January 5 , 18 S 2 . ] JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURE AND COTTAGE GARDENER. 
INDEX. 
ARELIA RUPESTRIS, 073 
Abies canadensis variegata, 133; 
Alcoqniana, 33 ; I’attoniana 
and concolor, 331 
Abutilons all the year round, 
322 
Aclilllca rigid a, 24.5 
Aconitums, good species of, 120 
Actiniopteris australis, 132 
Adhat.oda cydoni.tfolia, 543 
Adiantum aneitense, 132; 
Chveni,24l; cuneatum grandi- 
ceps and Latliomi, 330 ; farley- 
ense, in greenhouse, 536 
yEchmcas, treatment of, 18; 
Lindeni, 184 
A erides odoratum purpurascens 
404 
Aisculus californica, 83 
Agapanthus umbellatus, 359 
Alocasia Thibautiana, 108 
Aloes, Soccotrine and Barba- 
does, 140 
Alonsoa incisifolia,lo 
Aluine plants, rockery for, 349, 
404, 519,418, 457, 490, 5381 
Alternauthera paronyenyoides 
aurea, 244 
Amaranthus melancholicus 
ruber, 290 
Amaryllis Mrs. Garfield, 339 
Amateur’s holiday, 539, 579 
American blight, destroying, 
573 
Ammonia, carbonate of, v. 
snails, 624 
Androsace lanuginosa, 5 
Angriccum amabile, 199 
Anthurium Dickii, 199; Scliert- 
zeriauum, culture of, 262 'j 
Warroqueanum, 424 
Ants, destroying, 454 
Antwerp International Exhibi¬ 
tion, 150 
Apple, the Gooseberry, 19; The 
Joanneting, 93 ; useful, Lord 
Grosvenor, 201; Stirling 
Castle, 285; planting varieties, 
312; selection of, 314 ; King of 
the Pippins, 330; Warner's 
King, 330 ; Keswick Codliu, 
831; useful varieties, 331; can¬ 
kering and bearing, good and 
bad bearers, stocks for, 352; 
Warner’s King, early bearing, 
for market, pruning, 353; 
selection for dwarfs and 
standards, 314 ; early and late 
bearers, 382; Carlisle Codlin, 
Hambledon Deux Ans, The 
Baldwin,382; prolific varieties, 
early-bearing, Keswick Cod¬ 
lin, Lord Suliield in Corn¬ 
wall, 406; The Sultan, 409; 
The Queen, Washington, high 
price of, Peasgood’s None¬ 
such, 430 ; Margii, early bear¬ 
ing, 455; at Girtford, 471; 
canker, 489; for dwarf cul¬ 
ture, 465; proposed election of, 
557; select, 366 
Apples and how to use them, 
535 ; best twelve culinary, 544 
Apples and Pears, note's on, 
336 
Apricots, notes on varieties, 455 
Aquilegias, notes on, 52; for- 
mosa variegata, 266 
Aralia spinulosa, 9; spectabilis 
and spinulosa, 198 
Arbutus Andrachne,157 
Asparagus, waste in culture, 34; 
in heavy soil, 461 
Asplenium pterioides, 132; hor- 
ridum, 199 
Aster, Vilmorin’s Dwarf White, 
244 ; for cutting, 531 
Auricula,culture of, 78 ; Alpines 
from seed, 99; colloquy, 563 
Azaleas, early, for forcing, 387 ‘ 
cause of leaves falling, 413 
BACCHARIS HALIMIFOLIA ,402 
Bartonia aurea, 76 
Battersea Park, 339 
Bays, pyramids and standards 
at Liverpool, 179 
Bean, Leviathan Broad, 151; 
Ne plus Ultra, 269, 229 ; Cana¬ 
dian Wonder, tine examples 
of, 266 
Bee-keeping, pleasures of, 505 
Bees—dome-topped hives, bee- 
farming, 527 
Bees— 
Stocks in straw skeps, 19; 
supering,l8 ; alteration of sex 
in eggs, 43; moths in hive, 
destruction of queens, water 
for bees, transferring bees, 45; 
swarms uniting, 67; un¬ 
finished section boxes, The 
Moors, 91; preventing swarm¬ 
ing, 93; British Bee-keepers’ 
Association Show, 94; wooden 
foundation, Apiarian Show at 
South Kensington, 114; food 
for, mode of feeding, 116; Man¬ 
chester Bee Show, 119; un¬ 
finished section boxes, arti¬ 
ficial comb foundation, 137 ; 
notes on management,driving 
from supers, tiowers for bees ; 
Apis dorsata, drone pupa3,14U ; 
physiology of the honey bee, 
162 ; strong hives, 163; West 
of England Apiarian So¬ 
ciety’s Show, 166 ; driven bees 
fed into stocks, Ligurianising 
—a caution, 186; review of Mr. 
