0)70 



GENERAL INDEX. 



550 ; Rockland Abbey to Moreton Hampstead, 



551 ; Moreton Hampstead to Ugbrook una 

 Exeter, 561 ; Ugbrook, 551; Exeter, 552 ; Blc- 

 ton, 55S. 



Gardens and Country Seats in Sussex, notice of 

 tome, RIO; London to Wadhorst Cattle, 610 j 

 Wadhurst Castle, 610 i Wadhurst to Battle 

 Abbey, Beauport, and Hose Hill, till ; Battle 

 Abbey, (ill; Beauport, 613; Hose Hill, (115 ; 

 Bridge Castle, 615. 



Garstang churchyard, sycamore in, 477. 



Gas-Lime applied to horticultural purposes, 379. 



Germination, process of, 55. 



Cilly's Peasantry of the Horde;', 31. 



Glaaiug hot-houses, Ac, different modes of, 14. 



Gooseberry-cuttings, to facilitate their striking 

 root, 327. 



Grainer's Guide, 370. 



Granite as a building material, 140. 



Crape, cultivating the, in a greenhouse, 420. 



(I rape-growing, 573. 



Crape, new, from Ohio, 218. 



Crapes in pots, 327. 



Crapes, rust on, cnuses of, 422. 



Crasses of Scotland, by Dr. Parnell, 379. 012. 



Gray's Botanical Text Book for Colleges, School*, 

 aiid private Students, 6.54. 



Greg\ Scotch Farming in the Lothians, 569. 



Gregory's Catalogue of Nursery Stock, 27. 1 



Greenhouse, to connect, with a library, 394. 



Griffith's Botany of India, 130. 



Guano, its value as manure, 81. 



Guava, white, cultivation of, 503. 



II. 



Heat and moisture in plant structures, to pre- 

 serve, 106. 

 Heat, terrestrial, further observations on, 241. 

 Wedera Welix, 57a 

 Hedges, 228. 

 Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland, 



monthly meetings of, 142. 

 History and Management of Bees, noticed, 322. 

 History of British Forest Trees, 5li7. 

 Hooker's Catalogue of Roses for 1S42-3, 636. 

 Horses, taming and training. 328. 573. 

 Hothouses, ventilating of, S95. 

 Horticulture, on extending a knowledge of, and 



taste for, 252. 

 Horticultural Society's garden, exhibition at, 381. 



661. 

 Horticultural Society's Transactions, 424. 

 Hortus Lignosus abridged, noticed, 321. 

 Hot-water pipes, radiating power of, 324. 

 Hughes's Practice of making and repairing Roads, 



471- 

 Hydrogen, decomposition of, by plants, 57. 



1. 



Ice, artificial, for skating on, 42. 



Illustrations and Descriptions of Kilpcck Church, 



471. 

 lllustrationcs Plantarum Oricntalium, 466. 

 Incubation, 475 ; the thrush, the redstart, and the 



cuckoo, 475. 

 Indian corn, a new kind of, 229. 335. 

 Ipomrp'a Lchni, 576. 

 Irish planting, observations on, 172. 

 Isle of Wight, a botanic garden in the, 189. 



Janbert and Spach's lllustrationcs Plantarum Ori- 

 cntalium, 41)6. 

 Johnston's Elements of Agricultural Chemistry 



and Geology, 372. 

 .Johnston's English Agriculture, what can be done 



for it? 63a 

 Jones's Lecture nn Taste, 129. 

 :eua grandlllora, 188. 



K. 



Kcnrick's American Orchardisc, 30. 

 Kensington Gardens, building villas on, 139; 

 f'.'.ntain in, 381 ; proposed to be built on, 382. 



Kcw, Royal Botanic Garden, 189. 

 Kitchen-gardens at Kensington, building villas 

 on the site of the, 139. ~S^ 



L. 



Labels for French roses, on cutting out and 



naming, by J, Twigg, 113. 

 Labouring Population of Great Britain, Report on 



the Sanitary Condition of, 472. 

 Ladies' Companion to the Flower-Garden, 



2d edition, 634. 

 Lambert, Aylmer Bourke, Esq , death of, 144. 

 Landscape-gardeners, information wanted re- 

 specting, 3S4 ; want of moral courage of, 135. 

 Landscape-gardening of F. L. von Sr.kell of 

 Munich, PS; to form and stake out lakes, 98 ; 

 carriage-roads, bridle-roads, walks, and paths 

 through defiles and under rocks, 165 ; removing 

 earth in general, 204; formation of hills, 206 j 

 formation of valleys, 208 ; excavating lakes, 

 264 ; making ponds, 266 ; arrangement of woods 

 in natural scenery, 267; transitions of natural 

 woods, 268 ; picturesque grouping and union of 

 trees and shrubs, 405. 

 Lane and Sons' Catalogue of Roses for 1S42-3.636. 

 Larch and silver fir, relative value of, 269. 

 Large trees, transplanting of, 102. 

 /.i\rix Godsall/7, packing the, 34. 

 i Laurel, common (Cerasus Laurocerasus), 239. 

 | Leaves, rooting of, 134. 



| Lees's Botanical Looker-out among the wild 

 Flowers of the Fields, Woods, and Mountains of 

 England and Wales, 570. 

 Lewis's Illustrations and Descriptions of Kilpcck 



Church, 471. 

 Library, to connect, with a greenhouse, 391. 

 Liebig's Chemistry, 2d edit., noticed, 126. 

 Little English Flora, 635. 



Lobelia, on the cultivation of, by G. Fielder, 113 

 Logs, large mahogany, 429. 

 L'Oricnt, agriculture in the vicinity of, 39. 

 Loudon's, Mrs , Botany for Ladies,' 634. 

 Loudon's Encyclopedia of Cottage, Farm, and 

 Villa Architecture, Fint additional Supplement 

 to, 6J6. 

 Loudon's Encyclopaedia of Trees and Shrubs, no- 

 ticed, 321. 

 Loudon's Hortus Lignosus abridged, noticed, 



321. 

 Loudon's, Mrs., Ladies' Companion to the 



Flower-Garden, 2d ed. 634. 

 Loudon's Suburban Horticulturist, 631. 

 Lymburn on Manures, 72. 



M. 



Machine, Ainslie's tile-making, 239. 

 Maclurn aurantlaca, 180. 



Management, or rather Mis-management, of 

 Woods, Plantations, and Hedge-row Timber, 

 470. 

 Manure, bran as, 227 ; kiln-dust as, .580. ; oyster- 

 shell, 227 ; Poittevin's disinfected, 132 

 Manures, Essay on, by Mr. Locke, 78; experi- 

 ments on, at Dankeith, 76 ; at Shewalton and 



Rosellc, 78 ; on the recent publications on, by 



Mr. Lymburn, 72. 

 Matter, in plants, animals, and man, whence 



comes it ? 2. 

 May's Catalogue of Select Plants in the Hope 



Nursery, 27. 

 Melon, on forcing, for early fruits, 116. 

 Menzies, Archibald, Esq., F.L.S., Sc, his death, 



240. 

 Merthyr coal, 37. 

 Metropolitan Improvement Society, first Annual 



Report of the, 509. 

 Moles, to destroy, 326. 



Moral courage, in architects, and landscape-gar- 

 deners, want of, 135. 

 il/brus, genus, 231. 

 Moss, different uses of, in the cultivation of 



plants, 447 ; with the stoek-gilliflower, 448 ; 



with the winter stoek-gilliflower, 4IP ; in raising 



early beans, 41:0; melons, 450; cauliflowers, 



