The Gardening World.] 
CONTENTS. 
[August 31, 1895. 
Vll. 
Saintpaulia ionantha, 154, 216, 564, 
57 i 
Saladings, 520 
Salsafy, 141 ; and Scorzonera, 345 
Saltmarsh's Nurseries, Messrs., 773 
Salvia azurea grandiflora, 141 ; 
splendens, 141 
Sambucus racemosa plumosa fol. 
aureis, 634 
Sarcanthus pugioniformis, 118; 
teretifolius, 758 ; Williamsoni, 679 
Savin for effect and covert, the, 516 
Saxifraga Boydi alba, 533; burseri- 
ana, 57, 508 ; oppositifolia, 508 
Scabiosa caucasica, 389 
Scent of flowers, use of the, 757 
Schenley Park conservatory, 9 
Schizanthus pinnatus 667 
Schizodon soldanelloides, 620 
Schizostylis coccinea, 70 
Schomburgkia chionodora Kimballi- 
ana, 262 ; crispa, 503 
Schools wanted, 805 
Sciadopitys verticiliata, 297 
Science and practice, 597 ; bankrupt, 
is? 615 
“ Scientist," the word, 308 
Sc lly, the Daffodil trade of, 453 
Scorzonera and Salsafy, 345 
Scottish Pansy and Viola Association 
668,709 
Scurvy Grass, a new species of, 199 
Scutellaria formosana, 348; moc- 
ciniana, 72 
Scuiicaria Hadweni, 678 
Seakale and its culture, 152 ; forcing, 
220 ; in pots and boxes, on forcing, 
267; Lily-white, 296 ; propagating, 
168, 540 
Season, notes on the past, 188 
Secretarial dilemma, a, 309, 328 
Sedum acre and Lysimachia Num- 
mularia, 827 
Seed Merchants at cricket, 692; 
orders, and the seed trade, 404; 
sowing under glass, 453 
Seedless fruits, 667 
Seedlings, pricking cff, 564 
Seeds in America, distribution of, 
124; for exchange, 395; refusing 
to germinate, 199 
Sefton Park, Liverpool, 199 
Senecio Galpini, 27; giandifolius, 
319 ; macroglossus, 348 
Serrastylis modesta, 230 
Sevenoaks flower show, 811 
Shirley Poppies, 636 
Shrewsbury Floral Fete, 6, 841 
Shrubs, repairing losses amongst, 
484 ; with coloured bark, 420 
Sibthorpia europaea aurea, 635 
Small gardens, two flowers for, 76 
Snowdonia, a ramble through, 344, 
360 
Snowdrops, 11, 377; late planted, 
428 
Snowflakes, 220 
Sobralia Veitchi rosea, 694 
Soil, do plants eat ? 440, 467, 502, 
5 i 7 
Soils, potting, 181, 205 
Solanum Wendlandii, 667 
Solanums, berried, 261 
Solomon’s Seal, 620 
Sonerilla Mrs. Margaret Moore, 694 
Sophronites cernua, 134 ; grandiflora, 
374 . 47 ° 
Sorbus Aucuparia fructu luteo, 826 
Southampton Royal Horticultural 
Society’s show, 796 
Southend, vegetation at, 13 
Sow Thistle as fodder, Marsh, 743 
Sparrow, the, 375 
Spartium junceum, 730 
Spathoglottis Fortunei, 38; pubes- 
cens, 54 ; Veillardi, 246 
Speckled Roses be produced, how 
can ? 779 
Spider Orchid, the, 455 
Spinach, experiments with, 279 ; 
Long Standing, 678 
Spiraea arguta, 125 ; astilboides flori- 
bunda, 472 ; contusa, 473 ; lobata, 5 
Spiraea, herbaceous, 314, 331 ; 
shrubby, 297 
Spongioles and their functions, 454 
Spraying, advantages and amenities of 
259 ; effect of sprayiDg with fungi¬ 
cides, 259 
Spring Flowers, 500; in Hyde Park, 
549 ; the princes of, 499 
Spring gardening, 595 ; tints of leaf 
and flower, 563 ; the wild flowers 
of, 600 
Syringa pekinensis, 330 
Stanhopea inodora, 6 
Starling, the, 375 
Statice BondueJli, 827 ; profusa, 806 
