INDSX. 



453 



Swelled Lips. 271. 

 Swelled Neck, 152, 154, 380. 



T 



TJ 



Udder, inflamed, 157, 330. 

 opening cloeed teats, 157. 



Tagging, how performed, 141. 



cut, illnstrative of, 141. 

 Taintor, John A., his account of present 

 Merinos of Spain, 17. 

 imports French Merinos into United 



States, 86. 

 description of his Merinos, 36. 

 Tariffs of the United States, effects of dif- 

 ferent ones on production, price, etc. 

 of wool, 25, 26. 

 those in force from 1824 to 1861, 92-94. 

 Teats, closed ones, how opened, 157. 

 Teeth, cutting of the, 150. 

 described, 266. 



the most reliable test of age, 266, 267. 

 to be extracted sometimes, 267. 

 Tessier, cited in regard to sheep diseases, 



238, 318. 

 Tetanus, 281, 282. 

 Texas, adaptation of to wool growing, 248, 



climate 'of, 248, 249. 



mean temperature at New Braunfels. 



249. 

 mean temperature at Austin, 249. 

 climate of, 426, et seg. 

 northers of, 429, 430. 

 seasons and crops, and their vicissi- 

 tudes, 431, 432. 

 Thomiere, inoculates for small-pox, 350. 

 Tborne, Samuel, imports South Bown 

 sheep, 58. 

 describes his mode of managing them, 



58,59. 

 his crosses to procure lambs for the 



butcher, 134, 135 note. 

 his account of parturient fever in his 

 flock, 334, 335. 

 Ticks, effects of on sheep, 187. 



how exterminated from flocks, 187-189. 

 cut of dipping box, 187. 

 Toe-nippers, cut of, 169. 

 Torry, Dr.jhis account of St. John's-"Wort, 



269. 

 Travel-sore, 355. 



Treatment of ewe after lambing, 156, 157. 

 Trees in pastures, 212. 

 Trimmer, Mr., his description of French 

 Merinos in 1827, 19. 

 his description of Spanish sheep dogs, 

 399, 400. 

 Tunisian Mountain sheep introduced into 

 Pennsylvania, 53. 

 bred and commended by John Hare 

 Powell, -53. 

 Turnips as sheep feed, 221, 235, 239-243. 

 *' 21 per cent.," the ram so called, 15. 

 length of his wool, 76. 

 his qualities as a sire, 109. 

 remarkable cross between him and 



Saxon ewes. 130, and note, 

 his pedigree, 415. 



Vaccination for small-pox, 350. 

 Valois inoculates for small-pox, 349. 

 Variola Ovinar— (see Small Pox.) 

 Vegetation, kind of, required by difllerent 



breeds of sheep, 86, 87. 

 Vermont, Merino sheep breeders of, 27-30. 

 Von Thaer, Albert, cut of his Saxon ram. 

 26. 

 his mode of numbering sheep, 183. 



W 



Walker, Mr., his theory of hereditary 



transmission, 107 et Seq. 

 Walz M., his description of scab, 388. 

 Washing sheep, 163, 164. 



its utility considered, 164-168. 

 Water for sheep, its utility in summer, 194. 

 its necessity in winter, 231. 

 modes of watering in winter, 231-233, 

 Water in pastures highly beneflcial, 194, 



indispensable in winter, 232. 

 Weaning lambs, age and mode, 198. 

 feeding after weaning, 198-201. 

 English mode of fall-feeding, 198, 199. 

 Webb, Jonas, his success in breeding 



South Down Sheep, 57 et seg. 

 Wells, Thomas, describes symptoms of 



small-pox, 347. 

 White, Henry G., imports Cotswold Sheep 

 into United States, 49. 

 cut of his Cotswold ram Pilgrim, 48. 

 cut of his Cotswold ewe Lady Gay, 50. 

 an account of his sheep, 49. 

 Wilcox, Asahel F., pedigree of his "Thou- 

 sand Dollar Earn," 415. 

 Wild-fire, 344. 



Wilson, Professor John, his description of 

 Leicester sheep, 45-47. 

 his description of South Down Sheep. 



55. 

 his description of the Hampshire 

 Downs, 59, 60, 61, 63- 

 Womb, inversion of, 145, 330. 

 Wool, characteristics of Spanish, 15, 16. 

 fineness and felting property of Span- 

 ish, 16. 

 felting property of Saxon, 16. 

 characteristics of Saxon fleeces, 20. 

 proper degree of flneness of in the 



American Merino, 72, 73. 

 that of the Merino sometimes black, 72 



note, 

 evenness of, the term defined, 73. 

 tmeness and soundness of, 74. 

 pliancy and softness of, 74. 

 style of, 75. 

 length of, 75. 

 yolk in (see Yolk.) 

 oil, grease, and gum in, (see Tolk.) 

 prices of in United States from 1800 to 

 1861, 91-94. 



