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PART IV.

ADVERTISEMENTS CONNECTED WITH GARDENING AND
RURAL AFFAIRS.

AS

S GARDENER, or GAR-
DENER and BAILIFF, or KEEPER,

a Situation is wanted for a married Man, Forty
Years of Age, without Incumbrance. He has
a general knowledge of his business in the above
branches, having filled them all, and can be
well recommended., Letters, post paid, addressed
to G. S. T. at C. and J. Young's Nursery,
Epsom, Surrey, will meet immediate attention.

To the Nobility, Gentry, Vine-Cultivators,

and others.

A MOST IMPORTANT and VALUABLE IMPROVEMENT in the CULTURE of the GRAPE VINE, and for advancing the Fruit to the highest state of perfection.

The Inventor, JOHN LONG, Hothouse Builder, &c. Beaufort Place, Chelsea (at the foot of Battersea Bridge), begs most respectfully to invite the Nobility, Gentry, and Horticulturists generally, to an inspection of his newly-invented moveable Wire-trellis Frames, by means of which the Vines are lowered from the glass roof, and raised at pleasure to any angle with the greatest facility, without the slightest injury to the plants, thereby effectually securing them from injury from the extremes of cold and heat, ensuring a plentiful crop of well-matured grapes, and causing a considerable saving in fuel at a comparatively trifling expence.

J. L. can with the greatest confidence recommend the adoption of the above invention, and ensure its success in all cases; its utility for all the purposes for which it was designed having been most fully exemplified, as, from the highly respectable references he is enabled to give, can be amply proved.

Manufactured and erected by the Inventor in any part of the United Kingdom, on the shortest Notice.

PINCE'S GOLDEN NECTARINE.

LUCOMBE, PINCE, & Co. beg leave to call the attention of the Public to a new kind of NECTARINE, raised by them, which they have named as above; it is a most beautiful and highly desirable Fruit, of a large size, with a rich and very peculiar flavour. Its appearance marks it out most decidedly as a Fruit very distinct from any other hitherto produced.

Trees may be had on application to Messrs. LUCOMBE, PINCE, & Co. Nurserymen, Exeter, at 10s. 6d. each.

Nursery, Exeter, Sept. 10. 1826,

SOUTH AFRICAN BOTANY, &c.' ~~

JAMES BOWIE begs leave to

be ready to receive and execute orders for Seeds, inform the Botanical Public, that he will Bulbs, Plants, and dried specimens (natives of S. Africa), at the Cape of Good Hope, in the course of a few months from this date, and assures those Persons who may favour him with their Orders, that he will attend thereto with the utmost care and diligence.

J. B. not having appointed any Agent in Europe for the disposal of his future Collections, informs those Persons who may wish to favour him with their commands, and who have no mitted through the means of Visitors in transitu, correspondents at the Cape, that Orders transbe punctually attended to; and the seeds, bulbs, and plants, packed agreeably to their several or the Captains of the regular Cape traders, will natures, will be forwarded in the proper seasons will be given for the safer conveyance of the only, and, when requisite, written instructions specimens in question. Having been pretty successful hitherto in the transmission of seeds from the southern hemisphere, he sees no plausible objections to seeds being still allowed to cross the equator, with every hope of ultimate success, and especially those of some fine species the extinction or weakening of the vegetative which have hitherto failed in consequence of powers in seeds. With such, a course of experiments, founded on practical observations, will be made

they will hereafter be made public.
and, should they prove successful,

&c. touch at the Cape of Good Hope on their Many Vessels from the East Indies, China, return to Europe, having plants on board, which are too frequently in a very precarious condition. The Advertiser, while in the neighbourhood of Cape Town, and when requested, will examine the state of such growing plants, and freely sugto the future preservation of them, free of all gest such farther methods as may be conducive expence to the applicants; and in so doing, he hopes to be the means of preserving many valu. able plants for their owners, whose laudable exertions and heavy expences too often end in disappointment.

Professors in the various branches of Natural History will find this a favourable opportunity adding new and interesting specimens to their of increasing their Collections, and perhaps of Cabinets, as the Advertiser has already paid some attention to this circle of the Sciences, and is equally anxious to increase his knowledge; and this he will be enabled to do, being entirely freed from the restrictions under which he laboured while in His Majesty's service. addition to any specimens he may furnish, he tion which may pass under his notice, of the will be ever ready to forward any true informauses, habits, and economy of both the animal and vegetable kingdoms,

Kew, August 1826.

