PRINTED BY JOHN D. TOY, CORNER OF ST. PAUL AND MARKET STREETS.
AGRICULTURE of the North of Europe, extract from Mr. Jacobs' Work on the subject, 57. On the im- portance of, to a nation, 305.
-History of, (from the Encyclopedia Americana)
337. Of France, Germany, and Italy, 338. Of the
U. S of America, 345.
-North Carolina Board of, 346.3
AGRICULTURAL Addresses, American, opinions of foreign Journals on, 364.
(Foreign) Correspondence, with the Editor, 32,
-LIFE, advantages of an, 121, 139, 148.
-SCHOOL of N. Jersey, Constitution, By-Laws, List of Officers, &c., 322. AGRICULTURAL SOCIETIES.
-OF ALBEMARLE, Va., account of their Cattle Show and Fair, 283.
-BATON ROUGE, Lou., extract from their pro- ceedings, relative to the culture of Sugar, 385. -OF BEAUFORT, S. C., proceedings of, 282. -BRISTOL CO., Mass., premiums awarded by, and documents accompanying them, 74.
-ESSEX, Mass., addressed by Colonel Pickering,
OF FREDERICKSBURG, Va., list of officers, account of their Cattle Show and Fair, and distri-
OF HAMILTON COUNTY, Ohio, proceedings of, elect J. S. Skinner an honorary member, 227. -OF HARTFORD CO. elect J. S. Skinner an ho- norary member, 135.
-MARYLAND, meeting of the Trustees at J. B. Morris, Esqr's., March 12, 1829. D. Molion, Esq. elected an honorary member of, 7. Report of a Com- mittee of the Trustees for the Eastern Shore, on the Douglass Threshing Machine, 58. Ram of the Broad-tailed breed loaned to, by Captain Kearney, of the U. S. Navy, 111. Meeting of the Trustees, at B. W. Hall's, Esq., 8th August, 1829, 175. Do. at the residence of Jacob Hollingsworth, Esq. Sept. 1, 1829, 215. Do. at Oaklands, 9th October, 1829, 255. Do. at the American Farmer Office, Nov. 5, 1829. Election of officers. Do. at the re- sidence of George Howard, Esq., 280. Do. at the residence of Samuel W. Smith, Esq., Dec. 3, 1829,
OF MUSKINGUM, Ohio, notice from the Com- mittee appointed to manage the Experiment Farm belonging to the Society, 59.
-SALEM CO., N. J., list of officers and township
Committees, 127.
-OF SOUTH CAROLINA, letter to, from J. S.
Skinner, acknowledging the receipt of the piece of plate presented to him, 190.
ST. ANDREWS, S. C., meeting of, and list of
officers, &c., 178.
-ST. JOHNS, Colleton, S. C., meeting of, and list
of officers, 187.
- UNITED, of SOUTH CAROLINA, meeting of,
and election of officers, 186.
AITON, W. in refutation of sundry instances of false philosophy on agricultural subjects, 251, 258. ALABAMA, its products and prospects, in a letter from
his Excellency Governor Murphy, to the Editor, 87. Culture of Silk in, 172.
ALBION, on keeping farm accounts, with a plan, 1.
His journey from Alexandria to Delaware, and de-
scription of Mr. Barney's fine Cattle and Bakewell
Sheep, 226.
AMERICA as a manufacturing country, 239.
AMERICAN ECLIPSE for sale-His pedigree, 336.
AMERICAN TURF REGISTER, and Sporting Maga-
zine. Prospectus of 19. Contents of the First Num-
ber, 191. Favourable notice of. Contents of the
Second Number, 231. Contents of the Third Num-
ber, 271. Contents of the Fourth Number, 312.
Contents of the Fifth Number, 335. Contents of
the Sixth Number, 384.
AMPHICON, on the value of Railways, and the losses sustained on Cotton in one season, 85.
ANDREWSIA, a beautiful estate, described and for sale,
ANDROMACHE, (sorrel mare) pedigree of, 30. ANIMALS, use of the whiskers of, 166. Attachments formed by, 166. On the changes which take place among Domestic, transported from Europe to Ame- rica, 210.
ANNUALS, English, cost of, &c., 407. APPLES, large pippins raised on the farms of Judge McMechen, and Dr. James Smith, 200. Directions for preserving till late in the year, 205. On the preservation of, by Noah Webster, 221. Large pro- duct of, from a single tree, 356.
APPLE TREES, washing with soft soap, pernicious,
108. Remarks on the Sweet Greening, by James
Thacher, 276.
