IV 



MONTHLY JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE. 



Horses, Breeding. ..Value of the 

 Bred Horse, 301. Characteristics 

 of different Breeds, 391. Diseases 

 of, and their Remedies, 507. Ex- 

 pense of lieeping, 364. 



Horticultvire, 186. 



Horticulture, Botany and. How Cul- 

 tivated in other Countries, 482. 



Hot-Houses, Atmosphere of, 59. 



Household, Room of the, by Eliza 

 Cook. 408. 



Housewife's Department, 261, 336, 

 417. 607. 



Husbandi-}-, American, British Agri 

 cultural" Dissertations applicable 

 to, 9. 



Husbandi-y, Belgian. 414. 



Hydraulic" Ram Cheap Method 



of ha\-ing a constant supply of 

 Water, 356. 



I 



Immigration into Virginia, 477. 



Inclined Plane and Wedge. 307. 



Insects injurious to Vegetation, 439. 

 Injurious to Animals, 513. 



Iron, New Uses of, 552. 



Journals, Agiicultural, 61. 



K 

 Kohl Rabi, or Egyptian Kale, 50. 



Labor in England, Agricultural. 283 

 Labor Savin"g— Desultory Hints to 



Farmers, 5^7. 611. 

 Labor and Machinery, 506. 

 Labor, Thoughts on the Distiibu- 



tion of, 341. 

 Lady .Suffolk, with a Dissertation 

 on the Trotting-Horse of the U, 

 States. 67 

 Land, Exhaustion of 4'..0. 

 L'Art du Maraicher, 430. 

 Leaves, Save the, 300. 

 Liebig, Justus, Memoir of, 165. 

 Liebig's Explanation of the Princi- 

 ples and Uses of his Artiticiil Ma- 

 nures, 241. 

 Liebig and Petzholdt— Remarks on 

 their Ideas in relation to Green 

 Crops, 248. 

 Lime, Permanence of its Action, 

 278. Mode in which it operates, 

 333. As a Fertilizer, 103. " En- 

 richeth the Father, but impover- 

 isheth the Son," 404. 

 Lines among the Leaves, by Eliza 



Cook, .546. 

 Liquorice, 532. 

 Loudon, John Claudius, Memoii- of, 



56.5. 

 Lucerne— Preparation of the Land 

 123. 



ITI 

 Machines, .Agricultural, patented,52 

 Machinery. Labor and, 506. 

 Maize, or Indian Com, 590. Native 



or Wild, 1.50. 

 Manure, Anificial, Liebig's Explana- 

 tion of, 241. 

 Manure, Gas-water as a, 286. 

 Manure, Management of, .535. Man- 

 ufacture of, 133. For Onions, 60, 

 135. Artificial, 74. Bone, 536, 

 Peat, 253. 

 Manure, Stable-Dung, Mismanage- 

 ment of, 135. 

 Manuring Land, Table for, 5.58. Ex- 

 periments with, 364. 

 Marl. Essay on. by Gov. Hammond 



559, 599. 

 Meadows, Flooding of, 463. 

 Meadows, Water— How made and 



managed, 83. 

 Moon, Its supposed effect on Ter 

 restftal objects, 547. 



Miscellaneous Chapters, 184, 523. 



Much said in a small compass, 256. 



Mulberry .destruction of by frost,162. 

 IV 



National Institute, 224. 



Natural Sciences, Importance of 

 Farmers acquiring a knowledge 

 of them, 401. 



New-York Agriculture, 553. 



New-York State Ag. Society, and 

 their Fair, 114, 125. 

 O 



Ox, Giant, 242. 



Oxen, Durham, 54. 

 V 



Paring and Burning, 197. 



Pea Culture in the South, 310. 



Peat Manure, 253. 



Peters, Hon. Richard, Memoir of, 213. 



Petzholdt's Lectures on Agricultu- 

 ral Chemistrj', 523. 



Pho'isant, Horned, 597. 



Physiology and Electricity, Vegeta- 

 ble, 163. 



Plane and Wedge, 307. 



Planting, 59. — Table showing the 

 Number of Plants required for 

 one acre of Land, 558. 



Plant Watering, 86. 



Plowing, 489. Deep Plowing — An 

 Experiment to ascertain its Ef- 

 fects, 7, 315. Under what circum- 

 stances to recommend Fall, 19. 

 Effects of when wet, 19. 



Population in certain portions of the 

 United States, 363. 



Potato Disease, 279, 428. 



PotatoDiseaseinCentralAmerica389 



Potato Sickness, A Memoir on, trans 

 lated from the German, 387. 



Potato Washer, 369. 



Potatoes — Expeditious Mode of 

 Planting, .59. To have Eariy, 432. 

 Experiments in Growing, 539. 



