ind: 



i E X 



Celeriac, notice of several roots exhibited, with 



description of its culture, 57. 

 Chapman, Mr. Robert, his account of the 



cultivation of the Passiflora quadrangularis, 



60. 



Charcoal, its effects on a Hyacinth root, 130. 



Charles cTAutriche Pear, 521. 



Chenopodiam album, 489. 



Cherries, instructions for forcing them, 1 17- 



Christie, Mr. William, his account and des- 

 cription of the varieties of autumn and win- 

 ter Radishes, 10.— Description and account 

 of the different varietiesof the garden Carrot, 



• method of dwarf) n 



trees, and of propagating from branches, 

 224, et seqq.- — Their mode of distorting the 

 human form, 228, note. 



Chrysanthemum Ltdicuni, Lr\x. difference 

 between that and the Chinese Chrysanthe- 

 mum, 320, et seqq. 



Chrysanthemums, Chinese, account of the va- 

 rieties of cultivated in England, 320, et seqq. 

 —On the cultivation of, 571. 



Ciotat Grape, Alexandrian, account of a new 



Citrus, on the management of the plants of 

 that genus, in the garden of Edward Mil- 

 ler Mundy, Esq. 307, et seqq. 



Citron, Madras, notice of a specimen of, 417. 



Clay, observations on its effects in combustion 

 when united with coal, 157,8. 



Coburgia. See Nerine. 



Cocks-comb, on the cultivation of, 32 1 . 



Colvill, Messrs. Chrysanthemums flowered 

 by them, 335, 352. 



Columella, cited, 495. 



Convohuli, remarks on some, 22, 20. 



Cooper, Mr, Joseph, gardener to Lord Mil- 

 ton, 32. 



Corn, dwarf Indian, notice of heads of grown 



in the Society's garden, 53. 

 Cornato, Prince, cuttings of the Zante Grape, 



Co^ticJstriaio Apple, 278. 



Correa de Skrra, M. Joseph, notice by, 



respecting several esculent vegetables, 443, 



etseqq. 



Cotton, Miss, her drawing of Litium Jopo- 

 < 'omi-prittli/ jib ft congeal re Apple, 2/9. 



-Amabikfri 



Cowper, Earl, notice of a method of preserving 



Grapes, in his garden, 132. 

 Cranberry, American, on the cultivation of, 



in dry beds, 483. 

 Cresswell, John, Esq. notice of a mode of 



treating the Azalea Indica in his garden, 



133. 



Crinums, remarks on, 2 ■ 



Crinum rerolutum, 182 

 tice relative to the management of, 419. — 

 Superbum, 422-5.— Augustum, 424. 



Cucumber, account of one grown in Napal, 

 136. — Mode of obtaining Cucumber plants, 

 for the winter crop, 411.— On a method of 

 raising early ones, 453. — Account of two 

 specimens of one sent to the Society, 560. 



Cucurbit a lagenaria, notice of the fruit of ex- 

 hibited, 52. 



Cullum, Rev. Thomas Gery, on the con- 

 struction of piers and copings of garden 

 walls, 269. 



Currant bushes, mode of protecting them from 



the fly, 568. 

 Currants, notice of new varieties of, 206.— 



Dacre, Lord, his gardener's method of train- 

 ing Gooseberry bushes, 194. 

 Dahlias, on a method of propagating choice 



, bv ; 



of Strawberries 



Rev. W. W. 

 exhibiled bv, 508. 



Davy, Sir Humphrey, 78, 158. 

 Dawson, Mr. John, notice of Fruits of the 

 Banana tree sent by him to the Society, 137. 

 De Candolle, Flakes Grasses, cited, 491. 

 Decortication. See Ringing. 

 Dendrobia. on their treatment, 241. 



Histoire des Arbres, cited, 

 on Apples and Pears, cited, 

 Esq. specimens of an Apple 



Botanical character of 

 loticed, 457- 

 ' the Stock, so called by 



