Imatges de pàgina
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Pea, historical notice of two varieties of, by
Mr. T. H. Masters, F. H.S., Eden nursery, 153.
Pea, Master's imperial marrow, 153.

, Dwarf knight's marrow, 153.
Pea-husks, how to produce beer from, 324.
Peas for early crops, on transplanting, by Mr.
Daniel Judd, F. H.S., 164.

, rearing of, in pots and boxes, in hot-beds
and hot-houses, 127.

, method of raising early crops, $38.
Peach and nectarine, remarks, including the
result of some experiments on budding on
almond stocks, by Mr. William Anderson,
F.L.S. H.S., &c., 384.

Peaches and nectarines, arrangements of, re-
latively to the mildew, 225. Arrangement by
Mr. George Lindley, C.M. H.S., 174. 225.
Peaches and nectarines on the same tree, 471.
Peaches, sorts grown near Copenhagen, 271.
Spring Grove Persian, 72.
Peach-tree, new mode of training, communi-
cated by Mr. W. Seymour and Mr. Duff, 128.
Pears called Silvanges, and particularly on the
Silvange Verte (green Silvange), by M.
Charles Francis Piérard, C. M. H.S., 163.
Pear, new variety by T. A. Knight, Esq., 341.
Pears, description of some new sorts, by John
Turner, Esq., F.L.S., 73.

, a list of, cultivated in France and the
Netherlands, &c., 175.

Beurré d'Aremberg, by Mr. Knevet, 87.
Beurre Delbecq, some account of, 326.
Grande Bretagne Dorée, 249.
Colmar-Dewcz, 83.

· notices of three new keeping sorts of,
by John Braddick, Esq. F.H.S. 249.

, merveille de la nature, query on, 472.
, on grafting them on apples, 200.
, on the Beurré Spence and other new
sorts, and on the art of keeping fruit,
by John Braddick, Esq., &c. 144.
Present de Malines, notice of, 33.
Prince de Printems, 250.
Surpasse St. Germain, 249.
Pear-tree, description of one on which the
operation of reverse grafting has been per-
formed, by Mr. William Balfour, 71.
Pear-trees for perry, on the cultivation of, by
Rusticus, of Kent, 153.

Penny, Mr. George, of the Epsom nursery,
on the culture of orchideous plants, 465.
Percival, Dr., of Annfield, 261.

Petersen, Mr. Jens, 203. On the gardens and
state of gardening, &c. of Denmark, 269.
Petrovskoyé, a Russian country seat, 203.
Phelps, the Rev. W., on protecting wall-troes
from the effects of frost, 306.
Philalethes, on pruning vines in Sept. 211.
Philips's Sylva Florifera (advertised), 234.
Phoenix Park, Dublin, 12.

Picot de la Peyrouse's Sketch of the Agricul
ture of the South of France (advertised), 232.
Pictorial Plans (advertised), 231. 362.
Piérard, M. Charles Francis, C.M. H.S., note on
the pears called Silvanges, &c., 163.
Pines, to grow with the heat of leaves, without
dung or fire, by Mr. James Dall, 306.
Pine-apples grown on boards placed over a dung
pit, by Mr. John Breese, 308.
grown under a frame with the heat
of leaves alone, by Mr. William Gibson, 171.
Pine-apple, large one at Shugborough, 89, One
still larger at Stowe, 89.
monstrous, 342.

on the cultivation of, by Mr. Alex-
ander Stewart, C. M. H.S., 70.
, on the culture of, by Mr. William
Greenshields, 426.

plants, on destroying the bug and
scale on, by Mr. John Bowers, 308.
the different modes of cultivating
(advertised), 334.

White Providence, two very large
specimens, grown by Mr. Robert
Dixon, noticed, 454.
Pine-house and pits, description of, by Charles
Holford, Esq. F.H.S., 172.
VOL. I. No. 4.

Pino-pit, description of, to be heated by steam,
erected in Shugborough gardens, Stafford-
shire, by Mr. Andrew Johnston, 407.
Pine-pit, heated by flues, without tan, invented
by Mr. A. Stewart, C. M. H.S., of Valleyfield,
with a figure, 71.

