758 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Pruning forest trees, on a system of, by Mr. W. 

 Billington, M.C.H S., 36. 



Pruning, 417 ; larch nurslings, Billington's 

 mode of, 448 ; summer, and thinning timber 

 trees early, advantage of, 544; the fir tribe, 

 547; remarks concerning, 676; and other 

 points in the management of timber trees, 

 681 ; vines, Mr. Geo. Fulton's mode of, 709',; 

 timber trees, critical remarks respecting, by 

 W. Mason, jun., 725. 



Pruning shears for ladies, &c, 313. 



Pterocarpus erinkceus, 572. 



Puffing, 358. 



Pumpkins, large, account of, by G. Davenport, 



. 599. 



Quail, W., experiment on Calla a?thi6pica, 337. 



yuercus Robur and sessiliflbra, critical remarks 

 respecting, by the Rev.W. T. Bree, 723. 



Railway, suspension, 477. 



Rait Cottage-Garden Society, Aug. 10., 747. 



Ranunculus cardiophyllus, 559. 



Ranunculus, Nonpareil, figured and described, 

 78. 



Ranunculuses, seedling, on the culture of, by 

 the Rev. Joseph Tyso, 548. 



Ranunculus Show of Wallingford, June 8., 626. 



Rats, water, how to destroy, 223. 



Rats, to destroy, 500. 



Rattery, description of one invented by the late 

 Mr. R. Paul, by A. S. Taylor, 583. 



Red'spider on plants, method of destroying, 403. 



Relief, permanent, to all classes, 481. 



Rhododendron Smitlm, 562. 



Rhus Toxicodendron, 572. 



Kibes aureum, 562. 



Rigg, Mr., hisfamily and friends, obituary of,640. 



Rinz, M. Jacob, jun., landscape-gardening of 

 England and Germany compared, 31 ; account 

 of the forcing and floriculture at, 592 ; critique 

 on his criticisms, by Joshua Major, 611. 



Rivere, T., Esq., on the genus A'&ter, 684. 



Road, the most beautiful and picturesque one in 

 . Europe, 595. 



Roads, machines for scraping and sweeping, 100. 



Robertson, Mr. John, F. H. S., on the former 



- and present state of horticulture in Ireland, 

 26 ; on Mr.Johnson's doctrines concerning the 

 diseases of plants, 356. 



Rockwork, a picturesque mass of, on sale, 491. 

 Roger, Mr. E., a cheap and easy method of rais- 

 ing celery, 554. 

 Rollins, Mr. James, remark respecting the term 



- humane mouse-trap, 216 ; a gardener's fund, 

 ' 353. 



Roofs, high, in France, 7 ; reason for, 538. 



Rbsa odorata, on the culture of, by Mr. J. Elles, 

 427. 



Rose, W. B., on destroying slugs, 210 ; treat- 

 ment of the American shrubs at Foxcote, 425. 



Rose tree, peculiar, query respecting, 229. 



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

 review of his conduct, and remarks on, 252. 



Sabots, 106. 



Saccharum officinarum, 565. 



Salads, effect of washing in sea water, 219. 



Salles de Mars and de Flore in Paris, 649. 



Sap.vessels, ascending, of the vine, 132. 



Saul, M., a mode of packing fruit trees for ex- 

 , portation, 311 ; gooseberry shows of 1829, 337 ; 

 "list of American fruit trees, 613. 



Saunders, Mr. B., on the culture of pear trees, 

 53 ; his list of pears, remark respecting, by 

 R. Errington, 615 ; a few observations made 

 on visiting several public and private gardens 

 in England and Scotland, during the summer 

 of 1830, 653. 



Schools in Auvergne, 211 ; Lancasterian, of 

 Horsefieldand Woking, 381 ; of industry, and 

 for infants, notice of a, 487. 



Scott, Mr., his garden at Hobart Town, 597. 



Sea-kale, introduction of, in Ireland, 26. 



Secretaries of horticultural societies, hint re- 

 specting the names of, 222 ; addresses of, 382. 

