208 
Bulletin Wisconsin Natural History Sovlety. [Vol. 5, No. 4. 
CALLITRICHACE^. 
Callitriche verna L. C. palustris L. Water Starvvort. 
Southern part of county. 
IJMNANTHACE^. 
Flcerkea proserpinacoides Willd. False Mermaid. 
Iveynolds' Woods. Sec. 21, Greenfield. Dominant and copious. 
ANACARDIACE^. 
Rhus typhina L. R. hirta (L.)Sudw. Stag-horn Sumac. 
Eastern portion of county. Common. 
R. glabra L. Smooth Sumac. 
Western portion of county. Common. 
R. Vernix L. Poison Sumac. 
Near St. Francis and New Coeln. Rapidly disappearing-. 
R. Toxicodendron L. var. radicans Torr. H. radicans L. Poison Ivy. 
Reynolds' Woods and New Coeln. Not common. 
R. microcarpa (Michx.) Steud. Northern Poison Oak. 
Throug-hout county. Common. 
AQUIFOUACE^. 
ILICACEAE. 
Ilex verticillata (L.) Gray. Black Alder. . 
In southern part of county and formerly near Whitefish Ray, 
also in Town of Granville. Rare. 
I. laevigata (Pursh.) Gray. Smooth Winter-berry. 
Specimen in Public Museum herbarium, collected at New 
Coeln by T. A. Bruhin. 
CELASTRACE^. 
Euonymus atropurpureus Jacq. Burning- Bush. 
Sec. 27, Wauwatosa; Sees. 11 and 12, Greenfield ; Sec. 22, Oak 
Creek. Sparse. 
Ceiastrus scandens L. Bittersweet. 
Throughout count3^ Locally abundant. 