Pine plants in the garden of the Hort. Soc. 88.
Pine and fir tribe, mode of grafting, by the
Baron de Tschudy, 79.

Pine, Scotch, to improve the timber of, 447.
Plantes Fourragères de la Toscane, by M. Gai-
tono Savi, account of, 196.

Planting in North America, a work on, by
Michaux, 205.

Plants, naturalization of, by J. C. Lewchs, 324.
to take impressions of, 223.
Plater, Count Louis, $77
Plimley, Mr., of the Royal Forcing Gardens,
Kensington, 273.

Plum, a new variety, 89.

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description of an unknown one, 471.
Downton imperatrice, 68.

from New Jersey, called La Delicieuse,
or Cooper's large red American, 99.
Poa Abyssinia, the teff bread, 28.
Poison, action of, on vegetables, 89.
Pollen, on the influence of, in cross breeding,
upon the colour of the seed coats of plants,
and the qualities of their fruits, by T. A.
Knight, Esq. F.R.S., &c., 68.

Pomme de deux ans, 94.

Pomology, to render more flourishing, 324.
Pomological Society of Altenbourg, 324.
of Guben in Lusatia, 324.
Pomona Italiana, remarks on, 200.
Pompions and gourds, on the cultivation of, by
Mr. Henry Greig, 150.

Populus nigra, specimen of, in Denmark, 326.
Portugal, botanic gardens of, 52.
Potash of Russia, how obtained, 417.
Potato, carly variety of Penzance, 342.

, carly rufford kidney, 406.

on the culture of the early, as prac
tised in Lancashire, and on the mode of
cooking the potatoe there, by R. W., 405.
Potato, thirty-one uses of, enumerated, 438.

, use of the tender tops and leaves, 447.
Potatoes first brought into notice in France by
Voltaire, 80.

how to preserve, in a dried state, 80.
, mineral, in America, 205.
Potts, Mr. John, 56. 62.
Poultry, breeding, rearing, and fattening of,
as practised in France, a treatise on (adver
lised), 99.

Powell, David, Esq., on grafting wax, 67.
Powis, Earl, fruit of anona squamosa ripened
by him, 73.

Practical Botany, &c. by W. Johns, M.D., 195.
Practical essay on the vine and melon (adver.
tised), 474.

Practice of Mr. Robson in respect to pelargo.
nium, hemmemerises, and heliotropes, 12.
Prado of Madrid, 239.
Prangos hay plant, 87.

Preservative against insects and blight, 81.
Prickly pear, 205.

Primula sinensis, in France and the Nether-
lands, 80.; in Lee's nursery, &c., 220.
Pronville, M., of Versailles, his method of pre-
serving improved varieties of roses, 170.
Provident Institution, &c., plan of, by James
Cleghorn, Esq. accountant in Edinburgh, 317.
Provincial Horticultural societies, 88. Sea
Hort. Soc.

Prussian gardening society, transactions of, re.
viewed, 308.

Publication of rare plants proposed to be issued
by the Horticultural Society, 88.; of rare
fruit, &c. 88.

Public squares and parks of London, remarks
on, by Mr. Lenné, 311.
Pulawy, the principal seat of the family of
Prince Czartoryski, in Poland, 376.
Pyracantha, beautiful variety of, 12.
Pyrola minor, abundant near Dalkeith, 256.
Pyrus japonica, fruit of, by Miss Crabtree, 87.

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Radcliff's report on the agriculture of Flan-
ders (advertised), 232.

Radish, carrot, and turnip, rearing sex of, in
the East Indies, by W. Ingledew, Esq., 174.
Rainier Peter, Esq. Captain R. N., F. H.S., on
the treatment of the banyan tree, 67.
, on cultivating and cooking the brinjall,
' (aubergine, Fr.) a variety of egg plant, 307.
Ranunculus, the Turkish, observations on forc-
ing, by M. P. F. Bouché, commercial gar-
dener at Berlin, 186.
Rare British plants in the neighbourhood of
Dalhousie Castle, 256.

North Amer. plants, a collection of, 255.
or new plants, which have flowered in
the garden of the Horticultural Society at
Chiswick, previously to 1824, 502.
Rathfarnham Castle, Dublin, 13. 262.
Rawson, Mrs., Stoney Royd Pippin Apple, 75.
Reid, Mr. John, his syringe, 171. 231.

