Judd, Mr. Daniel, on transplanting peas for 

 early crops, v. 436. 



. observations on the shrivel- 



le means of preventing 



. 3<>0. 



Jugla 



derivation of the name, i. 154. 



cathartica, vi. 499. 



fraxinifolia, vi. 495 ; 2 S. ii. 2< 



nigra, vi. 498 ; 2 S. iii. 124. 



Jujube, v. 117, 123; vi. 37. 

 Juncus 

 Juniper, 



' its manner of growth on the Pyrenees, 



i. App. 18. 

 Juniperus chinensis, 2 S. ii. 244, 253. 



Lycia, 2 S. ii. 244, 276. 



— macrocarpa, 2 S. ii. 275. 



KiEMPFER, iii. 302, 304, 448 ; iv. 322, 552 ; v. 



124, 125; vi. 468, 486, 487; vii. 529, 532, 



560, 562. 

 Kaempferia Galanga, i. 286. 



~ — longa, i. 286. 



— ■ plantaginifolia, i. 286. 



• rotunda, i. 286. 



~ sessilis, i. 286. 



~ -versicolor, i. 286. 



Kageneckia cratagifolia, 2 S. ii. 284. 



^ah loo, a Chinese implement, 2 S. iii. 239. 



Kaki, Japanese name for the Diospyros Kaki, 



Buda, ii. 317 ; v. 24. 



experiment with, iv. 570. 



-blanched in the manner of Sea 



K;,l, 



112. 



Curled, 



Egyptian, i 



' Jerusalem, 

 Maacbeste 

 lxiii 



Kale, Prussian, ii. 317. 



Rabi, ii. 315 ; v. 24. 



Ragged Jack, ii. 316 ; v. 24. 



Russian, ii. 317. 



Scotch, ii. 310, 318 ; v. 10 ; 2 S. iii. 60. 



Woburn perennial, v. 297. 



Kamel, i. 46 ; vii. 521. 



Kang-Hi, v. 123. 



Kaa,* ofTheoph., vi. 42. 



Keens, Mr. Michael, v. 260; vi. 155, 201. 



seedling 



exhibited by him, iv. 205 ; v. 260, 261. 

 Kef Marjam, v. 46. 

 Kendall, Peter, Esq., iv. 209. 

 on the preservation of 



fruit from birds, 2 S. i. 390. 

 Kennard, Mr., iv. 505. 

 Kennedy, Mr. Lewis, iii. 328. 

 Kennedya bimaculata, 2 S. ii. 249. 



monophylla, 2 S. ii. 249. 



Kenrick, Mr., fruit trees received from, 2 S. 



ii. 415. 



Kent, Duke of, iii. 207 ; vi. 160. 



Mr., iv. 73, 238 ; v. 393; vi. 95. 



Kent, William, Esq., ii. 387 ; iii. 269; 



account of some im- 



provements in 

 for plants by 

 parted to their 



. account of the ma- 



nagement of aquatic plants, with descriptions 

 of several species cultivated in England, 



. 24. 



the 



nagement 



of a stove for tropical plants without the use 



of tan, iii. 287. 

 Ker, — , i. 316, 339, 346. 359, 304 ; iii. 189, 



193; iv. 339, 422, 500, 557; vi. 82, 277, 



475; vii. 180, 428, 435, 438, 444, 448, 



457, 459, 520. 

 Henry Bellenden, Esq., account of ^a 



mode of cultivating the water-cress, iv. 537. 

 Kggx* f > 33. 



Kerr, Mr. William, iv. 171.^ <# f 



, 424. 



