INDEX.
- ACCOUNTS—Accounts in Farming, chap. xxxv, 207;
- the causes of pecuniary failure, 207;
- loss from waste of time, 207;
- the author has found all successful farmers rigid economists of time, 208;
- farmers urged to keep a rigid account of how they dispose of their time, 208;
- keeping a diary recommended, 208;
- what it should contain, 209;
- accounts with neighbors, 209;
- the farmer should keep an account of the expenses of his farm, and the receipts therefrom, 209;
- importance of keeping an account with the several fields and crops, 210;
- complication and uncertainty in account-keeping considered, 210-211;
- the advantage of keeping careful accounts, 211.
- AGRICULTURE. See Farming: books on practical, referred to, 30.
- ALABAMA, 50.
- ALDER, 53.
- ALKALIS, as fertilizers. See Fertilizers, Commercial.
- ALLEGHANY RIDGE, 39.
- ALLEGHANIES, the, 45, 49, 79, 81, 156.
- ALPS, 75.
- ALPS, AUSTRIAN, 75.
- AMERICA, 44, 170.
- AMHERST. N. H., 52.
- AMMONIA, 104, 306.
- AMMONOOSUC, the river, 194.
- ANTELOPE, 278.
- APENNINES, 267.
- APPLE, the, 53, 118, 129.
- Fruit-Trees. The Apple, chap. xxix, 139;
- fruit-trees form a distinguishing feature of Northern farms and holdings, 139;
- unequaled in that respect elsewhere, 140;
- our country north of the Potomac excels, in its supply of tree-fruits, all other portions of the earth's surface of equal area, 140;
- the Northern States admirably adapted to the apple and kindred fruit-trees, 140;
- effects of such adaptability, 140;
- give an orchard the northern slope of a hill where possible, 140;
- the one which blossoms latest, yields, on the average, most fruit, 141;
- storing ice to place under trees, not recommended, 141;
- importance of drainage, 145;
- some reasons for choosing sloping ground for an apple-orchard, 141;
- the soil for such, 142;
- preparation of the soil, 142-3;
- treatment and care of the land devoted to an orchard, 143-4;
- More about Apple Trees, chap. xxv, 145;
- apple trees are planted too far apart, and allowed to grow too tall, 145;
- consequences, 145-6;
- trees should be set diamond fashion, 146;
- pruning should be attended to annually, 146;
- sprouts valueless, 147;
- the demands which apple-trees make on the soil should be supplied, 147;
- apple-trees in the township of Newcastle, Westchester, N. Y., 147;
- causes of their unproductiveness, 147-8;
- caterpillars and their ravages, 148;
- duties of farmers and fruit growers, 149;
- the abundant apple-crop of 1870, 149;
- establishes the capacity of our regions to bear Apples, 149, 191, 232, 291, 294;
- the apple-crop of 1870, as an illustration of the imperfect means of exchanging farm products, 297-8-9;
- loss to consumers and producers, 299-300.
- Fruit-Trees. The Apple, chap. xxix, 139;
- ARIZONA, 48.
- ARKANSAS, State of, 25, 36;
- ARTESIAN WELLS, 77, 277-8, 316.
- ASHES as fertilizers, 108-9, 127, 128;
- ATLANTIC, the coast, 156, 178;
- AUSTIN, 46.
- AUSTRALIA, 138, 200, 238.
- AUTUMN, 89, 97, 99, 116, 124, 173, 178, 179, 192, 193, 202, 262.
- BABYLON, 266.
- BALSAM FIR, 58.
- BALTIMORE, 165.
- BARLEY, 245, 265.
- BARN, the use of stone recommended in building a, 216
- BATAVIA YAMS, 271.
- BATTENKILL, 75.
- BEANS, 210, 271, 296.
- BEECH, 19, 53, 60, 287.
- BEEF, 37, 118, 220, 294.
- BEETS. see ROOTS, also 143, 232, 264, 271.
- BELGIUM, 70, 238.
- BERRIES, 90.
- BIRCH, 60.
- BIRDS—Insects, Birds, chap. xxii, 129;
- BLACK ASH, 30.
- BLACKBERRIES, 90, 158.
- BLACK WALNUT, 314.
- BLACKWELL'S ISLAND, 87.
- BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAINS, 81.
- BOARD OF WORKS (London), 269.
- BOISSIÈRE, E. V, DE, 253-4.
- BONES. See Commercial Fertilizers, also 118, 119, 192, 317.
- BONE-DUST, 174.
- BONES, flour of, 121.
- BONE FLOUR, 167.
- BONES, raw, 317.
- BOSTON, farm near, 15, 289.
- BOTANY, 30.
- BUCKEYE, 260.
- BUCKWHEAT, 21, 189, 191, 210.
- BUFFALO, 278.
- BUFFALO GRASS, 153.
- BURLINGTON, N. J., 166.
- BUTTER, 38, 164, 167.
- BRIDGES, 250.
- BRITISH ISLES, 178, 245.
- BROCCOLI, 271.
- CABBAGES, 264, 271, 296, 300.
- CACHE-LA-POUDRE, the river, 82, 262, 263.
- CALIFORNIA, 26, 76, 80, 159, 181, 260.
- CANADA, 48, 165, 289;
- creek, 75.
- CANALS, 105.
- CAROLINAS, the, 166, 315.
- CARROTS. See Roots, also 143, 271.
- CARSON, the river, 81, 83.
- CATTLE, 15;
- CATSKILLS, the, 172.
- CENSUS: the Seventh, 150;
- CHAMPLAIN, the, basin, 72;
- lake, 279.
- CHAPPAQUA, 62.
- CHAUTAUQUA Co., N. Y., 287, 288.
- CHEESE, 38, 164, 167.
- CHEMISTRY, 30, 119, 196, 231.
- CHERRIES. See Fruits, also 129, 139, 294.
- CHESTER CO., Penn., 110.
- CHESTNUT, 54, 55, 60, 135, 136, 215, 314.
- See also, Trees.
- CHEYENNE, 262.
- CHICAGO, 164.
- CHICKENS, 295.
- See Fowls.
- CHLORINE, 114, 235.
- CHLORIDE OF LIME, 128.
- CHOLERA, 268.
- CHURCHES, 250.
- CINCINNATI, 156.
- CLIMATES, American, for the finer fruits, 156.
- CLOVER, 120, 153, 167, 318.
- CLUBS. See Farmers' Clubs.
- COAL, 109, 288.
- COLONIES, advantage of settling in, 28;
- COLONISTS, English, 171.
- COLORADO, 181, 206, 317;
- river, 46.
- CONGRESS, 46.
- CONNECTICUT, 27, 171, 299;
- COMO, lake, 75.
- COMMON SCHOOLS, 196-7.
- COMMUNISM: Differs radically from Co-operation, 248.
- CONCLUSIONS, General, Summing up, chap. lli, 308;
- the facts set forth in the essays, 308;
- common misrepresentations, 308-9;
- object of the author in writing these essays, 309;
- the propositions sought to be established therein, 310;
- good farming must ever be a paying business, 310;
- thorough tillage advocated, 310;
- a location should be permanent, 310;
- the too great haste in incurring responsibilities, 311;
- the greed for land, 310;
- common abuses in fencing and cattle-raising, 312-13;
- tree-cutting and tree-planting, 314-15;
- underdraining, 315;
- irrigation, 316;
- commercial fertilizers, 317-8-9;
- shallow culture, 319-20;
- the need for study and inquiry, 320-21;
- concluding remarks, 321.
