90 
FLORA OF MOUNT DESERT. 
ANACAKDIACEjE. Cashew Family. 
RHUS, L. Sumach. 
R. typhina, L. Staghokn Sumach. 
Hillsides, etc.; frequent, but ratlier local. 
R. Toxicodendron, L. Poison Ivy. 
Thickets and low grounds ; frequent, but local in its distri- 
button. Common on cliffs and rocky banks by the seashore; — 
Pierce Head; Little Harbor; Hunters Beach; Roberts Point, 
etc. (R. & R.); — especially on the southern shore ' of the t ip ,■ 
Island. It is also found in some abundance about Somesville , 
and vicinity in low grounds and by roadsides. Poisonous to p; 
the touch. I 
.^ 1 ^' 
POLY GALACEJE. Milkwokt Family. 
POLYGALA, L. Milkwoet. 
'f ^ P. paucifolia, Willd. Fringed Polygala. ^ 
- Infrequent and local. Reported by various collectors from 
different parts of the region south and east of Salisbury Cove. 
Also found southwest of Youngs District (Clara L. Walley, 
Greenleaf, Lane & Rand). 
/i-D P. sanguinea, L. 
Infrequent. Fields, Bar Harbor; Southwest Harbor (Rand); —■ 
Long Pond meadows (Redfield); —“Mt. Desert ” (R. H. Day). 
/e>f P. verticillata, L. 
Rare. Fields, Horwood Road, Southwest Harbor (Rand, 
Anna H. Bee). 
LEGUMINOS.®. Pulse Family. 
TRIPOLIUM, L. Cloveb. Teefoil. 
/o AEVENSB, L. Raebit-foot Clover. 
Old fields, roadsides, etc.; common. Naturalized from Europe. 