ARACACHA, remarks on the cultivation of in the
United States, and the Island of Cuba, by Dr. Sa-
muel L. Mitchill, 325.
ASCLEPIAS SYRIACA, or Silky Swallow Wort, re-
ATTAR of Roses, manner of obtaining it, &c. 96. marks on, by A. Parmentier, 340.
AVALANCHE, in' Switzerland, remarkable prevention
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BACON, directions for making good, 388.
BALM OF MEKKA, method of procuring it, 134.
BARLEY, produce of a few grains sent by the Editor to
Alabama, 103.
BARONET, pedigree of, 38.
BATHING, directions for, 95.
BEANS, new variety of, 183. BEDFORD COUNTY, Penn., sketch of, manner of clearing new lands, its soil, productions, &c. &c. in answer to Captain Basil Hall's queries, by Thomas B. McElwee, 106, 114, 130.
BEDS, on the proper material for, &c., 333.
BEDSTEADS, improvement in, 279.
BEEF, how to keep, by Cousin Tabitha, 27. Market at
Brighton, Mass., 211.
BEER, how to make cheap and wholesome, 175.
make ginger, 191.
To
BEES, keeping of, in this country strongly recom-
mended, 5, Salt supposed to prevent the destruc-
tion of, by the worm, 60
Notice of a new manual
for the proprietors of, 61. Remarks by Medicus,
on the use of salt, in the management of, 84. Ex-
periment with charcoal in the management of, 149.
Inquiry as to the number of a swarm, 150. On the
management of, by Mrs. Griffith, 189. Curious
fact in the economy of, 196. Practice of the bee
masters in Germany, 267. On managing. Swarm-
ing of, 297.
BEETS, process of extracting sugar from the roots of,
151. Advantages to France from the culture of the sugar, 149. Memoir on the manufacture of sugar from, 163, 268. Remarks on the Sinclair, by L. Jenkins, 238. Notioę of two large ones, 356. BELLINGER, Doctor J, S. on the cultivation of yam potatoes from roots and slips, 11. BIDDLE, N. his address at the opening of the Chesa- peake and Delaware Canal, 300.
BIRDS, swiftness of, 413.
BLACKING, recipe to make Day & Martin's, 15.
BLAZE, pedigree of, 46.
BONAPARTE, Joseph, description of his seat near Bor
dentown, N. J., 182.
BOTTLING WINE, directions for, 77.
BOTTS in Horses, remedy for, 54, 133, 328.
BOXER, pedigree of, 46.
BREWING, Domestic, remarks on, with an engraving
of a portable apparatus for, 36.
BROCOLI, Virginia, 303.
BRODNAX, Alex., on the cultivation of the Irish Pota-
to, 42.
BUCKWHEAT straw, produces excellent potash, 179.
BUEL, J. recommends planting the Sugar Maple, 83.
On sheltering farm lands, 315.
BULL, E. W. notices the "Columbian" or "Buck"
Grape, 220.
BUTTER, the art of making in the winter season, 15,
309. Rules for making good, 220. Quantity of,
made in Massachusetts and elsewhere, from the dif-
ferent breeds of cows, 228.
CALCINED MAGNESIA, prepared at the Maryland
Chemical works, remarks on by the Editor, 111.
CAMEL fights at Smyrna and Aleppo, 221.
CAMELLIAS, culture of, 300.
CAMPHOR, to prepare without the use of alcohol, 351.
CANALS, on the present state of the New York, Ohio,
Maryland, and Pennsylvania, 252. Description of
the Great Dutch, 141.
CHESAPEAKE and DELAWARE, opening of
292, 300, remarks on, 343.
CHESAPEAKE and OHIO, progress of, 93.
-DISMAL SWAMP, commerce of, 310.
-UNION, Pennsylvania. Act in favor of, pros-
pects of, and trade upon, 93.
CANDLES, consumption of, 22.
CANE BRAKE, description of one, 35.
CANKER WORM, remarks on, by H. A. S. Dearborn,
341.
CAPE MAY ISLAND, sketch of a four days' visit to,
and of a fishing excursion, by one of the party, 145.
CARDMAKING MACHINE, notice of, 350.
CARROLL, Charles, of Carrolton, remarks by the
Editor on the 92d anniversary of his birth day, 223.
CARROLL, James, Jr. on housing corn, 268.
CARROT, red, on the cultivation of, and its value as
food for horses, by W. W. Cook, 378.
CARTER, George, on the fire blight in pear trees, 227.
CARTER, Col. Loudon, on the Wheat Weevil, its histo-
ry and mode of preventing its depredations, &c.
369.
CASTOR OIL, Process of making, by Doct. Robert R.
