INDEX. 



495 



Horticultural Society, London, remarks on the 

 mode of application for grafts, cuttings, &c, 

 106 ; on their designation of gardeners as la- 

 bourers, 106. 



— — ^— __ — — , notices of com- 

 munications to, not published in their Trans- 

 actions, 429. 



, notices on their 



garden, 105. 



, remarks on their 



garden at Chiswick, 440 ; rareplants added to, 

 from Columbia, 442; rules and regulations 

 respecting the sale of fruit and vegetables, 442 ; 

 rules as to the privileges of subscribers to the 

 garden, 443 ; list of garden committee, 443 ; 

 list of garden reports published, 443. 



-, report of the 



garden committee on the progress of the gar. 

 den, reviewed, 441. 



-, remarks on their 



-, suggestion as to 



garden regulations, 105. 



the form in which their Transactions should 

 be published, 360. 



-, Transactions of, 



remarks on the Preface to Vol. VI. ; compari 

 son of, with the Gardener's Magazine, 438 ; 

 review of Vol. VI., Parts IV. and V., 332. 414. 



Horticultural Society's garden, catalogue of the 

 fruits cultivated in, reviewed, 208. 



, plan for the re- 

 formation of, 359. 



— : , remarks on, by 



A Nurseryman, 469. 



Horticultural Society, Montrose, origin and ob- 

 jects, 99. 



, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 



see Horticultural and Botanical Society of 

 Durham, Northumberland, &c, 229. 



— , North British Profes 



sional, 465. 



-, Perth, 466. 



— — — — — , Preston, meetings for 



April and May, 1827, 473. 



-, Prussian, meeting, June 



1, 1823, 446 ; of June, 23, 1823, 447. 



Transactions 



of, reviewed, 444 ; prizes proposed for the year 

 1824»447. 



-, Ross, 91 ; meeting for 



-, Yorkshire, meeting for 



May, 1827, 472. 



May, 1826, 471. 

 Horticulture and botany of France and England 



compared, by Mr. Arnott, 353. 

 Horticulture in France, some account of, by Le 



Chevalier Soulange Bodin, 222. 

 Horticulturists, Chinese, hint respecting, 422. 

 Horticulturist's cottage, (advertised), 382. 

 Hortulanus, on the garden regulations of the 



Horticultural Society, 105. 

 Hortulanus's observations on Mr. Anderson's 



experiments with peaches and apricots budded 



on almond stocks, 168. 

 Hortus Berlinensis, notice respecting, 85. 

 Hortus Britannicus Americanus, sketches to- 

 wards a, by W. J., M.D., Titford, noticed, 



75. 

 Hortus Britannicus, &c, by Robert Sweet, F.L.S. 



&c, reviewed, 207. 

 Hortus Gramineus Woburnensis, by Mr. George 



Sinclair, F.L.S, H.S., &c. reviewed, 67. 

 Hortus Siccus, by Prof. La Gasca, account of, 



220. 

 Hot-houses, curvilinear metallic, by Messrs. 



Jones and Clark, (advertised), 382. 



, in regard to humidity, 201. 



-, curvilinear, on the management of, 



200. 



- in Syon Gardens, 107. 

 , iron, for the culture of the pine 



apple, on the merits and demerits of ; by Mr. 



Alexander Gordon, 291 ; unfavourable opi- 

 ! nion of, by Mr. Macmurtrie, 242. 



Hot-houses, model of a cast-iron plate for the 

 steaming of, 352. 



, on the plan of closing the smoke 



flues of, that are heated only in the daytime, 

 for the purpose of preserving a warm tem- 

 perature during the night, &c, by Mr Wil- 

 liam Flavell, 154. 



, plan for the absorption of heat in, 



House, bad arrangement of, with reference to 

 the approaches and walks, exemplified, 366. 



, situation for, importance of natural fea- 

 tures illustrated, 368. 



Hyacinths, on the culture of, by Mr. Alexander 

 Campbell, 411. 



, to improve the size and health of, 



232 ; strong and beautiful, grown at Drum, in 

 Scotland, 464. 



Hybrid currants, query respecting, 120. 



Hydrangea hortensis, experiment on changing 

 the colour of the flower, by W. R. Y., 405. 



i/yoscyamus, its poisonous qualities, 454. 



Jardinier Agronome, notice of, 215. 



Illustrations of ornithology, (advertised), 126;. 



Implements, list of those figured in Vol. II. of 



the Gardener's Magazine, viii. 

 Improvements, hints for, 480. 

 Insects, black, on cherry trees, to destroy, 121. 

 , proposed plan for destroying, 122. See 



A'phis lanigera. 

 Instruments, list of those figured in Vol. II. of 



the Gardener's Magazine, viii. 

 Joanneum de Gratz, I5th report, notice of, 79. 

 Johnson, Mr. Cuthbert William, essay on the 



uses of salt, &c, reviewed, 339; letter on the 



same subject, 339. 



, Mr. G. W, on salt as a manure, 1. 

 Jones and Clark, Messrs. description of the 



conservatory at the Grange, 170. 

 Irish Farmer's Journal, notice of its discon- 

 tinuance, 240. 

 Irish furze, broom, and yew, 241 ; where to be 



purchased, 356. 

 Iron hot-houses, Mr. Macmurtrie's opinion on. 



242. 

 , on their merits and demerits, 



by Mr. A. Gordon, 291. 

 Island of Peacocks, at Potsdam, 85. 

 Itinerating, juvenile, and village libraries, 376 ; 



of East Lothian, 376; of Mid Lothian, 376. 

 Judd, Mr. Daniel, F.H.S., observations on a dis. 



ease to which grapes are liable, and on the 



means of preventing it, 190. 

 Kalendar, gardener's, remarks on, 488. 

 Kalendarial index, remarks on, 488. 502. 

 Keen's fruit garden, Isleworth, notice of, 365. 

 Kendall, Mr. Alfred, his method of destroying 



the red spider, 38. 



>, on the importance of 



adopting and pursuing a proper plan for 



pruning and training fruit trees, 140. 

 Kensington Nursery, Messrs. Malcolm and Gray, 



notice of, 369. 

 Kew Gardens, hints for establishing a library 



there, 248 ; remarks on, 313. 

 King's Botanic Garden at Kew, remarks on the 



policy pursued in the management of, by J. P. 



Bumard, Esq., 313. 

 Kirschewasser, an imitation of, in Scotland, 



98. 

 Knight, T. A., Esq., F.R.S., L.S., Pres. H.S., 



&c, on some new seedling pears, 419. 



— — , on the bitter-sweet apple, 



432. 



, on the culture of straw- 

 berries, 184 ; on the cultivation of the Ama- 

 ryllis Sarniensis, or Guernsey lily, 185; on 

 the transplantation of plants with spindle- 

 shaped roots, 199. 



-, on the qualities of newly 



raised fruits, exemplified in plums, '. 

 Labourers' institutions, 373. 

 Laburnum seeds, poisonous to cows, 235. 