, his description of an instrument for ap-
plying tobacco fumigation to plants, 418.
, on a new mode of glazing sashes, 307.
Red Spider, query respecting, 471.
Reeve, Mr. James, on the culture of Nerium
oleander splendens, 402.

Regent's Park, improvements in, 336
Reverse grafting, observations on, by Mr.
William Balfour, 274.

Rheum palmatum, as a substitute to the other
species cultivated for culinary purposes, by A.
T. Thomson, Esq. M.D. F.L.S. H.S. &c., 396.
Rhododendra, on the culture of the, by M. L.
Mathieu, commercial gardener, Berlin, 187.
Rhododendron fragrans, 341.

Rhubarb, on forcing, in boxes in a dark room,
&c., by Mr. James Smith, C.M.H.S., 307.
Ribes Jasminiflorum, in Sweden, 204. a

query of, 229; answer, 464.
Richardot's remarks on paragrêles noticed, $19.
Ringing fruit trees, account of the effect of,
from a pamphlet by M. C. Bailly, of Paris, 80.
Ringing fruit trees, substitute for, 224
Roberts, Mrs., her mode of manufacturing
gooseberry wine, 93

Robinia jubata, a curious plant, 59.
Robinson's ornamental villas (advertised), 473.;
rural architecture, 473.

Robson, Mr., Phoenix Park, Dublin, 12.
Rockingham, a country seat in Roscommon,
described, 94

Rollisson, Messrs., list of Cape Heaths which
have been in flower in their nursery at Toot.
ing, in every month of the year, 366
Rosa Mul. Grevillii and Noisette, 344.

, account of a remarkable one, 467.
Rose-leaves, tarts of, 207.
Rose, multiplication of, by cuttings, 198.

Scotch, the double varieties of, 256.
Roses grafted on oak, 83.

how to preserve their improved colours,
by M. Pronville, of Versailles, 170.

, on forcing, by R. A. Salisbury, Esq.
F.R.S., 122.

Rosenburgh, a royal seat near Copenhagen, 270.
Ross, Mr. William, F.LS. H.S., his life, death,
burial, and daughters, 95.

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his seedling Camellias, 96.

on fecundating the blossom of the black
Damascus Grape, 308.

Rural Expenditure, essay on the beneficial di-
rection of, by R. Slaney, Esq., reviewed, 175.
Russia, botanic gardens of, 51.
Rusticus, of Kent, on the cultivation of pear
trees for perry, 153.

Sabine, J., Esq. F.R.S. &c., account of five
new Chinese Chrysanthemums, &c. 73.
Sabine on fig-trees, and an account of their
cultivation in a fig-house, in the garden of
the late Earl of Bridgewater, at Ashridge, in
Hertfordshire, 169. Some account of the
edible fruits of Sierra Leone, 164.
Sageret, M., 66.; Mémoire sur les Cucurbita.
cées, remarks on, 442.

Salisbury's British Grasses (advertised), 474.
Salisbury, R. A., Esq. F.R.S. L.S. H.S. &c., on
the cultivation of vines in the open air, 43.

Salisbury on forcing roses, 192.
Sinclair's Hortus Gramineus Woburniensis.
Salm-Dyke, prince of, 51.
(advertised), 474.
Salt as a manure, 335.; in Denmark, 446.

as a manure for arable lands, use of, and
for renovating grass lawns, &c., by William
Salt, testimonies in favour of (advertised), F.
Collyns, Esq., 401.

influence of, on vegetation in France, 323.
Saul, Mr. M., of Lancaster, his transplanting
instrument, 267.

, plan for preventing the drip in hot-
houses, 431.

his account of an experiment which serves
to show that hothouse flues may draw very
well, without terminating in an upright shaft
or chimney, 152.

Samouelle's Entomologist's Useful Companion
Saunders, Mr. B., nurseryman, Jersey, 87.
(advertized), 361.

