70 
Sonchus arvensis, L. 
Danvers (Oakes); Hamilton (G. D. Phippen). Quite common. 
(Nat. from Eu). 
LOBELIACE A. 
(LOBELIA FAMILY.) 
Lobelia cardinalis, Z. (CARDINAL-FLOWER.) 
Frequent in wet places, particularly along brooks and borders of 
ponds. Several acres of this plant at Boxford, in the bed of a mill 
pond (1877). ‘‘ Flowers red on a ground of white” (Proc. E. I. 
Vol. III,p.110). ‘* Pink, almost white in Haverhill ” (Mrs. Downs). 
Lobelia syphilitica, Z. (Great LOBELIA.) 
Reported at Andover, but as it is not mentioned otherwise, this 
may have been a mistake. It is probable that this species is known 
here only in cultivation (Salem, G. D. Phippen). 
Lobelia inflata, Z. (InpIAN ToBacco.) 
Dry places. Common. 
Lobelia spicata, Lam. 
Common in various soils, but generally in moist ones. 
Lobelia Dortmanna, LZ. (WaTrEeR LOBELIA.) 
Frequent in ponds, growing in about one foot of water. Martin’s 
pond, Andover; Kenoza lake, Haverhill; Chebacco; Cape pond, 
Rockport. ‘‘Rare. Spring pond, Lynn” (Tracy), etc. 
CAMPANULACEA, 
(CAMPANULA FAMILY.) 
Campanula rotundifolia, Z. (HAREBELL.) 
' Banks, etc. Towns along the Merrimac valley. 
Campanula aparinoides, Pursh. 
Meadows, among other plants; in various parts of the county. 
Campanula glomerata, LZ. (CLUSTERED BELLFLOWER. ) 
‘‘Dark Lane, locality first noticed by Dr. Nichols” (Oakes in 
Hovey’s Mag., Vol. VII); Topsfield, June, 1859 (Tracy, Proc. E. I., 
Vol. II, p. 390); ‘‘ Danvers, Mass., etc.” (Gray’s Manual). The 
Dark Lane locality has probably been destroyed some time since. 
Danversport (J. H. Sears); Danvers, near the Asylum, 1879 (Walter 
Faxon). (Adv. from Eu.) 
Campanula rapunculoides, L. 
Frequent in grassy places and roadsides in the older towns. (Ady. 
from Eu.) ; 