In

Just Published, Price 1s. 6d., with a descriptive
Plate,

APRACTICAL ESSAY on the

CULTURE OF THE VINE, and TREATISE ON THE MELON, by an Expea rienced Gardener, and Member of the Horticultural Society, held at Baldock, in the County of Hertford.

Royston: Printed, published and sold by J. WARREN; sold also by Messrs. LONGMAN AND Co., Paternoster Row, London, and all other Booksellers.

In 2 volumes royal 8vo., with 172 coloured
plates. Price 51. 5s. in boards.

DENDROLOGIA

In royal 4to. Price 7s.

ROBINSON'S ORNAMENT-
NT-

AL VILLAS, No. IX., containing a De-
Henry VII.
sign in the Style of Building of the Period of

Grecian, Italian, Swiss, Palladian, Norman, The prior Numbers consist of Designs in the and Old English Styles.

SONS, Old Bond Street. Of whom may be had, London: Printed for JAMES CARPENTER and by the same Author, in 4to., Price 31. 3s., a Second Edition of

RURAL ARCHITECTURE; or, a Series of Designs for Ornamental Cottages, Lodges, Dairies, &c. &c.

BRITAN-BOOKS on NATURAL HISTORY, BOTA

NICA; or Trees and Shrubs that will live in the open air of Britain throughout the Year.

A Work useful to Proprietors and Possessors of

Estates, in selecting subjects for planting Woods,
Parks, and Shrubberies; and also to all Persons
who cultivate Trees and Shrubs. By P. W.
WATSON, F. L. S., &c.
London, published by JOHN and ARTHUR ARCH,
Cornhill.

BOOKS on FIELD SPORTS, NATURAL
HISTORY, &c. published by J. HARDING,
No. 32, St. James's Street.

1.

NY, &c., sold by J. HARDING, No. 32, St.
James's Street.

A CURIOUS COLLECTION
SKETCHES, comprising about a Thousand
of ORIGINAL DRAWINGS and
subjects of Natural History, with Descriptions,
Vermes; Lepidoptera, &c. 5 vols 4to.
divided into Classes: Mammalia; Pisces

407,

;

2. SINCLAIR'S HORTUS GRAMINEUS: WOBURNIENSIS: an Account of Experider of the Duke of Bedford: the Original Ediments on the Grasses made at Woburn, by ortion, illustrated by Dried Specimens of the Grasses, Seeds, &c. &c., a very fine copy. 201.

1. SIR JOHN SEBRIGHT'S tise on Pasture Grasses, with Specimens of the

OBSERVATIONS upon HAWKING, and the Mode of BREAKING and MANAG ING the several Kinds of HAWKS used in FALCONRY — - Comprising Details on Partridge, Magpie, Rook and Heron Hawking; History and particular Management of the Fal con, Goshawk, Passage Hawk, Sparrow Hawk, Icelander, Gerfalcon, &c. &c., with a Description of the various Implements and Practices used in reclaiming and breaking them. 8vo. 5s.

2. SIR JOHN SEBRIGHT'S TREATISE on BREEDING, or the Art of improving the Breeds of Domestic Animals. 8vo. 2s. 6d.

3. An ESSAY on BREAKING DOGS for SPORTING, by WM. FLOYD, Gamekeeper to Sir J. Sebright. 8vo. 2s. 6d.

4. The GAME BOOK and SPORTSMAN'S CHRONICLE; by means of which an accurate account may be kept of the various kinds of Game, when, where, and by whom killed, how disposed of in presents or otherwise by the Gamekeeper, and various other particulars. Forming an agreeable Companion to the Lover of Field Sports, and enabling him to preserve a Journal of Sporting Occurrences from year to year. Price 7s in a small size, fitted for the Game Bag, or larger; and in various bindings, suited to the Shooting Box or Chateau. Price 10s. 6d., 21s., 50s. and upwards.

5. The FISHING BOOK, or ANGLER'S COMPANION, upon the same plan. Price 7s. and 10s. 6d.

3. SWAIN'S GRAMINA PASCUA: a TreaGrasses, and Descriptive Account. Folio. 31. 3s. BRITISH GRASSES, systematically arranged, 4. SALISBURY'S HORTUS SICCUS of the with One Hundred dried Specimens of Grasses. Folio. 31. 3s.

