IV 



F A R M E R S ' REGIS T E R 



Cheat, convertibility of wheat to 431, 555; proofs of 

 being derived from wheat, by Thomas Carter, 

 276 



Cheese, Parmesan 1C3 



Cheese, making and preservation of 10 



Chemistry, on the utility of, to agriculture and horti- 

 culture 717 



Chincoteague Island, and its wild horses, 417 



Christian, James H., gives details of manuring, &c, 

 149 



Cinders, blacksmith's, value of as manure, by W. S. 

 Morton 546 



Climate, Kenrick's remarks on 480 



Clover hay, curing of 107 



Clover seed, directions for saving 282, method in 

 France, 285 



Clover and plaster used successfully for improving 

 worn-out land, by Catlett Conway 444 



Clover, on the mode of its benefiting a succeeding 

 crop of wheat 296 



Coal gas, refuse of, important use of 126 



Cocoons, successive crops of i 3 



Coffee, Florida, by H. B. C. 232 



Coffee, substitute for 214 



Cold, the bad effects on our soils and their products; 

 by J. R., 252 



Comments on various papers of the Farmers' Register, 

 No. 10, vol. II, by Commentator 111 — on papers of 

 No. 11, 114 



Commercial reports, monthly, 64, 189.318,383,510, 

 511, 639, 704, 767 



Common grazing, the legal right of, by Jeremiah, 

 592 



Communications on small matters, generally the most 

 useful 44 



Co.rway, Catlett, corrects a mistake in the publica- 

 tion, 546 — on improving worn land by clover and 

 plaster 444 



Cooking with gas, as fuel 9 



Corn, Indian, how made without tillage, by James Ca- 

 mak, 454; comparative value of different kinds 16; 

 Tunicata, by N. Herbemont, 447; seed of, selection 

 of, 722; on tarring, by Hugh Campbell, 72.3; experi- 

 ments on gathering it early, and drying it in venti- 

 lated pens, by E. R. 634; advantage of cultivating 

 by cross ploughing, by A. S. F. 495; on the tillage 

 of, by J. P. 614; statement of a crop of, on Staunton 

 river land, by G. W. Read, £73; experiments-tp 

 shew the injury it receives from the fodder being 

 taken off, by Win. Carmichael 661; large crop of in 

 Goochland 574; on kilns for drying by W. O. 

 Gregory 251; experiments in topping; 369; seed, on 

 tarring 44; to lessen the cost of replanting, by E. R. 

 445; green, dried for table use in winter 25; large 

 yield of, by A. S. Foreman 470 



Corn, twin, notice of, by P. J. Derieux 434 



Corn crop, mode of securing and value of its offal, by 

 Agricola 346 



Cornstalks, on saving and preparing them as food for 

 cattle, by Agricola 91 



Correspondence, private, extracts from 191 



Cotton gin, Whittemore's improved, advantages of 

 179 



Cotton seed, an article of food, by II. B. C. 232 



Cotton, cultivation of on prairie lands, by "A Plan- 

 ter," 409 



Cotton, machine to gather from the balls in the field 

 678 



Cotton, on the different kinds of, by James Davis, 

 469 



Cotton, on the fraudulent packing of 700 



Cows, on spaying, 736; detailed esses of 747 



Cows, spayed, improved thereby for giving milk ICG, 

 183 — the process directed 1<?7 



Cows, on milking;, by Gideon B. Smith 231 



Couch (or wire) grass, its value as forage 715 



Croom, H. B. encloses a communication on marliiv 

 225 



Crops, mixed, on the cultivation of, by Agricola 



344 

 Crops, large and successive, of corn, rye and hay, 



543 

 Crops in Bedford, state of, by Micajah Davis, jr., 



227 

 Crops, principles of the succession or rotation of, by 



Chaptal 527 

 Crops, rotation of. 222, 412 

 Crops mixed, their culture, by Agricola °i0 

 Cut-worm, its ravages lessened by planting corn in 



ashes and lime — destroyed by poultry 353 — method 



for the destruction of, 'by T. B. Watkins, 296 



D 



Dairy, general economy and management of 10, pro- 

 duce of 77 



Darnel or spelt. European opinions of 716 



Date trees in Georgia 246 



Davis, James, on the different kinds of cotton 469 



Davis, M., on state of crops, and agricultural publica- 

 tions 227 



Debtors, list of, 469 



Derieux, P. J. on twin corn 434; on old practices and 

 new doctrines, 540 



Dew, Professor, on the central canal, 8tc. of Virginia, 

 133. On Price 65, additional note to, 128 



Dickinson, John, on the improvement of Va. — silk cul- 

 ture, marling, and female labor, 475 



Digging machine, worked by steam 281 



Discontinuances of subscriptions, a chapter on, 

 256 



Diseases of wheat, on Mr. Bauer's discoveries, by A. 

 Nicol 59 



Dog, a remarkable and destructive one 312 



Dogs, wild, of Van Diemen's Land 254 



Draining and reclaiming- low lands, and straightening 

 streams, by N. E.Read, 2§9 



Dry rot, Ryan's patent to prevent, by the use of cor- 

 rosive sublimate 592 



Ducatel, Professor J. T., review of his geological re- 

 port of Maryland 36 



E 



Earth and its inhabitants, speculations on the ancient 

 state of 411 



Earth, sinking of portion in Prince William coun- 

 ty 140 



Editorial remarks — on communications on small mat- 

 ters 44 — on the evils to Va., of the present law of 

 enclosures iff — on frauds committed in sales in Eng-- 

 land of American lands 57 — season, state of crops, 

 and prospects, in May, 1835, 63— on the phenome- 

 non of the '-black waters'' 64 — on the Essa}' on 

 Price 65— on the milk weed 106 — four shift rota- 

 tions 114 — provincial terms 118. animalized car- 

 bon 120 — on experiments on the effect of heat on 

 <r) psum 128— delinquent subscribers 128 — on the re- 

 lation of certain plants to the ingredients of the soils 

 on which they grow 129 and 4 II — the importance of 

 calcareous soils for vineyards 130— on potash and 

 ashes as manures 138 — on Professor Raflnfsque's in- 

 vention of steam ploughs — incombustible houses, 

 &.c ,141 — on the economical effect pf labor-saving 

 inventions 144 — quick lime on newly cleared land 

 157 — on the use of scientific and provincial terms in 

 agricultural papers 153— fertility of the old sites of 

 dwelling bouses 159 — on the spaying of milch cows 

 1C-6 — on party spirit 174— postmasters, leg-al respon- 

 sibility o(. to publishers 175 — on the peculiar claims 

 of the Farmer's Register to southern support 181 — 

 plan o! a labyrinth 185— season and state of crops, 



