Index. 



Dendrobium Johnsonse.., 123 



nobile. 139 



Allaniaiium 150 



nobilius i53 



Phaleenopsis 156. 343 



hoU'Ieuca 354 



sant^uincum ••-• 4^4 



speciosissinium 123 



subclausum- 504 



Wattii 53 



Dendrocalamus membranaceus. . . . 479 



Dendrolene 47° 



Deutzia ^-acillis for Easter 136 



Lemoinei 4°° 



parviflora J^4 



De Wolf, John, article by 34= 



Dicentra spectabilis 397 



Dichorisandra thyaiflora 45^ 



undata 5^4 



Dictamnua albus 254 



Dierama pulcherrima 34^ 



Dioncea muscipula 208 



Diospyros Vir^iniana 262='' 



Dipladenia Boliviensis. 49^ 



Dipiadenias, cultivation of 297 



DiplaiThena Morjea 104 



Dipterocarpacese 499 



Disas, hybrid 274 



Dock, Mira Lloyd, article by 7S 



Doing too much 291, 311 



Donlan, J. I., article by 398 



Doronicuni planta^neum 15 



excelsum no 



Downing, A. J., the debt of America 



to 211 



Downin^apulchella 256 



Downs, W., articles by 27, 76, 117 



Drennan, G- T. , article by 13^ 



Dracaena Baptisti 49^ 



Godseffiana 24 



magnifica 49^ 



Sanderiana 326 



Di-ac^nas 418 



E 



Easter, some flowering plants for.. 136 

 Eaton, Prof. Daniel Cady, death of. 2S0 



Echinacea angustifolia 367- 4^7 



purpurea 327, 407 



Echinocaclus Wislizeni and some 



related species 154* 



Egyptian antiquities at Giseh, col- 

 lection of tuneral wreaths and 



offerings in the museum of 312 



Echinops commutatus 297 



Elteagnus argeiitea 274 



longipes 23S, 437 



Electricity and plant-growth 60 



Eleusine .^^gyptiaca 103 



Indica 103, 430 



Elm-leaf beetle, fighting the -. 347 



Elm, White, in the north-west 53, 173 



the Penn Treaty 240 



El was. H. J., article by 98 



Endicott, W. E., ardcles by 16, 176, 



296, 316, 507 



Ephestia interpunctella 323* 



Epidendrum Stamtordianum 234 



Epigsea repens 15 



Episcia densa 454 



Eranthemums, the 516 



Eranthis hyemalis 124 



Eremurus in gardens 127, 266 



Erica pygmsea 229 



Ericas 499 



hardy 366 



Erigeron Canadense, a form of.... 213 



Erodiums, species of 193 



Eryngium Virginianum 363 



Eryngiums 314 



Erythraea armata 3SS 



Ery-thrinas, the 347 



Erythroniums ■ 176 



Eucharis Amazonica 86 



Lowii 253 



Stevensi 133 



Eulophiella Elizabethse 123 



Eupatorium purpureum 350 



Euphorbia coroUata 326 



fulgens 17, 276 



heematodes 358 



■ jacquiniceflora 17 



■ pulcherrima 486 



Euphrasia officinalis 213 



Euryale ferox 337 



Eurycles sylvestris 253 



Evergreens, tender, winter storage 



for 208 



Evonymus alatus 426 



Exochorda grandiflora 205 



Experimental farm in North Caro- 

 lina 299 



Experiment stations, bulletins of 



the 429 



agi'icultural 401 



Fagus sylvatica, 474 



Farm home reading circle, the 131 



Faunce, M.D., R. H., article by 249 



Faxon, C. E., articles by .52, 292 



Fernal, Merritt Lyndon, article by. . 28 

 Fcrnow, B. E., articles by.. 242, 467, 472 

 Ferns, cultivated, in Kew Gardens. 234 



for decorative use 456 



from spores 50 



Ferrocyanide potassium test 336 



Fertilizers, home-mixed 58 



Ficus elastica, propagating 7 



Fig-trees, in North Carolina 386 



Figs in Buffalo, New York 269 



Flora of a Long Island swamp 282 



Florida, effectsof cold in. .20, 30, 40, 70, 



130 

 Flower Company, the New York 



Cut 452, 462 



garden notes. . . . 127, 166, 197, 3S7 



markets of New York City, 



the wholesale 232 



show, spring, in Boston. ... 139 



Flowers, annual, novelties in 76 



at Christmas 10 



cut, for summer 116 



doubling of 448 



early 107, 129, 157, 178 



for Easter 160 



market, in private gardens. .. 118 



native, exhibition of 210 



popular, books about 201 



preservation of colors of 



driea 95, 109 



September wild 408 



some July 296 



wayside 193 



Folsom, Justus Watson, articles by. 383, 



392 



Fontanesia Fortune! 44 



Forage problem in Iowa, the 28 



Forcing-house notes 407 



Forest, a northern 282* 



• at Biltmore, Mr. Vanderbilt's. 481 



fires 242 



• in Minnesota 128 



of 



- schools in America, the need 



- trees in spring, American. . . 



