10 



INDEX TO EOYAL AGRICULTURAL JOURNAL. 



Buckley, J., on a peculiar disease in 



ewes, ii. IIB. 

 BncKMAx, James, on finger and toe in 



root crops, xv. 125. 

 , the natural history and agricul- 

 tural economy of the British grasses, 



a prize essay, xv. 462. 

 , on agricultural weeds, a prize essay, 



xvi. 359. 

 Buckwheat, analysis of, xiii. 474. 



, the climbing (Huckman), xvi. 364. 



BuGLOSS, the small, its soils and habits 



(Buckman), xvi. 364. 



, the viper's, xvi. 364. 



Bugs in corn, J. Curtis on, vi. 509. 

 Bulbous crowfoot, the, the effect of irri- 

 gation upon (Buckman), xv. 470. 



, its soils and habits, xvi. 360. 



Bdlls, proposed method of taming savage, 



by Erasmus Galton, iv. 559. 

 , the Jersey, scale of points of (Le 



Couteur), v. 44 ; ("Jersey Ag. Soc.) xii. 



582. 

 BuNBURT, Sir H. C, on the allotment 



system, v. 391. See "Allotment sys- 

 tem." 

 Bunt, or smut-balls, in wheat (Henslow), 



ii. 4. See " Smut." 

 BuPLUERUM rotundifolium, see " Hares'- 



ear, the common." 

 Burdock, the (Buckman), xvi. 362. 

 Burgess, J., on nitrate of soda as a 



manure, ii. 131. 

 Burke, John, jun., on the breeding and 



management of horses on a farm, v. 



508. 6'fe " Horses." 

 Burke, J. F., on drainage of land, ii. 273. 

 ■ , on cottage economy and cookery, 



iii. 83. 



, crown estate at King William's 



Town in the counties of Cork and 



Kerry, iv. 435. See " Cows." 

 ■ , experimental improvements on the 



estate, iv. 435. 

 Burness, C., on the marling of a light 



sandy soil on the Duke of Bedford's 



farm at Wobum, iii. 233. See " Marl- 

 ing." 

 Burnet, the common salad, analysis of 



(Way), xiv. 177. 

 Burnt clay, effect of on a crop of wheat 



growing on a heavy clay soil, by P. 



Pusey, vi. 477. See " Clay-burning." 

 , burning land for manure, by T. 



Rowlandson, viii. 146. 

 Burrell, Sir Charles, on some varieties 



of wheat, ii. 147. 



, on white carrots, v. 281. 



BuRRouGHES, Rcv. Thomas, a method of 



preserving conn-stacks from damage, 



by, xiv. 67. 



, on the bean-turnip fallow, xiv. 425. 



CABBAGE. 



BuRROUGHEs, T. C, on white mustard, a 

 prize essay, vii. 31. 



Bush vetch, the, analysed (Way), xiv. 1 79. 



Butter of the Netherlands ( Uham), iii. 

 259. 



of Holstein (C. S. Carr), i. 382. 



of North Wales (Rowlandson), vii. 



571. 



of Gloucestershire (Bravendar), xi. 



152. 



of Somersetshire (Acland), xi. 735. 



— ■—, on the production of, by T. Row- 

 landson, a prize essay, xiii. 23 ; com- 

 position of curd and skimmed milk, 

 ib. ; of new milk, by Dr. Play fair, 25 ; 

 on the fat of animals, and in the 

 food, 26; in Cheshire the milk from 

 cows fed on tares and vetches does 

 not produce first-class cheese, 29 ; 

 produced by hand-churning and by 

 machinery, 38 ; saltpetre removes the 

 turnipy flavour from cream, 42 ; butter 

 sometimes coloured by annatto, or the 

 scraping of the red part of carrots, 43 ; 

 Professor Trail and Drs. Bostock and 

 Gerard on the comparative quantity 

 of butter yielded by milk and cream, 

 separate or mixed, sweet and sour, or 

 scalded, 32. 



, large produce of, from a Cumber- 

 land cow (Dickinson), xiii. 255. 



, on the production of, by Louis H. 



Ruegg, xiv. 68 ; butter-making in Dor- 

 setshire, ih. ; milk rendered bitter by 

 cow feeding on wormwood, sow-thistle, 

 or the leaves of the artichoke, 69 ; ill 

 effects of the cow drinking bad water, 

 ih. ; necessity for cleanliness in the 

 dairymaid, 70 ; the cow, ib. ; the Guern- 

 sey cow, 71 ; the food, ib. ; removal of 

 turnipy taste from, 72 ; churning, 73 ; 

 letting dairies, 74 ; the supply of but- 

 ter, 75 ; foreign imports of, ih. ; Irish" 

 butter, imports of, 77 ; fresh butter 

 from Belgium, ib. ; bad butter-casks of 

 Dorset, 78. 



, improvements needed in the mak- 

 ing of Dorset (Ruegg), xv. 450. 



of Buckinghamshire (Read), xvi. 297. 



Butter-bur, its habits and soils (Buck- 

 man), xvi. 362. 



c. 



Cabbage, method of growing beans and 

 cabbages on the same ground, by the 

 Earl of Lovelace, v. 112. See Beans. 



, ravages of the wireworm on, v. 193. 



, growth of, at Stinchcombe, in Glou- 

 cestershire, i. 391. 



. ■, growth of, in Suffolk, viii. 276. 



