192 MISSISSIPPI STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY [Bull. 
SAPINDACEAE. Soapberry Family. 
SAPINDUS. L. 
Sapindus marginatus Willd. Soapberry. Wild China. 
Assigned doubtfully by Mohr to this state. 
RHAMNACEAE. Buckthorn Family. 
BERCHEMIA. Necker. 
Berchemia scandens (Hill) Trelease (B. volubilis DC.) Rattan 
Vine. 
Low damp thickets and borders of woods. Not common in 
the northern counties. Lafayette Co. (rare); Okolona; 
West Point; New Albany; Hinds Co.; Warren Co.; Adams Co. 
June. 
Geol. Surv. Herb. 
RHAMNUS lL. Buckthorn. 
Rhamnus Caroliniana Walt. (Frangula Gray). Indian Cherry. - 
Yellow Wood. 
Rich shaded hillslopes, especially in limey soils. Pontotoc 
Ridge at New Albany; Sartartia on loess bluffs; Hinds Co.; 
Copiah Co.; Clarke Co.; Amite Co.; Forrest Co. May. 
Geol. Surv. Herb. Allison Herb. 
SAGERETIA. Brongn. 
Sageretia minutiflora (Michx.) Trelease (Rhamnus minuti- 
florus Michx.) Michaux’s Sageretia. 
Gravelly and sandy exposed wooded banks (Mohr). Oct. 
CEANOTHUS - L. 
Ceanothus Americanus L. New Jersey Tea. Red Root. 
Dry open woods and copses in the northern counties. Ox- 
ford; Pontotoc; Lost Gap; Grenada; Ripley; Jackson; Mead- 
ville. May-June. 
Geol. Surv. Herb. 
