October 5, 1889. 
THE GARDENING WORLD. 
79 
For Market and Private Growers, 
ORNAMENTAL TREES, SHRUBS, ETC, 
Descriptive CATALOGUES Post-free. 
! fHEAL&QONS 
y s y Crawley, W Sussex. 
The Carnation and Picotee, 
ITS HISTORY, PROPERTIES, & MANAGEMENT, 
With a Descriptive List of the Best Varieties in Cultivation. 
HON. SEC. and TREASURER of the CARNATION and PICOTEE UNION. 
THE GARDENERS’ 
ROYAL BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. 
N OTICE is hereby given that an addition 
will be made to the Pension List of this Insti¬ 
tution in January next. All persons desirous of 
becoming Candidates are requested to send in their 
applications, with Certificates and Testimonials, to the 
Committee, on or before SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 
9th NEXT, after which day they will not be received. 
Preference will be given to those applicants (or their 
Widows) who have been on the Books of the Institution 
as Subscribers for Fifteen clear years. Should there 
not he a sufficient number of these applicants to fill the 
vacancies, then the claims of those who have not 
subscribed so long, or not at all, will be taken into 
consideration. 
By order, 
EDWARD ROGER CUTLER, Sec., 
50, Parliament Street, London, S.W. 
October 1st, 1889. 
P.S.—Printed Forms of Application, and all in¬ 
formation, can be obtained from the Secretary. 
SITUATIONS VACANTAN D WANTED- 
To Noblemen and Gentlemen requiring 1 Land 
Agents, Stewards, Bailiffs, or Gardeners. 
TAMES CARTER &*Co. have at all times 
(J upon their Register reliable and competent MEN, several 
of whom are personally well known to Messrs. Carter. En¬ 
quiries should be made to 237 and 23S, High Holborn, W.C. 
Notice to Subscribers. 
T HE SIXTH VOLUME of THE gar¬ 
dening WORLD commenced with the number for 
Sept. 7th. The INDEX to VOL. V. was published with the 
number for August 31st. 
For Rates of Subscription and Scale of Charges for Adver¬ 
tisements, see below. 
Publishing Office: 17, Catherine Street, Covent Garden, W.C 
he Hardening B[orld. 
ESTABLISHED 1884. 
Price One Fenny; Post Free, Three-halfpence. 
Subscription (including postage): 3 months, Is. 8 d .; 
6 months, 3s. 3 d.; 12 months, 6s. 6 d., prepaid. 
Foreign. Subscriptions to all countries in the Postal 
Union, 8s. 8 d. per annum, prepaid. 
A red wrapper denotes expiry of subscription. 
" THE BEST PENNY GARDENING PAPER.” 
THE GARDENING WORLD 
I S published every Thursday morning, for Saturday, 
and can be obtained at the Railway Bookstalls, and 
through all Newsagents and Booksellers, or direct from 
the Publisher, on the following terms, prepaid :—For 
twelvd months, 6s. 6 d. ; six months, 3s. 3d. ; three 
months, Is. 8 d. (post free). Foreign Subscriptions 
(excepting India and China), 8s. 8 d. for twelve months, 
including postage. P.O.O. to be made payable to 
B. Wynne, at Drury Lane Post Office. 
Publishing Office : 
17, CATHERINE STREET, 
COYENT GARDEN, LONDON, W.C. 
SCALE OF CHARGES FOR ADVERTISEMENTS. 
Small Advertisements, solid type, 6 d. per line of about nine 
.^played Advertisements, per inch, 6s. ; per column 
™Z'i™ E) ’ £3 5 f' ; per half-page, £5 ; per page, £9. Special 
quotations given for a series. Gardeners and others Wanting 
Bituations, thirty words for Is. 6d., prepaid. e 
,t^ St ?I and ^oney Orders to be made Payable to B. Wynne, 
at the Drury Lane Post Office, W.C. 
ii o* Advertisements for the- current week, and alsc 
Mop Orders ’' must reach the office not later than iht 
first post on Wednesday Morning. 
PRICE, 2s. 6d., POST FREE. 
"GARDENING WORLD” OFFICE, 17, CATHERINE STREET, STRAND, W.C. 
NOW READY. A New and Cheaper Edition, Revised and Enlarged, of 
VINES & VINE CULTURE. 
