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752

Birch rind of the American Indians, uses of,
by Mr. Hawthorn, 405; suggestions respecting,
by Mr. Baillie, 407.

Blaikie, Mr., his letter to the Duke of Bedford,

417.

Blaikie, T., effects of the winter in Paris, 482.*
Blair, T., notice respecting Lathyrus venosus.
and Kennèdia monophylla, 612.

Blight, the rapid generation of insects, 586; re-
medy for, by the Rev. J. Tyso, 587.
Boase, Mr. John, description of two machines
for scraping and sweeping roads, 100.
Boats for canals, improvement in, 477.
Bonplandia trifoliata, 285.

Botanic garden at Bath in Jamaica, 330; of
Edinburgh, 343; of Cambridge, 490.
Botanical and Entomological Society of Bury,
notice of, by Mr. J. Horsefield, 394.
Botanical and Horticultural Societies:-
Durham, Northumberland. and Newcastle
upon Tyne, Feb. 19th, 1830, 255; Nov. 15th,
1829, 124; April 8th, 1830, 383; May 14th
and June 11th, 521; Branch Meeting of,
June 10th, 630; July 9th, 631; July 12th,
631; Aug. 12th, 631.
Bristol, April 20th, 383.
Hexham, May 3d, 522.

Newcastle Sept. 3d and 7th, 758.

South Devon and East Cornwall, Feb. 4th,
address of Dr. Hamilton, 256; meeting of,
May 27th, 525.
Botanical Register and Botanical Magazine,
critical remarks on the comparative merits of
the, 721.

Botanical Society of Prestwich, notice of, by
Mr. J. Horsefield, 392.

Botany, lectures on, in Paris, 386; lessons on,
to be given by Mr. Sweet, 487.
Boulevards, the, of Paris, 644.

Bowers, Mr. John, on the management of the
timber tree plantations at West Dean, 543.
Boyce, Mr. W., answer respecting Strelitzia
reginæ, 229.

Braithwaite's steam fire-extinguishing engine,
478.

Brandy an antidote to beer, $52.

Brassica oleracea var. arborescens, introduced
into Philadelphia, 101.

Bread, on making, 168; at the foot of the Alps,

213.

Bree, the Rev. W. T., critique respecting the
Hanwell souring apple, 220; query respecting
the Bess Pool, and on the advantage of rais-
ing seedlings, 231; varieties of primrose, ox-
lip, and cowslip cultivated in the neighbour.
hood of Coventry, 366: the Hanwell souring
and seedling from Wheeler's Russet, 358; the
Erinus alpinus on old walls, 592.
Brewing beer, 168.

Brick tallies, 310.

Brient, Mr. Jas., on the culture of the Newtown
Pippin apple, 702.

Brighton, gardens at, 216.

Broccoli plant, a six-year, by Mr. Solomon
Philips, 492.

Brookes, Mr., notice of his rockwork to be sold,
491.

Buel, Mr. Jesse, education in North America,

103.

Buildings, the horticultural, for a kitchen-gar-
den of three acres and a half, 670.
Bulbs, on planting and protecting, by Mr. W.
Seymour, 49.

Burge, Mr. James, on a composition for destroy-
ing insects, 57.

Burges's improved axle for carriages, &c., figured
and described, 304.

Butter, ill-flavoured, remedy for, 368; tasting
of turnips, preventive for, by Mr. J. Clarke,
504.

Cabbages, culture of, 177; field, names and in-
troduction of several sorts of, 366.
Cactus Ackermánni, 560.

Camberwell Nursery, May 4th, 378.
Camellia japónica, maliflòra, oleifera, reticu.
Tata, Sasunqua, japónica variegata, japónica
incarnata, and japonica anemonefidra, 89, to
291; japonica Pomponia, japónica corallina,
japónica flore pleno álbo, and japónica eximia,
471; japonica Wiltòni, 575; japónica myrti
felia, 576; japónica fimbriata, 576; japónica
Chandleri, 576.

Cameron, Mr. John, answer to, query on heat-
ing pits by hot water pipes, 615.
Canavalia bonariensis, 210.
Canker and ulcer in plants, 29.
Canker in peach trees, query on the, by Mr. R.
Watts, 617.

Cape plant, technical name of a certain one,
query on, 224.

