754 



GENERAL INDEX. 



115; Newcastle, 252; Northumberland and 



Durham, US. («!. 749. 

 Bourne, Irciliriikj^ Ksq., his garden near Dub- 



hii.nolici'd, H>. ./"l. 4.S'2. 

 Brandy, home, a mode of making, 180 j a kind 



ol'brandv called niiirosrhino is made Irom the 



fruit of /'ninus liis-flbrens, 18H. 

 ^rassica.an altornative for avoiding the club in 



the roots of the dilll-rent species of, 55. See 



also CabljaRC. 

 Bretton Hall, the green-houses and hot-houses 



at, remarks on, oGl ; counter remarks, GU7. 

 Bridge-building, 5<J. 



Broccoli, Portsmouth, the cause of its superi- 

 ority sought, f)li 

 Brugmans/rt suavi olens, noticed, 47 ; on the 



cultivation of, in a conservatory, 159 ; M. 



Sinning's mode of cultivating, 195. 

 Brussels botanic garden, 4<KJ. 

 Buckwheat, a blue colour obtainable from, 42. 

 Bury St. Kdmunds, new botanic garden at, 



briefly noticed, 79. 

 Button wood trees, Phitanus occidentMis, of 



very large size in the United States, 153. 

 Cabbage, sea or wild, its excellence as a sauce, 



54 ; an alternative for avoiding the club in the 



roots of the cabbage tribe, 55 ; the Jersey cow 



cabbage, complaints on the exaggerated ac- 



count of its capabilities, 608. 

 Cacteae, increased introduction of, into our 



collections, 47. C'ftctus, see Cfereus. 

 Ca/"rf(«»J bicolor and viviparuni, iVL Sinning's 



method of cultivating, 195. 

 Calceolaria, additional hybrid kinds of, 48 ; C. 



AtkinsiVi/ia, noticed, 473. 724 ; C. Martineaurf-, 



noticed, 72.5. 

 Calysti-gia st pium and Tpomaj'a, their corollas 



dilicr in the mode of withering, 7.><). 

 Camellias, interesting kinds of, named, 211 ; 



the management proper to camellias when 



forced, 435 ; the flowers of camellias are rare 



and dear at New York, .JliO. 

 Camera lucida, its efficient service in drawing, 



237. 

 Camphor useful to revive withered plants, 



a39. 



Canker in fruit trees, the effect of a bad sub- 

 soil ; a mode of prcveutmg it, .'!2() ; a mode of 

 curing it when not the effect of soil, (596. 



Caoutchouc dissolved in pyrolignous ether 

 preserves twine or cord boiled in it, .'i54 ; what 

 IS the mode of dissolving it ? 735. 



Capeof (Jood Hope, Howie's hints on cultivat- 

 ing in Kngland the leguminous plants of, 5. 



Carnation, history and culture of, 428; Mr. 

 Hogg's carnation bloomed very satisfactorily 

 in 1832, 693 ; the eminent growers of the car- 

 nation named, 4.';2. 



Carrots may be grown in soil from a morass, 

 .06. 



Cassi, a drink, a method of making, 182. 



Castle Scmple, its grounds, gardens, &c., no- 

 ticed, 59G. 



Caterpillars, a mode of destroying, 323; cater- 

 pillars on gooseberry trees, a mode of checking 

 their raviiges, .37(). liiH. 



Ce<lar, white. Sec C'uprcssus. 



Celeriac, turnip-rooted celery, hints on culti- 

 vating, 44.). 



Cement, Mr. Kiost's, how formed, TO. 



Cemetery, the plan of a general one for Edin- 

 burgh, sketched, 3(i2. 



Ceratbnia .S'iliqua, its frequency and uses in 

 Italy, 2ii9. 



Circus specioslssimus, magnificent specimen of, 

 at Dropinore, .593 ; another tine plant of, 80 ; 

 a new seedling I'fereus, .Jtil. 

 Charu, the circulation of the sap in, 14.3. 482. 



Chemistry, girdening, technical terms in, re- 

 quire explanation, 7.3.'>. 



Cherries, Law's method of forcing, 439. 

 Chrysanthemum, Chinese, the, a sketch of its 



history, ti92. 

 Ciii' r, v.iiu.iiile information on (he manufacture 

 of, .183 : Ciller Imin the ireiich bitter scale 

 apple, 244) the tavourite kinds of apple for 



making cider in Butleigh, and the adjoining 

 parishes, 244 ; cider made in Krance, .'157. 

