106 



INDEX TO EOYAL AGRICULTURAL JOURXAL. 



UREDINES. 



Uredixes, the, of corn plants (E. Sidney), 



X. 38G. 

 Uric acid, formation of (L. Playfair), iv. 



228. 

 Urine of man, the horse, and the cow, 



analysis of (Berzelius), i. 156. 



, composition of, efi'ected by food, 



i. 157. 

 » of the horse diluted with water, 



effect of on Italian rye-grass (VV. 



Dickinson), vi. 575. 

 , of that of man, horse, cow, and pig, 



xiii. 506. 

 of man, amount produced, xy. 140; 



analysis of (J. T. Way;, 141. 

 • of the cow, fresh and putrid, 



analysed (Bowditch), xvi. 346. 

 Urtica dioica, sec " Nettle, the common 



stinging." 

 urens, see " Nettle, the small sting- 

 ing." 

 UsTiLAGO, the, funguses which attack the 



grasses, by the Rev. E. Sidney, x. 389. 

 ■ hypodytes, the Rev. E. Sidney on, 



X. 390. 



Vacy, C. K., on fibrous covering, vii. 



277, 

 Yallextine, R., on the cultivation of 



beans and peas, a prize essay, xv. 478. 



See " Beans and peas." 

 • , on the retention of moisture in 



turnip land, a prize essay, xvi. 346. See 



" Turnips." 

 Verney, SirH., on the Spanish phospho- 

 rite and other manures, vi. 331. 

 Vegetable marrow, analysis of, xiii. 



458. 

 Veronica agrestis, see " Speedwell, the 



procumbent." 



• arvensis, see " Speedwell, the corn." 



• buxbaumia, see " Speedwell, the 



buxbaums." 

 hederifolia, see " Speedwell, the ivj'- 



leaved." 



• politor, see " Speedwell, the field." 



Vetch, early, W. J. Williams on, iii. 



236. 

 , growth of, at Stinchcombe in Glou- 

 cestershire (Morton), i. 389. 

 • , on the botrytis of, by the Rev. E. 



Sidney, x. 394. 

 , the plant and its hay analysed, xiii. 



466. 



analysed (Way), xiv. 179. 



• , bush, the, analysed, xiv. 179. 



■ , growth of, on light flinty chalk 



soils (Haxton), xv. 100; on the sandy 



soils of Norfolk, 120. 



ViciA sativa, see " Vetch." 



sepium, see " Bush vetch." 



Viola tricolor, see " W' ild pansy." 

 Vincent, Rev. J. V., on the application 

 of a marine peat as manure in Carnar- 

 vonshire, ii. 417. 

 ViscuM album, see " Miseltoe." 

 VoELCKER, Augustus, ou the causes of 

 the efficacy of burnt clay, xii. 496, 



, on the composition of the parsnip 



and white Belgian carrot, xiii. 385. 



, on the source of nitrogen in plants, 



xiv. 382. 



, on the comparative value of different 



artificial manures for raising a crop of 

 swedes, with remarks on the composi- 

 tion of the manures, xvi. 90, 



, on his remarks on the value of 



artificial manures, by J. T. W"ay, xvi. 

 533. 

 Von Thaer, table of equivalent nutritive 



substances, iv. 146. 

 Vraic or kelp-ashes, the use of in Jersey 

 as a manure, described by Colonel Le 

 Couteur, iii. 45. 



w. 



Waddon Chace, on (C. Read), xvi, 307. 



Wages of farm-labourers (see " La- 

 bourers") in Northumberland chiefly 

 paid in kind (J. Grey), ii. 186. See 

 " Northumberland." 



in Germany, iii. 232 ; threshers, and 



in Prussia (H. Handley), ib. 



in Jutland (J. F. Johnston), iii. 416 ; 



men and women servants, ib. ; in 

 summer they have five meals a-day, ib. 



in JNIecklenburgh (S. Carr), i. 129. 



in Nottinghamshire (Corringham), 



vi. 39. 



in Kent (Buckland>, vi. 265. 



in North Wales (Rowlandson), vii. 



571. 



Waggons are said to last as many years 

 as they cost pounds (H. Hannam), ii, 

 88 ; those of the Netherlands described, 

 iii 262. 



, those used in Lincolnshire (1842) 



(P. Pusey), iv. 305; contrasted with 

 carts experimentally, ib. 



, on an improvement in the mode of 



attaching horses to, by J. H. Grieve, 

 vi. 248. 



, on those shown at the Lewes meet- 

 ing (in 1852). xiii. 326. 



of Derbyshire (Rowley), xiv. 27. 



shown at the Gloucester meeting, 



xiv. 344. 



of Oxfordshire (Read), xv. 246. 