1

Cape Town, gardening news from, 322.
Capper, W. W., on the anatomy of the vine, 12.
Caraccas, the Botanic Garden at the, notice of,
129. 257; papers on the vine, remarks on, by
John Lindley, 358.
Carlton Hall, plan and description of the kit-
by E. A. Williamson, 484.
chen-garden at, by Mr. W. Seymour, 669.
Carnation, picotee, and gooseberry show of Cox.
lodge, 632.

Carrots, culture of, 176.
Castlemartyr, account of, 348.
Carpets, stair, machine for beating, 319.
Castor oil, importation of, from the W. Indies,

350.

Caterpillar, to destroy, 210; on the oak coppice,
Caterpillars, critique respecting destroying, as
suggestion respecting, 223.
mentioned in a former No., 217, query on
destroying, 223; answer to, 223; on the Con-
Celery, critical remark respecting, 222; cheap
stantinople nut, query respecting, 221.
Ceanothus, a hardy one on sale, 317.
and easy method of raising, by Mr. E. Roger,

554.

Cemetery, planted, at Liverpool, $53; metropo
Cellular texture described, 29.
litan, 489.

Cesspools for cottages, 172.
Cérbera Túnghin, 275.
Chapman, Mr, notice respecting, 652.
Champs Elysées of Paris, 646.
Cherry, Knight's Early Black, 82; the Water-
Chenopodium ólidum, 574.
loo, 288; the Black Eagle, 472, the Downton,
Chimneys, stacks of, in Paris, 8.
575; the Affane, query respecting, by Joh
Chimney-sweeping apparatus, query respecting,
Stuart, 615.

223.

Chiswick garden, reports on, and management
of, 224; plan of, and structures in, 247; gene-
ral management, 247, 218; proposed plan for,
figured and described, 249.

Cider, for the cottager, 151; the best work on
Chrysanthemum indicum, on flowering the, 428.
Churchyards, fruit-trees in, 595.
making, 504.

Citron tree in the gardens of Castle Semple, no-
Clapton Nursery, April 3d, 378.
tice of a, by John Hay, 702.
Clarification in making sugar, 151.
Claremont, May 13th, 352
Clarke, Mr. J, preventive for butter tasting of
turnips, 501

Classical residence, 226.

Clover, South American, query respecting, 504.
Cobbett's corn, account of a patch of, by Mr.
Greig, 60.

Collectors of plants, instructions for, 568.
Collet, the, explained, 13.
Cócculus palmatus, 276. 570.

Colliers, Monmouthshire, circumstance respect-
ing the, 534.

Calendar, garden, for the cottager, 190; of hus- Composition for gardener's shoes, 311.

Colosseum, account of the, 105.

Colville's nursery, Jan. 3d, and May 1st, 377.

bandry, 193.

Calla æthiópica, experiment on, 337.

Composts and soils, qualities of, by J. Main, 215.
Concentration, in making sugar, 151.

Conductor, critical remarks on the principles | Edgeware, new alms-houses at, 107.

and conduct of the, 720.

Conservatory, design for a small one, 664.
Cooperation in education and travelling, 479.
Cooperative societies, object of, by J. C. Penn,
478; of Perth and Dundee, 494.
Copenhagen, gardening news from, 321.
Córculum, definition of the, 556.
Corn mill, new, 352.

Cornfield, Mr. P., on raising auriculas from
seed, &c., 426.
Corn laws, 592.

Cottages, of labourers, 109; country labourers,
plans and descriptions of three, 153; labour-
ers', four designs for, by Mr. Richard Var-
den, 660.

Cottage gardens, remarks on, by Mr. Charles
Hulbert, 598.

Cottage husbandry and architecture, with refer-
ence to prize-essays, &c., 159.

Cottage system, critical remarks on the, 606.
Cottage in England, description of one, by Mr.
John Howden, 657.

Council of the Horticultural Society, 246.
Country Times newspaper, 107.

Covent Garden Market, Jan. 2d, 119; March
12th, 253; April and May, 372; July, 511;
the new building of, 513; prizes in Septem-
ber, 623; Nov. 1st, 732.

Covering for an auricula stage, 426.

Edgeworth, Thomas, jun., the soude as invented
by a Wrexham mechanic, 216.
Edging tiles of Mr. Allardyce, 309.
Edinburgh, rare plants flowered near, 493; ve-
getable market, June 1st, 494; August 7th, 601.
Education, account of, in North America, by
Mr. Jesse Buel, 103; principle, critical re-
marks on, 217; system in the United States,
$24; classical, 325; erroneous notions of its
effects, 488; as a check to population, critical
remarks respecting, 69.