- CO-OPERATION, reference to, in regard to wild lands, 24;
- Co-operation in Farming, chap. xlii, 248;
- Co-operation is the word of hope and cheer for labor, 248;
- its meaning, 248;
- differs radically from communism, 248;
- the difficulties of a young farmer who migrates to Kansas, Minnesota or one of the Territories, 248-9;
- the different circumstances consequent on settlement by co-operation, 250;
- advantages of co-operation not limited to colonizing distant tracts, 250;
- would benefit colored men, 250-1;
- fencing as an illustration of the loss consequent on want of co-operation, 251-2;
- how co-operation would remedy it, 252;
- further application of the system, 252-3;
- Mr. E. V. de Boissière's co-operative farming, 254-5.
- Co-operation in Farming, chap. xlii, 248;
- CORN, 20, 21, 22
- growing of bread-corn eastward of the Hudson, 37, 43, 67, 68, 81, 86, 88, 92, 94, 99, 103, 107, 113, 114, 115, 118, 147.
- Grain Growing—East and West—chap. xxviii, 162;
- hoeing is of no use to Corn, 162;
- the best and cheapest way to cultivate corn, 162;
- the fields of the Mississippi Valley are the most productive in the world, 163;
- the tillage, in some places, seemed susceptible of improvement, 163;
- the West is the granary of the East, 163;
- a change imminent, 163;
- changes since twenty-three years ago when the author visited Illinois, 164;
- the course the West will ultimately adopt, 164;
- exhaustion of the soil in New England and Eastern New York, 164;
- in the Genesee Valley, 165;
- Eastern Pennsylvania profits by a provident system of husbandry, 165;
- the States this side of the Delaware will yet have to grow a large share of their breadstuffs, 165;
- can it be done with profit now, considering, also, if the East has wisely, so largely abandoned grain-growing, 165-9;
- the places not taken into account, 165;
- the "Pine Barrens" of New Jersey selected to illustrate the profits of grain-growing in the East, 168;
- their nature, 168;
- estimate of expenses thereon, 167;
- the product anticipated, 167;
- the favorable conditions the cultivator would enjoy, 168;
- the money value of his crop, 168;
- great economy could be achieved in the cost of cultivating, 169;
- conclusions, 169;
- also 177, 191, 192, 193, 210, 228, 238, 242, 246-7, 264, 265, 271-2, 290.
- COTTON, 107, 200.
- COTTON-GROWERS, Southern, 118.
- COTTONWOOD, 261.
- CREDIT, buying a farm on, 25.
- CROPS, Fall, 97.
- CURRANTS, 129.
- DAIRYING, 288.
- DANA'S MUCK MANUAL, 199.
- DELAWARE, the State of, 165;
- DENVER, 264, 277;
- Pacific Railroad, the, 262.
- DEPOPULATION, (RURAL)—Rural Depopulation, chap. xlviii, 286;
- the alleged decrease in the relative population of rural districts, 286;
- no increase since 1859 in the number of farmers in the State of New York, 286;
- probable slight decrease in that of New England, 286;
- consolidating farms, 286;
- small farmers are selling out and migrating, 287;
- reasons therefore, 287;
- the changed character of the tillage, 287-8;
- the general use of coal has reduced the demand for labour, 288;
- labour-saving implements, 288-9;
- the supposed degeneracy of the New England Puritan stock, 289;
- the migration from New England, 289-90;
- the assumption that Americans prefer other pursuits to farming, 291;
- the rock and bog of New England form a discouraging impediment to agricultural progress, 290;
- compensation therefor, 291.
- DIARY, the keeping of one recommended, 31.
- DICKINSON, Andrew B., 105, 106.
- DISTRIBUTION (of farm products). See Exchange.
- DOCK, 232.
- DOGWOOD, 314.
- DOGS; their depredations on sheep, 203-4.
- DRAINING—
- Draining—My Own, chap. x, 62;
- Draining Generally, chap. xi, 69;
- general conclusions from the author's experience, 69;
- extent of land to be drained, 69;
- all swamp lands and nearly all of some other kinds must be drained to be well tilled, 69;
- the many uses of underdrains, 69-70;
- no one should run into debt for draining, 70;
- tile and stone drains, 71;
- draining by a Mole Plow, 72;
- general direction, 72-3;
- covered mains recommended, 73;
- the question of labor, 73;
- a case where the rudest surface drains would have changed bog into decent meadows, 152;
- the stone drains on the author's farm, 214;
- the author's summing up on, 315.
- DROUTH—habitually shortens our Fall crops, 98;
- a Lesson of To-day (1870), chap. xxxii, 189;
- the popular view of hot and cold seasons, 189;
- the Summer of 1870, effects of the drouth, 189-190;
- general character of each Summer, 190;
- proof that drouth need not be feared by those who farm prudently, 190;
- the author's observations during a trip through Warren Co., N. Y., 191-2;
- results to be attained there by right cultivation, 192;
- the inquiry: how are the people there to obtain fertilizers? 192;
- answered, 193;
- irrigation might be applied profitably, 194.
- a Lesson of To-day (1870), chap. xxxii, 189;
- EARTH CLOSET, 123.
- EASTERN STATES, pasturing in, 19.
- EASTERN STATES, the, 23, 25-6, 37, 179, 189, 204, 215, 279, 311.
- EDINBURGH, 269.
- EGGS, 294-5.
- EGYPT, 164, 167.
- ELECTRICITY, 285.
- ELK, 278.
- ELM, 59.
- EMERSON, R. W., 44.
- ENGLAND, 70, 89, 164;
- ERIE Co., Pa., 23.
- EUROPE, 35, 74, 156, 163, 170, 171, 178, 180, 219, 238.
- EXCHANGE: Exchange and Distribution, chap. l, 297;
- the machinery for disposing of surplus farm products imperfect, 297;
- the abundant apple crop of 1870 as an illustration thereof, 297-8-9;
- apples should have been as common as bread or potatoes, 298;
- the actual facts, 298;
- cause of both the waste and dearness of apples, 299-300;
- consequent loss to producers and consumers, 299-300;
- turnips as a further illustration, 300;
- disappointments of inexperienced farmers, 300-1;
- hucksters and middlemen, 301;
- suggestion to have a railroad purchase and sell farm products, 301-2;
- results to be expected, 302;
- an objection answered, 302.
- EXHIBITIONS (AGRICULTURAL)—Agricultural Exhibitions, chap. xxxviii, 225;
- author has attended at least fifty, 225;
- concludes they were not what they might and should be, 225;
- the reform must begin with the people, 225;
- the lot of the public speaker, 225-6;
- what is needed to render our annual Fairs useful and instructive detailed, 226;
- each farmer should hold himself bound to make some contribution to his, 226;
- an interesting and running commentary should given, 227-8;
- liberal premiums should be given for proficiency in farming, 228-9;
- need for improvement in the character of the public speaking, 229;
- counties should be canvassed to enrol exhibitors, 230;
- all in a locality should feel a common interest in their fair, 230.
- EYE-SMART, 125.
- FABRICS, 200.
- FAIRS. See Exhibitions.
- FALL, the, 126, 173, 174, 193, 318.
- FARMING—
- Will Farming Pay, chap. i, 13;
- will it pay considered, 13;
- the case of a man without capital, 13;
- difficulties common to all pursuits, 13-4;
- Astor referred to, 14;
- earning the first thousand dollars, 14;
- instance of remarkable success in farming, near Boston, 15;
- case of a farmer in Northern Vermont, 15-6;
- Professor Mapes's success, 14;
- profitable return from a fruit farm on the Hudson, 15-6;
- that shiftless farming don't pay admitted, 17;
- good farming profitable, 17;
- farming not recommended as a pursuit to every man, 17;
- it can never be dispensed with, 17;
- it is the first, and most essential of human pursuits, 17;
- all are interested in having it honored and prosperous, 17;
- if unprofitable, it is from mismanagement, 17;
- the author's aim in these essays, 17.
