December  26,  1901. 
V 
i 
JOURNAL1 
I 
OF  HORTICULTURE  AND  COTTAGE  GARDENER. 
m. 
INDEX. 
Abies  Douglasi  seedlings,  385  ;  pungens 
glauca,  401 
Acacia— alata,  352,  424  ;  ornata,  seed¬ 
ling,  385 
Acacias — hardv,  in  bloom  at  Crieff,  52 
“  A  Chat  about  Lilies,”  262 
Aconite,  proliferous,  184 
Aconite,  Winter,  271 
Africa,  South— farms  in,  508  ;  agri¬ 
cultural  scheme  in  Transvaal  Colony, 
508  ;  fruit  farming  in  Cape  Colony, 
608  ;  cottage  gardeners  of,  547 
African  (South)  fruit  growing,  388 
Agricultural  analysis,  266 
Agave  in  bloom,  12 
Agricultural  College,  South-Eastern, 
Wye,  224 
“  Air  plants,”  372 
Almonds,  424 
Alocasia  metallica  Lowi,  drying  off,  476 
Alstromeria  aurantiaca,  124 
Alternantheras,  202 
Altrincham  gardeners,  33 
Amaranthus  caudatus,  396 
Amaryllis  Belladonna,  264 
Amelanchier  canadensis,  362 
America — extermination  of  medicinal 
plants  in,  293  ;  Apples  in,  288  ;  Sweet 
Peas  in,  310  ;  forestry  in,  360  ;  national 
flower  for,  376;  agricultural  educa¬ 
tion  in,  590 
American  Forestry  Association,  105 
American  II,  bridisation  Conference, 
R.II.S.  delegates  to,  241 
American  Pomological  Society,  56 
Amorphophallus  titanum,  4 
Ampelopsis  for  windows,  372 
Anemones,  Giant  French,  261,  274 
Angraecum  bilobum,  483  ;  Sanderianum, 
45 ;  Chailluanum,  578 
Ants,  13,  29 
Aphides,  Currant,  98 
Apospory,  a  new  case  of,  228 
Apple— stems  attacked  by  caterpillars, 
59  ;  leaves  blistered,  59 ;  tree  in  bloom, 
104  ;  barrel,  a  new,  198 ;  tree,  with 
holes  in  leaves,  232 ;  steins,  eggs  in, 
134  ;  twin  Apple,  228  ;  Alfriston,  331 ; 
Cockle’s  Pippin,  331  ;  Galloway 
Pippin,  331 ;  Golden  Reinette,  330  ; 
Tower  of  Glammis,  330;  Yorkshire 
Greening,  330  ;  Rival,  334  ;  King 
Harry,  362  ;  history  of  the,  369,  417  ; 
growing  on  cordons,  3S4  ;  Bielo  Boro- 
dawka,  452;  trees,  canker  in,  476; 
spotted,  466;  Norfolk  Beauty,  51S, 
542  ;  orchard,  a  great,  499  ;  Barnack 
Beauty,  542,  562 ;  and  Pear  trees, 
earthing  up  the  boles  of,  573;  scab, 
581 
Apples— United  States,  5  ;  seedling,  for 
grafting,  224  ;  in  Somersetshire,  238  ; 
in  America,  288 ;  notes  on,  304  ; 
early  dessert,  329,  352, '422  ;  selected 
list  of,  32S  ;  our  illustrations  of,  330"; 
cooking,  358  ;  at  Crystal  Palace  show, 
355  ;  Canadian,  380  ;  regarding,  422  ; 
a  chat  about,  435 ;  more  about,  483  ; 
and  Pears  at  Bristol,  537 
Appointments— Apted,  Mr.  W,,  199  ; 
Collins,  Mr.  E.,  240  ;  Dinne,  Mr.,  224  ; 
Dryden,  Mr.  Win,,  129  ;  Francis,  Mr. 
J.,  287;  Galloway,  Mr.,  56;  Galt, 
Mr.  A.  S.,  66;  Gill,  Mr.  T.,  240; 
Glen,  Mr.  F.  G.,  224;  Grace,  Mr. 