Elichrysum, Mr. Wiggins's management of,

656.

Elles, Mr. J., on the potato, 58; on the culture
of the Rosa odorata, 427; observations re-
specting Mr. Howden's management of forest
trees, 545.

Encèlia canescens, 210.

Englefield House, remarks on, 655.

Ensor, G., notice of the culture of wheat in the
neighbourhood of Ardress, in Ireland, 691.
Epsom nursery, plants which have flowered at,
during September and October, 1829, 115;
critical remarks concerning, 357; rare plants
flowered in the, from February to June, 508;
July and August, 620.

Erinus alpinus on old walls, by the Rev. W. T.
Bree, 592.
Errata, 614 726.

Cow, advantage of, to a cottager, 181; manage- Errington, Mr. Robert, fruit trees in too rich a
ment of, 182, 206.

Cow tree, 315.

Craig, Mr. James, remarks on Mr. Newington's
observations on the management of peach
trees, 430; on the green fly in the blossoms
of peach trees, 552; on the visible cause, and
easy and effectual cure, of the bad setting of
some sorts of grapes, 687.

Crops, rotation of, for cottagers, 201; remark.
able, produced in the Vale of York, 493.
Croup, remedy for the, 552.

Cruickshank's Practical Planter versus Pon-
tey's Forest Pruner, on the subject of pruning
fir trees, 675.

Cucumber, large, 600.

Cucumbers, on keeping a fine bloom on, by Mr.
George Fulton, 709.

Cultivation taught in Paris, 386.

Cummings, Mr. H., some account of a large
vine at Sellwood Park, 439.
Currants in Corsica, 211.

Curtis, Mr., his establishment at Glazenwood,
733.

Cypress and cork tree, deciduous, query respect-
ing, 227.

Daisies, query on destroying, 615.

Dalgleish, Mr. H., on heating hot-houses by
Fowler's thermosiphon, 334; notice of a plan-
tain which has ripened fruit, 429.
Davenport, G., large pumpkins, 599.
Dean Forest, fences at, 446.
Defecation in making sugar, 150.
Dendrobium chrysanthum, 277.
Denson, Mr. John, jun., on the sexes and his-
tory of the Lombardy, or Turin, poplar, 419.
Diack, Mr. Alexander, his mode of grafting the
large branches of old trees, 698.

Dick's railways, 477.

Diseases of plants, 396.

Dolichos tetragonolobus, $15.
Dove's dung in Samaria, 216. 358.

Drawing from nature, casy method of, 305.
Drummond, Mr., his mode of frightening bears,

569.

Dryobalanops Camphora, 573.

Duncan, Mr. William, on the botanic flower-
garden Trelowarren, 420.

Dykes, Mr. J., query on a weevil destructive to
fruit trees, 500; answer to, 501.

Earle, Mr. Á., notice of his views taken in New
Zealand, &c., 486.

Ear-rings, a remnant of barbarism, 481.
Earwigs, newly invented trap for, 491; critical
remark on destroying, by tin pipes, by W.
Mason, jun., 723.

soil, 54; answer to query respecting vines for
a geranium house, 231; standard sizes for
garden pots, 354; query on Mr. Saunders's
list of pears, 615; remarks on the treatment
of fruit trees, 693; farther remarks on training
the peach and nectarine, 695.
Espionage at the Chiswick garden, 242, 243.
Eucalyptus, answer to query respecting, 502.
Exotic nursery, call at, 119.

Exotics, acclimated, list of, desired, 229; natu-
ralisation of, 493.

Falconar, Mr. D., species of Iris wanted, 502.
Faldermann, M. F., rare plants from Persia to
the Petersburgh botanic garden, 321; collec-
tion of melons from Russia, 333; a new va-
riety of wheat from China, 339.

Fanning, Mr. D., his botanic garden at Carac-
cas, $25; account of the Guaco plant, 326;
the Aracacha plant, S26; tobacco plants of
Colombia, 327.

Farm servants in Northumberland, customs in
hiring, and method of paying, 589.
Farmers and gardeners near Paris, personal
character of, 9.

Fences at Dean Forest, the, 446.
Ferme, John, query on avoiding woodlice, 223;
on keeping fruits, more particularly apples,
700.

Férula pérsica, 572.

Festivities in the Champs Elysées of Paris,
646.

Field sports, a subscription park and warren for,
in France, 316.

Fig, the white Sidney, 654.