Harden, of Georgia 19.
CATHOLIC DISABILITIES in England, 54.
CATTERPILLARS, best time for destroying, 53.
CATTLE, account of the Chowry-tailed cattle of Tibet.
(with an engraving,) 25. Dead weight of stock exhi-
bited at the Smithfield (Eng.) club Cattle show. Pro-
perties and value of salt in feeding, 55. Value of the
improved Short horned, in England 62. On the qua-
lities of the improved Short Horns, by R. K. Meade,
82. Cost of an apparatus for steaming food for, 83.
Quality of, in Bedford Co. Pennsylvania, 108. De-
scription of some fine stock of the Alderney and Hol-
derness breed, owned by Jno. Prince, 139. On the
importance of wholesome water to, treatment of
wounds in, 149. New market for proposed, 151.
Plan of a feeding shed, with an engraving, 156. On
feeding, with a table, showing the relative value of
different Grasses, by G. Sinclair, 162. On improving
our native breed of, by Col. Pickering, 194. Disease
in, and cure for, 220. On Stock Cattle, 223.
the present state of some of the improved breeds of,
in Great Britain, 235. On Shifting and Stall feeding
and breeding stock, by Jos. Lambert, 266, 267.
Statements of a trial instituted by the Duke of Bed-
ford, between the Hereford and improved Short
Horns, 267. On winter fattening, 273. Disease in
by R. Patten, 280. Remarks on the domestic ox,
297. Priced catalogue of the celebrated Chilton
breeding stock, 307. Remarks on the Durham
Short Horns, by the Editor, 311. Remarks on the
disease in, by Veritas, 324. Experiments in Short
Horns, 346. On the present state of some of the
improved breeds of, in Great Britain 353. To kill
vermin on, and to cure the Mange. Inflation in the
stomach of, relieved by the use of vinegar, 367.
Weight of a Devon cow, raised by Henry Thomp-
son, 396
CATTLE SHOW, at Brighton, (Mass.,) 251. At Al- bemarle Co. Va., 283.
CEDARS, transplanting of, 87. CELERY, on the cultivation of, 372.
CHARCOAL, on the use of the dust of, as a top-dres-
sing for onions, and as a cure for the clubbing in cabbages, 92. Prevents the ravages of the bug on cucumbers and melons, 132. Trade in, 270.
CHARRING WOOD, new method of, $83.
CHEESE MAKING, 214.
CHENOPHODIUM QUINOA, or Quinar, notice of, 7.
CHERRY Stocks, for grafting, 261.
CHERRY TREE, black, poisonous property of, 222. CHILTON, (England,) breeding stock, priced cata- logue of, 307.
CHLORIDE of lime, successfully used in the diseases
of silk worms, 124, 383.
CHLORINE, fertilizing effects of, on seeds for sow- ing, 17. On the use of, as a preventive of Hydro- phobia, by Doct. J. E. Muse, 404.
CHOCOLATE, substitute for, 212.
CHRONOLOGY, Kings of England, 181, Kings of Scot-
land, 182.
CHURNING, best temperature of, 100. CIDER, Essay on making, (from Loudon's Enc. of Ag.)
Certificate in favor of Farnham's grater cider mill, 187. Specification of a patent for a cider mill and press, invented by Moses B. Bliss, 205. On the manufacture of. Quantity made in Devon county, Eng. 347.
CLAY, on burning for manure, by Wm. Aiton, 258.
CLIFDEN, pedigree of, 30.
CLIMATE, remarks on, as affecting crops and plants, by M. 4. On the supposed changes in, of the dif- ferent parts of the earth during the period of hu- man history, 254.
CLINTON HOTEL, at Ithica, N. Y. described, 302.
CLOTHING, on the benefits to be derived from atten-
tion to, 358.
CLOVER, on the varieties of the red, 26. Account of
the flesh coloured, or Tripolium Incarnatum, 50.
On the cultivation of, the choice of sorts, soil, cli- mate, preparation of the soil and manures, time and manner of sowing, &c. &c. 361, 370.
CLUBS in London, list of, with the number of mem-
bers, 30.
COAL TRADE of the Schuylkill, 253.
COCHINEAL, description of the plant which produces
it, 95.
COCKE, Doct. Townsend, on corns in horses' feet, 59. COCKEY, Jos. C. his experiments in the cultivation and manuring potatoes, 356.
COCKROACHES, to destroy, 191.
COFFEE, manner of culture, produce, dissemination,
mode of preparing for use &c. 313. Substitute
for, 347.
