GENERAL INDEX. 



763 



by Mr. William Anderson, F.L.S. H.S. &c., 



263. 

 Tallies, a simplified method of marking numbers 



on, bv Sir George Stewart Mackenzie, Bart. 



F.H.S., U3. 

 Taste in furniture, &c., 569. 

 Teachers, suggestions respecting. 627. 

 Thermometer, improvement in Bregazzi's bark 



bed one, 21.3 ; .self-registering one, 21.3. 

 Thermosiphon of Mr Fowler, 4.53 ; remark con- 

 cerning, bv William Johns, M.D. F L..S., 607. 

 Thompson, Mr. Joseph, an account of some ex- 

 periments in physiological botany, undertaken 



with a view to ascertain the probable cause of 



failure in early forced grapes, 253; an essay 



in continuation of, 237. 

 Thorn hedges, on a method of facilitating the 



growth of, on high and exposed situations, by 



Mr. D Anderson, 42. 

 Tiles, draining, 677. 

 Timber, to render uninflammable, 69. 

 Time, on the judicious division and employment 



of, especially addressed to young gardeners, 



135. 

 Tobacco, growth of, 216. 

 Totes, remarks made at, 247. 

 Tour through part of France and Germany, 



notes and reflections made during a, in the 



autumn of 1828, by the Conductor, 1. 113. 241. 



369. 497. 641. 

 Toward, Mr., his dwelling-house at Bagshot 



Park condemned, 571. 

 Training fruit trees en pyramide, observations 



on, 373. 

 Travelling, benefit to be derived from, 2. 

 Tredgold, Thomas, Esq., obituary of, 240. " 

 Tree cabbage, 460. 

 Trees, beautiful, in landscape-gardening, 265; 



picturesque, 266 . 

 Trefle farouche, queries respecting, 734. 

 Trellises, 582. 



Trellis-work, a handsome arcade of, 682. 

 Trianon nursery, belonging to Mr. Calvert, in 



Rouen, account of, ■374. 

 7'rifblium MolinJ-ri, 734. 

 Tuberoses, very double Italian, query respecting, 



2.39. 

 Tucker, Mr. H , description of a flower-stand, 



designed and constructed for the Honourable 



Mrs. Fox, of St. Anne's Hill, 274. 

 Ttilipa Sibthorp/VmiT, answer to query respecting 



by Perceval Hunter, Esq., 734. 

 Turnip, large one, 83. 



Union Florists of, Bishopswearmouth and its vi- 

 cinity show of, for May, 359 ; June 8th, 489 ; 



June 2Pth, 493. 

 Union Florists of Sunderland, show of June 7th, 



490. 

 Uva passa, origin of the term, 68. 

 Vallais, the, 657. 

 Vallet, M., his nursery in Rouen, 376. ; diable 



for removing orange boxes, 499 ; 

 Vases for gardens, 661 ; lead, for containing 



flower-pots, 683. 

 Vaughan, Mr. W. P., on destroying slugs by 



lime water in preference to chopped straw, 440. 

 Vegetable phvsiologv, with a view to vegetable 



culture, by M. W.' Hertz, 132. 

 Vegetable aiid Florists' Society of HowdonDock, 



show of May 9th, .358. 

 Vegetables, on condensing and preserving, 95 ; 



culinary, to make tender, 667. 

 Ferbena chamsedryfblia, 612. 

 Ferbtna Me/lndris, by whom introduced, by 



John Perry, 106 ; critique respecting, 229. 

 Verjuice, to prepare for bottling and keeping, 



668. 

 Vestries of parishes, obligations of, respecting 



schools, 699. 

 Villa, account of a small one near Quevilly, .501 ; 

 design for, with a plan and elevation, 541 ; 

 rural, in landscape-gardening, 36. 

 Villas, town, 36 ; of England, Scotland, and 



France compared, 646. 

 Village of Mailleraie, 644. 



Village library at Carcolston, 95. 

 Village libraries. East Lothian itinerating juve- 

 nile, 226. 

 Vine, an account of the manner of training the, 

 upon open walls, at Thomery, near Fontaine- 

 bleau, by Mr. John Robertson, F.H.S., 286. ; 

 black cluster, 665. See Grape. 

 Vine plants, upon the influence of rocks on the 

 prosperity of, and upon the quality of their 

 produce, 436. 

 Vines in the open air, 96 ; within the tropics, 

 by W. Hamilton, Esq. M.D., 98; query on, 

 when trained down from (he rafters, 110; 

 query on training down from the rafters, S39; 



trained from the rafters, answer to the query 



respecting, by Mr. John Haycroft, 733 ; for a 

 green house, query respecting, 733. 

 Violet, Russian, query respecting, 611. 

 Wages of gardeners, discussion on, 100. 



Walker, , Esq., late proprietor of Michel 



Grove, circumstance respecting, 588. 

 Walton, remarks on, 381. 

 Warsaw, letter from, 458. 

 Wasps, on the destruction of, by T. N. Parker, 



Esq., 277 ; the most effectual mode of destroy. 



ing, 3^i. ; on the destruction of, by Mr. James 



Dall, 438. 

 Waste lands, cultivation of, 704. 

 Water, soft, plan for collecting, 740. 

 Water-closet, Downe's self-acting, 545. 

 Water-melon, sugar made from, 658. 

 Waterm-'in's nursery, remarks on, 382. 571. 

 Watering pot, improved, 740. 

 Watering, system of, at Syon, 504. 

 Weare, Thomas, Esq., obituary of, 240. 

 Weather, prognostics of, 78. 

 Webster's, Mr. C. F., introduction of the Ota- 



heite pine, 466. 

 Weeding under and above the economic point 



explained, 372. 

 Weekes, Mr., improvement in heating by hot 



water, 544. 

 Wells, Artesian (t. e. invented in the county of 



Artois), 551. 

 Wentworth House, 679. 

 West, Counsellor, remark on his hot-house near 



Dublin, .3.38. 

 Westdean House, 581. 

 Westland, Mr., nurseryman, 589. 

 Weyhenstephan, royal central fruit tree nursery 



at, 386. 

 Wheat, insect which attacks the ear of, 177. 

 Whin, as a hedge plant, 43. 

 Whin hedges, query respecting, 730. 

 White Knights, remarks on, 383. 

 Whitlaw, Mr., query as to his hemp, 733. 

 Whitmore Lodge, 564, 722. 

 Whitton House, near Hounslow, 94. 

 Whitton Park, near Hounslow, 94. 

 Wick House, 93. 

 Wilkie's plough for diminishing friction, 652; 



his wheel plough, improvements on, 653; his 

 brake or cultivator, 6,53, improvements in, 654. 

 Windsor Castle, improvements at, 604. 

 Williams, Mr. Richard, an account of an easy 



method of destroying caterpillars on goose- 



berry bushes, 294. 

 Wilson. Mr. William, on training the goose- 



berrv, 62. 

 Wilson, Mr. William, of New York, on the cli- 

 mate of the eastern and middle States of 



North America, with reference to horticul- 

 ture, 409. 

 Wines, superior gooseberry and currant, French 



method of makins, .364. 

 Wingfield Spa in Windsor Forest, 567. 

 Winter, Mr. Joseph, answer to queries, on, 



109. 

 Winter garden described, by T. R. Rir^re, Esq., 



23. 

 Wire-worm, query respecting a remedy for the, 



and answer, 610. 

 Woburn Abbey, iron hot-houses at, 213 ; notice 



of, 560 ; beauties of, 561 ; defecU of, 562. 

 Wood-lice, answer to queiy on destroying, 238. 



