t »5o ] 



can find fufficient quantity of the former, and the 

 latter is too cxpenfive for general ufe. 



The following is the compofition of the Manure 

 here recommended, with the expence, for one acre 

 of land :— — • 



£•1 7 o 



The method of preparing it is, to fpread the 

 coombs on the floor abotft four inches thick — then 

 fprinkle the fait as level as you can; throw on half 

 the quantity of farid, and half the quantity of oil, 

 out of a watering-pot — turn it and rake it well — 

 afterwards add the reft of the oil and fand as be- 

 fore — turn it well 'till thoroughly mixed, and then 

 throw it in a heap for ufe. 



As the prolifick quality oil-cake is only in pro- 

 portion to the oil it contains, the coitipofition I 

 now recomnriend mtift be preferable, having a much 

 greater quantity of oil in it; and as malt- coombs 

 are a manure of themfelves, efpecially for turnip- 

 land, at about eighty or ninety bulhels per acre, 

 I dare venture to aflert, that twenty-foui* bufhels, 



Hvitb 



