IV 



CONTENTS, 



Canker, and other Diseases, iii Fruit Trees. 

 By Mr. T. Rivers, jun. - - - 460 



Some Account, and partly In Sequel to the 

 foregoing Communication, of Four Species 

 of Insects that feed, while in the Larva 

 State, upon the Wood of Trees. By John 

 Dcnson, jun. - . - . . 4,63 



On the relative Temperatures of the Earth, 

 under Surfaces covered with a Vegetable 

 Coat, and under Surfaces preserved bare ; 

 with a Table of Observations. By Robert 

 Mallett, Esq. - - - . . 1 



LANDSCAPE-GARDENING AND 

 GARDEN ARCHITECTURE. 

 Design for a Public Garden, made for an 

 English Corporate Town ; with a List of 

 the Trees and Shrubs to be planted in it, 

 and their Prices. By the Conductor - - 13 

 Design for a Cemetery proposed to be formed 



at Bristol. By Mr. P. Masey, jun. - - 3« 



On the Introduction of Single Trees in Park 



Scenery. By Mr. R. Glendinning - - 513 



Remarks on improving the Approach Road 

 to a small Villa which is now (Nov. 1835) 

 undergoing Alteration. By the Cotiductor 53 

 On a Method of making elastic Walks for 



Gardens. By Mr. Peter Mackenzie - - 181 

 On the Use of Slate for Horticultural Pur- 

 poses. By W. B. - - - - 173 

 A Series of Designs for laying out Suburban 

 Gardens and Grounds, from One Perch 

 to several Acres in Extent. By Mr. T. 

 Rutger. 

 Design 5. Frontages to Two detached 

 Houses. Design 6. Frontages to Four 

 double Houses - - - - 66 

 Design 7. For laying out the Frontage 

 Grounds of Twenty-one Houses. De. 

 sign 8. For laying out the Ground in 

 Front of a Crescent . - - - 121 

 Design 9. For laying out a Place of 

 Twenty Perches (an Eighth of an Acre) 

 in Extent. Design 10. For laying out 

 a Place containing a Quarter of an 

 Acre - - - - - Sm 

 Design 11. For laying out a Place of 

 Half an Acre in Extent. Design 12. 

 For laying out a Place containing 

 Three Quarters of an Acre - . 471 

 Designs 13. and 14. For laying out Two 

 Places, each about One Acre in E.x- 

 tent - - - - - 564 

 Design for laying out the Grounds of a Villa 

 of Four Acres in Extent. By Mr. T. 

 Rutger - - - - - 175 

 A Design for laying out a Piece of Ground 

 in front of a Villa Residence, as a Flower- 

 Garden and Arboretum. By T. Rutger - 180 

 Plan of a small Garden in the Town of Go. 

 dalming, Surrey, laid out for H. Marshall, 

 Esq., Solicitor, by Richard Varden, Esq., 

 Architect, in 1833. Communicated by Mr. 

 Varden ... - - . 474 

 Design for laying out the Garden of a Tavern, 

 now Building, in the Neighbourhood of 

 Gravesend, in Kent. By K B. Lamb, Esq., 

 Architect. With a List of the Trees and 

 Shrubs recommended for planting the Gar- 

 den. By the Conductor - - . 516 

 A Series of Designs for laying out and plant- 

 ing Flower-Gardens, with Remarks on each 

 by the Conductor. Design 5. By a Country- 

 bred Gardener - . - . 177 

 Design for a Gothic Flower- Garden. By A. 



G. C. 520 



Design for a Flower-Garden. By E. B. 



Lamb, Esq., and the Conductor . „ . 526 

 Descriptive Notice, accompanied by Plans 

 and Sections, of a Range of Forcing- 

 houses, including a Green-house, erected 

 for William Constable Maxwell, Esq., at 

 Everingham Park, near Pocklington, York- 

 shire, by Mr. W. Crossi'ill, Iron-Founder 

 and Hot-house Builder, Beverley. Drawn 

 up from various Communications, forward- 

 ed by Mr. Maxwell, his Gardener Mr. 

