CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 167 
OLEACEZ. 
FRAXINUS, L. 
Ash. 
F. Americana, L. White Ash. 
Moist woods. Camden: Atco—H. A. Green. Gloucester: 
Quite common about Mickleton—B. Heritage; and common in 
the middle and northern counties. 
F. pubescens, Lam. Red Ash. Black Ash. 
Gloucester: Banks of .the Delaware, Pennsgrove, also the 
glabrate form—Commons; not common about Mickleton—B. 
Heritage; and common in the middle and northern counties. 
F. viridis, Michx.f. Green Ash. 
Monmouth and Ocean: “ Near streams, not rare”—Knies- 
kern; but surely rare in the eastern parts of those counties. 
Gloucester: Mullica Hill—Britton. Hunterdon: Stockton— 
Schuh. Mercer: Along the Delaware below Trenton—A bbott. 
F. sambucifolia, Lam. Black Ash. 
In wet woods. Bergen: Closter—Austin; Lyndhurst— 
Schuh. Essex: Common—Rusby. Morris: Boonton—Brit- 
ton. Hunterdon: Rosemont—Schuh ; Pittstown — Henry 
Race. Sussex: Waterloo—Britton. Monmouth: Freehold— 
Willis. 
CHIONANTHUS, L. 
Fringe-tree. 
Cc. Virginica, L. 
Union: “Near Port Elizabeth, a tree thirty feet high ”— 
Pursh, Flora N. A. i. 7; Plainfield, escaped from cultivation 
—Tweedy. Atlantic: Buena Vista—C. A. Gross. Cumber- 
land: Bridgeton— Martindale; near Vineland—J. B. Har- 
rison; Millville, quite common—Apgar. 
LIGUSTRUM, L. 
7 Privet. Prim. 
L. vuLeareE, L. 
Escaped from cultivation into copses and waste places; fre- 
quent. Adventive from Europe. 
