Glass case, temporary, notice of blocks for, to be built into walls, 431. Gledston, Mr. George, his improved method of growing celery, 157.
Glycine sinensis, now Wistéria Consequána, on its beauty, &c., by Joseph Sabine, Esq., F.R.S., &c., 422.
Glycyrrhiza glabra, common liquorice, culture of, in Italy, 86.
Goldham, John, Esq., F.H.S., a distinguished florist, 470.
Goldie, Mr. John, on the culture of North American plants, including Ferns, 129. Goldworth nursery of Mr. Donald, F.H.S., an example of order and neatness, 171. Gooseberries, new sorts of, made public and for sale 74.; select sorts for a small garden, 253. Gooseberry Book of 1826, reviewed, 73. Gooseberry shows held in Lancashire, Cheshire, &c., an account of, for 1826, by Wm. Dean, reviewed, 73.
Gordon's Dictionary of Gardening, curious statement on the subject of producing varie- gation in plants, 46.
Gordon, Mr. Alexander, on the merits and demerits of iron hot-houses for the culture of the pine apple, 291.
Gormanston, in Meath, some account of, 148. Gorrie, Mr. Arch., C.M.H.S., his description of a dendrometer, 8.
-, on the effects of heat and moisture on vegetation, 418. Gould, Mr. Wm., gardener to Prince Potemkin, 388.
Gourds, large, 92. Grafting, dove-tail method, notice of, by Mr. E. Malone, 430.
–, herbaceous, by the Baron de Tschudy,
64. Grafting of roses, an improvement on, by Mr. Calvert, of Rouen, 192.
Granadilla, fruit of, ripened in a common green- house, 232.
Granite rock, improvement in blasting, 467. Grape, black Damascus, mode of setting the fruit of, 98.
black raisin, description of, &c., by Mr. Isaac Oldaker, F. H.S., 174. Grapes and peaches, Mr. Haythorn's structure for, described and figured, 281. Grapes, observations on a disease to which they are liable, and on the means of preventing it, by Mr. Daniel Judd, F.H.S., 190. Grapes on an open wall in Dublin, 102; ripened in the open air, 92. 100; ripening in the open air in Scotland, 100.
Grass-banks, how formed by the Belgians, 227. Grass lands, best mixture of seeds for, 69. Green-house Companion, (advertised), 384. Green Market of Edinburgh, 465. Green, Mr., of Bear Park, near Lancaster, an extensive grower of early potatoes, 47. Griffin, Wm., Esq., F.L.S., notice of his life and death, 255,
Grognier's Recherches historiques et statistiques sur le Murier, &c., 78.
Groom, Mr. H., F.H.S., description of a tulip case and its uses, 307.
Groom's florist's flowers, (advertised), 126. Gunnersbury House, Major Morrison, some account of, 362.
Halésia tetráptera, recommended, 34. Hampton, near Drogheda, some account of, 146.
Harding's Agricultural Library, (advertised),
Harding, Mr. John, agricultural bookseller, St. James's Street, life and death of, 381. Harrison, Mr. C., F.H.S., on blacking garden walls, 421.; on obtaining a second crop of melons, 414.
Harrison, Mr. Joseph, on the application of to- bacco-water in the destruction of insects, 428.
Hay, James, C.M. H.S., two letters addressed by, to Joseph Sabine, Esq., F.R.S., &c., reviewed, 338.
Hayne's Treatise on the Strawberry, Raspberry, &c., (advertised), 137.
Haythorn, Mr. John, C.M.H.S., description of a flued pit for growing cucumbers and melons, &c., 279.
Hazzi's Vomdünger, &c., notice of, 79. Hedges, trees, &c., their management in the Netherlands, 226.
Hedychiums, on the cultivation of, by Mr. Joseph Cooper, C. M. H.S., 420.
Henderson, Alexander, Esq., notice of his life and death, 255.
