

LETTUCE, WILD LIRIODENDRdST TTLIPIFKRA. 43 



Lettuce, wild. See Lactuca canadensis. 



Leucanthemurn vulgare Lain. Same as Chrysanthemum leucanthemurn. 



Leverwood. See Ostrya virginiana. 



Liatris odoratissima Michx. Same as Trilisa odoratissima. 



Liatrls scariosa Willd. Same as Lacinaria scariosa. 



Liatris spicata Willd. Same as Lacinaria spioa&a. 



Liatris squamosa Willd. Same as Lacinaria squarrosa. 



Life-everlasting. See Anaphalis margaritacea and Onaphalium obtusifoUum. 



Life-everlasting, sweet. See Gnapha/ium obtusifoUum. 



Liferoot. See Senecio aureus. 



Ligustrum vulgare L. Olive family (Oleaceae). 



Privet; prim wort; prim. 



A shrub, 5 or 6 feet high, introduced from Europe; escaped from cultivation and 

 grows wild in woods and along roadsides from Ontario to Pennsylvania and 

 North I arolina. 



Part used. — Leaves (nonofficial), 



Lily, cow-. See Nymphaea advena. 



Lily, flag-. See Iris versicolor. 



Lily, large yellow pond-. Sec Nymphaea adrena. 



Lily, liver-. See Iris versicolor. 



Lily, snake-. See Iris versicolor. 



Lily, sweet-scented water-. See Castalia odorata. 



Lily, water-. See Castalia odorata. 



Lily, white pond-. See Castalia odorata. 



Lily-of-the-valley. See Convallaria majalis. 



Lime, Ogeechee. See Xyssa ogeche. 



Iamonium carolinianum (Walt.) Britton. 



Plumbago family | Plumbaginaceae), 

 Synonym. — Statice caroUniana Walt. 

 Marsh-rosemary; inkroot; sea-lavender; cankerroot. 



Native, perennial herb, 1 to 2 feet high, in salt meadows on the Atlantic and 

 Gulf coasts. 



Part used. — Root (nonofficial). 



Linden, American. See Tllia americana. 

 Lindera benzoin Meissn. Same as Benzoin benzoin. 

 Lion's-foot. See Nabahis alba* and X. serpentari»s. 



Lion's- tail. See Lemurus cardiaea. 



Iaquidambar styraeiflua L. Witch-hazel family (Hamamelidaceae). 



Sweet-gum; star-leaved gum; red gum. 



Large, native tree, 80 to 140 feet high, in moist woods from Connecticut to 

 Florida, Illinois, and Missouri. Most common near the coast in the Middle 

 and Southern States. 



Parts used. — Bark and resin (nonofficial). 



Iariodendron tulipifera L. Magnolia family (Magnoliaceae). 



Tulip-tree; yellow poplar; whitewood; tulip-poplar; canoewood. 



An indigenous tree, 60 to 190 feet in height, growing in rich woods from New 

 England to Florida, west to Michigan and Arkansas; reaches greatest size in 



the Mid* lie and Southern States. 

 Part used. — Bark of trunk and of root (nonofficial). 



