The Gardening World.] 
[August 26, 1899. 
CON 
A 
Abbotsbury, Newton Abbot, 505 
Abelia uniBora, 72, Supt. d. 
Aberdeen, Morningfield Nursery, 89, 
Abies, Douglasii pumila, 775 
" Abol " insecticide, The, 615 
Abutilon Swartzii, 621 
Acacia dealbata, 376 
Acacia tree flowering in Perthshire, 
74 i 
Acalypha godseffima, 379 
Acer Jublkei variegata, 7c; Negundo 
elegans, 38 ; Pseudo-Platanus ele- 
gantisiimum variegatum, 650 
Acineta colossea, 22 
Adiantum Capillus-Veneris imbric- 
atum, 476; decorum, 316; Faulkneri, 
70, 85 ; scutum, 525 
Affiliation, new, 292 
African Nursery, an important south, 
490 
Agathea coelestis, 411 
Age of the earth, 582 
Agrostis alba, galls on the roots of, 
245 
Ailantus glandulosa, a fine, 68 
Akebia quinata 199 
Allamanda Williamsii, a double, 348 
Alleluia plant, the, 390 
AlliDgton Nurseries, 75 
Allium neapolitanum, 13 
Alnus nitida, 166 
Alocasia spectabilis, ng 
Aloes, American, at Abbey Park, 793 
Alpine plants, 586; extreme temper¬ 
atures and, 149 
Alstroemeria aurantiaca, 12 
Althaea tota alba, 70 
Amaryllis, the (Htppeastrum), 330 
American Apple barrel, size of the, 
276 
"American Gardening," 212 
Ammonia and wood-ashes, 756 
Analine colours, 486 
Androsace lanuginosa Leichtlinii, 157 
Androsaces, 661 
Anemone blanda cypriana. 556 ; ful- 
gens, 589; King of Scarlets, 7; 
sylvestris fl. pi , 650 
Angraecum ichneumoneum, 119; ses- 
quipedal®, 555 ; Veitchi, 326 
Annuals, twelve good exhibition, 423 
Anthurium Perfection, 556; Veitchi. 
726 
Antipodean Fruit growers, 375 
Apospory by environment, production 
of, 411 
Apples, Adam's, 197 ; Allington Pip¬ 
pin, 53; Ballimora Pippin, 215; 
Invincible, 119 ; James Grieve, 184 ; 
Lady Pilkington, 379 ; (crab) Mrs. 
John Seden, 119; Sanspareil, 411 ; 
Seaton House, 396, 410 
Apple and other fruit trees, feeding, 
615 ; diseased, 135 ; graft variation, 
459; jelly, 525 ; monument to an, 
358; preservation, 52; tart, the 
microbe and the, 646; the Wolf 
River, 573 ; trees affected by grubs, 
572 ; trees cankered, 199 ; trees dis¬ 
eased, 279, 791 ; twigs diseased, 
445 ; with glassiness, 135 
Apples at Kelso, 85; cast away on 
Iona, 727 ; chemical composition of, 
228 ; cooking and dessert, 693 ; late, 
410; on keeping, 567 ; on their own 
roots, 68; some good, 313, 359,409, 
457, 646 ; storing , 485; to preserve 
Crab, 53 
Appointments,Brain, Mr. Samuel, 724; 
Cubbon, Mr. Robert, 20; Davis, 
Mr., 724; Ellis, Mr. George, 6; 
Ellis, Mr. William, 597; Gilchrist, 
Mr. John, 69; Hemsley, Mr. A., 
518 ; Hogan, Mr. J., 308; Humph- 
TEDSTTS OIF- “VOL. ZHTV. 
FOR THE YEAR ENDING AUGUST 26 th , 1899. 
rey.Mr. G., 469 ; Jackson, Mr., 308; 
Jennings, Mr. William J., 6; Ken¬ 
nedy. Mr. H. E., 374 ; Mackay, 
Mr. Duncan, 565; Mackinnie, Mr. 
William, 212 ; Mark, Mr. Frank N., 
182, 630; Masson, Mr. Chas., 244; 
Middlebrooke, Mr. W., 244 ; Milne, 
Mr. G.,69; Mitchell, Mr. James, 
6 ; NelsoD, Mr., 613 ; Reid, Mr. I. 
B, 244 ; Robb, Mr. A , 518 ; Sayers, 
Mr. George, 724; Scott, Mr. Alex, 
485 ; Stoney, Mr. J., 30S ; Swan, Mr. 
William, 741; Tallack, Mr. J. C., 
292; Thomas, Mr. Harry H., 725; 
Threlfal, Mr. J., 308; Turton, Mr. 
