104 
Isaac Hicks & Son, Westbury, N. Y.— Index 
Index 
Fragrance, plants notable for. — 
Linden, Magnolia, Styrax, Balsam 
Fir, Pine, Azalea, Upright Honey- 
suckle, Lilac, Hardy Orange, 
Sweet-scented Shrub, Sweet Pep- 
per Bush, Syringa, Daphne, Rose, 
Clematis, Honeysuckle, Wistaria, 
Witch Hazel, Dianthus, Funkia 
subcordata, Lilium, Monarda, 
Narcissus, Thymus, Violet. 
Fungus, 93, 94. 
Geology of L. L, 55, 87. See 
Bibliography of L. I. 
Guthrie, Mr. W. D., 2. 
Garbage Can Screen. See Laun- 
dry Screen, Service Court Screen. 
Grapes, bagging and spraying, 99. 
Gravel, 73. 
Guarantee, 3. 
Hall, Japanese missionary, 74. 
Hedge Plants. — Beech, Hornbeam 
Magnolia glauca, M. stellaia, 
Cockspur Thorn, Arborvitse, Red 
Cedar, Hemlock, White Pine, 
Scotch Pine, White Spruce, Norway 
Spruce, Yew; Althaga, Japanese 
Barberry, Upright Honeysuckle, 
Lilac, Tartarian Maple, Japa- 
nese Maple, Hardy Orange, Privet, 
Rhodotypos, Sweet Pepper Bush, 
Boxwood, Holly, Rosa rugosa. 
Hemlock, in shrubbery, 52. 
Hemlock Hedge, old, for sale, 11. 
Hempstead Plains. How to in- 
crease value of for residence, 48. 
Hicks, Mr. John D., 29. 
Hitchcock, Mr. T., Jr., 6. 
Holly, how to raise from seed, 70. 
House Foundations, planting 
against, 41, 42. 
Insects, 94. 
Italian Garden, 9, 29, 30. 
Ivy, English, conditions for, 76. 
Japan and East Asia, plants from, 
21. 
Kitchen Screen, 2, 5, 6, 10, 16, 
28, 30, 32, 34, 40. See Screen 
Planting. 
Ladenburg, Mr. Adolph, 60. 
Landscape Architects, 4, 9, 10, 87 
Landscape Architecture, 4. 
Landscape Forestry, 4, 14. 
Landscape Plans, charge for, 3. 
Large Trees, how to order, 7 ; 
how to plant and care for, 8; on 
lawn, 2; up to 30 ft. by rail, 7, 8; 
cheap, — Catalpa, Silver Maples 
(19-21), Japanese Poplar. See 
price-list. 
Large Trees Moved. Density 
second year, 12. 
Large Tree-Moving. Success and 
and failure, 7; trip to inspect, 7. 
Large Pines and Spruce Moved, 
11. 
Laundry Screen, 6, 32, 34. See 
Screen Planting. 
Lawn, substitute on dry ground, 
73. 9°- 
Lawrence, Mr. John L., 25. 
Leaf-mould. See Mulch. 
Linden, small-leaved, 6. 
Locust, favorable to vines, 76; 
shrubs, Rhododendron, etc., un- 
der, 74. 
McAlpin, Dr. D. H., 34. 
Mackey, Mr. Clarence H., 1, 11. 
Magenta-color, 88. 
Maxwell, Mr. J. Rogers, 23, 43, 
45, 49- 
Mortimer, Mr. S., 9, 28, 29, 30, 
33, 83, 9 1 - 
of Landscape Problems, etc., co 
Moist Soil, trees and shrubs for. — 
Ash, Elm, Magnolia, Red Maple, 
Carolina Poplar, Willow, White 
Cedar, Yew, Button Bush, Red- 
twigged Dogwood, Marsh Elder, 
Japanese Pussy Willow, Holly, 
and many others. 
Mosquito Extermination. See 
Bibliography, 87. 
Mulch, how to hold, 71, 72. 
Nitrogen - gatherers. — Locust, 
Yellow-wood, Indigo Bush, Elseag- 
nus, Siberian Pea Tree, Desmo- 
dium, Lupin, Thermopsis, Lathy- 
rus, 56. 
Nuts, 16, 27, 51, 58, 101. 
Oak, Avenue, Mineola, on gravel 
subsoil, 25. 
Ocean Influence. Favorable to 
Privet, 35; unfavorable to Hem- 
lock, 35; map of ocean influence 
to test sewage pollution, 35; favor- 
able to English Yew, 51. 
Paths. — Grass vs. gravel, 92. 
Patrons, large-tree moving, 10. 
Payment, terms, 3. 
Phipps, Mr. J. S., 10. 
Plan, 5. 
Plant Breeders, 79, 84, 86, 96, 97. 
"Plant Thick, Thin Quick," 
23. 2 9- 
Planting, by our men, 3. 
Planting Season, relative unim- 
portance of, 3; how to lengthen, 3; 
large trees, 3. 
Play House of Weeping Mul- 
berry, 22. 
Poplar, Japanese, 27. 
Prices, 3. See price-list. 
Pruning, 3, 94; evergreens in June 
to keep dense and resist wind, 
38, 45; wild and collected shrubs, 
80; hard-wood trees, Oak, Beech, 
12, 24; Holly, 69. 
Pratt Estate, Glen Cove, 41, 47. 
