IV, 
JOURNAL  OF  HORTICULTURE  AND  COTTAGE  GARDENER, 
June  26,  1902. 
Clubbing  and  galling,  377  ;  in  Cabbage, 
0 
Cockroaches  and  crickets,  destroying, 
92 
Code,  an  horticultural,  538 
Codia?ums  at  Oldfield,  348 
Codogyne  Sanderiana,  75 
Cold  storage  in  country  houses,  274 
Coleus  from  seed,  140 
Colonial  exhibition  in  the  Koyal  Ex¬ 
change,  383 
Colorado  beetle,  the,  551 
Comfort,  Charles,  282 
Commons  and  Footpaths  Preservation 
Society,  547 
Conifer,  fast  growing,  47 
Cordylines  and  Dracaenas,  56 
Cornish  clemency,  319 
Cornwall— Daffodil  and  Spring  Show, 
242  ;  fruit  growing,  enterprise  in,  54 
Coronation— Day,  fete  and  floral  gala, 
Edinburgh,  468  ;  flower,  the,  187  ; 
trees  and  spaces,  222  ;  trees.  Dundee, 
468  ;  trees,  hunting  for,  514 ;  trees, 
planting,  301,  495 
/•Correspondence,  22,  46,  70,  92,  134,  156, 
176,  196,  216,  245,  263,  287,  308,  830,  352, 
396.  419,  441,483,  482,  624,  546,  563 
“Country,  The,”  526 
County  Council  gardening  in  the  Isle 
of  Wight,  168 
Cowan,  death  of  Mr.  Lindley,  406 
Cox,  presentation  to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  G  , 
203 
Creeper  clip,  a,  481 
Criuum,  bulbiform  seed  of,  126  ;  germi¬ 
nation  of  the  seed  of,  and  other 
Amaryllids,  212 
Crocus  marathoniscus,  146 
Crocuses— and  Shakespeare,  231,  363  : 
at  Edge  Hall,  276  ;  in  the  grass,  12 ; 
in  the  parks,  344 
Crops — of  1901,  184  ;  rotation  of,  57,  99 
Crossing  among  plants,  natural,  189 
Cucumbers  —  house  ventilating,  330; 
plants  in  bearing,  185  ;  in  houses,  233  ; 
memoranda  notes,  59  ;  raising  in 
frames,  180 
“Culture  of  Vegetables  and  Flowers,” 
30 
Cumberlow,  South  Norwood,  431 
Cutbush  and  Sons,  Highgate,  32,  107 
Cyclamens— 66  ;  diseased,  89  ;  Persian, 
peculiarities  of,  342  :  Primulas  and 
Cinerarias  at  Wordsley,  188 ;  scented 
Persian.  163, 183  ;  synanthy  in  flowers 
of,  212 
Cycloppedia  of  American  Horticulture, 
384 
Cypripedium  —  an  abnormal,  403  ; 
X  Edward  Rothwell,  249 ;  x  Emperor 
of  India,  423 ;  x  iNIrs.  W.  Mostyn, 
101 ;  X  Puruin,  357 ;  Spicerianum, 
26 ;  X  Venus,  Oakwood  variety. 