- Good and Bad Husbandry, chap. ii, 18;
- good and bad farming considered, 18;
- necessity master of us all, 18;
- dictates the line to follow in farming, 18-9;
- application of the principle to pasturing, 19-20;
- illustration of good farming, 20-21;
- excuses for waste insufficient, 21;
- truths on which good farming depend, 21;
- good crops invariably practicable, 21-2;
- rarely fail to pay, 23;
- increasing productiveness of the soil the fairest single test, 22;
- where to farm considered, 23;
- experience of the author's father regarding the East and West, 23;
- circumstances qualifying it, 23;
- the difficulties of the pioneer's life, 23-4;
- purchase of an "improvement" recommended in certain cases, 24;
- civilized places are to be preferred for settlement, 24;
- co-operation may change matters, 24;
- good farming will pay everywhere, 25;
- no one having a good farm advised to migrate, 25;
- money is made by farming near New York as fast as in the West, 25;
- where migration is advised, and its advantages, 25;
- troubles attendant on buying on credit, 25;
- the West will grow more rapidly than the East during the next twenty years, 26;
- the South invites immigration, 26;
- great inducements offered, 26;
- combined effort recommended, 26;
- good farming land cheapest in the United States, 27;
- an incident in Illinois farming, 27;
- counsel to intending purchasers, 27;
- land cheap in every State, 28;
- advantages of settling in colonies, 28;
- the first steps toward doing so, 28;
- division of the lands, 28;
- laying out the town, 28;
- the progress it ought to make, 28;
- economy of capital accomplished, 28;
- Preparing to farm, chap. iv, 29;
- counsel intended for young men unaccustomed to farming, 29;
- patience recommended, 29;
- penalties of over haste, 29;
- value of experience illustrated, 30;
- an inexperienced young man advised to hire out, 30;
- procure books, 30;
- general counsel, 31;
- how the course advised differs from running into debt, 31-2;
- experience and practice essential, 32;
- circumstances where theoretical study is approved, 32;
- qualifying remarks, 32-3;
- he who has mastered farming is competent to buy a farm, 33;
- exceptions, 33;
- a young man should not wait until he can buy a large farm, 33;
- twenty acres ample for $2,000 capital, 33;
- that extent is sufficient to test his aptitude, 33;
- Buying A Farm, chap. v, 34;
- it is better to buy good land than poor, 34;
- poor land can be turned to account, 34;
- the smallest farm should have its strip of forest, 34;
- advantage of New England and countries of like surface over very fertile regions, 34;
- cannot be divested of forest, 34;
- "Five Acres" or "Ten Acres" not sufficient, 35;
- exceptions, 35;
- genuine farms, the general want, 35;
- the remark "he has too much land," 35;
- some men specially adapted for large farms, 35;
- individual circumstances control, 35;
- counsel to a young man intent on buying a farm, 36;
- means of buying to be the main guide, 36;
- capital the true limit, 36;
- New England farms comparatively as cheap as Western, 36;
- migration urged only for those who cannot buy farms in the Old States, 36;
- success of the butter-makers of Vermont, 36;
- also of New York cheese dairymen, 36;
- insuperable barriers in the East to effective cultivation, 37;
- cultivation by steam must render large farms necessary, 37;
- grain growing not likely to be extended in the East, 37;
- the West to be the source of supply of bread-corn to the East, 37;
- main considerations in buying land in the Eastern States, 37;
- in the West the case is different, 37;
- social considerations, 38;
- make a permanent investment, 38;
- have confidence that industry will be rewarded, 38;
- Laying off a Farm, chap. vi, 39;
- the surface and soil of a farm should be carefully studied, 39;
- misconception of the similarity of prairie farms, 39;
- a Northern farm selected for illustration, 40;
- preparatory steps in laying off, 40;
- care necessary, 40;
- a pasture to be first selected, 40;
- what it should be, 41;
- the one great error in relation to this matter, 41;
- weeds inseparable from pasture, 42;
- treatment of a pasture, 42-3;
- it should have a rude shed, 43;
- fodder to be brought to cattle, 43;
- "too much" land and tree planting, 50;
- farming in Westchester County, N. Y., 51;
- management of grass lands a test of farming, 152;
- The Farmer's Calling: chap. xxxi, 183;
- merits of farmers as a class, 183;
- the author would have advised one of his sons if spared to attain manhood to become a good farmer, 183;
- difficulties attending the farmer's calling, 184;
- author's reason for recommending farming as a vocation to his son, 184;
- no other business in which success is so nearly certain as it, 184-5;
- farming conduces to a reverence for honesty and truth, 185-6;
- it is conducive to thorough manliness of character, 186-7;
- advantages the farmer enjoys in that respect over persons in other pursuits, 187;
- incidents of the author's experience as a journalist in this regard, 187-8;
- independent position of the true farmer, 188;
- difficulties a young farmer encounters as a pioneer, 248-9;
- considerably obviated be co-operation, 250;
- co-operation admits of wider application, 250-1;
- fencing as an illustration of the want of co-operation, 251-2;
- wide adaptability of co-operation, 252-3;
- Mr. E. V. de Boissière's co-operative farm, 253-4;
- farming in Colorado, 265;
- mistaken calculations of inexperienced farmers, 299-300;
- summing up: the farmer's calling, 308;
- American farming, 309;
- good farming is and must ever be a paying business, 310;
- thorough tillage, 310;
- choosing a location, 311;
- prudence enjoined, 311-2;
- the greed for land, 312-3;
- shallow culture, 319;
- need for study and inquiry, 320.
- Will Farming Pay, chap. i, 13;
- FARMS: Large and small Farms, chap. xlix, 292;
- naked magnitude has fascination for most minds, 292;
- some men can farm a township, 292;
- large farmers, 293;
- the opportunities and expectations of the small farmer, 293;
- making money from small farms, 293-4;
- large farming can never enable us to dispense with small farms, 294;
- evidence thereof, 294;
- fruit culture, 294;
- the production of eggs and the rearing of fowls, 294;
- the inducements offered to fowl-breeders, 295;
- this industry should comment itself to poor widows, 295;
- the growing of market vegetables, 296;
- the profits realized therein; 296;
- general conclusions, 296-7.
- FARMERS' CLUBS—Farmers' Clubs, chap. xliii, 254;
- farmers divide into two classes, 254;
- characteristics of those who do too little work, 255;
- the farmers who work too much, 255;
- illustration thereof, 255;
- value of the club to them, 256;
- who should form the club, 256;
- its rules, 256-7;
- the chief end to be attained, 257;
- habits of observation and reflection, 257;
- evidence of the need thereof, 257;
- a genuine interest in their vocation is needed by farmers, 257-8;
- false fancies to be removed, 258;
- the officers of the club, 258;
- grafts, plants or seeds for gratuitous distribution, 258;
- an annual flower show, 259;
- an exhibition of fruits, 259;
- the organization of a farmers' club is the chief difficulty, 259;
- how removed, 259.
- FARM IMPLEMENTS—Farm Implements, chap. xli, 237;
- labor arduous enough without adding inefficient implements, 237;
- improvements therein during fifty years, 237;
- proofs thereof, 237;
- the inferior implements used in the greater part of Europe, 237-8;
- the claim of inventors or their agents to attention, 238-9;
- the stock of an implement warehouse, 239;
- a co-operative plan will be found necessary to secure the needful implements, 240;
- reasons therefor, 240;
- greater inventions are certain to be made, 241;
- inventions for plowing, 241.
- FENCES, 100-1.