Henri Quatre, Urbaniste, and other new pears, by Mr. Braddick, 39.
Hilbert, George, Esq., remark respecting, 423. Highland Society of Scotland, notice of their meeting in January, 1827, 239.
Hodson, N. S., Esq. A.L.S., on the botanic gar. den of Bury St. Edmunds, 236. Hoe-fork, description and figure of, 65. Hoeing in straight lines, advantages of, 274. Hoe, Spanish, 233; recommended, 275. Hogg's Carnations, Picotees, Auriculas, &c., (advertised), 126.
Hogg, Thomas, his catalogue of carnations, &c., reviewed, 75; (advertised), 384; his ideas for a new plan of breaking tulips, 44; criticisms on, 379; his opinion on the uses of salt, 3. Hollis, Thomas, Esq., his burial in a ploughed field, 481.
Honey Bee, by Dr. Bevan, reviewed, 453. Hooker, Dr., and Mr. Lindley, query to, 448. Hookéria lúcens, 228.
Hop shoots, use of, as asparagus, in Flanders, 461. Horticultural fancies of the Belgians, 227. Horticultural Library of Ayrshire, notice of, 100. Horticultural Memorandum Book, description and use of, by a country clergyman, 319. Horticultural and Botanical Society of Durham, Northumberland, and Newcastle-upon-Tyne, prizes awarded by, from August 1825 to August 1826, 91.
Horticultural Society of Aberdeen, prizes pro- posed for 1827, 353; meeting of May 1st, 1827,
suggestion as to the form in which their Transactions should be published, 360.
Transactions cf, remarks on the Preface to Vol. VI.; compari- son of, with the Gardener's Magazine, 438; review of Vol. VI., Parts IV. and V., 332. 414. Horticultural Society's garden, catalogue of the fruits cultivated in, reviewed, 208.
formation of, 359. remarks on, by A Nurseryman, 469. Horticultural Society, Montrose, origin and ob- jects, 99.
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, see Horticultural and Botanical Society of Durham, Northumberland, &c., 229.
North British Profes- Perth, 466.
April and May, 1827, 473.
Preston, meetings for Prussian, meeting, June 1, 1823, 446; of June, 23, 1823, 447. Transactions
of, reviewed, 444; prizes proposed for the year 1824, 447. -, Ross, 91; meeting for May, 1827, 472. -, Yorkshire, meeting for May, 1826, 471. Horticulture and botany of France and England compared, by Mr. Arnott, 353. Horticulture in France, some account of, by Le Chevalier Soulange Bodin, 222. Horticulturists, Chinese, hint respecting, 422. Horticulturist's cottage, (advertised), 382. Hortulanus, on the garden regulations of the Horticultural Society, 105.
Hortulanus's observations on Mr. Anderson's experiments with peaches and apricots budded on almond stocks, 168.
Hortus Berlinensis, notice respecting, 85. Hortus Britannicus Americanus, sketches to- wards a, by W. J., M.D., Titford, noticed,
Hortus Britannicus, &c., by Robert Sweet, F.LS. &c., reviewed, 207.
Hortus Gramineus Woburnensis, by Mr. George Sinclair, F.L.S, H.S., &c. reviewed, 67. Hortus Siccus, by Prof. La Gasca, account of, 220.
Hot-houses, curvilinear metallic, by Messrs. Jones and Clark, (advertised), 382.
in regard to humidity, 201. curvilinear, on the management of,
in Syon Gardens, 107.
-, iron, for the culture of the pine apple, on the merits and demerits of, by Mr.
Hot-houses, model of a cast-iron plate for the steaming of, 352.
on the plan of closing the smoke flues of, that are heated only in the daytime, for the purpose of preserving a warm tem- perature during the night, &c., by Mr. Wil- liam Flavell, 154.
plan for the absorption of heat in,
-235. House, bad arrangement of, with reference to the approaches and walks, exemplified, 366. -, situation for, importance of natural fea- tures illustrated, 368. Hyacinths, on the culture of, by Mr. Alexander Campbell, 411.
