IV 



horticulture 245— on prunioK fruit tre«« 261^n iJie 

 fecuDilatioD of phnM, (tc. 2ti'.> — his report of the pro- 

 cteilini;* uf Van. Ilorl. Soc. 27-1. 2S3— on the culture 

 ot ini'lun* "illi— on a new specie* of olive ^S'l^on raii- 

 nii^ liiie* from aecd, ^^a^ting rone*, fitc. 293 — on soeJs 

 tmn^initlcJ from the I'aris llorlicullunl Soc-iety, 'JIT — 

 letlcr lo.froiu the I'resiilcnlof iht Froniont llorliculluml 

 Society 'i".!^ — hii trauiUtioni from ihe Uon Jardinier, 

 301— on ameliorated pears 3U'J — notice of hiii communi- 

 catioQi 31") — on the Kruil Market at Paris 310 

 Dclavan, Henry W., notices of his farm, &c. 52 

 December, temperature of 213 

 Diseases of rclined lifo 3(M — Abcrnethy on the origin of 



395 

 Domestic management of farmers 101 

 DojTWoo*!, reineiiy for p'li-^on by ti 

 Donation to a poor fjiiiily 3d-l 



Dorchester, his queries on the managcmcnlof sward land 6 

 Downer, S., his description of tho Clapp pear, a native 

 so '.lliiiz .">1 — of the Harvard or Eparc;ne pear &2 — of 

 the fusbing pear 113 — of the Dix pear lljl — of several 

 sorts of native (jrupes 22lj — of native Fruits, &c. 243 — 

 his report on an exhibition of flowers 382 

 Dress of ladies, remarks on 8 — passion for, confined to 



low life 408 

 Dung should be applied as soon as fermentation begins 273 

 E. B. on the properties of the sugar beet ^22 

 Edwards, E., his donation of sccdtiug potatos and early 



corn to Mxss. Hort. Soc. 105 

 Eel, gii^ntic 307 

 Eggs, how preserved for 6 or 7 years C7 — batched, eaten 



in China 07 

 Emigrants' life, delights of 240 

 Elderberry syrup, how made 54 

 Elder shrub, notices of Irtl, 310 

 Endive a substitute for coll'ec I'J5 

 Entomology, contributions to, by T. W. Harris 1 — notice 



of lectures on. by Dr Storcr 190 

 E. P. on ploughing greensward 42 — on the construction 



and uses of the roller 2S(8 

 Epilepsy in horses 380 

 Erving,' John, on making butler 3C3, 369 

 Everett, Hon. Edward, his remarks at Worcester Cattle 



.Show 96 

 Exercise, utility of 3C0— for plants 3C5 

 Eye, steel drawn from with a magnet 363 

 Fanning Mill-, Walker's improved 2C<7 

 Farming scientilically recommended 300 

 Farm lands shodid be sheltered by trees 147 

 F'arm management, remarks on 04 



Farmer, A, on the proper time for cutting timber 25 — on 

 worms in pencil trees 20— on extracting potash from 

 buckwheat 31 — Mr Rowan's description of 123 — a 

 Middlesex, on potato* 137 — the sloliiful, description ol 



144 on breaking steers to the yoke 250 — on orchards, 



feeding cattle with pomace, &c. 3.57 

 Fanner, a New York, on diseased sheep 230 

 Farmer, on old, on smoking cigars 145 

 Farmer, a young, on an insect which attacks the Mangel 



Wurtzcl 3t<5 

 Farmers, remarks on their dignity and importance 20, 125. 



1.52 — American, character of '2.57 — hints to .387 

 Farmer's Scries of Library of Useful Knowledge 150 

 Farming, profitable business 45 — should bo Icaint as an 



art 72 — examples of success in 240 

 Furriery, remarks on 03 

 Fasting removes incipient diseases 106 

 Fecundation of plants, fruits. Sic. 200 

 Felons, cure for 305 



Fences, live, remarks on by J. n. 1(>1 — by W. K. 171 

 Fencing, icmarks on, by Anglicanus08 

 Fennel, notices of 386 

 Fig, one remarkable for size 19 — raised in Drooklyn, 



N. Y. 21 

 I-'ish, how conveyed alive 67 

 Fiske, ().,on the blight in pear trees 400 

 Fits in horses 380 

 '•'l»gg. Wm.,his notice of Ihe great growth of scions of the 



Hartlett pear I 

 Flagg, M.,on new sorts of pease 255 

 Flannel, manufacture of in Vermont 102 

 Flowers, eirddems of innocence and purity 16— artificial, 

 by a French lady 181 — annual, remarks on their cul- 

 ture 2'2.'> — how producr'd from plants difficult to flower 

 t40— remarks on by II. A. S. Dearborn 25:t— to pre 

 serve Ihe ii.iiural color in the petals of such as have 

 been ilne.l 37» 

 Fonlaneillcs on a new spicies of mulberry tree 2°29 

 Fixxl, animal .>nd vegetable compared IG3 

 Forest trees, eiiltivalini; of 325 

 fossils, Aniedibivl.m, found in New Jersey 6 

 Foster, Adams, hi< iin'ice< of fruis 137, liii 

 Fountain', notos on, by W. Keniick 289 



INDEX. 