- Fences and Fencing, chap. xxxvii, 219;
- excessive fencing general, 219;
- fences are commonly dispensed with in France and other parts of Europe, 219;
- drivers must there keep their cattle from injuring the wayside crops, 219;
- American railroads have largely superseded cattle-driving, 220;
- fresh meat will ultimately come from the Prairies, in refrigerating cars, 220;
- owners of animals should be responsible for their care, 220-221;
- fencing bears with special severity on the pioneer, 221;
- fences, where necessary, are a deplorable necessity, 221;
- obstacles to introducing ditches and hedges, 221-2;
- wire fences, 222;
- stone walls, 222;
- rail fences, 222-3;
- posts and boards are the cheapest material for fences, 223;
- Red Cedar posts, 223;
- Locust posts, 223;
- posts set top-end down last longest, 224;
- general conclusions, 224;
- forms one of the pioneer's many trials, 251;
- it is different, but not better, with settlers on broad prairies, 251;
- co-operation would secure an immense economy in, 252, 287;
- should be scrutinized in winter, 306;
- most American farms east of the Roanoke and Wabash have too many fences, 313.
- Fences and Fencing, chap. xxxvii, 219;
- FERTILIZERS, Commercial.
- Commercial Fertilizers—Gypsum, chap. xvii, 102;
- Gypsum might be generally applied to cultivated land, with profit, 102;
- the case where it costs $10, or over, per ton, considered, 102;
- it should be used in all stables and yards, 102;
- on meadows and pastures, 102;
- time and mode of application, 103;
- how Gypsum impels and invigorates vegetable growth, referred to, 103;
- its value practically demonstrated in and around Paris, 303-4;
- the nature of Gypsum, 104;
- the chemists' theory of it, 104;
- its actual effect assumed as the basis of these remarks, 104;
- Gypsum ought to be extensively applied to pastures and slopes, 104-5;
- a farmer's observations on its effects, 105;
- it may be easily procured, 105;
- its trial requested, 105-6;
- soils can be improved by means of calcined clay, 105;
- a successful trial thereof, 106.
- Alkalis ... Salt—Ashes—Lime, chap. xvii, 107;
- all our country's surface might be improved by the use of suitable fertilizers, 107;
- not many acres but might be made more fertile by their use, 107;
- comparative exhaustion of the soil soon renders them necessary, 107-8;
- the good farmer's inquiry on the subject, 108;
- the state of each soil respectively, the true guide in using fertilizers, 108;
- alkaline substances might be universally applied with profit, 108;
- the use of ashes considered, 108-9
- Marls of New Jersey, 109;
- Salt, 109;
- Potash, 109;
- the author's trial of, 109-10;
- Lime as a fertilizer, 110;
- careful tests of the value of Alkalis suggested, 110-11.
- Soil and Fertilizers, chap. xix, 112;
- the farmer a manufacturer, 112;
- the opinion that some lands are naturally rich enough, 112;
- the great wheat product at the Salt Lake City Plain, 112;
- the author's experience regarding the imperfect manuring of land, 113;
- more manure and less seed should be applied by most farmers, 113;
- the richest soils deteriorate after successive crops, 114;
- Nature's law of inflexible exaction, 114;
- rich soil from the West exhibited at the N. Y. Farmers' Club, 114;
- chemical analysis made of same, 114;
- Professor Mapes' remark thereon, 114;
- the mistake of fertilizing poor lands only, 115;
- better to produce the same quantity of Corn from a small than a large area in certain cases, 115;
- barn-yard manure, and its use, 115-6;
- no farmer ever impoverished by making and using manure of his own manufacture, 117;
- Lime has been used without advantage, 111;
- reasons therefor, 111;
- adulteration of Lime, 111;
- farmers advised to be discriminating, 111;
- experiment recommended where there is doubt, 111;
- Bones—Phosphates—Guano, chap. xx, 118;
- wasteful outlay for fertilizers, 118;
- fertilizers needed and used in Westchester Co., N. Y., 118;
- where not needed, 119;
- unprofitable use of Guano, 120;
- exceptions to the general rule, 120;
- the other fertilizers, 120;
- author's trial of Guano, 121;
- not of general application, 121;
- experiments and careful observation recommended, 122;
- results that may be expected, 123;
- the earth closet, 123;
- importance of it and kindred devices, 123;
- oyster-shell lime is the best, 128;
- the fertilizers to be used in preparing for an orchard, 142-3;
- treatment of swamp muck for potatoes, 173;
- fertilizers for potatoes when muck cannot be had, 173-4;
- supposed inquiry of the people of Warren Co., N. Y, "How shall we obtain fertilizers?" 192;
- answered, 193;
- a Maine essayist on sourness of the soil and its remedy, 232-3;
- necessity for scientific knowledge on the effects of, 232;
- importance of some standard to go by in using, 234-5;
- the digging and drawing of clay as winter work, 306;
- value of clay for grass land, 306;
- procuring commercial fertilizers, as winter work, 306.
- Commercial Fertilizers—Gypsum, chap. xvii, 102;
- FRUIT: a profitable fruit farm on the Hudson, 14;
- culture of, 35, 37, 107;
- ravages of insects on fruits, 129-30.
- Peaches—Pears—Cherries—Grapes, chap. xxvii, 156;
- adaptability of American climates as regards fruit-growing, 157;
- why the climates of some sections are unfavorable for the most valued tree fruits, 156-7;
- author's personal observations, 157;
- difficulties attending the growing of finer fruits, 158;
- counsel thereon to farmers mainly engaged in the production of grain and cattle, 157-8;
- grape-growing, 159;
- the mistake of neglecting vines, 159;
- experiment recommended, 159;
- necessary precautions, 160;
- the course recommended to a farmer who proposes to grow pears, peaches, and quinces, 160-1, 168, 228, 232, 259;
- the descriptions of fruit grown by small farmers, 294;
- fruit culture would decline should small farms be generally absorbed into larger, 294;
- treatment of fruit-trees in winter, 307.
- GAMMA GRASS, 261.
- GARDA, Lake, 75.
- GENESEE, Valley of the, 163, 165, 292.
- GEOLOGY, 30, 190, 231.
- GERMANY, 289.
- GRAIN, 22, 35, 40, 107, 110, 118, 125, 126, 132, 157, 167, 186, 206, 228, 235, 239, 264, 266, 291, 293, 294, 296.
- See also Corn.
- GRAPES, 16, 59, 140, 226, 294.
- See also Fruits.
- GREAT BASIN, the, 138, 278, 317.
- GREAT BRITAIN, 179, 238.
- GRASS, 22, 40, 43, 67, 68, 95, 107, 110, 121, 152-3, 191, 232, 238, 239, 264.
- See also Pasturing and Hay.
- GREELEY, Horace—Arrival in New York, 13-4;
- own experience of the difficulties of securing a good start in life, 14;
- remark of his father to, on migration toward the West, 23;
- own evidence of the value of experience, 30;
- is descended from several generations of tree-cutters, 44;
- engaged for three years in land clearing, 44;
- reference to Amherst, N. H., his birthplace, 52;
- description of his farm, 62;
- drainage thereof. 63-8;
- observations in Italy, 74-6;
- experiments in irrigation, 76-7;
- observations in Virginia, 80;
- experience of the plowing of his plat in New York city, 87-8;
- tries deep plowing, 88;
- plowing of the hill-sides on his farm, 94;
- benefits thereof, 94;
- judges that the gravelly hill-sides of his farm would repay applying 200 tons per acre of pure clay, 108;
- experience of guano, 121;
- raising locust from seed, 134;
- hay product of his farm, 151;
- helps in hay-making from swamps, 152;
- hoed corn in his boyhood, 162;
- observations on the corn-fields of the Mississippi valley, 163;
- observations at Chicago twenty-three years ago, 164;
- finds potatoes less prolific on his farm than in New Hampshire, 173;
- speaks as a journalist's and farmer's calling, 187;
- observations in Warren county, N. Y., 191;
- the stone wall on his farm, 218;
- experience of agricultural exhibitions, 225;
- the plowing on his farm, 281;
- mentions the sale of his apples as an illustration of the imperfect means of exchanging farm products, 298.
- GREELEY, the city of, 262.
- GUANO, 116, 120, 121, 192, 318.
- GULF STREAM, 178.
- GYPSUM, 120, 121, 122, 174, 233, 317, 318.
