1914 

 THE CANADIAN HORTICULTU 



INDEX TO VOLUME XXXVII 



tog't \i J*"' 



Civic Improvement — 



Park Svstem for Small Towns 5 



Rochester the City of Parks 174 



Accomplishmemts of the High Park 



Horticultural Society 195 



Conventions, Reports of — 



Canadian Horticultural Association . . 2tJo 

 Dominion Fruit Conference Resolu- 

 tions • • ■ • ^' 



The Fourth Dominion Fruit Cornfer- 



ence • • ^^^ 



The Ontario Horticultural Associa- 

 tion '^^ 



Ontario Fruit Growers' Convention 294 



Editorials — 



Death of Alexander McNeil 12 



Hii>h Cost of Living 12 



The Front Lawn Problem 12 



Spraying ^^ 



Ontario Fruit 38 



Selling Fruit by Post 70 



The Jordan Station 7(i 



Big Business 70 



Planni.ng the Small Garden 102 



I'ruit Commissioner Wanted 102 



V Widening Vision 102 



The Improvement Tax 132 



Cooperative Principles 132 



Two Welcome Announcements 132 



The late Linus Woolverto^n 156 



.\n Entomological Division 156 



Civic Beautification 156 



I'nited Action Needed 178 



A Plea for Parks 178 



Fighting Orchard Pests 178 



More School Gardens 178 



An Kconomic Impossibilitv 200 



Protection of Bird Life 201) 



The Sod Mulch 200 



School Gardens 200 



The European War 224 



i:ifect of the War 224 



Ship onlv Good Fruit West 224 



Methods of The Future 248 



Civic Improvements 248 



The late Dr. Wm. Saunders 268 



A Lesson for Ontario '■ . . . 268 



A New Situation to Face 268 



• Signs of Progress 292 



The Middleman's Problem 292 



Ready for an Advance 292 



Fertilizers — 



Commercial 130 



Some Uses for Fallen Leaves 220 



Soil Sterilization for Ginseng 223 



Flowers — 



Home Culture of Chrysanthemums.. 67 

 Orchids — The Godess of the Flower 



Families 95 



Planting Roses and the Time 96 



Rose Culture 99 



The Culture of Sweet Peas 127 



Making Flower Beds 127 



Experimental Work With 128 



Art of Potting 129 



Summer Care of Roses 150 



Results from Home Grown Seeds . . . 152 



Chrysanthemums and their Culture.. 153 



Exhibiting the Sweet Peas 174 



Seasonable Paragraphs for the Gar- 

 dener 193 



Treatment of Calla/ Lily 194 



The Growing of Roses 196 



Modern Herbaceous Pasony 218 



Planting Notes for the Fall 241 



The Hyacinth 261 



The Hardy Border for Manitoba . . . 265 

 Floral Effects in an Amateur's Garden 285 

 The Best Roses for Amateur Garden- 

 ers 286 



The Charm of the Chrysanthemum . . 287 



The Sweet Pea : A Queen of the Annuals 289 



Fruit — 



Wrapped and Unwrapped Fruit in 



Boxes 3 



Apple Crop Prospects viii. 



Realty vs. Fiction in the Business ... 57 

 Cooperation in Marketing Apples ... 72 



Better Fruits at Less Cost 90 



Varieties of Currants and Gooseber- 

 ries 92 



The PoUinization of 124 



Admiinistration of the Fruit Marks Act 133 



Reducing the Cost of Production 145 



The Production of Gooseberries .... 146 

 The Culture of Raspberries and 



Strawberries 147 



Factors in Fruit Growing 148 



Tomatoes under Glass 156 



Successful Methods with Strawber- 

 ries and Tomatoes 154 



Cooperative Marketing of Fruit 134, 180 



Growing Grapes under Glass 189 



Exhibition of 213 



Modern Marketing Problems ; How 



we are Meeting Them 215 



Packing for Export 226 



Common Mistakes in Barrel Packing 



of Apples 230 



First Sales of Ontario Pr*-Cooled 



Fruit 233 



The Exhibition of 238 



Pre-cooling of 239 



The Barrel Packing- of Apples 240 



Packing for Exhibition aind Market 



216, 253 

 Should Fruit Inspectors give out Cer- 

 tificates ? 255 



Choosing Varieties of Apples for 



British Columbia 257 



Needed Improvement in Marketing 



Methods 259 



Protecting Trees from Mice and Rab- 

 bits 264 



Conditions in Winnipeg and the West 270 



Yield of Apple Trees at Different Ages 282 

 The Apple, The National Dish of 



Canada 284 



Fruit Business from the Retailer's 



Standpoint 297 



An Apple Consumption Campaign . . . 301 

 Apple Advertising Campaign Com- 

 mended 302 



Advantages of Cooperative Marketing 303 



Gardens — 



Of Bagnell Hall 7 



New Year's Plans for Next Summer's 9 



Pergolias in the > 35 



The Beeches 63 



Plans for this Year's 97 



Making a Lawn 125 



Of Cottesmore Hall . 149 



.'Vnd Lawm Hints for June 151 



Fall Notes for the Flower 219 



Simple Plans 221 



Fall W?ork in the 242 



Greenhouse — 



Suitable Types for Vegetable Culture 10 

 March Work in Indoor Garden and. . . 64 

 Managing for Profits 198 



Horticultural Societies — 



13, 39, 71, 103, 133, 157, 178, 201, 249, 269 



Hotbeds — 

 Concrete — and Cold Frames 266 



Insects and Diseases — 



The Apple Scab — How the Fumgus 



Spreads 1 



Plants and their Insect Pests 31 



Orchard Aphids and their Control... 59 



Fruit Tree Borers 122 



Orchard Aphids and their Control... 123 



Potato Scab 155 



Specific Diseases of Ginseng 176 



Fire Bligfit and How to Fight It . . . 191 



Garden Enemies 197 



Diseases of Ginsemg 246 



Cherry Fruit Flies 281 



Peach Canker 283 



Markets — , , 



" • * • 



Ontario and North-Wesf.,. . . .•;*.'*.vV.>**'S2 

 The Western Market fpt^titario Fruit '^H 



:::•• •::■ 



Nova Scotia — '••• •" 



• • 

 Cooperative Work ill ''the Annapolis 



Valley '.'■.. 1^. 



How Growers have <3v^^ome Trade •, '• 



Conditions '.'J / _.^ . , ...'.VqTd 



Success of Cooperative Effort iK*.»/.*a08 