Foirbi, crushed com recommended for 273 — inquiries 



concerning 278 

 Frost, itselTecls In ripening grain 379 

 Frugal Housewife, notices of 171 

 Fruit Market at Paris, notices of 31 



Fruits, on improving varieties of 43 — ladder for gathering 

 described 51 — on the mixing of 91, 111. r25— large, 

 notice of 91 — rare, notices of, by Ailains Foster 121, 162 

 on the selection of, by J. Leonard 193 — on obtaining new 

 varieties of, by M. Poiteau 221 — fine native described 

 by P. D. 212— keeps best when gathered early '273 



Fruit trees, on adapting to particular soils 35 — remarks 

 on by ' Cultivator' 41— should have a northern expo- 

 sure 76— queries respecting by D. 91— remarks on 

 planting 101— on building or inoculating 111 — planting 

 on the sides of hills 118 — wash lor, recommended by 

 Messrs Winships '231 — on removing caterpillars from 

 256— remarks on transplanting 262 — cultivation of a 

 branch of education in Sweden 27:i — to destroy insects 

 on, &.C. '273 — remarks on by R. Green 291 — oil as an 

 application to injurious .306 — cirects of ringing, remarks 

 on .334 — digging the giound near to injurious 367, 374 



Gardens, remarks on 92, 310 



Gardener's Calendar for August 14 — for October 101 



Gardening of the Germans in Pennsylvania 80 — in the 

 neighborhood of Boston 100 



Gardens and Fields, society for protecting 5,24, 399 



Garden walks, improvement in 368 



Garlic, uses and virtues of 3.85 



Glanders in horses 396,412 



Glass, thick, recommended for durability 21 



Glazier, Franklin, a new apple presented by 59 



Goat, recommended for milk 156 



Gourgas, J. M., his remarks on the Passion Flower 70— on 

 blight in barley 299, 330 



Gold mines in North Carolina 27— in the Cherokee coun- 

 try 371 



Gooseberries, on retarding the growth of 49 — remedy for 

 mildew in 379— large 411,414 



Gout, alleviated by carded cotton applied to the part 

 adectcd 53 



Grafting pears and apples on Mountain Ash and Service 

 trees 46— orange trees 138 — in winter, query concern- 

 ing '-34 — new mode of 301 —composition for 366 



Grain, striking ofTby a roller when measured 405 



Grap :. a large native 81 — Kenrick's native 403— the 

 queen, Mr Prince's description of 145 — profit in its 

 cu turc 267 — on engrafting foreign on native 267>— 

 Orwigsburgh, 403 



Grapes, remedy against mildew in 5, 353 — from E. W. 

 Bull 25 — native, remarks on 35, 153, 226— their cultiva- 

 tion recommended 56 — large kinds noticed 75 — Fox 



watering 34, remarks on their treatment by W. Carver 

 69 — improvement in the breed of 107 — general history 

 of 196. 204, 212, 220, '228, 236, 214, 252, 260, 26- 

 276, 284, 292, 297, 300, 308, 321. 332, 340, 34'*, 356 

 364 — diseases of 372, 380, 3H8, 396— on tho treatmen 

 of by J. M. G. 36"2 — embrocation for strains, wrenches 

 winilgalls, &.C. in 363 — breaking of 389 — glanders in 

 396, 412. 

 Horticultural buildings, heated by hot water 170 

 Horticultural Society, Massachusetts, notices of then 

 meetings and proceedings 7, 14, 22, 26, 38, 51, 62 

 70, 86, 95, 103, 111, 118, 126, 134, 113, 198. 287 

 3;J8, 375, 3«2, 390, 398, 407, 414— their festival 77- 

 fruits presented at 83 — ofTicers of 95, 166 — notices c 

 fruits left with 173 — paintings fine, in their hall 194— li- 

 of premiums ollered by 212,311,330 — letter receive 

 by from Lc Cointe De Lasteyrie 212 — account of pro 

 cecdings of 271, 283, 330, 317— noUcc of in Loudon' 

 Magazine 306 — report of a committee of respecting tl 

 curculio 382 

 Horticultural Society of Philadelphia, meetings of 3 



25, 370 



Horticultural Spciety of New York, notice of its annivcr 

 sary GG — varieties exhibited before 414 



'- of Albany, its anniversary 69 



of London, receipts and expenditures of 1 



of Paris, notices of 305 



Horticulture, remarks on, by J. L. 10 



Horticulturist, A, on digginglhe ground near fruit trees36 



Hosack, Dr David, notices of his residence in Hyde Par 



52, 85 

 Hotbed, how made. Sec. 195 

 Hunt, Ebenczcr, notice of his pears, &c. 70 

 Hyacinths, on the culture of 118--notices offineonc5 33 

 Hydrophobia, salt said to be a cure for 37 — washing th 

 wouikI for, recommended 80 — said to be cured b 

 chlorine 85 — notices of, by Dr Abcruethy 416 

 Hysteric fits, remedy for 376 

 Ignis latuus, remarks on 13 



India Rubber, solution of 171 — spun into thread 400 

 Indian Corn, on topping the stalks of 73— cultivated i 

 France 156— in England 165, 331— great crops o 

 raised in Maryland 116 — soaking in copperas wat« 

 reconunendeil previous to planting 355 

 Indian plaster 165 



Indigo in South Carolina 53 — history of its culture 86- 



cultivated in Noith Carolina 1!4 — a new species of, di 



covered in the Philippine Islands 215 



Inquirer, his queries concerning proper grasses for ce 



tain soils 178 — answer to his queries 186 — his quel' 



