December 30th, 1905. 
• T 
1938 
THIHj 
GARDENING WORLD 
An Illustrated Journal for all Lovers of Gardening. 
YOL. 3Z3III- 
(NEW SERIES.) 
JANUARY 7th to DECEMBER 30th, 1905. 
Abutilons, 348; for garden and green¬ 
house, 903 
Acacia hastulata, 200; platyptera, 91" 
Acacias as decorative plants, 398; in¬ 
bloom, 122 
Acalypha hispida, 135 
Achimenes, 330 
Aeonitum pyrenaicum, 37 
Actinidia polygama, 422 
Adiantum farleyense, 14, 583, 802 
Adiantums and their culture, 572 
Adonis amurensis flore pleno, 228 
Agave americana, 91; dasylirioides, 29 
Aldenham House, subtropical border 
at, 121 
Alpine plants and how to grow them, 
524 
Amaryllis, 72; stove, 220 
Amateur’s letter to amateurs, 633, 651, 
669, 687, 705, 722, 739, 760, 777, 811, 
827 , 843, 859 , 877, 895 , 913, 931, 949 
American blight on Apple trees, 644, 
852 
Andrews, Mr. John, 565 
Androsaces, the, 26 
Anemone blanda atrocaerulea, 312; 
japonica, 621; intermedia, 247; the 
Peacock, 624 
Angraecum sesquipedale, 179 
Annuals for indoor blooming, 499; 
handy, 181, 241, 283, 307; pot, 330, 
350 
Anoiganthus breviflorus, 433 
Antherieum Arethusa, 644 
Anthurium scherzerianum Geant Sang- 
lant, 317 
Ants and fruit, 803 
Apple, Crawley Reinette, 56; Berks 
Pearmain, 32; Bismarck, 818; Bram- 
ley’s Seedling, 818; Flower of 
Kent, 122; Mere de Menage, 112 
Apple and Pear Trees, 869; that seed¬ 
less, 218, 409 
Apple9 for market, 337; in pots, 202; 
six choice, 818; unhealthy, 649, 680 
Apprenticed to horticulture, to be, or 
not to be, 134, 182, 208, 221, 245, 258, 
292, 308, 328, 358, 371, 393, 422 
Arabis, two new varieties of, 87 
Arbutus or Strawberry tree, 471 
Arctostaphylos TJva-ursi, 531 
Arethusa bulbosa, 134 
Aristea corymbosa, 905 
Artichoke, Globe, 851 
Asparagus, forcing, 942; forwarding, 
347 
Asperula suberosa, 463 
Aster alpinus superbus, 642; amel- 
loides, 941; Amellus, 868; diffusus 
horizontalis. 886; Novi-Belgii densus, 
904; Novi-Belgii grandiflorus, 941; 
subcaeruleus, 610; vimineus, 904 
Asters, 972, 993 
Astilbe chinensis, 748; Davidii, 263; 
grandis, 621 
Asystasia bella, 508 
Aubrietia deltoidea grandiflora, 478; 
deltoidea Leichtlinii, 784; Dr. Mules, 
271 
Aunicula, Crowther, Mrs. H. O., 381; 
Daffodil, 317; Dean, Richard, 381; 
Favourite, 317; Mikado, The, 362; 
Rifleman, 405; Smith, William, 381; 
Standard Bearer, 317; Testa, 405; 
Winifred, Miss, 381 
Auriculas or Dusty Millers, 478; for 
amateurs, 565 
Azalea indica Hexe, 279; Julius 
Roehrs, 500 
Beans, Scarlet Runner, 270, 667, 698 
787 
Bear Place, 685 
Beds, basket, 330 
Begonia; Carnot, President, 609; 
Feamley, Sanden, 697; Gloire de 
Lorraine, 17, 263, 993; Granby, 
Mme., 556 
Begonias, a bed of, 494; at Bexley 
Heath, 836; bedding effects, 865; 
evergreen, 627; from West Norwood, 
838 
Begonia (tuberous), 836; Patti, Mme. 