 Citrus, how can the leaves and fruit of plants 

 of tliis genus be kept from falling prema- 

 turely f 73i). 

 Cloyne, bishop of, his garden, 475. 

 Cock, Sicbe'p, 370. 

 Colos.seum, the conservatories and other ap. 



purtenanccs of, noticed, .'i94. 

 Colvill, Mr, James, his death noticed, 2.">6. 

 Cooking alembic, a, for cooking vegclablos, 470. 

 Corn, a tub for weighing and measuring, VHi; 

 Indian corn, Cobtiett's, and a ITind grown in 

 Lombard y, 497. 750. 

 Cottages, allotments of land to, remarks on, 

 529 ; cottages and gardens to them, 96; cot- 

 tages in Scotland, their condition in 1831, 

 258. 474 ; directive hints for the effective cul- 

 tivation of cottage gardens, 647 ; industry 

 and independence promoted by cottage gar- 

 dens, 650. 

 Covent.garden market, January 17th, 1832, 127 ; 

 March 20th, 254 ; May 21st, 384 ; Julv 19th, 

 504 ; Sept. 17th, 624 ; Nov. 22d, 744 ; wcighU 

 and measures in Covent-garden market, 374. 

 Cr^me de Moka, a method of making, 182 ; 



creme de rose, a method of making, 181. 

 Crickets, a means of destroying, 14S. 

 Cucumber, abundant jiroduceof a plant, 81 ; on 

 the advantages of M'l'hail's pits for early- 

 cucumbers, .38 ; the Hussian mode of salting 

 cucumber, 183; a query on growing cucum- 

 bers by steam, 612 ; queries on a species of 

 caterpillar devouring the foliage of cucum- 

 bers, 611 ; Mr. Oliver's hybrid frum a cucum- 

 ber impregnated by the Maltese melon, 611 ; 

 other cro.ss i'npregnations, 740. 

 Cj'cas revolilta, female, 1i:ls flowered in the 

 garden of Count Hariach, at Uruck, on 

 I.eithe, and that of Wentworth House, 

 Yorkshire, Kngland, 448. 

 Cfclameii pcrsicum, a notice of varieties of, 



94. 

 C"yprcss, deciduous, American siMM^imcns of, 



ilescribed, 272. 276. 

 Cupressus /hyOidcs, the white cedar, its habit* 



noticed, 447. 

 Dii'lytra, a correction to, 368. 

 i)iosp>'ros virginiilna 80ft. high, near Phil- 

 adelphia, and the Americans distil an excel- 

 lent brandy fi-om its fruit, 272. 

 Dividivi, the C«sal()in>(( CoriUria, speculations 

 on its extraordinary usefulness and fitness 

 for appropriation in commerce, 46. 

 Dotting with plants, 86. 

 Droseras, Mallet on cultivating, 684. 

 Dry rot in oak timber, what is the best pre- 

 ventive of? .501. 

 Dublin, the mildness of climate at, 3f>4. 

 Dumfries stone, the price of garden ornaments 



made of, 91. 

 Earwigs, a means of destroying, 149. 

 E<liication, remarks on, 198. 

 Egg plant, the putple-fruited, the only variety 



eaten abroad, 5,3. 

 Electricity, its agency in vegetation, and a 



query on, 500. 740. 

 Elms, extremely large ones in the United 



States, 152. 

 Emigration, hints to gardeners wishing to cmi. 

 gr.ite to the I'liited .States, 272; works which 

 treat on emigration to America indicated, 

 46-1 ; emlKratioii to Van Diemcn's Land, 78. 

 Emyclopuilia (/ (lanlitiiiig, coriections to the, 



83. 4.S2, 48.). 

 JCncf/c/o/iifidti nf I'liinis, corrections to the, 



85. 244. .■;(i8, 

 ErAnthis hyemalis, its showincss when in large 



quantities, 89, 

 Erpition renifurmis nearly hardy, 87. 

 EugfeniVi au.stritlis, its beauty when planted in 



a bed of soil in a conservatory, 160. 

 Eut;'ixia w/yrlifi lia, on pnnKigating, lliO. 

 Evergreens, Stuart's mode of transplanting, 

 I 4.30. 

 Ecnncl is much cultivated at Uomo and Naples 