-, to improve the size and health of, 232; strong and beautiful, grown at Drum, in Scotland, 464.
Hybrid currants, query respecting, 120. Hydrangea hortensis, experiment on changing the colour of the flower, by W. R. Y., 405. Hyoscyamus, its poisonous qualities, 454. Jardinier Agronome, notice of, 215. Illustrations of ornithology, (advertised), 126.
Implements, list of those figured in Vol. II. of the Gardener's Magazine, viii. Improvements, hints for, 480. Insects, black, on cherry trees, to destroy, 121. proposed plan for destroying, 122. See A'phis lanigera. Instruments, list of those figured in Vol. II. of the Gardener's Magazine, viii. Joanneum de Gratz, 15th report, notice of, 79. Johnson, Mr. Cuthbert William, essay on the uses of salt, &c., reviewed, 339; letter on the same subject, 339.
Mr. G. W., on salt as a manure, 1. Jones and Clark, Messrs. description of the conservatory at the Grange, 170.
Irish Farmer's Journal, notice of its discon- tinuance, 240.
Irish furze, broom, and yew, 241; where to be purchased, 356.
Iron hot-houses, Mr. Macmurtrie's opinion on, 242. on their merits and demerits,
by Mr. A. Gordon, 291. Island of Peacocks, at Potsdam, 85. Itinerating, juvenile, and village libraries, 376; of East Lothian, 376; of Mid Lothian, 376. Judd, Mr. Daniel, F.H.S., observations on a dis- ease to which grapes are liable, and on the means of preventing it, 190.
Kalendar, gardener's, remarks on, 488. Kalendarial index, remarks on, 488. 502. Keen's fruit garden, Isleworth, notice of, 365. Kendall, Mr. Alfred, his method of destroying the red spider, 38.
on the importance of adopting and pursuing a proper plan for pruning and training fruit trees, 140. Kensington Nursery, Messrs. Malcolm and Gray, notice of, 369.
Kew Gardens, hints for establishing a library there, 248; remarks on, 313.
King's Botanic Garden at Kew, remarks on the policy pursued in the management of, by J. P. Burnard, Esq., 313.
Kirschewasser, an imitation of, in Scotland, 98.
Knight, T. A., Esq., F.R.S., L.S., Pres. H.S., &c., on some new seedling pears, 419. -, on the bitter-sweet apple,
on the culture of straw- berries, 184; on the cultivation of the Ama- rýllis Sarniénsis, or Guernsey lily, 185; on the transplantation of plants with spindle- shaped roots, 199.
on the qualities of newly raised fruits, exemplified in plums, 428.
Alexander Gordon, 291; unfavourable opi-Labourers' institutions, 373. nion of, by Mr. Macmurtrie, 242. Laburnum seeds, poisonous to cows, 235.
Lactúca, the lettuce, its poisonous and medical | qualities, 455.
La Gasca, Professor, Hortus Siccus by, de- scribed and recommended, 220; on the gar- dening and botany of Spain, 393.
Lamp, for keeping the frost out of small green- houses, 123.
Landscapes, list of those engraved in Vol. II. of the Gardener's Magazine, viii. Land steward, advertisement for a situation, 126. Larminat, his experience in grafting the pine tribe, 63.
Latham, Mr. John, his mode of training and fastening the shoots of vines on the roofs of cottages, 43.
Lathrop's Farmer's Library, &c., 344. Latour, Mr., notice of his villa at Craven Hill, 369.
Laurustínus, notice of one grafted on the way- faring tree, 60.
Laying out and planting small gardens, 253. Le Bon Jardinier for 1826, by A. Poiteau and Vilmorin, reviewed, 58.