Mr. H., on the Kitley Shaddock, 95.
Savi, M. Gaitano, Plantes Fourragères de la
Scotch farming in Kent, 88.
Toscane, account of, 196

Sea or shore cale, crambe maritima, on the cul
Sebright's art of improving the breeds of do-
ture and use of, by Mr. Brash, 189.
mestic animals (advertised), 253
observations on breaking and ma.
Sebright, on breeding domestic animals, 474.
naging hawks (advertised), 233. 474.
Seeds and plants, their packing and expedition
from foreign countries, according to a pam-
Seeds, on packing and preserving, 210.
phlet prepared by Mr. Lindley, $35.
Sennebier's plan for rendering fruit perma-
nently fruitful, 88.

Seton, Alexander, Esq. F. H.S., his mode of
numbering plants, remarks on, 487.
Seymour, Mr. William, and Mr. Duff, new
mode of training the peach tree communj-
cated by them, 128.

Shaddock, the Kitley, some account of, by Mr.
H. Saunders, 265.

Shaw, Sir Robert, Bart., 263.
Sheep, a remarkable disease in, 442.
of Thibet, 79.

Shelton Abbey, Co. Wicklow, described, 94.
Shennan, Mr. W. J., on the treatment of Cac

tus speciosus, speciosissimus, and other or-
namental succulent plants, 398.
Shugborough, large pine apple cut there, 89.
Sibbald, Sir R., discovery of Rosa ciphiana, 256.
Silk worms and cochineal insects in Spain, 204.
in France, 199.

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culture of, in Ireland, 95.

culture of, in Sweden, SS.

remarks on the cultivation of, by
John Murray, Esq., F.S.A. L.S. H.S. &c., re-
viewed, 317.

Sims, John, M.D., F. R.S.L., editor of the Bo-
tanical Magazine, 47. 60.

Simson, Mr. J., on the best mode of washing
water-cresses, 29.

Sinclair, Mr. George, F.LS. H.S., his Hortus

Gramineus Woburniensis (advertised), 98.
Sinclair, Mr. George, F.LS. H.S., on cultivat-
ing a collection of grasses in pleasure grounds,
26. 112.

Sinclair and Holditch, their essay on weeds
(advertised), 98.

Sion House, notice respecting, 349.
Slaney, Robert, Esq. his essay on the beneficial
direction of rural expenditure reviewed, 175.
(advertised) 233.
Smith, Mr. James, C.M. H.S., on forcing onions
to produce bulbs in clusters S07.
Mr. James, C.M.H.S., on forcing rhu-
barb in boxes in a dark room, &c., 307.
Smith, Sir James Edward, F.R.S., Pres. LS,

Smith, Mr., C.M.H.S., on charcoal dust, 293.
&c., 26.; his English Flora (advertised), 24.
Snowdrop, abundance of, at Arniston, 256.
Sorgenfrie, a royal scat near Copenhagen, 271.
Sondermarken, a royal park, Copenhagen, 270,
Soulange-Bodin, Chevalier Etienne, of Fro-

mont, near Paris, 49. 198.; son Catalogue
des Végétaux de Pleine Terre, account of,
196.; son Récit d'une Excursion Horticultu-
rale faite à Londres, dan le mois d'Avril
1824, reviewed, 189.

Sowerby, Mr. James, F.L.S. &c., 59.
Spain, botanic gardens of, 49.

, botany and gardening of, by Professor
Don Mariano La Gasca, 235.
Spanish chestnut, tan from the bark of, 83.
Sparrows, new trap for, 454.

Spence, William, Esq. F.L.S., and William
Kirby, Esq. M.A. F.RS & LS, their intro-
duction to entomology;(advertised), 99.; re-
marks on, 192.

Spinage, New Zealand, 200.

Sprengel Curtio, his Systema Vegetabilium
reviewed, 155,

Spring Grove, 36.

Stackpole, village of, cottages and gardens, 273.
Statistics of agriculture, Voght's view of, 441..
Steam, essay on heating hot-houses by, of Mr.
W. Bailey, 203.

Stems of fruit trees, upon the beneficial effects
of protecting from frost in early spring, by
Thomas Andw. Knight, Esq. F.R.S. &c., 424.
Steppes, burning of, in Siberia, 447.
Stevenson, William, Esq., on the benefits to be
derived by the country labourer from a
garden, and the means of teaching him how
to acquire those benefits, 101.
Stewart's Farmer's, &c. Companion, 432.
Stewart, Mr. Alexander, C.M.H.S., his mode of
culture of the pine-apple, 70.

his description of a green-house in the
garden of Sir Robert Preston, Bart. at Val-
leyfield, in Perthshire, 423.
Stewart, his newly-invented espalier rail, 340.
Stipe noxa, a disease in sheep, remarks on, 442.
Stock, Mr. Daniel, his query respecting orchi-
dex, 358.; answered, 465.

