INDEX
Ampelopsis Veitchii, [21], [88].
Analysis of fog at Kew and Chelsea in 1891, [49].
Apathy of the public about fog, [54].
Arabis, double and single, [11].
Area garden, [2].
“Art out of Doors,” [69].
Asparagus Plumosa, [47].
Asparagus Sprengeri, [17].
Back and front gardens, [64], [67].
Balcony-fitting, [25].
Barr’s, Messrs., rock-garden, [97].
Birds and butterflies in London, [30].
Bournville, workman’s village, [32].
Bonfires, [74].
Bulbs for the window-box, [10].
Bulbs after flowering, [14].
Bulbous plants in smoke, [28].
Bulbous plants for parks in town, [4].
Bulbous plants in fog, [53].
Button-hole bouquet-making in London streets, [60].
Campanulas, [4], [17], [41], [97].
Campanula Bavarica, [99].
Candy-tuft (Iberis), [99].
Charcoal filters for fog, [51].
Children’s window-boxes, [19].
Children’s ideas of “Next-door,” [73].
Choosing the window-box, [37].
Cleansing foliage, [38], [41].
Clean mist, [49].
Clematis Montana, [91].
Clementi-Smith’s, Mrs., rectory-garden in the City, [26], [30].
Climbers, [89].
Climbers in pots, [20].
Country Life on suburban gardens, [76].
Country board schools, [33].
Covent Garden Market, [45].
Coal-smoke Abatement Society, [54]
Crocus, [11], [64], [65].
Crook’s Place Board School, Norwich, [32].
Creepers, [89].
Cut flowers from the florist, [3]
Daisies, field, [16].
Daisies, Michaelmas, [4].
Double-wall gardening, [99].
Dracaenas, [47].
Drainage for window-box, [33].
Drainage for fernery, [81].
Drainage for rockery, [96].
Dyed flowers, [57].
Early and mid-Victorian bouquets, [59].
Encrusted Saxifrages, [99].
Establishing a rockery, [96].
Etiquette in suburban gardens, [71].
Exeter prize window-boxes, [18].
Factory-lad’s window-box and Miss Jekyll, [35].
Ferns for window-box, [42].
Ferns at Kew after fog, [52].
Ferns all the year round, [80].
Ferns and gas, [53].
Ferns under trees, [85].
Flower Hospital, [39].
Flower-girls of London, [60].
Flowers as symbols, [58].
Flower-beds in turf, [78].
Flower-pots, [21], [22].
Floral trophies, [59].
Foreign opinions on English suburban gardens, [64].
Fog filters and annihilators, [50].
Foliage plants, [44].
Free’s, Mrs. Richard, Window-box Society at Millwall, [31].
Front and back gardens, [64], [67].
Furnishing the fernery, [82].
Garden-schools in Germany, [33]
Gardens we grow fond of, [69].
Genista, [16].
Giant Snowdrop, Galanthus Whittalli, [10].
Giving away our surplus plants, [34].
Grassy gardens, [76].
Grass walks, [79].
Hanging baskets, [39].
Herbs in the window-box, [17].
Honeysuckle, [92].
Hops, [92].
Home for Working Boys, roof-garden at, [28].
Impurities of town fog, [49].
Individuality in gardens, [67].
Injuries from fog, [49].
Iberis, candy-tuft, [99].
Insects, [40].
Ipomœa (Morning Glory), [92].
Ivy, [11], [93].
Jasmines, [90].
Kitchen window-boxes, [17].
Kew Gardens, fog at, [50], [52].
Kew and Chelsea, fog at, [49].
Lady decorators, [85].
Lawn, the, [65], [76], [78].
Lilies, Japanese, at Holland House, [4].
Lilies in poor man’s garden, [32].
Limestone for rockeries, [96].
London in June, [23].
London flower-girls, [60].
London Pride, [11], [97].
Love of small gardens, [69].
Maiden-hair sprigs, [60].
Making a balcony-garden, [25].
Making a rockery, [96].
Magnolia Grandiflora, [90].
Michaelmas Daisies, [4].
Miniature rock and water gardens, [68].
Moss, [11], [39].
Musk, [15], [25], [41].
Narcissus, [12], [39].
Nasturtiums, [3], [43], [45].
Open-air fern-box, [42].
Ornamental foliage plants, [47].
Osmunda Regalis in May, [85].
Osmunda Regalis in autumn, [85].
Passion-flowers on south wall, [91].
Palms, [46].
Petunias, [15], [29], [39].
Pelham Park (Home for working boys), [29].
Plants for house-decoration, [46].
Poplar trees next door, [73].
Pots for balconies, [21].
Pot-plants, watering, [41].
Precautions in foggy weather, [53].
Primrose Day, [58].
Pruning creepers, [92].
Public Health Act, [54].
Pyrethrums as town flowers, [3].
Queen’s Gate window-boxes, [16].
Rain-water, [18], [86].
Rock-gardening, [95].
Rock-plants, hardy English, [100].
Roof-garden in Bishopsgate St., [28].
Roof-garden on London leads, [29].
Roses, [4], [20], [56], [58], [67], [90].
Saxifrages in rockery, [99].
Seeds for window-box, [42].
Seed Song, [18].
Shop-front in Bond Street, [23].
Shrubs for window-box, [38].
Silene (Campion or Catchfly), [12].
Slugs, [3].
Snowdrops, [10].
Smoke-poison, [48].
Soil for window-box, [37].
Soot, [3], [38].
Study of plants, [41].
Stone for rockery, [96].
Suburban gardens, [4], [62].
Suburban highways, [63].
Sunflower, a city, [34].
Summer flowers for window-box, [14].
Tiger Lilies, [28].
Town board schools, [32].
Tubs for verandahs and balconies, [22].
Turf for small gardens, [66].
Turf, love of green, [75].
Turf, flower-beds in, [78].
Turf for games, [77].
Turf for bordering shrubberies, [78].
Urban fog, [48].
Valerian, [100].
Villa window-box in March and June, [37].
Virginia Creeper for bird’s nests, [91].
Virginia Stock, [43].
Washing leaves, [41].
Watering, [40], [81], [83].
Weeping Willows, [65].
Weeds that are welcome, [30], [83].
Winter Jasmine (nudiflorum), [64], [90].
Winter Aconite, [11].
Wild flowers in the garden, [83].
Window-box in spring, [10].
Wire netting, [89].
Wired flowers, [56].
Wormwood, [17].
Handbooks of Practical Gardening
Under the General Editorship of
HARRY ROBERTS
Price 2s. 6d. net, each. Crown 8vo. Illustrated. Price $1.00.
Vol. I.—The Book of Asparagus. With Sections on Celery, Salsify, Scorzonera, and Seakale; and a chapter on their cooking and preparation for the table. By Charles Ilott, F.R.H.S., Lecturer on Horticulture to the Cornwall County Council.
The Speaker.—“The work of a specialist. Mr. Ilott gives us—for a matter of half a crown—the ripe experience of a life-time.”
Vol. II.—The Book of the Greenhouse. By J. C. Tallack, F.R.H.S., Head Gardener at Shipley Hall.