Finlayson's harrow and Wilkie's brake, remarks
on, by R. Finlayson, Esq., 499.
Firs, pruning of, 455. 676.
Flanders, fertility of, 540.

Fleetwood, Mr. Thomas, on the culture of the
strawberry on a light sandy soil, 710.

Floral and Horticultural Societies:

Bolton, June 30th, 634; August 18th, 743.
Chelmsford and Essex, April 20th, 514; Sep-
tember 13th, 734.

Hull, May 3d and 24th, 520; June 21, 629;
July 5th and August 5th, 650; September
18th, 757.

Liverpool, May 27th, 523; August 5th, 632.
Manchester, April 22d and May 20th, 739;
June 24th, 740; August 9th, 742.
Rochdale, April 28th, 524; May 26th, 633.
Sheffield, 758.

Stockport, 598.

Florence, vegetables and fruit at, 319; weather
at, 320,

Florists' and Horticultural Society of Notting.
ham, April 21st, 383; of Darlington, 521.
Florists of Monk wearmouth, August 9th, 632.
Florists' Societies:

Ayr and Kilmarnock, competition of the, 637.
Cambridge, June 14th, 515; July 26th, 625.
Exeter, April 15th, S84.
Morpeth, May 27th, 522.
Pandon Dean, May 8th, 522.
Ponteland, July 10th, 652.

Flower gardens, designs for laying out, remarks
respecting, 219.

Flower-garden, plan of a, 423.

Georgina, painted lady anemone-flowered
figured and described, 77.
Geraniums, marking, 210.

Ginger, culture of, &c., described, 235.
Glass, substitute for, in hot-houses, 353; crack-
ing, preventive for, 500.

Glazing with lead laps, answer to query re-
specting, 726.

Godsall, Mr. William, his new budding-knife
figured and described, 308; notice of a small
economical green-house, 667.

Goldfinch, change of colour in a, 601.
Goldworth Nursery, May 11th, 380.

Flower-gatherer, figured and described, 588; Gooseberries, queries respecting a collection of,

hand flower-gatherer, 589.

Flower pots, groove.bottomed, 309.

Flowers, hint on preserving, 229.

Flower Show of Bolton, April 30th, 525.

Fonzi's smoke-consuming stove, 479; his terro-

metallic teeth, 480.

Food of animals and vegetables, 400.
Foot-scraper for sandy soils, 318.
Forcing of earth, 456,

Fore-shortening, Mr. Blaikie's system of, 418.
Forest trees, management of, 463.
Fowls, for cottagers, 175, 189.

Fowler, Mr., his models for markets, 105.

Fowler's thermosiphon, extract on heating hot-
houses by, 334.

Frame and strike for a tulip bed, figured and
described, 684.

Fraser, Mr., 346.

by Edmund Vallance, 727.
Gooseberry Shows:

of 1829, M. Saul, 357.

Haddrick's Mill, July 31., 631.
Burnopfield, Aug. 14., 652.
Ovingham, Aug. 9., 632.

Gordon, Mr. Alexander, remarks on a defect in
the ripening of grapes, 221; chemical and
geological elevations of plants corrected, 559.
Gorrie, Mr. A., C. M. H.S., remarks on Sir Henry
Steuart's Planter's Guide, 43; on destroying
slugs, 69; on preserving tender plants in win.
ter, 402; crops in the Lothians, 495; critical
remarks respecting the functions of leaves,
724.

Gould, Mr. John, obituary of, 256.

Grafting on the large branches of old trees, Mr.
Alexander Diack's mode of, 698.

French, Mr. D., cause of the failure of the early Gram, query respecting, 224; answer to, 368.
Charlton pear, 503.

French, William, obituary of, 639.

Frognals, the seat of Lord Sidney, remarks on
663.

Fruit market of Edinburgh, September 26th, 109.
Fruit trees, in too rich a soil, by Mr. Robert
Errington, 54; for cottagers, 180; earlier bear-
ing of, now than formerly, 229; from North
America, 338, in churchyards, 595; Ameri-
can list of, by Mr. M. Saul, 613; remarks on the
treatment of, by Mr. Robert Errington, 693.
Fruits, to increase the size of, 481; on keeping,
more particularly apples, by Mr. John Ferme,
700.

Fuchsias and hydrangeas, query respecting,

728.

Fuel, mode of growing, for cottagers, 144.
Fulham nursery, June 27th, 507.
Fulton, Mr. G., answer respecting Strelitzia
reginæ, 229; vines for a green-house, 232;
observations on the management of vines in
the vinery, 707; on keeping a fine bloom on
cucumbers, 709.

