INDEX. 



499 



1'runus nigra, recommended, 34. 



Pumpkin, a large, 92. 



I'uvis's Essai sur la Marne, notice of, 342. 



Pyrolignous Acid, directions for distilling, from 

 coppice-wood, 251. 



Pyrus spectabilis, recommended, 33. 



Quassia amara, hint'respecting, 422. 



Quisqualis I'ndica, a handsome stove climber, 

 described and figured, 186. 



Kampion German, or tree primrose, 437. 



Red Spider, a simple and effectual method of 

 destroying it, by Mr. Alfred Kendall, 38. 



Reider : Die rationelle Bienenwirthschaft, &c, 

 81. 



Reed, Mr. James, on a cheap and efficacious 

 manure, 233. 



Reid, Mr. Robert, hints for cultivating Fiichsia 

 gracilis, Erythrina crista galli, and Salvia 

 splendens, with some remarks on flowering 

 climbing plants in pots, 16. 



Reim and Werner's Practische Bienenvater in 

 allerley Gegenden, 81. 



Rhubarb, mode of forcing, in the Horticultural 

 Society's Garden, 356 ; of Commerce, the true 

 species, 468 ; opinion on the species used for 

 culinary purposes, 486. 



Ribbe's Das Schaaf und die Wolle, &c, 81. 



Rigault's Nouvelle methode pour la culture de la 

 Vigne dans le dcipartement de la Gironde, 77. 



Robberds, J. W., jun., Geological and Histori- 

 cal Observations On the eastern valleys of 

 Norfolk, reviewed, 211. 



Robinson, Mr. John, F.H.S., on the importance 

 of liquid manure, 18. 



Rogers, Mr. J., notice of his Dendrometer, 13. 



, of Southampton, new pear, (advertised), 



125. 



Roman Cement, remarks on, 476. 



Rose, Mr. W. B., on the best mode of growing 

 such culinary vegetables as are raised annually 

 from seed, 274. 



Hose, R. H., Esq., on the farming of Susque- 

 hanna in Pennsylvania, 350. 



Rose, numerous varieties of, in the Garden of 

 the Luxembourg, 215. 



Rose, of Jericho, Anastatica /iierochuntica, 

 figured and described, 357. 



, Yellow, query respecting, 122. 



Roses, a selection of, in six sections from M. 

 Pirolle's Jardiuier Amateur, 216 ; budding of, 

 and manuring, query by C. Crabstock, 254 ; 

 Double Scotch, Austin and M'Aslan's Cata- 

 logue of, noticed, 102 ; Garden, notes on 

 grafting, budding, and cultivating, by Jean 

 Baptiste Van Mons., F.M.H.S., 191 ; mode of 

 budding and grafting, 192. 



, an improvement in the mode of grafting, 



192. 



Rural Expenditure, Essay on the beneficial 

 direction of, by Robert Slaney, Esq., reviewed, 

 51. 177. 321. 



Rutabaga, or Swedish Turnip, 84. 



Rye Grass, best varieties of, 69. 



Sabine, Joseph, Esq. F.R.S., &c, account of 

 several new Chinese and Indian Chrysanthe- 

 mums, 194 ; account of a method of forcing 

 figs, 198 ; on Glycine sinensis, now Wisteria 

 Consequaraa, 422 ; on the Mango, 432. 



Saccharometer, query respecting-, 122. 



Saint Hilaire's Traite des Arbrisseaux et des 

 Arbustes cultives en France, &c, 78. 



Salix JSgyptiaca, in Persia, 462. 



Salt, application of, for destroying weeds and 

 worms, 306; application of, in Ireland, 234; 

 as a hygrometer, 3U7 ; as a manure, &c, by 

 Agronome, 163 ; as a manure, by Mr. G. W. 

 Johnson, 1 ; as a manure, Sec, by W. Collyns, 

 Esq., 160 ; reviewed, 212 ; as a manure in 

 Ireland, 102; ash-trees destroyed by, 165; 

 Bishop Watson's opinion on, 234 ; corrosive 

 operations of, 306; antiputrescent qualities, 

 306 ; different opinions on its uses,viz. Bacon, 

 Piatt, Cook (gardener to the Earl of Essex), 

 Sinclair, Hitt, Knight, Cartwright, Sir T. D. 