- See also Fertilizers, Commercial.
- HARLEM RAILROAD, 62.
- HAWK, the, 132.
- HAY, 20, 68, 78, 95, 119, 122, 147.
- Hay and Hay-making, chap. xxvi, 150;
- importance of the grass crop, 150;
- the portion made into hay, 150;
- its quantity, 150;
- the product and quality should be better, 151;
- author's experience, 151;
- the management of grass lands is a criterion of farming, 150;
- hay-making in New England fifty years ago, 152;
- too little grass-seed is now used, 152;
- too little discrimination used in sowing grass seeds, 153;
- the variety of good grasses will be increased, 153;
- grass is cut in the average too late, 153;
- consequences, 153-54;
- the plea that our farmers are short-handed in the summer harvest, 154;
- treatment of grass when cut, 154;
- the author's anticipation of how hay-making will yet be carried on, 155;
- the need for improvement in hay-making insisted on, 155;
- explanation thereof, 155. Also 167, 189, 191, 211, 235, 288, 291, 306.
- See also Grass.
- Hay and Hay-making, chap. xxvi, 150;
- HAY-MAKING, See Hay.
- HEMLOCK, 19, 58, 60, 66, 223, 287, 314.
- HICKORY, 53, 54, 55, 59, 135, 136, 215, 291, 314.
- HIGHWAYS, 249.
- HOES, 237.
- HOGS, 143.
- HOLLAND, 238.
- HOMESTEAD LAW, 249.
- HOPS, 164.
- HORSES, 132;
- carrots as food for, 182.
- HUDSON, the, 16;
- HUMBOLDT, the river, 81.
- HUMBOLDT, the, or Canada Creek, 75.
- HUNGARY, 164.
- ILLINOIS, State of, 37;
- INDIANA, 37, 163.
- INSECTS—Insects—Birds, chap. xxii, 129;
- the serious loss to farmers from insects, 129;
- birds our best allies, 129;
- what good they can do, 130;
- ravages of insects not entirely due to the scarcity of birds, 130;
- degeneracy of our plants largely causes their ravages, 130;
- Gov. Packer of Pennsylvania's observations thereon, 130-31;
- the case of wheat and other plants, 131;
- a war against insects must continue for a generation, 131;
- the destruction of birds, 132;
- the measures to be adopted against insects, 132;
- birds should be preserved, 132;
- associations should be formed to do so, 132;
- artificial posts, 133;
- legal measures proposed, 133;
- their ravages in Newcastle township, Westchester, N. Y., 147-8;
- caterpillars, 148;
- numerous from neglect, 148;
- duties of farmers and fruit growers, 149.
- INTELLECT (in Agriculture)—Intellect In Agriculture, chap. xxxiii, 195;
- years of rugged manual labor essential to success in hewing a farm out of the forest, 195;
- value of education to the farmer, 196;
- our average common schools defective in not teaching geology and chemistry, 196;
- the leading principles and facts of these sciences ought to constitute the reader of the highest class in the common schools, 196;
- counsel to the young farmer on agricultural books, 197;
- their value demonstrated, 198;
- a two-hundred acre farm will be found to give ample scope, 199;
- instructions regarding particular books, 199;
- men of the strongest minds and best abilities will be attracted to farming so fast and so far as it becomes intellectual, 199.
- INTEREST, relatively high in this country, 202.
- IOWA, 27, 163, 164, 168.
- IRELAND, 170, 175, 289.
- IRRIGATION—
- Irrigation—Means and Ends, chap. xii. 74;
- Possibilities of Irrigation, chap. xiii, 79;
- natural facilities for irrigation
- general, 79;
- artesian wells on the prairies, 79;
- wells in California, 80;
- water as a fertilizer, 80;
- crops in Virginia suffering from want of irrigation, 80-1;
- counsel to farmers on irrigation, 81-2;
- great profits to be realized by irrigation, 82-3;
- need of irrigation in the Eastern and Middle States considered, 83;
- the prairie States after 1900, 83;
- common objections to irrigation, 84;
- it must become general, 247;
- wells will be sunk for the purpose, 247;
- a steam locomotive for the purpose referred to, 247;
- irrigation will become general, 247;
- Western Irrigation, chap. xliv, 260;
- irrigation is practicable everywhere, 260;
- the portion of our country which cannot be cultivated without irrigation, 260;
- its extent, 260;
- its climate, 260;
- it is spoken of as desert, 261;
- the readiest means of irrigating the plains, 261;
- their extent, 261;
- the North and South Platte rivers, 261;
- Union Colony, 262;
- its location, 262;
- location of Greeley, 262;
- the first irrigating canal of Union Colony, 262;
- branches and ditches therefrom, 262-3;
- how the water is deflected to it, 263;
- the larger and longer canal, 263;
- doubts at first entertained respecting the capacities of the soil, 264;
- proved baseless, 264;
- products of the soil, 264;
- the cost of irrigation is not in excess of cultivating without it, 264;
- demonstration thereof, 265;
- it would pay to expend $10 per acre for irrigating New England grass lands, 266;
- More of Irrigation, chap. xlvi, 274;
- irrigation of places bordered by streams referred to, 274;
- the facilities the Platte offers for irrigation, 274-5;
- results that may be attained, 275;
- the Plains, 275;
- obstacles to their cultivation, 275-6;
- the change that will be yet effected, 276;
- how the plains will be irrigated, 276-7;
- artesian wells, 277-8;
- the co-operation of railroad companies anticipated, 278;
- rain increases as settlements are multiplied, 278;
- the permanent character of the Plains, 279;
- tracts needing irrigation in the East, 279;
- summing up of the author's views on, 315-6-7.
- IRON, 242.
- ITALY (Northern), 171.
- KANSAS, 25, 26, 167, 249, 261, 264, 289.
- KANSAS PACIFIC, the railroad, 262.
- KENNEBEC, the valley of the, 165;
- the river, 279.
- KENTUCKY, 50.
- KIT CARSON, the, 277.
- LABORERS, Farm—Dearth of employment for, in winter, a great and growing evil, 303.
- LAKES, the Northern, 165.
- LANCASTER COUNTY, Penn., 110.
- LANCASHIRE (England), 76.
- LAND. See Farming.
- LANDS, public, 46.
- LARD, 164.
- LIEBIG'S agricultural chemistry, 199.
- LIME, 104;
- LOCUST, the, tree, 53, 54, 55, 60, 134, 215, 223, 314.
- LOMBARDY, 74, 75, 76.
- LONDON, 269.
- LONDONDERRY (Ireland), 171;
- New Hampshire, 171.
- LONG ISLAND, N. Y., 166, 251, 315;
- Sound, 172.
- LONG'S PEAK, 262.
- LORING, Dr. George B. (of Mass.), 193.
- LUMBERING—How rocks in creeks are removed by a lumberman, 217.
- MACHINES, agricultural, 225.
- MAGGIORE, Lake, 75.
- MAGNESIA, 235.
- MAIDSTONE (England), 89.
- MAINE, 125, 171, 232.
- MANGANESE, 111.
- MANGOLDS, 271.
- MANUFACTURES, 164, 243.
- MANURE, 95.
- MAPLE, 287.
- MAPES, Professor, 16, 85, 114, 128.
- MARL, 109, 120, 122, 142, 167.
- See also Fertilizers, Commercial.
- MARTINEAU, Miss., 187.
- MARYLAND, 166, 251;
- Eastern, 315.
- MASSACHUSETTS, 171, 193.
- McCORMICK, C., 86.
- MEATS, 150, 164, 167, 200, 201;
- MECHANICS, 243.
- MELON, 226.
- MEXICO, 172.
- MICHIGAN, State of, 163;
- Lake, 156.
- MIDDLE STATES, 139.
- MILK, 115, 167, 171.
- MILLS, 249, 250.
