GENERAL INDEX, 



755 



Botany, importance of the study of, for every 

 class of cultivators, 15 ; not to be considered 

 the object of the Horticultural Society, 536 ; 



1 on the introduction of, into the system of 

 education in village schools, 390. ; among the 

 common people in Paris, 516. 



Bouquet of crocuses, bad management of, in the 

 Horticultural Transactions., 517. 



Bowers, Mr., gardener at Westdean House, 

 815. 



Boyce's, Mr. W., answer to the query respecting 

 ants on peach trees, 730. 



Branches of fruit trees, naked, upon a mode of 

 covering with new wood, by Samuel Spyvee 

 Street, Esq., 516. 



Bread without yeast, 668. 



Breakfast-room, elegant specimen of a, 565. 



Breathing-places for the metropolis, &c., on fixed 

 principles, hints for, 686. 



Brechin, produce of bees at, 83. 



Bree, the.Rev. W. T., on the leaf of a hybrid 

 rhubarb plant, 81. 



Bregazzi's bark-bed thermometer, improvement 

 in, 213 ; self- registering one, 213. 



Brentford nursery, call at, 736. 



Bretton Hall, 680 ; general remarks on, 683. 



Brighton Cooperative Society, some account of, 

 387 ; gardens of, 118. 



Broccoli Cape and Navet, query respecting, 611 ; 

 query on the growth of, by Mr. C. Lawrence, 

 732. 



Brown's gas engine, remark concerning, by 

 William Johns, M.D. F.L.S., 607. 



Brunsvigia toxiciria, query respecting, 111 ; Jo- 

 sephine', notice respecting, by Robert Sweet, 

 332. 



Brussels botanic garden, 327. 



Budding a I'ceil poussant, et a I'ceil dormant, 

 described, 378. 



Burleigh House, 673. 



Burnard, J. P. Esq., a commercial horticultural 

 society, 349. 



Bury Hill, 593. 



Burying grounds, on the laying out and planting 

 of, by John H. Moggridge, Esq., 26. 



Business room, well furnished, 565. 



Byers, K. W. Esq., on some recent improvements 

 in the method of heating by hot water, 20 ; a 

 plan for, a strawberry- wall, 437; further im- 

 provements in the mode of heating hot-houses 

 by, 260. 



Cabbage plants bitten off, remedy against, 731. 



Calceolaria corymbbsa, an improved mode of 

 cultivating, by Mr. James Rollins, 272. 



Caldicott, Abraham, Esq., F.H.S., description 

 of a hot-house, combining a pinery, vinery, 

 succession pit, a winter green.house, all heat- 

 ed by one fire, 418. 



Caledonian Gardeners' Society, meeting of, Jan. 

 27., 215. 



Calla ■Eethi6pica, remarks on, by Mr. John 

 Ferme, 664. 



Calls at gardens, t(y the Conductor, 557. 



Calvert, Mr. , account of his nur.sery in Rouen, 374. 



Cambridge botanic garden, 305. 



Cameron, Mr., gardener at Bury Hill, 593. 



Canal projected for uniting the Danube and the 

 Rhine, 685. 



Canker in an orchard, query on. 111 ; in apple 

 trees, remedy for, 731 ; prevented, 739. 



Capacities of individuals, various, 695. 



Caraccas, new plants from, by Mr. D. Fenning, 

 661. 



C^rica Papaya, figured and described, 300. 



Carlowrie garden, rare plants flowered in, by 

 Mr. David Falconar, 6()+. 



Carnation show of Ipswich, Aug. 6„ 743. 



Carriages, steam, and their influence on im- 

 provement, 6S4. 



Caterpillar, the common, 204; on preserving 

 plants from, 179. 



Caterpillars on gooseberry bushes, an easy me- 

 thod of destroying, by Mr. Richard Williams, 

 294. 



Cauliflowers, large, 552. 



Cedars proved to grow straight, 569. 



