22 



INDEX TO EOYAL AGRICULTURAL JOURNAL. 



ib. ; of tilings in common, such as an 

 oven, or a copper, 358 ; the mode of 

 preparing clay for walls, 359 ; of build- 

 ing these walls, ib. ; of the cost of 

 brick-walls, 360 ; of stone-walls, 361 ; 

 of the chimney, ib. ; of the oven, ib. ; 

 paving the floors, ib. ; of the ceilings, 

 362 ; of lath and plastering, ib. ; the 

 ■windows, 363 ; stairs, 364 ; chamber 

 floors, ib. ; doors, 365 ; thatched roof, 

 ib. ; total cost of clay and thatched cot- 

 ' tage, 366 ; ditto of stone and thatch, 

 367 ; elevation and ground-plans, 368. 



Cottages, the, of Essex (Baker), v. 31. 



• , allotments in Cheshire, v. 96. 



, on the building of cottages for farm- 

 labourers, by John Grey, v. 237. 

 , plans of some cottages in Northum- 

 berland, V. 239 ; estimates of the ex- 

 pense of these, 244. 



■ , on the advantage of comfortable 



cottages, G. NichoUs, vii. 17 ; of cot- 

 tage gardens, 21. 



— — , the Duke of Bedford on, x. 185 ; 

 plans, elevations, and estimates for, 

 188, 



, on the construction of a pair for 



agricultural laboiirers, by Henry God- 

 dard, a first-prize essay, x. 230 ; situa- 

 tion, aspect, soil, 231 ; exterior arrange- 

 ments, ib. ; interior arrangements, 232 ; 

 the out-offices, 233 ; materials, con- 

 struction, supply of water, &c., ib. ; 

 warming and ventilating, 234 ; speci- 

 fication and estimate, 235 ; a plan of a 

 cottage grate, 243 ; elevation of cot- 

 tages, 245. 



, on labourers', by J. Y. Macvicar, a 



second-prize essay, x. 400 ; plans, 

 404 ; estimates, 411-417 ; specification, 

 414. 



of Oxfordshire (Read), xv. 264. 



of Dorsetshire (Ruegg), xv. 441 ; 



plans of, improved, 442. 



, prize plan of double cottages for 



farm-labourers, with specifications, by 

 G. Arnold, xv. 455. 



ofBuckinghamshire(Read), xvi.313. 



CoTTON-FLAX, xiv. 199. See " Claussen's 

 flax-cotton." 



CoTTON-LiKE substancc, an account of a, 

 found after an inundation of the 

 Thames, i. 505. 



Couch grass, P. Pusey on, xi. 423. 



, J. Buckman on, xv. 471. 



, on forking up, by hand labour, by 



E. E. Agate, xvi. 111. 



, its soils and habits (Buckman), xvi. 



366. 



Cough or cold in sheep (Cleeve), i. 318. 



, chronic, in horses (Dun), xiv. 117. 



COWS, 



Covered homestalls, W. Fisher Hobbs on, 

 xiv. 325. 



farm-steadings, on, by Lord Kin- 



naird, xiv. 336. 

 Cow-GRASS, analysis of (Way), xiv. 179, 

 parsnip, its soils and habits, xvi. 362. 



CowiE, J., on the comparative advan- 

 tages in the employment of horses and 

 oxen in farm -work, prize essay, v. 52. 

 See " Cattle." 



Cows in Holland often lie on smooth 

 brick floors, ii. 57 ; bean-meal mixed 

 with their water, iii. 246 ; the way in 

 which their cows are fed, 258 ; their 

 scalded food, ib. ; called " brasin," 26. ; 

 their butter, ib. ; their dairies, 259 ; 

 Avhen put into winter-quarters, when 

 put to grass, 260 ; the milk-room, 260 ; 

 experiments on the produce of milk and 

 butter aflbrded by Kerry, Galloway, 

 and Ayrshire cows, iv. 436. 



, on the Jerseys misnamed Alderney 



cow, by Col. Le Couteur, v. 43 ; their 

 extraction, ib. ; the scale of points for 

 Jersey cows, ^44 ; sketch of the old 

 and the improved breed, 46 ; the way 

 in which a Jersey farmer treats his cow, 

 48 ; the tethering of it, 49 ; the rearing. 

 ib. ; the cream very rich, ib. ; yield of 

 milk, 50 ; the Jersey butter, ib. 



of Cheshire, v. 70 ; no distinct breed 



there, ib. See " Cheshire." 



, on their gestation, by Earl Spencer, 



i. 165 ; shortest time, longest, 167 ; on 

 twins of different sexes, 168. 



■ , on the detection of pregnancy in, 



by W. Youatt, i. 170. 



• , the milk from the Irish and the 



Ayrshire cows compared, i. 443. 



, on the construction of the cow- 

 house, xi. 247, 256, 259. 



, on abortion in, by J. Barlow, a 



prize essay, xii. 62. See " Abortion." 



, on the diseases occurring after calv- 

 ing, by W. E. Sibbald, a prize essay, 

 xii. 554 ; milk fever, dropping, 557 ; 

 the garget, or inflammation of the 

 udder, 562 ; cracked teats, 566 ; hy- 

 steritis, or inflammation of the womb, 

 567 ; red water, 568 ; inversion of the 

 uterus, 571 ; retention of the placenta, 

 or cleansing, 573. 



, analysis of solid excreta, xiii, 482. 



, analysis of urine, xiii. 606. 



, on the food of, xiv. 71 ; in Guern- 

 sey, ib. 



of Oxfordshire (Read), xv. 224. 



(see "Cattle"), on the maternal 



organs of repi-oductiou in, and on the 

 practice in difficult cases of labour, by 

 J. B. Simonds, x. 248. 



