GENEKAL INhhK. 



'4-9 



Cels's nursery, a notice of, li>. 



Cemeteries, tlie large public ones at Manches- 

 ter and Liverpool noticed, 527 ; the latter cri- 

 ticised, 5i;8 ; public, at Plymouth, i'Sl. 



Centrocarph.i, Don's genus, noticed, 340. 477. 



Cfreus grandiflbrus, or nigiif -flowering, 498. 



Chatenay's nursery grounds, remarks on, 13. 



Chatsworth house and gardens, noticed, u95. 



Chemistry the key lo agriculture, 481. 



Cherries, excellent kinds named, 239 ; the kinds 

 of, recommended in the Ponmlogical Maga- 

 zine, 113 ; Montmorency cherry gardens, 91. 



Cliestnut, the sweet or Spanish, a superior va- 

 riety of, 101. 



Chilton Lodge, noticed, 13fi. 



Chimneys, remarks on, 400. 



Chiswick garden, noticed, Feb. IG., 251 : Oct. 29., 

 687. 



Choisv, in France, remarks on the nurseries at, 

 12. 14. 



Churchyards, general remarks on, 528; parti- 

 cular remarks on tlie churchyard of St. Mi- 

 chael's parish, Dumfries, 528. 



Chrysanthemum sinense, a method of propagat- 

 ing and cultiv.-.ting productive of perfectly 

 dwarf plants which flower in great beauty and 

 perfection, 457 ; difficulties in the blooming of, 

 123 



Cinchbnn, or Peruvian bark, the medical pro- 

 perties of three species of, stated, fi7. 



City g.irdens, advice on growing plants in, soli- 

 cited, 720. 



Clark, William, Esq., an obituary of, 639. 



Classical garden, outlines of a plan for the form- 

 ation of a, 432 ; classical residence, 723. 



Climate of England, remarks on the supposed 

 changes in the, B3 ; of the north of England, 

 in July, 1831,517; umformityof insular, 195 



Climbers and creepers, their beauteous effect, 

 526. 



Clothes-pegs, improved ones, described and 

 figured, 369, 370; where purchasable, 371. 



Clove trees thrive at .Singa])ore, 92. 



Clover and wheat, hints on the culture of, 705 ; 

 the white clover, a troublesome weed on all 

 arable soils, 481. 



Cock, Siebe's new-invented self-pressure one, 

 85. 



Coc'/scombs, large, 100. 226 ; very large, 683 ; 

 culture of, and compost for the, 302 ; Howes's 

 mode of cultivating, solicited, 110. 



Coffee, the medical properties of, stated, G7. 



Commercial gardens in Fr.ince, II. 



Conductor's principles and conduct, 116. 6.99.'701. 



Conolly and Sons, nurserymen, Lancaster, ii'^. 



Conservatory at Neston Hall, Norfolk, 651. 



Controversy, on the language of, 20. 



Convolvulus Batatas, modes of cultivating and 

 preserving, 10. 



Cooperation for cheap food, lodging, and edu- 

 cation, 369 ; cooperative societies, 530. 



C<jssus lignip^rda, its erosions in trees, 603. 



Cottage, plan of a double one, uniting pictur- 

 esque appearance with internal comfort, 292. 



Cottagers, cottages, and cottage gardens, 216, 

 217. 367. 410. .55.5. 607. 673. 706, 707. 709. 



Covent Garden Market, the new, figured and 

 described, 265 ; prices in, and remarks, Jan. 

 14th, 125; March 2tth, 255; May 19tli, 382 ; 

 July 18th, 511; Sept. I6th, 621; Nov. 16th, 732 ; 

 weights andmeasures used in, 255 ; conserva- 

 tories in, 256. 272. 367. 696. 



Cowitch {Muckna priiriens), the medicinal uses 

 of, 66. 



Cowslip, rosaceous double, 123. 247. 



Crab, French, keeps in fern for twelve months 

 or more, 678. 



Crab (^'yrus lUilus), the uses of its wood, 234. 



Craigmillar Castle, standard trees in its orchard 

 300 years old, 2'J7. 



Cress, Norman curled, its uses, history, and 

 culture, described, 38. 242. 656; the broad- 

 leaved, 6;)6. 