Stauropsis philippinensis, 118 
Stephanotis, a free-flowering, 791 ; 
floribunda, fruiting, 238, 268 
Stock, a white perpetual 8 ; Princess 
Alice, 683 
Stock-taking in the garden, 5 
Stocks, Apple and Pear, 136 ; double, 
316; night scented, 314 
Stoking, 10, 345, 361, 380, 394 
•Stove, a new greenhouse, 393 ; in the, 
437 
Strandmillis, Belfast, 174 
Strawberries, harvesting the, 691 ; in 
Cornwall, early, 628, in pots, 
11, 156 ; Messrs. Cutbush & Son’s, 
709 ; Messrs. Veitch & Sons’, 709 ; 
new and old, cultivation of, 675 
Strawberry Monarch, 742 ; Rouge 
Ameliore, 827; Royal Sovereign, 
124, 698 ; Stevens’ Wonder, 474 ; 
trials at Chiswick, 700 
Streptocarpus Distinction, 678; 
Gratus, 485, 523 ; Laing’s Multi¬ 
flora, 742 ; Wendlandii, 61 
Streptocarpus, a fine strain of, 840 
Streptoselon Jamesonii, 666 
Strobilanthes isophylla, 269 
Studies, winter, 276 
Study, an interesting, 247 ; for winter 
evenings, a, 371 
Summer school of Horticulture, 677, 
725, 74t, 776; flower shows of to¬ 
day, 611 
Surrey flower show, a, 810 
Sussex horticulturists at Brighton, 
612 
Sutton & Sods’ annual excursion, 
676 ; " Bulbs for 1895,’’ 821 
Sutton Court Nursery, Chiswick, 555 
Swanley College, distribution of 
prizes at, 700 
Swanley, popular flowers at, 693 
Swan River Daisy, 27 
Sweet Briers, Penzance, 694 
Sweet Pea Blanche Burpee, 774; 
Cupid, 500, 699, 710; Emily Hen¬ 
derson, 69; Lady Grisel Hamilton, 
774; Mars, 774 
Sweet Pea, origin of the, 24 
T 
Talauma Candolii, 348 
Teaching the young idea, 4, 120 
Technical Instruction in Horticulture, 
at Chelmsford, 677, 725, 741, 776; 
at Wellington, Shropshire, 763; 
extension lecture at Dobcross, 821 ; 
Garden Lectures, 725, 757; in 
Surrey, 805 ; in the counties, 531 ; 
Scottish Horticultural Association, 
34 ° 
Temperature and germination, 199 
Temple Show, salient features of the, 
627; the, 616 
Teneflos, 341 
Testimonial to Mr. Wm. Dean, Bir¬ 
mingham, 180 
Thame, Oxon., 838 
Thistles, a plague of, 68 
Thornton Dale, flowers from, 88 
Thousand pound Orchid, the, 651 
Thunbergia grandiflora, 70 
Thunia Veitchi magnifica, 694 
Tigridia grandiflora aurea, 826; 
grandiflora immaculata, 826 
Tobacco water, 316 
Tomato All the Year Round, 571 ; 
Chemin,33o; Edmondscote Favour¬ 
ite, 779 ; Excelsior, 678 ; the Duke 
of York, 42, 58, 76, 774 
Tomato crops, 698 ; culture in the 
open air, 116; culture, successful, 
5"8 ; disease, 598 ; diseases of the, 
469 ; House, Swiss Nursery, Farn- 
ham, 729 ; notes, 21 
Tomatos, 811 ; all the year round, 
579 ; fur profit, how to grow, 312 ; 
ior winter use, 36 ; on the Con¬ 
tinent, new, 245 ; real English, 612 ; 
soil for, 330 
Tottenham, hardy cut flowers from, 
697 
Transplanting shrubs, 282 
Town Gardens, fruit trees for, 61 
Trachelium caeruleum, 827 
Trachelospermum jasminoides, 220 
Transplanting of hardy flowers, 21 ; 
of large trees, the, 504 
Travels, an Englishman on his, 792 
Tree culture, the advantages of, 164 ; 
Planting &c. in Wales, 426, 440; 
Trees and soil, 684 ; for town plant- 
ing, 99 ; the transplanting of large, 
5°4 
Trenching in the kitchen garden, 
204 
