752 



GENEUAL INDEX* 



queried, 725 J liedge in a garden, Scottisli roses 

 proposed for, TiH. 

 Hepaticas, remarks on the time of transplant- 

 ing, &c., 599. 

 Highclere, Hants, the seat of Earl Caernarvon, 



noticed, 135. 

 Higluvays, remarks on the watering of, and with 



salt water, 225. 

 Hints for improvements : 

 Animals, foreign and domestic, suited to agri- 

 culture, exhibitions of, suggested. 111. 

 Benefit societies for gardeners suggested, 



109. 

 Cockscomb, Mr. R. L. Howes's mode of culti- 

 vating never supplied, suggested that it 

 should be, 110. Cottagers' show articles, a 

 mode for exhibiting and selling, at horticul- 

 tural societies, without inconveniencing of- 

 ficers or members, suggested, 500. 

 Dessert, the, how to improve from January to 



June, 501. 

 Farm, an experimental one, suggested. 111. 

 Fruit trees on all walls and in hedges, 

 110. 

 Horticultural societies, a mode of showing and 

 selling the articles produced by cottagers, 

 with benefit to these and the public, and 

 without inconvenience to officers or mem- 

 bers, 500. Horticultural societies should 

 form libraries for gardeners, 591. 

 Information from every part of England on 

 the relative expenses of living to persons in 

 the middle classes, suggested for insertion 

 in this Magazine, 108; approved and again 

 solicited by another, 241; complied with, 

 508, and further communications on the.sub- 

 ject refused insertion, 508. 

 ' Mosses, the cultivation of them in town gar- 

 dens, suggested, and its practicability ex- 

 emplified, 110. 

 Roses, a new work on, and Sweet's Florist's 



Guide, hints respecting, 500, 501. 

 Sunflower seeds to be grown and crushed for 



oil, 110. 

 Telegraphic communications as to coming 

 weather, suggested, 109 ; coincided in, 231 ; 

 adopted and published, 501. 

 Hippophaii (Shephi5rd;o) argt'ntea, a new fruit 



tree for cultivation in gardens, 570. 

 Holly prevails about the northern lakes, and 

 birdlime was once manufactured there for 

 exportation, 519; abundant in Staffordshire, 

 519 ; remarks and queries respecting, 233 ; 

 insect which feeds on its leaves, 23i ; mice eat 

 its bark, 235. 

 Hoole House, gardens at, noticed, 551. 

 Hop, its blight, and the remedy of its blight, 



332. 

 Hope, Thomas, Esq., of Deepdene, obituary of, 



384. 

 Hops, boxwood a substitute for, 698 ; the excise 



prevents the cottager growing hops, 707. 

 Hop-pole drawer, Knowles's, 220. 

 Horticultural Societies, provincial, our reports 

 of, censured, 238; defended, 238. 626; rules 

 for, 104 ; prizes to be offered for fruits pro- 

 duced between January and June, 501 ; gene- 

 ral rules for the adjudication of prizes, 623 ; 

 the great general utility of reports of the shows 

 of horticultural societies' fruits, 626 ; the pro- 

 perties they should possess to win prizes, 626. 

 should form gardeners' libraries, 591 ; may 

 exhibit and sell cottagers' garden articles with- 

 out inconvenience, 500. See Floral and Horti- 

 cultural Societies, Botanical and Horticultural 

 Societies, and Florists' Societies. 

 Aberdeenshire, May 3d and 25th, June 22d, 



and July 13th, 636. 

 Abergavenny and Crickhowel, June 24th and 

 " Sept. 16th, 745., 

 Antrim, 638. 



Belfast, Sept. 1830, 106 ; May'lSth, 638. 

 Burv St. Edmund's, June 28tli, July 26th, 



632. 

 Caledonian, Sept. 1st, 635. 



Cambridgeshire, Oct. l.'th,18S0, 126; Dec. 1st, 

 1330, UT; April 20th, Way l8th, June 15th, 

 and Sept. 7tli, 737. 