5. KNAPP'S GRAMINA BRITANNICA; Remarks; with One Hundred and Nineteen or Representations of British Grasses, with coloured Plates. 4to. 81. 8s. 6d.

*** At HARDING'S may be seen a great variety of Books on AGRICULTURE, BOTANY, GARDENING, and the relative subjects, many of them scarce and curious; and of part of the Collection a Catalogue may be had, price 18.

This day is published, in one vol. 8vo. with 60 coloured Plates, price 2. 12s. 6d.

FLORA CONSPICUA; a Se

Hardy, Exotic, and Indigenous Trees, Shrubs, lection of the most Ornamental Flowering, and Herbaceous Plants, for embellishing Flower Gardens and Pleasure Grounds. The Generic and Specific Names, the Classes and Orders, and distinguished Characters, in strict agreement with Linnæus; the Remarks as to cultivation, treatment, and propagation; the particular earth for each plant, its height of growth, month of flowering, and native country. By Richard scape Gardening, &c. Morris, F.LS. &c., Author of Essays on LandPublished by Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green.

INDEX.

INDEX.

A. C, query of, 359; answer, 378.
A Constant Reader, on diseased elm trees, 378.
query of, 96; answer, 229.

A Friend to Discussion, $93.

Facts, remarks by, 391.
A. S., query respecting gold & silver fish, 229.
A Subscriber, query of, and answer, 229.
A Young Gardener, query of, and answer, 229.
Acclimating plants, remarks on, 214.
Acorn, used to fatten sheep in Germany, 200.
African sheep in the United States, 86.
Agave Americana, uses of in Mexico, 206.
Agricultural and Botan. Soc. of Ghent, 201.

Company of Australasia, 86.
establishment in France, 445.
implements (advertised), 230.
schools of Switzerland, 82.
Society of Calcutta, 207.
Moscow, 443.
Stockholm, 83.
Wurtemburg, 441.

Agriculture connected with garden culture, 7.
in the neighbourhood of Warsaw, 4.
of the State of New York, me-
moirs of, remarks on, 443.
of the island of Corsica, 79.
Allen, Mr. T., F. H.S., on cucumbers, 416.
Amager, an island of gardens near Copen-
hagen, 272.

Amaryllis, on a hybrid produced between A.
vittata and A. Regina vittata, by J. R.
Gowen, Esq. F.H.S. 70.
Amateur, on the Granadilla, 15.

, query of, 229; answer, $56.
American aloe in flower at Chiswick, 89.

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fine specimen of, at Kitley, 335.
blight, (Aphis lanigera, some ac-
count of an attempt to arrest the ravages of,
on fruit trees, by T. C. Huddlestone, Esq.
F.H.S., 388.

American botanic gardens, 52.
botanists, 53.

cranberry and oak leaves, in Ger-
many, 80.
Anderson, Mr. John, F.H.S., gardener to the
Earl of Essex, celery grown in trenches by
him, 170; recipe for tomata sauce, 353.
Anderson, Mr. William, F.L.S. H.S., curator
of the botanic garden, Chelsea, on packing
and preserving seeds, 210; remarks, in-
cluding the results of some experiments on
budding the peach, &c. on almond stocks, 384.
Angler's book, (advertised), 233.

Annales Agricoles, de Roville, par Mathieu
de Dombasle, account of, 196.
Annfield, the villa of Dr. Percival, 261.
Anona squamosa, ripened by Earl Powis, 73.
Ants, how destroyed in France, 80.
Aphis lanigera, or American blight, an'attempt
to arrest the ravages of, on fruit trees, by T.
C. Huddlestone, Esq. F. H.S., 388.
Apple, Bere court-pippin, 73.

Calville rouge de Micoud, 429.
Claygate pearmain, 73.
Cray pippin, ib.

Jubilee pippin, 72.

Esopus Spitzenberg, 78.

stony royd pippin, 73.

mammoth, 351.

Pomme de deux ans, 94.

golden knob, old maid, or old lady, 269.
Apples, how marked with the impression of a
leaf in Persia, 332.

how to retain good varieties of in the
country, 223

on a mode of keeping through the
winter, by Mr. Robert Donald, 268.

VOL. I. No. 4.

Apples, remarkable variety at St. Valery in
Normandy, some account of, 198.
Arachis hypogaa, on its culture, by Mr. John
Newman, 66.

