The Gardening World. 
CONTENTS. 
September 3. 1892. 
vii. 
Potatos, Beet, and Turnips, 407, 419 
Potatos, early, 386 ; early v. late 
planting, 289, 308 ; exhibition, 436 ; 
imported, 644; new varieties of, 
112; notes on, 6, 211 ; notes on 
some new, 170 ; weight of, per acre, 
74 
Potentilla chrysocraspeda, 647 ; ne- 
palensis, 742 
Preston Spring Flow Show, 472 
Primrose, evening, a miniature, 552 
Primrose, the wild Chinese, 305 
Primroses, hardy, 513 
Primula, a new shrubby, 83 
Primula floribunda, 369; Forbesi, 
257, 552 ; imperialis, 727 ; Kentish 
Purple, 242 ; obconica, 391; Sinen¬ 
sis Peach Blossom, 326 ; Sinensis 
Pink Queen, 326 ; Sinensis rubra, 
359; the old double white, 433 ; 
Veitch’s red-stemmed white, 391 
Primulas at Forest Hill, 420 ; Chi¬ 
nese, planted out, 356; double 
Chinese, 547; hardy, 519; laced 
Chinese, 369 
Prophet flower, 676 
Prunella grandiflora, 8 
Prunus sinensis flore pleno, 374 
Psychotria cyanocca, 307 
Ptelea trifoliata, 406 
Pteris serrulata gracilis, 647 ; tremula 
densa, 647 
Public and the, 784 
Pulmonaria angustifolia, 502 ; saccha- 
rata, 504 
Puschkinia scilloides, 530 
Pyrethrum Alfred Keiway, 661 ; 
Marie, 661 
Pyrethrums, transplanting, n 
Pyrus baccatus microcarpa, 824 
Q 
Quince marmalade, 24b 
R 
Radish, Veitch’s extra early forcing, 
456 
Railway Station Gardens, 337 
Rainfalls, heavy, 230, 736 
Ramondia serbica, 40 
Ranunculus cortusaefolius, 483, 517 ; 
Lyalli, 615 ; montanus, 582 ; specio- 
sus, 579 
Raspberries, late, 112 
Reading, Cyclamens and Primulas at, 
305 
Redleaf and Penshurst, 753 
Redleaf, early culture of the Chry¬ 
santhemum at, 708 
Reigate and District Chrysanthe¬ 
mum Society, 339 
Renanthera coccinea, 168 ; Rohani- 
ana, T36 
Resurrection plant, the, 340 
R etinospora obtusa lycopodioides, 241 
Rhododendron bloom, the, 608, 704 
Rhododendron balsaminaeflorum 
roseum, 610 ; campylocarpum, 529 ; 
Ceres, 71 ; Chamaecistus, 536; 
Collettianum, 615 ; racemosum, 
546, 629 ; Veitchianum, 582 
Rhododendrons, double flowered, 663 
Rhododendrons, greenhouse, 567 ; at 
Christmas, 258; hardy, 676 
Rhopaloblaste hexandra, 194 
Richardia africana compacta, 151, 
209 ; Elliottiana, 630, 656; Pent- 
landi, 691 
Richardias, on planting out, 615, 646 
Ricinus communis, dwarf varieties of, 
23 
Ripe Rot of Fruit, 67 
Rivina aurantiaca, 261 
Robinia, the simple leaved, 98 
Rock plants, 519 ; in bloom, 662 
Rockery at Lamport, the, 116 
Rockery, Messrs. Veitch’s new, 515 
Rodgersia podophylla, 695 
Rodriguezia secunda, 664 
Root hairs, 499 
Roraima, plant hunting on, 405, 420 
Rosa Beggeriana, 73 ; moschata, 743 ; 
rugosa, 488 
Roscoea purpurea, 790 
Rose Carolina Testout, 483; Clio, 
611; Corinna, 582 ; Crimson 
Queen, 610; Danmark, 483; Gus¬ 
tave Pigneau, 567 ; Gustave Regis. 