- MINNEHAHA, the, 285.
- MINNESOTA, 25, 26, 36, 37, 163, 164, 168, 206, 249, 289.
- MISSOURI, valley of the, 20;
- MISSISSIPPI, valley of the upper, 20, 38;
- MOLE PLOW, the, 72.
- MONMOUTH, N. J., 166.
- MORMONS, tree planting by, 46.
- MORTGAGE, buying land on, 31.
- MIDDLE STATES, pasturing in, 19, 25, 69, 142, 179, 204, 215.
- MUCK, 95, 109, 116, 120;
- use in preparing for an orchard, 142.
- Muck—How to Utilize it, chap. xxi, 124;
- chemists will yet be able to determine the value of all kinds, 124;
- use of muck profitable, 124;
- the author's trial of it, 124;
- how swamp muck forms, 124-5;
- its vast extent, 125;
- little benefit derived from applying it directly, 125;
- the true course to adopt to secure good returns, 126-7;
- practical evidence of its value, 127;
- the course to be adopted by farmers having few animals, 127-8;
- mixing salt with lime, 128, 147, 167;
- diversity of opinion about, 233;
- as an illustration of the need for more scientific knowledge, 233-4;
- as an illustration of winter work, 304;
- it is abundant and accessible, 304;
- proof thereof, 305-6;
- value of muck, 305;
- where to procure, 318.
- MUTTON. See Sheep;
- NAPOLEON I, 33, 292.
- NEVADA, 46, 76, 83, 260.
- NEWBURG, N. Y., a fruit farm above, on the Hudson, 16.
- NEWCASTLE (township), Westchester Co., N. Y., 62, 147.
- NEW ENGLAND, 25, 34, 36, 39, 45, 50, 69, 78, 79, 139, 152, 163, 164, 165, 171, 190, 206, 214, 266, 279, 286, 287, 289, 290, 291, 303.
- NEW HAMPSHIRE, 87, 140, 172, 237.
- NEW JERSEY, 49, 85, 109, 165;
- NEW RIVER, Va., 86.
- NEW YORK (city), 13, 60, 87, 129, 269.
- NEW YORK STATE, 37, 49;
- NIAGARA, the falls of, 285.
- NINEVEH, 266.
- NITRATES. See Fertilizers.
- NITRATE OF SODA, 122.
- NORTHERN STATES, 48, 139, 140, 192, 297.
- OATS, 67, 92, 94, 113, 118, 121, 143, 189, 191, 210, 238, 245, 264, 265.
- OHIO, State of, 37, 163, 220;
- OLD STATES, the, 73, 249, 306.
- ONIONS, 191.
- ONTARIO, Lake, 156.
- PACIFIC STATES, 178.
- PACIFIC, the coast, 156;
- valley, a broad, 101.
- PACKER, Gov. William F., of Penn., 130.
- PARIS, 103.
- PASTURES—Pasturing will soon disappear in the Eastern and Middle States, 19;
- its pernicious effects, 19;
- soiling is preferable to pasturing, 20;
- a pasture should be the first field selected on a new farm, 40;
- where it should be placed, 41;
- misconceptions respecting indiscriminate pasturing, 41;
- treatment of a pasture, 42-3;
- should have a shed, 43;
- appearance of pastures where there is bad farming, 152;
- summing up of the author's views on pasturing, 313-4.
- See also Hay.
- PEACH-TREES. See Fruits,
- PEARS. See Fruits,
- PEAS, 89, 90, 271, 296.
- PENNSYLVANIA, 23;
- PEMIGEWASSET, the river, 75.
- PHILADELPHIA, 156, 159.
- PHOSPHATES. See Commercial Fertilizers,
- PHOSPHORUS, 118, 119, 235.
- PIPPINS, 53.
- PITCH-PINE, 314.
- PILGRIMS, the descendants of the, 289.
- PINE, 58, 223.
- PINE BARRENS, 166.
- PLAGUE, the, 268.
- PLAINS, the, 46, 101, 261;
- PLASTER (Gypsum). See Commercial Fertilizers,
- PLATTE, the river, 82, 260, 261, 262;
- valley of the, 274.
- PLOWS, steel, 87.
- PLOWING:
- Plowing, deep or shallow, chap. xiv, 87;
- the Deep Plowing of all lands, not advocated, 85;
- reasons therefor, 85;
- instances where Deep Plowing was unadvisable, 85-6;
- the primitive plow, 86;
- plowing in New Hampshire in the author's boyhood, 87;
- will Deep Plowing pay? 87;
- author's experience of the plowing of a plat in New York city, 87-8;
- plows deeply with profit, 88-9;
- an English farmer's trial of Deep Plowing, 89-90;
- the imperative reasons for Deep Plowing, 90.
- Plowing—Good and Bad, chap. xv, 91;
- misconceptions regarding Deep Plowing, 91;
- the right conditions for Deep Plowing, 91;
- case of a farmer of the old school cited, 91-2;
- how Deep Plowing will prove profitable to him, 92-3;
- how he should proceed, 92-3;
- subsoiling hill-sides, 94;
- author's own experience, 94;
- the revolution that steam-plowing will cause, 95;
- plowing of Grass land considered, 95;
- treatment of Grass land that has been plowed, 95;
- plowing of a poor man's rugged sterile farm, 97-9;
- Fall-plowing, 99-100;
- fences impede plowing, 100;
- favored lot of the squatter on the prairie in regard to plowing, 101;
- the plows of sixty years ago, 237;
- the plows used in the greater part of Europe, 238;
- improvement in plowing inevitable, 241;
- the improved system would be adopted in the West, 241;
- steam plows and their inventors, 243;
- at work in Great Britain, 243-4;
- the locomotive that is needed for steam-plowing, 244;
- losses from want of such, 244-5;
- necessity for greater rapidity in plowing demonstrated, 246;
- advice of a German observer on plowing for Corn, 246-7;
- author's experience of the cost and delay of plowing, 281-2;
- not half so much or so thorough plowing done as there should be, 282;
- the imperfect means of plowing, 282;
- steam-plowing in England, 283-4-5;
- application of the facts to this country, 284.
- See also Steam.
- Plowing, deep or shallow, chap. xiv, 87;
- PLUM-TREES. See Fruits, also 129, 139, 294.
- PO, the river, 74-5.
- PORK, 37, 99, 143, 186, 191, 220, 238, 291.
- POTASH. See Fertilizers, Commercial, also 109.
- POTATOES, 88, 99.
- Esculent Roots—Potatoes, chap. xxix, 170;
- their productiveness, 170;
- cultivated universally in Europe, 170;
- they alone form part of the every-day food of prince and peasant, 170;
- the poor of New England depended on them when the grain crop was cut short, 171;
- formed part of the regular supper in farmers' homes, 171;
- the history of the Potato, 171;
- it is essentially a mountainous plant, 172;
- it may have grown wild on the sides of the great chain traversing Spanish America, 172;
- everything there congenial to it, 172;
- results attained by the author in growing potatoes, 172;
- conditions which insure a good crop, 172-3;
- swamp muck treated as described, makes an excellent fertilizer for, 173;
- how to act where such is not to be had, 173-4;
- instructions to a farmer having a poor, worn-out field of sandy loam, 174;
- objections thereto considered, 174-5;
- the potato blights, 175-6;
- the kind of seed to plant, 176;
- drills are preferable, in the author's judgment, 176-7;
- preparation of the soil, 177;
- varieties considered, 177;
- growing from tubers tends to degeneracy, 177;
- the originator of a valuable new potato entitled to a recompense, 177;
- also, 189, 264, 296.
- Esculent Roots—Potatoes, chap. xxix, 170;
- POTOMAC river, the, 53, 73, 140, 159;
- valley of the, 317.
- PORTUGAL, 237.