Creepers and climbers, their decorative effect, 

 .^26. 



Crocus, a description of the species and most re. 



markablc varieties of, 41 ; theii' cultivation 

 and management, 43 ; matchless effect of, in 

 decorating borders, 564. 



Crook forgathering apples, &;c., in orchards, 614. 



Cropping, economical modes of, 412. 690; earlv 

 614. ' 



Cucumber, an excellent variety, grown in boxes 

 and trained in the forcing-houses at Syon, 

 101 ; a very large one produced in Ireland, 



Cucumbers, melons, &c., hot water applied to 

 the growth of, 245 ; an improved frame for 

 forcing, 459 ; a mode of pruning and training, 

 462 ; qualities entitling them to prizes, 627.' 



Cullis's nursery, Leamington, noticed, 410. 



Cultivator, Kirkwood's, improved by Mr. Car- 

 ruthers, its elKciency, 532. 



Cunningham, Mr., of the Liverpool nursery, a 

 notice of, 538 ; his nursery at Manchester, 410. 



Cunningham, Mr., his recent importation of 

 Australian plants to Xew, 687. 



Cunnoquhie, an account of, 22. 



Curraghmore, near Waterford, noticed, 682. 



Cuthbert, Mr. John, an obituary of, 512. 



Cuttings, the physiology of striking by, 585. 



Cyclamen cbum, the cultivation of, recommend- 

 ed and prescribed, 561 ; C. persicum ? a mode 

 of cultivating productive of abundance of 

 flowers, 483; vernum and repandum, their 

 merits, 717 ; remarks on cyclamens, 561. to 56.3. 



Cypress trees, deciduous, enormous ones near 

 Mexico, 670. 



Dandelion, a mode of destroying, queried, 722. 



Daphne odura or indica, how to propagate and 

 to blossom it in perfection, 483. 



Dates in South Carolina, 670. 



Dean, Mr., an obituary of, 512. 



Denbrae, Scotland, gardens at, noticed, 681. 



Dendrophagi, insects preying on trees, 603. 



Denlbrd Place, noticed, 136. 



Denmark, Florxultural Society in, 489; in- 

 stances of the climate of, its effect on vege- 

 tables, and their price, 490 ; notices on, 661. 



Desserts defective from January to June, 501. 



Despatcher for watering, described, 654. 



Devonshire, the prices of freehold estates, and 

 of numerous articles in, as guides to a resi- 

 dence in, 5()8. 



Dickson's, Messrs., nursery at Chester, 556. 



Digitillis purpurea abounds wild, 519. 



Dioecious plants, many exotic species of, but one 

 sex exists in Rritain,572; some instances, 573. 



Disandra prostrita, hardihood of, 483. 



Dool trees, described, 644. 



Doryiinthes excelsa, described, 499. 728. 



Doube's garden, Paris, noticed, 134. 



Douglas, Mr. David, a notice of his achiev. 

 mcnts, 465. 



Draining of moss lands, its effecLs shown, 533. 



Drawing flowers botanically, and fruits horticul- 

 turally, 95. 



Drewery's New System of Farming, thoughts on, 



Dromana,' in Waterford county, noticed, 682. 



Drummond, Mr., sent out to America, 95. 



Dumfries, remarkable for numerous elegant 

 tombstones, 528 ; places near, remarked on, 

 641 ; sandstone of, queries on its fitness for 

 vases, fountains, and garden ornaments, 724. 



Dumfries and Manchester, geology of the tract 

 of country between, 514. 



Dung, hints on the philosophy of its ferment- 

 ation, 716. 



East India Company, its liberality, 211. 



East India plants, the rarer, 2o7. 



Eaton Hall and its gardens, remarks on, 547. 



Edges of walks, edges of dug clumps, and the 

 dug surfaces of clumps of shrubs, critical re- 

 marks on, 543; rules for the formation" and 

 management of walks and edges, 546; rules 

 for keeping, 404. 



Edinburgh, new and rare plants which have 

 flowered in the neighbourhood of, 102 ; 

 School of Arts at, account of, 227 ; botanic 

 garden, 227. 



Education, remarks on, 92; in France, 488; high 



