CO 



INDEX TO EOYAL AGRICULTUEAL JOURNAL. 



LIQUID. 



ments, 154 ; expense of preparing, 155 ; 



the tanks required for its preparation, 



ib. ; urine, its analysis, 15(3 ; its quality 



varies with the food enii)loyed, 157; 



the loss of fertilizing matters in town 



sewage, 158. 

 Liquid manure, on the application of, to 



Italian rye-grass, by \V. Dickinson, vi. 



575. 

 , analysis of farm tank-water or 



putrefied urine, by J. T. Way, x. 613. 

 , used in Switzerland, in water-meads 



(Jenkinson), xi. 611. 

 , on the use of town sewage, by J. T. 



Way, XV. 135. 

 cart, a simple, described by H. 



W^ood, i. 501. 

 tanks described by Mr. D. Gilbert, 



i. 499. 



• described by M. M. Milburn, ix. 520. 



, on, by H. S. Thompson, xi. 439. 



LiTHOSPERNUJi arvense, see " Corn grom- 



well." 

 Little, Edward, of Chippenham, the 



farming of Wiltshire, a prize report, v. 



161. <S'c?tf " W^iltshire." 

 Liverpool meeting, report on the exhi- 

 bition of implements, ii. ciii. 

 Livers, small, indicate a tendency to 



fatten (Karkeek), v. 255. 

 Live stock, on the situations best adapted 



for, by N. Whitley, xi. 51. 

 , at the Lewes exhibition, report of, by 



Samuel Jonas, xiii. 397 ; the numbers of, 



shown at the Society's meetings, from 



Oxford in 1839 to Lewes in 1852, 398. 

 • , report on the exhibition of, at the 



Gloucester meeting, by R. Milward, 



xiv. 456. 

 , report on the exhibition of, at the 



Carlisle meeting, by W. Simpson, xvi. 



502. 

 Loams, analysis of several sorts, xiii. 544. 



, the weeds of (Buckman), xvi. 369. 



Lobelias attacked by wire worms (Cur- 

 tis), V. 196. 

 Loft, W., on different varieties of wheat, 



and the advantages of thick sowing, ix. 



281. 

 LoLiUM italicum, sec " Italian rye-grass." 

 perenne, see " Perennial rye-grass 



or darnel." 



temulentum, see " Bearded darnel." 



London clay formation, the, in Surrey, 



its agriculture (Evershed), xiv. 402. 

 Long, Walter, on clay-burning for 



manure, vii. 245. 

 LoNG-wooLLED shecp, the breeds of, viii. 



11. -See " Sheep." 

 , especially the Cotswolds, give more 



gross increase for a given weight of 



food than the Downs or crosses (J. B. 

 Lawes), xvi. 85. 



LoNG-wooLLED shccp, J. Wilsou ou, xvi. 

 223. 



LooMES, E., on the advantages derived 

 from the use of one-horse carts, vi. 398. 



Lords and ladies (Buckman), xvi. 366. 



Lothian, East, the farming of, con- 

 sidered by Mr. Pusey (1842) to be 

 hardly on a level with that of Lincoln- 

 shire, iv. 289. 



, on the farming of, by Charles 



Stevenson, xiv. 275 ; climate of, 278 ; 

 rainfall of, 279 ; rotations of, ih. ; 

 growth of turnips, 281 ; swedes, 284 ; 

 wheat, 285 ; grass-seeds, ib. ; oats, 286 ; 

 beans, 287 ; beans deemed the best pre- 

 paration for wheat, ib. ; but the quality 

 of wheat after potatoes superior, ib. ; 

 sheepwalks, 289 ; woods, ib. ; imple- 

 ments, 290 ; farm-buildings, 292 ; 

 draining of, 294 ; average produce of 

 corn, 296 ; cattle, ib. ; conveyance of, 

 297 ; sheep, 298 ; pigs, 302 ; horses, 

 ih. ; potatoes, 303 ; manures, ib. ; har- 

 vesting, 305 ; labourers, payment of, 

 306 ; J. Brodie's farm at Abbey Mains, 

 311 ; P. Handyside's at West Fenton, 

 314 ; G. Hope's at Fenton Barns, 317 ; 

 steam-engines employed in Hadding- 

 tonshire, 322. 



Love, P., on the advantage of one-horse 

 carts over waggons, vii. 223. 



, general remarks on continental 



farming, xvi. 142. 



Lovelace, the Earl of, on the culture of 

 mangold-wurzel, iv. 21. See " Man- 

 gold-wurzel." 



, method of growing beans and 



cabbages on the same ground, v. 112. 

 See " Beans." 



, on climate in connection with agri- 

 culture, i.K. 311. 



Lungs, their comparative size in the pig, 

 sheep, ox, and horse, and the order of 

 their aptitude to fatten is the same, iv. 

 258 ; very fat cattle, their small lights 

 and livers, ib. ; of the Leicester sheep 

 and the Southdown, ib. ; discordant opi- 

 nions of Liebig, Cline, and Youatt, 257. 



■ . small, indicate a tendency to fatten 



(Karkeek), v. 255. 



, J. B. Simonds on, x. 587. 



Lucerne, on the cultivation of, by J. 

 Rodwell, iii. 238 ; sows seed with 

 spring corn, 239 ; his experiment with 

 it from 1807 to 1841, ib. 



■ , its analysis, by Dr. Fownes, iv. 



532, xiv. 179. 



, growth of, in Cumberland (W. 



Dickinson), xiii. 274. 



