462 
THE NATIONAL NURSERYMAN 
National Flower Show. 104 
(Grange Show. 149 
Native Grown English Walnuts. 09 
Nature an Exhibitor.. 307 
Nebraska, Fruit Outlook in. 228 
Fruit Farm, Returns from. 188 
New Company, A. 74 
New Hampshire, Framing in. 175 
Jersey State Horticultural Society. ... 27 
Roses Worth Growing. 141 
Strawberries. 303 
York Central Patronized by Nursery¬ 
men. 219 
York Exp. Station on Crown Gall. 307 
York Florists Ask State Aid. 149 
York State Fair, Fruit at. 301 
York State Fair, Growth of. 07 
York Orchardists’ Protective Fund. . . 02 
York State Fruit Growers Meet. 71 
York State Vegetable Growers. 340 
York Vegetable Growers’ Association. 457 
Niagara Again in Danger. 273 
Northern Nut Growers’ Association. 457 
Northwest Fruit Crop Estimated Short. . 335 
Apple vSelling Agency. 188 
Notable Progress in Apple Breeding. 302 
Note and Comment 
Bagging Fruit. 454 
Box Package Popular in Scotland. 330 
Cost of Growing Apples in Washington 330 
European Apple Crop. 454 
Flowering Grape. 24 
Interesting Establ'shment, An. 149 
New York Florists Ask State Aid. 149 
Nova Scot’a Apple Crop. 454 
Cur Friends the Birds. 192 
Plan a Big Orchard. 24 
Products of the Grape. 04 
Root-Gall. 454 
The Apple Crop of 1911. 454 
Unseasonable Weather in Central 
Georgia . 454 
Walnut Culture to be Investigated.... 454 
Why so Few Pecans. 24 
Notes on Plums. 304 
Nova Scotia Apple Crop. 454 
Growers Favor Free Trade. 02 
Nursery Implements in California. 05 
Inspection in Florida. 449 
Inspection in New York. 97 
Inspectors Meet. 04 
Interests of Missouri. 290 
Legislation . 109 
Office, A. 53 
Spray Rig. 01 
Spray Rigs. 104 
Sprayers. 103 
Nurseryman and the Entomologist, The. 205 
as a Lumber User. 272 
Nurseryman’s Burden. 333 
Nurserymen at Western New York Soc. . 04 
Cooperate with Scientists. 421 
Nurserymen’s Trade Lists. 337 
Nut Culture, Interest in. 451 
Culture in the United States. 332 
Obituary 
John W. Adams, 151; Charles P. Braslan, 
59; Robert Buist, Jr., 59; Bundschu, 28; 
Preston W. Butler, 204; Francis O. 
Canning, 309; Wm. Cutter, 108; Fred 
Dorner, 59; W. F. Heikes, 331; W. N. 
Irwin, 305; J. A. MePheron, 305; 
Magoon, Chas. H., 204; Miller, F. 
A. 4.50; Samuel C. Moon, 59, 108; 
• Wm. H. Moon, 450; Mrs. Wm. H. Moon, 
331; Franklin P. Phoenix, 108; Pietro 
C. Rossi, 459; C. P. Rothwell, 59; H. 
C. Roualet, 28; William Taat, 305; 
William Webster, 180; Thomas C. 
Wilson 229; William A. Woodward, 305. 
Our Friends the Birds. 192 
Pacific Coast Fears Frost. 177 
Coast N urserymen. 301 
Coast Nurserymen’s Meeting. 32.5 
Passing of the American Chestnut. 221 
Peach Difficulties in East Texas. 184 
Pits, Cracking. 418 
Root Gall, An Experience with. 180 
Peach Seed. 187 
Yellows from Pits. 08 
and Peach Culture. 291 
for Essex Co., Massachusetts. 447 
Pears and Pear Culture. 30i 
Pecan, The Schley. 452 
Industry, Development of. 00 
Orcharding, Problems in Commercial. 295 
Trees and the Hurricane. 422 
Varieties of. 448 
Why so Few?. 24 
Pedigree T rees. 05 
Personal Mention 
Coe, Mr. E. F., in the Orient. 145 
Observations on a Winter Tour in South 
America. 222 
on Conventions Program. 210 
Ohio State Nurserymen’s Association. . . 107 
Oklahoma, Conditions in. 22 
Ontario, Conditions in. 22 
Orange, Long Keeping. 190 
Orchard, A Large. 177 
Cover Crops. 224 
Enemies . 218 
Heating. 180 
Orcharding East and West. 145 
Orchard’s! and the Nurseryman, The. . . 140 
Oregon Apple Show. 449 
Fruit Growers Active. 140 
Nursery Conditions. 300 
State Horticultural Society. 19 
Our Book Table 
Agr’culture Through the Laboratory and 
School Garden, 420; A Manual of Practi¬ 
cal Farming, 457; A Manual on the 
Peony, 180; Alpine Flowers and Gardens 
305; An Introduction to the Study of 
Agricultural Economics, 271; Among 
School Gardens, 457; Breeding Plants 
and Animals, 229; Diseases of Culti¬ 
vated Plants and Trees, 305; Elements 
of Agriculture, 271; Farm Develop¬ 
ment, 420; Insects and Diseases, 152; 
Landscape Gardening, 457; Neighbor¬ 
hood Entertainments, 420; Ornamental 
Shrubs of the United States, 108; Plant 
Breeding, 108; Plant Physiology, 305; 
Practical School Gardening, 340; Report 
of the Commission on Country Life, 229; 
Rural Hygiene, 180; Some Suggestions 
for R. 1. Apple Growers, 57; Southern 
Gardeners’ Practical Manual, 340; Spices 
and How to Know Them, 305; The 
Book of Friendship, 108; The Book of 
the Rose, 229; The Care of Trees, 57; 
The Conservation of Natural Resources 
in the United States, 152; The Home 
Garden, 229; The Man in Shadow, 457; 
The Old Farmer and His Almanac, 186; 
The Small Country Place, 152; Who’s 
Who Among the Ferns, 108; Who’s Who 
Among the Wild Flowers, 17. 
