JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURE AND COTTAGE GARDENER 
January 11, 1883.1 
V 
Abies Webb i an a, 33 
Abutilon Thompson!, 210; cul¬ 
ture of and varieties, 4«3 ; for 
winter, 531; new varieties of, 
575 
Acacia Farnesiana, 151; three 
useful, 403' 
Achillea Ptarmica flore pleno, 
229 
Aclumenes, selection of from 
Chiswick trials, 177 
Acrocliniums, double varieties 
certificated, 553 
Adhatoda cy(Ionia-folia, 511 
Adiantum cuneatum, 501 
rEschynantliuses, 315 
Agapanthus umbellatus, cul¬ 
ture of, 403 
Ageratnm Malvern Beauty, 177 
Allamandas, culture of, plagiar¬ 
ism, 99; 498 temperature for, 
676 
Allium sacculiferum, 175 
Alpine plants, selection of, 324 
Amateur’s holiday in Scotland, 
531 
American blight, the tar remed v 
536 
Ampelopsis Veitchii, 242, 305 ; 
A. sempervirens, 243 
Anagatlis tenella, 154 
Androsaces, notes on species of, 
156 
Anemones, planting, 259, 465 
Anthurium Andreanum in Co¬ 
vent Garden, 343 
Antirrhinum Uendersoni, 39 ; 
versicolor, 250 
Ants, utilisation of in horticul¬ 
ture, 80; destroying, 450,499 
Aphelexis, culture and varie¬ 
ties, 404 
Aphides, destroying black on 
Peach trees, 392 
Apples—1). T. Fish, syn. War¬ 
ner’s King, 151; The Cats- 
head, 157, 175; at Girtford, 3C0; 
crop in America, 249; the crop, 
277 ; Pott’s Seedling, 322; Itei- 
nette, Franclie, and Pine 
Apple Russet, 343 ; Lands- 
berger Reinette certificated, 
346 ; Lady Henniker, 364 ; 
variations in, 376 ; effect of 
liquid manure on old trees, 
386 ; for the north, 424, 474 ; 
Potts’ Seedling, 425; The Do¬ 
mino, 428, 449 ; Cellini, 436 ; 
American importations, 448; 
l’easgood’s Nonsuch, Ringer, 
and 'Tom Montgomery, 453; 
The Washington, 471; Lane’s 
Prince Albert,474; The Wash¬ 
ington, 500; for market, 511 ; 
Ringer, Tom Montgomery and 
Early Julien, 519; Lane’s 
Prince Albert, 520; Crab v. 
Paradise stocks for, 543; Ham- 
bledon Deux Ans, Hawthorn- 
den, history of, 601 
Aquatic plants, choice, 153,154 
Aquilegia clirysautha, 151 
Arums, 306 
Arundo conspicua, 153 
Araucaria, improving, 352 ; 
notes on species, 456, 966; 
cone of A. excelsa, 457; Bid- 
willi, 532 
Asparagus and Globe Arti¬ 
chokes, 271 ; Asparagus in 
autumn and winter, 447; 
notes on culture, 477 
Asperula hirta, 6 
Asphalt walks, making, 188 
Asters, selection of perennial, 
357 
Astrocnryum mexicanurn, 572 
Attaeus Mylitta and cocoon of, 
63; Atlas, 123; Polyphemus 
moth and caterpillar, 182; 
Varna Mai, moth of, 254 ; co¬ 
coon and caterpillar, 293; 
Yama Mai, 349 
Auchendrane, 574 
Auriculas, potting, autumn- 
flowering, 27 ; for borders, 34; 
Mrs. Douglas, 199 
Avocado Pear, 581 
Azaleas, watering, 67 ; destroy¬ 
ing thrips on, 92 ; for forcing, 
373 ; culture and varieties, 
404; A. narcissiflora, 498 ; for 
forcing, varieties of, 597 
BANANAS—value of as food, 321 
Barbacenia purpurea, 386 
Barberry fungus, 36J 
Barr & Son, partnership of, 
flowers exhibited by, 11 
