INDEX. 



progress, state, and the objects to which 

 attention is more particularly directed, Pre/. 

 — Advantages likely to result from its pos- 

 sessing a garden, ib. vi. — Account of 

 specimens of Apples imported by, from 

 Rouen, 29S. — Notices of subjects commur" 

 cated to, of which separate Accounts hai 

 not been given in its Trar 



Horticulture, its nomench 

 settled, Pre/, vi. — Its 

 Agriculture, ib. vn. — ( 

 expediency of giving it i 



: form, &c. 



Hume, Sir Abraham, method of preserving 

 Fig trees during winter, practised in Ins gar- 

 den, 228.— Description of a Double Chinese 

 Paeony in his garden, 279. — Method of 

 managing Orange, Lemon, and Citron trees 

 in his garden, 295. — Method of ripening 

 grapes by dung-heat in his garden, 330. — 

 Description of a Stove for tropical plants, in 

 his garden, App. 4. 



Hyacinth, Oriental, experiments on its culture, 



Ice Pear, described, 50. 



Ichneumon Linn., a great destroyer of cater- 

 pillars, &C.151. 



Iliciam Floridanum, 158. 



Illiger's Magazine cited, 162, note. 



Insects, on some vulgar errors respecting their 

 destruction by cold, 148. 



Jean de Witte Pear, notice of, 407- 



Jena, battle of, instance of ravages committed 

 after, App. 7- 



Jenkinson, Hon. Rob. 157. 



Jeeves, Mr. Stephen, account of a method of 

 growing Mushrooms under glass, 212. 



Judd, Mr. Daniel, on the cultivation of Aspa- 

 ragus, 234. 



July flower Apple, description of, 74. 



Kale, description and mode of culture of the 

 different kinds of, 312-19.— German receipt 

 for dressing Brown Kale, 213, note. 



Keens, Mr. Michael, his account of a new 

 Strawberry, 101. — On the cultivation of 

 Strawberries in the open ground, 392. 



KENNEnr, Mr. Lewis, notice of some Apples 

 of extraordinary magnitude, presented by 

 him, and Mr. Lee, to the Society, 405. 



Kent, W. Esq., account of some improvements 

 in the construction of a Stove for plants, 387. 



Kew Gardens, nomenclature of, to be adhered 

 to, 59. 



Kirke, Mr., notice of a variety of Nut, pre- 

 sented by him to the Society, 403. — And of 

 specimens of the Wheat-ear Carnation, 404. 



Knight, T. A. Esq., great serv ices rendered 

 by, to the Horticultural Society, Pre/, m. — 

 His account of the Elton Pear, 1.— His 

 remark on seedling-trees, 6. — On the trans- 

 plantation of blossom buds, 7« — Letter on 

 an early variety of Grape, 10.— On the proper 

 Stock for the Moor Park Apricot, 19.— Hii 

 treatise on the Apple and Pear tree cited, 33. 

 — On inarching leafless branches of Peach- 

 trees, 35. — On the prevention of the curl in 

 the Potatoe, 64. — On the culture of the Mul- 

 berry, 68. — On the early puberty of the 

 Peach tree, 70.— On the culture of the Pear 

 tree, 78. — On the prevention of Mildew in 

 particular cases, 82. — On a late kind of Pear, 

 87.— On the culture of Shallot, and other 

 bulbous plants, 97.— On the propagation of 

 the Mulberry tree by cuttings, 1 14. — On the 

 beneficial results of planting Potatoes that 

 have grown late the preceding year, 125. — 



of excessive heat in forcing-houses during 

 the night, 130. — Account of two varieties 

 of Cherry raised at Downton, 1 37-— Ac- 

 count of a new variety of Peach, 140. — 

 On the want of permanence of character in 

 varieties of fruit, when propagated by grafts 

 and buds, 1 60.— On the mode of propagation 

 of the Lycoperdon cancellatum, a species of 

 fungus, which destroys the leaves and branches 

 of the Pear tree, 178. — On the preservation 

 of fruits during the winter, 193.— On the 

 effects of different kinds of Stocks, in grafting, 

 199. — Some account of three new Cherries, 

 208. — An account of three new Peaches, 2 14. 

 —On the culture of the Peach and Apricot 

 on espalier trees, 219.— On the ventilation 

 offorcmg-houses, 224.— Upon the advantages 

 of pn 'plating from the roots of old un- 

 graded fruit trees, 252.— On the means of 