W.  J.,  129;  Hamilton,  Mr.  J.,  240; 
Lodge,  Mr.  Alfred,  421 ;  Macdonald, 
Mr.  M.,  265  ;  Rowe,  Mr.  A.,  265  ; 
Smith,  Mr.  E.  D.,  33  ;  Spooner,  Mr. 
Herbert,  12;  Tansley,  Mr.  Geo.  II., 
12;  Winstanley,  Mr.  Robt.,  287  ; 
Wooster,  Mr.  W.,  265;  Baker,  Mr. 
D.  N.,  488;  Ball,  Mr.  H.,  512; 
Stringer,  Mr.  J.,  512  ;  Cholwell,  Mr. 
W.  S.  461 ;  Johns,  Mr.  H„  488  ; 
Appointments— continued. 
Hawes,!  Mr.  E.  F.,  560;  Wilkinson, 
Mr.  T.j|560  ;  Ellwood,  Mr.  G.,  533 
Apricot,  the.  and  its  culture,  535 
Apricots,  rotten  on  the  trees,  189  ;  split¬ 
ting,  134  ,  228  ;  at  Southfields,  338 
Aralia  spinosa,  298 
Araucaria  imbricata,  seeds  of,  524,  542, 
685 
Ardisia  Olivieri,  298 
Aristolochia  triloba,  58 
Arnott,  Mr.  S  ,  and  his  flowers,  558 
Arsenoid,  green,  56 
“Art  and  Craft  of  Garden  Making,” 
314 
ArtiScia  flowers,  chemistry  of,  76 
Art  in  th  i  conservatory,  223 
Arum, 9f  ;  “bulbs”  diseased,  164 
Ashton  Court,  Bristol,  353 
Asparagus — infested  with  fungus,  344  ; 
new  fields  for,  376;  beds,  top-dressing 
with  kainit,  389  ;  forcing,  554  ;  value 
of  per  acre,  572 
Asphalt  .  258 
Asphalt  walk,  making,  524 
Aspidistra,  the  546 
Aster  Novi- Angli*  var.  pulchellus  409 
Asters,  siugle  Comet,  265;  perennial,  at 
Lewisham,  465 
Auchnu.re,  the  Vine  of,  174 
Auricula,  the,  149 
Auriculas,  171 
Autumn-sown  Sweet  Peas,  101 
Azaleas  and  Rhododendrons,  watering, 
76  ! 
Balchin,  death  of  Mr.  William,  senr., 
461 
Bamboo].  in  flower,  267 
Banans  I  profits  from,  129  ;  a  fine 
bunc  i |of ,  443  ;  in  Queensland,  489 
Bankriptcy — British  Horticultural  As- 
socia  on,  105 
Ba  re  p;  ches  on  lawn,  388 
Barley,  proliferous,  316 
Barr,  Mr.  Peter,  443 
Basic  slag  for  destroying  Yarrow,  301 
Bedder,  a  useful  spring,  14 
Bedding  at  Hampton  Court  and  Hyde 
Park  241 
Bed-,,  atiractive  bulbs  for,  268 
Befieh  tree  bug,  316  :  leaves,  galls  on, 
zsr 
Beeth  with  palmately  nerved  leaves,  58, 
purple  leaved,  402 
Bee-keeping,  504 
Bees— swarming,  198;  when  working; 
amongst,  257  ;  Sea  Lavender  for,  290  ; 
straying  swarms  of,  314 
Beetles  on  the  tramp,  259 
Begonia  subvirescent,  274 ;  a  white 
winter-flowering,  424 
Begonias— in  the  open  air,  287  ;  Ware’s, 
3&! 