Fumigating pot, figured and described, 553.
Functions of animals and vegetables, 399.
Fund for gardeners, remarks on, by Mr. James
Rollins, 353.

Funds for general education, $35.
Fúngi, poisonous effects of, 571; edible, of Bri.
tain, 572.

Garden, cottage, cultivation of, 175; committee
of the London Hort. Soc., 246; Libraries, cri-
tical remarks respecting, by J. Newman, 610.
of the Caledonian Hort. Soc., promenade in
the, 600; royal, remarks on the, 751
Gardener, the continental, compared with the
English one, 388.

Gardener's house and gardens at Worksop Ma.

nor, by Robert Abraham, Esq., architect, 34.
Gardeners and farmers near Paris, personal
character of, 9.

Gardeners sent out by the Hort. Soc., 245.
Gardens and gardeners, the royal, 489.
Gardens of Marshal Tallard, answer to query
respecting, 224; of Prince Metternich, on the
Rhine, described, 33; in England and Scot.
Land, observations made on visiting several,
during the summer of 1830, by Mr. Saunders,

653.

Gaultheria Shállon, 562.

Gender of botanical names, on the, 496.
Geometrical forms and lines prevalent in France,

3.

Grape, the Rhodes, figured and described, by
Thos. Appleby, 599; the Tokay, setting of,
by D. Wright, 602.

Grapes, defect in ripening, remarks on, by Mr.
Alexander Gordon, 21; Muscadine and
Muscat, answer to query respecting, 232;
early, 343; on the visible cause, and easy and
effectual cure, of the bad setting of some sorts
of, by Mr. James Craig, 687; cause of the
shrivelling of, in hot-houses, 709.
Green fly in the blossoms of peach trees, on the,
by Mr. James Craig, 552.

Green-house Society of Ayrshire, April 2d,
384; May 27th, 526; June 24th, 636; July
8th, 637.

Green-house, design for a small one, 664; no-
tice of a small economical one, by Mr. God-
sall, 667.

Greffe des Charlatans, 211.
Greig, Mr., account of a patch of Cobbett's corn,

60.

Groom's flower-garden, May 4th, 578; tulip
bed, description of, €83.

Ground, preparation of, for the reception of
plants, 462.

Guaco plant, 326.

Guard for trees, new, by Mr. John Hislop, 47.
Guinguettes, the, or tea gardens of Paris,
648.

Haarlem, account of the forcing and floriculture
at, by J. Rinz, 592.
Habranthus Andersoni, 562.
Hamilton, W., M.D., his address to the S. De-
von and E. Cornwall Bot, and Hort. Soc., 256;
circumstances respecting Argemòne mexi-
cana, 315, the Dolichos tetragonólobus, 315;
the Meloncito d'Olor, 315; seeds from Car-
thagena, 493.

Hammersmith Nursery, April 4th, $78.
Happiness, temporal, $44.

Harewood House, and its gardens and grounds,
description of, 649.

Harrison's method of pruning the peach and
nectarine, remarks on, by Jos. Harrison, 290.
Harrison, Mr. George, critical remarks on l'er-
bèna Melindres, 222.

Hawkins, Mr. Thos., suggestions respecting the
caterpillar on the oak coppice, 223.
Haworth, A. H., query respecting hardy bulbous
plants, 368.

Hawthorn, Mr., on the birch rind of the Ame-
rican Indians, 405.

Hay, John, on forcing by means of steam acting

on loose stones, 50; farther notice of the pine
plants at Castle Semple, 437; notice of a
citron tree in the gardens of Castle Semple,
792; his system of heating pits, 367.
Heating hot-houses, comparative advantages of
smoke and hot water, for, 233. 367.
Heating pits by hot water pipes, answer to
query respecting, by John Cameron, 615.
Hedges for cottage gardens, 152.

Herbert, the Hon. and Rev. W., notice of the
gardens of the, 531.

Hislop, Mr. John, on a new guard for trees, 47.
Hiver, Mr., his mode of training the pear tree,
364.

Hobart Town, a literary and scientific society

in, 597; Mr. Scott's garden at, 597; prizes
of vegetables and fruits at, 597.
Hobson, Mr. Edward, obituary of, 748.
Hodson, Mr. N. S., description of gram, 368.
Hogs, for the cottager, 173. 188.

