CONTENTS OF VOL. VII. ADAMS, President, his address to Lafayette, 214. ADONIS, the flower so called, on its culture, &c. 197. AGRICULTURAL SOCIETIES, Proceedings of. Albe- marle, scheme of premiums for 1825, 42, sketch of their first exhibition, 284, address delivered to by the Hon. James Barbour, Secretary of War and President of the Society, 289-Dorchester county, Md. deter- mine to have a Cattle Show, 167, premiums offered and distributed, Nov. 1825, 236. Addressed by Dr. J. E. Muse, 313-Frederick county, Md. list of pre- miums offered by, for August, 1825, 71, 204.-Frede- ricksburg, election of officers, and other proceedings, 283-Hartford, Conn. sketch of their Cattle Show, Oct. 1825, 282-Maryland; proceedings of Trustees at Eutaw, March 16, 1825, 8. At Mr. J. B. Morris's, April 14, 1825, 40. At Dr. Thomas's, 71. At Waverly and Hazlewood, 175. At H. V. Somerville's, 288. At Lex- ington, 311. At Mr. Cox's, 350.-Maryland Ag. Soc. for the E. S. resolve to have a Cattle Show at Easton in the autumn of 1825, and premiums offered by, 221. Account of its Cattle Show at the Maryland Tavern in June, 89. Committee of award premiums for best Essay on the Mule to S. W. Pomeroy, and for best on the Ox to T. P. Stapler, 109. Appoint judges to award premiums for Farms, 191. Publish their list of premiums for distribution at the Maryland l'avern in June, 1826, 345.-Massachusetts; official account of their Cattle Show in Oct. 1825, 266, 274, 282.-Penn- sylvania; met April 9, and receive communications on various agricultural subjects, 35. Premiums offered by, 240. Sketch of their Cattle Show in Oct. 1825, 251. Official account of it, 265. Hold their quarterly meeting, elect honorary members, and receive certain communications, 298. Addressed by Dr. W. Darling- ton, 346. Papers communicated to on Sheep, 361. On night soil, 562. On sheep and improvement of do- mestic animals, 369.-Philadelphia; Address, extracts from by Roberts Vaux, and certain communications made to, 20, 27. Ditto, 139. Communication to re- specting the culture of silk worms, by R. Vaux, 181. Election of its officers and papers read to, 363.-Union Ag. Soc. of Georgia; elect officers and receive report from the Board of Managers, 41. Addressed by Thomas Spalding, 185.-Valley; elect officers and pass sundry resolutions, Feb. 5, 1825, 12. AGRICULTURE, address on the utility and dignity of, by 203. Further Remarks on by Mr. Thompson, 220. BARBOUR, James, his address to the Cadets at West Point, 158. Ditto to the Albemarle Agricultural So- BARTÓŃ, W. B. describes Brooking's threshing machine, 60. On deep ploughing, and other agricultural topicks, 99. Addresses Society of the Valley, 111. Reports on various farms, 300. On the use of cob meal, 332. 226. BLINDNESS in sheep, 201. BORING for water, communication on by J. Trimble, 101. Letter on, to the Editor, from the Mayor of Alexan- BOSLEY, James, imports grape seed from Madeira, 6. BOTANY, Catechism of, 110, 117, 125, 133. BRANDY, capacity of this country to produce it, 329. CHEROKEE ROSE, on its culture in Maryland, 28, CIDER, on making good, 157. On making and preserv- CLAY, Burned, theory of its operation by Dr. Muse, 234. COBBETT, J. P. on the culture of grapes and making COB-MEAL, for feeding cattle, 281, 299, 306, 353. COGSWELL & BANCROFT, sketch of their school sys- COCKE, J. H. on the white flint wheat and the peach COOKERY, on cooking fish, 213. To make broths and BROTHS and Soups, how to make, 229. BUEL, Judge J. elected a member of the Horticultural CATTLE; match between Herefords and Improved Short CAROLINAS, natural and cultivated productions of 166, CARROTS, 403. CAULIFLOWERS, how to cultivate and manage CHAMPION, Charles, takes the prize with Miss Points at COMBUSTION, spontaneous remarkable case of, 251. COMMERCE of Great Britain, France, and the United CONVENTION for Internal Improvement, proceedings of COTTON, on the culture of by Theo. Field, 1. Seed for distribution, 8. Machine for cleaning seed, 2. Trade in at Manchester, 48. Manufactures, duties on, 58. On the culture of in Virginia, 65, 117. Inquiries con- cerning, by F. H. Smith, 139. Memoir on the cul- ture of,1 61. Mode of packing in South Carolina, 181. Extraordinary increase in the trade in Great Britain, 191. Remarks on recent speculations in, by Amphi- con, 203. Seed of, poisonous to hogs, 196. New in- vention for planting, 220. How to pack 229. Damage of Sea Island crops, 251. Patent press, 277. How seed of, used in feeding hogs, 278. Culture of, in Vir ginia, 299-in Maryland and Virginia, 308, 316. Match in picking, 338. Machines for planting, with cuts, 364. On planting, 387. Press, (Williams',) with a cut, 395. For sail cloth or cordage, report from Navy COW, Alderney, remarkable one of H. Thompson's, 203. COWS, rules for keeping, 141. Extraordinary ones, 354. COWSLIP, history and culture of, 255. CURWEN, ou Agricola's Teeswater steer, 12. Contests |