PLANTS OF ONONDAGA COUNTY 163 



D. TATULA — Lin., 1753. Purple Stramonium. 



Rare. Several specimens between waterway and mill, 

 Orville. Also near pine grove. Introduced. Orville, 

 June, 1905. 



NICOTIANA— Lin., 1753. ^ 



N. RUSTICA — Lin., 1753. Wild Tobacco. 



Rare. Waste places. Indian Res. Baldwinsville, 

 summer, 1896. Rev. Beauchamp. 



SCROPHULARIACE/E— Lindl, 1 826— Figwort Fam. 



VERBASCUM— Lin., 1753. 



V. THAPSUS — Lin., 1753. Velvet Dock. Mullen. 



Common. Everywhere. Valued weed for its medicinal 

 qualities. Goodrich Barnyard, summer. 



V. LYCHNITIS — Lin., 1753. White Mullen. 



Occasional. Yellow. Rarely white. Kinney Farm, James- 

 ville, summer. 



V. BLATT ARIA— Lin., 1753. Moth Mullen. 



Frequent. Fields and waste, stony places. Same range 

 as V. thaspus. 



CYMBALARIA— Medic, 1791. 



C. CYMBALARIA — Wettst. Kenilworth, or Colisseum Ivy. 

 Rare. Roadsides. Escaped. Bank of Onon. Creek, 

 July, 1909. 



LINARIA— Juss., 1789. 



L. LINARIA. (Karst Deutsch Flo., 1880.) Ramstead. 

 Butter and Eggs. 

 Common. Roadsides and waste places. Rose Settle- 

 ment. 



ANTIRRHINUM— Lin. 



A. MAJUS — Lin., 1753. Large Snapdragon. 



Not common. Escaped from gardens. Danforth, Ang., 

 1898. 



