INDEX. 



Cherry Royale, 2 S. i. 282. 



— Royale Tardive, 2 S. i. 283. 



Schone von Choisy, 2 S. i. 280. 



Schwarze Herz Kirsche, Grosse, 2 S. 



— — Small Black, ii. 139. 



• de Soissons, 2 S. i. 285. 



St. Martin's Amarelle, 2 S. i. 287. 



Sussex, 2 S. i. 285. 



Suss Kersche, Grosse Weisse, 2 S. i. 271. 



Tartarian, 2 S. i. 255. 



Black, 2 S. i. 255, 293. 



White, 2 I 



White, 2 S. i. 274. 



— Tauben Herz, Schwarze, 2 S. i. 252 



— Tobacco-leaved, 2 S. i. 273. 



— Four to the Pound, 2 S. i. 273. 



— de la Toussaint, 2 S. i. 287. 



— Tradescant's, 2 S. i. 254. 



— Transparent, Fraser's White, 2 S 



— Trauben Amarelle, 2 S. i. 287. 



— Vier ein Pfund, 2 S. i. 273. 



— Virginian May, 2 S. i. 285. 



— Waterloo, ii. 208, 302 ; figured, j 

 212, 213; iv. 510; 2 S. i. 257. 



We 



2<S7. 



Florentiner, 2 S. i. 290. 



Friihe Kleine Runde Zwerg, 



Hollandische, 2 S. i. 

 Ratafia, 2 S. i. 290. 

 September Grosse, 



- Weichselbaum mit Kur 



- Weisse Sauer, 2 S. i. 292. 



- Werder's Early Heart, 2 S. i. 294. 



- Dredge's Early 



i. 290. 



Yellow, or Golden, 2 S. i. 275. 



— Yellow Ramonde, 2 S. i. 286. 



Zwerg, 2 S. i. 288. 



Cherry Trees of Asia Minor, vi. 43. _ 



— experiments in training, iii 



Cherries, Country, v. 89. 



of the West Indies, v. 98. 



Cherry Houses, use of bees in, i. 151. 



Cherry Orchard, account of c 



and plan of, vii. 400. 

 Chervil, 2 S. iii. 52, 61. 



• food in the northern parts 

 of Europe, L 140. 



grown at Spring Grove, propagated 



by grafting, i. 141. 



method of keeping the home-grown 



nuts, i. 141, 247. 



sorts known to the Romans, i. 152. 



Sweet, resemblance of its wood to 



< nf tin 



. 336. 



Trees, observations on rearing ther 



by grafting, i. 62, 245 ; practised from tint 

 immemorial, i. 140. 



Chevalier, Mr., 2 S. i. 15. 



Chiatatlab.ua, plant used against its bite, 2 f 



iii. 129. 

 Chicha, abeveragi 

 Chicory, 2 S. iii. t 

 Chicoree Blanche, 



of the Indif 



, 2 S. 



- fine d'ltalie, vi. 136. 



de Meaux, vi. 137, 138. 



toujours blanche, vi. 139. 



Chickweed, i. App. 21. 

 Child, — , Esq., 2 S. ii. 180. 



Chimaphila maculata, 2 S. iii. 128. 

 Chimonanthus fragrans, vi. 496 ; vii. 41 ; 2 S. 



ii. 242, 258. 

 Chinese, state of their nursery-gardens near 



Canton, iii. 422. 

 their method of dwarfing trees and 



shrubs, iv. 224 ; and of propagating from 



branches, iv. 228. 

 their mode of distorting the human 



form, iv. 228, note. 



■ cultivation of the Nelumbium. \i. 5 35. 



plants, how to import them, vii. 396. 



Ching-cho-lee, vii. 239. 

 Chiogenes serpyllifolia, account of, ii. 94. 

 Chionanthus pubescens, 2 S. iii. 149. 

 maritii 



Chlidanthus fragrans, 2 S 



283. 



2 S. 



CMoride of calcium, 2 S. iii. 203, 204, 205, 206. 



lime, 2 S. iii. 45, 95, 96, 97, 98. 



Chlorine, 2 S. iii. 36. 

 Chlorophytum orchidastrum, vi. 78. 

 Chontadura,2S.iii.l58 „ 

 Chorozema vanum, figured, 2 S. U. 478. 

 Chou aigrette, v. 11. 