123;  flowers  of,  156 
Cyrtopodium  palmifrons,  249 
Daffodils  —  at  Rood  Ashton,  380 ; 
Fuchsias  and  Gloxinias,  467  ;  in  the 
grass,  12 
Dahlia— analyses.  399,  431  ;  specimen 
bush  of  a  show,  404  ;  union,  the,  384  ; 
what  is  a  Cactus  ?  434 
Dahlias— Cactus,  211,  401,  463  ;  new 
Cactus,  403  ;  Fancy,  409  ;  Mr.  Mawley 
and  his,  406  :  planting  out,  518 ; 
pompon,  409  ;  Show,  409  ;  single,  402 
Daisies,  634 
Daphne  indica  rubra,  81 
Darwin,  life  of,  144 
Dean,  R.— testimonial,  55,  102,  128  ; 
list  of  persons  at  presentation  cere¬ 
mony.  144;  presentation,  157 
Decorations,  dinner-table,  31,  74 
Dendrobium  —  Apollo  grandiflorum, 
201  ;  densifloruiE,  92  ;  Lowi.  4  ; 
Wardianum.  92 
Design,  flowers  for,  264 
Deutzia  Lemoinei,  16 
Devon  Gardeners*  annual  outing,  4)8 
Devonshire,  backward,  609 
Digging  and  trenching,  122 
Disa  X  Luna,  485 
Disease,  Hyacinths,  92 
Diseases,  plant,  losses  from,  427 
Domain,  young  gardeners’  —  hints  for 
the  coming  K.H.S.  exam.,  350  ;  hints 
for  young  heads,  194,  500  ;  Impatiens 
Sultani,  350  ;  Lantana  Drap  d'Or, 
328  ;  Melons,  cordons,  500  ;  Tomatoes, 
outdoor,  as  bush  plants,  329  ;  trees, 
a  few  ornamental,  329 
Downes,  death  of  Mr.  John,  319 
Dracaenas  and  Cordylines,  56 
Draining  garden,  309 
Droit wich  experimental  garden,  184 
Drosophyllum,  446 
Dudley  Flower  Show,  406 
Dye  plants,  British,  5 
Earth’s  many  voices,  236 
Echos  from  Hamilton,  N.B. ,  304 
EtUnburgh  Agricultural  College,  318  ; 
Coronation  fete  and  floral  gala,  468  ; 
city  gardens,  15  ;  Gardeners’  As.sem- 
bly,  87  ;  gardens,  beautifying,  451 ; 
horticultural  societies,  128;  notes, 
514  ;  nursery,  an,  457 
Edwards,  Mr.  S.  H.,  233,  255,  275 
Elms,  venerable,  felled,  274 
Entomology,  182,  271 
Epergne,  an  improved,  154 
Epidendrum  Lindleyanum,  52 
Epiphyllum  treatment,  482 
E[isom  salts  as  manure,  22 
Eranthis,  in  the  grass,  12 
Ericas  gracilis,  245  ;  hyemalis,  215  ;  in 
cold  pit,  22 
Ether  in  forcing  plants,  315 
Evaporating  fruit  and  vegetables,  69 
Exhibitors,  some  points  for,  42  4 
Exhibits,  naming,  433 
Fallacies,  99 
Farm— Agricultural  Organi.'iation  .So¬ 
ciety,  135 ;  American  agricultural 
notions,  115 ;  American  trusts  and 
home  protection,  376 ;  Australian 
coffee  cultivation,  332  ;  butter  and 
water,  158  ;  cattle  breeding  and  rear¬ 
ing,  504  ;  an  import  tax  on 
Wheat,  158  ;  co-operation  in  Craven, 
177  ;  Corn  duty  and  middlemen,  419  ; 
excessive  railway  rates,  178 ;  failure 
in  growing  Turnips,  331  ;  farmers 
emigrating,  318  ;  feeding  stuffs, 
manufacturers  of,  216;  gentlemen 
farmers,  397  ;  how  the  German 
labourer  fares,  94 ;  1902  :  its  agricul¬ 
tural  prospects,  23  ;  our  transactions 
with  other  lands,  309;  permanent 
pastures,  464;  Potatojs  as  food  for 
cattle,  116  ;  Pot-pourri  of  facts  and 
fancies,  563  ;  preparation  for  the 
Barley  crop,  62 ;  Rhodesia  and  its 
Blue  Book,  217 ;  S.ale  of  Butter  Regu¬ 
lations,  420  ;  some  poultry  notes,  525  ; 
South  Africa,  the  future  of,  198 ; 
Sugar  Beet  cultivation  at  Newnham 
Paddox,  24  ;  the  lambing  season,  197  ; 
the  purchase  of  manures,  246  ;  the 
quarlerlies,  353  ;  the  wool  trade,  288  ; 
Turnips  :  their  enemies,  548  ;  vermin 
and  other  pests,  265;  Victoria,  Austra¬ 
lia,  441  ;  working  days,  47  ;  work  on 
the  home  farm,  24.  47,  02,  94,  116,  136, 
158,  178,  198  ,  218,  216,  266,  288,  332, 
354,  376,  397,  420,  442,  464,  482,  504, 
626,  548,  564 
Fusciation  in  Valeriana  arizonica,  126 
Father  of  the  gardening  press,  the,  88 
Feathered  friends,  322 
February  day  in  the  garden,  a,  179 
Fen  districts,  flowers  from  the,  record 
consignments,  334 
Fern— balls,  Japanese,  434  ;  Japanese, 
scarce,  7  ;  Marsh  Buckler,  438 
Ferns  for  the  greenhouse,  ‘290  ;  green¬ 
house,  221 ;  growing  wuthin  a  bottle, 
46 ;  notes  on,  66 ;  the  world’s,  3 ; 
Tree,  3  ;  unsatisfactory,  92 ;  wood¬ 
land,  292 
Fertiliser,  applying  to  Vine  border,  352 
Figs — trees,  raising  young,  278  ;  earliest 
forced,  348;  forced  planted  out,  348  ; 
forced  pot,  278  ;  succession  houses  of. 