“Berries”— Elder,  182;  Logan,  1S2 ; 
McDonald,  182  ;  the  Partridge,  424 
“Best  Hardy  Perennials  for  Cut 
Bowers,”  530 
Bigpueric  hybrids,  196 
Birds,  and  fruit,  238  ;  protection  of,  443 
Biffningham  and  Gooseberries,  12  ;  gar¬ 
deners  at  Elvaston,  114 
Blajk-Arch  moth,  233 
Blackberry  culture,  332 ;  American, 
the  Kittatiny,  543 
Blackberries  and  Wineberries,  485 
Blind  for  glass  houses,  432,  463,  492 
Blossoms,  good  effects  of  thinning,  232 
Booconia  cordata,  grouping  of,  298 
Bog—  plants,  437  ;  slide  in  Ireland,  460 
Boiler,  heating  capacity  of,  477 
Boilers,  Hartley  &  Sugden’s,  180 
Bollea  ccelestis,  73 
Bolton  Horticulturists  at  dinner,  561 
Bombax  sp. ,  274 
Bonapartea  robusta,  476 
Book,  an  old,  530 
Book  notices— “  Art  and  Craft  of  Gar¬ 
den  Making,”  314;  “British  Trees,” 
100  ;  “  Cyclopedia  of  American  Horti¬ 
culture,”  56;  “Pictorial  Practical 
Fruit  Growing,”  216;  “The  Gar¬ 
dener’s  Assistant,”  284;  “  Wall  and 
Water  Gardens,”  216  ;  Book  of 
Bulbs,”  559;  “The  Best  Hardy 
Perennials  for  Cut  Flowers,”  530 ; 
“An  old  Book,”  530;  Lilie3  for 
English  Gardens,  516;  “Formal 
Gardens  in  England  and  Scotland,” 
516  ;  “  Origin  of  Species,”  559 
Borage,  148 
Bordeaux  mixture,  45 
Border— flowers  and  annuals,  238 ; 
chemical  dressings  for  Peach,  584 
Botanical  Repository,  Kew,  298 
Botanic  Gardens,  Edinburgh,  123,  221  ; 
Regent’s  Park,  152  ;  curator  of 
■Washington,  310  ;  Cambridge,  plants  | 
from,  466  ;  Dublin,  plants  from,  466  ; 
Brussels,  512.  [See  also  “Kew.”] 
Botanist,  death  of  an  old,  376 
Bothydom,  336 
Bottling  fruit,  484 
Boulevards  for  London,  129 
Bouquets  for  politicians,  559 
Bowie,  death  of  Mr.  R.,  265 
Bracket,  Mr.  G.  B.,  57 
Braiswick  nurseries,  157 
Briers,  seedling,  242,  270,  290 
British  grown  fruit  at  the  Crystal 
Palace,  354  ;  dye  plants,  385 
Broccoli  planting  in  old  Strawberry 
bed,  93 
Brougham  Hall,  Westmoreland,  490 
Brussels  Sprout  Solidity,  438 
Buds,  decayed  Chrysanthemum,  279 
Bulb  Company  chartered,  105 
Bulb — Number,  our,  259,  2S0  ;  culture, 
school  children  and,  512 ;  culture, 
Irish,  551 
Bulbs— their  culture,  170,218  ;  in  shrub¬ 
beries,  massing,  239  ;  diseased,  264  ; 
in  grass,  269,  271  ;  miscellaneous, 
272 ;  attractive,  for  massing,  268  ‘ 
as  edging,  286  ;  notes  on,  437  ;  forcing, 
458 
Buried  gardens  and  orchards,  404 
Butterflies  in  Battersea  Park,  104 
Calceolaria,  the  herbaceous,  26 
Calla  Elliottiana,  44 
Camellia  Sasanqua,  130 
Campanula — macrostyla,  105  ;  fasciated, 
58 
Canada’s  crops,  142 
Canadian  Trade  Index,  266 
Canker  in  Apple  trees,  476 
Cannell’s  championship  belt,  129 
Cardiff —Gardeners’  Association,  287  ; 
Central  Reference  Library,  list  of 
books  in,  319 
Carnation— Duchess  of  Roxburghe,  85  ; 
Germania,  101 ;  Sir  R.  Waldie  Griffith, 
124  ;  Mrs.  T.  W.  Lawson,  226  ;  a  good 
tree,  286  ;  Princess  Alice  de’  Monaco, 
286  ;  lists,  287  ;  E.  Crocker,  317  ;  rust, 
388  ;  a  new,  485 
Carnations — from  Kelso,  12  ;  at  Chelsea, 
50  ;  a  few  good,  52  ;  diseased,  59  ;  and 
