INDEX. 



Fruit Trees, observations on Diseases incident 

 to, 175— On the effects of age on, 384. 



Fruits, observations on the accidental inter- 

 mixture of character in, 63. 



description of various Tropical Fruits, 



83-126. 



notices of new or remarkable Varieties 



of, exhibited at Meetings of the Society, 260, 

 et seqq. ; 398, et seqq. 



of Sierra Leone, list of, 463. 



Gangi, a fruit so called, 9 1 . 

 (xtirr'nua Mangostana, 106. 

 Garlick Pear, 100. 



Gaenieb, Rev. Thomas, notices of specimens 

 of the Roseberry Strawberry, sent by him to 

 the Society, 260. 



Gibson, Mr. William, his method of growing 

 Pine-apples without tan, 486. 



Gihgille Pear, 138. 



Girolamo, Viaggio nel regno di Congo, cited, 

 Gomortega nitida, 1 04. 



Goodhall, Henry, Esq. Chrysanthemum 

 presented by, to the Society, 415. 



Gooseberry Plants, description of remarka- 

 bly large ones, 490. 



Goss, Mr. John, on the Variation in the Colour 

 of Peas, occasioned by cross impregnation, 

 234. 



Gowen, James Robert, Esq. description by, 

 of a new hybrid variety of Aman 

 cma-Johnsoni, 361. 



1, 201-4. 



ybrid Amaryl- 



; experiments 

 ; the Scion 



« method of securing 

 the stock, in, 284. 



Reverse, account of, 396. 



Wax, receipt for making, 285, 376. 



w ".liam, Esq, Descripti( 

 variety of Amaryllis Ps 

 sed b\- Sfi 1 



v hybrid variety < 

 - ioni, raised ] 

 i. 1st. Call. 



Johnsoni, raised by, 361. J 



t. Piacenza, cited, 38, 



ig, 399. 



Grapes of China and Japan, 123. 



— notices of specimens of, exhibited at 



Meetings of the Society, 263, 4. 

 mode of forcing them in Denmark, 



mode of hastening their maturity < 



open walls, 485. 

 — — of Sierra Leone, 447. 



Grove -Ewd^Sweetwater Grape, 263. 



Scarlet Strawberry, 399. 



Guava, Chinese, ripened by Mr. Cattley, 8 



varieties of described, 86, 7- 



Giiavas, wild, 449. 



Gum, observations on that disease in frui 

 trees, 181. 



Hanbury, William, Esq., his gardener's 

 description of a Pit for growing early Cu- 

 cumbers, 493. 



Hectar, contents of that measure in English 



;rt, Hon. and Rev. William, notice 

 rtain seedling varieties of Amaryllis pre- 

 :d by him to the Society, 337. 



Hervy, M., Director of the Luxembourg 

 Garden at Paris, account of Pears 

 from, 127-141. 



Hogan, Mr. William, on a method of culti- 

 vating the Mushroom, 305-9. 



Holford, Charles, Esq., Letter to, on 

 Grafting, 284. 



— his description 



of a Pine-house and Pits, 499. 



Holland, mode of forcing Peaches in, 321. — 

 Origin of the first Peach-house in, 323, note. 



Hornemann's Hort. Hafn., cited, 33. 



Horse-Radisfi, on the cultivation of, 302. 



Horticulture of the Chinese, account of, 49. 



Hortus Kewensis, cited, 93, 98. 



Hot-bed, for forcing Cucumbers, 491. 



Hot-houses, on the construction of the Flues 

 of, 214. 



upon the advantages and disad- 

 vantages of curvilinear Iron Roofs of, 227- 



; description of an Apparatus for 



ventilating them, 502. 



Fire-places of, directions for their 



