REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I9QI4 49 
Lepargyraea canadensis (Linn.) Greene 
In thickets and open woods on the high bluffs facing Lake On- 
tario, west of Oswego. H. D. House, June 26, 1914. No. 5558. 
Lychnis flos-cuculi Linn. 
Sheldon’s grove, Oswego. H. D. House, June 26, 1914. Wo. 
5500. 
Hieracium pratense Tausch. 
Sheldon’s grove, Oswego. H. D. House, June 26, 1914. WNo. 
- 5502. This new addition to the flora of the State is a native of 
Europe and has already been noted at several places from eastern 
Quebec to southern New England. It bears a close resemblance to 
Hieracium florintinum All.. but differs in having an 
elongated, slender rootstock and numerous leafy stolons, while 
Hieracium florentinum possesses a short, stout rootstock 
and is not stoloniferous. This new arrival of the “hawk weeds” 
is already abundant at Sheldon’s grove and is spreading vigorously. 
Mariscus mariscoides (Muhl.) Kuntze 
(Cladium mariscoides Torrey) 
Shores of Panther lake, H. D. House, August 4, 1914. No. 5824. 
The distribution of this species in central New York is decidedly 
local, and about the borders of most of the lakes where one would 
expect to find the species it is entirely lacking. It has been collected 
at Litchfield, Herkimer county, by Doctor Peck. 
Lysias macrophylla (Goldie) House | 
(Muhlenbergia 1: 127. 1906) 
(Habenaria macrophylla Goldie) 
Moist woods under the shade of pine and hemlock. Panther 
lake. H. D. House, August 4, 1914. No. 5810. This species differs 
from Lysias orbiculata, chiefly in the greater length of 
the spur of the flower. 
Lycopodium annotinum Linn. 
Moist woods under the shade of pine and hemlock. Panther 
lake. H. D. House, August 4, 1914, No. 5826. This locality con- 
stitutes one of the few known stations of the State for this species 
outside of the Adirondack and Catskill mountain regions. 