Picotees,  show,  84  ;  fungus  pests  of, 
274  ;  and  Picotees,  382  ;  from  Battle 
Abbey,  461 
Carsethorne,  the  garden  at,  558 
Cassell’s  “Dictionary  of  Gardening," 
513 
Catalogue,  a  sundriesman’s,  399 
Catalpas  at  Kew,  124 
Caterpillar,  Death’s  head,  279 
Cattleya  x  Hardyana  Rochfordiana, 
305 ;  x  Iris  aureo-marginata,  397  ; 
Brownie,  Veitch’s  variety,  437 
Cattleyas,  notes  on,  121 
Cauliflowers  in  Essex,  377 
Cedrus— Deodara,  307  ;  atlantica,  401 
Celery  stem  diseased,  45  ;  maggot,  pre¬ 
vention  of,  352 
Celery  stem-rot  d'sease,  20 
Celosias,  fine,  374 
Cephalotaxus  Fortunei,  481 
Ceropegia  Gardneri,  540,  562 
Certificated  plants,  78 
Cereus  nycticalus,  514 
Chelmsford  School  of  Agriculture,  581 
Cheiranthus  alpinus,  buds  proliferous, 
58 
Chemical  dressings  for  Peach  border, 584 
Chemistry  of  artificial  flowers,  76 
Cherry  time,  24  ;  house,  the,  487,  540 
Cherries  —  forcing,  139;  under  glass, 
312  ;  in  pots,  312  ;  varieties  of,  312 ; 
sweet,  and  Plums,  540 
Chertsey  School  of  Handicrafts,  80 
Chesluint  revisited,  130 
Chestnut,  Horse,  double  flowered,  182 
Chimouanthus  fragrans  grandiflorus  at 
Kew,  534 
Chionodoxas,  271 
Chiswick  Gardens,  56,  224 ;  lectures, 
419 
Chiswick,  Lilium  Conference  at,  84 
Christmas  in  the  bothy,  585 
Christmas  in  the  garden,  576 
Christmas  on  duty,  542,  562 
Christmas  trees,  561 
Chrysanthemum  —  frutescens,  sowing 
seed  of,  45  ;  season,  identification  of 
“grubs,”  240;  buds  decayed,  279; 
disbudding  and  feeding,  308  ;  some 
salient  features  of  prize  schedules, 
413  ;  season,  the,  457 
Chrysanthemums — notes  on,  4, 100, 150, 
381 ;  blight  on,  141 ;  fly  on  the,  149  ; 
selecting  buds  and  feeding,  196;  dwarf 
218  ;  outdoor  varieties,  286  ;  plant  pro¬ 
tector  wanted,  286  ;  rust  on,  366  ;  early 
flowering,  352  ;  in  the  garden,  396; 
general  cultural  remarks,  403  ;  crown 
buds,  403 ;  final  potting,  and  first 
break,  403  ;  new  varieties  at  Chelsea, 
403  ;  the  Lewisham  collection,  381 ;  at 
Battersea  Park,  420 ;  at  Swanley, 
421  ;  growers’  social  evening,  421 ; 
diseased,  455  :  in  Liverpool,  442 ; 
Anemone-flowered,  444 ;  taking  cut¬ 
tings  from  rust  infested  stock,  524 ; 
outdoor,  492,  509 :  groups,  510  ; 
blooms  arranged  with  foliage  and 
plants,  510  ;  a  model  group  of,  511 ; 
Messrs.  Cannell’s.  collection,  465  ; 
at  Southport,  461 ;  at  Christmas,  557  ; 
hints  on  propagation,  557  ;  damaged, 
560  ;  abbreviated  and  badly-spelt 
names,  580  ;  a  veteran  exhibitor,  580  ; 
striking  and  stopping  Madame  Des- 
grange,  588 
Cinerarias— and  Primulas,  72  ;  and  Pico¬ 
tees,  171 ;  wireworm  at  the  roots  of, 
1S8,  226 
Cirrhopetalum  Cummgi,  73 
Oirrhopetalums,  73 
Clematises,  culture  of,  181  ;  trained,  441 
Cloves,  gathering,  202 
Club-root  fungicide,  466 
Ccelogyne  cristata,  45,  863  ;  early 
flowering,  4 
Coating  for  hot-water  pipes,  500 
Cob  Nuts  and  Filberts,  culture  of,  553 
Coccid,  stellate,  466 
Colchester,  the  Old  Rose  Gardens,  244 
Coleus  thyrsoideus,  76 
Collections  of  indoor  fruits,  354 