T., 292; Watt, Mr. David, 549; 
Websier, Mr. G. W., 597 ; Winnard, 
Mr., 308 ; Wright, Mr. Alexander, 
788; Wythes, Mr. George, 374; 
Urqutart, Mr. Alexander, 692 
Aquatics as Florists' flowers, 676 
Arabis procurrens, 316 
Aralia, an old woman's, 212 ; Sieboldi, 
139 ; Sieboldi in bloom, 252 
Araujia albens, 507 
Arnebia cornuta, 425 
Arundo Donax macrophylla, 775 
Arundinaria Falconeri, 573; nitida, 
121 
Ascott, Leighton Buzzard, in aut¬ 
umn, 147, 277 
Ashes, Lime kiln, 740 
Asparagus deflexus, 332; Sprengeri, 
279, 725 ; Sprengeri compacta, 263 ; 
Sprengeri seedlings from, 286 ; fas- 
ciated, 693; salting, 567; tooth¬ 
some, 694 
Aster Amellus Framfieldi, 139; the 
China, 425 
Asters, perennial, as bedding plants,54 
Astilbe japonica,'376 
Astilbes, hybrid, 381 
Attar of Geranium, 124 
Aubrietias and Arabis, 653 
Australia, botanising in Western, 196 ; 
flora of Western, 213 
Australian pasture grasses, 284 
Azalea Anthony Koster, 525 ; mollis 
Purity, 473; mollis x sinensis Betsy 
de Bruin, 506 
Azalea, culture of the, 123 
B 
Bacteria, co operation among the, 709 
Bacterial purification of sewage, 805 
Baker, Mr. John Gilbert, 630 
Balgownie Lodge, Aberdeen, 363 
Bamboo paper, 149 
Bamboos, hardy, 42, 361 
Bambusa, palmata, 473 
Barley competition at Ipswich, 182 
Barr, Mr., in America, 91, 249, 406 
Barron, Mr. Leonard, 724 
Beaufortia purpurea, 316 
Bed, a showy, 599 
Beechhill Nursery, 230 
Beech trees at Kew, 69 
Bee keeping, 772 ; a nuisance, 756 
Bee poison, 70 
Beet, Cheltenham green Top, 190; 
Red Globe, 39 
Beet in Kent, Sugar, 455 
Begonia coccinea, 414; Gloire de 
Lorraine, 219, 314; semperflorens 
flore pleno, 438 ; venosa, 277, 279 ; 
Winter perfection, 186 
Begonia, a curious, 53 ; leaf, longevity 
of, 325 ; monstrous, 200, 791 
Begonia, tuberous, Duke ot Devon¬ 
shire, 650; M. Wannot, 775 ; Miss 
Barbara Ray, 650; Miss Bella 
Tate, 650 ; Miss Mary Pope, 650 ; 
Mr. John Caulfield, 775 
Begonias at Newlands, Devon, 183 ; 
double, 105, 121 ; double, at New¬ 
ton St. Loe, 265 tuberous, and 
Swainsonia galegifolia alba, a bed 
of, 219 ; tuberous, from Bexley 
Heath, 118, 137; tuberous, in Nov¬ 
ember, 181 ; Ware’s, 649 
Belgian colonial horticulture, 534 
Belladonna, accident with, 293 
Bell & Bieberstedt, Leith, 25 
Bergamot, Calabrian, 583 
Bicton, Devon, 393, 444 
Birch bark, 276, 293 
Birds and petroleum, 536; the bad 
langu age of, 374 
Blackberries, 21, 134 ; or Brambles, 
the cultivation of, 67, 101 ; some 
desirable, 565 
Bladderwort, and its relatives, 117 
Blight from fruit trees, washing, 614 
Bois de Boulogne, 374 
Bonaparte’s gardens, Prince, 101 
Books: Forest trees, 78, no 
Books, Notices of : An Encyclopaedia 
of Gardening, 683 ; Anne Pratt's 
Flowering Plants, 810 ; Bunyard 
& Co's, Messrs. George, Centenary 
show, 116; Cactus Culture for 
Amateurs, 787; Chemical and 
other manures, 245 ; City of Bos¬ 
ton Department of Parks, 214 ; 
Culture of the Chrysanthemum, 
407; Elegy written in a country 
churchyard, 407; Familiar Wild 
Flowers, 742 ; Flora of Kent, 645 ; 
Fruit Culture for Amateurs, 227 ; 
Handbook of Insects Injurious to 
Orchard and Bush Fruits, 211 ; 
Journal of the Royal Horticultural 
Society, 315; Le Chrysantheroe, 
342 ; List of Roses nowin Cultivat¬ 
ion at Chateau Eleonore, Cannes, 
150 ; Markets and marketing, 708 ; 
My Garden Diary, 331 ; My Roses 
and how I grew them, 810; One 
and All Gardening, 1899, 396; 
Our Gardens, 788 ; Report on the 
Caine Agricultural Demonstrations, 
405 ; Sutton's Royal Seed Estab¬ 
