t a 5 5 1 



imes be happy to : communicate to them the 

 little knowledge he poileflcs or may acquire. 



Lhtk!c J. HAZARD. 



o — i Hum — 



; 

 Article XXIV. 



unt of the Culture, Expcnces> and Produce o/JPo- 

 s, per acrcy about llford, and the adjacent 

 Parijhes, fix miles Eaft of London. 



THE foil on which the bed crops are raifed, 

 is a ftrongifh loam, not quite approaching to 

 clay. The manure ujfed is rotten dung, which is 

 laid on juft before planting, in the proportion of 

 from 15 to 20 loads per acre. 



Twenty-four bufbels, cut into lets of one or two 

 good eyes each, are planted per acre, at 15 inches 

 nee, and kept clean by hoeing, in which tile 

 earth is drawn up round the plants as they advanrfc 

 in height. The produce on ah average, ten tons 

 per acre — 1 261bs. to the hundred weight. 



They take them up with a broad three-tin'd fork, 

 at three guineas per acre. The average expence 



per 