Trichocentrum hymenanthum, 75S 
Trichopilia fragrans, 70 
Trifolium pratense, phyllody of the 
calyx of, 583 
Trollius Orange Globe, 651 
Tropaeolum Coolgardie, 571 
Tropaeoluins in winter, 364 
Tropical plants, strange, 202 
Trowbridge, Fuchsias at, 8 
Tuberous Begonias, 729 
Tulip, the English show, 152 
Tulipa chrysantha, 125; concinna, 
123; elegans alba, 634; Gala 
Beauty, 634 ; Striped Beauty, 634 
Tulips, about, 25 ; three fine, 603 
Turnera ulmifolia elegans, 664 
Turnips, 822 
Tussilago Farfara, 490 
u 
United Horticultural Provident and 
Benefit Society, to8, 458, 660 
V 
Vaccinium Myrsinites, 361 
Vanda caerulea, 70, 376, 839 ; Fow¬ 
ler’s var., 840; concolor, 630; 
parviflora, 662 ; sanderiana, 839 ; 
tricolor planilabris, 758 
Variety in the garden, 732 
Vegetable crops and the frost, 549 ; 
exhibition, the proposed national, 
117, 276, 388 ; fat tree, a new, 631; 
imports, 524 ; notes, 118; seeds, on 
sowing, 311 ; show in 1895, the 
proposed, 84 
Vegetables, early, 676, 692; for winter, 
341; gathering, 280; storing of, 
165 ; the culture of, 469, 490, 506, 
523 ; the cultivation of early, 425 
* 442 
Vegetation at Southend, 13 
Veitch & Sons’Strawberries, Messrs., 
709 ; Memorial Medals, 676 
Ventilation, 540 
Verbena Aubletia, 84 
Veronica cupressoides, 74; incana, 
747; lycopodioides, 74 ; salicor- 
noides, 74 
Victoria Park,56 
Vine disease in Kashmir, 138 ; leaves, 
coloured, 120 
Vines, manures for, 487 
Viola, A. J. Rowberry, 710; Con¬ 
ference in Birmingham, 612 
Violas and Poppies, 661; size and 
form of, 243; sporting and re¬ 
version in, 711 
Violet and its relations, the, 581 ; 
Princess Beatrice, 458 ; the Cali¬ 
fornian, 699 
Violets in winter, 103 ; for winter, 
188 
w 
Walk in the country, 24, 44, 712 
Walking leaves of Australia, 631 
Wallflowers, 667 ; two good, 636 
Walls, the covering of bare, 60 
Waltham Horticultural Society’s 
show,812 
Waste ground and neglected gardens, 
119 
Water-colour and oil painting, 
flowers in, 581 
Water Spreader, a handy, 580, 635 
Wayside Ireland, 197, 217 
Wayside thoughts, some: mostly 
floral, 555, 570 
Weather contrast, a, 389 ; the severe, 
395 
Weeds, 26; common garden, 714; 
killing, 698 
West of Scotland Rosarian Society, 
764 _ 
What is a plant, 3 
Wild Birds, protection of, 519; 
flowers of spring, the, 600 ; flowers, 
only a few, 632, 645 
William Thomson Memorial Fund, 
500 
Window, a pretty, 827 ; boxes, the 
filling of, 666 ; gardening, 140, 328, 
348, 378 ; plants, 44 
Windsor, Eton and District Rose 
show, 716 
Winter, another phase of the mild, 
211 ; evenings, a study for, 371 
Woking Nursery, 89 
Woodbridge Horticultural Society, 
748 
Woodlands and vegetation, 119 
Wood Lilies, 773 
Wood-pulp mosaics, 452 
World’s Fair Medals, the, 667 
Worthing Horticultural Society, 747 
Wreath making, 138, 603 
Y 
Yellows, the, 58 
York Florists, Ancient Society of, 
331 ; Gala, memories of, 713 ; 
Nurseries, alpines at the, 712 
Yucca gloriosa, flowering of, in Aber¬ 
deenshire, 52 
z 
Zephyranthes carminata, 74 
Zinnias, double, 811 
Zonal Pelargoniums for winter 
flowering, 648 
