JOURNAL  OF  HORTICULTURE  AND  COTTAGE  GARDENER, 
December  3],  1903. 
viii. 
Vandas,  notes  on,  391,  599 
V'e,|etable  Conference  (and  fruit  show) 
at  Cliiswick,  312  ;  glowing,  book  on, 
478 ;  growing  on  a  large  scale  for 
market,  343 
Vegetable  Marrow,  monster,  340 
Vegetables,  “Supply  of,  for  a  private 
family,”  312;  Mr.  Beckett  on  “  Ex¬ 
hibition  Vegetables,”  313  Mr. 
Lobjoit  on  “  the  Marketing  of 
Vegetables,”  313 
Vegetables  :  Carrot  failures,  81.  98  ; 
early  summer  crops,  29 ;  origin  of, 
70  ;  thoughts  and  things  about,  378 
Veitchian  cup,  the,  99 
Veronica  spicata,  10  ;  virginica,  .555 
Veronicas,  529 
Viburnum  Sieboldianum,  104 
Vine  borders,  dressing,  277  ;  borders, 
renov.ating,  351,  378  ;  leaf  spotted, 
321  ;  rods,  depressing,  535  ;  roots  from 
a  Black  Hamburgh,  592 
Acacias — A.  armata,  A.  cordata,  A.  j 
Drummondi,  A.  pulchella,  A.  verti- 
cillata,  197 
Apple,  Gascoigne’s  Scarlet,  445  ;  Golden 
Pippin,  311 :  Golden  Spire,  379 ; 
Lord  Hindlip,  314  ;  Middle  Green, 
462  ;  Eibston  Pippin,  617  ;  White 
Transparent,  313;  Yorkshire  Green¬ 
ing,  641 
Birmingham  Botanic  Garden,  151 
Bothy  for  six  men,  109  ;  two-storeyed, 
the  fourth  an  1  last  of  the  Journal 
plans,  3S3 
Bulbs  in  the  greenhouse,  243  ;  large 
V.  .small,  2:3 
Campanula  spicata,  267 
Carnation,  Mrs.  Lora  Armstrong,  351 
Carnations,  diagrams  illustrating  cross- 
pollination,  101 ;  flaked  and  self,  79 
Cattleya  x  Atalanta  superba,  1S9 ;  x 
Dowiana  Rosita,  34V  ;  x  Oweniana, 
97;  X  Pittiana,  Wilson  Potter’s  var., 
281 ;  X  Rex,  143  ;  Schilleriana  Lowi, 
303;  C.  guttata  Prinzi,  599 
Chrysanthemum— Australie,  333  ;  Mme. 
Carnot,  333;  Dime.  G.  Henry,  333  ; 
Mrs.  Barkley,  333  ;  Mrs.  AV.  Mease, 
421 
Chrysanthemums— a  Tasmanian  show, 
125  ;  cottagers’  twelve,  a,  493  ;  dozen 
Japanese-incurved,  491;  six ‘‘.Japs  ” 
from  Isle  of  Wight,  493 
Chilworth  Manor,  Romsey  —  (three 
views),  354,  355;  Peaches  as  grown  at, 
357 
Clematis  x  Countess  of  Onslow,  169 
Colchicum  autumnale  and  variegatuni, 
559 
Conservatory' (see  also  winter  garden) 
at  Smedley’s  Hydropathic,  Matlock, 
373;  at  Farmleigh,  exterior,  468;  in¬ 
terior,  469  ;  at  Philiphaugh,  exterior, 
466 ;  interior,  467 
Coping,  a  portable  Peach  tree  wall,  454 
Cornusbrachypoda  variegata,  147 
Crowe  i  saligna  major,  613 
Cyclamens,  hardy.  533 
Vines,  forced,  pot,  583  ;  for  planting  and 
fruiting,  E02  ;  grafting.  547;  inarching; 
a  query,  218,  239  ;  in  pot.«,  3.51  ;  not 
ripening  wood,  365;  pot,  at  Cardiff 
Castle,  8 ;  root  of,  decayed,  430 ; 
winter  dressing  for,  342 
Viola  hybridisation,  356 
Violas  and  Pansies,  VS  ;  as  rock  plants, 
242  :  best  13  varieties,  242  ;  the 
modest,  356  ;  the  newer.  353 
Violet,  Lady  Clifford,  461;  l.a  France, 
654  ;  Princess  of  AVales,  654 
Visiting,  garden,  46 
A’itis  Thomsoni,  261 
W 
W’ake  Up,  England,  490 
Wallflowers,  183 
Wash  for  Gooseberry  bushes,  265 
AVater  and  bog  plants,  461 
AA'ater  Hyacinth,  The,  in  American 
waters,  282 
AA’eather,  Roses,  and  bees  at  Newton 
Mearns,  N.B.,  479 
AA’eather,  the  Belvoir,  31,  140,  3C8,  331, 
479,  546  ;  Chiswick,  20,  43,  67,  90,  133. 