Our Exchanges 
Cost of Harvesting an Apple Crop.... 73 
Grows Apples on Haw Bush. 423 
Moving Big Trees. 459 
Raspberry-Strawberry, The. 145 
Pitkin, Wm., State Fair Commissioner. . 20 
Plan a Big Orchard. 24 
Plant Formations on Sour Soil. 11 
Plums, Notes on. 303 
Pollination Studies in Oregon. 226 
Pomolog’sts’Convention. 103 
Positive Hot Water Circulation in Green¬ 
houses . 191 
Practical Work. 177 
Prepotency. 448 
Prices, A Word on. 6.5 
Problems in Commercial Pecan Orchard¬ 
ing. 295 
Products of the Grape. 64 
Program for St. Louis Convention. 182 
Thirteenth Meeting .Southern Ass’n. . . 329 
Progress in Alabama. 180 
Prominent Fruit Grower Candidate for 
Assembly . 457 
Propagating Catalpa Bungei. 45.5 
Weeping Birch, Mulberry, Catalpa 
Bungeii. 228 
Prosperity in the United States. 51 
Protest on Custom Levy. 73 
Publicity Movement. 326 
Questions . 336 
Purchasing Nursery Stock. 230 
Quiz Column 
Batch of Book Inquiries. 1.5 
Best Way to Ripen Peach and Apple 
Stock. 4.56 
Books for Plant Growers. 15 
Books on Fruit Growing. 15 
Books on Propagation and Plant 
Breeding . 455 
Cracking Peach Pits. 418 
Downing’s Fruit Books. 106 
Funguous Diseases. 106 
Greenhouse Construction. 15 
Propagating Catalpa Bungei. 455 
Propagating Weeping Birch, etc. 228 
Spraying Nursery Stock. 148 
Storage Cellars. 187 
Sweet Potato Planter. 187 
Top-Worked Trees. 106 
Treating Scions for San Jose Scale. . . . 148 
Winter Storage of Peach Trees. 455 
Winter Storage of Shrubs. 455 
Wistaria. 418 
Railroad and the Apple Grower, The. ... 24 
Railway Gardeners’ Association. 361 
Randall Brands of Grape Juice. 273 
Raspberry-Strawberry, The. 145 
Received at the Editorial Office. 325 
Recent Bulletins. 420 
Recommend Apples as Cure for Drunken¬ 
ness . . . .'. 184 
Recommendation of Committee on Ex¬ 
hibits . 264 
Reed, Mr., in the South. 74 
Reminder, A. 28 
Reminiscence of Early Days in Iowa.... 216 
Report o‘f John Hall, Secretary. 259 
by Secretary Hall. 331 
of Treasurer. 260 
Resolutions, Final. 260 
on Death of W. F. Heikes. 360 
Retail Market, How to Extend. 269 
Prices, Standardization of. 268 
Returns from a Nebraska Fruit Farm. . . 188 
Roeding, George C., on Inspection. 69 
Rome Beauty for Colorado. 184 
Root GaU. 454 , 414 
Gall Committee’s Work. . 304 
Rotundifolia Grapes. . 373 
St. Louis Convention.144, 249 
Scarff, W. N., Home and Nursery of. . . . 340 
Schley Pecan. 452 
Secretary’s Report. 2.59 
Selection vs. Breeding. 20 
Self-Sterility or Rotundifolia Grapes.... 147 
Selling American Apples in British 
Markets . 370 
Should a Nurseryman Sell to Parks at 
Trade Prices?. 323 
Shrubs for the Southwest. 359 
Smith Co., W. T., Geneva, N. Y. 228 
Society for Horticultural Science. 147 
South America, Observations on. 222 
Georgia and North Florida. 176 
Southern Nurserymen’s Ass’n Program. . 329 
Nurserymen’s Meeting. 330 
Specimens of Apples. 70 
Spray Notes. 98 
Residue on Export Apples. 304 
Spraying Nursery Stock. 148 
Lime Should Not be Added. 230 
Mixtures. 218 
Standard Apple Packages. 102 
Standardization of Grades. 267 
of Retail Prices. 268 
Stark, Pres., Before Tennessee Ass’n. . . . 139 
Stark’s Address, W. P. 255 
Address Concluded, President. 415 
Stock and Trade Conditions. 397 
