OLEACEJE. (OLIVE FAMILY.) 369 



TRIBE II. FRAXINEJE. Fruit a samara. Flowers dioecious, apetalous. Leaves 

 pinnate. 



3. FRAX1NUS. Flowers in lateral and tenrinal panicles. Calyx minute or rarely want- 



ing. Trees. 



TRIBE III. FORESTIERE.32. Fruit a drupe. Flowers dioecious or perfect, apeta- 

 lous. Leaves simple. 



4. F011ESTIERA. Flowers mostly dioecious, from scaly axillary buds. Shrubs. 



1. OLEA, Tourn. OLIVE. 



Calyx 4-toothed. Corolla short-salver-form, 4-lobed. Stamens 2. Style 

 short. Stigma globose or 2-lobed. Drupe mostly 1-seeded, oily. Trees or 

 shrubs, with opposite coriaceous entire leaves, and small white fragrant flowers, 

 in axillary racemes or panicles. 



1. O. Americana, L. Smooth; leaves oblong or obovate-oblong, nar- 

 rowed into a petiole; racemes compound, shorter than the leaves; flowers 

 polygamo-dioecious, bracted ; drupe ovoid, dark purple. Light soil, near the 

 coast, Florida to North Carolina. March and April. A shrub or small tree, 

 with whitish bark and evergreen leaves. Drupe as large as a pea, bitter and 

 astringent. 



2. CHIONANTHUS, L. FRINGE-TREE. 



Calyx small, 4-cleft. Corolla wheel-shaped, 4-parted, with long and linear 

 lobes. Stamens 2-4, included. Style very short : stigma notched. Drupe 

 fleshy, 1-seeded. A shrub, with oblong entire deciduous leaves, and delicate 

 white flowers in slender axillary panicles, appearing with the leaves. 



1. C. Virginica, L. Light soil, Florida, and northward. April and 

 May. Shrub 6 -10 high. Leaves smooth or pubescent, narrowed into a 

 petiole. Panicles longer than the leaves, leafy-bracted. Flowers on slender 

 drooping pedicels. Corolla-lobes linear, 1' long. Drupe ovoid, purple. 



i 



3. FRAXINUS, Tourn. ASH. 



Flowers dio3cious and (in our species) apetalous. Calyx 4-lobed or toothed, 

 minute, sometimes wanting. Stamens 2 - 4 : filaments shorter than the large 

 anthers. Stigma 2-cleft. Fruit (samara) dry, winged above, 1 -2-seeded. Co- 

 tyledons elliptical. Kadicle slender. Trees. Leaves petioled, odd-pinnate, 

 deciduous. 



* Fruit naked and terete or barely margined and 2-edged at the base, winged above : 



leaflets 7-9, stalked. 



1. P. Americana, L. (WHITE ASH.) Branches and petioles smooth; 

 leaflets ovate-oblong or lanceolate-oblong, acuminate, entire, or slightly serrate 

 above, smooth on the upper surface, pubescent or glaucous beneath ; fruit terete, 

 striate, dilated at the apex into a cuneate-linear or lanceolate obtuse or notched 

 wing. (F. acuminata and F. juglandifolia, Lam.) Swamps, Florida to Mis- 



