INDEX. 



Hemlock timber, account of it. Barked, or girdled, standin.^, 109 

 Hickory, useful for inside work ; when barked, or cut 



when sap flowing, - - - - 110 



Horse rake, for hay ;— described. Cut. - - 212,213 



Horses, improper treatment of their diseases, by ignorant 



quacks, - - - - - 167 



exposed to vicissitudes of weather, should not be 

 pampered, clothed, or kept in close stables, - lb. 



lampas, burning, often injurious, - - 169 



diseases affecting their eyes, - - - ib. 



salivary defluxions in, (see v. 2, plast. Paris, p. 124,) 283 

 Hoven cattle, stabbing recommended, - - - 41 



Husbandry, convertible, - - - - 84 



in Scotland, account of, - - - 159 



disadvantages of permanent high ridges, 160, 161 



two successive grain crops, liighly prejudicial, 162 



straw-burning, account of, - - 210 



Hybernation, of swallows ; vexata guxstioy (a litigated 

 point,) account of a sv/allow tree ; supposed 

 to have been the place of frequent hyberna- 

 tion of those birds, - - 345, 346, 8cc. 

 I 

 In and in, breeding, instances where that practice is disap- 

 proved, - - - . 52, 53, 54 

 Indian corn, red, account of, - - - - 24 

 (see title corn, Indian,) mixed with, and tinged, 

 all other kinds, - - - - ib* 

 fallow crop of, with fresh dung, - - 92, 93 

 mode of planting, - - - 151 to 155 

 trench ploughing for, - - - 155 

 Col. Taylor's mode of cultivating, 196, 197, 198 

 moiety of a field planted, the 

 other part plastered, and not 

 mowed, or grazed j alternate- 

 ly and annually cropped, - 197 

 high ridges, divided by deep 

 furrows, said to be the best 



VOL. iir. r * 