Bass, death of Mr. Abram, 176 
Battersea Park, notes on, 315 
Bean, Bunyard’s Broad-podded 
Kidney, 175; selection of, 255 
Beckett House, 521 
Bedding plants, propagating, 
BEES— 
Artificial swarming, Norfolk 
Show, a professor of bee¬ 
keeping, 20 ; unsettled points, 
eating pollen, Show at Read¬ 
ing. Cheshire and Lancashire 
Association, 44; not swarm¬ 
ing, 46 ; prolonging lives of 
queens, bog heather for, 65; 
heather for on wet land, 90; 
standard frame, 92; driving 
stocks, prolonging life of 
queens, 113; Berks and Bucks 
Show, 114; autumn treatment 
of stocks, forecasts, 137; re¬ 
moving. supers from hives, 
139; autumn treatment of 
stocks, 161; glass v. tin for 
honey, equalising colonies, 
162; cold and food consump¬ 
tion, comb foundation v. feed¬ 
ing, Bee-keepers’ Associa¬ 
tion’s Show, awards of, 185 ; 
critique of South Kensington 
Show, Neighbour’s prize hive, 
209; a retrospect of season, 
232 ; the South Kensington 
Show, 233; driving and stupi- 
fying, Hertford Show, 234 ; 
Lancashire and Cheshire Bee¬ 
keepers’ Exhibition, 256 ; 
swarming v. non-swarming, 
257,333 ; Sussex Bee-keepers’ 
Association, 258; driving bees, 
260 ; exhibition at Dundee, 
the black bee and red Clover, 
Derbyshire Show, 282; honey 
crop of America, 283 ; notes 
for beginners, 333; in winter, 
plants for bees, 304; British 
Bee-keepers’ Association’s 
certificated teachers, 305 ; the 
Stewarton and bar-frame 
hives, 330,394; the Stewarton 
hive, preparing for winter, 
351 ; the Stewarton hive, 
thirty years’ progress, Wor¬ 
cestershire Bee-keepers’ As¬ 
sociation, 374 ; frame hives, 
meeting of apiarians, 895; 
hives and how to make 
them, 413 ; the art of bee-keep¬ 
ing, 435 ; prize hives at the 
Dairy Show, 435; purchasing 
stocks, 437 ; art of keeping, 
natural history of and social 
instincts, 463 ; costly hives 
and results, 464 ; plants for, 
486 ; hives, 486, saving bees, 
removing eggs, young and 
old queens, 5o9; art of bee¬ 
keeping, natural history, 510; 
profits of, 512 ; art of keeping 
queens, 534 ; antiquity of 
ri nging swarms,superstitions, 
557 ; hiving swarms, size of 
INDEX. 
■0 - 
BEES— continued. 
hives, overstocking, under¬ 
feeding, 579; the art of bee¬ 
keeping, the drone, 599 ; the 
Stewarton hive, 600 
Beetles v. Strawberries, 61 ; eat¬ 
ing Strawberries, 127, 217 
Begonias A. F. Barron, Mrs, 
Stevens, and Thomas Moore, 
39; gogoensis, 82 ; Tuberous, 
as border flowers, 120 ; notes 
on species of, 143 ; for bed¬ 
ding, 250; select ornamental¬ 
leaved, 222; large at Swanley, 
223; at Forest Hill, 224 ; win¬ 
tering tubers of, 425 ; sem- 
perflorens massiliensis, 429; 
at Swanley, 474 ; winter¬ 
flowering, 570 
Belgian horticulturists, visits 
to nurseries and gardens, 10 ; 
a week in—M. Fynaert’s nur¬ 
sery, 223 
Benevolent (Gardeners’) Insti¬ 
tution, Mr. Perkins’ appeal 
for, 99 
Berberidopsis corallina, 153 
Birch, origin of purple-leaved, 
437 
Biron, presentation to Rev. 