691 ; Lady Henry Grosvenor, 610; 
Margaret Dickson, 567 ; Souvenir 
de la Malmaison, 152, 183, 193 ; 
Spencer, 611 ; Tea, Princess May, 
648; the Macartney, 24 ; the Pyren¬ 
ean, 823; the Waban, 577, 582; 
White Lady, 582 ; a hybrid, 528 ; 
a new, 576 
Rose bloom in Scotland, 743 
Rose in autumn, the. 783 
Rose, the, in America, 774 
Rose tree planting, 208 
Rosehaugh Gardens, Inverness, 5 
Rosery, the, 75b 
Rose Show at the Mansion House, b88 
Rose shows, 679; selling flowers at. 
688 
Rose shows, the, 687 
Roses, novel method of propagating, 
803 
Roses, autumn, 65 ; climbing, 148 ; 
decorative, 259; for decoration, 
641 ; for town gardens, 243 ; hybri¬ 
dising, 736 ; in pots, 84; near 
towns, 466 ; notes on, 419 ; pack¬ 
ing, 708 ; on their own roots, 116 ; 
pruning, 390, 420; single, 488; 
some of the best new, 71 ; Tea, a 
house for, 8 ; Tea-scented, 33, 593 ; 
the Colchester, 720 
Rotation cropping, 770 
Royal Caledonian Horticultural 
Society, portraits of members of 
the, 20 
Royal Horticultural Society’s Jour¬ 
nal, the, 64 
Royal Horticultural Society, 288 ; 
Committees, 239 ; for 1892, 312 
Rubus arcticus, 582 
Rudbeckia purpurea, 806 
Ruellia Herbstii, 263 ; macrantha, 
199 ; 
s 
Saccharine, 227 
Saccolabium bellinum, 408 
Salvia coccinea, 82 ; pratensis Baum- 
gartenii, 743; sylvestris, 759; 
splendens Ingeneur ‘Cleveland, 
183 ; 
Saponaria officinalis, 806 ; officinalis 
flore pleno, 38 
Sarracenia Farnhami, 804 
Saxifraga Burseriana major, 374 ; 
cordifolia purpurea, 579 ; Fortunei, 
88 ; granulata, 614 ; sarmentosa 
tricolor superba, 359 ; scarellica, 
552 ; Stracheyi, 502 
Scabiosa caucasica amoena, 723 
Scale, mice eating, 56 
Scarlet Runners, 6 
Scilla bifolia, 435, 502 
Schomburgkia Sanderiana, 247 
Schizocodon soldanelloides, 487 
Science progressive, 67 
Scientific sentences, 695 
Scoliopus Bigelowi, 407 
Scolopendrium vulgare crispum de¬ 
corum, 35 ; vulgare digitatum 
majus, 630 ; vulgare crispum fim- 
briatum, 630 ; vulgare muricatum 
crispum, 35 ; vulgare peraferens 
Nepenthesioides, 35 ; vulgare ramo- 
inequale laudabile, 34; vulgare 
supralineatum Moona?, 34 
Schools, horticulture in, 465 
Scottish gardeners in America, 49 
Scottish Pansy Show, 675 
Scythe mowing, 769, 807 
Sea Buckthorns, the, 289 
Seafield, Ayrshire,132 
Sea Kale, 209, 385 
Seaside, Trees and shrubs for the, 
74 1 
Sedum Sieboldii, 134 ; spectabile, 38 
Seed growing on the continent, 802, 
817 
Seed harvest, the, 135 
Seeds imported to America, 672 
Seed warehouse, a new, 486 
Selaginella amoena, 24b; elegans, 
647 
Selaginellas, 342, 354 
Senecio Doronicum, 673 ; Kaempferi, 
758; macrophyllus, 710 
Service trees, Crabs and, 549 
Sevenoaks Flower Show, 808 
Severe weather in April, 529 
Sheep’s Fescue, proliferous, 57 
Shoreham Flower Show, 791 
Shortia galacifolia, 114, 502 
Shrewsbury Flower Show, 822 
Shrubs, forcing, 772 
Shrubs, common flowering, 647 
Sidalcea Candida, 673 
Silene colorata, 727 ; maritima flore 
pleno, 8 ; maritima rosea, 711 ; 
virginica, 680 
Silver Fir, rust of the, 99 
Sisyrhynchium grandiflorum, 530 
Small fruit culture, 64 
Smilax argyrea, 630, 657 
