582 



THE GARDENEK 



Dec. i8Si. 



Potatoes, the Ixvst, 463. 



I'otatoes, Champion and ^higiuuii Ijo- 



mim, 560. 

 l''ottiiig material for Orcliids, 566. 

 Primulaj the Chinese, 78. 

 Private gardens, subtropical bedding 



in, 463. 

 Pruning Roses, 64. 

 Pteris umbrosa, 131. 

 Painfall in 1880, 91. 

 Rare hardy flowers, choice new, 24. 

 Reciprocal action, 229. 

 Room decoration, flowering plants for, 



52. 

 Root-cuttings, 147. 



Root inspection, the importance of, 570. 

 Rose— Is it red ? 466. 

 Rose-house, the, 97 — and pot-Roses, 



343. 

 Rose notes for amateurs, 126. 

 Roses on their own roots, 6 — pruning, 



64 — under glass, 301— to be seen to 



best advantage, 371 — manuring and 



digging among, 408. 

 Roses, Hybrid Perpetual, 64— Tea, 65— 



in pots and under glass, 65 — on the 



back walls of vineries, 551. 

 Royal Horticultural Society : February 



meeting, 132 — March, 187 — April, 



233— May, 281— June, 330— August, 



428. 

 Salads, winter, 346. 

 Scientific balderdash, 220. 

 Seasonable notes on florist flowers and 



bedding-plants, 84. 

 Showy herbaceous plants, 419. 

 Shrubberies, 312. 

 Solenum capsicastrum, 130. 

 Speddock large Vine, Dumfriesshire, 



407. 

 Standard plants, indoors and out, 417. 

 Stirling Horticultural Society's Show, 



423. 

 Stocks, East-Lothian, 420. 

 Stoking, 81. 



Storrs Hall Gardens, 39. 

 Stove Vincas, 390. 



Strawberries, 316. 



Subtropical bedding in private gar- 

 dens, 463. 



Suggestions for young gardeners, 276. 



Suggestions regarding the flower-gar- 

 den, 501. 



Sydney (New South Wales) Botanical 

 Ganlens, 360. 



Tabernoemontana coronaria flore-pleno, 

 309. 



Tea Roses on the back walls of vineries. 

 551. 



Tetrathica verticillata, 545. 



Tomatoes, their profitable cultivation, 

 485. 



Tropreolum, Worsley Hall variety, 281. 



Turnip, a good, 570. 



Vallota purpurea, 69, 187. 



Vanda spikes at Chatsworth, 187. 



Varieties of Calanthe Veitchii, 524. 



Vegetables, winter, 392. 



Vincas, stove, 390. 



Vine, notes on the, 273. 



Vine-growing in tlie open air, 362. 



Vines, &c., feeding, 339 — and setting 

 ]\Iuscats, 455 — low night-tempera- 

 ture for, 461, 483, 557, 560, 561, 564. 



Wall-borders in kitchen-gardens, how 

 to make the most of, 3, 55, 104. 168, 

 204, 256, 298, 364— remarks on fruit- 

 trees, 387 — Peaches and Kectarines, 

 512 — Pears, 552 — Plums, 553 — 

 Cherries, 553 — Red Currants and 

 Gooseberries, 554. 



AVeather, the, 92. 



Weather in the south-west of Scotland, 

 430. 



Winter, the late, 329. 



Winter .salads, 346— vegetables, 392. 



AVinter flowers, 539. 



Winter-flowering plants, notes on, 247, 

 448. 



AVinter's frost, efl'ect of, on evergreen 

 shrubs, 327. 



Young gardeners, suggestions for, 276. 



Zonal Pelargonium, Guillon Mangilli, 

 180. 



PRIXXED BV WILLIAM BLACKWOOD A>"D SONS. 



[L 



