INDEX. 



Pea, Sans Parchemin Vert, 2 S. i. 383. 



Sanspareil, 2 S. i. 377. 



Scymitar, Blue, 2 S. i. 383. 



Single-blossomed, Early, 2 S. i. 376. 



Spanish Dwarf, 2 S. i. 375. 



Common, 2 S. i. 375. 



Large, 2 S. i. 375. 



New Early, 2 S. i. 37 



Early, 2 S. i. 380. 



Marotta, 2 S. i. 386. 



■ Patriot, 2 S. i. 383. 



Stowe, 2 S. i. 384. 



Sugar, 2 S. i. 380. 



Dwarf, 2 S. i. 382. 



■ Crooked, 2 S. i. 382. 



Dutch, 2 S. i. 381. 



Early, 2 S. i. 381. 



Early May, 2 S. i. 381, 387. 



Fishamend's, 2 S. i. 385. 



Large Crooked, 2 S. i. 380. 



Late Dwarf, 2 S. i. 381. 



White, 2 S. i. 382. 



Wyker, 2 S. i. 382. 



Red-flowered, 2 S. i. 385. 



Vilmorin's, 2 S. i. 381, 387. 



Suisse, 2 S. i. 378. 



Sumatra, 2 S. i. 383. 



Superfine Early, 2 S. i. 376. 



Tall Frame, 2 S. i. 377. 



Imperial, 2 S. i. 383. 



White Marrow, 2 S. i. 378. 



Tamarind, 2 S. i. 381. 



New, 2 S. i. 387. 



Temple, New Tall, 2 S. i. 378. 



Turc, 2 S. i. 380. 



a Fleurs Blanches, 2 S. i. 380. 



Twesley Dwarf, 2 S. i. 376, 384. 



Vert Gros Normand, 2 S. i. 378. 



Hatif a la Moelle, 2 S. i. 378. 



i Rames de Mont Julienne, 2 S. i. i 



W ,!.;.-!,, 2 ? 



■Wa 



, 2S. 



Peaches, on its own stock, ii. 203. 



how to obviate the paleness of tho 



grown under glass, i. 149. 



mildew on, ii. 88. 



on their culture on espalier trees, 



observations on forcing, 



219. 



108 ; 2 S. 



on the house management of, v. 57. 



advantage of a span-roofed house for 



forcing, iv. 562. 

 notice of a second crop in the same 



season, grown in pots, iii. 367. 

 on a method of forcing, principally by 



dung-heat, v. 218. 

 ■ account of the method of forcing them 



in Denmark and Holland, v. 320. 



effect of climate on the flesh of, ii. 61. 



varieties of, known to the Romans, i.149. 



lYach-lxmses, Roman, remarks on, i. 149. 



plan of one, i. 199. 



observations on the best method 



of constructing, i. 199. 



ventilation of, ii. 227. 



elevation, section, and plan of 



one used in Denmark, v. 320. 



origin of, in Holland, v. 323. 



Peaches and nectarines produced on the same 



branch, i. 103; ii. 59 ; figured, i. 103. 

 leaves of, without 



glands, figured, v. 529 ; with reniform glands, 



figured, ib. ; with globose glands, figured, ib. 

 — — classification of, v. 



525. 



■ peculiar to each class, 



— synoptical tables of, 



trees may be propagated 



iii. 386 ; v. £ 

 Peach and nect 



by layering, 

 Peach-pit, Dutch, section and plan of, v. 324. 

 Peach-stocks, v. 290. 



Peach-trees, observations on the origin of, iii. 2. 



to raise from stones, v. 290. 



produced from the seed of an 



almond -tree, iii. 1 ; fruit of, figured, ib. 



on apricot stocks, ii. 370. 



transplantation of their blossom- 

 buds, ii. 7. 



the almond recommended as a stocl 

 remark on the apricot as a stock for 



remarks on their luxuriant shoots, 