- POWER—Undeveloped Sources of Power, chap. xlvii, 280;
- the farmer's sources and command of power less than the manufacturer's, 280;
- both have the same opportunities, 280;
- author's experience of the delay and cost of plowing, 281-2;
- further illustrations of the imperfect means of plowing, 282;
- steam plowing in England, 282-3-4;
- steam not commended as a source of power to the farmer, 284;
- reasons therefor, 284;
- wind as a source of power, 284-5;
- the further anticipated sources, 285;
- the triumphs of the future, 285.
- PRAIRIE, 24;
- PRAIRIE STATES, 46, 83.
- PRUNING, 146.
- PUBLIC LANDS, 24, 46.
- PURSLEY, 125.
- QUINCES. See Fruits.
- RAG-WEED, 125.
- RAILROADS, their influence on the progress of the West, 26, 105;
- suggestions to have one act as factor of farm products, 301-2.
- RALEIGH, Sir Walter, 171.
- "RANCHING," 292.
- RASPBERRIES, 90.
- REAPERS, American, 245.
- RED CEDAR, 58, 157, 223.
- RED OAK, 19, 53, 60.
- REPUBLICAN, valleys of the, 274.
- ROADS, 250.
- ROBINSON, SOLON, on fencing, 219.
- ROCK. See Stone.
- ROCKY MOUNTAINS, 206, 261, 262, 274.
- ROMFORD, England, 269-70.
- ROOTS, culture of, 35, 43;
- all seek heat and moisture, 98, 126, 168, 206, 228, 242, 265;
- Roots—Turnips—Beets—Carrots, chap. xxx, 178;
- British and American climates compared as regards turnip culture, 178-9;
- turnips may be profitably grown in the United States, 179;
- cattle breeders should each commence with one or two acres per annum, 179;
- the beet better adapted to our climate than the turnip, 180;
- its value to Europe as a sugar producer, 180;
- reasons for doubting that beet sugar will become an important American staple, 180-1;
- beets will be extensively grown under a better system of tillage, 181;
- the author's experience of growing carrots, 181;
- reasons for not achieving eminent success therein, 181;
- the carrot ought to be extensively grown for horse feeding, 182;
- its value as such, 182;
- the oat degenerates in very hot, dry summers, 182;
- roots valuable to diversify food, 182.
- RUTA BAGAS, 143.
- RYE, 21;
- SAGE-BUSH, 261.
- ST. LOUIS, 156.
- SALEM, N. J., 166.
- SALT. See Fertilizers, Commercial;
- SALT LAKE, 46.
- SALT LAKE CITY, 112.
- SAVOYS, 271.
- SCHOOLS, 249, 250.
- SCIENCE IN AGRICULTURE, 32;
- Science in Agriculture, chap. xxxix, 231;
- author disclaims being a scientific farmer, 231;
- men have raised good crops, who knew nothing of science, 231;
- science is the true base of efficient cultivation, 231;
- the elements of every plant, 231;
- necessity for scientific knowledge, 232;
- author's personal experience, 232;
- the assertion of a Maine essayist, as an illustration of the need of scientific information, 233;
- the diversity of opinion as to the value of swamp muck as a further illustration, 233-4;
- analysis of soils considered, 234;
- the necessity for some standard to go by in manuring land, 234;
- illustration thereof, 234-5;
- science explains the impoverishment of soils, 235;
- author's testimony on the value of science, from personal experience, 236;
- a competence is reserved for young men fully conversant with agriculture, 236.
- Science in Agriculture, chap. xxxix, 231;
- SCOTCH-IRISH, the, 171.
- SCOTLAND, 178, 269.
- SCRUB OAK, 314.
- SCYTHES, 239.
- SEASONS, Dry. See Drouth.
- SEWAGE—Sewage, chap. xlv, 266;
- causes which doomed ancient empires to decay, 266;
- illustrations thereof, 266-7;
- the soil must receive back the elements taken from it, 267;
- obstacles thereto, 267;
- location of ancient and modern cities, 267;
- imperative necessity for cleansing treat cities, 267-8;
- meaning given to sewage in England, 268;
- conditions necessary for its equable diffusion over the soil, 268;
- application of sewage, 268;
- difficulties of utilizing it, 268-9;
- the progress made, 269;
- the measures taken to utilize sewage at Romford, England, 269;
- farm whereon it was used, and the results attained, 269-70-1-2-3;
- conclusion therefrom, 273-4.
- SHEEP—Sheep and Wool Growing, chap. xxxiv, 200;
- production of wool in the United States insufficient, 200;
- they might profitably grow as much as they consume, 201;
- reasons therefore, 201;
- the increased price of mutton will make up for the reduction on wool, 201;
- sheep-growing in England as an illustration, 201;
- sheep soon make a return for the outlay on them, 202;
- they successfully contend with bushes and briars, 203;
- more mutton should be consumed, 202-3;
- all farmers are not counseled to grow sheep, 203;
- depredations of dogs, 203-4;
- precautions against them, 204;
- the change in the relative values of mutton and wool, 204;
- the relative prices and product the farmer must expect in the future, 205;
- growing sheep for mutton near New York, 205;
- profit thereof, 205;
- sheep-growing is no experiment, 205;
- encouragement thereto, 205-6;
- sheep growing in Colorado and other Territories, and its future, 206.
- SICILY, 267.
- SICKLE, 239.
- SILICA, 235.
- SMITH, William (Woolston, Eng.), 283.
- SOCIETY, Agricultural, an, 228.
- See Farmers' Clubs.
- SODA, 235.
- SOILS, analysis of, 234.
- SORGHUM, stalks of, 43.
- SORREL, 125, 232.
- SOUTH, 25;
- SOUTH AMERICA, 200, 206.
- SPAIN, 86, 237.
- SPANISH AMERICA, 172.
- SPRING, 67, 70, 73, 75, 76, 78, 81, 87, 88, 99, 111, 126, 127, 134, 135, 136, 137, 140, 141, 150, 168, 171, 173, 174, 193, 194, 202, 258, 303, 319.
- SPRUCE, 223.
- SQUASH, 226, 264.
- STARK COUNTY, Ohio, 110.
- STEAM IN AGRICULTURE, cultivation by, 37;
- application of steam to plowing, 95.
- Steam in Agriculture, chap. xli, 241;
- farmers have been slow in utilizing the natural forces around them, 241;
- evidence thereof, 242;
- steam as a source of power is hardly a century old, 242;
- the revolution it has effected, 242;
- it will effect still greater, 243;
- steam has contributed very little to preparing the soil, 243;
- disappointments of inventors of steam plows, 243;
- steam plowing in Louisiana, 243;
- steam plows in Great Britain, 243-4;
- the locomotive that is needed for steam plowing, 244;
- the saving it would effect, 244-5;
- American reapers in England, their value appreciated, 245;
- need for a machine to plow rapidly demonstrated, 246;
- recommendation of a German observer regarding plowing, 246;
- irrigation will become general, 247;
- the locomotive referred to above could be used for sinking wells, 247;
- steam plowing in England, 283-4-5.
- STEAM PLOWS. See Steam.
- STEEL, 242.
- STEUBEN COUNTY, N. Y., 105.
- STONE—Stone on a Farm, chap. xxxvi, 213;
- formation of the earth, 212;
- diffusion of stones over the surface, 213;
- these are sometimes a facility, but oftener an impediment to efficient agriculture, 213;
- no rock on the surface of the great prairies of the West, and a portion of the valleys and plains of the Atlantic slope, 213;
- advantages and disadvantages thereof to the pioneer, 214;
- less use for stone now than formerly, 214;
- the stone on Eastern farms to be yet utilized, 214-5;
- very stony land should be planted with trees, 215;
- rough, unshapen stones will be more and more used for building, 215-6;
- instructions for building a barn partly with stone concrete, 216;
- its advantages, 216;
- blasting out stone considered, 216-7;
- the mode a lumberman employs to remove rocks in creeks, 217;
- the author's experience regarding the fencing of his farm, 218;
- his stone walls, 218.
