286 



AGRICULTURE OF MASSACHUSETTS. 



Vineries (Eliphalet Stone), 1867 (Part 



2), 101. 

 Vineyard, cost of a, 1864 (Part 1), 239. 

 Vineyards. (Sec Grape ) 



— management of, 1861 (Part 2), 128; 

 1864 (Part 2) , 78 ; 1866 (Part 2) , 39 ; 1869 

 (Part 2), 113; 1870 (Part 2), 122; 1874 

 (Part 2), 75. 



Violet disease, concerning a, 1892 (Exp. 



Sta.), 231. 

 Viueo, red-eyed, habits of the, 1871 (Part 



2), 117. 

 Virginia marls, analyses of, 1892 (Exp. 



Sta.), 287, 303. 

 Voigtlander cattle, characteristics of the, 



1863 (Parti), 124. 

 Volatile acids, methods for determining, 



1890 (Exp. Sta.), 67; 1891 (Exp. Sta ), 



85. 

 Vhaic or kelp, analyses of, 1892, 104. 

 Vulpes, characteristics of the genus, 1861 

 (Part 1), 151. 



Wages on the farm, 1853 (Part 1), 94; 



1866 (Part 1), 177 ; 1873 (Part 2), 6, 56. 

 Wakefield, Dr. H. P., address by, on 



agriculture from a New England stand- 

 point, 1873 (Part 2), 15. 

 essay by, on saving and preparation 



of manure on the farm, 1877 (Part 1), 



2S7. 

 report by, on management of farm 



of State Primary School at Monson, 1873 



(Part 1), 267. 

 Walker, Amasa, address by, on the 



farmer's wants, 1855 (Part 2), 336. 

 Walker, Freeman, report by, on farm 



improvements, 1853 (Part 2), 15. 

 Walker, J. B., lecture by, on hay for 



market, 1888, 183. 

 Wall papers, arsenic in, 1890, 239. 

 Walls, land occupied by, waste of, 1855 



(Part 1), 84. 



— of gravel and lime, construction of, 

 1854 (Part 2), 247. 



Walnut trees, cultivation of. 1880 (Part 



1),48. 

 Waltham, industries of, 1877 (Part 1), 



16, 22. 



— public winter meeting of the Board of 

 Agriculture at, 1877 (Part 1), 11. 



— watches made at, character of, 1877 

 (Parti), 19,20. 



Warblers, foraging habits of the, 1861 

 (Part 2), 58; 1872 (Part 2), 199. 



Ward, Andrew H., lecture by, on ma- 

 nures and fertilizers, 1872 (Part 1), 

 165. 



Ware, Benjamin P., address by, on ex- 

 perience of a practical farmer, 1S69 (Part 

 2),1. 



essay by, on experiments in potato 



culture, 1880 (Part 1), 205. 



on reclaiming swamp lands as to 



profit and the public health, 1879 (Part 

 1), 292. 



on the silo and ensilage, 1882, 382. 



lecture by, on corn culture, 1885, 153. 



on vegetable gardening and root 



culture, 1876 (Part 1), 185. 



remarks by, before the Board of 



Agriculture at Easthampton, 1888, 268. 



report by, on the canker worm, 1870 



(Part 2) , 142. 



statement by, on experiments with 



manures, 1877 (Part 2), 48. 



Ware, Darwin E , address by, on agri- 

 culture and the industrial arts, 1864 

 (Part 2), 1. 



Waring, George E., Jr., address by, on 

 the chemistry of agriculture, 1855 (Part 

 2), 402. 



on the needs of New England agri- 

 culture, 1871 (Part 2), 65. 



remarks by, on preparation of land 



for crops, 1871 (Part 1), 27. 



Warmth as a substitute for food, 1859 

 (Part 1), 48. 



Warner, W. L , lecture by, on our homes, 

 1887, 99. 



Warren, Dr. B. H., lecture by, on birds 

 of Massachusetts, 1890, 34. 



Warts on cattle, how they ma3 r be cured, 

 1865 (Part 1), 75. 



Washburn, Emory, address by, on in- 

 fluence of agriculture — tenure of lands, 

 1861 (Parti), 14. 



on taste and common sense in farm- 

 ing, 1858 (Part 2), 29. 



on the Massachusetts farmer, 1854 



(Part 2), 459. 



Wasps, characteristics of species, 1862 

 (Parti), 174. 



Watches, American, character of those 

 made at Waltham, 1877 (Part 1), 19, 20. 



Water analyses, interpretation of results, 

 1884, 468; 1886, 534; 1887, 725; 1888, 

 598; 1889 (Exp. Sta.), 279; 1890 (Exp. 

 Sta), 277; 1891 (Exp. Sta.), 301; 1892 

 (Exp. Sta.), 296. 



— and its supply for our crops (John W. 

 Pierce), 1884, 12. 



— as a fertilizer, 1888, 45. 



— beetles, characteristics of, 1862 (Parti), 

 143. 



— enters drains, how, 1871 (Part 1), 37. 



