Wadmond—Flora of Racine and Kenosha Counties. 845 
481. Prunus Pennsylvania, L. f. Wild Ped Cherry. 
Common; wood-borders and fence rows. 
482. Prunus Virginiana, L. Choke Cherry. 
Common; dry woods and thickets. 
483. Prunus serotina, Ehrh. Wild Black Cherry. 
Common; open woods. 
LeguminoS/E. Pulse or Pea Family . 
484. Cassia Chamaecrista, L. Sensitive Pea. 
Pare; on dry prairies. 
485. Gleditschia triacanthos, L. Honey Locust. 
Pare; escaped from cultivation and well established 
in a few places. 
486. Gymnocladus Canadensis, Lam. Kentucky Coffee Tree. 
Pare; in the manuscript of a bulletin on the Trees of 
Wisconsin, began by Prof. Cheney, but never completed, 
is a reference to the occurrence of this species in the 
neighborhood of Salem, Kenosha Co. 
487. Baptisia leucophaea, Hutt. False Indigo. 
Common; prairies. 
488. Baptisia leucantha, T. & G. False Indigo. 
Occasional to rare; edge of thickets. 
489. Medicago saliva, L. Alfalfa. 
Occasional; escaped from cultivation and established 
along roadsides and in waste places. 
490. Medicago lupulina, L. Black Medick. 
Common; fields and roadsides. 
491. Melilotus alba, Desv. White Sweet Clover. 
Common; roadsides and waste places. 
492. Melilotus officinalis, Lam. Yellow Sweet Clover. 
Common; roadsides and waste ground. One of the 
most desirable of our roadside “weeds.” 
493. Trifolium procumbens, L. Low Hop Clover. 
Occasional; in grassland. 
494. Trifolium pratense, L. Ped Clover. 
Common; everywhere, preferring rich, deep soil. 
495. Trifolium hybridum, L. Alsike Clover. 
Common; roadsides, lawns, meadows and cultivated 
fields. Hot in Swezey’s list. 
