7(52 



GENERAL INDEX. 



plant of, now in th« gardens at Hale Hall, 

 JLancashire, by Thomas Kirkland Glazebrook, 

 Esq., 52. 



Sabine, Joseph, Esq. F.R.S., the most remark- 

 able of the spring crocuses in the garden of 

 the Horticultural Society, 516. 



Sacks of corn, iron frame for weighing, figured, 

 674. 



Saffron in England, 460. 



Salubrity of high and dry situations, 547. 



Silvia spl^ndens, new variety of, figured, 577. 



Sandpit Gate in Windsor Forest, 568. 



Saul, Mr., record of the prize gooseberries of 

 1828, 728. 



Saunders, Mr. Bernard, on the culture of the 

 cow cabbage, or Cesarean cole, 440. 



Savoureux, M., his nursery and flower-garden, 

 &c., in Rouen, 378. 



Savoy, education in, 656. 



Scarthing Moor, inn at, 675. 



Schleicher, M., his herbarium to be disposed of, 

 457. 



Schools in Ireland, increase of, 84. 



Schools of Agriculture, practical, 337. 



Schools, Gaelic, in the Highlands and Islands of 



. Scotland, 338. 



Schools, maritime, in Sweden, 548. 



Schools, to be established universally, sugges- 

 tions for, 696 ; obligations of the local police 

 respecting, 699. 



Schultes's botanical visit to England, 305. 



Scotch pine, on the, by Agronome, 139. 



Scotch pine and larch, premiums offered for 

 raising from foreign seeds, 336 



Scraper to the pressing plough, figured and de- 

 scribed, 677. 



Sea air, effects of, query respecting, 730. 



Seas, artificial, on forming in ornamental land- 

 scape, 137. 



Seat, garden, made of straw, 594. 



Seats for gardens, convenient, 682. 



Seats, country, with respect to landscape-gar- 

 dening, 35. 



Seeds, genuine agricultural, on the propagation 

 Of, 179 ; American, received from New York, 

 212; alpine, for sale or exchange, 332; of rhu- 

 barb and sea-kale, for the Horticultural So- 

 ciety of Pennsylvania, -550. 



Selwood Park, 570. 



Sepulchre, a metropolitan, 214. 



Servants and masters, 649. 



Shades for the forcing-pits at Syon, figured and 

 described, 510. 



Sheaves of com, mode of setting up, figured and 

 described, 458. 



Shed, pleasing effect of one, 676. 



Sheffield, horticultural impostor at, 215. 



Shetland Isles, gardening in, 663. 



Shirreff, Mr. Patrick, strictures on Dr. Fleming's 

 remarkable law of vegetable life, 532. 



Show places, suggestion respecting the payments 

 given at, 561. 



Shrubs, transplanting in full growth, 208 ; co- 

 vering for, of wicker-work, 681 ; American, 

 treatment of, in the Goldworth nursery, by 

 Mr. Donald, F.H.S., 143. 



Sicily, hedges in, 658. 



Siebe's rotatory garden engine and pump, 545. 



Silesia, education in, 326. 



Silk, growth and manufacture of, 658. 



Siphon, circulation of, hot water in, exempli- 

 fied, 453. 



Sis^brium indicum, query respecting, 733. 



Skerrat, Mr. John, gardener at Milton Bryant 

 Rectory, 564. 



Slugs, an effectual mode of destroying among 

 cauliflowers and cabbages, by Mr. Henry Pike, 

 143 ; on destroying by lime water in prefer- 

 ence to chopped straw, by Mr. W. P. Vaughan, 

 440. 



Sluice, on a new one for regulating the rise and 

 fall of the tide in artificial seas, 137. 



•Smith, the late Mr. William, biography of, 495. 



Snag-pruning of trees, 664. 



Societies, practical cooperative, as a means of 



ameliorating the condition of the laborloui 



classes, 387. 

 Soils, analysis of, 404 ; very tenacious, ploughing 



and digging, 651. 

 Song of the Hungarian gardener, 326. 

 Soude, the, figured and described, 655. 

 Spade-forks, two-pronged, 134. 

 Spades, varieties of, for peculiar soils, 652. 

 Spain, elysium in, 71. 

 Spence, William, Esq. F.L.S., «rc. remarks on 



the education and amusement of the lower 



Spinage.'New Zealand, 80. 680. 



Spring Grove, 564. 



Squib, Mr., query on his mode of pruning the 

 vine, 733. 



Stachys palustris, an esculent vegetable, 546. 



Staircase, well arranged, 565. 



Stakes of cast iron for standard roses, 332. 



Stamford, 673. 



Standard apple and pear trees, dwarf, upon 

 pruning and managing by Mr. William Green. 

 shields, 146. 



St. Anne's Hill, remarks on, 382. 



Steam, heating by, 188 ; diffused through a bed 

 of stones as a means of heating pine pits, 450 ; 

 applied to tillage, remarks on, by Mr. James 

 Wilkie, 655 ; draining by, 660. 



Steam carriages, and their influence on improve- 

 ment, 684, 



Stephenson, William, Esq., obituary of, 240. 



Stone, artificial, 82. 



Stones, steam diffused through a bed of, as a 

 means of heating pine pits, 450 ; on breaking 

 in gravel walks, by Mr. W. Anderson, 459; 

 machine for breaking, 678. 



Stone pine, critique respecting, 230. 



Stove, handsome domical, 680. 



Stove plants, observations on the cultivation of, 

 by Sir Edward Poore, Bart. F.H.S., '■293. 



Strawberry, on the cultivation of, by Sir George 

 Steuart Mackenzie, Bart. F.H.S, 286; the 

 Keen's seedling, 530 ; Wilmot's superb, query 

 respecting, and answer, 610 ; large, 552. 



Strawberry beds, 183. 



Strawberry wall, a plan for a, by Robert Bvers, 

 Esq., 437. 



Strawberries, two new ones, 216; grown in Mr. 

 Knight's manner, 680. 



Straw garden seat, 594. 



Street, Samuel Spyvee, Esq., upon a mode of co- 

 vering the naked branches of fruit trees with 

 new wood, 516. 



Strelitzirtr reg'mje, query respecting, 2S9. 



Strong, B. W., Esq., on the culture of the sweet 

 potato, as practised in the neighbourhood of 

 New York, 275. 



Stroud house, 574. 



Stuart, Mr. James, on the raising of mush- 

 rooms, and on the forcing of rhubarb stalks 

 in the open air, 443. 



Succession, natural, of forest trees in North 

 America, 421. 



Sugar in Florida, 78. 



Sugar from the beet root, 325. 



Surrey, on some gardens and country residences 

 in, by J. Gale, Esq., 9. 



Swan river, new settlement on the, 327. 



Sweden, maritime schools in, 548. 



Sweet, Mr. R., F.L.S.' &c., plagiarism, by the 

 author of the article signed "A Blooming 

 Bulb," 105 ; and, a Blooming Bulb, remarks 

 on, by T. S. Alcock, 229 ; notice respecting 

 Brunsvig/n Josephln<5, 332. 



Sweet potato, on the culture of, by B. W. Strong, 

 Esq., 275. 



Sweet's Hortus Britannicus, critical suggestion) 

 respecting, 722. 



Switzerland, liquid manure in, 548. 



Syon, some account of the improvements in the 

 garden at, 502. 



Systematic names, use of, 650. 



Tailly, Chateau du, 643. 



Talipot tree, 76 ; use of the leaves, 77. 



Tally, notice of a durable one of earthenware. 