Lemon tree, some account of a remarkable one in the garden of C. Hoare, Esq., at Luscombe, Devonshire, by Mr. Richard Saunders, 29. Leóntodon taraxacum, its medical qualities, 337. Lepinois, Petit Cours d'Agriculture, &c., 77. Lettuce, cabbage, the Perpignan and Montre, 447.
union cabbage, 436; black-seeded Gotte, 436; ice, of the United States, 436. -, sorts of, for small salad, or to be used as spinach, 437.
substitute for, in Picrídium vulgáre,
437. Libraries, garden, see Garden Libraries. village, see Village Libraries. Lichtervelde's Béche, ou la mine d'or de la Flandre Orientale, 344.
Lime-kilns, 399; Booker's, 400; Menteath's, at Closeburn, 400; Heathorn's, 402; York- shire, 403.
comparative remarks on, by J. C. Stuart Menteath, Esq. 399. Lindegaard's culture of the vine in Denmark, 344.
Lindley, John, Esq., F.L.S., Assist. Sec. Hort. Soc., observations upon the natural laws which govern the production of double flowers, arising out of a remarkable case of preter- natural formation in the flowers of an ama- rýllis, 191.
on Persian melons, 433. on the effect of frost on plants in the garden of the H. S., &c., 421. report upon the new or rare plants which have flowered in the garden of the Horticultural Society at Chiswick from March, 1824, to March, 1825, 186. Linnean Botanic Garden, Flushing, near New York, account of, 90.
Linnean Society of London, general report on, 470; Transactions of, Vol. XV., Part I., re- viewed, 338.
Linnean Society of Paris, 84.
Liquid manure, on the importance of, by Mr. John Robinson, F.H.S., 18. Lochnile gardens, 32.
Loddiges Botanical Cabinet, for December, 1826, reviewed, 72; for January and Febru- ary, 1827, 206; for March and April, 334, 335; for May and June, 451. Loddiges, Messrs., of Hackney, origin and date of their nursery, 386. Lodoícea, (A name of Commerson's, supposed to be in memory of Laodice, a Trojan lady, who first was made happy by Acamas; after- wards married Helicaon, son of Antenor;
next, Telephus, king of Mysia; and finally threw herself down from the top of a tower, and was killed, when Troy was sacked by the Greeks. Commerson named various plants after remarkable females; among others, the Hortensia, after his own mistress, who, in the disguise of a sailor, saved his life.) the double cocoa nut, its description and uses, 448. Lólium temulentum, its poisonous qualities, and supposed mixture with malt, 211. Lombards, Manuel des propriétaires d'abeilles, &c., 78.
Loquat, Eriobotrya Japónica, treatment of, 234. Lot's wife, explanation of the allegory respect- ing, by Agronome, 305. Loudon's Encyclopädie des Gartenwesens, 79. Landwirthschaft, 79. Lowe, Mr. Hugh, his description of a propa- gation shelf in the Clapton nursery, with the mode of using it, &c., 25.
Lyne Grove, near Chertsey, Surrey, notice re- specting, 366.
Machines, list of those figured in Vol. II. of the Gardener's Magazine, viii.
Maclúra aurantiaca, criticisms on the conduct- or's remarks on, 486.
male plant of, at New
York, 350. MacMurtrie, Mr., C.M.H.S., on a pit and stoves heated by fire and steam jointly, 419. Madras school, suitableness of, for country vil- lages, 25.
Magnólia grandiflóra, mode of preserving from the frost, in Mr. Boursault's garden, 63. Magnólia Yulan (conspicua Salisb.), notice of its introduction, 334; superb specimen in the Kensington Nursery figured and described, 370.
Main, Mr., observations on Chinese scenery, plants, and gardening, 135; note on winter pruning the vine, 413.
Malmaison, gardens of, 223.
Manger's system of classing fruits, 445. Mango, account of two varieties ripened in the garden of the Earl of Powis, by Joseph Sabine, Esq., F.R.S., &c., 432. Mangosteen, see Garcínia, 223. Mangold Wurzel, remarkable field of, 231, Manuel du Jardinier,, &c., 78. Manure, a cheap and efficacious mode of procur- ing, 233.
