296 
THE NATIONAL NURSERYMAN 
» 
Adaptation in Relation to Hardiness 14 
Advantages of Buying out of Sea¬ 
son . 266 
Advantages of the Trailer in the 
Nursery Trade . 189 
Advertising, Co-operative . 239 
Advertising, Successful . 191 
Agriculture, the new Secretary of 60 
Alien Plant Enemies Caught .... 128 
Alphabetical list by States, Con¬ 
cerning the shipment of five¬ 
leaved Pines and Ribes (Cur¬ 
rants and Gooseberries) .... 240 
American Association of Nursery¬ 
men . 30 
American Association of Nursery¬ 
men, The . 17 
American Association is doing fox- 
all Nurserymen, what the ... 118 
American Association of Nursery¬ 
men, trade mark of the . 94 
American Forestry Association .. 224 
American Rose Annual, The .... 113 
An Appeal to every Friend of 
American Horticulture . 286 
An Attractive Tree . 196 
Announcement by the Executive 
Committee . 140 
Annual Meeting of the Southwes¬ 
tern Association of Nursery¬ 
men . 261 
Another Quarantine Proposed by 
the F. H. B. 30 
Answers to Co-respondents 12. 2)3. 2^0 
Aphis Resistant Apple Stocks ... 213 
Apple Crop, The ....' . 10 
Apple in Commerce, The . 36 
Apple nursery stock. Two-leaf hop- 
pei'S injurious to . 264 
Apple show, Western Norm Car¬ 
olina . 274 
Apple Stocks, Aphis Resistant ... 213 
Apple trees by cuttings and layers, 
Propagation of . 92 
Apples, U. S. Export trade in .... 97 
Association, its aims and pro¬ 
gress, The . 81 
Baby Ramblers .42, 66, 124, 175 
Barberry, Box . 265 
Beautifying the Farmstead . 144 
Beauty of deciduous trees in win- 
' ter, The . 10 
Bemis Ti’ansplanter, The . 262 
Better Quality . 244 
Billboards . 12 
Box-Barberry . 265 
Bud Selection . 285 
Budding, A new system of . 274 
Bureau of Plant industry, Pi-opa- 
gating greenhouses for the .. 90 
California Nurserymen are Pro¬ 
gressive . 148 
Canadian National Exhibition, The 239 
Cashman, Michael R., . 196 
Census, The . 10 
Certificate of Membei-ship in the 
National Association of Nux-- 
serymen . 242 
Cherries, Stocks for .. 270 
Chicago Selected Again . 168 
Chi-stmas tree and its future .... 16 
Chrysanthemums, Hardy . 265 
Classification of Plants according 
to their relative commercial 
value . 141 
Climbing Roses, New . 68 
College Training, Report of Com¬ 
mittee on . 167 
Commercial Fruit Crop Reports, 
Discontinued . 144 
Committees Appointed by Lloyd C. 
