June  27,  1901, 
JOURNAL  OF  HORTICULTURE  AND  COTTAGE  GARDENER, 
vii. 
Stanhopea  grandiflora,  149 
Stanton,  Mr.  G.,  honours  for,  152 
Stocks— dwarfing,  167  ;  for  budding, 
184 
Strawberry— points  of  a  good,  198  ;  cul¬ 
ture,  improved,  223  ;  support,  a,  239  ; 
runners  for  forcing,  380 ;  leaves  and 
flowers  injured,  466  ;  early,  458  ;  crop, 
the  forced,  484  ;  the  Laxton,  542 
Strawberries— black  dots  on  leaves,  43  ; 
in  pots,  63,  138,  178  ;  perpetual,  55 ; 
treatment  of,  145  ;  in  barrels,  429 
Succulents  for  bedding,  326 
Sugar  Beet,  252 
Sulphate  of  copper  for  the  Greek  vine¬ 
yards,  9 ;  of  ammonia  and  nitrate  of 
soda,  424 
Summer,  early,  in  Warwickshire,  546 
Sundries,  3 
Sunny  memories  of  Sutherland,  218 
Sun  shines,  when  the,  276 
Sutton’s  nurseries,  100,  504 
Swainsonia  McCullockiana,  440 
Swanley  —  Horticultural  College,  325, 
418,  430  ;  Cannell’s  Nursery  at, 
362 
Sweet,  Mr.  James,  V. M.H.  259 
Sweet  Pea,  proposed  National  Society, 
245 
Sweet  Peas,  36,  60 ;  in  pots,  600  ; 
autumn  sown,  541 
Symons,  memorial  to  the  late  Mr. 
J.  G.,  521 
Tea,  culture  of,  260 
Tecoma  Smithi,  370 
Temperate  house,  Kew,  octagons  of 
the,  347 
Temple  Show,  431 
1  Theft,  a  mean,  243 
The  old  century— the  new,  12 
Thomas,  retirement  of  Mr.  Owen, 
397 
Thunia  Bensonise,  493 
Thyrsacanthus  rutilans,  298 
Tigridias,  planting,  124 
Thunbergia  laurifolia,  309 
Todeas,  296 
Tomatoes— early,  75  ;  Hackwood  Park 
Prolific,  75  ;  should  they  be  stopped  ? 
155  ;  immature,  175  ;  culture  of,  225  ; 
jottings  about,  308  ;  plants  diseased, 
483,  610 
Tomato  growing,  book  on,  301 
!  Topiary  work  at  Elvaston,  12,  33 
Trachelium  coeruleum,  84 
Trees— expansion  of,  14  ;  annual  lop¬ 
ping,  59 ;  at  Osborne,  138  ;  an  hotel 
of,  138  ;  in  the  London  Parks,  178  ; 
ages  of,  223 ;  the  pruning  of  hardy, 
218,  326,  370;  Loquat,  223;  in  the 
Strand,  245  ;  who  owns  roadside?  260  ; 
insect  enemies  of,  306  ;  purple  leaved, 
lack  of  colour  in,  416  ;  and  shrubs  at 
the  Temple  Show,  433;  Californian, 
the,  502  ;  Japanese  dwarf,  498  ;  endur¬ 
ance  of  Californian,  521 ;  developing 
the  shape  of,  524 
Trichocentrum  tigrinum,  297 
Tropseolum  Sunlight,  416 
Tuberoses,  treatment  of,  124 
Tulipa  Picotee,  429 ;  Gesneriana  Ixi- 
oides,  440  ;  Mooreana,  440  ;  Batalini 
Sunrise,  440  ;  La  Tulip  Noire,  440  ; 
“  Brunhilde,”  602 
Tulips,  418  ;  at  Cork,  497 ;  disease  in, 
527 
Utility  in  gardening,  99 
Vanda  cserulescens,  297 
Vandas — a  white  coerulea,  25 ;  notes  on, 
109 
Vanilla,  195 
Vegetables— English,  in  East  Africa,  7, 
155 ;  forcing,  16  ;  artificial  light  in, 
14  ;  early,  in  frames,  64  ;  early,  raising 
in  boxes,  104  ;  new,  300  ;  collection  of, 
336 
Veitch,  Mrs.  Peter,  death  of,  153 
Veltha  for  rust,  52,  104 
Victoria  Medal  of  Honour  in  horticul¬ 
ture,  243,  476 
Village  life,  back  to,  620 
Vines— seasonable  notes  on,  19,  63,  103, 
143,  183  ;  not  fruiting,  43  ;  outdoor, 
105  ;  new  borders  for  152  ;  notes  on 
young,  259  ;  leaves  affected  with 
spots,  315 ;  leaves  destroyed,  293  ; 
for  planting  and  forcing,  298,  331  ; 
watering  borders,  327  ;  weevil,  334 ; 
Mrs.  Pearson  Vine  dropping  flowers, 
337  ;  rejuvenating  old,  350 ; 
“weeping,”  leaf  burning,  380  ;  on 
the  Continent,  602  ;  syringing,  511 
Viola  cornuta  papilio,  429 
Violets— and  Anemones,  37  ;  and  Violet 
culture,  331 
Virulence  of  Poison  Ivy,  306 
Wages,  gardeners’,  314 
Walks,  salting,  380 
Walls  in  the  West  Conntree,  475 
Wasted  vigour,  535 
Water  gardens  and  gardening,  442 
Water— “  Kent,”  unsuitable  for  plants, 
421 
Water  Lily  pond,  a,  49  ;  ground  plan, 
51  ;  sections  of,  50  ;  selections  of 
plants,  50 
Water  Lilies,  uncommon,  624 
Waterpool,  an  indoor,  394 
Watsonia  iridifolia  Ardernei,  37 
Weather  in  1900,  127  ;  and  the  crops, 
260 
Weeds  in  soil,  destroying,  14 
Weevil,  Vine,  337 
When  the  sun  shines,  276 
Wild  flowers  of  old  English  gardens, 
26,  107,  237 
Wilton,  impressions  of,  441 
Windsor  Elms  doomed,  207 
Windflowers,  single,  345 
Winter  Aconites,  17 
Winter  digging,  52 
Wireworm,  successful  trapping  of, 
175 
Women  as  gardeners,  11,  55,  95,  155, 
195 
Wood  leopard  moth,  193 
Woods— the  structure  of,  28 ;  ashes  of 
and  rubbish,  84  ;  hard,  of  Paraguay, 
158 
Worthing  as  a  fruit  centre,  499 
Wreath,  an  Ivy,  602 
Wreaths  cast  on  the  ocean  waves,  520 
Y  ew,  the,  12 ;  at  Elvaston,  15 ;  tree, 
famous,  on  fire,  290;  the  Fortingall, 
Perthshire,  472 
Yucca— recurvifolia,  246  ;  filamentosa, 
plants  decayed,  425 
Zygopetalum  leucochilum,  89 ;  maxil- 
lare,  89 
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