Holland, J., account of two large melons, 358;
erratum of the word Punno, 726.
Hooker's British Flora, critical remarks re-
specting, by J. Jones, 722.
Hops, for the cottager, 148.

Horsefield Mr. J., notice of the Prestwich Bo-
tanical Society, and the Bury Botanical and
Entomological Society, 392.

Horticultural Chemistry, continued, by G. W.
Johnson, 27.

Horticultural Societies:

Query respecting, 223; rules of, 353; remarks
respecting, by W. Wilson, $54.
Aberdeenshire, Aug. 26th, 1829, 128; Nov.
4th, 128; May 4th, 528; May 26th, 638;
June 22d, 639; July 14th, 689; Aug. 25th,
747.

Belfast, June 5th, 495.

Bolton, May 20th, 524.

Sept. 7th, 619; critical observations respect-
ing, 604; Sept. 21st, and Oct. 5th, 728; Oct.
19th, 729; remarks on the garden, 730.
Massachusetts, 104.

Norfolk and Norwich, 254; Nov. 25th, 1829,
123; May 26th, 516; July 8th, 625.
Norwich, Aug. 4th, 626.

Ross, April 21st, and May 19th, 519; June
16th, 623; July 21st, 629.

South Devon, &c., 125; July 24th, 635; Sept.
16th, 744.

Stirling, 127; meeting of May 11th, 527; July
15th, 638; Sept. 7th, 746.

Vale of Evesham, Oct. 15th, 1829, 124; April
22d, 518; June 17th, 627.

West Renfrewshire, May 25th, 526; June 22d,
637; July 20th, 638; Sept. 21st, 745.
Whitehaven, Aug. 27th, 743.
Wigtonshire, Sept. 9th, 745.
Worcestershire, May 14th, 517; June 17th,
626; July 20th, 627; Sept. 10th, 756.
Yorkshire, July 7th, 29; Aug. 25th, 737.
Horticultural and Botanical Society of Man-
chester, garden of, 334. 743.

Horticultural and Florists' Society of Chelms-
ford and Essex, Sept. 15th, 1829, 121.
Hot water, query respecting heating by, by Mr.
W. G. Walmesley, 223.

Housman, Mr. Jas., observations on Mr. New-
ington's remarks on training the peach tree,
220; best sorts of pine-apples for cultivation,
232; remarks on, 363;
remark on wired walls,

614.

Hòvea purpurea, 314.

Howden, Mr. John, on the planting and prun-
ing of forest trees, 416; his management of
forest trees, observations respecting, by Mr. J.
Elles, 545; description of a cottage in Eng-
land, and a mud-cabin in Ireland, 657.

Bristol, May 18th, 517; June 22d, 684; July Hybrids, critical observation concerning, by Mr.
27th, 735.

Buckingham, Aug. 4th, 1829, 121.
Bury, Nov. 24th, 1829, 122.

Caledonian, Dec. 3d, 1829; 340; March 4th,
1830, 842.

Cambridgeshire, Oct. 16th, 1829, 121; Dec.
4th, 122; March 3d, 1830, 382; April 21st,
383. 515; May 19th, 515; June 17th, 515;
July 22d, 624; Sept. 15th, 734.
Chichester, April 15th, 514; June 21st, and
July 31st, 734.

Cupar, April 28th, 528. 746.

Dumfries and Galloway, Sept. 17th, 1829, 125.
Dundee, May 10th, 1829, 127; Aug. 7th, 127;
May 3d, 528; June 10th, 746; Sept 10th,
746.

Falkirk, April 27th, 527.

Glamorgan and Monmouthshire, Jan. 5th,
1830, 254; April 28th, 518; June 16th, 627;
Oct. 1st, 736.

Glasgow, Sept. 9th, 1829, 126; Sept. 21st, 22d,
1830, 745.

Gloucester, April 16th, 383; June 18th, 626.
Hampshire, Sept. 4th, 1829, 124.

Herefordshire, remarks on, 255; April 23d,
518; June 22d, and July 24th, 628; Sept.
21st, 737.

Ipswich, Nov. 17th, 1829, 122; April 20th,
1830, 383. 516.

Ireland, June 22d, 602; Aug. 10th, 603.
Liverpool, April 28th, 522.

