903 
recent Improvements, 412-417 ; Ber¬ 
nard’s hot-houfe, and Mr. March’s gra¬ 
pery, 413; Loudon’s peach-houfe, 4155 
pinery, 416. 
Hove, in cattle, to cure, 501. 
Hunting, 482-485'; for deftroying ferocious 
beafts, 483 ; for amufement, 484; coni 
demned by the great king of Pruffia, 485. 
Hufbandry, its antiquity, efteemed by the 
Romans, 490; lately improved in this 
country, 491 ; broadcaft, and drill, 547 ; 
improved implements, 585 publications 
°n, 597 - 
Inarching, or approach-grafting, 400. 
Lambs, 523 ; houfe, 525. 
Lime as a manure, 565 ; mode of applying 
it, 566 ; limeftone and chalk, 567. 
Lucern-grafs, 554. 
JVIalt-duft and oak-bark as manure, 563. 
Manures, 55.5; from animal fubftances, 
556 ; with lime, 576 ; from vegetable 
fubftances, 561 ^ with lime, 578 ; from 
foflil fubftances, 564 ; faline fubftances, 
572 ; compound manures, or comports, 
575; to apply manures with advantage, 
579 i topreferve, improve, and increafe, 
them, 582 ; maoure to be gained by fold¬ 
ing of fheep, 500-5^8. 
I N D E X. 
Marl, 557; how to apply as a manure, 
568. 
Merino-fheep, 497. 
Milk and cream, curious particulars relating 
to, 51c, 511; fale of, 515, 516. 
Mud, and fweepings of ftreets, 563. 
Nurfery for fruit-trees, 409-411. 
Oats, cultivation of, 543. 
Oil-cake for feeding cattle, 524^ for ma¬ 
nure, 576. 
Ox, a moll ufeful animal, 502,. 
Peafe, management of, 544. 
Peat-afhes, 573. 
Pigs, management of, 5165 experiments 
by Mr.. Young, 517. 
Plantain, two forts, 549. 
Ploughs, feven kinds, 586, 7. 
Potatoe-wafher, 596. 
Poultry of various kinds, 519 ; Mrs. D’Oy- 
ley’s method of rearing, 520. 
Pruning and training wall-trees, 395^399* 
Rags as manure, 564. 
Rib-grafs, or plantain, 549. 
Roller with fpikes, 595. 
Rye, management of, 542. 
Saintfoin-grafs, 553. 
Sale and faltpetre as manures, 574, 
Sand and (hells aoa.manure, 570. 
Sea and river-weed as manure, 562. 
Shears, 501. 
Sheep, South-down, Merino, and Bakewell, 
and Lincoln, breeds, 497 ; Tees, Rom¬ 
ney, Exir.ore, Dorfet, Hereford, Norfolk, 
heath, Herdwick, Cheviot, dun-faced, 
and Shetland, breeds, 498; breeding of 
fheep, 499 ; folding, 500, 582 ; (heal¬ 
ing, 501; to cure the hove, 501, 2j 
gracing and fattening, 522; grafs-larnbs, 
523 ; houfe-lambs, 525. 
Sheep-folds, 584. 
Smut in wheat, 540. 
Soot, 573 ; its value ns a manure, 574. 
South-Down (heep, 497. 
Sowing by broadcaft, and by drill, 547 3- 
univerfal fowing-machine, 590. 
Stag-hunting, a royal ("port, 454. 
Sward-cutter, 595. 
Thraihing-machmes, 596, 
Trefoil-grafs, 549. 
Turkeys, not to be crammed, 519. 
Urine as a manure, 559. 
Wall-trees, management of, 395. 
Water as a manure, 585. 
Wheat, cultivation of, 539; fmutty, 549, 
END of the TENTH YOLUME 
V 
