I ND 



E V 



Mansfield, Earl of, a new method of cultiva- 

 ting the Lobelia fulgens, practised by his 

 gardener at Kenwood, 398. 



Marie Louise Pear, notice of, 404. 



Marveille d'hyver Pear, described, 51 



May Duke Cherry, 138. 



Medals, list of, presented by the Society, Ap- 



Mean, Mr. J., on the preservation of Fig trees, 

 during the winter, 228. — On the manage- 

 ment of Orange, Lemon, and Citron trees, 

 295. — His method of ripening grapes by 

 means of dung-heat, under a hot-bed frame, 



Melidora Pellucida, a beautiful Chinese ever- 

 green, some account of, 156. 



Mice, method of preventing their depredations 

 on tree-seeds, &c. when sown, 121. 



Michelson, Mr., information by, relative to 

 the Aphis Lanigera, 163. 



Mignonette, account of a method of raising it 

 in pots throughout the year, in the vicinity of 



Mildew, on its causes ; and on the prevention 

 of, in particular cases, 82, ct scqq. 



Miller, his description of the kinds of Peach 

 and Nectarine, good, 60. — Cited, 238, 2/6. 



Monopy'.s Conspicua, on i;s cultivation, 37. — 

 Where first seen, 38.-Erroneou-.lv named 

 Cliff ortiana, 41. 



Moor Park Apricot, on the proper stock for, 19. 



Morgan, Mr. W., his description of t he diffe- 

 rent sorts of Winter Greens, and of their 

 cultivation, 307. — On the cultivation of 

 Strawberries in forcing-houses during the 

 winter and spring months, 374. 



Morison, a professor of botany at Oxford, 

 mentioned, 274, 6. 



Moss Rose de Meaux, account of an original 

 plant of, 241. 



Moths, mode for their destruction recom- 

 mended, 34. 



Moutan, Yellow, 277. 



Mitizen met staarten, the Lathf/rus Tubcroxus 



Linn, so named by the Dutch, and why, 359. 

 \fulberry, on the culture of the, 68, 91. — On 



the propagation of the tree by cutting, 114. 



— Experiments on, with liquid Manure, 129- 

 Murray, Mr., information by, relative to Aphis 



Lanigera, 168. 



Mushrooms, account of a method of growing 



them under glass, 212. — In houses, 336. 

 Muscat Robert Pear, described, 47. 

 Musk, Winter, Pear, described,42. — Grosse, ib. 



N. 



Napoleon Pear, notice of, 404. 



Nectarine, probable cause of its failing to 

 acquire maturity, 35. — One grown on the 

 same twig with a Peach, 59. — On a method 

 of forcing the, 245. 

 Veto South Wales, instance of the early puberty 

 of a Peach tree there, 70. 



New Town Pippin, 285. 



Nicol's Treatise on Gardening cited, 83. 



Noctua Brassicce, how destroyed by German 

 gardeners, 33, note. 



Noehden, Dr., on the watering of frozen 

 branches of Peach and Nectarine trees, 13. 

 — On a method of improving the productive- 

 ness of fruit trees, 262. — Observations on the 

 expediency of giving to Horticulture a scien- 

 tific form,* by an\mgi:ii;- its objects under a 

 system, 290.— Some farther observations on 

 the method of ringing fruit-trees, for the 

 purpose of rendering them productive, 382. 

 — His translation from the German, of a 

 tract on fruit trees, App. 1.— Some account 

 of the works of the Rev. John Volkmar 

 Sickler, an eminent Pomologist, App. 6. — 

 On a mode of training Fruit trees, described 

 by M. Noisette, App. 8. 



Noisette, Mons., cited from Le Bon Jardi- 

 nier, 3S5. — His mode of training fruit trees, 

 App. 8. 



N'uuoMfA, a Spanish botanist, some account of 

 the Chinese shrub, called by him Melidora 

 Pellucida, 156. 



Nut, Cosford, notice of a variety so named, 

 403. 



Nuts, account of a method to keep them fresh, 



399. 



O. 



Oldaker, Mr., his account of a method of 

 growing Mushrooms in houses, 336, et seqq. 

 —Report of a committee on his method, ib. 



Onion Pear described, 54. 



Onions, successful method of raising, 121- 