London, meeting of, Sept. 15th, 1829, 112;
Oct. 20th, 113; Nov. 5d, 113; Nov. 17th,
113; Dec. 1st, 113; affairs of, 114; Dec.
15th, Jan. 5th, and Jan. 19th, 234; Feb. 2d,
235; Feb. 16th, March 2d, 206; March 16th,
252; Report of the committee respecting
the affairs of, 236; accounts of, 236; debts
and assets, 237; retrenchment, 237; future
income and expenditure, 237; manage.
ment, 237; conclusion of the committee's
report, 239; gardeners sent out by, 245;
April 6th, 20th, May 1st, S69; May 4th,
371; May 18th, 504; June 1st, 15th, and
21st, and July 6th, 505; July 7th, and 15th,
506; July 20th, 618; Aug. 3d, and 17th, and

J. Newman, 499.

Hydrangea, variation in colour in, 348.
Hydrangeas and Fuchsias, query respecting, 728.
Hulbert, Mr. Charles, remarks on cottage gar-
dens, 598.

Ice-house, query on the proper size for a, by W.
P. Vaughan, 726.
Impression of leaves and plants, cheap and ele-
gant method of obtaining, by T. Baynton,
S05.

Independent Florists of Hendon, May 31st, 522.
Indian corn, result of experiments with ten

varieties of, &c. &c., 63; produce of, 103; ac-
count of some raised at Hampstead, 444.
Infant schools of Edinburgh, &c. &c. 494.
Insects, a composition for destroying, by Mr.

James Burge, 57; on trees, supposed preserv-
ation against, 220; infesting the plum and
cherry, query respecting, 204; on plants, me.
thod of destroying, 403; in orchards, on, by
Mr. D. Anderson, 551; the rapid generation
of, in spring, 586; on young peas, query re-
specting, by W. P. Vaughan, 615.

Ireland, former and present state of horticul-
ture in, by Mr. John Robertson, F.II.S., 26;
flower-gardening in, 496.

Iris, species wanting, by Mr. D. Falconar, 502.
Islington botanic garden, 333.

Jardin des Plantes in Paris, 385; not suitable
for England, 589.

Jessop, Mr. C. Hale, his mode of cultivating the
Enville pine, 704.

Johnson, G. W., horticultural chemistry, con-
tinued, 27; remarks on the doctrines con-
cerning the diseases of plants, by John Ro-
bertson, 356.

Justicia guttata, 561.
Kelly, Mr. A., on raising mushrooms during
the winter season, 63.
Kennèdia monophylla, notice respecting, by T.
Blair, 612.
Kensington Gardens, north wall of, a deformity,

490.

Kensington nursery, 332.
Kewley's mode of heating on the siphon prin-
ciple, 377.

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Kitchen-garden, the horticultural buildings for Maclura aurantiaca, fruit of, figured and de-
a, 670.

Knapp Hill nursery, May 10th, 379.

Knife for budding, improved one, by William
Godsall, 308.

Knight, T. A., remarks on his pines, by Mr. A.
Begbie, 110; treatment of, by the Conductor,
217; letter from, on the state of the Hort.
Soc., 935.

Knight, Mr., his visit to Haarlem, 317; his ac-
count of the bulb district, 318; of the fruit-
forcing, 318; his pine pots, 363; hot water
apparatus, figured and described, 374; exotic
nursery, Dec. 21st, 373; May 1st, 376; the
purchasers of Mr. Baxter's seeds, 507.
Krelage, Mr. E. H., bulbs cultivated by, 593,
Labourers, agricultural and horticultural, in
France and England, observations chiefly re-
lating to the, by R. Bakewell, Esq., 588.
Labouring classes, progress of an experiment
for bettering the condition of the, by John H.
Moggridge, Esq., 533; further information
respecting, 536.
Laconia, 214.

Ladies, a mode of pruning trees in plantations,
suggested as highly suitable for them; garden
operations fit for, 312. 587.

Land to be attached to cottages, reasons for,
140; quantity of, 142.
Landscape-gardening of England and Germany
compared, by M. Jacob Rinz, Jun., 31.
Láthyrus venosus, notice respecting, by T.
Blair, 612.

Lauder, Mr. P., query respecting hybrid melons,

502.

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scribed, 103. 483.

Main, J., A.LS, remarks on Mr. Thompson's
experiments in vegetable physiology, 214; on
the qualities of composts and soils, 215; on
raising an early crop of peas, 555; reply to
criticisms on his Villa and Cottage Florist's
Directory, 722.

Maize, as a crop in this country, conclusion re-
specting, 67.

Major, Joshua, critique on M. Rinz's criti-
Cismis, 611.
Malaria, 213.