Archibald, Mr. J., C. M.H.S. On Dalhousie
castle and gardens, and the botany of the
neighbourhood, 251.

Architectural improvement, 353.

Architecture, half a dozen hints on, (adver-
tised), 97. 361.

Arniston, botany of, 256.

Arracacha, description and account of, 332.
Asparagus, on the cultivation of, during the
winter, by Mr. P. Lindegaard, C. M. H.S. 173.
Astragalus Baeticus as a substitute for coffee,
82; remarks on, 440.

Atkinson's agriculture of New South Wales,
remarks on, 432.

Atkinson, W., Esq. F.H.S., his directions for
the management of hot-house fire-places, &c.
167; his Grove End scarlet strawberry, 72.
Atti del Real Instituto d'Incorragiamento, &c.,
account of, 196.

Aubergine, the brinjall, a variety of the egg-
plant, Solanum melongena, 307.
Australian Agricultural Company, 86.
Averruncator, echénillier, Fr., its use in the
Netherlands, 325.

Baical lake, great botanical interest of, 52.
Bailey, Mr. W., F.H.S. civil engineer, Lon-
don, Traité de l'Emploi de la Vapeur pour
les Serres Chaudes, &c. account of, 197.
Bailly, M. C., abridgment of his pamphlet on
raising fruit trees, 80..

Baines, E. M., Esq. on an anomalous appear-
ance in Lilium, 273.

Balfour, Mr. W., on reverse grafting, 71, 274.
Banks, Sir Joseph, P. R.S. &c. &c., 53, 54.
Banyan tree, on the treatment of, by Captain
Peter Rainier, F. H.S., 67.

Barnet, Mr. James, his description of the diffe
rent varieties of strawberries cultivated in
the garden of the Horticultural Society of
London, 420.

Bates, Mr. William, a remarkably large goose-
berry plant growing in his garden at Duf-
field, near Derby, 171.
Bavaria, agriculture of, 445.
Bayldon's art of valuing rents and tillages,
(advertised), 233

Bayswater garden, Comte de Vandes, notice
respecting, 349.

Beattie, Mr. William, C.M.H.S., his descrip-
tion of a vinery, and mode of training prac-
tised in it, 172.
Bees, on the winter management of, commu-
nicated by Miss Ann Dingwall, 153.
quality of their honey and wax relatively
to the flowers they are selected from, 323.
Begbie, Mr., of the botanic garden, Kew, 352.
Belgrave nursery, notice respecting, 221.
Berberis fascicularis, 220.

Bicheno, James Ebenezer, Esq. F.LS., remarks
by, on methods and systems of natural his-
tory, 461.

Biographies wanted for the Gard. Mag. 95.
Biography of some early horticulturists sug-
gested, 470.

Bishop, Mr. David, his history, description,
and mode of treatment of Bishop's early
dwarf pea, 126.

Blakie's essay on the conversion of arable land
into pasture, (advertised), ib.
essay on the management of farm-
yard manure, (advertised), 233.
treatise on hedges and hedge-row tim-
ber, (advertised), 232.

K K

Blakie's treatise on mildew, wheat, lime, &c.
(advertised), 232

treatise on the smut in wheat, (adver.
tised), ib.

Bland, Michael, Esq. his jubilee pippin, 72.
Blenheim, its lake and poplars, 17.
Bletia Tankervillæ, experimental observations
on the culture of, by Mr. Otto, 188.
Bliss, Mr. G., his fruit-grower's instructor,
(advertised), 98.

Bonde, Count of, his improvements near Stock-
holm, 446.

Bones, as manure in Denmark, $26.


, as manure in France, 323.

for manure where ground, and how sold,
with other particulars, 333; how to collect for
vine borders, 334.
Book-keeping, method of, by A. Trotter, Esq. 192
Books advertised for January 1826, 97; for
April, 230; for July, S61; for October, 443.
Books on Gardening, Agriculture, Botany, Do-
mestic Economy, &c., published since January
1824, including new editions, &c., 74.
Books: America, 1824-5, 78; January 1826,
78; April, 197; October, 443
Britain, 1824-5,74; January 1826, 74;
April, 192; July, 312; October, 431.
France, 1824 5, 76; January 1826, 76;

April, 195; July, 318; October, 437.
Germany, 1824, 77; 1825, 78; January
1826, 77; April, 196; July, 320; October, 440.
Books, Danish and Swedish, 1824, 77; 1825,
78; January 1826, 77; Apríl, 197; July, 322.
Books, Dutch and Flemish, 1824, 77; 1825, 78;
January 1826, 77; April, 197; October, 442.
Books, Italian, 1824, 77; 1825, 78; January

1826, 77; April, 196; July, 326.
Russian and Polish, 1824, 77; 1825, 78;
January 1826, 77; October, 442.
Spanish and Portuguese, 1824, 77;
1825, 78; January 1826, 77; April, 196;
July, 322.