191 

 131 



Foresters, why we need skilled . . 

 Forestr)' Association, the American, 



meeting of 3"9 



meeting of the American and 



New Jersey State Associations. . . . 229 



and abandoned farms 162 



at the Michigan Agricultural 



College 148 



British 8 



exhibit at Atlanta 449, 47° 



for farms 411 



policy in Germany 382 



summer school of 120 



Forests and rivers 37^ 



Califoniia, destruction of. .. . 490 



observations in 402 



of the national domain, the.i, 51 



—— of the Wabash Valley.t he. . loi* 

 importance of, to the Ger- 

 man people 180 



Fosterman, Ignatz, death of 150 



Fothergilla Gardeni 446* 



Fragaria Indica 193 



Franceschi, F., articles by 228, 38S 



Fraxinella 267 



Fraxinus Pennsylvanica lanceolata. 52 



Fritillaria alpina 188 



imperialis aureo-marginata. 208 



Fritillarias 216 



Frosts and fruits 4+8 



Fruit, an exhibition of, in England. 413 



as food 48 



drying, a representative rural 



industry 441 



■ farm, experimental, in Eng- 



land . 



- from English colonies 114 



- growing, commercial 48 



in California, new 



fields in 258 



rot 368 



tree, a valuable, for the high 



north 162 



trees, flowering 168 



Fruits and frosts 448 



and vegetables, adulteration 



of canned 68 



California 512 



does size affect flavor and 



color of 498 



keeping fresh 420 



Russian tree, in America.. .. 226, 



236 

 Fungus on Quince-leaves 160 



G 



Galanthus Caucasicus 188 



Elwesii 124 



and other species 144 



new and old forms 137 



Olgae Regince 477 



Galtonia candicans 343 



Galtonias 316 



Garden, accumulation in the — in, 199 



atWellesley, the flower 358 



color inlhe.. 321 



flowers for cutting 116 



in late summer, the 357 



notes 507 



Garden plants, some new S5, 503 



preparatory work for the...- 76 



sprmg work in the 146 



. (he flower 127, 166, 307 



the rock 205, 249, 256, 308 



[he vegetable 336 



winter, gift of 4 



work for early July . 276 



Gardening an outlet for vitality 42 



unnatural 361 



Gardens at Ventura 399 



autumn, suggestions for. . . . 391 



of Mexico, floating 431* 



old-fashioned 281 



railway station 429 



the social use of 342 



Gaylussacias 492 



Genista Andreana 229. 499 



Gentiana cruciata 297 



pneumonanthe 297 



saponaria 409 



Thibetica 297 



Gentians 397 



Geonoma acaulis 466 



Geranium armenum 367 



Mrs. Parker 348 



Gerard, J. N., articles by.. 18, 76, 85, 97, 



106, 107, 117, iiS, 137, 147. 157. ^^7i 169, 



178, 187, 207, 216, 228, 246, 267, 286, 317, 



327- 357- 368, 376, 3S6, 389. 4-^8, 416, 428, 



467 



Gerardias 363 



Gerbera Jamesoni 403 



Geum, species of 367 



Ginkgo biloba 45^, 515 



Gladioli 296, 3^7 



in England 373 



Gladiolus Brenchleyensis 343 



cifi-inus "- 144 



ti-ichonemifolius 144 



tristis concolor 74* 



Gloxinias 27,177,247, 276 



Goff, Prof. E. S., articles by.... 143, 155, 

 238, 292, 349 



Gold Thread, a search for 78 



Golden-rod killing horses 477 



Golden-rods, late-flowering 458, 499 



Goldring, W., articles by. . .364, 373, 394 



Goodrich, S. F- article by 299 



Goodyera pubescens 423 



Grammatophyllum Rumphianum. . 273 



speciosum 356 



Grape, Alice ^ 107 



belt, the Chautauqua 43S 



Campbell's Early 470 



Colerain 107 



growing in North Carolina. . 337 



the botany of 47 



Golden Pocklington 408 



Green Mountain 79, 3S0 



propagation of the 48 



trellis, the Munson 186 



Grapery, the 7^ 



Grapes, best, of the year 377, 387 



black-rot of 450 



in north-eastern Vermont... 96 



keeping fresh all winter. 45S, 499 



new 107 



thinning 157 



under glass 87, 496 



Vergennes and Moore's Dia- 

 mond 487 



Grapevine, a large 139 



Grass, Beach 412 



Bermuda 73 



Buffalo 193 



Grasses atWellesley 358 



troublesome, in southern 



New Jersey 103 



Greenhouses, work in. 417 



Grevillia Preissii 77 



Thelmanniana 77 



Gunnera manicata 54* 



Gynerium jubatum 444 



Gy nura aurantiaca 64 



Gypsophila paniculata 280, 337 



Gypsy moth in Massachusetts, the. 108 



13. 