348  ;  under  glass,  9,  120,  192,  300,  540 
Flies  for  identification  (Empis  tessel- 
lata),  524 
Flora  of  Hampstead,  103 
Florist— a  distinguished,  171 ;  starting 
as  a,  225 
Florists  and  floricultui'e  over  fifty  years, 
467,  518 
Flower— ball,  a  grand,  54  ;  beds  in  the 
parks,  340  ;  boxes  gratis,  492  ;  grower, 
the  cut,  314  ;  show  reforms,  334,  410 ; 
shows,  301 
Flowers — cut,  to  make  lasting,  434  : 
for  buttonholes,  463  ;  for  design,  264  ; 
from  the  parks,  251 ;  London,  battle 
of,  in  carriages,  492  ;  notes  on  hardy, 
540  ;  origin  of,  274;  hardy  spring,  276 ; 
hardy  winter,  226  ;  100  tons  of,  292  ; 
late  in  Scilly,  8 ;  to  preserve,  434 ; 
wild,  January,  147;  February,  207  ; 
wild,  of  old  English  gardens,  31,  271 
Forbes,  honouring,  Mr.,  64 
Forcing  Roses,  122 
Foresight,  199 
Foresters,  Scottish,  to  visit  Sweden,  406 
Forestry  inquiry,  British,  406,  426  ; 
round  the  AVells,  539;  the  encourage¬ 
ment  of,  128 
Forests,  Great  Britain’s,  214  ;  His 
Majesty’s  woods  and,  54 
Forfar  gardeners,  55 
“  Formal  garden  in  England,  the,”  98 
Forty  years  a  reader,  233 
Forwarding  Tulips,  Daffodils,  and 
Irises,  121 
Fossil  plants,  35 
Fowls’  dung,  245 
Foxgloves  and  Mulleins,  408 
Freesias  from  Bittern,  211 
Frigi  Domo,  88 
Fritillarias  —  askabadensis,  294,  386  ; 
dwarf,  79 ;  in  grass,  9 ;  some  chat 
about  the,  315  ;  tunasia,  540 
Frost,  hoar,  15  ;  10°,  Fall.,  on  the  14th 
of  May,  482  ;  warning  against,  372 
Fruit  and  vegetables,  evaporating,  69  ; 
and  vegetables  in  small  gardens,  226  ; 
in  California,  254  ;  culture,  books  on, 
264  ;  culture  in  Worcestershire,  16  ; 
effects  of  ripening  on  the  trees,  466  ; 
feeding  wall  trees,  610  ;  gathering  of, 
510  ;  growers’  association,  proposed 
federated,  102  ;  growers,  English,  and 
foreign  competition,  28  ;  growing,  old 
book  on,  246  ;  growing  enterprise  in 
Cornwall,  54  ;  “  hardy,”  grown  under 
glass,  18;  Growers’  Federation, 
National,  468 ;  growth,  as  dis¬ 
tinguished  from  ripening,  466  ;  in 
France,  363  ;  in  Victoria,  402  ;  nature 
of  mellowing  and  ripening,  466  ;  on, 
465,  510,  541 ;  production,  on,  290,  338, 
359,  454,  496  ;  (see  also  Fruit  Supply) ; 
resources,  California’s,  184  ;  steamers, 
367  ;  supply  of  these  islands,  380, 
404,  421,  494,  508  (see  also  under 
‘  ‘  Fruit  Production  ”)  ;  supplies,  our. 
226 ;  to  Australia,  184  ;  trade,  Hull, 
and  railway  companies,  468 ;  trees, 
planting,  distances  apart,  65 ;  value 
of  chemical  manures  for,  80  ;  forcing, 
21,  45.  91,  113,  133,  176,  195,  215,  244, 
£08,  329,  341,  373,  395,  417,  439,  461. 
523,  545  ;  hardy, ,45,  133,  215,  262,  307. 
