496 



INDEX. 



Blaikie, Thomas, Esq., C.M.H.S., on the locust 

 tree of Cobbett, 308. 



Blair, Mr. Thomas, on the hardy fruits of Upper 

 Canada, 313. 



Blight and fire-blast on fruit trees, remarks on, 

 by Mr. Robert Sutherland, 278. 



Blight, notice of a plan for lessening the ten- 

 dency to, by W. Cotton, Esq., 174. 



Bonafous's Osservazione, &c, noticed, 338. 



Books for Garden Libraries, religious, 116 j 

 scientific, 116. 



Booth, Mr. Wm. Beattie, A.L.S., on a Meteor- 

 oligical Journal, &c, 176. 



.Borassus flabellif6rmis, sugar produced from, in 

 Ceylon, 213. 



Bosse, Mr. M., on filling up the gaps in plant- 

 ations, 317 ; on soils, &c, 437. 



Bostrichuspinip^rdus, and Sc61ytus destructor, 

 query on destroying, 378. 



Botanical and Horticultural Society of Durham, 

 Northumberland, and Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 



" meeting of, June 29th, 235 ; at Hexham, June 

 26,235; at Newcastle, Aug. 11th, and Sept. 

 7th, 236. 



Botanical Garden, contemplation of one at Man- 

 chester, 352. 



Botanical Lessons, by Miss Kent, 104. 



Botanical names, remarks on changing, 121. 



Botanical Society of Wirtemberg, 94. 



Botanic garden of Berlin, notice of, 93 ; of 

 Brussels, 95 ; of Ceylon, notice respecting, by 

 Sir Alexander Johnston, 99 ; of Chelsea, 103 ; 

 numerous sorts of wheat, barley, and oats 

 raised in, 103 ; of Edinburgh, 105 ; of Mexico, 

 98 ; of New York, 97 ; of Ferpignan, notice of, 

 90 ; of Warsaw, plan and description of, 338. 



Botanic names, criticism on the etymology of, 

 370. 



Botany, course of popular lectures on, at Edin- 

 burgh, 105. 



Botany of Aule, 98 ; of the Birman Empire, ex- 



Z ploring by Dr. Wallich, 213. 



Bourgene de Canadie, 313. 



Boyce, Mr., hints by, for the cultivation of the 

 truffle, 102. 



Zfrassica oleracea, or cow cabbage, notice re- 

 specting, 351. 



Bread fruit, on the property and use of, in Bra- 

 zils by Mr. Beyrich of Brazil, 441. i 



Breeding in and in, remarks on, 75. 



Bregazzi's bark-bed thermometer, described and 

 figured, 215 ; hot-house thermometer, de- 

 scribed and figured, 215. 



British Fruitery, and Florist's Gazette, proposal 

 for, 359. 



Bromley Hill, high order and keeping of, 246. 



Brown, Capt. Thomas, proposed work on the 

 auricula, 89. 



Brown, Robt., F.R.S., &c.,89. 



Buckingham Palace, notice respecting, 476. 



Buck's scarlet rhubarb, notice of, 172. 



Bullock, Mr., notice of his newly founded town 

 of Hygeia, 349 ; " Sketch of a Journey through 

 the Western States of North America," notice 

 of, 349. 



Burial of Mr. Hollis, criticism on, 369. 



Burnet, exhilarating quality of, 352. 



Busby's Treatise on the Vine, noticed, 462. 



Butler and gardener.comparative expenses of,32. 



Cabbage, account of a large one, 351 ; another, 

 351. 



Cabbage, tree variety, or cow cabbage, notice 

 respecting, 351. 



Cactus specibsa, to flower in the open air, 65; 

 treatment of, by Mr. Fleischinger, 317. 



Caesalpinia coriaria, used for tanning in Cartha- 

 gena, 212. 



Calceolaria integrifblia and corymbbsa, criticism 

 on statement concerning, 371. 



Calceolaria integrifblia, notice of a half hardy 

 suffruticose variety, 69. 



Calceolaria.'purpurea, in flower in the Edinburgh 

 Botanic Garden, 226. 