 514. 624. 



Seedlings, advantage of raising, 231. 



Seeds, 401 ; alpine, received from South Ame- 

 rica, 333 ; from Carthagena, by Mr.^W. Ha- 

 milton, 493. 



Seimel, M. Jacob, on growing pine-apples in 

 moss, 705. 



Sexes, the, in animals and vegetables, 401. 



Seymour, Mr. William, on planting and protect- 

 ing bulbs, 49 ; on the treatment of the peach 

 and nectarine during the summer season, 434 ; 

 of Weddington, on a method of training the 

 peach and nectarine on low walls, 436; plan 

 and description of the kitchen-garden at 

 Carlton Hall, the seat of Miles Stapvlton,Esq., 



'' 669. 



Shallots, 210. 



Shrubs, American, at Foxcote, on the treat- 

 ment of, by Mr.W. B. Rose, 425. 



Slitter, the, tigured and described, 469. 



Slugs, on destroying, by Mr. Archibald Gorrie, 

 C.M.H.S., 69; to destroy, byW. B. Rose, 210.; 

 on plants, method of destroying, 403. 



Smith, Mr. J., query respecting caterpillars on 

 the Constantinople nut, 224. 



Smith, John, notice respecting, 651. 



Smith, Mr., varieties of British plants cultivated 

 and sold by Mr. James Smith and Son, at 

 Monkwood Grove, near Ayr, 713 to 718. 



Smithfield, a disgrace to London, 514. 



Society of Florists of Heworth, May 5., 521 ; 

 May 26., 522. 



Soil for the different forest trees, 459. 



Soude, the, as invented by a Wrexham me- 

 chanic, 216. 



Soul, the, 398. 



Sowing the seeds of trees, 458. 



Spectator newspaper, recommended, 107. 



Spence, W., F.L.S., on planting trees and shrubs 

 in masses of one species, 408. 



Spirit from the berries of the mountain ash, 352. 



Spirits, for the cottager, 151. 



Sport, the, of plants, query on, 501. 



Steam acting on a mass of loose stones, on 

 forcing by means of, by John Hay, Esq., 50. 



Steam engines, locomotive, 477. 



Steam plough, invention of, encouraged, 106. 



Steers and Wilkinson's pruning shears, &c, 313. 



StrelitZMZ reglnse, answer to querv respecting, 

 by Mr.W. Boyce, and G. Fulton," 229. 



Steuart's Planter's Guide, remarks on, by Mr. 

 Gorrie, C.M.H.S., 43; by Quercus, 46; re- 

 marks on, 413. 



Striking slips of carnations, &c, neat method 

 of, 348. 



St. James's Park, hint respecting, 337. 



Stove, smoke-consuming, 479. 



Stowe, Mr.W., lime-water, 499. 



Strawberries, prolific or conical Hautbois, 210 ; 

 to produce late, 316; the Elton Seedling, 574 ; 

 large, 604; on a method of forcing, 692; on 

 the culture of, on a light sandy soil, by Mr. 

 Thomas Fleetwood, 710; the Kautbois, on 

 the management of, 711. 



Structure of animals and vegetables, 399. 



Stuart, John, query respecting the Affane 

 Cherry, 615. 



Sty for cottages, 172. 



Succession of woods, 470. 



Sugar, for the cottager, 149 ; making from man- 

 gold wurzel, 149. 



Sugar from the beet-root, a manufactory of, 596. 



Sundays, working on, 359. 



Swan River, 597. 



Sweet, Mr., lessons on botany by, 487 ; critique 

 respecting Feruena chamaadrifblia, 613. 



Sweet's Florist's Guide, observation respecting, 

 722. 



Sydney, letter from, 328. 



Sylvester's mode of heating air, improvement 

 in, by Messrs. White and Veitch, 108. 



Syringes, garden, improvements in, by Mr. D. 

 M'Dougal, 109. 



Talc for green-house sashes, query respecting, 

 615. 



Tallard, Marshal, answer to query respecting 

 his garden, 224. 



