad; petals, 

 4, oblong-lanceolate to linear-lanceolate; filaments, slightly shorter than 

 the petals; drupes, about 3 mm. in diameter, subglobose, white; stone, 

 :about 2 mm. in diameter, scarcely longer than broad, faintly pitted. 



