REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I907 1 25 



rounded at the ends, cherry-red, lustrous, marked by small pale 

 dots, about i cm long and 8-9 mm in diameter; calyx prominent, 

 with a wide deep cavity tomentose in the bottom, and long spreading 

 and incurved persistent lobes ; flesh thin, yellow-green, dry and 

 mealy; nutlets 2-4, rounded at the base, gradually narrowed and 

 acute at the apex, or when 4 acute at the ends, ridged on the back, 

 with a high broad irregularly grooved ridge 7-7.5 mm long, and 

 about 5 mm wide. 



A slender tree sometimes 8 m high, with a short trunk occasionally 

 2 dm in diameter and covered with pale gray very scaly bark, small 

 spreading dark gray branches spotted with lighter gray, and very 

 slender nearly straight branchlets dark orange-brown and marked 

 by pale lenticels when they first appear, becoming light yellow-brown 

 and lustrous in their first season and dull light gray-brown the fol- 

 lowing year, and armed with occasional slender nearly straight or 

 slightly curved light chestnut-brown spines 2.5-3 ^^ long. 



Borders of woods in low bottom lands of Wet-stone brook near 

 the Honeoye state road, Richmond, Ontario co., Henry T. Brown 

 (;^38, type), May 28 and October 17, 1906. 



Both Brown and Henry having been used in forming specific 

 names in Crataegus, Crataegus harryi, one of the most 

 distinct and interesting of his discoveries will serve to commemorate 

 the name of Henry T. Brown of Rochester, New York, who has 

 carefully studied and collected the numerous thorns found by him 

 near Hemlock and Honeoye lakes in Livingston and Ontario counties. 



ANOMALAE 



Crataegus simulans n. sp. 



Leaves ovate to slightly obovate or oval, acuminate or rounded 

 at the apex, gradually narrowed to the concave-cuneate entire base, 

 sharply often doubly serrate above, with straight glandular teeth, and 

 slightly divided usually only above the middle into 4 or 5 pairs of 

 small acuminate spreading lobes ;. neaHy fully grown when the 

 flowers open in the last week of May and then thin, yellow-green 

 and slightly roughened above by short white hairs and paler and 

 glabrous below, and at maturity thin, dull yellow-green and scabrate 

 on the upper surface, paler on the lower surface, 5-6 cm long and 

 2.5-5 c^ wide, with thin light yellow midribs and primary veins ; 

 petioles slender, slightly wing-margined at the apex, sparingly 

 villose on the upper side while young, soon becoming glabrous, often 

 rose colored in the autumn at the base, 1.5-2.5 cm in length; leaves 



