64 Rhodora [APRIL 
G. neglecta Torr. (G. virginiana of Gray's Manual). See Ruo- 
DORA Xx. 65, 1918. Moist rich soil; occasional in Essex, Middlesex 
and Norfolk counties. 
ILYSANTHES. 
I. inaequalis (Walt.) Pennell. (7. anagallidea (Michx.) Raf.) 
See Pennell (Torreya, xxii. 83, 1922). Wet sandy and gravelly 
shores of ponds; frequent, but no reports from southern towns. 
I. dubia (L.) Barnhart. Wet places, often on shores; frequent, 
but no reports from Plymouth Co. (in our area). 
LIMOSELLA. 
L. subulata Ives. (L. aquatica L., var. tenuifolia of Gray 's Manual). 
See RHODORA xx. 160-164, 1918. Above Chain Bridge, Newbury- 
port (E. Moulton, Aug. 22, 1886); salt-marsh mud flats of Ipswich 
River, Ipswich (J. H. Sears, July 23, 1886). Specimens in herb. 
Peabody Acad. Sci. and Gray. 
LINARIA. 
L. canadensis (L.) Dumont. Dry sandy soil, sometimes in moister 
places; common throughout. 
L. CYMBALARIA (L.) Mill. Dump, Lowell (C. W. Swan, Aug. 4, 
1884); waste heap, Malden (F. S. Collins, June 26, 1886); Sherborn 
(Miss M. L. Loomis Dec. 3, 1912); Milton, weed about greenhouse 
(N. T. Kidder, June 28, 1921). 
L. Exatine (L.) Mill. “In siccis apricis argillaceis ad Ipswich” 
(Wm. Oakes, no date); weed in garden among grass, Cambridge 
(ex. herb. H. G. Jesup, August, 1877). 
.. L.GENISTAEFOLIA (L.) Mill. Fields and roadsides, well naturalized 
at Groton (C. II. Knowlton, Sept. 1905 to date). Introduced from 
Europe. 
L. rEPENS Mill. About six plants escaped on Mill St., Waverley 
[Belmont] (W. Deane, June 24, 1900). Native of Europe. 
L. supina Desf. Medford (Wm. Boott, July 10, 1863). Speci- 
men in herb. Gray. 
L. vurcaAnis Hill. Roadsides, fields and waste places; very common 
throughout. 
L. minor (L.) Desf. Cambridge gravel pathway in Botanic 
Garden (F. W. Hunnewell, Sept. 12, 1914). Specimen in herb. 
F. W. Hunnewell. 