Malt, for the cottager, 147.
Malting, 148.

Management of forest trees, 463.
Mangold wurzel, sugar made from, 149; variety
of, proper for this purpose, 150; on brewing
beer from, 352; advantages of, as a fallow
crop, 582.

Manure for the cottager's garden, 172, 188.
Mason, W., jun., critical remark on destroying
by tin pipes, 723;, critical remarks on pruning
timber trees, 725.

Mauritius, letter from the botanic garden at the,
by Mr. John Newman, 484; prices of provi-
sions at the, 485.

Mearns, Mr. John, remark respecting sabots, 106,
Medico-Botanical Society, 104. 598.
Meloncito d'Olor, 315.

Melons, collection of, from Russia, by M. F.
Faldermann, 338; large, 558; the King
Charles, query respecting, 368; hybrid, query
respecting, by Mr. P. Lauder, 502; answered,
727; species of, wanted, 503; large Cantaloup,
600.

Menagerie of the Jardin des Plantes, 391
Methley's fire-places, 108.
Milk-tree of Demerara, 325.
Mind, the, 398.

Misrepresentation of the Encyc. of Gard, 456.
Moffat, Mr., his treatment of the fig tree, 654;
his mode of preserving wall fruit from frost,
654.

Liber converted into the alburnum, disproved, Moggridge, John H., Esq., the progress of an

258.

Life, defined, 399.

Lilac tree, query respecting the, 229.
Lilium Pomponium, 322.

Lily, water, query respecting, 227.
Lime-water, observation on, by Mr. W. Stowe,

499.

Lindegaard, M. P., historical account of a me-
thod of making bass for binding plants, &c.,
translated by M. Jens P. Petersen, 656; on the
forcing of cabbage lettuce in Holland, trans-
lated by M. Jens Peter Petersen, 689.
Lindley, J., letter from, to Mr. Sabine, 240;
statement of, respecting the Chiswick garden,
240; on the mismanagement in Regent Street,
241; remarks on Capper's papers on the vine,
358.

Ling and Saltzburg, district between, 317.
Liston's wheel plough, remarks on, by Mr. S.
Morton, 209.

Loddiges' botanic garden, April 3d, 378.
London and Paris, natural and artificial cir-
cumstances of, compared, 1, 2; agriculture
of, 9.

Lothians, state of the crops in the, by Mr. A.
Gorrie, 495.

Loudon's Encyclopædia of Gardening misre-
presented, 456.;

Loyal Horticultural Society of Northampton,
April 21st, 383.

Luxembourg, gardens of the, 641.
Luxuries, use of, 170.

Lyons, coffee-houses at, 211.

Macartney's method of obtaining new kinds of
potatoes from seed, 449.

Macdougal's inverted garden syringe, figured
and described, 305.

Machines for breaking stones, 209.

Machines for reaping and threshing, evil effects
of, 217.

experiment for bettering the condition of the
labouring classes, 533; farther information
respecting, 536.

Mortgage Society of Poland, origin of, 482.
Morton, Mr. S., on Wilkie's whee! plough, and
Liston's wheel plough, 209; improvements in
the wheels of carts and waggons, 304.
Moss, on growing pine-apples in, by M. Jacob
Seimel, 705.

Moss rose, curious, 387.

Mud-cabin in Ireland, description of a, by Mr
John Howden, 658.
Munich, weather at, 317.

Museum of the Jardin des Plantes, 391.
Mushrooms, on raising during the winter season,
by Mr. A. Kelly, 68.

Musk melons from Russia, $39.
Myrtle, the broad-leaved and narrow-leaved,
near Belfast, $47.

Nectarine and peach, identity of the, 596.
New Cross nursery, 379.

Newington, Mr. H. John, on the peach tree,
55; observations on his remarks on training
the peach tree, by Mr. James Housman, 290;
observations on his remarks on training the
peach tree, by Mr. James Craig, 430.
Newman, Mr. John, letter from the botanic
garden at the Mauritius, 484; critical observ.
ation concerning hybrids, 499; critical re-
marks respecting garden libraries, 610; criti-
cal notice respecting Amaryllis solandræflora,
613; the pollen of plants, 613.

New Zealand, views taken in, 486.
Northumberland, customs in hiring, and method
of paying farm servants in, 589.
Northwick Park, the copper-roofed forcing-
houses at, 708.

Notes and reflections made during a tour
through part of France and Germany, con-
tinued, 1. 385. 529. 641.

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