THE BEST BOOK ON GRAPES. 
By ARCHIBALD F. BARRON, 
Superintendent of the Royal Horticultural Society's Gardens; Secretary of the Fruit Committee, &c. 
Chapter 
I.—Historical Sketch. 
II.—Propagation of the Vine. 
III. — Hybridising and raising Vines from 
Seed. 
IV. —Vine Borders: their formation, 
soils, &c. 
V.—Structures for Grape Growing. 
VI.—Heating of Vineries. 
VII.—Planting Vines ; when and how to 
do it. 
VIII. —The General Management of 
Vineries. 
IX. —Pruning and Training the Vine. 
eOKf E®?S. 
Chapter 
X.—Disbudding and Stopping the 
Shoots. 
XI.—Setting the Fruit. 
XII.—Thinning the Fruit. 
XIII. —Keeping the Fruit. 
XIV. —Packing Grapes. 
XV.—Pot Culture of Vines. 
XVI.—Fruiting Vines in Pots. 
XVII.—Pot Vines as Decorative Table 
Plants. 
XVIII.—Ground Vineries. 
XIX.—The Great Grape Conservatory at 
Chiswick. 
Chapter 
XX.—Vines on Open Walls. 
XXI.—Commercial Grape Culture 
XXII.—Diseases and other Injuries. 
XXIII.—Noxious Insects. 
XXIV.—Selections of Grapes for Special 
Purposes. 
XXV.—The Classification of Grape 
Vines. 
XXVI.—The Varieties of European Grapes 
XXVII.—The Varieties of American 
Grapes. 
PLATES I—XXX.—Illustrations of the 
best kinds of Grapes. 
Demy 8vo. HANDSOMELY BOUND in CLOTH, PRICE 5s., post free, 5s. 3 cl. 
“THE GARDENING WORLD” OFFICE, 17, CATHERINE STREET, W.C. 
PRICE, Is. POST FREE, Is. Id. 
TheChrysanthemum Annual, 
Edited by LEWIS CASTLE. 
-CONTENTS- 
Chrysanthemum Topics—Notes on Novelties—The Blue Chrysanthemum—On Dressing the Blooms—Notes 
from the West, the Midlands and the North—A Chat about Chrysanthemums—Wood Ripening—Manures for 
Chrysanthemums—Damping in Blooms—Chrysanthemum Sports —Mid-winter Chrysanthemums—List of Varieties 
Certificated since 1859—Chrysanthemum Societies, &c. 
“THE GARDENING WORLD” OF F ! GET 17, GATHERING STREET, STRAND, W.C. 
The Seventh Edition, revised and enlarged, price 3s. 6d., post free. 
CULTURAL DIRECTIONS for the ROSE, 
By JOHN CRANSTON, 
CONTAINING 
Every information relative to Rose Culture; a choice selection of all the finest 
Roses (fully described); . a select list of sorts adapted to various circumstances, 
situations, soils, and climates; a complete catalogue of varieties of Roses in¬ 
troduced up to the present time, and a 
CALENDAR OF OPERATIONS 
To be performed during each month throughout the year. 
“GARDENING W ORLD” OFFICE, 17, CATHERINE ST„ STRAND, W.C, 
Demy 8vo., Cloth Boards, with Twenty-five Illustrations. Price, Is.; Post Free, Is. 3d. 
The TUBEROUS BEGONIA, 
ITS HISTORY AND CULTIVATION. 
— CONTENTS — 
Introduction—-A Brief History of the Begonia Family—The History of the Tuberous Begonia from the intro¬ 
duction of B. holiviensis—The first Garden Hybrid and subsequent improvements—Propagation of the Begonia • 
1., By Seeds ; II., By Cuttings—Cultivation of the Begonia under glass—Double-flowering Begonias—Cultivation 
of late or winter-flowering plants—The new race of winter-flowering varieties—Begonias for Exhibition and for 
Be *\ n ?,, ut—1 ® eed Sa ™S and Hybridisation—The best form of Begonia House—Lists of Select Varieties, &c. &c. 
—And Illustrations of twenty-two species and varieties. 
"GARDENING WORLD " OFFICE, 17, CATHERINE STREET, STRAND, W.C., 
And THROUGH ALL BOOKSELLERS. 
