PRINTED BY JOHN D. TΟΥ, CORNER OF ST. PAUL AND MARKET STREETS.
A. B. on Maryland lands, No. 1. 81. No. 2. 91. ADLUM, John, on the manufacture of wine from wild AMPHICON on civil engineering, 205. On the Aus-
grapes, 261.
ADOPTION, singular system of in France, 32.
AGRICOLA, dissertation on lime, by, 369.
AGRICULTURE, of modern Italy, 1. As influenced
by geographical circumstances, 2. Science of, 2,
9, 17, 33, 65. On the establishment of schools teach-
ing theoretically and practically, with letters from Emanuel De Fellenberg and William C. Wood- bridge on the subject, 25, 34. Of Louisiana, re- marks on, 154. Of New England, by Thomas Gold, 161, 169. Remarks on, by the editor of the New York Statesman, 322. Of Georgia, extract from Mr. Bevan's report thereon, to the legislature, 338. Arthur Young's experiments in, 361, 370, 386, 394. Act for the promotion of, in Pennsylvania, 410.
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETIES.
-OF BARNWELL DISTRICT, S. C. addressed by
Mr. Patterson, 17.
-OF DORCHESTER COUNTY, Md. list of pre- miums for the show in October, 1827, 227. Official account of their show, and distribution of premi- ums, 273. Addressed by Dr. J. E. Muse, 281.
-OF HAMILTON COUNTY, Ohio, offer premiums for crops of barley, 204.
-OF HARTFORD COUNTY, (Con.) extract from the address to, by the Rev. C. A. Goodrich, on neat- ness of farm houses, 315.
-OF LOUDON, FAUQUIER, PRINCE WILLIAM
AND FAIRFAX COUNTIES, Va. addressed by
Thomas Marshall, Esq. 306.
-OF MARYLAND, list of premiums for the Show
of 1827, with remarks on, by the editor, 41. Meet-
ing of the Trustees at Col. Bosley's, June 7, 1827,
104. Address to the members of the Eastern Shore,
by N. Hammond, 106. List of premiums offered
by the society for the Eastern Shore, at the Show
of November, 1827, 187. List of judges for the
Western Shore, 240. Official account of the Cattle
Show and Fair at Baltimore, Oct. 24th and 25th,
257. List of officers for the ensuing year, 259.
Official account of the Cattle Show and Fair at
Easton, 323.
-OF MASSACHUSETTS, addressed by the hon. John Lowell, their president, 265.
-OF PAWTUCKET, R. I. premiums to be award- ed at their next Cattle Show, 228.
-OF PENNSYLVANIA, proceedings of, in rela-
tion to the plan of the Fellenberg school-list of
officers, 378.
-OF SALEM, N. J. premiums selected from their
list for October, 1827, 228.
-OF SOUTH CAROLINA, papers read at their
meeting 18th September, 1827, 233.
AGRICULTURAL Associations, benefits of, 283, 295.
Axioms, 308. Fete, in China, 188. Implements
used in Italy, 1. Improvement, importance of, 210.
Institute and system of education of the Rev. E. De
Fellenberg, brief sketch of, 50. Knowledge, read-
ing necessary to, 74. Meeting in Lancaster, Pa.
203. Penance, advantages of, 59. Query, 188.
Schools, proposition to establish one in Pennsyl-
vania, by Mr. Morris, 267, 378.
AGRICULTURAL AND MANUFACTURING Society,
of Muskingum county, Ohio, elect J. S. Skinner an
honorary member. Officers for 1827, 168.
-Establishment in France, 264.
AGRICULTURISTS, biographical sketches of eminent,
ANIMAL KINGDOM, on the study of, with reference
to agriculture 186, 194, 202, 209, 226, 235, 242, 249,
266, 273.
ANIMALS, on the improvement of the breed of, 19.
General principles of rearing, managing and feed-
ing domestic, 33. On the study of the animal king-
dom with reference to agriculture on the lan-
guage, nomenclature, description and classification
of-external anatomy of, 186, 194, 202, 209, 226,
235, 242, 249, 266, 273.
ANTS, battle of the, by M. Hanhart, 264. APPLES, large ones, 109, 229, 308. On retaining good varieties of, 165. Notice of Adams', 210. Japa- nese, description of, by D. and C. Landreth, 221. Method of keeping for twelve months, 285. Το mark with the impression of a leaf, 340.
APRICOT, notice of a large one, from Mr. J. Lafitte,
BEEF, inquiry as to the best mode of pickling, 232.
BEER, when and where first brewed, 210.
BEES, how to preserve from the worm, &c. 53. Man-
ner of raising in Livonia, 181. Method of remov-
ing without destroying, 256.