Smut, prevention of in Wheat and 
Oats, 515 
Snowdrops, about, 66 
Snowflake, the Spring, 435 
Snow, cost of melting with gas, 337 
Soapwort, the Rock, 696 
Sobralia leucoxantha, 24 ; Lowi, 776 ; 
Lucasiana, 696; macrantha, 552 ; 
violacea, 505 
Societies :—Acton Horticultural, 776 ; 
Crystal Palace. 25,105, 490 ; Devon 
and Exeter Gardeners’, 344 ; Dun¬ 
dee Horticultural, 21 ; Glasgow and 
West of Scotland Horticultural, 
227; Great Saughall Horticultural, 
791 ; Hawick Plorticultural Im¬ 
provement, 41, 97, 323; Manchester 
Royal Botanical and Horticultural, 
120, 344, 649 ; National Auricula, 
535 . 562 ; National Chrysanthe¬ 
mum, 40, 214, 225, 248 ; National 
Dahlia, 25; North of Scotland 
Horticultural Association, 120; 
Preston and Fulwood Horticultural, 
41, 96 ; Royal Aquarium, 120 ; 
Royal Botanic, 489, 568, 584, 616 : 
Royal Caledonian Horticultural, 
227; Royal Horticultural, 25, 57, 
89, 137, 168, 232, 312, 375,440,473, 
5 2I > 537. 599. 614, 648, 680, 759, 
790, 820; Royal Horticultural of 
Aberdeen, 120 ; Royal Horticul¬ 
tural of Perthshire, 97 ; Scottish 
Horticultural Association, 21, 97, 
166, 323, 515, 723; Sevenoaks 
Gardeners’ and Amateurs’, 344; 
Stirling Horticultural, 21 
Socrata exorhiza, 374 
Soil, is it inexhaustible ? 39 
Soils for plants, 419 
Soils, potting and watering, 210, 232, 
243 
Solandra grandiflora, 24 
Solanum Jasminoides. 424, 567 ; 
hardiness of, 440 ; robustum, 56 
Sophora Japonica, 24, 133 
South Devon Fruit Farm, the, 515 
Sparrow, the, 642, 663 
Spinkenard of the Ancients, 736 
Spindle trees, deciduous, 391 
Spirasa Aruncus, 711 ; bullata, 775 ; 
Bumaldii, 69 ; decumbens, 679 ; 
japonica compacta multiflora, 37 ; 
lobata, 758 ; palmata, 646 ; rotun- 
difolia alba, 96 ; Thunbergii, 457 ; 
Ulmaria flore pleno, 774 
Spiraeas, the, 69 
Spraying by horse power, 744 
Spring, a late, 482 ; the dry, 608 
Stachys tuberifera, 418 
Stanhopea inodora, 57 ; insignis, 584 ; 
Wardii venusta, 425 
Stapelia gigantea, 194 
Statice Butcheri, 775 ; latifolia, 822 
Statices and Dipladenias, 743 
Stauropsis Warocqueana, 505 
Stenandrium Lindeni, 630 
Stephanotis, fruiting of, 595 
Stevia Eupatoria, 50 
Stock, Princess Alice, 33 
Stocks, East Lothian, 134 
Stoke Park, Slough, 468 
Street Trees, 207 
Streptocarpus Ariel, 610; Mignon, 
610; Gaiety, 566; Nestor, 566; 
Sidonie, 566 ; Saundersii, 55 ; Rexii, 
floral variations in, 406; The 
Pearl, 566 
Streptocarpus, cross-bred, 771 ; 
hybrid, 293, 303 
Strawberries, 353 : at Chiswick, 724 ; 
early, 391; forced, 624; forcing, 
578 ’ 
Strawberries, manure for, 231 
Strawberries, on, 742; culture, 37, 
211 
Strawberry, Elton Pine, S24 ; 
Empress of India, 610; John 
Ruskin, 679 ; Laxton's Royal 
Sovereign, 691 ; Souv. de Madame 
Struelens, 145 
Sugar Cane, flowering of the, 514 
Sulphate of copper and the health, 
128 
Summer Solstice, the, 723 
Sunflower, Sutton’s Miniature, 73 
Sunflowers, 80; Conference on, at 
Chiswick, 102 
Sunflowers, perennial, 102, 118; cul¬ 
tivation of, 102 
Sunshine, ten years, 402 
Sutton & Sons’ Nursery, 805, 818 
Swan, Mr. W., presentation to, 784 
Sweet Briars, Alice Bridgeworth, and 