« C 



Celeriac, recipe for dressing the roots of, by J • 

 Elles, 364. 



Celery, answer to query on the diseases in, by 

 Mr. Robert Errington, 107 ; maggots in, 238. 



Cellar, good contrivance in a, 564. 



Central Horticultural Society of Paris, meeting 

 of, Dec. 17. and Jan. 7., 67. 



Ceylon, cinnamon department in, 74. 



Chandos, Duke of, reflections on, 557. 



Channer, Mr. Francis, obituary of, 496. 



Character, moral, value of a good one, 210. 



Characters of gardeners, mode of showing, 102. 



Chateau de Queville, description of, 641 ; du 

 Tailly, 643 ; du Mailleraie, 643 : de Radepont, 

 647. 



Cheiranthus incanus, query respecting, 110. 



Chelsea botanic garden, 308. 



Cherry, the Elton, 530. 



Chimneys, smoky, 238. 



China closet, complete, 565. 



Chiswick garden, calls at, 343. 380. 735. 



Chlidanthus fragrans, query respecting. 111. 



Choco, timber trees of the province of, by W. 

 Hamilton, Esq. M.D., 44. 



Churchill, W., Esq. R.M., some account of the 

 botanic garden at Lisbon, 412. 



Cider, query how to make, and answer to, 734. 



Cinnamon tree, figured, 74. 



Cinnamon department in Ceylon, 74. 



Clapton nursery, 379. 



Claremont, the seat of Prince Leopold, 381, 



Clover, flesh-coloured, 80. 



Coal, soil poisoned by, 177. 



Coal and ironiii France, 326. 



Cobbett not the first who raised the Indian corn, 

 by J. Murray, 106. 



Cobbett's corn, query respecting. 111, 



C6ccus ovatus, remedy for, by Mr. J. Hay- 

 thorn, 731. 



Cockchaffer, Mr. Calvert's mode of preventing 

 the ravages of, 375. 



Cockscomb, correction respecting the size of 

 Mr. Howes's, 98. 



Cockscombs at Petworth House, 578. 



Chcos nucifera, 77. 



Colne, the poor in, 659. 



Colosseum in the Regent's Park, remarks on, 

 222. 671. 



ColviUe's nursery, visit to, 839. 



Comfrey, stalks and roots of, eaten, 546. 



Commercial Horticultural Society proposed, 349. 



Commodrties, prices of, 650. 



Conservatory, description of an ornamental one 

 in the Grecian style of architecture, to be dis- 

 posed of, by Mr. Roberts, 268. 



Continent, architecture of the, 6 ; manners of 

 the, 7. 



Cookery, best modes of, 667. 



Cooperative Practical Societies, as a means of 

 ameliorating the condition of the laborious 

 classes, with some account of the one at Brigh- 

 ton, 387. 



Corn, object to be observed in harvesting, 599. 



Cottages,ornamental,in landscape-gardening, 36. 



Country seats, in landscape-gardening, 3.5. 



Coutie, M., director of the botanic garden at 

 Metz, 68. 



Covent Garden market, prices for January 17, 

 85; prices for beginning of March, 219; for 

 the first and second week of May, 341 ; for 

 June, 472; for September, 616; for Novem- 

 ber, 741 ; general observations, 742. 



Cow cabbage, figure and description of, by John 

 Murray, Esq., 6.5. 



Cow cabbage, or Cesarean cole, on the culture of 

 by Mr. Bernard Saunders, 440. 



Cowslip, extraordinary, 82. 



Cowslips, real double, answer to query on, by 

 S. B, Ward, 238. 



Crinum araabile, '37. 



Crocuses, spring, the most remarkable cultivated 

 in the garden of the Horticultural Society, by 

 Jos. Sabine, Esq. F.R.S., 516. 



Cucumber, large one, 81 ; snake, 552. 



Cucumbers and melons, query on stopping iij 

 early forcing, 110. 