H. B., 364 
Blackberries, American, 375 ; 
theKittatiny, 474,519; Parsley 
leaved, 524 
Bog garden; 145 
Bomareas, notes on, 322 
Book, review of “Dictionary of 
Economic Plants,” 178 
Borders, small v. large for fruit 
trees,541 
Botanical phenomena, lecture 
on, 17 
Botanic (Royal) Society’s re¬ 
port, 15b 
Botany, “ The New,” 301 
Bougainvillea glabra, culture 
of, 590 
Bouquets, modern, 598 
Bouvardias, temperature for, 
394 ; culture of, 450 ; Alfred 
Neuner, 545, 571 ; President 
Garfield, 570 
Bramble, the Parsley-leaved, 391 
Brick-kilns v. vegetation, Mr. 
Foster’s trial, 176 ; trial on 
and verdict, 150 
British plants, two useful, 146 
Broccoli, Snow’s Winter and 
Veitch’s Autumn, 524 
Brussels Sprouts, Reading Ex¬ 
hibition, 542 ; the Aigburth, 
568 
Budding and grafting, influence 
of stocks and scions, 173,205; 
curious examples of, 206 ; fruit 
trees, 115 
CABBAGES — Wheeler’s Impe¬ 
rial, 101; and how to grow 
them, 176; preparing for 
winter, 426 
Cactus Jenkinsonii, 578 
Calanthes at Marston, 571 
Calla afthiopica, 578 
Calochorti, culture of, 601 [601 
Camellias, cutting blooms of, 
Campanula liederacea, 154, 176, 
199; pyramidalis in borders, 
223; C. pyramidalis, 276 
Canterbury Bells, 2 
Capsicum Little Gem, 476 
Carnations and Picotees, pro¬ 
posed show of at Oxford, 34 ; 
for towns, 55 ; Mary Morris, 
104; certificated varieties, 105 ; 
raising from seed, 106; layer¬ 
ing, 139 ; Gloire dc Nancy, 
150 ; Wakefield Show, 151; 
Mary Morris, 183 ; Duchess of 
Westminster, 198 ; Virgo, 273, 
296 ; treatment of, 661 
Carrot difficulties, 525; failures 
and the tar remedy, 565 
Carters’ Holborn Seed House, 
294 
Cassia corymbosa culture, 415 
Caterpillars on Oaks, 187, 297 ; 
in 1882, 246 ; destroying Cab¬ 
bages, 352 
Cattleya Whitei, 82 
Ceanothuses for bedding, 423 
Ccleriac, three-coloured, 476 
Celery, stimulants for, 45; in 
winter and spring, 553 
Charcoal as manure, 67 
Chenopodium atriplicis, 243 
Chermes abietis, 278 
Cherries, good varieties for suc¬ 
cession, cheap houses for, 74; 
house and varieties for, 393 ; 
the Morello, 474 
Clilora grandiflora, 32; perfo- 
liata grandiflora, 131 
Christmas and church decora¬ 
tions, 564 
Chrysanthemum La Petite 
Marie, 38 ; maximum, 251; 
coronarium, 348; in London, 
new varieties, 385 ; notes on 
annual, 393; fixtures of shows, 
Madame Desgranges, 428; La 
Nymphe, Sceur Melanie, 429; 
in the London parks and 
gardens, 430 ; segetum, 452 ; 
Lord Wolseley,Crimson King, 
M. Desbreux, and F. A. Davis, 
454 ; Mr. Henslow’s lecture 
on, 455; for decoration, 475; 
Soeur Melanie, 500; showing 
and dressing, 518 ; manure 
for, King of the Crimsons, 549, 
567 ; Dnke of Albany and 
Ceres, 553; proposed election, 
late white, Rosa Bonheur, 
570; Golden Circle, 571; Sceur 
Melanie, 575; growing speci¬ 
mens, 580 ; dressing and exhi¬ 
biting, 588 : white varieties, 
591; a specimen, 595 
Chrysanthemum Shows—Bath, 
Birmingham, 502 ; Bristol, 
484 ; Brighton, 501; Brixton, 
458 ; Canterbury, 484; Chester¬ 
field, 533; Hartford, 483; King¬ 
ston, 480 ; Lambeth, 459 ; 
Leicester, 500; Liverpool, 504 ; 