Caledonian Horticultural Society, Memoirs of, 



reviewed, 55 ; documents respecting the gar- 

 den, 55. 



Caledonian Horticultural Society, see Horticul- 

 tural Society, Caledonian. 



Caledonian Lodge of Gardeners, notice of, 105. 



Camellia, note on grafting, by Mr. Stewart Mur- 

 ray, 28. 



Camellias, cultivation of, in an open border, by 

 Mr. Joseph Harrison, 181. 



Camellias, new mode of grafting, by Geo. Dun- 

 bar, Esq., of Rose Park, 56. 



Cameron, Mr. Daniel, on grafting the peach, 

 nectarine, and apricots on stocks of their own 

 kind, 149. 



Cameron, Mr. David, A.L.S., on destroying the 

 red spider in hot-houses, 277. 



Cameron, Mr. John, on the conduct of gardeners 

 and their employers, 156. I 



Canada, cellars for keeping potatoes, description 

 of, 405. 



Cantharides fly, proposal to cultivate in France, 

 92. 



Capsicum, medical properties of, 323. 



Caragana frutescens, notice of, 320. 



Cardoon, on the varieties of, and method of cul- 

 tivating them, by Mr. Andrew Mathews, 

 A.L.S.,46. 



Carica papaya, notice of a fruit of, 109. 236. 



Carlsruhe, history of the gardens of, 204. . 



Carnation show of Lancaster, 114. 



Carnations, lists of select sorts, 142. 114. 



Caryophyllus aromaticus, the clove spice, de- 

 scribed and figured, 66. 



Carybta urens,. importance of, in Ceylon, 213. 



Casks tainted, to render sweet, 478. 



Cassia senna, virtues of, 73. 



Catalogue of Fruits of the Horticultural So- 

 ciety, criticism on, 371 — 374. 



Catalogue raisonne, 66. 195. 318. 449. 



Catalpa seed, notice of a long pod of, 364. 



Catd/pa syringif blia, notice of, 364. 



Cauliflowers, large, 216. 



Cauliflower, method of obtaining an early crop 

 of, 302. 



Cedar, rapid growth of one at St. Ann's Hill, 

 125. 



Celery, mode of culture"late in the autumn, 174. 



Celery, on the culture of, by T. A. Knight, Esq. 

 F.R.S., &c. 57. 



Cherries, ideas on forcing, by Mr. Schultze, of 

 Potsdam, 433. 



Cherries, remarks on forcing, by Mr Fintel- 

 mann, 64. 



Cherry, Chinese, culture of, by T. A. Knight. 

 Esq., 182. '.;■■ 



Cherry, doppelte maikirscke, 64. 



Chevalier's Flore de Pans, &c. noticed, 78. 



Chiswick Fete, reply to Philo-Olitorum, by Oli- 

 tor, 357. 



Chloride of lime, preserving qualities of, 354. 



Chrysanthemum indicum, on the culture and 

 propagation of, by Mr. A. C Lambie, 291. 



" Circle of the Seasons," reviewed, 332. 



Citrus tribe, culture of, by an amateur, 272. 



Cloud Berry, ifubus Chamaemorus, query re- 

 specting, 376. 



Clove spice, described and figured, 67. 



Cobbett's nursery, Kensington, call at, 363. 



Coccus lanigera, or A'phis lanigera, and other 

 species, notice respecting, 471. 



Cockchaffer, experiment with the grubs of, by 

 the Conductor, 336; letter on, by Mr» Calvert 

 of Rouen, 334. 



CockchafFer, or Ver Blanc of the'French horti- 

 culturists, remarks on by Wm. Swainson, Esq., 

 F.R.S., L.S., &c, 295; pamphlet on, by Mr. 

 Vibert, 334 ; remarks on, by Mr. Main, 334 ; 

 by Superficial, 487. 



Cocoa nut palm, favoured in its growth by salt, 

 62 ; trees form a screen on the shores of Cey- 

 lon, 62. 



Cbcos nucifera, importance of in Ceylon, 213. 



Coffee bean ana plants, 119. 



C61chicum, poisonous effects of, 92. 



