No. 17] FLOWERING PLANTS AND FERNS 169 
Melilotus Indica All. M. parviflora Desf.) 
Prairie region (Mohr.) May-June. 
MELILOTUS Juss. Sweet Clover. 
Trifolium reflexum L. Buffalo Clover. 
Open woods and pastures; prairies. Tishomingo Co. 
April-May. 
Allison-Herb. 
Trifolium Carolinianum \ic!ix. Wild White Clover. 
Open fields and pastures. Starkville (Traey.) Mareh- 
April. 
Trifolium pratense I. Red Clover. 
(Int.) Eseaped from cultivation throughout the state; 
more frequent in the hmey soil of the prairies. May. 
Trifolium arvense L. Rabbit-Foot Clover. 
(Int.) Dry light soi! along roadsides, in old fields, and 
yards. Holly Springs. Summer. 
Geol. Survey Herb. 
Trifolium repens L. \\ ite Clover. 
(Int.) Eseaped | eultivation commonly throughout 
the state, along roadsi‘' in pastures, and waste places gen- 
erally. April-June. 
Trifolium procumbens ! Yellow Clover. 
Common in the nori!:::n counties in pastures and moist 
open ground. May-Jun Lafayette, Tishomingo counties. 
Allison Herb. 
PSOR A \ L. Psoralea. 
Psoralea pedunculata (\!') Vail (P. melilotoides Michx.) 
Common in open tic’ ind banks throughout the state, 
most common northw Oxford; Newton; Hattiesburg. 
June. 
Geol. Survey Herb. 
Psoralea simplex Nutt. 
Wet grassy banks in ern counties (Mohr.) June. 
