Caley, Mr. George, 194. 



Camellia Britannica, by Messrs. Chandler and 



Buckingham, some account of, 317. 



Japonica.var. Gloriosa, of Mr. Ross, 211. 



, new variety, from the garden of T. C. 



Palmer, Esq., 341. 

 Oleifera, 87. 



, single white-flowered, 325. 

 Campbell, Mr., of Bayswater Garden, 349. 

 Canal digging machine in France, 323. 

 Cape Heaths, hints for the better cultivation 

 of, by Mr. James Bowie, 363. 



, List of, which have been in flower 



in the Tooting Nursery in each month of the 



year, communicated by Messrs. Rollisson, 



nurserymen, Tooting, 366. 



Cara of Brazil, query respecting, 358 ; answ. 468. 



Carnations and Piccotees, wonderful collection 



of, by Mr. Hogg, Florist, Paddington, 450. 

 Cairot, Turnip, and Radish, the method of 

 rearing Seed of in the East Indies, by William 

 Inglcdew, Esq., 174. 

 Cassilis, Earl of, 254, 257. 

 Castlereagh House, County of Roscommon, 



described, 94. 

 Caswell, G., his Esopus Spitzenberg apple, 72. 

 Catalogue des Vegetaux de Pleine Terre, &c. 



par M. Soulange-Bodin, account of, 186. 

 Catalogue Raisonnee of Books on Horticulture, 



suggested, 469 

 Caterpillars, ants, worms, and other insects, 

 recipe for composing a liquid for effectually 

 destroying, by Mr. James Burges, 389. 

 Caterpillars in the Netherlands, 325. 



on cabbages, how destroyed in Li- 

 thuania, 84. 



, remarks on their ravages on the 

 pine forests of Franconia, 321. 

 Cauliflowers, on a new mode of preserving, by 



Mr. Charles Macintosh, 139. 

 Cedar of Lebanon, grafting of, 199. 



, remarks on the effect of, in 

 Landscape, by John Thompson, Esq. 118. 

 Celery, grown in trenches, by Mr. J. Anderson, 



F.H.S., gardener to the Earl of Essex, 170. 

 Cels, M., Nurseryman, Paris, 49. 

 Chamois Goat, 210. 



Chandler and Buckingham, Camellia Britan- 

 nica, some account of, 317. 

 Charcoal dust, as a top dressing for onions, and 

 as a cure for the clubbing in cabbages, by Mr. 

 T. Smith, C.M.H.S., 293. 

 Charlcmont, Earl of, 264. 



Charlottenlund, a royal seat, Copenhagen, 272. 

 Charlottenburgh, near Copenhagen, botanic 



garden of, 272. 

 Cherries, forcing of, in the 16th century, in 

 France, 323. 

 , on destroying a black insect, which 



infests, 464. 

 , to scare birds from, 454. 

 Child, Mr. Samuel, his treatise on brewing, (ad- 



vertised), 99. 

 Chinampas, or floating garden, 448. 

 Chinese rose, as a stock for the yellow rose, 66. 

 Chrysanthemums, account and description of 

 five new Chinese, &c. 73. 

 , in the gardens of the Horti- 

 cultural Society, 87. 

 Cinders and coal ashes, effects of, on plants, 224. 

 Cistineae, review of, 48. 61. (advertised), 98. 

 Clapton Nursery, notice respecting, 220. 

 Classification of plants, remarks on, 435. 

 Cleghorn, James, Esq. Accountant in Edin- 

 burgh, conductor of the Farmer's Magazine, 

 his tract on a general provident institu- 

 tion for the benefit of the working classes, 

 remarks on, 317. 

 Clerk, Mr., botanical draughtsman, 61. 

 Climate, considered with regard to Horticul- 

 ture, by T. F. Daniell, Esq. F.R.S., 287. 

 Clubbing in cabbages, to cure, 293. 

 Coal ashes and cinders, effects of, on plants, 224. 

 Cobcea scandens, 12. 



Cobbett, William, Esq , his work entitled The 

 Woodlands ; or, a Treatise on Planting, &c, 

 aceount of, 195. 