A„ 500 
Beetroot, lifting and storing, 815 
Belamcanda punctata, 92 
Bellflowers for the border, 788 
Beilis annua, 608; rotundifolia caeru- 
lescens, 901 
Berberds Aquifolium at home, 136; 
japonica. 257 ; stenophylla, 415 
Bird life in field and garden, 955 
Blechnum Spicant variegated, 425 
Bletia hyacinthira alba, 478 
Bluebells, three. 530 
Books: A Gardener’s Tear, 41, 75, 
293; Cassell’s Popular Gardening, 
166; Clay’s Successful Gardening, 
890; Flowers and Fruit for the 
Home, 166; Handbook on Pruning 
Roses, 203; Harmsworth Encyclo¬ 
paedia, 228; Journal of the Kew 
Guild, 11; London Street Guide, 
255; Management of Lawns, 166; 
Manual of British Botany, 141; My 
Garden Diary for 1905, 23; My New 
Zealand Garden, 232, 311; Peat and 
its Products, 195; Pictorial Practical 
Tree and Shrub Culture, 304; Pigs 
for Profit, 18; Poisonous Plants of 
all Countries, 377; Pnactical Hints 
on Fruit Farming, 392; Practical 
Hints on Vegetable Farming, 392; 
Species and Varieties, 223; Sum¬ 
mary of Horticultural Lectures, 
392; The Advertiser’s A.B.C., 304; 
The Advertiser’s, Tear Book, 805; 
The Book of the Carnation, 55; The 
Book of the Lily, 204; The Book of 
the Potato, 304; The iBotanieal 
Magazine, 62; The Botanist’s Al¬ 
bum, 486; The Culture of Sweet 
Peas, 393; The Harmsworth Ency¬ 
clopaedia, 304; The Horticultural 
Directory, 65; The Living Plant, 
163, The Ratepayer's Guide, 65; 
Vegetables and their Cultivation, 
18; Wayside and Woodland Blos¬ 
soms, 962 
Boshier, Mr. Harry, 709 
Botanical collecting, 90 
Botanic, gardens, Petermaritzburg, 215 
Brasso - Cattleya Trianaei - digbyana, 
228; nivalis, 362 
Brugmansias, 238 
Bud Mite, Currant, 127, 562, 644; 
Hazel, 124 
Buddleia variabilis magnifica, 680 
Bud variation, 271 
Bulbophyllum Reinwardtii, 405 
Bulb annual, 645 
Bulbs for spring gardening, 764; in 
American parks, hardy, 48, 143, 162 
Burbank, Luther, aid for, 61 
Cabbage, the Chinese, 45, 315, 408; 
Webbs’ Emperor, 191 
Cabbages, a giant among, 691 
Cactaceous plants, 751 
Cacti, growers of, 537, 573 
Caesalpinia Gilliesii, 709 
Caladiums, wintering, 284 
Calanthe Chanmanii, 81 
Calanthes, 332. 666 
Calceolaria plantaginea, 666 
Calceolarias, annual, 260; express cul¬ 
ture of, 525; in cold frames, herba¬ 
ceous, 431 
Californian big trees, 233 
Callicarpa purpurea, 74 
Callipsyche euerosioides, 294 
Callistemon salignus, 715 
Calochoqtus amoenus, 785 
Calypso borealis, 441 
Campanula gargan.iea hirsuta, 470; 
phyctidocalyx, 464; thyrsoides, 100; 
turbinata Isabel, 865 
Caima. Niagara, 752 
Cantua buxifolia, 228; dependens, 397 
Carex Vilmorini, 145 
Carnation: Elliott’s Queen, 146; 
Elizabeth, 362; Enchantress, 748; 
Flamingo, 273; General Kuroki, 228; 
Harlowarden, 317; Lawson running 
out? is, 255; variegated, 20; Rich¬ 
ness, 591 
Carnations for winter; flowering, 117; 
from Bloxham, 662; in winter, Mal- 
rnaison,, 8, 205; layering, 620; Mal- 
maison in the open air, 618; Mar¬ 
guerite, 393; tree, 532 
Carrot, New Red Intermediate, 850; 
Scarlet Model, 855 
Carrots for winter use, 122 
Cattleya: Citrima maxima, 478; Iris, 
His Majesty, 806; Maroni Westfield, 
var., 806; Mendelii Cicero, 478; Oc¬ 
tave Doin, 81; Pittiae, 442; Schil- 
leriana, 478; Schilleriana Westfield, 
var., 834; Schroderae alba, Mme. 