Stocks, ten-week, German varieties of, 337.
Stoffels, Mr. Louis, of Malines, 34. 251.
Stowe, large pine-apple cut there, 89.
Strawberries, Grove End scarlet, 72.

method of cultivating on small
ridges, by J. Williams, Esq. of Pitmaston, 308.
Strawberry, Alpine, query respecting, 471.
Bishop's orange, early globe cinna-
mon (advertised), 230.; Wilmot's superb
(advertised), 230.
Strawberry, Dalmatian, 82.

different varieties of, cultivated in
the garden of the Horticultural Society of
London, by Mr. James Barnet, 420.
Strawberry," Nairn's scarlet," 72.

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on the cultivation of, by T. A.
Knight, Esq. F,R.S. &c., 304.
the melon, 338. Diack's, No. 1.
and No. 2., S38.
Wilmot's black imperial, 72.
superb, on the cultiva-
tion of, by Mr. Isaac Oldacre, F.H.S., 278.
Strawberry plants, for early forcing, on the pre-
paration of, by Thomas Andrew Knight,
Esq. F.R.S. &c. Pres. H.S., 163.
Street, Mr., C.M.H.S. his mode of growing
plants in live moss, noticed, 343.
Strokestown House, Co. Roscommon, 94.
Substitutes for hemp in India, 85.
Sugar, from the field beet, art of obtaining,
remarks on, 319.

Sun-flower, uses of, in Portugal, 322.
Swain's Gramina Pascua (advertised), 474.
Swayne, the Rev. G., on protecting the branches
of fig-trees during winter, 306.

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the Rev. G., on the management of
hot-house flues, 430.

Sweden, botanic gardens of, 52.
Sweet, Mr. Robert, F. L.S. culture of hot-house
bulbous-rooted plants, 31. 47, 48. 61.
Sweet's Botanical Cultivator (advertised), 362.
British Flower-Garden (advertised),231.
Warblers, some account of,
193.; (advertised) 231.
Geraniaceæ, Cistineæ, and Botanical
Cultivator, (advertised) 98. 562.

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Sweet's Hortus Britannicus, announced, 99.;
(advertised) 362. remarks on, 433.
Swine, feeding of, in Mexico, 447.
Sylvester, Mr., his mode of planting the con-
servatory at the Grange, 111.

Syringe, new, by Mr. John Reid, 171.
Systematic Botany, review of Sprengel's work
on, 155.

Systems and methods in natural history, re-
marks on, 461.

of plants, remarks on, 435.
Tallies, forms of, 258; moulds for, by Mr.
Archibald, 258.

Tan from the bark of Spanish chestnut, 83.
Tankerville, Earl of, 44.

Tap-roots of plants, on shortening the, by Mr.
F. Masseli, of Militsch, 188.
Tartarian buck-wheat, 325
Taxidermy; or, the art of preparing objects
of natural history, &c. (advertised) 99.
Taylor's Phil. Mag., quotation from, 461.
Tea, culture of, in Brazil, 352.
Teall's treatise on the foot-rot in sheep (ad-
vertised), 233.

Ten-week stocks, Mr. Lee's varieties of, 337.
Tereneure, the seat of F. Bourne, Esq., 262.
Thermometer for bark beds, 312.
Thompson, Mr. J. junior, of Welbeck gardens,
on the culture of orchideous plants, 466.
Thompson, John, Esq., on the Lombardy pop-
lar, 16; remarks on the effect of the cedar
of Lebanon in landscape, 118.; on the im-
provement of Hyde Park and Kensington
Gardens, 280.

Thomson, Anthony Todd, Esq. M.D. F.L.S.,
&c. on a.hypothesis concerning green vege-
table manure, 20.; hints on the superiority
of the rheum palmatum to the other species
cultivated for culinary purposes, 396.; Lec-
tures on the Elements of Botany (adver-
tised), 99. 234.