relative to the introduction of polatas into New Enji 



lion reconinn.iiiu:ii uu — lai^c iviun^ ■iui,>,cu .., — . «.. | land 225 — his cjucry relative to bees 259 



giape recpmmended 75— nomenclature, &c. 121, 1.32," llnsects injuiious to the vino 15 — in barley 43 — how d 



178,205,213— protected by black gauze 301— coal dust, stroyed by steam 53, '299 — de-troyed by soap sue 



cinders, &c. good manure for 350 



Green, R.,lhermoinctrical register by 290— on fruit trees, 

 fee. 291 



Green pease, &c. in China 37 



Greensward, Daniel, on making butter in winter 145 



Greville rose, notices of 9 



Griffith, Mrs Mary, her letter to Gen. Dearborn respect- 

 ing a new bee-hive and the curculio in fruit 17 



Outta Serena, in horses 396 



H., his remarks on Ihe nomenclature of grapes 178 



Harris, T. W., on entomology 1 



Hay, on sailing 398 



Haymakers, diligent 7 



Haymaking .398 



H. C, his remarks on polalos 121, 1'22 



HaywanI, Joseph, Esq., extracts from his work on horti- 

 culture 116 



Health, Journal of, extracts from, 132,139, 157, 181, 19S, 

 376 —precautions for preserving 389 



Healing by hot water for gardening purposes 170 



Heifer, a remarkably large 370 



Hemp, great growth of 13— notices of 20— cultivation of 

 118 — nilture of; in Madison co, N. Y. 13:5 — premium 

 offered for raisiiie in Maine 179— specimens of exhibited 

 at Boston Stale House 206— .Mr Buel's remarks on the 

 culture of 258— remarks on, hy J. MAi. '265— S. Wells, 

 Jr's iiolices of its culture, ''eii— further notices of 272 



report of the select eonimitlee of the state of Ohio on 



its culture .307, 311, 3',11 — Extracts from a report to 

 (Jongress on 351, 365— premium for its cultivation by 

 Worcester Agricultural Society 35ti — how eullivoted 

 anil prepared in Russia 365 



Hessian fly in wheat, how destroyed '23 • 



lliiils for Ihe pn'ssiire of the limes 37 



lloceo, a bird, imported by lien. Lafayette 157 



Hog, iiiaiiimolh 1*28 



lloraer.idlsh. for cough", colds, consumptions, &c. 368 



Horse, gr.iphic llliistratiniis of 319 



Horses, spavins In, description of, and remedies for 6— on 



310 — in fruit, on a premium for a remedy against 347 

 on ash trees, notices of 350 — destroyed by lime wale^ 

 363 — cannot be destroyed by quicksilver nor sulph' 

 plugged up in trees 36li — thickness of their wings 3" 

 — sent by Mr Salisbury, and cnoneously supposed 

 pro.lucc the worm in plums, &c. 390 

 Instinct in aniipals 173 



Intemperance, must be left olf at once, not by degrees . 



— consiilered as a disease 168 — Mr Pomeroy's essav • 



the means of suppressing 321 — in England, notices of 3: 



Iriigalion, on the importance ol 75 



Isabella giape, vine, a remarkable 21— Messrs Winshi i 



crop of, 158— Mr Stedman's ciopof. 194 

 Ives, John, his notice of large trees 353 

 Ivy, remedy for poison by 6 

 J., on the mixlnie of fruits 114 

 Jack-a-lantein'.V2 



Jalap, eiillivated in Philadelphia 256 

 Jarvis, Charles, on the ciiliivalionof the potato 162 

 Jenkins, L., on the Sinclair beet 74 — on Mr Welh 



present of a Durham bull 74 

 J. L.. hisnolicesnf exotic plants 161, 169. 178— his que 



relative to forcing-houses for the vine 179 

 J. M.. on the natural succession of forest trees in Nor 



America 146 

 J. M. G., on Ihe culture of the potato 218— on guardi 

 auninsl canker-worm "257 — on Ihe cultivation ol hei 

 26,5 — on blight in barley '299 — on the trcaluuut 

 hoi>es 302 

 Jockey club, cautions against 290 

 Jobnsi'ui, W. R., his remedy against mildew in grap 



6, 858 

 J. W. W., on the row tree 201 

 Kenrick. Win., Esq , on pruning fruit trees '261 

 Kings, European, notices of by Mr JelTerson 2'24 

 Knives, new mole of shirpeiiiiu; 15 

 L., on the ciillur* of annual flowers 22J 

 Lacing. -Irieliires on 190 

 Ladder, for gathering fruit 64 