Manuring, by turning in green crops in bloom, 123.
Marriage tree in Italy, 226. Masey, Mr. J. P., notice of a present to garden libraries from, 247.
Matthews, Mr. Andrew, A. L. S., description of the different varieties of Parsnips, cultivated in the garden of the Horticultural Society of London, 190.
Maund's Botanic Garden, for December, 1826, reviewed, 73; for January and February, 1827, 207; for March and April, 336; for May and June, 443; (advertised), 128. M'Dougal, his mode of destroying worms and slugs, 466.
Mealy Bug, Cóccus lanígera, on vines and plants in pots, on the destruction of, by Mr. James Strachan, 166.
Medals given by Horticultural Societies, re- marks as to the persons and subjects to and for which they are given, 237.
Medical Botany, &c., by John Stevenson, M.D. and James Morss Churchill, Esq., Surgeon, reviewed, No. I. for January, p. 111.; No. II. for Feb., 327; for March, April, and June, 454. Meloncito de olor, 95
Melon Compost, on collecting, by W. R. Y, 404. Melon, treatise on the, noticed, 74.
-, Winter, description of one of extraordi- nary dimensions, 229. Melons and cucumbers, description of stoves for the growth of, by Mr. John Haythorn, C.M.H.S., 425.
Melons, Persian, account of ten varieties, by Mr. John Lindley, F.L.S., 433. Melons, plan for obtaining a second crop of, by Mr. Charles Harrison, F. H.S., 414; to propa- gate by cuttings, 414.
Menteath, C. J. S., Esq., on lime-kilns, 399; his lime-kiln described and figured, 400. Mentor, on the Spanish hoe, 233; remarks by, on the mode of application for grafts, cuttings, &c. to the H.S., 106.
Merinos, Troupeaux de, &c., 78.
Meteorological observations made in the garden of the Horticultural Society, during the year 1825, report upon, 204.
Metropolitan garden and agricultural library, hint for establishing, 248. Metrosidéros lanceolata, on a garden wall at Edinburgh, 239.
Metrosidéros Lophánta, hardy in France, 459. Metzger's cereal grasses of Europe, some account of, 343; Weinbau, 343.
Mice and rats, notices of modes for destroying, 61.
Mice, simple garden trap for, 278. Michie, Mr. James, on setting the blossoms of the more shy-bearing kinds of pears, 320. Misletoe, its propagation by Mr. Keen, 366. Mitcheson, Mr. William, on the cultivation of the Passiflóra quadranguláris, 203; on a mode of preparing strawberries for early forcing, 390.
Mitchinson, Mr. James, on the culture of early potatoes in Cornwall, 174.
Mixture and variety, principles of, explained,
Models of estates, by Mr. Crowe, notice of, 232. Modern style of laying out grounds in Russia, history of the first introduction of, by one of the imperial gardeners, 385.
Moggridge, John H. Esq., remarks on his cot- tage system, as applied to Ireland, 240; an account of a successful experiment, made with a view to ameliorate the condition of country labourers, 19,
Mons, Jean Baptiste Van, M.D., notes on graft- ing, budding, and cultivating garden roses,
Montgomery, Mr. Duncan, C. M.H.S., on the cul- tivation of an early and a late variety of the pear on the same tree, 199. Mont-Rouge Nursery, history of, 59. Morretti's Biblioteca Agraria, 344. Morris's Botanist's Manual, (advertised), 127. Morris, Richard, Esq., F.L.S., his elegant work on plants, 35; observations on water as re- gards ornamental Scenery, 286. Morton, Mr. Andrew, on forcing strawberries, 393.
Muir, Messrs. J. & A. of Greenock, their pro- gress in the imitation of Leghorn bonnets, 239; on the growth and manufacture of straw plait for hats, 456.