- STONES, 249.
- STRAWBERRIES, 16, 90.
- SUGAR, production of, from the beet, 180;
- SULPHUR, 104.
- SUMMER, 47, 59, 64, 67, 78, 83, 84, 86, 88, 99, 103, 124, 126, 130, 154, 173, 178, 189, 190, 191, 202, 260, 264, 279, 288.
- SUPER-PHOSPHATE, 174.
- SUSQUEHANNA, the, 279, 292;
- the valley of the, 317.
- SWAMP LAND: about 50,000,000 acres of, in the old States (including Maine), 125;
- See Draining.
- SWINE, 143.
- SWITZERLAND, 139;
- Northern, 171.
- SYCAMORE, 59.
- TAMARACK, 223.
- TERRITORIES, the, 206, 249.
- TEXAS, 43, 205, 206;
- (Western), 260.
- TEXTILE FABRICS, 242.
- THEBES, 266.
- THISTLES, 42.
- THREAD, 200.
- TILLAGE: Thorough Tillage, chap. xvi, 96;
- rocky character of the author's own fields, 96;
- clearing off stones profitable, 96;
- cultivating wet lands without draining unprofitable, 97;
- the course a poor man with a rugged, sterile farm should adopt, 97;
- should reclaim one field each year, 97;
- should plow often, deeply and thoroughly, 98-9;
- reasons therefor, 99;
- Fall plowing, 99;
- enriches the soil, 99-100;
- fences, 100;
- the favored lot of the squatter on the prairie, 101.
- See also, Plowing—Draining—Farming.
- THE TIMES (London),282
- TIMBER. See Trees.
- TIMOTHY GRASS, 38, 153.
- TOBACCO, 191.
- TOMATOES, 264, 296.
- TRIBUNE, the, New York, 188.
- TURKEY, 86.
- TURNIPS. See Roots, also 178, 264, 300.
- TREES: clearing off timber, 30;
- New England must always be well wooded, 34, 37;
- Trees—Woodlands—Forests, chap. vii;
- the author not sentimental regarding the destruction of, 44;
- utility the reason
- and end of vegetable growth, 44;
- profit the main consideration, 44;
- the beauty and grace of trees, 44;
- New England a favored section in regard to tree-growing, 45;
- disadvantage of prairie land in that respect, 45;
- trees once grew on "the Plains," 46;
- tree-planting in Utah, and its climatic influence, 46;
- failure of congress to pass a bill encouraging tree planting, 46;
- mistake of the New York dairy farmers in destroying trees, 47;
- Spain, Italy, and portions of France suffering from the destruction of their forests, 47;
- other illustrations of improvidence, 48.
- Growing Timber—Tree-Planting, chap. viii, 50;
- proportion of a farm that should be devoted to trees, 49;
- the question of "too much land" and tree-growing, 51-2;
- its general application, 52;
- timber should be culled out rather than cut off, 52;
- the care of apple trees applicable to all trees, 52;
- some woodlands, the cheapest property in the United States, 53;
- another profitable field of labor, 54;
- plant thickly, 54;
- a common objection answered, 54;
- the Far West and tree-planting, 55.
- Planting and Growing Trees, chap. ix, 56;
- timber general on most farms, 56;
- suggestions for locating trees, 56;
- trees once planted cost nothing for cultivation, 56;
- the soil is richer even after repeated crops of wood, 57;
- poor land improved by growing timber on it, 57;
- springs and streams will be rendered more equable and enduring by tree-growing, 57;
- trees should be set on all hill-sides and ravines, 57;
- trees accumulate manure, 58;
- they can be placed so as to modify agreeably the temperature of a farm, 58;
- author's experience, 58;
- trees on the crest of a hill improve the crops on the slope, 59;
- trees may be placed with advantage on banks of rivers, &c., 59;
- a good tree grows as thriftily as a poor one, 59;
- evidence thereof, 60;
- diversity profitable, 60;
- wood-lot should be thinned out, not cleared, 60;
- the future should be considered when cutting, 60;
- evidence thereof, 60;
- a plantation furnishes employment at all seasons, 61;
- tree-growing will make springs appear, and cause rain, 61, 97.
- About Tree-Planting, chap. xxiii, 134;
- author's experience in raising Locust plants, 134;
- general counsel on the raising of locust and most other trees, 135;
- sowing seed and raising plants therefrom, 135;
- the raising of Chestnut, Hickory, White Oak, 135-6;
- how a farmer, having a rugged, stony hill should act, 136;
- profits which can be realized, 137;
- the utility of forests, 137-8;
- tree-planting as a field for adventurous young men, 138;
- how they should proceed, 138;
- the great profits to be realized, 138;
- drouths may be expected as the country is more and more denuded of its forests, 100;
- how stony land may be advantageously used for tree-planting, 215;
- treatment of forests in winter, 307;
- summing up of author's views on, 314.
- TREE-FRUITS. See Apples and Fruits.
- TREE-PLANTING. See Trees.
- UNION COLONY—Its location, 262;
- UNITED STATES, 27, 53;
- UTAH, 46, 76, 181.
- VEGETABLES, culture of, 35, 37, 90, 107, 168, 228, 264, 265, 266;
- the growing of market, as a source of profit, 296.
- VENICE, 74.
- VERMONT—A grazing farm in Northern Vermont, 15, 25, 36, 48, 110, 159, 172.
- VINES. See Fruit.
- VIRGINIA, 50, 80, 86, 140, 166, 191, 237.
- WALNUT, 54, 60, 135, 136.
- WARREN COUNTY, N. Y., 191, 192.
- WARING, on drainage, 72;
- WATER, 231-2.
- See also Irrigation.
- WATER MELONS, 300
- WEBER, the river, 81.
- WEEDS, in pastures, 43.
- WEST, the, a farmer who migrated to, 16;
- WESTCHESTER COUNTY, N. Y., 49, 52, 62, 67, 118, 119, 125.
- WESTERN IRRIGATION. See Irrigation.
- WHEAT, 21, 22, 37, 92, 94, 112, 113, 121, 131, 162, 167, 169, 238, 242, 245, 264, 265.
- See also Corn.
- WHITE ASH, 291.
- WHITE BIRCH, 314.
- WHITE DAISY, 42.
- WHITE MAPLE, 53.
- WHITE MOUNTAINS, N. H., 172.
- WHITE OAK, 54, 55, 135, 215, 291, 314.
- WHITE PINE, 30, 48, 53, 54, 55, 215, 287, 314.
- WHITNEY, Eli, 86.
- WILLOW, 59.
- WINDMILL, 276-7.
- WINDS—Utilizing the Winds for power, 284.
- WINTER, 47, 59, 73, 81, 89, 113, 126, 135, 140, 141, 150, 154, 156, 157, 171, 178, 179, 193, 206, 209, 222, 258, 262, 263, 288, 298.
- WINTER. See Work, Winter.
- WISCONSIN, 25, 159;
- Eastern, 163.
- WOOD ASHES, 120, 147, 173.
- WOOL, 164. See Sheep.
- WOOL GROWING. See Sheep.
- WORK, WINTER—Winter Work, chap. li. 303;
- dearth of winter work a great and growing evil. 303;
- consequences thereof, 303;
- it is quite a modern evil, 303-4;
- the hard-working farmer's claim to leisure, 304;
- he errs in supposing that there is no winter work to be done, 304;
- the drawing and preparing of muck as an illustration, 304-5-6;
- the work to be substituted where muck is not to be had, 306;
- procuring commercial fertilizers, 306;
- fences, 306;
- fruit trees, 306;
- forests, 307;
- general counsel, 307.
- WYOMING, 206.
- ZONE, temperate, 46;
- torrid, 46.