Habenaria rhodocheila 274 



Habenarias 422 



Habrothamnus elegans 217 



Harmanthus Kalbreyeri 253, 288 



Katherinas 343 



Hale, J. H., article by 496 



Halsted, Prof. Byron D,, articles by 137, 

 158, 172, 518 

 Hardy herbaceous plants lor 



florists' use 360 



perennials . . . 327, 337, 366, 



396, 406 

 Harris, Dr. Robert P., article by... 457 



Harrison, W. H., article by 268 



Harshberger, Dr.John W.,aMicleby 239 



Hartman, C, V., article by 162 



Hatfield, T. D., articles by... 26, 46, 66, 



87, 116, 127, 136, 146, 167, 177, 196. 205, 



217, 237, 247, 256, 276, 2S7, 308, 318, 337, 



358. 367. 377, 397. 417. 427. 436* 437- 487. 



498. 517 



Havard, Dr. V., article by 203 



Hazels, the 344'*' 



Heath family in The Pines 492 



Heaths, hardy 366 



Hedychium angustifolium Gard- 



nerianuni 304 



Helenium grandicephalum 426 



Hoopcsii 246 



Helianthus multiflorus 116 



rigidus, Miss Mellish 403 



species of 360, 407 



Helleborus niger 167 



maximus 167 



Hemerocallis aurantiaca 304 



Dumortieri 265 



flava 264 



fulva 265 



minor 296 



Hemlock, Poison 172 



Hepatica angulosa 197 



Heracleum lanatum 172 



Herbaceous plants in Kew Gardens 313 



Herbariums, garden 242 



Heuchera sanguinea 225 



Hibiscus Caliiornicus 406 



coccineus 366 



■ Cooperii tricolor 376 



Moscheutos 360 



Syriacus 56, 355 



Hickories, diseases of 352-*' 



Highways, defacement by adver- 

 tising 480 



Hill, Rev. E. J., articles by 182, 193, 



213. 342. 382, 412. 422, 468, 503 



Hippeastrum brachyandrum 323 



platypetalum 417 



vittatum superbum 164 



Hippenstrums in England 173 



treatment of 56, 86 



Holcus lanatus 283 



Hollies, English 359 



yellow-berried 518 



Home grounds, plans for 241 



Horsford, F. H., articles by 7, 17, 37, 



47, 106, 276, 297 

 Horticultural instruction at Cornell 



University 420 



society, meeting of the west- 

 em New York.. _.^ 48, 58, 63, 79 



of Nebraska 



state 47. 57, 67 



Pennsylvania, new hall 



for the 340 



annual report of the 



Royal 93 



Horticulture, experiments in 90 



principles of 511 



schools of 21, 471, 50S 



Hoskins, M.D., T. H.. articles by.. 23. 



96, 226, 236. 246, 266, 28S, 306, 44S 

 House-plants, flowering, for early 



winter oS 



Houstonia ccerulea 95 



Howardia Caraccasana 24 



Hoy a carnosa 216 



Humulus Japonicus .... 117 



Hunnemannia fumaria3foUa 407 



Hunnewell, H. H., article by 209 



Hufchins. W. T., article by 188 



Hyacinthsand Grape Hyacinths.. . 169 



Hyacinthus amethystinus. i6g 



ciliatus 147, 169, 188 



lineatus 169 



Hybrids, garden 284 



Hydrangea quercifolia 334 



Hydrangeas, flowering, for Easter. 136 



Hydrocotyle, species of 362 



Hydrolea affinis 72 



ovata 72 



Hymenocallis calathina 297 



Cairibai^a 464 



Hypericum adpressum 415 



Moserianum 398 



tricolor 445 



Hypericums, some species of 346 



Hypophae rhamnoides 30 



Iberis sempervirens 228 



Idria Columnaria 503 



I lex Vomit oria 520 



Impatiens amphorata 403 



Sultani 106 



violacea 505 



Improvement Association at Narra- 



gansett Pier 308 



Incarvillea Delavayi 234, 246, 250 



Indian Com ^3 



Inga pulcherrima 154 



Insect pests 1S7 



Insecticides tested 187 



Insects, injurious, destroyed by 



birds 349 



injurious to fruits 79 



scale 244, 513 



Inula glandulosa ■ 264 



Iowa, conifers in =79 



Ipomcca imperialis 408 



Learii 3O0 



versicolor 428 



Ipomoeas ii"* 418 



Iris Hariwegii 323 



hexagona 3=9 



Japonica 3*^ 



Kochii 215 



. macraiitha 234 



Nepalensis Let ha 254 



■ orchioides 176 