Mulberry leaves, substitute for, 346. Mulberry plantation at Slough, account of, 235. Munro, Mr. Donald, F.L.S., account of the cul- tivation of Chinese Chrysanthemums in the garden of the Horticultural Society, 187. Murray, John, Esq., F.A.S., L.S., H.S., G.S., &c., on the establishment of M. Fellenberg, at Hofwyl, 347.
Murray, Mr. Stewart, C. M. H.S., on cultivating North American orchideous plants, 332. Mushroom, a large, 94; on the culture of, in hot- house sheds, by Mr. T. Forrest, C.M.H.S., 406. Mushrooms, cast-iron shelves for, 406; descrip- tion of a mode of growing in a green-house in the neighbourhood of Vienna, by Mr. Na- poleon Bauman, 407; force of vegetation in, 94; large crops of, 94; in arable land, 94; Mr. Haythorn's pit for, described and figured, 280; short directions for raising according to Old- aker's plan, 251.
Musk Plant, A'ster argophyllus, in the open ground, 378.
Nagel's Vollständige Uebersicht, &c., 81.
Nanny-Water, near Drogheda, some account of, 147.
National Forests of Germany, 86. Natural system of plants, the study of by means of a Hortus Siccus, recommended, 221. Natural system, prevalence of papers on, in the Transactions of the Linnean Society, 470; opi- nion respecting in Van Dieman's Land, 470. Nelumbiums, idea of producing hybrids, with Nymphæ a and Nuphar, 429; on the cultiv- ation of in Italy, by Joseph Clare, Esq., 428. Nelumbium speciosum, on the culture of, by Mr. A. Stewart, F.H.S., 416. Nepaul Silver Fir described, 462. New South Wales, notice of its agriculture, 229. cultivation of sugar in, 229.
New Zealand flax, culture of in France, 63. Nicotiána, now Petunia nyctaginiflóra, 446. Niven, Mr. James, a distinguished botanical collector, notice of his life and death, 255. Noël, a French florist, notice of, 59. Nott, Mr. Wm., on forcing strawberries, 392. Noisette's Nursery, history of, 59. Nurseries of Paris, notices of, 59. Nurserymen of Paris, notices of the principal, 59. Nursery gardens, advantage of employing com- mon labourers in, rather than professed gar- deners, 271.
Nuts, mode of keeping, by A. B. Lambert, Esq., F.R.S., Pres. L.S., &c., 431.
Oak bark, Mimósa of New South Wales, as a substitute for, 277.
Oak from the acorn, on raising plantations of, by Mr. Thomas Allen, F. H.S., 277. Oberlin, Jean-Frideric, a benevolent Protestant pastor, notice of his life, 85. Observations on the Corn Laws, by Sir Claude Scott, (advertised), 127.
Enóthera biennis, roots of, as Rampion, 457. cæspitósa and Galárdia bícolor, culti- vation of, 379.
Oil as a manure in France, 84. Oldaker, Mr. Isaac, F.H.S., description of the Black Raisin Grape, &c., 174; list of goose. berries by, for a small garden, 253.
Olive, its culture in the South of Europe, 455. Oliver, Mr. J., on the Wyken Pippin, 487; no- tice of the late Mr. John Whitlock, 487. Onions, some remarkable ones noticed, 241. Orange and Lemon trees, treatment of in Italy, by Mr. Shea, 430.
Orchards in Argyle and Inverness, some ac count of, 32.
Orchideous plants of N. America, method of cultivating by Mr. Stewart Murray, C.M.H.S., 332. -, on the culture of, by A. X.,
385, Outlines of Botany reviewed, 338. Oxális carnósa, 450.