lishment, 363; The Chrysanthe¬ 
mum, 300 ; The Culture of Flowers 
from Seeds and Bulbs, 90 ; The 
Farmer and the Birds, 182; The 
Garden Annual, 341 ; The House 
Sparrow, 549; The National Foot¬ 
path '.Preservation Society, 8ti ; 
The Story of the Farm and other 
Essays, 150; The Strength and 
Decay of Nations — Forestry, 522 
Bntanic garden in the United States, 
the first, 276 
Botanical Exchange Club of the 
British Isles, 750 
Botanising on hills, 804 
Botany, development of, 550 
Botrychium matricariae folium, 676, 
725 
Bouquets, preserving flowers for 
winter, 455 
Bracken, crested, 6 
Bradfield, Culiompton, Devon, 613 
Bradley’s Gardening, 486 
Bramble, cut-leaved, 503 ; wine, 236 
British grown fruit at the Crystal 
Palace, 72, Supt. a , 83, 92 
British Produce Association, 342 
British soil, fertility of, 229 
Broccoli from Cornwall, 583 
Bromyard fruit show, 125 
Broughty Ferry, technical education 
in, 166 
Bryn-glas, Newport, 122 
Buccleuch .bowling Club, 68, 117 
Buccleuch Nurseriec, Hawick, 330, 
474 
Bulbophyllum modestum, 682 ; nut¬ 
ans, 682 
Bulbs: at auction, 13; Carters’, 7; 
for the Glasgow parks, 85 ; for the 
London parks, 69; Sydenham's, 52 ; 
Toogood’s, 6; Webb & Sons’, 36 
Bulbs, America tries to grow her 
own, 358; and bulbous plants, the 
popular aspects of, 5 
Bunyard & Co's, Messrs. George, 
centenary show, 116 
Burnham Beeches, 692, 708 
Bush Hill Park Nursery, 710 
Bute Botanical Society, 116 
Butterflies in the Strand, 788 
Buxted Park, Uckfield, 324 
c 
Cabbage, a big, 53 ; Fly, the, 6x8 
Cacti, some beautiful, 796 
Cactus house, notes in a, 694 
Caerleon, 156 
Caladium A. Siebert, 743 ; esculen- 
tum, 72, Supt. d. ; Mdme. Jean 
Dybowski, 774 
Calanthe labrcsior, 215; revertens, 
263 ; sanderiana, 475 
Calanthes, 391 ; at Harleyford, Mar¬ 
low, 362 
Calceolaria Burbidgei, 459 
Calceolarias at Udston House,Hamil¬ 
ton, 697 
Calla Little Gem, 316 
Cambridge Lodge, Orchids at, 154 
Camellias, disbudding, 332 
Campanula species and hybrids, 791 
Campanula Warlev, 774 
Canadian fruit, 324; school of for¬ 
estry, 299 
Canary guano and other fertilisers, 
518 
Candle, a natural, 100 
Canna variegata, 428 
Carex, a reputed Irish, 455 
Carnation Agnes Sorrell. 682; Don 
Carlos, 682 ; Falcon, 682 ; Florizel, 
682 ; Galatea, 682 ; Galileo, 682 ; 
Goldfinch, 682; Heather Bell, 
743; Lady Gerard, 7r 1 ; Lady Rose, 
682 ; Lizzie McGowan, 557 ; Miss 
Alley, 154; O sian, 682 ; Rosalind, 
743; The Baron, 743 ; Trojan, 711 
Carnation craze, the, 646 ; gorgeous, 
new, 324; Mrs. Thos. W. Lawson, 
340, 438 ; Souvenir de la Mal- 
maison, origin of, 478 
Carnations, among the, 456 ; and 
Begonias from Wrawby, Brigg, 53 ; 
at Chelsea, 757 ; at Edenside, 730 ; 
attacked by Acarus, 571 ; diseased, 
571,727; from Kelso, 21 ; plate of 
new, 149 
Carruthers, testimonial to Mr. James, 
148 
Carnivorous plants, 630 
Carters’, Messrs , Vade Mecum, 261 
Caryopteris Mastacanthus, 139 
Castle Boro', Enniscorthy, 297 
Catalogues : Barr & Sons’, 209, 325, 
470 ; B. Wells, 598 ; Ed. Webb & 
Sons, 293, 375 ; Dicksons, Messrs., 
309; Drummond & Sons, 340; 
George Bunyard & Co , 69 : Hart- 
land, Mr. W. B , 325 ; J. Veitch & 
Pons, 276 ; Kelway & Son, 309; 
Newsagents’ and Booksellers' 
Union, 325 ; Sutton & Sons, 246, 
390, 789 ; Thos. S. Ware, Ltd., 101, 
341, 438 ; Toogood & Sons, 324, 
420; W. Duncan Tucker, 69 ; Wm. 
Wood & Sons, Ltd., 100 
Catasetum discolor, 4n ; rostrianum, 
monstrous, 727 
Caterpillais, 279; in the Mall, 772; 
music and, 788 
Cats, 156; in gardens, 789 