Books preparing for publication, 443.

reviewed for January 1826, 47; for April,
155; for July, 287; for October, 415.
Borage as manure, 200.

Bornholz's translation of Egger on the Culture
of the Truffle, 320.
Botanical Cabinet, review of, 47. 60.

Cultivator (advertised), 98.
Lectures, popular, delivered at Edin-
burgh by professor Graham, 220;
in Belfast by Dr. Drummond, 340.
Magazine, review of, 47. 89.
Magnifier, for gardeners, 358.
Register, review of, 47. 60, (adver-
tised), 98. 362.
Sketches, notice of, 192.

Botanic Garden at Batavia, 52.

at Calcutta, 55.

at Edinburgh, 218.

at the Isle of France, 55.

at Madrid, 257.

at Marylebone, broken up, 89.
at New South Wales, 55, 86.
at Spain, 236.

at St. Petersburgh, 51; de-
scribed, 89.

at St. Vincent, 55; an account
of, by the Rev. L. Guilding, B. A. F.LS.
reviewed, 193,
Botanic Garden at Trinidad, 55.

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| Botany, South African, Mr. Bowie's intentions
respecting, (advertised), 473.
Bouché, M. P. F., his observations on forcing
the Turkish Ranunculus, 186.
Bouché, on the culture of the Torch Thistle, 186.
Boughton Mount, 35.

Bourne, F., Esq., of Tereneure, 262.
Bowers, Mr. John, his description of an Elruge
Nectarine tree, in the garden of West Dean
House, Sussex, 174.

Bowers, on destroying the Bug and Scale on
Pine plants, 308.

Bowie, Mr. James, Botanical Collector at the
Cape of Good Hope, his hints for the better
cultivation of Cape Heaths, 363; his inten-
tions, (advertised), 473.

Boxtree as manure, in France, 323.
Braddick, John, Esq., F.H.S., his Claygate
Pearmain Apple, 73.

on the Beurré Spence, and other
Pears, and on the art of keeping Fruit, 144.
Braddick, on the Present de Malines Pear, $3.

, on three new keeping Pears, 249.
Brash, Mr., on the culture and use of the sea
or shore Cale (Crambe Maritima), 189.
Brassica, or Cabbage family, on its different

species and varieties, by Prof. Decandolle, 63.
Breedon, the Rev. J. S., his Bere Court-pippin
Apple, 73.

Breese, Mr. John, grows Pines on boards placed
over a pit filled with dung, &c., 308.
Brewing, a practical treatise on, by C. N. Hay-
man, (advertised), 99.

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Mr. Samuel Child's treatise on, (ad-
vertised), 99.

Brighton Athenæum and Oriental Garden, 89.
Brinjal or Aubergine, a variety of the Egg-
plant Solanum Melongena, 307.
British Botanist, (advertised), 100.

Entomology, by John Curtis, Esq. F. L.S.
&c., remarks on, 317.

Farmer, by Mr. John Finlayson, an-
nounced, 99, remarks on, 192.
Flower Garden, reviewed, 47.61.

Parks and Gardens, remarks on, by M
Lenné, royal garden engineer, Potsdam, 308.
British Warblers, &c., by Mr. Robert Sweet,
F.L.S., some account of, 193.
Wines, how to manufacture, 95.
Broccoli, to preserve in a growing state, from
being injured by the frost, 224.
Brookhouse, J. Esq., Cucumbers grown by him
in a dung bed in the front of a peach house, 171.
Brown, Robert, Esq., F.R.S., L.S. &c., 54.
Mr., gardener at Stowe, 89.
Browns, Messrs., formerly of Perth, 256.
Buchan, Mr. W., F.H.S., on improving the
Gardens of Cottages, 275.

