48 G 



INDEX. 



Trotter, Alexander, Esq., his method of book- 

 keeping, 192. 

 Truffles, on the culture of, 320. 

 Tschudy, the Baron de, his mode of grafting 



the pine and fir tribe, &c, 79. 

 Tulip beds, on forming, by Mr. Saul, 451. 



, principal, in the neighbourhood of 

 London, 347. ; Mr. Lawrence's, 347. ; Lan- 

 caster tulip show, 347. ; Mr. Groom's, at Wal- 

 worth, 349. 351. 

 Turner, John, Esq., F. L. S., his description of 



some new sorts of pear, 73. 

 Turnip, carrot, and radish, the method of rear- 

 ing seed of, in the East Indies, by William In- 

 gledew, Esq., 174. 

 Turnip, early white stone, 210. Yellow, 210. 

 , on the French or Teltow variety, by 

 Mr. John Hunneman, 307. 

 Twarnley's Essays on the Management of the 



Dairy (advertised), 262. 

 Ulmus parvifolia, 12. 

 Underwood, Mr. W., Dublin, 11. 

 Unripe Melons, how to make the most of, 80. 

 Van Dieman's Land, horticulture of, 207.; 



agriculture, 209. 

 Vandes, Comte de, his botanic garden, 349. 

 Vaughan, Sir Robert, bart., M.P., F.H.S., 



woollen netting for fruit trees, by, 341. 

 Vegetable glue of South America, 332. 

 life, power of, in Italy, 325. 

 Ventilator for hothouses, description of a self- 

 acting, byjohn Williams,Esq. C.M.H.S., 419. ; 

 by Mr. Mugliston, 173. 

 Verge-cutter, on a new, &c, by Mr. Charles 

 M'Intosh, and also on anew mode of pre- 

 serving cauliflowers, 139. 

 Verhandlungen des Vereins, &c, Transactions 



of the Prussian Gard. Soc. reviewed, 186. 

 Verus on field-gardening, and on the gardens 



of farm servants in Scotland, 259. 

 Villa Nuova, belonging to the family of Po- 



tocki, near Warsaw, 376. 

 Vinery, circular one of General Durham, and 

 of Mr. Fletcher, 254. 

 , plan for, 254. 



, description of a, and mode of training 

 practised in it, by Mr. William Beattie, 

 C.M.H.S , 172. 

 Vines, a peculiarity in the treatment of, oy Mr. 

 Archibald, at Dalhousie Castle, 253. ; at Col- 

 zean Castle, 254. 

 Vines, cultivation of, in the open air, 43. 



, on a Devonshire practice in planting, &c. 



by William Collyns, Esq., 401. 

 , on a new mode of grafting, 4S4. 

 , on pruning in Sept., by Philalethes, 211. 

 Vineyards, in Italy, 82. 

 Voght's Statistics of Agriculture, 441. 

 Volsfandige Auleitung zur Mastungder Thiere, 



&c, by Char Leuchs, 196. 

 W. B., query of, and answer, 359. 

 W.B.B., query of, as to insects, 359. ; answ. 464. 

 W. S., query of, 357 : answer, 358. 

 Wade, Dr., botanical professor, Dublin, 11. 

 Walker, Mr. James, gardener at Melville 

 Castle, his culture of Lathraea squamaria, 256. 

 Wall-fruit trees, qu. respecting insects on, 470. 

 Wall trees, on the protection of the blossoms of, 



by T. A. Knight, Esq. F.R.S. &c, 173. 

 W'all trees, to preserve, from the effects of frost, 

 by the Rev. W. Phelps, 306. 



Walls of compressed earth, 355. 



Walsh, the Pev. Robert, LLD.^and C.M.H.S. 

 on the botany of the neighbourhood of Con- 

 stantinople, 293. 



Waltham House, in Massachusetts, 205. 



Walworth Florists' Garden, 349. 



Waring, R, Esq., his Cray pipi in-apple, 73. 



Wastes and waters of France, repeopling of, 79. 



Water-cress, culture of, in Britain and on the 

 Continent, 200. 

 , on the cultivation of the, and the 

 English and- American cranberry, at Bretton 

 Hall, by Mr. Christie Duff, 151. 



Water-cresses, on the best mode of washing, 29. 



Water, remarks on the qualities of, for watering 

 vegetables, 222. 



Watering vegetables in dry seasons, on the use 

 and abuse of, and on the advantages of shade 

 to culinary crops in times of great drought, 

 by Mr. George Fulton, 399. 



Watson's Dendrologia Britannica (advertised), 

 474. 



Wax-tree, on the cultivation of, in England, by 

 W. Hamilton, Esq. M.D., 403. 



Wedgewood, John, Esq., on blanching and 

 forcing Buda-kale, 307. 



Weeds.Holditch and Sinclair's Essay on (adver- 

 tised), 98. 



Weevil among corn, to destroy, 444. 



Werthmeister, Mr. R., his mode of ringing 

 fruit-trees, 187. 



Wheat, different sorts of, 211. 



, Sandomir, or Polish variety of, 447. 



Whin, double-flowering, 342. 



Wild mustard, how destroyed m Franconia, 

 446. 



Williams, John, Esq., C.M.H.S., his description 

 of a self-acting ventilator for hot-houses, 419. 



Williams, John, Esq., C.M.H.S., on cultivating 

 strawberries on small ridges, &c, 308. 



Williams, John, Esq., C.M.H.S., on the culti- 

 vation of the yellow rose, 66. 



Wilkie, Mr., gardener, Dublin, 13. 



, Mr. W., his work on woods, &c, 87. 



Willis, Mr. Richard, his account of peaches and 

 nectarines on the same tree, &c, 471. 



Wilmot, Mr. John, F.H.S. Isleworth, his mode 

 of cultivating the Cyclamen persicum, 386. 



Wilmot, Mr., of Lewisham nursery, his orna- 

 mental pots, 336. 



Woad, Isatis tinctoria, cultivation of, 82. 



Wodzicki, Count, 375. 



Woking nursery, Mr. Donald, 269. 



Wood, proposed method of charring, 446. 



Woodlands; or, a Treatise on Planting, by 

 William Cobbet, Esq., account of, 195. 



Worms and slugs, how destroyed, by Mr. 

 M'Dougal, 89. 



Worms in pots, to destroy, by Sir C. M. L. 

 Monck, Bart., 307. 



Xanthochymus pictorius, 343. 



Yarnall, Mr. R. Keyte, life and death of, 223. 



Yeast, as manure, 224. 



Yellow rose, on its cultivation at Cobham 

 Hall, 66. ; by John Williams, Esq. C.M.H.S., 

 66. ; by J. C. Palmer, Esq. F.H.S., 66. - 



Young, Mr. nurseryman, Epsom, 34. 



Yucca gloriosa, fine specimens of, 451. ; in 

 Ireland, 458. 



Yvart, a distinguished French agriculturist, 402. 



Zoological Society, prospectus for, 335. 



/ 



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END OF THE FIRST VOLUME. 



London : 

 Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode, 

 New-Street-Square. 



