710 STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE. 



Formosa Bog, Cape May County. Three miles south of Tuckahoe, on a 

 branch of the Cedar Swamp Creek. In the pine barrens. 



Fort Lee, Bergen County. Means usually the base or wooded slopes of the 

 Palisades at that point. The country is rough and stony, the forests are 

 deciduous. 



Freehold, Monmouth County. In the midst of a rich, almost level, well culti- 

 vated country ; some decidous and evergreen woodland to the west. 



Frenchtown, Hunterdon County. On the Delaware river, the land rising to 

 elevations of 400 feet within a mile or two to the eastward. 



G. d. Generally distributed : means that the species has been found in so 

 many places and so often that the conclusion is fair that it occurs 

 wherever the food conditions are favorable. Cited by a Philadelphia 

 man it means the lines between Camden and Atlantic City or those 

 between Camden and Cape May. Cited by a Newark man it is equivalent 

 to "Newark district " To a New York collector it means the range 

 between Greenville and Fort Lee. Cited by me it means the State at 

 large. 



Gibbs Hill Pond, Salem County. Four and one-half miles southwest of 

 Alloway, in the pine scrub land. Elevation twenty-two feet 



Glassboro, Gloucester County. In the pine district, with scrub oak fields 

 and small swamps, interspersed. 



Gloucester, Camden County : see introductory remarks. 



Greenville, Hudson County. On the narrow neck of highland just south of 

 Jersey City, between Newark and New York Bays. Almost all laid out 

 in building lots at present. 



Greenwich, Cumberland County. On Cohansey Creek Mostly low land, 

 which becomes marshy along the creeks and brooks near by. 



Greenwood Lake, Passaic County. A long narrow sheet of water between 

 two parallel ridges, extending into New York State. The ground is 

 rough and broken, the sides of the hills well wooded in most places. 

 Several of the recorders have collected here, though Mr. Beutenmuller 

 cites this point most frequently. 



Grenloch, Camden County, two miles south of Blackwood. 



Good Intent, Gloucester County, just west of Blackwood. On the south 

 branch of Timber Creek which widens into ponds to the south. 



Guttenberg, Hudson County. On the Palisades, about three miles north ot 

 Hoboken. Most of the collecting was done at the banks of the Hudson 

 or on the wooded slopes. 



Hackensack Meadows, Hudson and Bergen Counties. A great stretch of 

 marsh land between the Palisades and the rising ground, separating the 

 Hackensack from the Passaic river. Gay in fall with acres of mallow. 



Hackettstown, Warr=n County. On the Musconetcong river at an elevation 

 of about 500 feet, rising within a mile or two to 1,000 feet or more, slopes 

 with deciduous woodland. 



Haddonfield, Camden County. A rich, well cultivated district, with little, 

 mostly deciduous, woodland, usually well elevated. 