Louis de Hemptinne, 362; Schroderae 
Robin, 362 
Cattleyas and Laelias, hybrid, 744 
Celosia plumosa, 248 
Cauliflower seven months in the year, 
870 
Ceanothus azureus, 940 
Celery, how to grow good, 139; how 
to grow, 870 
Celmisia coniacea, 71 
Celmisias, the, 96 
Ceratostigma plum'baginoides, 797 
Ceriman, the, 87 
Chaenostoma hispidum, 899 
Chamaerops excelsa, 886 
Chelsea Physic Garden, 32 
Cherry, the Cornelian, 241 
Clerodendron trichotomum, 971 
Cresswell, Mr. A. E., 935 
Chimonanthus fragrans grandiflorus, 
30 
China Asters in pots, 680; wanderings 
in, 418 
Chionodoxa Luciliae Tmoli, 351 
Chironia exi/fera, 680 
Choisya ternata, 881, 924, 935 
Christmas tree, the New Zealand, 125 
Chrysanthemum uliginosum, 868 
Chrysanthemum: Buttercup, 886; 
Embleme Poitevin, 868; Harrie, 868; 
Harrowby, Countess of, 868; Jinks, 
Mrs. Walter. 924; Knox, Mrs. Wm., 
936; McLeod, Donald, 868; Chrysan¬ 
themum Market Gold, 15, 57; Merst- 
ham White, 940; Miller, Mrs. A. T., 
959; Moneymaker, 888; Pearson, 
Mrs. R. Hooper, 904; Perle Chatil- 
lonnaise, 869; Pink, Goacher’s, 868; 
Richardson, Mary, 869; Shrimpton, 
J. G., 904; Sfopford, Miss, 886; 
Street, Mrs., 865; Vestale, La, 806 
Chrysanthemum, a large - flowered 
trained, 730; the decorative, 13 
Chrysanthemums at Edinburgh, 916; 
at Sydenham, 954; at the Crystal 
Palace, 871; dressing for exhibition, 
864; early, at the Crystal Palace, 
804; for autumn flowering. 137; for 
cut flowers, 57; for exhibition, 99; 
new, 882; seasonable work. 944; 
watering and feeding exhibition, 
906 
Cimicifuga racemosa, 660; simplex, 
904 
Cinerarias, Webbs’ Superb, 335 
Clematis alpina, 349; montana, 456; 
montana in Perthshire, 570; mon- 
tana rubens, 405, 442; virginiana, 
345 
Cliantbus Dampieri, 763 
Climbers for a rustic pergola, 78; 
hardy, 160 
Climbing plants in the garden, 778 
Codling Moth, parasite of the, 251 
Coelogyne lawirenceana, 273; Parishii, 
314; speciosa alba, 273 
Colchieum crociflorum, 219; speeio- 
biim, 787; Steveni, 78 
Colour cure, 646 
Colours of northern flowers, 411 
Comments on current topics, 268 
Competition, results of our garden, 
697 
Conservatory, a beautiful, 495; at 
Lathom House, 476 
Cornwall flora, west, 555 
Corokia Cotoneaster, 441 
Corydalis cava alba, 328; lutea, 670; 
nobilis, 394 ; ochroleuca, 317 ; 
thalictrifolia, 335, 714; Wilsoni, 316 
Corylopsis, 240 
Corvpha elata, fruits of, 522 
Costus igneus, 8 
Cotoneaster horizontalis, 839; pan- 
nosa, 81 
Creeper-clad houses, 745 
Crinum Rattrayi, 273 
Crocus Balansae, 219; bifloru6 Pesta- 
lozzae, 285 ; ohrysanthus, 503 ; 
ohrysanthus albidus, 175; chrysan- 
thus var., 145, 175; hermoneus, 208; 
hyemalis, 73; Sieberi, 285 
Crocuses, substitute for, 685, 698, 716; 
Sutton’s, 765 
Crotolaria capensis, 93 
Crowea augustifolia, 273 
Cucumber Aristocrat, 406; Delicacy, 
442, 556 
Cucumber spot, the S.H.C. cure for, 
288; strange, 838 
Culharn Court, 654 
Cup, the Sutton Challenge, 395 
Currant, Black Champion, 660; White 
Dutch, 660 
Cyclamen, 116: a sportive, 187; re- 
pandum, 456; Webb’s Perfection, 
226, 246 
Cyclamens, hardy, 74; well grown. 
476 
Cydonia vulgaris, 958 
Cymbidium rhodochilum, 405; San- 
deri, 145 
Cyno-rchis compacta, 116; lowiana, 156 
Cypripedium: Alcibiades, 15; aureum 
Shrubbery var., 81; Charles Rick¬ 
man magnifieum. 228; Craveniae, 
145; Dom Carlos auperbum, 442; 
Godefroyae citrinum. 834; Gode- 
froyae leucoehilum Godson's var., 
752; haywoodianum, 228; Jerning- 
hamiae, 15. 69; laurebel Shrub¬ 
bery var., 81; leea.num J. Gurney 
Fowler, 81, 148; Moore, G.. 81; 
Nogi, 29; purpuratum Tracy's var., 
806; rothschildianum, 442; San- 
Actaeus, 81; tracyanum, 159; west- 
fieldense, 15, 69 
Cypripediums, a fine exhibit of, 37; 
and Trilliums, 784; hardy. 331 
Cyrtanthus angustifolius grandiflorus, 
362; sanguineus glaucophyllus, 806 
Cvtisus, the S69; the purple-flowered, 
'480 
Daffodil, development of the, 772 
