INDEX. 



Lee and Kennedy, Messrs. Chrysanthemums j 



grown by, 337- 

 Lemon trees, account of, in the open ground 



at Salcombe, 142. 

 /.< <■;■■> 'din V, lata, 181. 

 Lilium Japonicum, notice relating to theflower- 



Lindley, Mr. George, his account of some 

 of the best varieties of Apples peculiar to, 

 or cultivated in Norfolk, 65. 



Lindlky, Mr. John, his drawing and descrip- 

 tion of a Hybrid Passiflora,261.— His Mono- 

 graphs Rosarum, cited, 281, 458, 464.— 

 Notes by, on five kinds of Larch, 416. 



Liverpool, Earl of, mode of growing Spanish 

 Onions in his garden at Walmer Castle, 

 1S9. 



Livingstone, John, Esq. account of the 

 Chinese mode of dwarfing Shrubs and Trees, 

 including their plan of propagating from 

 branches, 224, et seqq. 



Lockner, Capt. John Christopher, 339. 



Loddiges, Mr. George, his description of a 

 steaming apparatus, 56. — Result of his ex- 

 periments in ringinging the bark of Passi- 



Long, Rt. Hon. Sir Charles, managementof 



the Crinum amabile in his garden, 419. 

 London Pippin, GJ. 



Loudon, Mr. his substitute for putty in glaz- 

 ing hot-houses, 90. 



Loudon, John, Earl of, the Ayrshire Rose 

 first raised in his garden, 457, 463. 



Lowd, Mr. Thomas, notice of his Fig garden, 

 506. 



M. 



Macfarlane, Mr. John, specimens of Cher- 

 ries exhibited by, 511. 



Mac Leay, Alexander, Esq. 135, 6. 



Mac Leod, Mr. Daniel, his method of grow- 

 ing Cape Broccoli, 559. 



Macphail on the Cucumber, cited, 187, 



Magic Ring of Pomona, notice of the second 



edition of, 557- 

 Magnolia conspicua, account of a plant of, 



grown in the garden of Sir Abraham Humt, 



59. 



Maher, Mr. John, notice of a method adopted 

 by him to protect young vegetables from the 



effects of excessive heat, 51.— On the treat- 

 ment of standard Fig trees, 185. 

 Mais a Poulet, 53. 



Malcolm, Mr. William, one of the first cul- 

 tivators of Double Scotch Roses, in Eng- 

 land, 286. 



Marie Louise Pear, 519. 



Marsland, Peter, Esq. notice of a Queen 

 Pine grown by him, 52. — Account of a mode 

 of treating Pine Plants, so as to make them 

 produce fruit within the year, 392. 



Matricaria Japonica, and Indica, 329, 331. 



Mearns, Mr. John, account of a method of 

 inanaging Vines in a common Grapery, 246. 

 — of obtaining Cucumber plants for a win- 



Me\ '.' , I -arlv, a practical account of their cul- 

 ture, 187, et seqq. — Notice of a variety 

 called the Dampsha, 21 I. — Account of the 

 Montagu Cantaloup, and the method by 

 which it was obtained, 318. 



Miller's Gardener's Dictionary, cited, 11, 

 282, 285, 331. 



Mills, Mr. James, plan of a hot-wall ex- 

 hibited by him, 139. 



Models, in 'wax, of the most approved fruits 

 grown in Germany, a collection of, presented 

 to the Society by the Grand Duke of Saxe- 

 Weimar, 5 1 . 



Milne, Mr. Thomas, account of a Hybrid 

 Passiflora raised by, 258. 



Moenchs Supplementum, cited, 327- 



Molina s Xutitnd History of Chili, cited, 54. 



Model's Guernsey Pippin, 524. 



Mons, Dr. Van, a successful cultivator of 

 Fruits, 274, 5. 



Montagu Cantaloup Melon, 320. 



Morgan, Mr. William, notice of a Seedling 

 White Currant raised by, 206.— Of a Seed- 

 ling Plum, 208. 



Morrison, Dr. '227.— Information obtained 

 from, respecting the propensity of the Chi- 

 nese to distort the human form, 228, note. 



Moths, notice of a mode of destroying those of 

 the Phalcena brumata, 135. 



Mule vegetables, remark, on their production, 

 41, 43, 47.— Singular instance of a Mule 

 bird, 372. 



Mundy, E. M. Esq. on the management of 

 the plants belonging to the Genus Citrus in 

 his garden. 306 