BEVAN, Mr. extract from his report on the agriculture
of Georgia, 338.
BINGHAM, J. A. on the use of mules in the western
country, 408.
BIRNIE, C. letter from, on the subject of fermented
liquors, offered at the Cattle Show of 1827, 373.
BLANKETS, cheap and excellent substitute for, 235.
BONES, excellent glue made from, by the French,
BORROWING AND LENDING, evils of, by A. P. 199.
BREAD, how to make without yeast, 71. Kind of pro-
per to be used by dyspeptic persons, 181. Expe-
riment with, 283.
BREWERIES, notice of the extensive ones at Albany,
quantity of barley and hops consumed therein, 45.
BRICKS, success of Mr. Bakewell's method of burning,
BRODNAXE, W. E. on raising blooded horses, 359.
BROOKE, Col. George M. on the climate and produc-
ductions of Florida, 40.
BROWN, Samuel, on the manufacture of coarse cotton
goods in the southern states, 249.
BUCKWHEAT, experiments in the culture of, 387. BUEL, Judge J. on the cultivation of barley, 2. Com- munication from, on pear trees, 252. On the cul- tivation of lucern, 322. Communicates Arthur
Young's experiments in agriculture, with remarks, viz.-on wheat, 361; on barley, 370; on oats, 386; on buckwheat, 387; on peas, turnips and carrots, 394; on potatoes, 409.
BURNING, directions to escape, 399.
BUTTER, general observations on the manufacturing
of, 285.
BYRON, Lord, list of his works, 64.
C.
CABBAGES, culture of, injurious to the soil, 179. Large
one raised in Aldie, Va. 215-do. in Northampton No
county, Va. 362.
CAMPO MARTO, farm of, in Italy, account of its ma-
nagement, 1.
CANALS, extracts from the report of the commission-
ers of the New York, 77. Remarks by "Anne
Arundel," on cutting one from Annapolis to Wash-
ington, 222. List of, in the United States, 286.
Progress of the Chesapeake and Delaware, 301.
Report of the president and directors of do. to Gov. Kent, 381. Proposed one in Georgia, 325. Estimated cost of the Chesapeake and Ohio, 413.
CANVASS, American, superiority of, 231, 242. CARNATIONS, time for potting, 6. CARPENTER, George W. observations and experi-
CARROTS, notice of a large one raised in Maryland,
16-do. in Pennsylvania, 177. Directions for cul-
tivating, 179. Experiments in the culture of, 394.
CARTS AND WAGONS, where best used, 284. CARTER'S LETTERS from Europe, proposals for pub- lishing, 96.
CASTOR OIL, American, the manufacture of, profita-
ble, 373.
CATTLE, manner of feeding in Piedmont-Colour of in Tuscany, 1. Cheap fodder for, 105. Short-
horned not a native breed of Britain-excellent
food for, 179. Uses of salt to, when given freely,
179. Ill effects of soiling, 193. Fodder for, 204.
Cure for wens, 204. Notice of a disease in, called
shoulder brake, 229. The importance of selecting
good breeds, 243. Account of the large ox, Colum-
bus, 312. Weight of some at Washington, Pa. 315.
Bulls of the Devon and short-horn wanted, 380.
Short-horned for sale by James Cox, 404.
CATTLE SHOW, Hartford, remarks on, by the editor of the Connecticut Courant, 208. At Baltimore, 257. At Easton, Md, 323.
CATTERPILLARS, how to destroy, 117. CAULIFLOWERS, directions for cutting, 197. How to keep for any length of time, 286.
CELERY, large head of, 93.
CHEAT, remarks on, by a Farmer, 116-do. by A. P.
CHEESMAN, George H. queries by, on rolling land, CHERRIES, very fine raised by J. Willis, 104. Re- marks on eight varieties of, by W. Prince, 260- do. on ten varieties by do. 363.
CHESNUTS, flour made from, in Tuscany, 1. Compa- rative weight of American and French, by M. F. Wheeler, 272.
CHRYSANTHEMUM, Chinese, description of the seve ral varieties of, by William Prince, 252. CIDER, on the manufacture and fining of, by B. B. Gooper, 387. Methods of making good, 229, 231,
CLARKE, George J. F. Esq. memoir by, on the culti vation of the Spanish segar tobacco, 337.
CLAY, on burning, information wanted, by a "bscri
ber, 251.
CLIMATE, amelioration of, 9.
CLOVER, treatment of the second crop, 179.
-SEED, time and method of saving, getting out and cleaning, by Robert Sinclair,-do. by "Expe- rience," 396.
