VOLUMES ONE TO SIXTEEN. 



21 



CORN. 



Corn, average produce of in E. Lothian 

 (Stevenson \ xiv. '296. See "Average." 



blue-bottle, analysis of, xiii. 528 ; 



its soils and habits (Buckman), xvi. 

 -362. 



bedstraw, the rough-fruited, its 



soils and habits (Buckman), xvi. 362 ; 

 the number of its seeds, 377. 



cockle, the, analysis of, xiii. 528 ; 



(Buckman), xvi. 370 ; its soils and 

 habits (Buckman), xvi. 360 ; the num- 

 ber of its seeds, 377. 



crowfoot (]5uckman), soils and 



habits, xvi. 360. 



crushers, a report by P. Pusey on 



those exhibited at the Great Exhibi- 

 tion (in 1851), xii. 634 ; on those 

 shown (in 1852) at the Lewes Meet- 

 ing, xiii. 325. 



dressing-machines, see "Winnow- 



ing-machiues." 



forget-me-not, the, its soils and 



habits (Buckman), xvi. 304. 



gromwell, its soils and habits, xvi. 



364. 



horsetail, the, its soils and habits, 



xvi. 366. 



marigold, its soils and habits (Buck- 

 man), xvi. 362. 



mills, see " Mills." 



lady's mantle, its soils and habits 



(Buckman), xvi. 360. 



mint, the (Buckman), xvi. 364. 



moths, the, described by J. Curtis, 



vii. 84. 



mouse-ear, the, its soils and habits, 



(Buckman), xvi. 360. 



mow, a section of one in Lanca- 

 shire, X. 49. 



parsley, its soils and habits (Buck- 

 man), xvi. 362. 



penny-cress, its soils and habits 



(]3uckman), xvi. 360. 



pheasant's-eye( Buckman), xvi. 360. 



scabious (Buckman), xvi. 362. 



scythe and corn-rake, the Kentish, 



described, i. 444 ; use of, in Cumber- 

 land (W. Dickinson), xiii. 233. 



stacks, on a method of preserving 



from damage by rooks, xiv. 67. 



CJoRNSTONE, tlif. division of the old red 

 sandstone of Ilcrijfordshire, xiv. 436. 



Cornwall, on tlie connection between 

 its agriculture and geology, by Sir II. 

 T. I)e la Beche, iii. 21. See "Geo- 

 logy." 



, on preparation for the wheat-crop in, 



by J. H. Trenuiyiie, v. 158. 



, on the farming of, by W. F. Kar- 



keek, vi. 400 ; its granite soils, 4<i4 ; 

 rotation of crops on, 4U7 ; its grauwacke 



group, 408 ; rotation of crops on, 413 ; 

 the serpentine rock, 419 ; the horn- 

 blende soils, 419; the diallage soils, 



420 ; the drainage systems in Cornwall, 



421 ; general culture, 423 ; cultivation 

 of wheat, ih. ; cultivation of barley, 

 425 ; its hay crops, ib. ; cultivation of 

 turnips in, 427 ; growth of potatoes 

 in, 428; growth of rape in, 430; 

 cropping and culture reviewed, 433 ; 

 erroneous conditions as to management, 

 434; manures employed, 438 ; analysis 

 of granite, 439 ; lime in the sea-sands 

 of, 440 ; waste lands, 444; analysis of 

 a specimen of, 447 ; breeds of sheep, 

 448 ; breeds of cattle, 450 ; feeding of 

 cattle, 452 ; breeds of horses, 453 ; 

 feeding of horses, 454 ; animal labour, 

 456 ; agricultural labour, 458 ; agri- 

 cultural implements, 460. 



Corn woundwort (Buckman), xvi. 364. 



CoRRiNGHAM, K. W., on the Agriculture 

 of Nottinghamshire (a prize report), vi. 

 1. See " Nottinghamshire." 



CoTswoLD sheep, trials with the feeding 

 of, by J. B. Lawes, xiii. 179, xvi. 73 ; 

 food consumed by, 185 ; the wool they 

 produced, 189; by E. Moore, vii. 294. 



• , comparative profit realized with, by 



S. Druce, xiv. 210. 



, the cross bred or Down-Cotswold 



of Oxfordshire (Read), xv. 228. 



, those shown at the Lincoln meeting 



(1854), XV. 381. 



, J. Wilson on, xvi. 226. 



, R. Smith on, viii. 16. 



CoTswoLDS, in Gloucestershire, the fann- 

 ing of (J. Bravendar), xi. 133. 



Cottage gardening, on, by J. Main, ii. 

 323 ; its draining, ib. ; its fencing, ib. ; 

 its trenching, ib. ; on keeping it in 

 heart, 324 ; on a succession of crops in 

 it, 325 ; on the parsnip, 328 ; of the 

 carrot, 329 ; on the radish, lettuce, 

 and turnip crop, 330 ; on the potato 

 crop, 331 ; plan of a garden for a first 

 year's cropping, 335 ; probable crop to 

 be gathered from 1-Sth of an acre or 

 20 poles, 33(! ; plan of cropping for se- 

 cond year, ib. ; a pig may be profitably 

 kept, and how, 337 ; five general good 

 rules for, 339 ; seeds re<iuired in a 

 garden, and their (luanfities, 340; a 

 monthly calendar of the Mork to be 

 (lone in a well-managed kitchen gar- 

 den, 341. 



economy and cookery, on, by F. 



Burke, iii. 83. 



CoiTAGKS, on the construction of, by the 

 Rev. Copingcr Mill, prize essay, iv. 



. 356 ; the walls, 357 ; walls and roofs. 



