I isr ide: :x 
A. 
A Canine Graveyard 107 
A Plea for Centralizing Country Cem- 
eteries 2 
*A plea for the Old Style 107 
All Saints Day in New Orleans 10 1 
*Ancient Monuments— Artemisia and 
the Mausoleum 51 
Annual Convention of American 
Cemetery Superintendents 45, 74 
*Aquatic Garden, Pine Grove Cem- 
etery, Lynn, Mass 88 
Are we going from one Extreme to 
Another 79 
B. 
Burial Reform 13, 25 
c. 
*Calvary Cemetery, St. Louis, Mo.. . . 27 
*Cedar Hill Cemetery, Hartford, 
Conn., 116 
Cemetery Entrances ... 61 
Cemetery Greenhouses 126, 136 
Cemetery Memorials other than 
Grave Monuments 49 
Cemetery Notes 4, 20, 33, 46, • 
57, 69, 82, 94, 104, 1 18, 130, 140 
*Cemetery planting 6, 15,32,42 
Cemetery Reports. .9, 22, 47, 58, 13 1, 
• 33 > 142 
Cemeteries from the Sanitary View 
Point 50 
Chinese Sanitary Burial 106 
Common Law Dedications 1 
Correspondence. . . 10, 35. 72, 94, 107, 
119, 141 
Cremation 23, 48, 58, 96 132 
D. 
*Death as a Friend 38 
Decoration Day .’ 45 
*Dickson Memorial Chapel, Salem, 
Mass 41 
Dry Rubble Foundations 123 
E. 
Electric Funeral Cars 19 
Embalming as a .Sanitary Measure. ..122 
■^Entrance to Montefiore Burial 
Grounds, Minneapolis, Minn 21 
Epitaphs 144 
Extremes in Cemeteries 106 
F. 
^Fall in Graceland, Chicago 123 
*Illustrated. 
Forethought necessary in acquiring 
Land for Cemetery Purposes 110 
Foundations 83 
Funeral Customs of Ancient Nations 90 
Funeral Reform 109, 133 
Fungicides 50 
H. 
*Hardy Herbaceous Plants for Cem- 
eteries 67, 79 
I. 
Individual Rights and State Remov- 
als 98 
Injury to trees 17 
L. 
Lawn Grass 72 
M. 
Memorial Trees .* 41 
^Metairie Cemetery, New Orleans, La., 64 
*Mt. Auburn and some of its Famous 
Dead 89 
N. 
New Greenhouses, Allegheny Cem- 
etery, Allegheny, Pa 139 
o. 
*Oakwood Cemetery, Austin, Minn.. . 127 
*Oakwoods Cemetery, Chicago 52 
*Obelisks 55 
Ornamental Cemetery Monuments 
considered as Trade Fixtures 42 
P. 
*Pine Grove Cemetery, Whitinsville, 
Mass 114 
Planting and Good Planting 143 
Police Power of Stafes over Burial 
Grounds 70 
Power to take Land in Iowa 70 
Q. 
Question Box 1 1, 36, 48 
R. 
Removals from unpaid for Lots.. 70, loi 
Rubble and Concrete Foundations. ..113 
Rules and Regulations.. .8, 22, 35, 47, 84 
s. 
*Shrubby Herbaceous Perennials 91 
*Shrubs for Cemeteries 99, 138 
St. Johns Churchyard, New York 1 19 
*St. Roch’s Chapel, New Orleans 111 
*Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord, 
Mass 134 
Some Canons of Criticism 91, 100 
Some Parasitic Growths and Re- 
cipes for their Removal 80 
Some Rights of Officials of Cemetery 
Associations 127 
Suggestions to Lot Owners. . . .7, 83, 119 
Suitable Trees and Shrubs for a Mod- 
ery Cemetery 86 
T. 
*The Archer Mausoleum, Woodlawn 
Cemetery, Dayton, 0 5 
The Cemetery in the Country 2 
The Cemetery Superintendents Con- 
vention 60, 61, 66 
The Education of the Lot owner. . . .^ 97 
The Friends Burial Ground, Brook- 
lyn, N. Y 62 
The Garden 106 
*The G. P. Morisini Mausoleum, 
Woodlawn Cemetery, New York. . 129 
*The Houghton Monument 142 
■’''The Humboldt Monument, Berlin. . . 30 
The Law with regard to Removal of 
Bodies 44 
The Lily Pond 20 
The May Mausoleum 102 
*The Mather Monument, Lakeview 
Cemetery, Cleveland, O 43 
^The McKay Mausoleum, Pittsfield 
Mass 40 
The Modern Cemetery, a Social 
Force 63 
*The Patterson Monument, St. Louis, 
Mo 56 
*The Shaw Mausoleum, St. Louis, Mo 18 
The Soil of Graveyards. 68 
The Use and Abuse of Boulder Mon- 
uments 122 
Thoughts on Transplanting 9 
To Shakespeare 7 
Treasured Tears 46 
Trees and Shrubs — The Lawn 131 
V. 
Validity of Ordinance Relating to 
Places of Burial 134 
w. 
*Westlawn Receiving Vault, Canton, 
Ohio 92 
Women in Westminster Abbey 1 17 
*Woodlawn Cemetery, Toledo, O. . . . 102 