Cowan’s pamphlet, 187; re¬ 
moving supers, diluted honey, 
Holy Land bees, 188; Man¬ 
chester Bee and Honey Show, 
2tl; sugar in relation to 
honey, bee food, 231; exami¬ 
nation of hives, 253; Lin¬ 
colnshire Bee-keepers’ Associ¬ 
ation’s Show, 253; recollec¬ 
tions of the season, failure of 
honey in Scotland, 276 ; pre¬ 
parations for winter, feeding, 
298; contracting space of 
hives, 321; sugar-boiling for, 
321; development of queens 
and bees, 343 ; crude honey, 
driving and uniting bees, 344; 
golden syrup fer, 345; queen 
introduction and destruction, 
305 ; shows, contracted hives, 
poisonous honey, 366 ; not 
sealing syrup, 368 ; the bee 
tent at Manchester, contract¬ 
ing hives for winter, 388; 
starving, feeding, 396; shows, 
advantages of, the season of 
1881, 411; peculiar incident 
with a queen, 412; commenc¬ 
ing bee-keeping,ligurianising, 
shows, 436 ; bee farming, cla¬ 
rifying honey,459 ; bee-battles, 
British Bee-keepers’ Associ¬ 
ation’s Committee meeting, 
484; facts about queens, 549; 
wax-boiling, bees in Decem¬ 
ber, 550; design in honeycomb, 
571; British Bee-keepers’ As¬ 
sociation’s Meeting, apiarian 
appliances at Bath,572: honey 
as food, boiling wax, 591 
Beet, Turnip-rooted, 206; Chi¬ 
lian, 296 
Bedding plants, autumn propa¬ 
gation of, 170, 287 ; and the 
weather, 224; notes on, 475,523 
Begonias, tuberous-rooted, 14, 
82; culture, 20; Kichardsiana, 
uatalensis, and Schmidtii, 
82; Queenie, In3; Tuberous, for 
bedding, 284; Madame Du- 
mast and Countess of Kings¬ 
ton, 291; treatment of, 413; 
BEGONIAS— contin ued. 
Ivnowsleyana, 398, 565; sem- 
perflorens f grandiflora, 423; 
socotrana, 427,451; Madame rie 
Dumast, 432; insignis, 518; 
select varieties at Chiswick, 
525 
Belgium, a week in, 219,264, 333, 
567 
Berberis sinensis, 547 
Betlerhave crapaudine, 313, 425 
Birdlime, making from Hollies, 
178 
Birds, migratory, uses of, 681 
Blackberries, Ameriean, 309 
Blandfordias, culture of, 124 ; 
B. princeps, 125 
Blinds, Parisian chain, 65 
Boiler, the Loughborough, 251 
Boilers, prevention of furring, 
329, 395 ; V. water, 281.363, 419 
Border plants, list of, 188 
Borders, preparing for fruit 
trees,275 
Botanic (Royal) Society’s Ire- 
port, 473 
Bougainvilleas spectabilis and 
glabra, 92 
Bouvardias, treatment of, 20, 93; 
Alfred Neuner, 132; culture, 
139; jasniiniflora fiavescens, 
and Heine des Roses, 244 
Bouquets, making bridal, 188 
Boxes for exhibiting flowers, 
140 
Books, review of—“ Bulbs and 
Bulb Culture,” 402; “ Com¬ 
mercial Plants and Drugs,” 
35; “Manual of Injurious In¬ 
sects,” 63; “Pocket Guide to 
British Ferns,” 525; “Poultry 
of the Farm, the,” 214 
Brachycome iberidifolia, 413,469 
Breutham Park, 521 
Brussels Sprouts,The Aigburtli, 
375; large v. small, 538 
Bryn Glas, 422j 
CABBAGES, DESTRUCTION OF 
in Fifeshire, 10'; ElJam’s 
Early, 45 
Calantlies, culture of, 473; belia, 
542 
Calceolaria Pavonii, 337 
Calochorti, 15 
Cambridge Botanical Garden, 
notes on, 50 
Camellias, notes on, 75; shading, 
111,123,229 ; in Cornwall, 288; 
Belgian, 383 
Campanula Vidalii, 82, 153 ; 
notes on, C. turbinata and C. 