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Buck, Mr. W., his Elford seedling Grape, 72.
Buda Kale, on blanching and forcing, by John
Wedgewood, Esq., 307.
Buda-Kale, query respecting, 472.
Budding in the Netherlands, 85.
Bulbous-rooted Plants, culture, by Mr. Sweet, 31.
Roots, the Rev. W. Herbert's treatise
on, (advertised), 99.

Bulos, his Traité d'Agriculture et d'Horti-
culture, noticed, 487.

Burges, Mr. James, his recipe for composing a
liquid for effectually destroying Caterpillars,
Ants, Worms, and other Insects, 389.
Burn, Mr. Henry, F.H.S, his account of a new
seedling Grape, 415.

Burnard, J. P., Esq., on the remuneration of
gardeners, 141.

Burton, W. D., Esq., 353.

Bushy Park, near Dublin, the residence of Sir
Robert Shaw, bart., 263.

Bulletin des Sciences, Agricoles, et Econo-
miques, remarks on, $20.

Cabbage, on the tree variety, by Mr.P.Day, 307.
, or Brassica family, see Brassica, 63.
Cactus, several species of, grafted on Cactus
triqueter, by Mr. John Nairn, 171.
Speciosus, Speciosissimus, and other or-
namental succulent Plants, on the treatment
of, by Mr. W. J. Shennan, 398.

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Caley, Mr. George, 194.
Camellia Britannica, by Messrs. Chandler and
Buckingham, some account of, 317.
Japonica,var. Gloriosa, of Mr. Ross, 211.
, new variety, from the garden of T. C.
Palmer, Esq., 341.

Oleifera, 87.

single white-flowered, $25.
Campbell, Mr., of Bayswater Garden, $49.
Canal digging machine in France, 323.
Cape Heaths, hints for the better cultivation
of, by Mr. James Bowie, 363.

List of, which have been in flower
in the Tooting Nursery in each month of the
year, communicated by Messrs. Rollisson,
nurserymen, Tooting, 366.
Cara of Brazil, query respecting, 358; answ. 468.
Carnations and Piccotees, wonderful collection
of, by Mr. Hogg, Florist, Paddington, 450.
Carrot, Turnip, and Radish, the method of
rearing Seed of in the East Indies, by William
Ingledew, Esq., 174.

Cassilis, Earl of, 254, 257.

Castlereagh House, County of Roscommon,
described, 94.

Caswell, G., his Esopus Spitzenberg apple, 72.
Catalogue des Végétaux de Pleine Terre, &c.
par M. Soulange-Bodin, account of, 186.
Catalogue Raisonnée of Books on Horticulture,
Suggested, 469

Cat erpillars, ants, worms, and other insects,
Recipe for composing a liquid for effectually
destroying, by Mr. James Burges, 589.
Caterpillars in the Netherlands, 325.

on cabbages, how destroyed in Li-
thuania, 84.

remarks on their ravages on the
pine forests of Franconia, 521.
Cauliflowers, on a new mode of preserving, by
Mr. Charles MacIntosh, 139.
Cedar of Lebanon, grafting of, 199.

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remarks on the effect of, in
Landscape, by John Thompson, Esq. 118.
Celery, grown in trenches, by Mr. J. Anderson,
F.H.S., gardener to the Earl of Essex, 170.
Cels, M., Nurseryman, Paris, 49.
Chamois Goat, 210.

Chandler and Buckingham, Camellia Britan-
nica, some account of, 317.

Charcoal dust, as a top dressing for onions, and
as a cure for the clubbing in cabbages, by Mr.
T. Smith, C.M. H.S., 293.
Charlemont, Earl of, 264.

Charlottenlund, a royal seat, Copenhagen, 272.
Charlottenburgh, near Copenhagen, botanic
garden of, 272.

Cherries, forcing of, in the 16th century, in
France, 323.

, on destroying a black insect, which
infests, 464.

to scare birds from, 454.

Cochineal Insects and Silk Worms, in Spain,
204.

Cockerell, C. R., Esq., jun., 107.

Cockles, discovery of their existence in fresh
water, $35.

Code of Agriculture, translated into French by
M. Mathieu Dombasle, 80.

Coffee from the seeds of Astragalus Boeticus,
82.440.

Coloma, Count, of Malines, 34.

Collyns, William, Esq., on a Devonshire prac-
tice in planting vines, and on the use of salt
as a manure for arable lands, and for renovat-
ing grass lawns, 401.

