= BOTANICAL GAZETTE 
NOVEMBER, 18094. 
Popular American plant-names. _ III. 
F FANNIE D. BERGEN. 
printed by request from plates kindly furnished by the editor of the Journal of 
5 American Folk-lore.—Eps. | 
_ Iv this paper the writer has, for convenience, discarded the sys- 
‘ematic arrangement of names of genera, under families, and adopted 
“the alphabetical arrangement. It has also seemed best, in view of 
the threatened revolution in nomenclature, to give the authorities 
for the scientific names used, as far as these could be conveniently 
'rtained, In a few instances the Spanish names of species 
UMBELLIFERE. 
shay sp., Aunt Jerichos, N. E. 
Carota, L.., Queen Anne’s lace, somewhat general. 
bird’s nest, N. J. 
lace-flower,! Philadelphia, Pa. 
ee Devil’s plague,! West Va. 
“Sigg bulbosa, Nutt., turkey-pea,? near Cincinnati, O., fifty years 
aca sativa, L., queen-weed, West Va. 
Bay ARALIACE#. 
OP ‘da, Vent., pigeon-berry, Buckfield, Me. 
~ Mudicaulis, L.., sassafariller, Banner Elk, N. C. 
' Vénquefolia, Decaisne & Planch., sang,? West Va. 
lia » ginshang, Vt. 
oe memos, L.,, spice-bush, Hartford, Conn. . 
1 : J eee 
: fare former evidently a city-born name, the latter from the point of _- oe 
D * Name ; . finds the species a pestilent weed. ee 
od “thy in a former list, but without locality. 
: ¥ an abbreviation for ginseng. 
ca 
