I IO 
PARK AND CEMETERY. 
A PLANTING CHART OF GARDEN PLANTS— II. 
The following groups suggested for planting 
the chart given in the last issue, include among 
many exotic hardy plants, such well-known species 
as follow: 
1. Ranales: Virgin’s bower, wind flower, he- 
patica, meadow-rue, globe flower, hellebore, col- 
umbine, larkspur, baneberry, magnolia, tulip tree, 
barberry, may-apple, nelumbo’s and nymphaea. 
2. Parietales: blood-root, horn-poppy, climbing 
fumitory, Dutchman’s breeches, rock cress, alys- 
sum, rocket, treacle mustard, cleome, mignonnette, 
rock- rose, pansy and violet. 
3. Polygalales: Milkworts. 
4. Caryophylales: Carnations, catchfly, sand- 
wort, cockle, mouse-ear, portulaca and tamarix 
5. Guttiferales: St John’s-wort, stuartia and 
Loblolly Bay. 
6. Malvales: Mallow, glade mallow, rose mal- 
low and basswood. 
7. Geraniales: Flax, crane’s bill, wood-sorrel, 
balsam, rue, prickly ash and hop tree. 
8. Olacales: Pfolly, both evergreen and de- 
ciduous, and mountain holly. 
9. Celastrales: Bitter sweet, spindle tree, 
supple jack, buckthorns, New Jersey tea and orna- 
mental grape vines. 
10. Sapindales: Horse-chestnuts, maples, box 
elder, bladder-nut and the finer sumachs. 
11. Rosales: Yellow wood, whin, broom, lu- 
pine, false indigo, hoary pea, locusts, wistaria, 
coronilla, tick trefoil, bush clover, everlasting pea, 
butterfly pea, red bud, Kentucky coffee tree and 
honey locust. 
11 a. Flowering plum, peach and cherry, meadow 
sweet, five fingers, roses, flowering apples, haw- 
thorns and June berries. 
; 1 b. Saxifrage, mitre- wort, alum root, hydrangea, 
stone crop, witch hazels and sweet gum. 
12. Myrtales: Meadow beauty, loosestrife, wil- 
low herb, evening primrose and cupheas. 
13. Passiflorales: Passion flower, wild balsam, 
apple and ornamental gourds. 
14. Ficoidales: Prickly pear, ice plant, &c. 
15. Umbellales: Cow parsnip, giant fennel, 
eryngo, angelica tree, dogwoods, ivy and tupelo. 
16. Rubiales: Elders, arrow woods, snow-berry, 
honeysuckle and woodbines, bluets, button bush 
and partridge berry. 
17. Asterales: Valerian, thoroughwort, golden 
rod, rayless rod, daisy, aster, groundsel tree, ever- 
lasting, cone-flower, sunflower, marigold, chrysan- 
themum, wormwood and star thistle. 
18. Campanales: Cardinal flower and Canter- 
bury bells, &c. 
19. Ericales: Andromeda, sorrel tree, heather, 
kalmia, rhododendron including azalea, white alder, 
winter green, galax, and many others. 
20. Primulales: Sea lavender, American cow- 
slip, primrose, loosestrife, pimpernel and ardisia 
japonica. 
21. Ebenales: persimmon, styrax, halesia and 
sweet leaf. 
22. Gentianales: Ash, fringe tree, privets, milk- 
weed butterfly weed, &c. , pink root, sabbatia, 
gentian, buckbean and floating heart. 
23. Polemoniales: Phloxes, Greek valerian, lung- 
wort, forget-me-not, morning glory, night shades, 
old world ground cherries, “cultivated jimson 
weed,” tobacco’s and matrimony vines. 
24. Personales: Cultivated mullein, toad flax, 
snap dragon, beard tongue, monkey flower, speed- 
well, trumpet flower, Indian bean and acanthus. 
25. Lamiales: Verbena, French mulberry, perilla, 
hyssop, thyme, sage, horse mint and dead nettle. 
26. Polygonales: Abronia, amaranthus, Iresine, 
goosefoot, orache, poke weed, knot weed and 
buckwheat. 
27. Podostemales: Include the river weed, rarely 
or never in cultivation. 
28. Asarales; Wild ginger, birthwort, &c. 
29. Piperales: Lizard’s tail, &c. 
30. Daphnales: Aligator pear, sassafras, wild 
allspice, leather wood, daphne, eleagnus and 
shepherdia. 
31. Santalales: The host trees of the American 
and European mistletoe, that they may be grown 
southward. So far, berries of the European kind, 
have failed for use in New Jersey. 
32. Unisexuales; in place of Quernales. Spurge, 
phyllanthus, jatropha, croton, acalypha, castor oil 
and boxwood. 
32 a. Elm, hackberry, hemp, hop, osage orange, 
mulberry, figs and plane trees. 
32 b. Quernales: Walnut, hickory, bayberry, 
birch, hazelnut, alder, hornbeam, oak, chestnut and 
beech. 
33. Salicales: Willows, broom crowberry and 
hornwort. 
34. a, & b. Coniferales: Pine, spruce, fir, hemlock, 
larch; bald cypress, cypress, arbor vitae, juniper; 
ginko and yew. 
35. Orchidales: Eel grass, frog’s bit, ladies’ 
tresses, rattlesnake plantain, rein orchis and lady’s 
slipper. 
36. Narcissales: Thalia, canna and bananaplants. 
3 6 a. Iris, blackberry, lily, atamasco lily, Ameri- 
can aloe and yam, &c. 
37. Liliales: Green brier, wild hyacinth, day 
lily, yucca, lily of the valley, asparagus, dog’s 
tooth violet, lily, wake robin, pickerel weed and 
spider wort. 
