INDEX. 



Petit Jean Apple, 525. 



Pepys, Mr. 158. 



Phalcena brumata Linn. 135. 



Phalangium esculentum, 445. 



Phytolacca decandra, 444. 



Pigeon's dung, advantages of using water, 



impregnated with it, as a manure, 412. 

 Ptne, Queen, notice of one exhibited to the 



Society 52. 



Pine, Apple, on the culture of, without bark, 

 or other hot-bed, 72.— Notice of a specimen 

 of the Welbeck Seedling, 213.— Description 

 of a mode of culture of, in Mr. Jenkins's 

 garden, 3 63.— Account of a mode of treat- 

 ing Pine plants, so as to make them produce 

 fruit withir. the v ear, 392.— Observations on 

 the production of seeds of, 533.— Account of 

 a mode of treating Pine plants of extraordi- 

 nary size, 555. 



Pinks, on the cultivation of, 451. 



Pippin, Colonel HarboroVs, 65.— London, 67- 

 — White Stone, 69. Bayfordbury, 528. 

 Fall, 217. 



Pinner Seedling Apple, 530 



Plants, on the means of giving strength to the 

 stems of those growing under glass, 1.— 

 Enumeration of many which are erroneously 

 considered as distinct, 19. 



Plum tree, upon pruning and training the, 



10. 



Raffles, Sir Stamford, information from, 



respecting Crinum superbum, 425. 

 Ransleben, Mr. communication by, on the 



destruction of the Moths and Caterpillars of 



the Phalcena brumata, 135. 

 Ranunculus, on the cultivation of, 374. 

 R«i>h<i»><.s niger, 11.— Or biculatus, ib. 

 Raspberry, Double-bearing Red, notice of, 55. 



—Early Red, 205. 

 Rawes, ,Capt. Richard, 340. 

 Redoute's Roses, cited, 171, 2.—Liliacees, 



181,289. 

 Rees's Cyclopedia, cited, 281. 

 Recelstone Pippin, 523. 

 Rhododendrons, Hybrid, remarks on, 24. 

 Rhubarb, method of forcing, applicable to its 



n, 64. 

 Khi, 



53 1 



. 27'; 



Poire (TAnai 



Polo Family, probably introduced many 



from China into Europe, 224, 5. 

 Pomme Knight, 279.— De Wyneghem, ib. 

 Pomone Francoise, cited, 271- 

 Pope, Mrs. notice of a drawing by, 321. 

 Potatoes, Earlv, mode of raising, 447- 

 Poyntz, William Stephen, Esq. notice a 

 White Nectarine grown in his garden, 21 

 Princesse d? Orange Pear, 277- 

 Psidium Cattleianum, account of, 315, 317 

 Psoralia esculenta, 445. 

 Plerocarpus Marsupium, remarks on its p 



pagation, 226. 

 Pyrus spectabilis, result of 

 ringing its bark, 129. 



Ringing the bark of trees and plants observa- 



I _ '■• 



meal observations on its effects, 159.— Dif- 

 ferent ( fleets of. .,57, 8, 561, 5(14. 



Rintotil, Mr. Sam i i i,. notice of Spanish 

 Onions grown by him, 139. 



Robertson, Mr. John, on the advantages 

 which Peach trees derive from the;; roots 

 penetrating the border on the north side of 

 the wall, 95, et seqq.— Wis classification of 

 Plums, 323, 5. 



Robson, Mr. Mark, his receipt for a wash for 

 destroying insects on fruit trees, 143. 



Rogers, Mr. Thomas, his account of the cul- 

 tivation of Mushrooms, 472. 



Ronalds, Mr. Hugh, notice of a Pear ex- 

 hibited by, 214.— Of Apples, 21(j. 



Rosa pimpineUifolia, 285.— Arvensis, 4<u>. 



Roses, mode of protecting their buds from in- 

 sects suggested, 136.— Notice of nine kinds 

 of Moss-Roses, exhibited, 137- — Account of 

 the Rosa Banksice, 170, et seqq.— Descrip- 

 tion and account of the varieties of Double 

 Scotch, 281.— List of, 302, 3.— On the Ayr- 

 shire Rose, 456, et seqq. 



Rose doree Pear, 277- 