 Ingram, Mr. Crosskill, and others^ . . 347 



Notice of a Range of Green-honsos recently 

 erected in Barratt's Subscription Botanic 

 Garden at St. John's, Wakefield Drawn 

 up from a Communication by Mr. Barratt 312 



On the best Form of Stages and Shelves for 

 the Display of Green-house Plants. By Mr. 

 T. Rutger - - - - - 68 



Description and Result of suspended Trellises 

 in early Forcing-houses, as a Method for 

 more readily forwarding Vines, &c. By Mr. 

 Charles PuUar . . . .248 



HORTICULTURE. 



On the Systems of Cropping Kitchen-Gar- 

 dens, adopted by the best Private and 

 Commercial Gardeners; with an Attempt 

 to re.iuce them to fixed Principles. By 

 W. D. S. - - - . - 476 



Remarks on the Ringing of Fruit Trees. 

 Translated from an Article on that Sub- 

 ject by M.Van Mons, published in Belgium 122- 



On the Arrangement and Management of 

 Fruit Trees in Kitchen-Gardens. By Mr. 

 Robert Errington . - - . 126 



Remarks on Cropping Fruit-tree Borders. 

 By Mr. T. Rutger - . - .242 



Pomological Notices ; or. Notices of new 

 Fruits, which have been proved, during the 

 past Year, to deserve general Cultivation in 

 British Gardens. By Mr. Robert Thorap. 

 son, Fruit-Gardener in the Horticultural 

 Society's Garden .... 639 



On the Treatment of old Fruit Trees which 

 it is wished to preserve; and on [the Ad- 

 vantages of laying Cow-Dung at the Bases 

 of their Trunks, and also at the Rootstalks 

 of Vines. By W. A. L. - - -416 



On the Culture of the Pine-apple. By Mr. 

 Alexander Forsyth . . 593 



On removing the White Scale from Pine 

 Plants. By Mr. Charles Pullen, Gardener 

 to J. L. Goldsmid, Esq. . . 352 



On a Mode cf producing Two Crops of Grapes 

 from the same Vines in one Year. By Mr. 

 James Waldron, Gardener to the Arch- 

 bibhop of Armagh ... 355 



A Mode of producing Two Crops of Grapes 

 in One House, in One Year. By Y. . 537 



A new Method of grafting, or rather budding. 

 Vines. By Mr. George M'Leish . . 171 



Some Account of the Vineyard at Collin 

 Deep, near Hendon, Middlesex. By James 

 Bamford, Esq. . . . 414 



Observations on the Cultivation of the Vine 

 under Glass. By Jasper Wallace, Gardener 

 to William Forsyth, Esq. . . 244 



Olitorial Notices ; or. Notices of new Culi. 

 nary Vegetables, deserving of general Culti. 

 vation in British Gardens . - . 641 



On the Culture of Asparagus ; with a Note 

 on the Globe Artichoke. By Mr. James 

 CuthiU 5CG 



On the Culture of theChicory, as a Salad Plant, 

 as practised in Belgium. By Dr. Lippold - 250 



On a new and economical Method of preserv- 

 ing Endive through the Winter. By Mr. 

 James CuthiU, Gardener to Capt. Trotter 

 Dyrham Park . . . . 356 



A Plan for growing Potatoes and Dahlias on 

 the same Ground, and in the same Season. 

 By J. H. R. - . . . 249 



On the Culture of the Potato. By R. L. .132 



An Account of an Experiment made with 

 Three Potatoes. By Mr. Jolm Denson, 

 Sen. - - - - . 134 



New Mode of growing Mushrooms. By W. 35 



On the Mode of raising Mushrooms from the 

 Mushroom Stone. By Mr. James Alex- 

 ander, Gardener at Maeslaugh Castle . 35 



ARBORICULTURE. 



Dimensions of Trees of the British Oaks 

 (ftuercus Tiftbur pedunculatum and Q. R. 

 sessilifiijrum), and of the Cedar of Lebanon 

 (Cedrus Libani), now growing in different j 

 Parts of Britain and Ireland ; selected from. 