Manchester, 485 ; Northamp¬ 
ton, 503; Plymouth, 484; Put¬ 
ney, 460; Southampton, 460 ; 
South Shields, 532 ; Staines, 
504 ; Stoke Newington, 459; 
Tooting,483;Tunbridge Wells, 
48L; Walton, 483; Wimbledon, 
503; Westminster Aquarium, 
482 
Cinerarias, stopping shoots of, 
436 
Clarke, James, death of, 475 
Clay’s fertiliser v. slugs, 57 
Clay, burnt for gardens, 187 
Clematises in pots, 139 ; cocci- 
nea, 273 ; propagating, 511 
Clerodendron fallax from seed, 
208 
Climbers for conservatory, 21, 
162,436 
Coca, culture of, 200 
Coclilearia alpina, 52 
Cocoa-nut fibre for Peas, 320 
Ccelogyne barbata, 592 
Coleuses from seed, 195 
Comet influences, 533 
Commelina cafiestis, 243 
Comparettia macroplectron,fal- 
cata vera, 82 
Conifers for hedges, 559 
Conservatories in summer, 336 
Corn mildew, 368,369 
Cornus mascula variegata, 153 
Corydaiis glauca, 250 
Cosmos bipinnatns, 265 ; diver- 
sifolius var. atro-sanguineus, 
381; bipinnatus var. parvi- 
florus, 553 
Cottagers’ cropping, 53 
Cranberries, 178 
Crotons aureo-marginatus find 
Dayspring,38; Tliomsoni, 271; 
Eyrei, 347 
Cucumbers — pruning, tempe¬ 
ratures for, 43 ; The Cardiff 
Castle, 64; culture of for 
winter, 192; disease, 284; in 
America, 408 ; disease, eradi¬ 
cating, 423,470; curing disease 
of, 519; disease and high tem¬ 
peratures, 507 
Cucumbers and Melons failing, 
381 
Cucurbits, ornamental, 139 
Culzean Castle, 389 
Cunninghamia smensis, 553 
Cupressus Lawsoniana Silver 
Queen, 249 
Currant Black Champion, 202 
Cymbidium Mastersii, 388 
Cypripedmms, notes on hardy, 
good species of, 194 ; Arthur- 
lanum, 347; reticulatum, 364 ; 
calceolus culture, 415 ; sel- 
ligcrum majus and other 
hybrids, 429 
DAHLIAS—Gem, 82; single, 104 ; 
edges, 199; National Show, 
243; John Henshaw, Ruby 
King, and Christine, 255 ; 
White Juarezi and Glare of the 
Garden, 295 ; Harrison Weir, 
John Henshaw, 319 ; single 
at Tottenham, select varie¬ 
ties, 337 ; new varieties certifi¬ 
cated, 347 ; single varieties at 
Oxford, 344 ; viridiflora, 363 ; 
effective varieties, 387; notes 
on single, 427 
Daisies, single, quilled, 150 
Damsons, the Prune and Clus¬ 
ter, 474, 519 
Daphne Mezereum, propagat¬ 
ing, 46 
Delphiniums, good double va¬ 
rieties, 78 
Dendrobium superbiens, 410 
Dew, formation of, 404, 447 ; in 
hothouses, 499, 522, 544, 564 
Digging and manuring, 566 
Dracamas, propagation and cul¬ 
ture of, 577 
Ducks in garden, 46 
Dundee,proposed International 
Show at, 548 
Durdham Downs Nursery, 432 
EALING Nurseries, 225 
Earthworms in New Zealand, 
519 
Earwigs v. Nectarines, 163 
Eccrcmocarpus scaber, 331 
Echeveria l’eacockii, 79; win¬ 
tering, 199 
Echium albicans, 29; E. ru- 
brum, 77 
Edge Hall, 245 
Edinburgh and the Pilrig Nur¬ 
series, 339 
Edinburgh nurseries, 365 
Elaterium, 138 
Electric light and vegetation, 
235 ; for conservatories, 570 
Emigrants, a warning to, 224 
Epidendrum bicornutum, 465 
Epping Forest Naturalists’ 
Club, 249 
Ericas andEpacrises for winter, 
463 ; notes on, 545 ; Erica 
gracilis autumnalis, 581 
Erodiums, notes on species,109 
Eryngiums, notes on, 115 
Erythroniums, 292 
