INDEX. 



485 



mout, near Paris, i9. 198. ; son Catalogue 

 des Veggtaux de Pleine Terre, account of, 

 196. ; son R&it d'une Excursion Horticultu- 

 rale faitc 2 Londres, dan le mois d'Avril 

 1824, reviewed, 1S9. 

 Sowerby, Mr. James, F.L.S. &c, 59. 

 Spain, botanic gardens of, 49. 



, botany and gardening of, by Professor 

 Don Mariano La Gasca, 235. 

 Spanish chestnut, tan from the bark of, 83. 

 Sparrows, new trap for, 454. 

 Spence, William, Esq. F.L.S., and William 

 Kirby, Esq. M.A. F.R.S. & L.S., their intro- 

 duction to entomology (advertised), 99. ; re- 

 marks on, 192. 

 Spinage, New Zealand, 200. 

 Sprengel Curtio, his Systema Vegetabilium 



reviewed, 155. 

 Spring Grove, 36. 



Stackpole, village of, cottages and gardens, 273. 

 Statistics of agriculture, Voght's view of, 441. 

 Steam, essay on heating hot-houses by, of Mr. 



W. Bailey, 203. 

 Stems of fruit trees, upon the beneficial effects 

 of protecting from frost in early spring, by 

 Thomas Andw. Knight, Esq. F.R.S. &c.,424. 

 Steppes, burning of, in Siberia, 447. 

 Stevenson, William, Esq., on the benefits to be 

 derived by the country labourer from a 

 garden, and the means of teaching him how 

 to acquire those benefits, 101. 

 Stewart's Farmer's, &c. Companion, 432. 

 Stewart, Mr. Alexander, C.M.H.S., his mode of 

 culture of the pine-apple, 70. 

 his description of a green-house in the 

 garden of Sir Robert Preston, Bart, 

 at Valleyfield, in Perthshire, 423. 

 Stewart, his newly-invented espalier rail, 340. 

 Stipse noxa, a disease in sheep, remarks on, 442. 

 Stock, Mr. Daniel, his query respecting orchi- 



dese, 358. ; answered, 465. 

 Stocks, ten-week, German varieties of, 337. 

 StofFels, Mr. Louis, of Malines, 34. 251. 

 Stowe, large pine-apple cut there, 89. 

 Strawberries, Grove End scarlet, 72. 



method of cultivating on small 

 ridges, by J.Williams, Esq. of Pitmaston, 308. 

 Strawberry, Alpine, query respecting, 471. 



Bishop's orange, early globe cinna- 

 mon (advertised), 230. ; Wilmot's superb 

 (advertised), 230. 

 Strawberry, Dalmatian, 82. 



different varieties of, cultivated in 

 the garden of the Horticultural Society of 

 London, by Mr. James Barnet, 420. 

 Strawberry, " Nairn's scarlet," 72. 



, on the cultivation of, by T. A. 



Knight, Esq. F.R.S. &c, 304. 



, the melon, 338. Diack's, No. 1. 



and No. 2., 338. 

 , Wilmot's black imperial, 72. 



superb, on the cultiva- I 

 tion of, by Mr. Isaac Oldacre, F.H.S., 27S. I 

 Strawberry plants, for early forcing, on the pre- 

 paration of, by Thomas Andrew Knight, 

 Esq. F.R.S. &c. Pres. H.S., 163. 

 Street, Mr., C.M.H.S. his mode of growing 



plants in live moss, noticed, 343. 

 Strokestown House, Co. Roscommon, 94. 

 Substitutes for hemp in India, 85. 

 Sugar, from the field beet, art of obtaining, 



remarks on, 319. 

 Sun-flower, uses of, in Portugal, 322. 

 Swain's Gramina Pascua (advertised), 474. 

 Swayne, the Rev.G, on protecting the branches 

 of fig-trees during winter, 306. 

 , the Rev. G, on the management of 

 hot-house flues, 430. 

 Sweden, botanic gardens of, 52. 

 Sweet, Mr. Robert, F.L.S. culture of hot-house 



bulbous-rooted plants, 31. 47, 48. 61. 

 Sweet's Botanical Cultivator (advertised), 362. 

 British Flower-Garden(a<ta')'(7«'rf),231. 

