756 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Cucumber-growers, challenge to, 92. 

 Cultivation of waste lands, 704. 

 Culture of fruit trees, a branch of education, 457. 

 Cummings, Mr., the gardener at Selwood Park, 



570. 

 Curvilinear liot-house principle, whether it 

 might not have been applied at Sion Gardens, 

 513. 

 C^cas revoUita, 5.52. 

 Cyclamen eurnpai^um, in full bloom, 613 ; re- 



pindicum, 613. 

 Dahlias (now Georginasi, on the cultivation of. 



Hi ; double, query respecting, 239. 

 Daisy-rake, figured, 674. 

 Daisy-knife, figured and described, 595. 

 Dall, Mr. James, on the destruction of the mealy 

 bug and scale on pine plants, 430; on the de- 

 struction of wasps, 428. 

 Dalley, Mr., maker of ornamental flower-pots, 



&c., 459. 

 Dilimnara orientMis Lmnb., 214. 

 Dancing, for the laborious classes, remarks on, 

 250j dancing and music among the labouring 

 classes, critical remarks on, 722. 

 Davidson, Mr. Charles, obituary of, 112. 

 Davy Inn florist show. May 9, 358. 

 Day Lily as a forage plant, by Mr. J. EUes, 441. 

 Deas, Mr., gardener at Arundel Castle, 586; 



his house, 5S8. 

 Deepdene, views and description of, 590 ; only 



fault of, 593. 

 Denbighs, 595. 

 Denby House, 576. 

 Denmark, horticultural observations for, by 



M. Jens Peter Petersen, 547. 

 Detcnncmare's nursery in Rouen, 376. 

 Developement, human, principle of, 543. 

 Diablo, machine so called, for removing trees 



in boxes, figured and described, 377. 499. 

 Dieppe, 122 ; nursery of, 123 ; view of the coun- 

 try, agriculture, &c., between it and Rouen, 

 244, 245. 

 Dining-room, well contrived, S^S. 

 Discussions, professional, 676. 

 Division of duties, 564. 

 Don, Mr. G., A.L.S., prosecution of, 534. 

 Donald, Mr., F.A.S., his nursery at Goldworth 



noticed, .572 ; his plan for drying corn, 598. 

 Donald and Westland's nursery, 589. 

 Downe's self-acting water-closet, 545. 

 Draining by steam, 660. 



Drama, the, as a means of improving the labori- 

 ous, 250. 

 Drawing-room, well arranged, 565. 

 Drawing, use of, 700. 

 Dressing-room, well provided, 565. 

 Dropmore, remarks on, 383, 727. 

 Drying of botanical specimens, hints with regard 



to, 391. 

 Dublin, a horticultural society in, 551. 

 Dubreuil, M., the director of the Rouen garden, 



497 ; his wife, and son, 497. 

 Dung, heat of, tr.^nsmitted by pipes, 670. 

 Echeverirt from M. Echeveria, a skilful botani- 

 cal painter, 519. 

 Edgeware road, improvements lately made in 



the, 558. 

 Edinburgh green market, June 26. and July 10 , 



461. 552. 662. 

 Education and amusement of the lower classes, 

 remarks on, by William Spence, Esq. F.L.S., 

 125. 

 Education, general, remarks on, 223, 658; in 

 Germany, 70; in Wurtemberg, 8; in Ireland, 

 338 ; in India, 549 ; in the Ionian Islands, 549 ; 

 in Madagascar, 549 ; in the canton of Geneva, 

 656 ; in Savoy, 656 ; in Argovia, 657 ; plan for 

 a national establishment for, 692 ; degree of, 

 to be imparted, 693; universal national ad- 

 vantages of, 700; objections to, 701. 

 Eichthal, the Baron, 69. 



EUes, Mr. J., recipe for dressing the I'oots of 

 celeriac, 364; on the day lily as a forage plant, 

 441. 

 Elm, the Scotch, 677. 



Elysium in Spain, 71. 

 Emigration, 174. 

 Enclosure act, 706. 



EncyclopEBdia of gardening, corrections and ad- 

 ditions for, 728. 

 Engravings and paintings as a means of instruc- 

 tion, 225. 

 Entrance or approach to a country mansion, &c 



37. 

 Entrance-hall, well arranged, 565. 

 Epsom nursery, 470. 597 ; new or rare plants 

 flowered there during March and April, 3+0; 

 May and June, 470 ; during July and August, 

 613. 

 Errata in the paper on ornamental gardening, 



97. 

 Errington, Mr. Robert, answer to query on the 

 diseases in celery, 107; correction of the ar- 

 ticle on flowering mignonette during winter 

 and spring, 97. 

 Errors by the Conductor, pointed out by Mr. 



John Damper Parks, 97. 

 Esrom Lake, 72. 

 Estates, models of, 213. 

 Existence, a mode of, for gardeners, 669. 

 Eulbphia (from eulophos, well crested) streptO- 



petala, figured and described, 518. 

 Exotics, attempts to acclimate, 331. 

 Exton Hall, 673. 

 Evil in the management of the Horticultural 



Society pointed out, 536. 

 Evils in Ireland, remedies for, 666. 

 Falconar, David, Esq., query on /ddcK, 611; 

 rare plants flowered in his garden at Carlow- 

 rie, 664. 

 Falkirk sch ool of arts, library of the, 556. 

 Farms, system of consolidating, effects of, in 



Scotland, 707. 

 Fanning, Mr. D., new plants introduced by,; 



from the Caraccas, 661. 

 Fences in North America, critique respecting, 



by A. Gordon, 232. 

 Fenn, Mr. George, jun., cast-iron gardening- 

 pins with eyes, 460. 

 Ferme, John, Esq. curious instance of retarding 

 gooseberries, 337 ; reference to a fuller account 

 of the venerable orange-tree, 338 ; spots ort 

 leaves accounted for, 664 ; remarks on C4Ua 

 Eethiupica, 664. 

 Ferme orn^e, in landscape-gardening, 35. 

 Ferns, cultivation of, by Mr. James Housman, 



49; list of British, 51 ; list of exotic, 52. 

 F^te, anniversary of the Horticultural Society, 



343. 467. 

 Fifeshire, education in, 662. 

 Figures, human, sketch of, 676. 

 Filbert, the frizzled, 316. 

 Fine arts, as a source of moral improvement, 



668. 

 Fintelman, M. G. A., some account of the public 

 orangeries, or winter gardens of Berlin, 251 ; 

 on the culture of the Hydrangea hortensis, as 

 practised in the Potsdam gardens, 273. 

 Firs, Balm of Gilead, in Kinmell Park, 103. 

 Flax-breaking machine, 326. 

 Fleetwood, Mr. Thomas, on the cultivation of 



the hyacinth, 426. 

 Fleming, Dr., strictures on Dr. Fleming's re- 

 markable law of vegetable life, by Mr. Patrick 

 ShirrefF, 532. 

 Flitwick, the village of, 559. 

 Flitwick House, 559. 

 Flood, Mrs., of the Norfolk Arms, 585. 

 Floral Society of Ashton-under-Lyne, June 29., 



493 ; of Stockport, June 30., 493. 

 Floral and Horticultural Societies : 

 Bolton, meeting of April 29., 361 ; June I., 



493 ; May -29., 494 ; Aug. 12., 636. 

 Bury, Junes., 476; June 30., 477. 

 Hull, meeting of Feb. 11., 220 ; July 7., 631. 

 Bedale, Aug. 15., 748. 

 Bedlington, meeting of May 11., 359 ; June 1., 



487. 

 Cambridge, May 25., 475. 

 Dunfermline, June 2., 464 : show of June 19: 



