42 



GENERAL IXDEX TO EOYAL AGRICULTURAL JOURNAL. 



CORRINGHAM. 



the serpentine rock, 419; the horn- 

 blende soils, 419 ; tlie diallage soils, 

 420 ; the di-ainage systems in Cornwall, 

 421; general culture, 423; cultivation 

 of wiieat, ih. ; cultivation of barley, 

 425; its hay crops, -ib.; cultivation of 

 turnips in, 427 ; growth of potatoes 

 in, 428 ; gi'owth of rape in, 430 ; 

 cropping and culture reviewed, 433; 

 erroneous conditions as to management, 

 434 ; manujes employed, 438 ; analysis 

 of granite, 439 ; lime in the sea-sands 

 of, 440 ; waste lands, 444 ; analysis of 

 a specimen of, 447 ; breeds of sbeep, 

 448 ; breeds of cattle, 450 ; feeding of 

 cattle, 452 ; breeds of liorses, 453 ; 

 feeding of horses, 454 ; animal labour, 

 45G ; agiicultural labour, 458 ; agricul- 

 tural unplement!', 4G0. 



OoKuixGHAM, Iv. W., on tliG agriculturc 

 of Nottinghamshire (a prize report j, vi. 

 1. See "Nottinghamshire." 



CoTSWOLD sheep, trials with the feeding 

 of, by J. B. Lawes, xiii. 179, xvi. 73 ; 

 food consumed by, 1 85 ; the wool they 

 produced, 189; by E. Moore, vii. 294. 



, comparative jjrofit realized with, by 



y. Uruce, xiv. 210. 



, the cross bred or Down-Cotswold of 



Oxfordshire (Read), xv. 228. 



, those shown at the Lincoln meeting 



(18.)4), XV. 381. 



, J. Wilson on, xvi. 226. 



, R. Smitli on, viii. 16. 



CoTSwoLDS, in Gloucestershire, the farm- 

 ing of (J. Bravendar ), xi. 133. 



, analysis of soils of (Voelcker), 



xviii. 359-60. 



, sheep, account of (R. Smith), xix. 



384. 



■Cottage gardening, on, by J. Main, ii. 

 323 ; its draining, ih. ; its fencing, ih. ; 

 its trenching, ih. ; on keeping it in 

 heart. 324 ; on a succession of crops in 

 it, 325 ; on the parsnip, 328 ; of the 

 carrot, 329 ; on tlie radish, lettuce, 

 and tunnp crop, 330; on the potato 

 crop, 331 ; plan of a garden for a first 

 year's cropjjing, 335 ; probable crop to 

 be gathered from l-8th of an acre or 

 20 poles, 336; plan of cropping for 

 second year, ih.; a pig may be pro- 

 fitably kept, and how, 337 ; five general 

 good rules for, 339 ; seeds required in 

 a garden, and their quantities, 340 ; a 

 monthly calendar of the work to be 

 done in a well-managed kitchen gar- 

 den, 341. 



' economy and cookery, on, by F. 



Burke, iii. }<o. 



Cottages, on the construction of; by the 



Rev. Copinger Hill, prize essay, iv. 

 356 ; the walls, 357 ; walls and roofs, 

 ib. : of things in common, such as an 

 oven, or a copper, 358 ; the mode of 

 preparing clay for walls, 359 ; of build- 

 ing these walls, ih. ; of the coast of 

 brick- walls, 360 ; of stone-w^alls, 361 ; 

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

 paving the floors, ib. ; of the ceilings, 

 362 ; of lath and jtlastcring, ih. ; the 

 windows, 363 ; stairs, 364 ; chamber 

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

 ih. ; total cost of clay and thatched cot- 

 tage, 366 ; ditto of stone and thatch, 

 367 ; elevation and ground-plans, 368. 



Cottages fur labourer.-*, construction of 

 (Isaacs), xvii. 494 : cost not to exceed 85Z. 

 each, 495 ; should be remunerative, ib. ; 

 gables are costly and comfortless, 496 ; 

 size of rooms, ih. ; M'Culloch's prize 

 windows, 497 ; Beadon's caves gutter, 

 499 ; objections to briek-Hoors, ih. ; 

 thatch, its advantages and drawbacks, 

 500 ; the Newark cottiige ninge (plan), 

 ih. ; ventilation, 502 ; Pearce's grate, 

 ■ib. ; Dr. Arnott s valves, 503 ; drainage 

 and privies, 504 ; spccitications for cot- 

 tages, 505 ; plans of ditto, 509. 



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



, on tliebuildingof 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. Nicholls, vii. 17 ; of cot- 

 tage gardens, 21. 



, the Duke of Bedford on, x. 185 ; 



plans, elevations, anil estimates for, 188. 



, on the construction of a pair for 



agricultural labourers, by Henry Grod- 

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

 tion, aspect, soil, 231; exterior arrange- 

 ment.s ib. ; interior arrangements, 232 ; 

 the out-otfices. 233 ; materials, con- 

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

 warming and ventilating, 234 ; specifi- 

 cation 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 jilan of double cottages for 



farm-labourers, with specifications, by 

 G. Arnold, xv. 455. 



of Buckinghamshire (Read), xvi. 



313. 