Lucy Bertram, 691 
Syme, Mr. D., presentation to, 628 
Symphoricarpus, the species of, 241 
T 
Table plants, 424 
Tacsonia Smythiana, 149 
Tasmanian Apples, 432, 528, 673 
Tea, something about, 279 
Technical Education, 483 
Technical Horticulture, 255 
Temple Show, the, 614, 627 
Templeton House, Roehampton, 199 
Teucrium pyrenaicum, 759 
Thalictrum aquilegifolium purpu- 
reum, 673 
Thrixspermum Berkleyi, 13b 
Thunia Bensonae, 728 
Thymus Broussonetii, 85 ; comosus, 
790 
Tiarella cordifolia, 614 
Tillandsia anceps, 504 ; hieroglyphica, 
471 ; Lindeni, 339 ; Massangeana 
superba, 566; Moensii, 566 
Todea barbara, 246 
Todeas in the open ground, 789 
Tomato disease in the Canary Islands, 
640 
Tomato, Flying Dutchman, 786; 
Royal Sovereign, 769; the Confer¬ 
ence, 824 ; the Strawberry, 487 
Tomato, the, 262 ; a fruit or a vege¬ 
table ? 52 
Tomato, the future of the, 560 
Tomatos, 211, 517 ; and the disease, 
292 ; an open-air trial of, 50 
Tomatos at Chiswick, 50 
Tomatos, effects of fertilisers on, 227; 
yellow, 113 
Town gardens, Roses for, 243 
Trachelospermum jasminoides an- 
gustifolium, 727 
Trachymene cserulea, 55 
Tradescantia Reginae, 520, 693; su¬ 
perba, 630 
Transatlantic “ Notions,” 661 
Tree growth, 752 
Tree, the value of a, 321 
Trees and Shrubs for the seaside, 741 
Trees in Parks and Gardens, 688 
Trees, ornamental, 497 ; street, 207 ; 
wall, 418 
Tregullow, Cornwall, 52 
Trentham Flower Show, 758 
Trichocentrum albo-purpureum, 137 ; 
triquetrum, 343, 408 
Trichopelia suavis, 457 ; suavis alba, 
5 2 J 
Trillium sessile californicum, 550 
Trilliums, the, 535 
Tritelia porrifolia, 564 
Tritonia caulescens, 691 ; crocosmi- 
flora, 9 ; Potsii, 38 
'l rollius europaeus, 646 
Tropaeolum Mrs. Clibran, 615; 
speciosum, 773 ; spit fire, 87 
Truffles, French, 292 
Tuberoses, 805 
Tulip, the florists’, 625 
Tulipa biflora, 550 ; Leichtlinii, 550 ; 
Ostrowskiana, 579 
Tulip Show, the Royal National, 596 
Tulips and Pansies, 671 
Tulips, a selection of good, 707 
Tulips for outdoor culture, 644 
Turner’s Memorial Prizes, 498 
Turnips, garden, 33 
Turnips, growing for exhibition, 424 
Tying, a new material for, 327 
u 
Ulmus campestris Uredii, 56 
Undulations in landscapes, 497 
United Horticultural Provident and 
Benefit Society, 454 ; annual din¬ 
ner, 118 
United States, horticulture in the, 152 
Urceolina pendula, 231 
Utricularia Humboldtii, 529 ; longi- 
folia, 529 
V 
Valeriana rotundifolia, 626 
Vallota purpurea carnea, 790 
Vanda caerulea, 57 ; caerulea, Sander’s 
var., 200 ; Hookeriana, 65, 120, 809 ; 
Kimballiana delicata, 57 ; lamellata 
Boxalli, 280 ; Lowii, 408 ; unicolor, 
120 ; teres alba, 616 
Variegated Plants, 497 
Vegetable Notes, 456 
Vegetable or Fruit, what is a ? 4 
Vegetables, 304, 816 ; certificated at 
Chiswick, 30; sowing early, 355; 
Winter, 355 
Vegetable wonders, some, 342 
Vegetation living without foliage, 161 ; 
Vegetation of Peru, 582 
Veitch firm, the, 800 
Veitch Memorial Prizes, 256 
Veitch's, Mr. and Mrs. H. J., Silver 
Wedding, 785 
Veitch’s Manual of Orchidaceous Plants, 
58 1 
Veltheimia viridifolia, 406 
