132 
FLORA OF MOUNT DESERT. 
1 
3 ^ 
LINARIA, Juss. Toad Flax. 
L. Canadensis (L.), Dumont. Wild Toad Flax. 
Frequent in dry soil. An exceedingly depauperate form in 
gravelly hollows among rocks, especially on the mountains. 
Browns Mt.; Flying Mt., etc. (Rand); — shore, Northeast Har¬ 
bor (B. E. J. Gresham); — Baker Island (Redfield). 
L. VXJLGAEIS, Mill. Buttee-and-Eggs. 
Roadsides; infrequent. Southwest Harbor; Town Hill;P,^i'4,, 
Great Cranberry Isle ffiand); —• Baker Island (Redfield). ». 
CHELONE, L. Snake-head. Tuetle-head. 
C. glabra, L. 
Wet places, along hro^is and rills; frequent. v\Q.ici A . 
.j, 
ILYSANTHES. Raf. 
I. riparia, Raf. 1. gratioloides (L.), Benth. False Pimpernel. 
Rare. Muddy border of Somes Stream (R. & R.); — shore ^ 
of little mill-pond, Somesville (Rand). 
VERONICA, L. Speedwell. 
V. scutellata, L. Marsh Speedwell. 
Boggy ground; infrequent. Northeast Harbor (William H. 
Dunbar); — Ripples Pond; High Head meadow; bog near Sea 
Wall (Rand);— “Mt. Desert” (F. M. Day). 
V. oflBlcinalis, L. Common Speedwell. . . 
Dry ground; rare and local. Roadsides and fields, Salisbury 
Cove (Faxon, R. & R.); — “Norway Drive,” south of Salisbury 
Cove (Rand, Mary Minot). Apparently confined to the neigh- ^, 
borhood of Salisbury Cove, and appearing both introduced and 
indigenous. 
V. serpyllifolia, L. Thyme-leaved Speedwell. Puu' C.6, 
— Fields, clearings, and roadsides; common. Apparently both p, w <2 
introduced and'indigenous. 
3^0 