Thouin, Professor Andrew, F. M. H. S. &c.,
biography of, 226.; on the Calville Rouge de
Micaud apple, 429.

Thunder and hail protectors, remarks on, S18.;
in Savoy, 325.

Thunder and hail, society for mutual assurance
against, in France, 80.

Ticketing plants, on the cheapest and most dur-
able mode of, by Mr. Dern of Scarbrük, 187.
Ticketing plants, observations on Mr. Dern's
mode of, by Mr. Otto, inspector of the botanic
garden of Berlin, 187.

Tigridia pavonia, directions for managing, by
Mr. John Damper Parks, 306.
Timber, to preserve from the dry rot, 336.
Timothy grass, culture of, in Bavaria, 324.
Tobacco fumigation, description of an instru-
ment for, by Mr. John Reid, 418.
Tollaght, near Dublin, the country seat of the
archbishops of that city, 263.

Tomato, methods of preparing the fruit, 353.
Torch-thistle, on the culture of the, by W.P.F.
Bouché, 186.

Town gardens, queries respecting, 472.
Traité de l'Emploi de la Vapeur pour les Serres
Traité de la Pomme de Terre, remarks on,
438.
Chaudes, by Mr. William Bailey, account of,
197.

Transactions of the London Horticultural So-
ciety. See Horticultural Society of London.
Transactions of the Prussian Gardening Society,
reviewed, 308. Parts III, and IV.,
Transplantation of trees in Italy, 82.
321.
Transplanting instrument of Mr. M. Saul, 267.;
of the French, 268.
Tredegar prize-show, 210.

Tredgold, Thomas, Esq. on heat, moisture, and
evaporation, 37.

Trees and shrubs, the introduction into Ireland
of new species by Mr. Mackay, 458.
Trellis, Long's movable, described, 454.; (ad-
vertised) 473.

Trianon Nursery, near Rouen, 445.
Trinity College Garden, Dublin, 11.

Trotter, Alexander, Esq., his method of book- Walls of compressed earth, 355.
keeping, 192.

Truffles, on the culture of, 320.
Tschudy, the Baron de, his mode of grafting
the pine and fir tribe, &c., 79.
Tulip beds, on forming, by Mr. Saul, 451.

, principal, in the neighbourhood of
London, 47.; Mr. Lawrence's, 347.; Lan-
caster tulip show, 347.; Mr. Groom's, at Wal-
worth, 349. 351.

Turner, John, Esq., F. L. S., his description of
some new sorts of pear, 73.

Turnip, carrot, and radish, the method of rear-

Walsh, the Rev. Robert, LL. D. and C.M.HS.
on the botany of the neighbourhood of Con-
stantinople, 293.

Waltham House, in Massachusetts, 205,
Walworth Florists' Garden, 349.
Waring, R., Esq., his Cray pippin-apple, 73.
Wastes and waters of France, repeopling of, 79.
Water-cress, culture of, in Britain and on the
Continent, 200.

on the cultivation of the, and the
English and American cranberry, at Bretton.
Hall, by Mr. Christie Duff, 151.

ing seed of, in the East Indies, by William In-Water-cresses, on the best mode of washing, 29.
gledew, Esq., 174.
Water, remarks on the qualities of, for watering
vegetables, 222,

Turnip, early white stone, 210. Yellow, 210.
on the French or Teltow variety, by
Mr. John Hunneman, 307.
Twamley's Essays on the Management of the
Dairy (advertised), 232.
Ulmus parvifolia, 12.

Underwood, Mr. W., Dublin, 11.

Unripe Melons, how to make the most of, 80.
Van Dieman's Land, horticulture of, 207.;
agriculture, 209.

Vandes, Comte de, his botanic garden, 349.
Vaughan, Sir Robert, bart., M.P., F.H.S.,
woollen netting for fruit trees, by, 341.
Vegetable glue of South America, 332.

life, power of, in Italy, 325.
Ventilator for hothouses, description of a self-
acting, by John Williams, Esq. C. M. H.S., 419.;
by Mr. Mugliston, 173.