159,  205,  231,  235,  277,  298,  340,  364,  385, 
429,  479,  603,  624,  54%  568,  69) ;  crops, 
and  the,  124 ;  cyclone  in  Berks,  428  ; 
IJevonsliire  (Nov.),  479 ;  Hamilton 
district,  5,  250,  308,  603  ;  Newton 
Mearns,  N.B.,  S62,  418,  646;  October 
at  Hamilton,  428  ;  Perthshire,  624, 
568  ;  records  and  garden  crops.  49 ; 
Sussex,  6.  149,  250,  331,  429,  546; 
Temple  House  Gardens,  Great  Mar¬ 
low,  31,  124,  250,  331,  429,  624  ;  wet, 
the  continued,  387 
AA’eeds  on  gravel  walks,  destroying,  547 
AVem,  Henry  Eckford’s  nursery  at,  238 
AVindow  gardening,  141 
AA'indmill,  the,  466 
AVinter  Aconite,  the,  242 
AVinter-garden  structures,  346 
- - - - 
ILLUSTEATIONS. 
Cypripedium  x  Arlhurianura  pulchel- 
lum.  675  ;  X  Constance,  259;  x  Gode- 
froyre  leuchochilum,  483  ;  Lawren- 
cianum  Gratrixianum,  369  ;  x  leucor- 
rhodura,  119 ;  spectabile,  27  ;  venustum 
Measuresiauum,  71 
Daffodils  (see  also  Narcissus)  natur- 
ali  ed,  245 
Dendrobium  x  A’enus,  325 
Di-a  racemosa,  213 
Elm,  the  (Ulmus  campe3tri3)339 
Erica propendens,  543 
Floral  arrangement,  a,  221 
Flower  support,  a  handy,  407 
Frames  and  wall  shelters,  309 
Fritillaria  Meleagris,  238 
Front,  study  of  a  form.al,  637 
Fruit,  a  Tasmanian  show,  129  ;  Brown- 
rot  of  (Sclerotina  fructigena),  51  ; 
store,  Veitch’s  at  Langley,  316  ; 
trees,  a  fungus  disease  of  (Eutypella 
prunastri),  41 
Gardeners'  Dinner  Committee,  175 
Gooseberry,  Wonderful,  34 
Hedges,'  sheltering  Yew,  and  grass 
walk,  285 
Hive,  A’-shaped  entrance  to,  364 
Houses,  orchard,  span  and  lean-to,  198, 
199 
Hyacinth  glasses,  275 
Hyacinths,  commercial  culture  of,  286  ; 
in  Hyde  Park,  273 
Impney  Hall,  Droitwich,  the  indoor 
fernery,  28) 
Insects,  butterfly,  small  copper,  296 ; 
butterfly,  the  comma,  380  ;  moth,  the 
Pith  (Laverna  atra),  136  ;  moth,  the 
AA’aberian  (Tortrix  AA’aberiana),  501 
Ixias,  a  spray,  247 
Kew,  the  Palm  House  at,  439 
Kingswood  Show  (Bristol)— best  six 
Peaches,  215  ;  epergnes,  the,  217  ; 
first  prize  fruit  collection,  215  ;  flower 
bunches,  best  six,  217  ;  flower  bunches, 
i  second  prize,  217 
Laelia  anceps  Oweniana,  531 
La;lio-cattleya  x  Decia,  553  ;  x  Nor  jaa 
superba,  437 
Lilium  Martagon  and  its  white  vaiiety, 
33  ;  speciosum  varieties,  105 
Loganberry,  the,  329 
Millipedes  and  centipedes,  424 
Narcissus,  Euglehearti  section,  an  ex¬ 
ample,  235  ;  Hybrid  Chalice-cup  or 
Star,  325  ;  Poet’s  N.arcissus  or  small- 
crown,  235  ;  Trumpet,  or  Daffodil, 
235 
Narcissus  —  incomparabilis  Gloria 
Mundi,  295 ;  Johnstoni,  Queen  of 
Spain,  235;  Polyanthus,  Her  Majesty, 
251  ;  sulphur  Phoenix,  237 
Nectarine,  a  pot,  269 
Nut,  Duke  of  Edinburgh,  315 
Oncidium  Gardneri,  415  ;  pumiluiu,  409 
Passiflora  carulea,  57 
Pear,  Bergamotte  Esperen,  587  ;  Eeurr6 
Bose,  663 ;  Marie  Benoist,  338 ; 
Nouvelle  Fulvie,  310 ;  Olivier  de 