Acland, Andrews, Hogg, Cline, and Sir H. 

 Davy, 1, 2, 3 ; essay on the uses of, &c. by Cuth- 

 bert William Johnson, reviewed, 339 ; extir- 

 pating thistles and other weeds bv, 233; in- 

 fluence of, on vegetables, by Mr. G. W. 

 Johnson, 430 ; in gardens, on the use and 

 abuse of, by Agronome, 304 ; list of gardeners 

 called on to make experiments with, 6 ; Lord 

 Napier's patent for improving lands by, 234 ; 

 plants which contain, 4, 5; some experiments 

 with, by Alfred, 408. 



Silvia sple'ndens, Fuchsia gracilis, Erythrina 

 crista galli, hints for cultivating, by Mr. Ro- 

 bert Reid, 16. 



Samouelle's Entomologist's Compendium, {ad- 

 vertised), 384. 



Sartorelh's Observazioni sopri i mezzi di con- 

 servare i Boschi mediante la i*golarita dei 

 Tagli, &c, 344. 



Saul, Mr. Mathias, on the mode of growing 

 early potatoes in the north of Lancashire, 47. 



Saunders, Mr. Richard, his account of a remark- 

 able lemon tree in. the garden of C. Hoarc, 

 Esq., at Luscombe, Devonshire, 29. 



Savi Gaetano's Almanacco per i dilettanti di 

 gianUnaggio, Sic, noticed, S2. 



Sea-kale, its culture in Mr. Keen's garden, Isle- 

 worth, 365. 



Seeds and fruits, remarks on the general prin- 

 ciples of preserving, bv a Denbighshire Gar- 

 dener, 317. 



Seeds, garden, the best method of packing, for 

 exportation, 378 ; mode of germinating, before 

 sowing, 62 ; garden, on saving, by gentlemen's 

 gardeners, by an Old Gardener, 264 ; samples- 

 of horticultural and agricultural, exhibited at 

 the Smithfield Cattle Show in December, 

 1826, 231. 



Sensitivus, of Yorkshire, on the treatment which 

 gardeners out of place generally receive from 

 the nurserymen, &c, 36. 



Seymour, Mr. John, explanatory remarks on his 

 mode of training peach trees, 295. 



Shepherd, Mr., of Sudbury, market gardener, 

 life and death of, 381. 



Shrubs, deserving a place in every shrubbery, 33 ; 

 protection of their stems by hay bands, 276, 

 277; which bear the climate of Petersburg, 

 list of, 388. 



Silverlock, Mr., his hollow walls recommended, 

 203. 



Sinclair, Mr. George, F.L.S., H.S., his experi- 

 ments with salt, Sic, 2 ; his Hortus Gra- 

 mineus Woburnensis reviewed, 67 ; on Pani- 

 cum germanicum, 224. 



', Sir John, biography of, in the British 



Farmer's Magazine, 456. 

 Slane Castle, on the Boyne, some account of, 



149. 

 Slaney, Robert, Esq., Essay on the beneficial 



direction of Rural Expenditure, reviewed, 51. 



177. 321. 

 Slate tallies for naming plants, by Suffolciensis, 



273. 

 Slate troughs, instead of plant pots or cisterns 



for aquatics, notice of their invention and 



manufacture, 431. 

 Slater, Gilbert, Esq., remark respecting, 423. 

 Sloping hollow wall proposed to be erected by 

 ! J. A. B, Esq., remarks on, by H. G., &W. H, 



: Slugs and worms, destruction of, 466.. 



Smith, Mr. James, C.M.H.S., on the straw- 

 berries of Scotland, 425 ; on the cedars at 

 Hopetoun House, 418 ; on the cultivation of: 

 Fitchsiff.?, 426. 



, Mr. W., notices of vineries with arched 



hanging trellises, 427. 



Smoke, its baneful influence on vegetation, 353. 



Smut in wheat, some curious and interesting 

 experiments on, 235. 



Soap suds as a manure, query by Mr. E. M. 

 Mather, 254. 



Society of Domestic Economy at Utrecht, HS. 



