GENERAL INDEX. 



753 



Conductor, critical remarks on the principles 



and conduct of the, 720. 

 Conservatory, design for a small one, 664. 

 Cooperation in education and travelling, 479. 

 Cooperative societies, object of, by J. C. Penn, 



478 ; of Perth and Dundee, 494. 

 Copenhagen, gardening news from, 321. 

 Corculum, definition of the, 556. 

 Corn mill, new, 352. 

 Cornfield, Mr. P., on raising auriculas from 



seed, &c., 426. 

 Corn laws, 592. 



Cottages, of labourers, 109 ; country labourers, 

 plans and descriptions of three, 153 ; labour- 

 ers', four designs for, by Mr. Richard Var- 

 den, 660. 

 Cottage gardens, remarks on, by Mr. Charles 



Hulbert, 598. 

 Cottage husbandry and architecture, with refer- 

 ence to prize-essays, &c, 139. 

 Cottage system, critical remarks on the, 606. 

 Cottage in England, description of one, by Mr. 



John Howden, 657. 

 Council of the Horticultural Society, 246. 

 Country Times newspaper, 107. 

 Covent Garden Market, Jan. 2d, 119; March 

 12th, 253; April and May, 372; July, 511; 

 the new building of, 513; prizes in Septem- 

 ber, 623 ; Nov. 1st, 732. 

 Covering for an auricula stage, 426. 

 Cow, advantage of, to a cottager, 181 ; manage- 

 ment of, 182. 206. 

 Cow tree, 315. 



Craig, Mr. James, remarks on Mr. Newington's 

 observations on the management of peach 

 trees, 430 ; on the green fly in the blossoms 

 of peach trees, 552; on the visible cause, and 

 easy and effectual cure, of the bad setting of 

 some sorts of grapes, 687. 

 Crops, rotation of, for cottagers, 201 ; remark- 

 able, produced in the Vale of York, 493. 

 Croup, remedy for the, 552. 

 Cruickshank's Practical Planter versus Pon- 

 tey's Forest Pruner, on the subject of pruning 

 fir trees, 675. 

 Cucumber, large, 600. 

 Cucumbers, on keeping a fine bloom on, by Mr. 



George Fulton, 709. 

 Cultivation taught in Paris, 386. 

 Cummings, Mr. H., some account of a large 



vine at Scllwood Park, 439. 

 Currants in Corsica, 211. 

 Curtis, Mr., his establishment at Glazenwood, 



733. 

 Cypress and cork tree, deciduous, query respect- 

 ing, 227. 

 Daisies, query on destroying, 615. 

 Dalgleish, Mr. H., on heating hot-houses by 

 Fowler's thermosiphon, 334 ; notice of a plan- 

 tain which has ripened fruit, 429. 

 Davenport, G., large pumpkins, 599. 

 Dean Forest, fences at, 446. 

 Defecation in making sugar, 150. 

 Dendrobium chrysantbum, 277. 

 Densoii, Mr. John, jun., on the sexes and his- 

 tory of the Lombardy, or Turin, poplar, 419. 

 Diack, Mr. Alexander, his mode of grafting the 



large branches of old trees, 698. 

 Dick's railways, 477. 

 Diseases of plants, 393. 

 Dolichos tetragonolobus, 315. 

 Dove's dung in Samaria, 216. 358. 

 Drawing from nature, easy method of, 305. 

 Drummond, Mr., his mode of frightening bears, 



569. 

 Dryobalanops Cdmphora, SIS. 

 Duncan, Mr. William, on the botanic flower- 

 garden at Trelowarren, 420. 

 Dykes, Mr. J., query on a weevil destructive to 



fruit trees, 500; answer to, 501. 

 Earle, Mr. A., notice of his views taken in New 



Zealand, &c, 486. 

 Ear-rings, a remnant of barbarism, 481. 

 Earwigs, newly invented trap for, 491 ; critical 

 remark on destroying, by tin pipes, by \V. 

 Mason, jun., 723. 

