GENERAL INDEX. 



Acacia dealbata, notice of a large plant, 430. 



Acacia loplidntha, notice of a large specimen 

 of, 69. 432. 



AgcLve americina, notice of a plant in bloom, 

 431. 



Agricultural Society of Massachusetts, notice 

 of the annual show for October, 1835, 432. 



Agriculture, tlie Indiana State Board of: a no- 

 tice of its pro|Kising to award premiums or 

 certificates for essays on subjects connected 

 with husl)andry and gardening, 311. 



AniaryllidetB, remarks ^on the treatment and 

 management of, 328. 



Anemonies. See Ranunculus. 



Animal Instinct, aberration from, and very 

 singular iastauce of, 321. 



Annual plants -. an account of the most beau- 

 tiful varieties desirable for gardens, with re- 

 marks on their growth and cultivation, and 

 the enumeration of those sorts which are 

 suitable for planting in patches, 101. 131. 179; 

 a good selection of kinds for a small garden, 

 200 ; on the sowing of several varieties of in 

 the fall, to flower strong the ensuing year, 335. 



Apples: a method of planting out an orchard 

 of, of six acres, being a new experiment; 

 deep planting entirely dispensed with, 97; a 

 select list of, for ))lanting a kitchen garden 

 wanted, 313; a list of kinds which do not 

 succeed well in our climate, 326; selected 

 list for planting gardens, embracing many of 

 the most superior sorts which are generally 

 cultivated, 326; descriptive account of other 

 fine sorts for the same purpose, 362; the ap- 

 ple orchard, important remarks on, 329; on 

 the origiu aud history of that fine and valu- 

 able old sort, the Baldwin, 360. 



Arbor-vitK : its value as a hedge plant when 

 beauty is an object, 201. 



Arrow root : notice of some specimens sent 

 to the Massachusetts Horticultural Soc, S2. 



Asclepias tul)erA.sa: a notice of in bloom, 225. 



Asiinma. (See Custard apple.) 



Asters, Canary, (Cineraria cru^nta:) on the 

 culture and blooming of, 251. 



Autumnal cryptogamic plants: on the beauty 

 and attractive character of, 441. 



A7illea indica jihcDi iicca : notice of, 224. 

 Baldwin apple, on the origin of, 360. 

 Tartsia cocci:iea. on the culture of, 13. 



Belmont Place, Wutertovvn, notice of, C8. 190. 



.385, S.S5. 

 Perberis aqui''d:ium, notice of, 255. 

 Botanical tour of Messis. Nuttall and Town- 

 send noticed, 311. 

 Brewer, Thomas, Esq., notice of his green- 

 house, 67. 

 Brick pits for forcing : on the construction and 



building of, with observations of the growth 

 of cucunil)ers, &c., 401. 



Proomley Vale, Roxbury, notes on, 349. 



Cicteffi and Cdcti, method of gralting describ- 

 ed, 217. 



Cactus AckerniAnnii var. major, a notice of 

 this splendid variety in blooui, 222. 



Caliimpelis scabra, on the culture of, 182. 



Calendar of horticulture and floriculture, 35. 

 79. 119. 159, 199. 210. 2S0. 320. 360. 400. 440. 



Calailium esculentum, notice of a superb large 

 specimen, 433. 



Camellia japonica var. Kiirtzii, a new variety 

 noticed, 196. 



Camellia japonica var. F6rd!i, a new variety 

 noticed, 119. 221. 



Camellia japonica var. Laudrethi, notice of, 2C2. 



Camelli:is, new varieties of, noticed at 221. 242. 

 255. 307. 343. 



Camellia japonica: an account of its intro- 

 duction into Great Britain, and from thence 

 to tliis country, 14; its cultivation and man- 

 agement, 15; first seedlings exhibited, 15; in- 

 arching of, 16; notice of that superb kind, 

 F16yii, 77; new kinds coming into bloom, 

 72; a notice of a new kind, 119; further re- 

 marks on the cultivation ami treatment of, 

 134; all the species of, enumerated and par- 

 ticularly described, 136; some rare sorts in 

 bloom, 165; a new seedling noticed, 262; no- 

 tice of a mode adopted in a green-house to 

 prevent the rays of the sun from scorching 

 the leaves, 204; notice of several fine varie- 

 ties of, 205; notice of a new kind, 221; sev- 

 eral splendid American seedling varieties of, 

 ineutioucd, 2^2; new mode of inarching, as 

 practised by Mr. Floy, 243; C. japonica im- 

 bricata, a short notice on its character, 283; 

 method of -budding, as practised by some 

 nurserymen in New York, 285; experiment 

 to acclimatize to our climate, 351. 



Cape Heaths, on a new arrangement of, 256. 



Caulifiowers, a notice of a very large one, 

 436. 



C^reus speciosissimus, notice of a large plant, 

 26; Cdreus grandifidra, notice of a mode of 

 preventing the closing of the flowers, 222. 



Charlestown vineyard, notes on, 190. 



Chenor6dium Quinoa, notice of, its value and 

 use, 187. 



Chrysanthemum, the Chinese, an account of 

 its introduction into Britain, 138; notice 

 of new seedling varieties originated in Eng- 

 land, 139; management and successful flow- 

 ering of, 140; a new and superior arrange- 

 ment of, according to the late Adrian Hardy 

 Haworth, Esq., F. L. S., &c., 141; notice of 

 the flowering of several kinds in the open 



