TABLE OF CONTENTS OF VOL. V 



Abutments, 2 



Address of Mr. Madison to the Agricultural Society 

 of Albemarle, 412 



Address to the Ag;ricultural Society of Dorchester, 539 

 — exceptions to some of its positions, 610, 664 



Address to the Agricultural Society of Fredericks- 

 burg, 649 



Agricultural schools, 14 



Agricultural journals, influence of, 34---importance of 

 599 



Agricultural tour in western N. York, extract from, 224 



Agricultural condition of Alabama, 294 



Agricultural communications, the use of real signa- 

 tures to 249 



Agricultural Convention in Virginia, failure of, 63 



Agricultural Convention of New York, proceedings 

 of 28, 762 



Agricultural improvement, governmental action in aid 

 of, 449 — by small farmers, 101 



Agricultural Survey of Massachusetts, remarkson,253 



Agricultural Societies, Arthur Young's opinion of, 602 



Agricultural Society, Central, proceedings of, 614 



Agricultural Society of Fredericksburg, proceedings 

 of, 609— Address'to, 649 



Agriculture, the morals of, 304 



Agriculture, some of the common errors which serve 

 to depress it, 187 



Agriculture connected with physics, 278 



Agriculture in Maryland, improvement of, 124 



Agriculture of Virginia, prospects of, 127 



Agriculture of Nelson and Amherst, 7, 460 — of Camp- 

 bell, 34 



Agriculture, in Calvert, Mar}'land. 49 



Agriculture of Halifax, Virginia, 117 



Agriculture of western New York, account of. No I, 

 441— No. II. 555 



Agriculture, and other notices of Warren county, N. C. 

 228 



Agriculture, British, improvements and prospects of, 

 107 



Agriculture, Board of, (British) on the establishment 

 of, 641 



Agriculture, law for aiding improvement of, in New 

 York, 764 



America, observations on, in several voyages, (extract 

 from an old publication,) 81, 146 



Animalcules from flint, 53 



"Anirnalized carbon," identity of with prepared hu- 

 man excrements, 251 

 Anirnalized carbon. Lance's, 250 — Owen's, 397 

 Apple trees, new method of propagating, 206, 213 

 Apples, to keep sound, 181 

 Arable land, 564* 



Asparagus, culture of, 37, 398, 662 



B 



Banks, the several operations of, on agricultural and 

 general interests, 422 



BaVtram, the self-taught American botanist, 455 



Beans, to harvest 558* 



Beavers on Nottoway river, 561— proposal to domes- 

 ticate, 616 



Bedding land, 3 



Bees, new mode of hiving swarms of, 13 



Beet sugar, 695, 552— bounty for, 47— full directions 

 for manufacture of, 91— fabrication of in France. 

 150, 374. 428 



Beet sugar culture, extension of in Europe, 107 



Birds, remarkable attraction of, 398— to keep from 

 seeds 246 



Birds, migration of 570 



Black-weevil 551 



Bhghtin pear trees 188, 359, 552 



Bone manure 90, 183, 250 



Book farming 607 



Boring for water near London 177, 178 



Bots, or grubs in horses 457 



Bread baked by steam 286 



Bread as food for cattle and horses 90 



Bricks, dilference of wet and diy in masonry 293 



Bridge of Fiibourg, account of 396 



Bridges 72 



British opinions on the 'Essay on Calcareous Ma- 

 nures,' and the original discovery of one of its po- 

 sitions 380 



Buckwheat as a green manure 219 



Bud, each one has its roots 640 



Bull, short-horned, Mr Booths 383 



Burnt earth, its influence on the spirit in wine 264 



Burnt clay as manure, its preparation and application 

 134 



C 



Calcareous earth, action of in preserving putrescent 



matters 154 

 Canal boats, experiments on, at high velocities 79 

 Canals, resistance to motion in, relative to velocity 575 



* The eight pages (sigjnature 71) which follow 552, 

 were numbered incorrectly, by mistake of the printer. 

 All theait icies on them are here marked (thus*) 

 and the references arp made to the proper numbers for 

 those pases. The reader can mnke the corrections re- 

 quired, by referring to the pivceding and succeeding 

 pages. 