INDEX. 477 



Cochineal Insects and Silk Worms, in Spain, 

 204. 



Cockerel), C. R., Esq., jun., 107. 



Cockles, discovery of their existence in fresh 

 wal er, 335. 



Code of Agriculture, translated into French by 

 M. Mathieu Dombasle, 80. 



Coffee from the seeds of Astragalus Bceticus, 

 82. 440. 



Coloma, Count, of Malines, 34. 



Collyns, William, Esq., on a Devonshire prac- 

 tice in planting vines, and on the use of salt 

 as a manure for arable lands., and for renovat- 

 ing grass lawns, 401. 



Colsa, a variety of Brassica, cultivated for its 

 seeds, 64. 



Colville, Mr., nurseryman, 31 ; nursery, 221. 



Colzean Castle, treatment of the vines at, 254. 



Conservatory at Milburn Tower, 264 ; at Mr. 

 Angerstein's, Blackheath, ibid. ; at Slane's 

 Castle, ibid. 



Conservatory at the Grange, Hampshire, 105 ; 

 planting and list of plants, 108. 



Conservatory at Vienna, 82. 



Constantinople, Botany of, by the Rev. Dr. 

 Walsh, 293. 



Conversations on Botany (advertised), 234. 



Cooke, Mr., fruiterer, of London, 36. 



Copenhagen, gardens of, 270. 



Copperas, as a vegetable poison, 444. 



Coreopsis tinctoria, description of, 453. 



Cormack, Son, and Sinclair, nurserymen, New 

 Cross, Deptford, 87. 



Cottage economy, 354. 



Cottagers, premiums given to, 210. 



Cotton, growth of, in New Holland, 207. 



Country labourer, benefits to be derived by, 

 from a garden, &o. by W. Stevenson, Esq. 101 

 —by Mr. Donald, 269. 



Country seats, how ruined in Ireland, 13. 



in Ireland, omitted in the Ency- 

 clopaedia of Gardening, 94. 



Courtown House, County of Wexford, de- 

 scribed, 94. 



Covent Garden Market — January, February, 

 and March, 216; April, May, and June, 

 348 ; July, August, and September, 462. 



Cow tree, of South America, 86. 



Coxheath, new fruits planted on, by Mr. Brad- 

 dick, 34. 



Crabtree, Miss, fruit of Pyrus Japonica exhi- 

 bited by her, 87. 



Cranberry, on the cultivation of the English 

 and American, and the water cress at Bret- 

 ton Hall, by Mr. Christie Duff, C.M.H.S. 151. 



Cucumber, a very large one, noticed, 453. 



Cucumbers, early, grown in a pit by Mr. John 



Mearns, 170. 



grown in a dung bed in the front of 



a peach house, by J. Brookhouse, Esq., 171 ; 



on forcing, by Mr. Thomas Allen, F.H.S.,416. 



Culinary vegetables, mode of accelerating in 

 Louvaine, 325. 



Cultivation without dung, 201. 



Currants, hybrids, remarks on, 464. 



Curtis, John, Esq., his British Entomology, 

 remarks on, 317. 



Curtis, Mr. Samuel, his account of a lime 

 duster for the destruction of insects, 415. 



Curtis, Mr. William, founder of the Botanical 

 Magazine, 47, 59, 60. 



Curtis's directions for cultivating the Crambe 

 maritima (advertised), 232. 



Cuttings of oranges, how to prepare, 266. 



Cyclamen Persicum, on the culture of, by Mr. 

 John Wilmot, F.H.S., 386. 

 , sweet scented, remarks on, 453. 



Dacre, the Rev. B., A.L.S., his testimonies In 

 favour of salt as manure (advertised), 97. 



Dairies of Switzerland, remarks on, 321. 



Dairy account book (advertised), 232. 



Dalhousie Castle and Gardens, &c. by Mr. J. 

 Archibald, C.M.H.S., 251. 

 , Countess of, a zealous and indefati- 

 gable botanist, 255. 

 Gardens, plan of, 252. 



I Dalkeith, Botany of, 206, 257. 



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