45 
Gilia coronopifolia Pers. Growing in a cemetery near Mad— 
ison, Lake County. Spreading slowly. F. J. Tyler. 
Gyrostachys romanzofiana (Cham.) MacM.  (Spiranthus. 
romanzofhana.) Hooded Ladies-Tresses. Ashtabula 
Co: (CE: Vi.ouths) 
Helianthus petiolaris Nutt. Prairie Sunflower. Cuyahoga. 
Co. (Wm. Krebs.) 
Helianthus maximiliani Schrad. Sandusky. A single plant 
along railroad tracks. R. F. Griggs. 
Hieracium greeniu Porter & Britt. Green’s Hawkweed.. 
Wayne County. (Selby and Duvel; reported by A. D. 
Selby before meeting of Academy of Science, Decem- 
ber 27, 1900.) 
Iberis umbellata L. Candy-tuft. Rarely escaped. 
Tris hexagona Walt. Southern Blue-Flag. Auglaize Co.. 
(A. Wetzstein. ) 
Juncus dichotama Ell. ° Forked Rush. Cuyahoga County.. 
(Edo Claasen. ) 
Lactuca saligna L. European Wild Lettuce. Dayton. (A. 
De Selby.) 
Lactuca sativa L. Garden Lettuce. Rarely escaped. 
Lechea leggettiana Britt & Hol. Erie Co. (San. Fl.— 
Moseley. ) 
Lechea minor L. Steubenville, Ohio. H. N. Mertz. 
Leontodon hastilis L. Dandelion. Escaped; Painesville,. 
Lake County. (Otto Hacker.) 
Lespedeza angustifolia (Ph.) L. (L. capitata var. angus- 
tifolia Ph.) Narrow-leaf Bush-clover. Fulton county. 
(A. D. Selby in report at meeting of Ohio Academy of 
Science, December 27, 1900.) 
Lunaria annua L. Honesty. Rarely escaped. 
Lycopersicon lycopersicon (L.) Karst. Tomato. Often 
escaped. 
Matthiola annua Sweet. Tenweek-stock. Rarely escaped: 
