HORTICULTURE, 



Page 



Scranton Florists' Club 429, *459 



Seed trade 9, 35, 



70, 104, 167, 232, 262, 306, 342, 

 391, 430, 498, 530, 562, 595, 626, 

 659, 690, 722, 754, 786, 818, 849. 



—Catalogues received 136, 168, 262 



— Distribution, free 136 



— Sowing 200 



Send for one 298 



Shrub chat 457, 527, 



589, 717, 751. 



— And garden chat 692 



— And tree chat 813 



Sim plant, Some features of 423 



Simple faith and "sour" news 385 



Small fruits and their relation to 



the home garden 529 



—The outlook for 58i; 



Small lawns. Spring care of 587 



Societ}- of American Florists: — 

 — Banquet to Executive Board at 



Philadelphia 338 



— Hearing on express rates before 

 Interstate Commerce Commis- 

 sion '. 385 



— Department of plant registration 623 



—Ladies' auxiliary. 8, 296,623 



— *New directors 8 



— Vice presidents for 1907 134 



Society of Southern Florists 



162, 257 

 Soda in its relation to plant 



growth 181 



Southampton Horticultural Society 719 

 Southern Calilornia Horticultural 

 Association 054 



Page 



Spokane Fruit and Vegetable 



Grower:?' Association 526 



♦Stenanthium robustum 491 



Storer Prof., resigns 653 



Strawberries, Maryland, at James- 

 town exposition 815 



—Of Washington State *837, 842 



Sunlight problem, The 286 



Supplement, Colored 522 



Sweden's great botanist 681 



Sv/eet peas and dahlias as a winter 

 crop 193 



T 



Tamarisks, Two good 531 



Tarrytown Horticultural Society.. 



CO, 162, 294, 458, 622, 846 

 Temple show at London, The great 785 



Tennis court, To lay out 790 



Thou canst not say I did it 291 



Tightening of the ties 291 



Toledo Florists' Club 134, 296 



*Tomato, The 781 



Toronto Gardeners' and Florists' 



Association 258 



Ti-ees in city streets 461 



— Shade, Butchering the 717 



— And shrubs. Notes on 495 



Tribute, A fitting 21 



Tri-City Florists' Association.... 428 

 Tulip disease and its treatment. 



The 375 



—Display, Fairmount Park 721 



— '*Gretchen, Darwin 803 



—Usefulness of the late 809, 842 



Page 



V 



■^Vases as substitutes for grave- 

 stones 390 



Vegetable seeds. Sowing 833 



Vineyard apparatus. Prizes for.... 446 

 — Pruning the 523 



W 



Washington, D. C: — 

 — A few words for the Rose So- 

 ciety 196 



—Florists' Club of.... 63, 194, 493, 

 620, 752. 



Garden notes 786 



—Notes 376, 758 



Washington State, Fruit prospects 



in 566 



—Notes 590 



■^Waverley, Mass., F1"eld day at 434 



'"Wayside flower, A beautiful 845 



'*Welch Bros.' model establishment. 385 



Wholesome chestnuts 7, 66, 163, 



292. 346, 384, 425, 491, 525, 589, 

 653, 689, 724, 813, 845. 



Wide house question, This 11 



Widener conservatories. At the. . . . 292 



Winged friends, Our 811 



•^Winter and summer 521 



■^Wirth, Theodore 8 



COLORED PLATES ISSUED WITH 

 VOLUME V: 

 Oriental Poppy, Mrs. Perry; Hybrid 

 Tea Rose Dean Hole; Allington Pip- 

 pin; Rhododendron Pink Pearl. 



THE INDEX WHICH APPEARS ON THESE PAGES 

 HAS A VALUE BEYOND ITS ORDINARY PURPOSE 

 AS A GUIDE TO THE CONTENTS OF VOLUME 5. 

 IT IS, WE THINK, A STRONG PRESENTATION OF 

 THE VALUE WHICH HORTICULTURE IS RETURN- 

 ING TO ITS SUBSCRIBERS. CONSIDER THAT THE 

 ABOVE LIST OF SUBJECTS COVERS ONLY SIX 

 MONTHS— HALF A YEAR— COSTING THE SUB- 

 SCRIBER FIFTY CENTS. CAN YOU DO BETTER 

 THAN TELL YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT IT? 



