| = 
INDEX. 
in, without feeding, or cutting ;—to 7 
nish vegetable matter for manure, and ame- 
lioration, - - - - - 52 
Said there to be best ploughed in dry 
But see page 63. 
Alternation—Indian corn and vegetable 
cover plaistered and ploughed in to pre- 
cede and follow, in constant biennial suc- 
cession, ~ — = -— - ibid 
Col. Taylor’s account and explanationof = 
his process on the foregoing plan, - 75 
Benefits of restoring vegetable matter to 
the soil, - - - - (7 
Vi irginia Tunis sheep there. Parts of that state Sa 
lated for sheep-breeding, - - 233 
Vegetation promoted by sulphur, - - - 206 
Ww 
West William eulogium on, = - - - - 147 
Wheat, on harrowing in the spring, - - 9 
disease in, called decay of the root, - 287-8 
Remarks thereon, - . - 288-9 
Worms, found in other sheep, do not breed in the Tunis 
race, - - - - - - - 222-6 
Wool, Tunis in great estimation and yields more to the 
fleece than that of common sheep, - 234. 
Not équal to merino ; but superior to most others, 244 
average weight of Tunis fleeces ; and description 
of them, - - - = 217 
Comparison of Tunis wool with that of English fleeces, 
See note on proof of originality, - - - vi 
Wool micrometer on, - ~ - — 325 
»d a 
Young William on oat pasture and improvement of 
soils, - - - - 186 
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