pulla, 103; macrostyla, 129 
Canker, cause of in fruit trees, 
372,385 
Canua virdiflora hybrida, 155 
Canwell Hall, 249 
Capsicum Little Gem, 246 
Cardiff Castle, notes on, 288 
Carduus eriophorus, 28 
Carnation Gloire de Nancy, 36 ; 
Mr. Hibberd’s lecture on, 65, 
81; select varieties, 69 ; from 
seed, 98,129; properties of, 188; 
National Show fixture, 335 ; 
Negro and Duke of Albany, 
542 
Carnation and Picotee Show at 
Manchester, 148 
Carnations and Picotecs, selec¬ 
tion of, 92; culture of, 155 
Carnations, National Show of 
at Manchester, 205 
Carrots, creosote v. the maggot, 
69; sowing and culture of, 74 
Cashew N uts, 592 
Cassia corymbosa, 309 
Castilleja indivisa, 2U9 
Castle Kennedy, notes on, 579 
Caterpillars, swarm oi,123 
Cattleya Chamber!ainiana, 132; 
gigas superba, 199 
Ceanothus Gloire de Yaite, 313 
Cedrns Deodara, 10 
Cedar forest of Lebanon. 451 
Celery, earthing, 272 ; Winches¬ 
ter Red, certificated at Ken¬ 
sington, 54L; Leicester Red, 
557 
Centaurea ragnsina Russelli, 
180 
Cereus pectinatus, 132; gigan- 
teus, 133 
Costrum aurantiacum, 451 
Chamostoma hispidum, 413 
Charcoal, animal, 485 
Cheirauthus alpinus, 171 
Chelone obliqua, 243 
Chelsea at Christmas, 586 
Cherries, manure for, 92 ; shed¬ 
ding fruit, 92 ; select varieties, 
26n; house and borders for, 343 
Chester Nurseries, 151 
Chestnuts, uses of, 367 
Chester-le-Street, 433 
Chiswick, notes on, 525 
Chrysanthemums, notes on, 89; 
disbudding, 174, 239 ; crown 
and terminal buds of, 254 ; 
in London, coming sho vs, 402 ; 
in Finsbury Park, 426 ; Rex 
Rubrorumand Lady Selborne, 
427; Pere Delaux, 450 ; clas¬ 
sification of, 465 ; late-struck, 
Madame Desgrange.472; Gold 
Button, 474 ; classification oi, 
561 ; exhibiting, ambiguous 
schedules,573 : culture,of, 583 
Chrysanthemum Shows—Rich¬ 
mond, 444 ; Croydon and 
Stoke Newington, 445; Lam¬ 
beth, Walton,and Putney,446; 
Kingston, 476 ; Westminster, 
478 ; Brixton, Bristol, 479 ; 
Tunbridge Wells, Hartford, 
Southampton, 481; Manches¬ 
ter, 482; Northampton, 500 ; 
Birmingham,502; Wimbledon, 
503; Wellingborough, 504; 
Liverpool,523; Newcastle,524; 
Alexandra Palace, 539 ; hints 
on culture, 544 
Chrysocotna Linosyris, 309 
Cienkowskla Kirkii, 36 
Cimicifuga spicata, 239 
Cinchonas in Jamaica, 314 
Cineratias and Calceolarias, 
cultural notes on, 240 
Clarkia Mrs. Langtry, 32 
Clematises for pots, list of, 19; 
reticulata, 547 
Clerodendron Balfourianum in 
small pots, 81 ; at Drayton 
Manor, 108; tricliotomum, 134; 
fragrans. 273 
Cletlira alnifolia, 263 
Climbing plants, 146 
Climbers lor walls, 299 
Clovenfords, Grapes at, 244 
Coffee in Queensland, 518 
Colax jugosus, culture of, 164 
Coelogyne Massangeana, 339 ; 