 Warblers, some account of, 

 193. ; (advertised) 231. 

 Geraniaceae, Cistinefe, and Botanical 

 Cultivator, (advertised) 98, 362. 



Sweet's Hortus Britannicus, announced, 99. ; 

 (advertised) 362. ; remarks on, 433. 



Swine, feeding of, in Mexico, 4'47. 



Sylvester, Mr., his mode of planting the con- 

 servatory at the Grange, 111. 



Syringe, new, by Mr. John Reid, 171. 



Systematic Botany, review of Sprengel's work 

 on, 155. 



Systems and methods in natural history, re- 

 marks on, 461. 

 of plants, remarks on, 435. 



Tallies, forms of, 258; moulds for, by Mr. 

 Archibald, 258. 



Tan from the bark of Spanish chestnut, 83. 



Tankerville, Earl of, 44. 



Tap-roots of plants, on shortening the, by Mr. 

 F. Masseli, of Militsch, 188. 



Tartarian buck- wheat, 325 



Taxidermy; or, the art of preparing objects 

 of natural history, &c. (advertised) 99. 



Taylor's Phil. Mag., quotation from, 431. 



Tea, culture of, in Brazil, 332. 



Teall's treatise on the foot-rot in sheep (ad- 

 vertised), 233. 



Ten-week stocks, Mr. Lee's varieties of, 337. 



Tereneure, the seat of F. Bourne, Esq., 262. 



Thermometer for bark beds, 312. 



Thompson, Mr. J. junior, of Welbeck gardens, 



on the culture of orchideous plants, 466. 

 Thompson, John, Esq., on the Lombardy pop- 

 lar, 16 ; remarks on the effect of the cedar 

 of Lebanon in landscape, 118. ; on the im- 

 provement of Hyde Park and Kensington 

 Gardens, 280. 



Thomson, Anthony Todd, Esq. MD. F.L.S., 

 &c. on a hypothesis concerning green vege- 

 table manure, 20. ; hints on the superiority 

 of the rheum palraatum to the other species 

 cultivated for culinary purposes, 396.; Lec- 

 tures on the Elements of Eotany (adver- 

 tised), 99. 234. 



Thouin, Professor Andrew, F. M. H. S. &c, 

 biography of, 226. ; on the Calville Rouge de 

 Micaud apple, 429. 



Thunder and hail protectors, remarks on, 318. ; 

 in Savoy, 325. 



Thunder and hail, society for mutual assurance 

 against, in France, 80. 



Ticketing plants, on the cheapest and most dur- 

 able mode of, by Mr. Dern of Scarbriik, 187. 



Ticketing plants, observations on Mr. Dern's 

 mode of, by Mr. Otto, inspector of the botanic 

 garden of Berlin, 187. 



Tigridia pavonia, directions for managing, by 

 Mr. John Damper Parks, 306. 



Timber, to preserve from the dry rot, 336. 



Timothy grass, culture of, in Bavaria, 324. 



Tobacco fumigation, description of an instru- 

 ment for, by Mr. John Reid, 418. 



Tollaght, near Dublin, the country seat of the 

 archbishops of that city, 263. 



Tomato, methods of preparing the fruit, 353. 



Torch -thistle, on the culture of-the, by W.P.F. 

 Bouche, 186. 



Town gardens, queries respecting, 472. 



Traits de la Pomme de Terre, remarks on, 

 438. 



Traits de l'Emploi de la Vapeur pour les Serres 

 Chaudes, by Mr. William Bailey, account of, 

 197. 



Transactions of the London Horticultural So- 

 ciety. See Horticultural Society of London. 



Transactions of the Prussian Gardening Society, 

 reviewed, 308. Parts III. and IV., 321. 



Transplantation of trees in Italy, 82. 



Transplanting instrument of Mr. M. Saul, 267.; 

 of the French, 268. 



Tredegar prize-show, 210. 



Tredgold, Thomas, Esq. on heat, moisture, and 

 evaporation, 37. 



Trees and shrubs, the introduction into Ireland 

 of new species by Mr. Mackay, 458. 



Trellis, Long's movable, described, 454. ; (ad- 

 vertised) 473. 



Trianon Nursery, near Rouen, 445. 



Trinity College Garden, Dublin, 11. 