 Cumberland, 737. 

 Devonshire, 739. 

 Diss, June 9th, 745. 



Dorset, April 27th and Sept. 2Sth, 740. 

 Dundee, May 3d and July 29th, 637. 

 Durham, 12L 

 Essex, 74ff. 

 Forfaixshire, 637. 

 Glasgow, Aug. 12th, 6;37. 

 Hereford, May 17th, June 21st, July 21st, 740; 



Sept. 22d, 741. 

 Huntingdonshire, April 27th, 742 ; July 27th, 



743. 

 Ipswich, Nov. 9th, 1830, 128: July 26th and 



31st, 632. 

 Ireland, April 20th, 638. 749. 

 Lanarkshire, 637. 

 Lancashire, 627. 743. 



London, meeting of, 1830, Nov. 2d and 16th, 

 and Dec. 7th and 21st, 126; 1831, Jan. 4th 

 and 18th, Feb. 1st and 15th, and March 1st, 

 250; March I5th and April 5th, 380; April 

 19th and May 2d, 381 ; May 3d and 17th, 

 and June 7th, 509 ; June 21st and July 5th, 

 510 ; July 19th, 622 ; Aug. 2d and 16th, 623 ■ 

 Sept. 6th, 733 ; Sept. 20th, 734 ; Oct. 4th and 

 20th, 735 ; prizes for fruits at the ffite criti- 

 cised, 716; ate, 510. 

 Lynn, June 30th, 629. 

 Monmouthshire, 745. 

 Norfolk and Norwich, Nov. 17th, 1830, 127 ; 



May 25th, 629. 

 Norfolk, 127. 629. 745. 

 Northumberland, 127. 629. 

 Renfrewshire, West, May 25th and June 29th. 



637. 

 Ross, May 18th and June 22d, 741 ; July 27th. 



?42. 

 Sheffield, May 4th, 634 ; August 3d, 635. 

 Somersetshire, 63i. 

 Stirlingshire, May 3d and 31st, and July 12th. 



638. 

 Suffolk, 128. 632. 

 Taunton, 674 

 Vale of Evesham, Sept 23d, 1830, 128 ; June 



16th, 633. 

 West Riding, Aug. 3d, 635. 

 Whitehaven, April 29th, May 17th, and Au- 

 gust 5th, 738. 

 Worcestershire, 128. 633. 

 Yorkshire, 633. 

 Horticulture for sportsmen, 219 ; scientific, in- 

 stanced, 580. 

 Hot climates, their prodigious effect on vege- 

 table fecundity, 705. 

 Hot-houses, improvements devised in one, 139 ; 

 metallic ones stated to have an evil effect on 

 vegetation, 6()5 ; modes of heating and ven- 

 tilating, considered, 83; plan for heating, by 

 the breath of cattle, 652; Alcock's hiode of 

 heating the central beds of, 286 ; points in the 

 construction of, many remarks on, 5S9 ; no 

 curvilinear ones farther north than Dallam 

 Tower, 539; metallic ones commended, 539; 

 and objections to, obviated, 540 ; points in the 

 management and culture of, considered, 

 540. 

 Hot water, heating by, 98; disapproved, 397; 

 strongly recommended, 539; an improved 

 boiler for heating hot-houses by, 141 ; modi- 

 fications of hot-water apparatus, 141 ; hot 

 water applicable to domestic comfort, 691 : 

 applied to the growth of cucumbers, melons, 

 &-C., 245 ; to heating a hollow fruit wall, 121 ; 

 when first used in France, 9 ; Kewley's mode 

 of healing by, preferred on comparison with 

 others, 685 ; total expense of hot- water appa- 

 ratus, 686 ; Mr. Alcock's application of, to 

 heating the central bed of a hot-house, 286 ; 

 Mr. Fowler of Devonshire's mode of heating 

 by, 376 ; opinions on Cottam and Hallen's 

 cast-iron vertical tubes, and Fowler's ther- 