Colsa, a variety of Brassica, cultivated for its
seeds, 64.

Colville, Mr., nurseryman, 31; nursery, 221.
Colzean Castle, treatment of the vines at, 254.
Conservatory at Milburn Tower, 264; at Mr.
Angerstein's, Blackheath, ibid.; at Slane's
Castle, ibid.

Conservatory at the Grange, Hampshire, 105;
planting and list of plants, 108.
Conservatory at Vienna, 82.

Constantinople, Botany of, by the Rev. Dr.
Walsh, 293.

Conversations on Botany, (advertised), 254.
Cooke, Mr., fruiterer, of London, 36.
Copenhagen, gardens of, 270.

Copperas, as a vegetable poison, 444.
Coreopsis tinctoria, description of, 453.
Cormack, Son, and Sinclair, nurserymen, New
Cross, Deptford, 87.
Cottage economy, 354.

Cottagers, premiums given to, 210.
Cotton, growth of, in New Holland, 207.
Country labourer, benefits to be derived by,
from a garden, &c. by W. Stevenson, Esq. 101
-by Mr. Donald, 269.

Country seats, how ruined in Ireland, 13.

in Ireland, omitted in the Ency-
clopædia of Gardening, 94.
Courtown House, County of Wexford, de-
scribed, 94.

Covent Garden Market-January, February,
and March, 216: April, May, and June,
348; July, August, and September, 462.
Cow tree, of South America, 86.
Coxheath, new fruits planted on, by Mr. Brad.
dick, 34.

Crabtree, Miss, fruit of Pyrus Japonica exhi-
bited by her, 87.

Cranberry, on the cultivation of the English
and American, and the water cress at Bret-
ton Hall, by Mr. Christie Duff, C. M. H.S. 151.
Cucumber, a very large one, noticed, 453.
Cucumbers, early, grown in a pit by Mr. John
Mearns, 170.

grown in a dung bed in the front of

a peach house, by J. Brookhouse, Esq., 171;
on forcing, by Mr. Thomas Allen, F. H.S., 416.
Child, Mr. Samuel, his treatise on brewing, (ad- Culinary vegetables, mode of accelerating in
vertised), 99.

Chinampas, or floating garden, 448.
Chinese rose, as a stock for the yellow rose, 66.
Chrysanthemums, account and description of
five new Chinese, &c. 73.

, in the gardens of the Horti-
cultural Society, 87.
Cinders and coal ashes, effects of, on plants, 224.
Cistineæ, review of, 48 61. (advertised), 98.
Clapton Nursery, notice respecting, 220,
Classification of plants, remarks on, 435.
Cleghorn, James, Esq. Accountant in Edin-
burgh, conductor of the Farmer's Magazine,
his tract on a general provident institu-
tion for the benefit of the working classes,
remarks on, 317.

Clerk, Mr., botanical draughtsman, 61.
Climate, considered with regard to Horticul-
ture, by T. F. Daniell, Esq. F.R.S., 287.
Clubbing in cabbages, to cure, 293.
Coal ashes and cinders, effects of, on plants, 224.
Cobœa scandens, 12.

Cobbett, William, Esq, his work entitled The
Woodlands; or, a Treatise on Planting, &c.,
account of, 195.

Louvaine, 325.

Cultivation without dung, 201.
Currants, hybrids, remarks on, 464.
Curtis, John, Esq., his British Entomology,
remarks on, 317.

Curtis, Mr. Samuel, his account of a lime
duster for the destruction of insects, 415.
Curtis, Mr. William, founder of the Botanical
Magazine, 47, 59, 60.

Curtis's directions for cultivating the Crambe
maritima, (advertised), 232.
Cuttings of oranges, how to prepare, 266.
Cyclamen Persicum, on the culture of, by Mr.
John Wilmot, F.H.S., 386.
sweet scented, remarks on, 453.
Dacre, the Rev. B., A.L.S., his testimonies in
favour of salt as manure, (advertised), [97.
Dairies of Switzerland, remarks on, 321.
Dairy account book, (advertised), 232.
Dalhousie Castle and Gardens, &c. by Mr. J.
Archibald, C.M.H.S., 251.

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Countess of, a zealous and indefati-
gable botanist, 255.
Gardens, plan of, 252,
Dalkeith, Botany of, 256, 257.

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