VOLUMES ONE TO TWENTY-FIVE. 



CHE3IISTRY. 



Chemistry, table of chemical equivalents, 

 or atomic weights, and definite propor- 

 tions, by E. T. Hemming, xiii. 445. 



, its relation to physiology (A. Hen- 



frey), xvii. 63. 



' ; process for estimating minute quan- 

 tities of nitric acid (J. T. Way), xvii. 

 151. 



; metliod of analysing farmyard ma- 



mu'e (Voeleker),xvii. 259. 



, papers on, see "Lawes and Gil- 

 bert." 



CHENoroDaT»i album, see "White goose- 

 foot." 



Chekey, the, analysis of the wood and 

 bark of, xiii. 5o0. 



trees of Kent, vi. 279. 



orchards in Hertfordshire, xxv. 313. 



Oherwell, the meadows of the valley of, 

 injured by the floods, xv. 222. 



Cheshike, the farming of, by W. Palin, 

 prize report, v. 57 ; chiefly in grass, 58 ; 

 the soils, ib. ; sand-land daiiy-fann, 

 59 ; course of cropjjing, 60 ; clay-land 

 dairy-farm, 62 ; rotation after a ley, 

 03 ; sand-land arable fanu, ih. ; rota- 

 tion on a strong clay, 65 ; breeds of 

 cattle, 70 ; cows, ib. ; sheep, their 

 number, 71 ; Cheviots and Leicesters, 

 72 ; pigs, 73 ; rearing young cattle, 

 74 ; management of calves, 75 ; calves 

 reared from every 20 cows, ib. ; drain- 

 age, 77 ; agricultural implements, 81 ; 

 the horses and other cattle employed 

 in husbandr3% 83 ; the tenures of the 

 farms, 84 ; reasons for and against 

 leases, 86 ; wages, 87 ; cheese of 

 Cheshire, SB; modern improvements 

 in the manufacture, ib. ; manures em- 

 ployed, 89; marl, 90; lime, ib.; guano, 

 itl ; iiitrate of soda, ib. ; cottage allot- 

 ments for sj^ade husbanchy, 96 ; irri- 

 gated meadows, 98 ; pasture-land, ib. ; 

 fences, 99 ; farm-buildings, &c., 100 : 

 potatoes, 102 ; Swedish turnips, ib. ; 

 lucerne, 103 ; sketcli of a furrow- 

 presser, 110 ; sketches of a curd-mill, a 

 curd-breaker, and a cheese-mill, 111; 

 an agricultural ride in Cheshire. 105. 



, a detailed accoimt of the making of 



Cheshire cheese, by H. White, a prize 

 essay, vi.'102. See " Cheese." 

 Chester, meeting of Koyal Agricultural 

 Society at (1858), see " Meetings," 

 " Premiums," " Implement trials." 

 Chesnut, horse, its planting and manage- 

 ment (Falkener), iii. 274. 



, its planting and management (R. 



Falkener), iii. 269. 



, the Spanish, analysis of its wood 



and leaves, xiii. 530. 

 VOLS. I. XXV. 



CHE.STEraiAN, W., account of a newly- 

 invented portable steaming apparatus 

 for steaming potatoes or other roots, v. 

 283. 



Chevalier barley, its origin,?. Puscy on, 

 i. 11, viii. 280. 



Cheyalliers glactometre centesimale, 

 for testing milk, xxiv. 316. 



Chevaudier, on water meadows and the 

 virtue of springs, xvii. 325. 



Cheviot sheep, the, their extensive in- 

 troduction into Scotland described by 

 J. Dudgeon, i. 97, ii. 174, viii. 431. 



, on, by J. Wilson, xvi. 231. 



Chichorrm intybus, see " Chicory, wild." 



CniCKWEED, its soils and habits (Buck- 

 man), xvi. 360 ; the number of its 

 seeds, 377. 



Chicory, its cultivation in Holland 

 (Piham), iii. 251 ; used for beer (for its 

 bitter taste) and coffee, ib. ; the seed 

 when sown, ib. ; the soils best adapted 

 for, ib. ; the roots, when taken up, ib. 



, analysis of its root and leaves, xiii. 



474. 



, the wild, its soils and habits (Buck- 

 man), xvi. 361. 



Childers, J. W., on shed-feeding sheep, 

 i. 169. See " Sheep." 



Chillingham, the, breed of wild cattle 

 (W. Dickinson), xiii. 249. 



Chiltern, the, district, rotation of crops 

 on (Bead), xv. 203; its beech-woocls, 

 253; (Read), xvi. 307. 



hills of Bucks, xvi. 275. 



Chladosporium herl)anim, the, x. 386. 



Chloride of sodimn, see " Salt, common." 



of potassium, xiii. 430. 



Chlorite, the, analysis of, xiii. 532 ; xvii. 

 463. 



, schist rocks, analysis of, xiii. 534. 



Chlorophyll, or leaf green, see " Vege- 

 table Physiology " (Pr. Henfrey), xviii. 

 390, 394 ; generated, according to 

 Mulder, from starch, 404 ; its albumi- 

 nous substance identical with proto- 

 pla.sm, 405. 



Christopher, E. A., on bones and Poit- 

 tevin's manure for turnips, ii. 267. 



Chrysanthemum leucanthemuni, see 

 " Ox-eye, the white." 



segctum, see " Ox-eye, the yellow, 



or Com marigold." 

 Churning in Dorsetshire and other 

 places (Ruegg), xiv. 73. 



in Mr. Horsfall's dairy, xvii. 277. 



Churns, a report by P. Pusey on the 

 churns sho-\vn at the Great Exhibition 

 (in 1851), xii. 637. 

 , on those sliown at the Lewes meet- 

 ing (in 1852;, xiii. 328, 



c 