Serres,  307  ;  Passe  Colmar,  427 
Pear— cordon,  319  ;  pyramid  on  Quince, 
319 
Pelargonium,  double-flowered  reverting 
to  single  form,  615 
Phaio-calanthe  x  Sedeniana,  165 
Phaio-cymbidium  x  Chardwarense,  607 
Phaius  X  Chapmani  superbus,  47 
Ph.alaenopsis  intermedia  Poitei,  395; 
P.  Marioe,  699 
Picea  nobilis  of  40ft  height,  removing, 
227 
Plum  trees,  one  of  Bunyard’s  pot,  317 
Poplar,  the  black,  589 
Portrait.s— Barr,  Peter,  241 ;  Bulmer 
(Rev.)  C.  H  ,  399 ;  Chambers,  Sir 
AVilliam,  287 ;  Dean  of  Rochester 
(the  A’ery  Rev. ),  399 ;  Foster- 
Melliar  (Rev.)  A.,  399  ;  Heaton,  S., 
372;  Humphreys,  Thos.,  80;  Jones, 
Conway,  398  ;  Mawley,  Ed.,  399 ; 
Meindoe,  James,  438  ;  Molyneux, 
H.,  398  ;  Page-Roberts  (Rev.)F.,  398  ; 
Pemberton  (Rev.)  J.  IL,  399;  Shea, 
C.  E.,  618 
AVire  net  for  Peas  and  Strawberries,  460 
AVisley,  proposed  horticultural  college 
at,  464;  the  R.H.S.  new  garden,  gilt 
by  .Sir  Thos.  Hanbury,  149 
AA’istaria,  dying,  139 
AA’omeu  and  horticulture,  487 
AA’ood,  average  price  per  foot  of  Ouk. 
Birch,  Chestnut,  Larch,  and  Sco  s 
Pine,  184 
AA'oodhall,  Hilgay,  Norfolk,  539 
AVork  for  the  week,  19,  41,  66,  89,  159, 
205,  229,  253,  275,  297,  319,  341,  385, 
523,  545,  668,  591,  (08 
AA'orld’s  Fair  at  St.  Louis,  370 
AA’ye,  South  Eastern  Agricultural  Col¬ 
lege,  331 
Y 
Year,  lessons  of  the,  649 
Yew,  shoots  of,  discoloitred,  430  ;  tree, 
planting,  569 
York  Gala,  1904,  149 
Yule-tide  flowers,  603 
Raphiolepis  ovata,  521 
Red  Currant,  Raby  Castle,  37 
Rhododendrons,  arrangement  of,  61 
Rose,  Niphetos,  489 
Roses,  Tea-scented,  11 
Sarmienta  repens,  413 
Sarracenia  x  Stevensi,  155 
Scilla  campanulata  rosea,  248 
Schoenia  cassiniana,  7 
Southampton  show — Peed's  Gloxinias, 
75;  Roses,  18  distinct,  83;  Rcse-i, 
6  distinct,  83  ;  Roses,  9  distinct,  85  ; 
Roses,  12  distinct,  85  ;  vegetables, 
1st  prize  collection  of,  87 
Sparaxis,  249 
Spirsea  Thunbergi,  337 
Strawberries,  a  bed  of  St.  Joseph, 
Sept.  25,  403;  in  October — Rev.  Foster- 
Melliar’s  arrangement  in  i)lanting, 
350 
Sweet  Pea  plant  affected  with  pea  spot 
(Ascochyta  pisi),  157 
Tasmania,  show  of  Chrysanthemums’ 
125  ;  show  of  fruit,  129 
Tom.ato,  Lister’s  Prolific,  605 
Tree-ties,  Beckett’s,  476 
Tree  moving  machine,  226 
Trees,  collar  for  lifting,  228;  removing 
a  Picea  nobilis  of  40ft.  height,  2J7  ; 
transplanting  at  Stancliffe,  491 
Tiitoma  uvaria.  263 
Truffle,  the  white,  291 
Tube-holders,  “  Handy-clip,”  204 
Tubs  for  shrubs,  112,  113 
Tulips,  a  spray  of  double,  236 
Vanda  tricolor  tenebrosa,  3 
A’eronica  spicata,  15 
Violet  La  France,  in  a  pot,  555 
Vitis  Thomsoni,  231 
AA’aH  shelters  and  frame?,  309 
AA’inter  garden  at  Moulton  Paddocks, 
Newmarket,  360  ;  interior  view  of 
s.ame,  377  ;  in  the  Public  Park, 
AVolverhampton,  361  ;  interior  view 
of  same,  376 
Yule-tide  flowirs,  603 
