756 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Kitchen-garden, the horticultural buildings for 



a,670. 

 Knapp Hill nursery, May 10th, 379. 

 Knife for budding, improved one, by William 



Godsall, 308. 

 Knight, T. A., remarks on his pines, by Mr. A. 

 Begbie, 110; treatment of, by the Conductor, 

 217 ; letter from, on the state of the Hort. 

 Soc., 235. 

 Knight, Mr., his visit to Haarlem, 317 ; his ac- 

 count of the bulb district, 318 ; of the fruit- 

 forcing, 318 ; his pine pots, 363 ; hot water 

 apparatus, figured and ciescribed, 374 ; exotic 

 nursery, Dec. 21st, 373 ; May 1st, 376 ; the 

 purchasers of Mr. Baxter's seeds, 507. 

 Krelage, Mr. E. H., bulbs cultivated by, 593. 



Labourers, agricultural and horticultural, in 

 France and England, observations chiefly re- 

 lating to the, by R. Bakewell, Esq., 538. 



Labouring classes, progress of an experiment 

 for bettering the condition of the, by John H. 

 Moggridge, Esq., 533 ; further information 

 respecting, 536. 



Laconia, 214. 



-Ladies, a mode of pruning trees in plantations, 

 suggested as highly suitablefor them; garden 

 operations fit for, 312. 587. 



Land to be attached to cottages, reasons for, 



140 ; quantity of, 142. 

 Landscape-gardening of England and Germany 

 compared, by M. Jacob Rinz, Jun., 31. 



iathyrus venosus, notice respecting, by T. 

 Blair, 612. 



Lauder, Mr. P., query respecting hybrid melons, 

 502. 



Leaves, functions of, critical remarks respecting, 

 by Mr. Archibald Gorrie, 724. 



Lectures on botany, in Paris, 386. 



Lemna gibba,566; germination of the seeds of, 

 567. 



Lettuce, cabbage, on the forcing of, in Holland, 



t by M. P. Lindegard, translated by M. Jens 

 Peter Petersen, 689. 



Liber of the vine, 21. 



Liber converted into the alburnum, disproved, 

 258. 



Life, defined, 399. 



Lilac tree, query respecting the, 229. 



Lilium Pompbnium, 322. 



Lily, water, query respecting, 227. 



Lime-water, observation on, by Mr. W. Stowe, 

 499. 



Lindegaard, M. P., historical account of a me- 

 thod of making bass for binding plants, &c, 

 translated by M.'Jens P. Petersen, 656 ; on the 

 forcing of cabbage lettuce in Holland, trans- 

 lated by M. Jens Peter Petersen, 689. 



Lindley, J., letter from, to Mr. Sabine, 240; 

 statement of, respecting the Chiswick garden, 

 240; on the mismanagement in Regent Street, 

 241 ; remarks on Capper's papers on the vine, 

 358. 



Ling and Saltzburg, district between, 317. 



Liston's wheel plough, remarks on, by Mr. S. 

 Morton, 209. 



Loddiges' botanic garden, April 3d, 378. 



London and Paris, natural and artificial cir- 



, cumstances of, compared, 1, 2; agriculture 

 of, 9. 



Lothians, state of the crops in the, by Mr. A. 

 Gorrie, 495. 



Loudon's Encyclopaedia of Gardening misre- 

 presented, 456.; 



Loyal Horticultural Society of Northampton, 

 April 21st, 383. 



Luxembourg, gardens of the, 641. 



Luxuries, use of, 170. 



Lyons, coffee-houses at, 211. 



Macartney's method of obtaining new kinds of 

 potatoes from seed, 440. 



Macdougal's inverted garden syringe, figured 

 and described, 305. 



Machines for breaking stones, 209. 



Machines for reaping and threshing, evil effects 

 of, 217. 



Macliuvi aurantiaea, fruit of, figured and de- 

 scribed, 103. 483. 



Main, J., A.L.S., remarks on Mr. Thompson's 

 experiments in vegetable physiology, 214 ; on 

 the qualities of composts and soils, 215 ; on 

 raising an early crop of peas, 555 ; reply to 

 criticisms on his Villa and Cottage Florist's 

 Directory, 722. 



Maize, as a crop in this country, conclusion re- 

 specting, 67. 



Major, Joshua, critique on M. Rinz's criti- 

 cisms, 611. 



Malaria, 213. 



Malt, for the cottager, 147. 



Malting, 148. 



Management of forest trees, 463. 



Mangold wurzel, sugar made from, 149 ; variety 

 of, proper for this purpose, 150 ; on brewing 

 beer from, 352 ; advantages of, as a fallow 

 crop, 582. 



Manure' for the cottager's garden, 172. 188. 



Mason, W., jun., critical remark on destroying 

 by tin pipes, 723;. critical remarks on pruning 

 timber trees, 725. 



Mauritius, letter from the botanic garden at the, 

 by Mr. John Newman, 484 ; prices of provi- 

 sions at the, 485. 



Mearns, Mr. John, remark respecting sabots, 106. 



Medico-Botanical Society, 104. 598. 



Meloncito d'Olor, 315. 



Melons, collection of, from Russia, by M. F. 

 Faldermann, 338; large, 338; the King 

 Charles, query respecting, 368 ; hybrid, query 

 respecting, by Mr. P. Lauder, 502 ; answered, 

 727 ; species of, wanted, 503 ; large Cantaloup, 

 600. 



Menagerie of the Jardin des Plantes, 391. 



Methley's fire-places, 108. 



Milk-tree of Demerara, 325. 



Mind, the, 398. 



Misrepresentation of the Encyc. of Gard., 456. 



Moffat, Mr., his treatment of the fig tree, 654 ; 

 his mode of preserving wall fruit from frost, 

 654. 



ridge, John H., Esq., the progress of an 



experiment for bettering the condition of the 

 labouring classes, 533; farther information 

 respecting, 536. 



Mortgage Society of Poland, origin of, 482. 



Morton, Mr. S., on Wilkie's wheel plough, and 

 Liston's wheel plough, 209; improvements in 

 the wheels of carts and waggons, 304. 



Moss, on growing pine-apples in, by M. Jacob 

 Seimel, 705. 



Moss rose, curious, 337. 



Mud-cabin in Ireland, description of a, by Mr 

 John Howden, 658. 



Munich, weather at, 317. 



Museum of the Jardin des Plantes, 391. 



Mushrooms, on raising during the winter season, 

 by Mr. A. Kelly, 68. 



Musk melons from Russia, 339. 



Myrtle, the broad-leaved and narrow-leaved, 

 near Belfast, 347. 



Nectarine and peach, identity of the, 596. 



New Cross nursery, 379. 



Newington, Mr. H. John, on the peach tree, 

 55; observations on his remarks on training 

 the peach tree, by Mr. James Housman, 220 ; 

 observations on his remarks on training the 

 peach tree, by Mr. James Craig, 430. 



Newman, Mr. John, letter from the botanic 

 garden at the Mauritius, 484 ; critical observ- 

 ation concerning hybrids, 499; critical re- 

 marks respecting garden libraries, 610; criti- 

 cal notice respecting Amaryllis solandr<s/Z6ra, 

 613 ; the pollen of plants, 613. 



New Zealand, views taken in, 486. 



Northumberland, customs in hiring, and method 

 of paying farm-servants in, 589. 



North wick Park, the copper-roofed forcing- 

 houses at, 708. 



Notes and reflections made during a tour 

 through part of France and Germanv, con- 

 tinued. 1. 385. 529. 641. 