CONTINENTAL Money, emissions of, 342. COOK, A. B. on the culture of the grape, 116. COOK, W. W. on the cultivation of the red carrot, and its value as food for horses, 378.
COOPER, Benj. B. on the means of recruiting worn out land, 393.
COPPER MINES, on Lake Superior, 199.
CORK TREE, should be introduced into the U. S. 380. CORMORANT, pedigree of, 46.
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CORN, method of raising, by a New Jersey farmer, 17.
Quantity raised by S. Shepard, in Massachusetts,
14. On housing with the husks on, by James Car-
rol, Jr. 268. Notice of some large kinds, 276. Cul-
ture of, in Louisiana, 298. Premium crop of, rais-
ed by Dr. J. E. Muse, 315, 339. Favourable
notices of Messrs. Robbins' new machine for
planting, 351, 352.
CORN HUSKING frolic in Pennsylvania, 107. COTTAGE ECONOMY, (Cobbett's.) Extracts from, to the labouring classes of England, 357, 364.
COTTON, on the cultivation of fine, and the selection
of seed for that purpose, by Wm. Elliott, Esq.
Losses sustained on, in one season, in Georgia, 85.
Relieves the gout, when applied in the raw state.
To detect the presence of, in woollen stuffs, 95.
On the use of, in making sail duck, 206, 207, 215.
Cotton crops. Encouragement to the growers of,
298. Culture of, in Louisiana, 298. Cordage,
correspondence with the Secretary of the Navy, on
the subject of, 318. Machine for hulling the seed
of, 143, 144, 290. State of the crops in S. Caro-
lina, 403.
COWS, notice of a remarkable one, and her calf, 123.
Quantity of butter made from the different breeds
of, 228. Weight of a Devon, raised by Henry
Thompson, 396.
COW TREE of Caraccas, observations on, by David
Lockhart, 204. Grows in the garden of W. Prince,
268. Analysis of the milk of. Interesting par-
ticulars respecting it, 356.
CROPS, exhausting and ameliorating kinds, 17. Pros-
pects of in Maryland, 26. In Virginia, 43, 157,
167. New York, 123. Georgia, 128. N. Caro-
lina, 131. Delaware, 157. Pennsylvania 157.
CUCUMBERS, large ones raised in the garden of G.
B. Smith, 167.
CULTIVATION, in Long Island, N. Y. Observations
on some subjects of, by And. Parmentier. 17.
CURCULIO, description of the, 140.
CUTS, chowry tailed bull of Tibet, 25.
brewing apparatus, 36. Showing the parts of a
complete flower, 65. The celebrated American
horse Tom Thumb, 110. Of Pointers, 142. Feed-
ing shed, 156. Title of "Turf Register," 196. Ma-
nuring Wagons, 203. Of horses' mouths, 233. Of
silk worms, 236. Of the fox, 285. Of Bergami,
a Maltese Jack, 296. Silk reels, 316. Horse
shoes, 321. Of the common Deer, 349. Of the
Wolf, 366. The "Novelty," Nos. 1 and 2, 382. “No-
velty" No. 3, 390. The "Rocket" and "Sans Pariel"
397. Of Raccoons, 414.
DAHLIAS, varieties of, in Mr. Prince's nursery, 268.
DAIRIES, in Massachusetts, great product of, 228.
DAMP, rust, &c., protection against, by John Murray,
F. S. A., F. L. S &c., 87.
DANDELIONS, produce and value of, 100.
DARBY, Wm. on the population of Europe and the
United States, with a table, 22.
DEARBORN. H. A. S. on the Canker worm, 340.
DEER, Common, Natural History of, with an engraving,
DE L'AIN, M. GIROD, letter from, to the Editor, ac-
knowledging receipt of the "Farmer," Diploma of
Membership, &c. sends notes and pamphlets on ag-
ricultural subjects, 79.
MOLEON, Mons. J. G. V., letter from, to the Edi- tor, proposing an exchange of publications, &c., with the Editor's reply, 39.
DIETETIC Regimen in France and England, 270.
DIOMED-EAGLE, pedigree of, 38.
DISTEMPER in Dogs cured by the application of lea-
den bullets, 29. Cure for, by an old Sportsman, 46.
Vaccination, an antidote to, 367.
DOGS, extraordinary race of beagles, imported from
Liverpool-distemper in, cured by leaden bullets,
Cure for distemper in, 46. Pointers, with an
engraving, 142. Cure for the Mange, 215, 367.
Do. for Cancer in the lips of, 215. Leaves of the
Pride of China tree drives the fleas from, 253.
Notice of an extraordinary one, 326. Vaccination
an antidote to the distemper in, 367.
