80 



INDEX TO EOTAL AGRICULTURAL JOURNAL. 



PULPIXG. 



PuLPixG-MAcniNES, those shown at the 

 Lincohi meeting (1854), xv. 373. 



at the Carlisle meeting (1855), xvi. 



507-520. 



PuREECK marble of Dorsetshire (Ruegg), 

 XV. 390. 



PuRCHAS, R. W., on the use of bones and 

 sulphuric acid and other manures, v. 

 440, vi. 244. 



, on the action of the same three 



years after its application, vii. 273. 



PuRGiNG-FLAX (Lluum catharticum) apt 

 to purge cattle (Playfair), iv. 251. 



— — , its soils and habits (Buckman), xvi. 

 3G0. 



PuRTK sheep, on the, of Thibet, by C. B. 

 Phillips, xi. 03. 



Purple cow-wheat, the (Buckman), xvi. 

 304. 



Purple melic-grass (Buckman), xv. 465. 



Purples or peppercorn in wheat (Hen- 

 slow), ii. 19. 



Pusey, p., on the state of agriculture in 

 England in 1839, i. 1. ^e " Agricul- 

 ture of England." 



, an account of the Charlbury sub- 

 soil plough, i. 433. 



on shallow cultivation of land, vi. 



191. 



on the eflPect of burnt clay on a crop 



of wheat growing upon very heavy 

 clay land, vi. 477. 



on the Brendon catch-meadows, vi. 



521. 



• on the action of dung and some arti- 

 ficial manures on beetroot, vi. 528. 



on white Belgian carrots, ii. 41. 



on Beart's draining-tiles, ii. 101, 



on nitrate of soda as a manure, ii. 



118. 



on guano, ii. 303. 



, some account of the practice of 



English farmers in the improvement of 

 peaty soils, ii. 400. 



— — on the progress of agricultural 

 knowledge during the last four years, 

 iii. 169. See "Agriculture." 



— — on marl or clay-burning, iii. 325. 



, evidence on the antiquity, cheap- 

 ness, and efficacy of thorough-draining 

 or land-ditching, as practised through- 

 out the counties of Suffolk, Hertford, 

 Essex, and Norfolk, iv, 23. See 

 " Drainage of land." 



■ on horse-hoeing flat-drilled turnips, 

 iv. 76. See " Turnips." 



on the agricultural improvements of 



Lincolnshire (1842), iv. 287. Sec 

 " Lincolnshire." 



■ , practical opinions on the effect of 



Crosskill's clod-crusher, iv. 560. 



PUSEY. 



Puset, p., report on the wheats selected 



for trial at the Bristol meeting, iv. 583. 

 , note on Mr. S. L. Hodge's paper 



on making and burning draining-tiles, 



V. 556. 

 , experimental inquiry on draught 



in ploughing, i. 219. 

 — — - on the St. John's-day rj^e, vi. 177. 



on superphosphate of lime, vi. 324. 



on cheapness of draining, vii. 520. 



on a new method of preparing 



bones for manure, viii. 417. 



on the autnmn cleaning of stubbles 



on light land, viii. 570. 



on breaking up of grass-land by 



paring and burning at Longworth, ix. 

 422. 



on the putrefaction of bones, ix. 



530. 



on the use of rape-cake as food for 



stock, X. 247, 496. 



on the theory and practice of water- 

 meadows, X. 462. 



on deep drainage, x. 508. 



on the Purik sheep of Thibet, xi. 



64. 



on the progress of agricultural 



knowledge during the last eight years, 

 xi. 381. 



on the controversy on the mineral 



theory of manures, xii. 40. 



on M'Cormick's reaping-machine, 



xii. 161. 



on nitrate of soda as a top-dressing 



for wheat, xii. 202. 



on the cultivation of mangold and 



carrots in alternate rows, xii. 580. 



, report to H. R. H. Prince Albert, 



the president of the commission for the 

 Exhibition of the Works of Industry 

 of all Nations, on the agricultural im- 

 plements, xii. 587. 



on the theory of irrigation, xiii. 



177. 



on a new method of hoeing turnips, 



xiii. 202, xiv. 358. 



on the source and supply of cubic 



saltpetre, salitre, or nitrate of soda, 

 and its use in small quantities as a 

 restorative to corn crops, xiii. 349. 



on a trial between the water-drill 



and the dust-drill in growing turnips, 

 xiii. 408. 



, comparative profit realised with 



different breeds of sheep, xiv. 213. 



, translation of a paper by Malingie- 



Nouel on a method of obtaining im- 

 mediate fixity of type in forming a new 

 breed of sheep, xiv. 214. 



on the natural law by which nitrate 



of soda or cubic saltpetre acts as a 