Purple- and Red-foliaged Trees 
and Shrubs.— Japanese Maple, 
Barberry, Beech, NorwayMaple, 1 2 . 
Red-foliaged. See Purple. 
Red-foliaged Trees. See Purple. 
Regan, Mr. T. J., 52. 
Rhododendron, culture, 67, 71; 
relative shade and moisture re- 
quirements of Rhododendron 
catawbiense and R. maximum, 
72, 73; grouping colors, 71; purple 
shades, how to group, 67, 72; 
soils and places to avoid, 71. 
Ripley, Mrs. S. D., 41. 
Rose Bugs, how to overcome, 77, 
78, 79- 
Sand, bank, 31; pits, 40 (see Dry 
Ground, and Drought-resisters); 
how cover, 52 (see Drought-re- 
sisters, Dry Ground, Sea-side). 
Sand Dunes, 40. See Dry Soil, and 
Seaside list. 
Scale, spraying for, 93. 
Screen Planting, with low- 
branched trees, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 
14, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23, 24, 26, 32, 
33, 37, 4i, 42, 43, 45, 46, 48, 49; 
with shrubs, 52, 57, 58, 62, 63, 64, 
65, 67, 81; with vines, 74, 75, 
76; with Golden Glow, 91. 
Screen, Kitchen, 2, 5, 6, 34 (see 
Screen Planting); village, 11; 
large evergreens for, 8, 28, 29, 
30, 32, 33, 40,-42, 45, 48; small 
evergreens for (see price-list), — ■ 
Cedar, Pine, Spruce, Hemlock 
(see Windbreak). 
Sea Wall and Jetties, 31. 
tinued 
Seaside (See, also, Sand, Dry 
Ground). — Sycamore, Norway 
Maple, Red Maple, Plane, Ca- 
talpa, Wild Cherry, Poplar, Oak, 
Willow, Locust, Magnolia, Red 
Cedar, Pitch Pine, Scotch Pine, 
Austrian Pine, Pinus densiflora, 
Mugho Pine, Juniper, White 
Spruce, Concolor' Fir, Privet, 
Marsh Elder, Beech Plum, Rosa 
rugosa, R. Nitida, R. Wichu- 
raiana, Bayberry, Upright Honey- 
suckle," Tamarix, Holly, Choke- 
berry, Yucca, Virginia Creeper, 
Japanese Honeysuckle, Wistaria, 
Trumpet Creeper, Sea-sand Reed, 
or Amophylla, Cactus, 13, 33, 65, 
„ 76-79, • 
Seed-pods, rusty, how to avoid, 
64, 9 1 - 
Shade, what kind to avoid for Rho- 
dodendrons, 71. 
Shade-enduring Plants, — Dicen- 
tra eximia, Digitalis, Lily-of-the- 
Valley, 67, 84, 85. 
Shrubs, large and quick for imme- 
diate effect, — Althcea, Catalpa, 
Deutzia, Red-twigged Dogwood, 
Eloeagnus umbellata, Forsythia, 
Hercules' Club, Upright Honey- 
suckle, Tartarian Maple, Privet, 
Spircea opulijolia, Styrax Japon- 
ica, Sumach, Sweet Pepper Bush, 
Syringa, Viburnum, Weigela. 
Soil, carting good, unnecessary, 30. 
Spraying, 3, 93, 99. 
Stable Screen, 36. See Screen and 
Kitchen Screen. 
Stakes and Guys, inside cover. 
Substitution, 3. 
Swamp, See Moist Soil. 
Trees, Small -growing. — Androm- 
eda, White Birch, Japan Chest- 
nut, Dogwood, Hornbeam, Judas, 
Kcelreuteria, Magnolia glauca, 
M. Kobus, Styrax, Silver-bell, 
Cockspur Thorn, Arborvitae, Red 
Cedar, Retinospora, White Fringe, 
Tartarian Maple. 
Trees for Symmetry, — Linden, 
Norway Maple, Trimmed Silver 
Maple, 7. 
Tropical Foliage. — Magnolia, 
White Fringe, Aralia, Paulownia, 
Sumach, 18. 
Trees, quick-growing. — Catalpa, 
Elm, Larch, Linden, Liquidam- 
bar, Magnolia, Maple, Pin Oak, 
Red Oak, Phellodendron, Poplar, 
Willow, Tulip, Black Walnut, 
Red Cedar, Hemlock, Scotch Pine, 
Pitch Pine, Austrian Pine, Jack 
Pine, Pinus densiflora, Red and 
White Pines, Norway Spruce, 
White Spruce, Douglas' Spruce. 
True to Name, 3. 
Vines, succession of flowers and 
color, 74. 
Watering, 8, inside cover. 
Winter-killing, 67; California 
Privet, away from ocean, 35; 
California Privet, substitute for, 
63; Oak, from Philadelphia, 26; 
importance of local seed and 
matching climate, 50; of Euro- 
pean trees, 36, 46. 
Windbreak, 9, 11, 16, 28, 30, 32, 
33, 34, 37, 4o, 41, 42, 43, 45, 46, 
48, 49. See, also, Screen and 
Seaside lists. 
Woods, thinning out, 4, 14; feather- 
ing down newly cut, 14; planting 
in, 15, 36, 53, 57'- 7°, 7 1 , 8 4, 85. 
J t HORACE IUcFARLAND COMPANY, HORTICULTURAL PRINTERS, HARRISBURG, PA. 