Verge cutter, on a new, &c., by Mr. Charles
M'Intosh, and also on a new mode of pre-
serving cauliflowers, 139.
Verhandlungen des Vereins, &c., Transactions
of the Prussian Gard. Soc. reviewed, 186.
Verus on field-gardening, and on the gardens
of farm servants in Scotland, 259.
Villa Nuova, belonging to the family of Po-
tocki, near Warsaw, $76.

Vinery, circular one of general Durham, and
of Mr. Fletcher, 254.

, plan for, 254.

, description of a, and mode of training
practised in it, by Mr. William Beattie,
C.M.H.S., 172.

Vines, a peculiarity in the treatment of, by Mr.
Archibald, at Dalhousie Castle, 253. ; at Col-
zean Castle, 254.

Vines, cultivation of, in the open air, 43.

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Watering vegetables in dry seasons, on the use
and abuse of, and on the advantages of shade
to culinary crops in times of great drought,
by Mr George Fulton, 399.

Watson's Dendrologia Britannica (advertised),
474.

Wax-tree, on the cultivation of, in England, by
W. Hamilton, Esq. M.D., 403.

Wedgewood, John, Esq., on blanching and
forcing Buda-kale, S07.

Weeds, Holditch and Sinclair's Essay on (advér-
tised), 98.

Weevil among corn, to destroy, 441.
Werthmeister, Mr. R., his inode of ringing
fruit-trees, 187.

Wheat, different sorts of, 211.

Sandomir, or Polish variety of, 447.
Whin, double-flowering, 34.
Wild mustard, how destroyed in Franconia,
446.

Williams, John, Esq., C.M.H.S., his description
of a self-acting ventilator for hot-houses, 419.
Williams, John, Esq., C. M. H.S., on cultivating
strawberries on small ridges, &c., 308,
Williams, John, Esq., C.M.H.S., on the culti
vation of the yellow rose, 66.

Wilkie, Mr., gardener, Dublin, 13.

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Mr. W., his work on woods, &c., 87.
Willis, Mr. Richard, his account of peaches and.
nectarines on the same tree, &c., 471.
Wilmot, Mr. John, F.H.S. Isleworth, his mode
of cultivating the Cyclamen persicum, 386.
Wilmot, Mr., of Lewisham nursery, his orna-
mental pots, 336.

Woad, Isatis tinctoria, cultivation of, 82.
Wodzicki, Count, 375.

on a Devonshire practice in planting, &c. Woking Nursery, Mr. Donald, 269.
by William Collyns, Esq., 401.

, on a new mode of grafting, 464.
on pruning in Sept., by Philalethes, 211.
Vineyards, in Italy, 82.

Voght's Statistics of Agriculture, 441.
Volständige Auleitung zur Mastung der Thiere,
&c., by Char Leuchs, 196.
W. B., query of, and answer, 359.
W.B.B., query of, as to insects, 559.; answ. 464.
W. S., query of, 357: answer, 358.
Wade, Dr., botanical professor, Dublin, 11.
Walker, Mr. James, gardener at Melville
Castle, his culture of Lathræa squamaria, 256,
Wall-fruit trees, qu. respecting insects on, 470.
Wall trees, on the protection of the blossoms of,
by T. A. Knight, Esq. F.R.S. &c., 173.
Wall trees, to preserve, from the effects of frost,
by the Rev. W. Phelps, 306.

Wood, proposed method of charring, 446.
Woodlands; or, a Treatise on Planting, by
William Cobbet, Esq., account of, 195.
Worms and slugs, how destroyed, by Mr.
M'Dougal, 89.

Worms in pots, to destroy, by Sir C. M. L.
Monck, Bart., 307.
Xanthochymus pictorius, $43.

Yarnall, Mr. R. Keyte, life and death of, 228.
Yeast, as manure, 224.

Yellow rose, on its cultivation at Cobham
Hall, 66; by John Williams, Esq. C.M.H.S.,
66.; by J. C. Palmer, Esq. F.H.S., 66.
Young, Mr. Nurseryman, Epsom, 34.
Yucca gloriosa, fine specimens of, 451.; in
Ireland, 458.

Yvart, a distinguished French agriculturist, 402.
Zoological Society, prospectus for, 335.

END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.

LONDON:

Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode,
New-Street-Square.

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