Oxen, working of, opinion on, 488. Packing seeds, query as to the best method, by a Constant Reader, 254. Pæónia Moútan, on its varieties, by Jos. Sabine, Esq., F.R.S., &c. 423; remarks respecting their introduction from China, by J. M., 423; figure of the word Moútan in the Chinese cha- racter, 424; varieties enumerated, 424. Pæony, the tree, see Pæónia Moútan. Palace and gardens for the King, in the manner of those of Babylon, hints for, 372. Pánicum germánicum, its description and uses, by Mr. G. Sinclair, F.L.S., H.S., 224. Paragrêles, Rapport sur l'Utilité des, 78. Park at Brussels, 87.
Parkin, Mr. Thomas, cultivation of the cucum- ber at Thoresby Gardens, Nottinghamshire,
Parsnips, description of the different varieties cultivated in the garden of the Horticultural Society in London, by Mr. Andrew Mathews, A.L.S., 190.
Passiflóra édulis, fruit of, ripened in a commion green-house, 232.
covered by Mr. Douglas, 228.
Passiflóra quadranguláris, on the cultivation of, | Pinus, new species of, in North America, dis- by Mr. William Mitcheson, 203. Paupaille's Discours sur les Applications de la Chimie à l'Agriculture, et à la Botanique, character of, 77.
Peaches and Apricots, budded on almond stocks, observations on Mr. Anderson's experiments with, by Hortulanus, 168.
Peaches and Grapes, Mr Haythorn's wooden structure for, described and figured, 281. Peaches, list of some American sorts, sent to the Garden of the Horticultural Society,
-, on budding, on almond stocks, by Causidicus, 167.
Peach trees, advantages of budding on almond stocks, 168.
-, explanatory remarks on Mr. Sey- mour's mode of training, by Mr. John Sey- mour, 295.
Pea, different early varieties in the Garden of Gunnersbury House, 363; early Spanish dwarf, 93; golden Hotspur, 93.
Peas and beans, mode of transplanting in Flan- ders, 461.
Peas, second crops of, 93, 94.
Pear, a huge, in Dumfriesshire, 101. - Duchesse d'Angouleme, 94; John Mon- teith, 98; on the cultivation of an early and a late variety on the same tree, by Mr. Duncan Montgomery, C.M.H.S., 199; Stuyvesant's, from America, 415; Uvedale's St. Germain, an extraordinary one from Jersey, 241. 243; wild sort, uses of, in Russia, 89.
Pears, account of some new ones, by John Brad- dick, Esq., F.H.S., 39; account of some new seedlings, by T. A. Knight, Esq. F.R.S. Pres. H.S., &c., 419; Belle Lucrative, and Beurrée Kirk, 42; Colmar and Crassane, a particular mode of training recommended, 262; French, observations on the management of the finer sorts, &c., by F. N. B., 257; Henri Quatre, Urbaniste, 39; list of new and superior sorts, which will succeed as standards about Lon- don, 253; list of select new ones, by John Braddick, Esq. F.H.S., 159; new French sorts, planted at Bristol, 463; note on the keeping qualities of different sorts, 41; setting the blossoms of the more shy-bearing kinds, by Mr. James Michie, 320.
Pear tree, an extraordinary, 94. Peat Moss, natural and agricultural history of, reviewed, 214.
best sorts of trees for planting on, 214; review of Steele's History of, in the British Farmer's Magazine, 456. Peckra, the country-residence of the Prince M. P. Galitzin, near Moscow, 89.
Pectic Acid, method of preparing, by Dr. A. T. Thomson, 677.
Pennsylvania Agricultural Society, memoirs of, noticed, 344.
Petersen, Mr. J. P., on the cultivation of Cele- riac, 415.
Petit's Nouveau Dictionnaire du Jardinage, &c., 78.
Petunia, formerly Nicotiána, 446.
Phalangium esculentum, as a substitute for bread, 102. 228.
Pheasants, blackbirds, and thrushes, to feed in winter, 123.
Phellándrium, its poisonous qualities, 454. Photinia glábra, a most desirable hardy ever- green shrub, 239.