Stark Pres, of A. A. of N. Year 
1920-1921 . 294 
Control Apple Blotch Again this 
Season. 292 
Convention of the A. A. of N., 
Confidence needed . 88 
Connecticut Nurserymen’s Asso¬ 
ciation . 214 
Co-operative Advertising . 239 
Co-operation between Scientific 
Horticulturists and Nursery¬ 
men . 60 
Corn borer quai-antine, A proposed 64 
Correction, A . 193 
Cost System . 272 
Cotoneaster acutifolia . 53 
Counti-y’s Need, The . Ill 
Ci’own Gall . 84 
Crown Gall injurious to Apple 
Nux-sery Stock? Is . 180 
Customer, The . 34 
Cure All, A . 122 
Dahlias . 263 
Dandelions in Lawn, Control of . 198 
Danger in Banding Trees . 272 
Deciduous trees in winter, The 
beauty of . 10 
Digest of laws and regulations af¬ 
fecting the Interstate ship¬ 
ment of nursery stock . 124 
Editorials: 
Advantages of buying out of 
season . 266 
Better Quality . 244 
Confidence needed . 88 
Customei*, The . 34 
Does a nurseryman value his 
own pi'oducts? . 146 
Fixing pi'ices for next season .. 9 
High Prices of Foreign . Fruit 
Stocks . 222 
Make an Ally of the F. H. B. .. 244 
Mis-directed economy . 176 
Modern application of an old 
Law . 224 
Native Plants . 88 
National Association as a bus¬ 
iness proposition, The . 9 
Nursery Business, The . 194 
Nursery Training . 194 
Px-actical Experience . 60 
Prevention of Waste . 146 
Prices and the jobbing gardener 266 
Quarantine 37 . 292 
Sensational, The . 116 
Spirit of the Convention, The .. 176 
The new Sec’y of Agidcultux-e.. 60 
Trustworthy Trees and Plants . 222 
Watson, Real work by Sec’y John 110 
Effect of the Past winter on Ever¬ 
greens . Ill 
Englewood Nursery Co., The .... 40 
Evergi-eens, Effect of the Past 
Winter on . Ill 
Evergi-eens, Pruning . 274 
Evidence that Barberry Spreads 
Rust, Nurserymen demand 
real . 29 
Exhibition, The Canadian National 239 
Experimexxtal Nurseries in Utah . 128 
Express Packages, weight of .... 167 
Export trade in Apples, U. S. 97 
Fair axxd Stable prices . 265 
Fertilizer Experiment with As¬ 
paragus . 203 
Fertilizers, Some of the effects of 
the war on . 196 
Fighting Peach Tree Pest With 
Gas Saves Millions. 300 
Fixing prices for next season .... 9 
Flagstaff erected in Kew Gardens, 
A new . 120 
Flemmer, Jr., William . 34 
Florist, The Nurseryman and the 5 
French Fruit Stocks . 193 
French Orchards and Nui*series 
after the War . 6 
Fruit Stocks, American gi’own . . . 215 
Fruit Stocks, High Prices of Foi’- 
eign . 222 
Fruit Stocks, French . 193 
Future Prospects . 16 
Greenhouses for the bureau of 
plant industry, propagating .. 90 
Growing Material for the Florists 
Trade . 285 
Hardy Chrysanthemums .. 265 
Horticulturists and Nurserymen, 
Co-operation between Scientific 60 
Horticultural Profession, In the .. 262 
Horticultui-al trade committees of 
Angers, Orleans, axxd Ussy, 
Fi-ance . 248 
How He Got In . 94 
Ibolium Privet . 265 
Idaho Plums in London. 296 
Illiixois Nurserymeix’s Association - 226 
Illinois State Nurserymen’s As¬ 
sociation .40, 66 
Illustrations: 
Apple Seedlings . 215 
Bryaixt, Miles W. 42 
Bryant, Louis R. 42 
Cashman, Michael R. 196 
Certificate of Membership in the 
American Association . 242 
Clarence Perkins, Newark, N. J. 66 
Convention Get-together Ban¬ 
quet . 170 
Cotoneaster acxitifolia . 56 
Cotoneaster acutifolia ixsed as a 
hedge in Minnesota . 53 
IDAHO PLUMS IN LONDON 
There recently arrived in London the first consignment 
of the season of fresh prune plums from Idaho. The total 
consignment is stated to have been small. The fruit was 
packed in trays averaging five lbs. each, and four trays 
comprised a crate, each crate therefore containing ap¬ 
proximately twenty lbs. The condition of the fruit is re¬ 
ported as having been variable—poor rather than ex- 
eellent—and the whole sale prices obtained ranged from 
10s. to 22s. (from $2.43 to $5.35 at normal exchange) 
per crate, or an average throughout of 16s. lOd. ($4.10). 
Some fair proportion of the fruit found its way into 
the Soho district of London, where it was retailed at 
Is. ($0.24) per pound. The prunes had the fresh bloom 
on them and could be purchased either by the pound or 
half pound or by the tray, and, while not in the per¬ 
fect condition of fruit sold in the highest class stores, 
were sound and palatable and exhibited few instances 
of damage through pressure .—Commerce Reports 
INDEX TO VOLUME XXVIII 