COCHINEAI., on the culture of, (with cuts,) 188.
COCKROACHES, how to destroy, 13, 119, 143.
COKE, Thomas William, Esq. of Norfolk, (Eng.) biogra-
COMPOSTS, their application and cost, 201. CONGRESSIONAL ITEMS, of general interest, 303,
CONSUMPTION, good effects of riding in, 327. Liver- COOPER, B. B. on raising fruit trees, and the manu- facture of cider, 387. His experience in the use of different kinds of manures, 411.
-Joseph, his directions for making wine from cherries, currants, &c. 109.
CORN, on the selection of, for seed, by Calvin Jones, 12. Preservation of, 124. Proper directions for stalking, 179. Sown broadcast on fallow, its fari- naceous product and value as long fodder; sown broadcast on rye stubble and sward, its product and value, by J. H Powel, 207. Tall growth of, in Ohio, 315. Large crop, 316. Remarks on the height of, by Agricultor, 331.
- GUINEA, its cultivation, great product, and va- lue as food for cattle, 193. Queries respecting, by R. Dunbar, 410.
-LAWS, British, effect of, on the agricultural
productions of the United States, 52.
COTTON, estimates of the imports and consumption of in Great Britain, in seven years, 5. Quality of the
Maryland, 7. On the qualities of the nankin, cul-
tivated in North Carolina, 81. Consumption of, in
France, Switzerland, and the United States, 116.
Report on the causes which contribute to the pro-
duction of fine Sea Island, by Whitemarsh B. Sea-
brook, 129, 137, 145. Improper for wounds, 208.
On the employment of in the manufacture of bag-
ging, cordage, and coarse fabricks, 219, 225, 235,
241, 249, 260, 274, 290, 298, 307, 314, 324, 330, 346,
353, 395, 410. Quantity of cloth made on the farm
of Dr. J. E. Muse, 242. Value of goods annually
manufactured in Great Britain, 220. Trade at
Havre, in 1826 and 7, 231. Exports of, from Pe-
tersburg, Va. for twelve months, 242. Thread of,
preferable to flax, for shoes, 247. Account of the
"spinster" used in Tennessee and Alabama, 249.
On the gro growth of Sea Island, in Virginia, by J.
Mercer, 260. African mode of dying a rich and
lasting blue, 299. Remarks on the manufacture of,
in North Carolina, 307. History of the trade and
manufacture of, in Great Britain, 313. Printing in
the United States, 327. Mr. Fisher's report to the
legislature of North Carolina on the establishment
of manufactures, &c. 346, 353. Present state and
future prospects of the market in England, &c. 411.
COWS, observations on by T. Pickering, 13. Winter
food for, 27, 315. Extraordinary one, belonging
to J. H. Powel, Esq. 100. Further particulars
concerning it, 105. Extraordinary one owned by
Dr. Elmer, in New Jersey, 176. Good ones want-
ed, 232.
COX, James, offers short-horned cattle for sale, 404.
CROPS, rotation of, 17. Essay on, by W. C. Nicholas,
49, 57. Do. by Sir H. Davy, 65. Prospect of, in
Virginia, 83, 396. North Carolina, 100, 179, 252,
220. Maryland, 100, 149, 179, 404. In Alabama,
107. In New York, 133. In Pennsylvania, 139,
149, 179. In Georgia, 164. Inquiries as to the
advantage of a certain rotation of, by a young Far-
negar, 94. Large one, 117.
CULTURE, origin and principles of, as derived from
the study of vegetables, 9. Influence of, on vege-
tables and fruits, 10.
CUTS, box for transplanting plants, 38. Mail stage for
a rail road, 126. Rail road carriages, on Mr. Mill's
plan, 142. Illustrative of the culture of cochineal,
189. Transplanting instruments and orange box,
212. Of the great ox Columbus, 312. Solution of
a question, by V. 351. Shewing the mode of culti-
vating potatoes, 363. Machine for measuring the
depth of ploughing, 384.
DAVIS, Gideon, prices of his ploughs, is ploughs. 8
DEAFNESS, sure remedy for, 392.
DENNY, William H. interesting letter from, on the Bal-
timore and Ohio rail road, 389.
DICKINSON, W. R. on sheep and wool, 284.
DIET, influence of, on the intellectual faculties, 206.
DOANE, Capt. (U. S. N)
a variety of beauti-
ful shells to the editor, 72.
DOCKS, proper time for pulling, 210.
DOGS, distemper in, cured by laudanum, 6. Account
of a faithful one, 80. Useless ones in the state of
Virginia, 107. Singular instance of sagacity in one,
151. Inquiry as to cure for certain diseases in, 239.
Cure for the mange, or itch, 263-4. Lines on the
death of Piper, a celebrated fox hound, 287.