Picrídium vulgáre, as a salad lettuce, 437. Pike, Mr. William, on an improvement in the propagation of the Double Camellia, 33. Pine and fir tribe, directions for grafting, 64; plants raised from layers, 65.
Pine pits, construction of, in Mr. Wilmot's Garden at Isleworth, 364.
Pinus Laricio, grafted on Pinus sylvestris, 63.
spectábilis, described, 462. Pirolle's Jardinier Amateur, reviewed, 215. Pit and stoves, heated by fire and steam jointly, description of, by Mr. William Mac Murtrie, C.M. H.S., 419.
Pit, flued, for growing cucumbers and melons, &c., by Mr. John Haythorn, C.M. H.S., 279; for winter and early spring forcing, description of, by Mr. A. Stewart, F. H.S., 414. Planting, great advantages of duly preparing the soil previously to, 75; in France, 87. Plants, anatomical preparations of, by Mr. F. Crowe, (advertised), 356; equivocal production of, 346; from China, suggestions for accli- mating, 122; in pots, treatment of, 483; in the Garden of the Horticultural Society, report on the effect produced on, by the frost of April 29th, 1826, by Mr. John Lindley, F.L.S., 424; list of those figured in Vol. II. of the Gardener's Magazine, viii.; new or rare, which have flowered in the Garden or the Horticultural Society at Chiswick, from March 1824 to March 1825, report upon, by Mr. Lindley, F.L.S., 186; notice of im- provements in printing the scientific names of, in the Gardener's Magazine, 488; number of, necessary to exemplify the natural system in a garden, 302; of New Holland, Mr. Sweet's proposal for a work on, 82; on the cultivation of, in moss, by Mr. John Street, C.M. H.S., 419; progress of the love of, 303; rare, added to the Garden of the Horticultural Society, from Colombia, by Mr. David Dou- glas, 442; rare, which have flowered in the neighbourhood of Paris 60; splendid and select sorts, which have flowered at Bury Hill, 297; that will grow in London, 484; worth possessing by every one who has a garden, list of, $70.
Poiteau, A., and Vilmorin, Le bon Jardinier for 1826, by, reviewed, 58. Pollockshaws, Florist Club of, 465. Polyanthuses, new sorts of, made public, and for sale, 74.
Pontier's Connaissance des Terres en Agricul- ture, noticed, 341. Portuguese Cabbage, or CoúveTronchuda,query, 124; culture of, 434.
Potato, advantage of pinching off the blossoms, 94; early crop raised in Mr. Saul's manner, 464; raised near Penzance, by planting in December, 464; extraordinary increase of a single one, 232; golden, of Peru, 435; red golden, 435; asparagus potato, 436; mouse,436; pine-apple or cone, 436.; Spanish dwarf, 436; notice of a second crop of, planted in August, 48; on the field culture of, in Argyleshire, by W. M., 316; the early Foxley, Nelson, and Rufford kidney, 171.
Potatoes, an early crop grown among rags, 232; artificial watering of, 102; second crop of, 94; early, on the culture of, in Cornwall, by Mr. James Mitchinson, 174; early, on the mode of growing them in the North of Lan- cashire, by Mr. Mathias Saul, 47; early, on the mode of cultivating, in Denbighshire, by a Denbighshire Gardener, 171; raising new sorts from seed, 124; remarks on the choice of, for seed, by a Denbighshire Gardener, 317; Scotch,superior flavour and dryness of,107. Prevost's Essai sur l'Education des arbres fruitiers, &c., 78. Prévôt de Rivolta's Nuovo Metodo di Agricul- tura, noticed, 81.
Prince, Mr., C.M. H.S., account of his nursery at
Flushing, near New York, 90; catalogue of fruit and ornamental trees, &c., notice of, 345. Propagation Shelf, description of, in the Clapton Nursery, with the mode of using it, &c., by Mr. Hugh Lowe, 25.
Provincial Horticultural Society, query respect- ing, by C. F. W., 255.
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