DRIVER, pedigree of, 131.
DRUMMOND, Z. on priming and topping tobacco, 195.
On the improvement of land, 227.
DUCKS, on the flying kite used as a decoy for, 247.
DUNLOP, A. Campbell, of North Britain, on the culti-
vation of indigo and preparation for market, 74.
DUVAL, Judge, communicates an account of great run-
ning by Selim, at Philadelphia, and Figure at Upper
Marlboro', 125.
DYSPEPSIA, remarks on, with directions for relieving
it, by a dyspeptic man, 198.
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EAR, physiology of the, 71.
EATON, Professor, on the Bot fly, or Nitter, 68.
ECLIPSE, American,his pedigree, $36.
ECLIPSE, (Sir John Shelly's sorrel colt,) pedigree of,
ECLIPSE HEROD, pedigree of, 30.
ECONOMY, importance of, in a family, 46.
EDITORIAL REMARKS. On Vermont, as an economical
government. On the Maryland Legislature, 7. On
percussion powder, 14. On Col. Long's Rail Road
Manual, 28. Correspondence between the Editor
and M. De Moleon. On riding on horseback, re-
commended to the ladies, 39. On public country
roads, 44. On Mnemonika, or tablet of memory,
46. Describing the Jackson Bridge, 62. On cock
fighting, 79. On the healthiness of Baltimore, 87.
On the Post Office Department, 102. On the impor-
tance of subscribers remitting punctually, 103. On
the broad tailed sheep. On pedigrees. On the Cal-
cined Magnesia, prepared at the Maryland Chemi-
cal Works, 111. On the course of education proper
for youth, 119. On the proposal to publish an
"Elementary treatise on Natural History," 127.
On the Post Office laws and regulations, 134. On
the latent qualities of water, 149. On the silk cul-
ture, and market for the cocoons, 151. Suggesting
the establishment of a horticultural society in Ma-
ryland, 159. On the manumission of negroes. On
the Swiss chard, a new vegetable. Large cucum-
bers, 167. To subscribers, 167. Two days in the
country. Recommending the N. York Mirror. On
a new variety of green beans, 183. On the price
of wheat. Acknowledging the receipt of the plate
presented by the Agricultural Society of South Ca-
rolina. On a specimen of silk from Virginia, 191.
On hounds, 197. On the ninety-second anniversary
of the birth day of Charles Carroll of Carrrollton.
On stock cattle. The corn crop, 223. On the
Jackson bridge. On wool and sheep. Silk So-
On the Ortolan, or
ciety of Philadelphia, 231.
rice bird, 339. On the Journal of Health, 240.
On G. B Smith's newly invented silk reel, 263.
On Dishley sheep, 268. On education, and the
Lafayette Institution, 286. On the Legislature.
Virginia Brocoli. Mr. Randolph, 303. On the Dur-
ham short horn cattle. Turf Register, 311. On the
General Post Office Expresses. Patent implements,
320. On the militia system, 327. Exposing impo-
sitions in grapes.
On the American Almanack, 335.
On the Encyclopedia Americana. Baltimore and
Ohio Rail Road. Chesapeake and Delaware Canal,
343. On a new planting machine, 351. On the
raising of horses. On the cultivation of the sugar
cane, 359. On the experiments on Rail Roads, 367,
375. On horticultural societies, 375. On the La-
fayette Institution. Silk worms. Chloride of lime,
383. On the want of an establishment for the sale
of horses, &c., 399. On the true principles of farm-
ing, 401.
EGG PLANT, large one, 255.
EGGS, how to preserve fresh for a year, 96. ELLIOTT, Wm. on the cultivation of fine cotton, and the selection of seed for that purpose, 11.
ELM, astonishing product of the, 85.
ENCYCLOPEDIA AMERICANÁ, notice of, 343.
EXCISE REGULATOR, notice of it, 174.
EXCISE, remarks on, 262.
FAIRS in Great Britain, account of, with the amount of cattle, sheep, &c. sold at them, 62. English and Irish, 355.
FALLOW, summer, advantages of, by W. Aiton, 257.
FALLOWING, observations on, by Joseph Lambert, 266.
FARM ACCOUNTS, on keeping, by Albion, with a
plan, 1.
FARM LANDS, on sheltering, 276. Remarks on,
by J.
Buel, 315. FARM SERVANTS, on the payment of, in produce, 17. FARMER, signs of a poor one, 195. FARMER'S LIFE, advantages of a, 99. FARMS, report on, delivered at a cattle show and fair in New Hampshire, 281. Award of premiums on,
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