Potatoes from the Seed, 540. 



Poultij, 203, 336. 



Premiums, Agricultural : Proper 

 objects to be promoted by award- 

 ing them, 313. 



Provisions, Curing for the British 

 Market, 411. 



Quaker or Friends' Farming, 460. 

 R 



Recipes... Beetles, for Exterminat- 

 ins, 545. 



. . Cements, for Making, 538, 468, 580. 



..Corn Bread, how to Make, 555. 



. . Corn, Indian, for Using, 555. 



. .Cream, Burnt, for Making, 530. 



..Inks, Colored, how to Make, 390. 



..Lockjaw, Remedy for, 443. 



..Peach Blossoms, how to obtain 

 Extract of. 538. 



. .Potato Starch, how Prepared, 305. 



..Turpentine, for making Balsam 

 of, 419. 



Registers, Agricultural, How kept, 

 247. Do. as kept by Harold, 247. 



Reports, Agricultural, 63. 



Resources and Products, Agricultu- 

 ral, of the United States and Great 

 Britain, 274. 



Rhubarb, 51. Should not be al- 

 lowed to seed, 96. 



Rural Life, Poetry of, 26, 157. 



Salt— a Fertilizer, 533. Use of to 



Man and Animals, 409. 

 Science applied to Agriculture, 97. 

 Screw, the, 361. 



SerpentB,Power of Fascination in 556 

 Sewerage, Town, 522. 

 Sheep Husbandry, 317. 

 Sheep and Chestnuts, 256. 



Sheep, Shed-feeding of, 257. Cost 

 of Keeping them in Illinois, 464. 

 Notes on the Management of, 605. 

 Influence of Pasture on, 370. Ef- 

 fects of Climate and Food on, 317. 

 Comparative value of, 91. Alpac- 

 ca, 438. Tunisian, 220. Broad- 

 Tailed, 220, 255. South-Down, 

 Form and Qualities of, 35. 



Silk, Vegetable, 62. 



Silk Plant, 150. 



Silk Plant from Tripoli. 45. 



"kinner's, J. S., Discourse delivered 

 at Hempstead, L. I., 232. 



Smithsonian Fund — -uggestions as 

 to its Application, 421, 570. 



Smut in Wheat, H ow to prevent, 172. 



Societies,Agiicultural, Hints for, 355. 



Societies, Importing, 443. 



Soils, Composition of, 126. 



Soiling, Successful Experiments in, 

 272. 



SpaiTOWs and other Birds, Destruc- 

 tion of, 133. 



Spencer, Earl— Honor to Merit, 408 



Stables, Atmosphere of, 191. 



Steam applied to Agricultural Pur- 

 poses, 579 



Steam-Power for Farmers, 528 



■iuear, its Culture and Manufacture, 

 127—133 In Texas, 462. Its Ef- 

 fects on Man and Animals, 479. 

 Consumption of in Europe and 

 America, 281 



Sugar, Apple, 554. 

 T 



Texas : Its Sugar Lands, foil, &c., 

 521. Sugar Culture in, 462. 



Theories, Various, on the Growing 

 of Potatoes, 55, 258. 



Thistle, Canada, 91. 



Thomas, J. J., His Prize Essay on 

 Farm Management, 11. 



Transplantingr228. 



TransplantingTrees,Thoughtson225 



Trees and Flowers.Thoughts on, 151 



Turnip Culture in England, 76 



Turnips, Nutritive Properties, how 

 affected by different Manures, 315. 



Tussac Grass, 47. 

 U 



United States, Agricultural Re- 

 sources of, 274. 



Van Rensselaer, Stephen. Memoir 



of, 1. 

 Vegetable. New, 47, 186. 

 Vegetable Physiology and Electri- 

 city, 163. 

 Virginia, Immiaration into, 477. — 



Prospects for New Settlers, 47.5. 

 Virginia, Red-Land District of, 181. 



W 

 Wagons, Improved mode of attach- 



inu Horses to, 195. 

 Walnuts, 34. 

 Water, ' heap method of having a 



constant supply, 356. 

 Water-Meadows, How Made and 



Managed. 83. 

 Wedce and Inclined Plane. 307. 

 Weeds on Gravel-Walks, 282. 

 Wheat, How much per acre will 



pay, 272. Stooiing of,299. Wheat 



exhausts Land, 420. Smut in, to 



prevent. 172. 

 Wheat. Mediterranean, 249. 

 Whip-poor-will, Its character and 



habits, 398. 

 Wine-Makine, as practiced in North 



Carolina— with Notes, 243—246. 

 Wool, Cape, 124. 



Wool, Influence of Nutrition on, 317. 

 Wool-growers, Important to, 203. 

 Wocl-growing at the South, 300. 