 Vol. VI. — No. 29. 3 



Edgeware, new alms-houses at, 107. 



Edgeworth, Thomas, jun., thesoude as invented 

 by a Wrexham mechanic, 216. 



Edging tiles of Mr. Allardyce, 309. 



Edinburgh, rare plants flowered near, 493; ve- 

 getable market, June 1st, 494; August 7th, 601. 



Education, account of, in North America, by 

 Mr. Jesse Buel, 103; principle, critical re- 

 marks on, 217 ; system in the United States, 

 324 ; classical, 325 ; erroneous notions of its 

 effects, 488 ; as a check to population, critical 

 remarks respecting, 609. 



jElichrysum, Mr. Wiggins's management of. 

 656. 



Elles, Mr. J., on the potato, 58 ; on the culture 

 of the ifbsa odorata, 427 ; observations re- 

 specting Mr. Howden 's management of forest 

 trees, 545. 



Encelia canescens, 210. 



Englefield House, remarks on, 655. 



Ensor, -G., notice of the cullure of wheat in the 

 neighbourhood of Ardress, in Ireland, 691. 



Epsom nursery, plants which have flowered at, 

 during September and October, 1829, 115; 

 critical remarks concerning, 357 ; rare plants 

 flowered in the, from February to June, 508 ; 

 July and August, 620. 



£rinus alplnus on old walls, by the Rev. W. T. 

 Bree, 592. 



Errata, 614. 726. 



Errington, Mr. Robert, fruit trees in too rich a 

 soil, 54 ; answer to query respecting vines for 

 a geranium house, 231 ; standard sizes for 

 garden pots, 354; query on Mr. Saunders's 

 list of pears, 615 ; remarks on the treatment 

 of fruit trees, 693; farther remarks on training 

 the peach and nectarine, 695. 



Espionage at the Chiswick garden, 242, 243. 



Eucalyptus, answer to query respecting, 502. 



Exotic nursery, call at, 119. 



Exotics, acclimated, list of, desired, 229; natu- 

 ralisation of, 493. 



Falconar, Mr. D., species of i"Vis wanted, 502. 



Faldermann, M. F, rare plants from Persia to 

 the Petersburgh botanic garden, 321 ; collec- 

 tion of melons from Russia, 338 ; a new va- 

 riety of wheat from China, 339. 



Fanning, Mr. D., his botanic garden at Carac- 

 cas, 325; account of the Guaco plant, 326; 

 the Aracacha plant, 326 ; tobacco plants of 

 Colombia, 327. 



Farm servants in Northumberland, customs in 

 hiring, and method of paying, 589. 



Farmers and gardeners near Paris, personal 

 character of, 9. 



Fences at Dean Forest, the, 446. 



Ferme, John, query on avoiding woodlice, 223 ; 

 on keeping fruits, more particularly apples, 

 700. 



Ferula persica, 572. 



Festivities in the Champs Elysees of Paris, 

 646. 



Field sports, a subscription park and warren for, 

 in France, 316. 



Fig, the white Sidney, 654. 



Finlayson's harrow and Wilkie's brake, remarks 

 on, by R. Finlayson, Esq., 499. 



Firs, pruning of, 455. 676. 



Flanders, fertility of, 540. 



Fleetwood, Mr. Thomas, on the culture of the 



strawberry on a light sandy soil, 710. 

 Floral and Horticultural Societies : 

 Bolton, June 30th, 634 ; August 18th, 743. 

 Chelmsford and Essex, April 20th, 514 ; Sep- 

 tember 13th, 734. 

 Hull, May 3d and 24th, 520; June 21, 629; 

 July 5th and August 5th, 630 ; September 

 13th, 737. 

 Liverpool, Mav 27th, 523; August 5th, 632. 

 Manchester, April 22d and May 20th, 739 ; 



June 24th, 740 ; August 9th, 742. 

 Rochdale, April 28th, 524 ; May 26th, 633. t 

 Sheffield, 738. 

 Stockport, 598. 

 Florence, vegetables and fruit at, 319; weather 

 at, 320. 