DOMESTIC MANUFACTURES, advantages of, 191.
DRILLING, importance of, 210.
DROVERS, excellent establishment for their accommo-
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FIGS, directions for drying, wanted, 53. FISH PONDS, management of, in France, 255. FITZHUGH, William H. queries on the manufacture
of wool, and the employment of slaves, 260. FLANNEL, observations on the use of, as an article of clothing, by Dr. Barlow, 6. On the manufacture of, in the United States, 87.
FLAX, how to dress so as to look like silk, 181. In- quiries respecting, by J. T. Kilby, 396.
FLORICULTURE, florists' flowers used in, 11.
FLORIDA, climate, productions, &c of, 40. Answer
to inquiries relative to middle, propounded by a
gentleman in Switzerland, &c. &c. by D. B. Ма-
comb, Esq. 217.
FOOD, Animal, remarks on the texture of and the dif-
ferent methods of cooking, 93.
FORSYTH, William, his composition for the cure of diseases, defects, and injuries in all kinds of fruit and forest trees, 75.
FOWL, how to fatten, 199.
FRUIT TREES, variety of, for sale in British nurse-
ries, 10. On trimming, by Joseph Kersey, 29. On
the management of various kinds, by John Willis,
44. To cure the blight on, 61. Injured by the
pea-bug, 101.
in families, 40. On the cattle show for 1827, 41.
On the town of Salem, and its vicinity, 56. On
the good effects resulting from Agricultural Fairs,
80. On the Boston Medical Intelligencer, 93. On
the season and the crops, 120. On the culture of
silk, 128. On wool, 132. On American silk, 136.
Occasioned by a toast given by the sheriff of Suf-
folk, Mass. 144. On domestic manufactures-on
the necessity of preserving pedigrees of celebrated
horses, 192. On diet, 206. On the approaching
fair, 208, 247. On the employment of cotton for
cotton bagging, &c. 219. Suggesting the propri-
ety of ladies attending the fair-on the fair to
be held for the benefit of the Orphaline Charity
School, 223. Acknowledging the receipt of fruits
and wines, 232. On the advantages of encourag-
ing the breed of horses in Maryland, 248. On
the cattle show of 1827-on the utility of pub-
lishing the accounts of races, and the pedigrees
valuable horses, 264. On the Dorchester coun-
ty cattle show, 272. On the bad effects of simi-
larity in the names of horses, 278. On Colonel
Long's letter to the rail road company, 280. In
reply to "A Subscriber," on the use of ardent spi-
rits among labourers, 288. On the erection of
monuments, 303. On farming in New England -
on economy in fodder, 321. On Fessenden's Far-
mer's Almanac, 328. On the establishment of an
agricultural society in Ohio, &c. 352. Noticing the
Southern Agriculturist--on the proper time for sow-
ing oats. 363. On rail roads, 367. On the native
black mulberry, 380. On distribution of seeds, 392.
On the proposed rail road from the Chesapeake to
the Delaware, 400. On the use of Mules, 407.
ELLIOT, Capt. J. D. sends carrier pigeons and hogs to ENGINEERING, civil, remarks on, by Amphicon, 205. ENGLAND, national debt, rise of, 32. EQUESTRIAN performances, an account of some re- markable, 94.
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GRAPES, description of the "Scuppernong," 29. Ex-
cellent quality of the "Alexander" varieties cul-
tivated in Italy, 30. General reinarks on the Co-
rinthian, or Zante currant, by S. W. Pomeroy, 37.
Experiments with the "Bland," 39. Query res-
pecting the kinds best for making wine, 53.
rinthian, or Zante currant, further remarks on, 83.
On the "Roanoke" or "Scuppernong," and the
wine made therefrom, by James G. Hall, 139. On
proper selection of for vineyards, by William
Prince, 221. Remarks on the native, by D. & C.
Landreth, 221. Notices of some fine ones, by W.
Prince, 276, 284. Notice of the Isabella, and the
wine made therefrom, by W. Prince, 294. Further
remarks on the "Isabella," by
by
"A Constant Rea-
der," 309. Do. do. by W. Prince, 325. On the
Scuppernong, by Orion, 348. Great addition of, to
William Prince's garden from the Luxembourg,
356. Names and qualities of the best French, by
D. N. Norton, 380. On the Scuppernong as a na-
tive, by William Prince-different kinds cultivated
in Tennessee, 397.
GRASSES, on the different kinds of, 4, 11, 20, 27, 35,
42, 58, 67, 78, 82, 90, 98, 105, 115, 131, 147. In-
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