INDEX TO VOL. XIII. 



NOTE. — The various plants mentioned in the " 3fonth's Work'' and other general articles are 

 not indexed. Illustrated subjects are printed in italics. 



Adonis amurensis, 2 1 . 



Aethionemas, 88. 



AMiricultiival Experiment Stations of Canada, 171. 



Allotiueat observations, 23, 45, 62, 94, 110, 154. 



171. 

 Allotments and scliool i^ardens, 45. 

 Allotments, the common sense of, 61. 

 Allotments, demonstration, St. Stephen's Green, 



Dublin, 62. 

 Allotment notes, 144, 17.3. 

 Alpine and rock plants, 58. 

 Alpine knofweed, 140. 

 Anchusa, Dropmore var.. KM. 

 An arnxy honour, 157. 

 Aphides abietineae, 105, 

 Apples, brown rot of, 172. 

 Appointment, 1 51 . 

 Arboretum, the, 157. 

 Auhrietias, 80. 



Beans, haricot, 52, 73, 179. 



Beans of .sorts, 74. 



Beans, broad, growing with potatoes, 14. 



Bellflower, the Persian, 121. 



Berberis candidula, 153. 



Berberis Prattii, 12. 



Birds of the garden, 80. 



Bulb planting, 148. 



Campanula mirabilis, 139. 



Carnations, perpetual flowering, 144 



Catchfly, double white, 7. 



Cider fruit in food production. 176. 



Club-root, 14. 



Cratgegus orientalis, 154. 



Cyclamen Rohlsfianum, 36. 



Disanthus cercidifolia, 6. 



Dublin Corporation Land Cultivation Committee, 



26. 

 Dwarf Rose culture, 149. 



Economy in the use of vegetable seeds, 48. 

 Erinacea pungens, 91. 

 Escallonias, 101. 

 Euonymus europffius, 160. 

 Experimental planting in France, 170. 



February flowers, 38. 



Fendlera rupicola, 106. 



Floivering jjlanfs of January, 18. 



Flowers, wartime, 41. 



Flowers of ^larch, 53. 



Flowering plants in early spring, 68. 



Flowers of April, 70. 



Flowers of ]May, 86. 



Flowering shrubs in spring, 97. 



Flowers of August, 132. 



Flowers of October, 166. 



Food Control Committee, Irish, 26. 



Food Prodviction, 73, 147. 



Food supply, maintaining the, 120, 



Forestry, 2. 



Forestry question in Canada, 27. 



Forsythia, 80. 



Friends and foes of plotholders' crops, 24, 42, 



55, 76. 

 P'ruit culture in Queensland, 12. 

 Fi'uit industry, the, 27, 54. 

 Fruit j)reserving without sugar, 51, 75. 

 Fruit crop, the, 122, 121. 

 Fuchsia excorticata, 107. 



Gardening lectures, 28. 



Gardeners and foresters under the Department 



of Agriculture, 121. 

 Gentianellas, 40. 



Geranivims for the rock garden, 106. 

 Gladiolus tristis, 89. 

 Grevillea sulphurea, 6. 



Hedgehog broom, the, 91. 

 Herbaceous- border, making a, 8. 

 Ileucheras. 105. 

 Hippocrepis comosa, 107. 

 Home-grown seeds, 134. 



Irises, early floivering, 36. 

 Irises, intermediate, 90. 

 Irises, 107, 180. 



July Plants and Flowers, 120. 

 June flowers, 102. 



Laburnum, a hybrid, 168. 



Laurestinus, 180. 



La vat era olbia, 168. 



Ladybirds and larvje, 106. 



Lectui'es for plotholders, 8, 22, 44. 



Lime, functions of, 13. 



Linum salsoloides, 104. 



List of flowering trees and shrubs, 184. 



Lonicera fragrantissinia and L. Standishii, 48. 



Magnolias, Japanese, 65. 

 Alanures and fertilisers, 30. 

 Meconopsis nepolensis var. elala, 103. 

 Meconopsis Prattii, 103. 



Month's work, the, 15, 31, 46, 63, 78, 95, 111, 127, 

 142, 158, 174, 186. 



New year, the, 1. 



Obituary, 13. 110. 

 Old Conna Hill, 81. 

 Onion, the, 29. 

 Onion mildew, 91. 

 Ostrowskia magnifica, 121. 