351,  395,  439,  481,  523,  562 
Fruits  and  flowers  of  -Tamaica,  278 
Fruiterers’  Company,  gold  medal  of 
the,  102  ;  the  Worshipful  Company  of, 
318 
Fuchsias,  decorative,  516 
Fumigating  for  mealy  bugs,  341 
Fumigation  methods,  323 
Fusarium  Solaui,  £42 
Gadding  and  gathering,  14,  32,  85, 107, 
296,  316,  344,  430,  456.  486,  530 
Galanthus  Imperati  var.  Atkinsoni,  187 
Garden— design,  36  ;  a  formal  front, 
193  ;  gleanings,  16,  35,  81,  141,  153, 
187, 278,  348,  386,  408, 434,  534  ;  infested 
with  wireworms,  441 ;  of  England, 
the,  388  ;  plan,  who  can  sketch  a,  166 
Gardens,  some  typical,  the  Manor 
Farm,  299 ;  the  Manor  House,  33 ; 
the  Rectory,  168 
Gardener— a  fortunate,  255 ;  an  old- 
time,  50 
Gardeners  —  and  the  Coronation,  276  ; 
and  their  studies,  324,  363  ;  curri- 
'culum,  the,  210  ;  education,  264,  454, 
468,  495,  613,  533,  557  ;  Ipswich,  29 ; 
“Labyrinth,  the,”  517  ;  “lodges,”  30  ; 
meetings  (see  Societies) ;  qualifica¬ 
tions,  a,  360-,  411 ;  Royal  Benevolent 
Institution  (leader),  25;  annual  din¬ 
ner,  490  ;  self-education  for  young, 
303 ;  wages,  410 
Gardening— charities,  62  ;  landscape, 
52,  103  ;  old-time,  49,  159  ;  (fifteenth 
century),  346,  449,  617;  scholar.ship, 
128;  spring,  250  years  ago,  267  ;  the 
future  of  British,  34 
Garven,  death  of  Mr.  Alexander,  384 
Gazania  splendens,  263 
German  school  gardens,  367 
Geum  montanum,  540 
Ghent  International  Horticultural  Ex¬ 
hibition,  513 
Gil'jhrist,  Mr.  Douglas  A.,  S66 
Gillingham,  Kent,  new  public  re¬ 
creation  ground  at,  144 
Glasgow  Botanic  Gardens,  166 
Glass  ranges,  construction  of,  170 
Gloxinia  flower  with  excrescences,  438 
Gnaur  on  Allamanda,  212  ;  on  Pavia  sp, 
212 
Godfrey,  Mr.  and  his  American  con¬ 
freres,  8 
Gooseberry — bushes  dying  off,  438 
Gooseberries,  early,  4C6  ;  in  America,  8 
Gossamer  webs,  244 
Gourds,  an  archway  of,  266 
Grafted  Hollies,  35 
Grammatocarpus  volubilis,  273 
Grammatophyllum  speciosum,  4,  141 
Grange,  the.  Bishops  Stortford,  360 
Grape — Cooper’s  Black,  245  ;  wine,  to 
make,  16 
Grapes— early  Muscat,  1S7  ;  for  July 
and  August,  163 ;  late,  35,  163  ;  late 
houses  of  Black  Hamburgh,  163  ; 
remarks  on  setting,  312  ;  seedless,  0  ; 
the  price  of,  39 
Growing  for  exhibition,  3.'^7,  447 
Guano,  Peruvian,  274 
Guunersbury  House,  Acton,  250 
.Hale  Farm  Nurseries,  auction  sale  at, 
384 
Halesia  tetraptera,  141 
Hallingbury  Place,  Bishops  Stortford, 
430 
Hall,  the  Horticultural,  160,  200;  com¬ 
mittee’s  report  on  the  site  of,  240,  283  . 
Hamilton,  echoes  from,  367,  £14  , 
Hampstead,  flora  of,  103 
Hampton  Court  —  foundation  of,  449  ; 
grounds,  426 
Hardenbergia  Comptoniana,  252 
Hardy  flower  notes,  146,  253,  347 
“  Hardy”  fruit,  grown  under  glass,  18 
Harmonising  colours,  312 
Hastings,  new  Horticultural  Society  at, 
384 
Hazel  buds  affected  with  mites,  269 
Hazels,  the  Witch,  ISO 
Heating  with  hot  water,  309 
Hedge  twigs  infested,  524 
Heliotropes  from  seed,  188 
Hellebores— at  Edge  Hal),  276  ;  lesser- 
known,  205  ;  the,  205 
Helleborus— colchicus  magnificus,  139  ; 
niger,  139 
Henry  VIII.  and  Leland,  449 
Henslow.  Rev.  Prof.  George.  383 