barbata, 542 
Coleuses, treatment of, 2; Edith 
Seutance, 180 ; Ada Sentence 
and Pompadour, 339 ; Colum¬ 
bine, 427 
Coleworts, notes on, 54 
Cockscombs, large, 223, 266 
Colouring white flowers, 260 
Coltsfoot wine, making, 2u9 
Columbia, forests of, 292 
Comfrey, culture of, 236 
Concrete walk, making, 69 
Conifers,propagation of, 215,262, 
319 
Cordon fruit tree training, 1 
Coreopsis lanceolata, 149 
Cotoneuster microphylla, 361 
Covert for game, 323 
Crabs, Siberian, 24.5 
Crinums at. Glasnevin, 218 
Croton Sinitzianus,29; C. rubro- 
lineatus, 36; at Aigburtli. 1“7 ; 
Stewartii, 198; Bruce Findlay, 
and Thomsoni, 199; Laiugii, 
427 
Crowea saligna major, 467 
Crittenden, death of Mr., 407 
Dioon edule lanatum, 339 
Crystal Palace, bedding at, 272 
Cucumbers in Africa, 66 ; dis¬ 
ease, 164; for wintir 2i7j 
disease of, 254; root disease, 
397, 454 ; iu winter, 549 
Cueumis prophet.a'-um, 181 
Cunonia capensis, 84 
Currants as standards, 207, 316; 
best of good varieties, 410 ; 
late, 431; Red and Black, 566 
Cuscuta reflexa, 184 
Cycas unduiata, 198 
Cyclamens, potting, 140 ; cul¬ 
ture of, 399 
Cypripediums Ainsworthii,por- 
phyrospilum,albo-purpureum 
and selligerum majus, 199; 
hybrids and parentage, 338 ; 
insigne,413; Spiceriauum, 499: 
spectabile. 592 
Cytisus purpureus major, 61 
DAHLIAS, liquid manure for, 92; 
single, 211 ; Pioneer, Miss 
Batchelor, George Rawlings, 
246, 266 ; Florence Brown, 
Joseph B. Service, 2G6; gla- 
brata, 285; Double-floret, 290 ; 
George Rawlings, 291 ; at 
Swauley, 313; Beautv, 339; 
lifting and potting single, 424; 
in pots, 448 ; Show, proposed 
national, D. imperiahs, 563 
Daphnes, grafting, 484 
Davallia gibberosa, 339; fijien- 
sis plumosa, 427 
Dendrobium splendidissimum, 
203; notes on, 209; aureum 
phillipinense, 290 ; notes on, 
403 ; Pierardii, 513 
Dianthus Napoleon III., D. 
Heddewigii, 135 ; Napoleon 
III., 283 
Dinner-table decorations, 555, 
580 
Dioon edule lanatum, 339 
Disa grandiflora, 179 
Dogwood, new Weeping, 291 
Domestic floriculture, 128 
Dominy, Mr., presentation to, 2, 
290, 835 
Draoama Lindeni, 198, 427,453 ; 
Williamsi, 199 ; green, 468 
Dracocephalum Ruprechtii, 209; 
speciosum, 329 
Dressing flowers, 36 
Ducks, Pekins, 370 
Dulwich House, Cardiff, 409 
EARTHWORM, Dr. Darwin’s 
work on the, 377 
Eclieveria secunda glauca, 287 
Echinocactus Wistizenii, 133 
Electricity and plants at Paris, 
24.5 
Endive, sowing, 74 
Englemannia pinnatiflda, 54 
Epidendrum vitellinum, 10; 
prismatocarpum, 50 
Epipliyllums for decoration,53 
Erythrina crista-galli losing its 
leaves, 20 
Euadenia eminens, 548 
Eucharis a n&zonica not 
flowering, 20 
Eulalia japonica variegata, 356 ; 
E. zebrina, 356 
