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Here we find the expence of carrying 

 out the corn amounts alone to 2 s. a quar- 

 ter, which js prodigious. Suppofe a far- 

 mer raifes 500 quarters in a year, the ex- 

 pence of the carriage runs up fo high as 

 50 /. full 30 L of which ought to be 

 reckoned as extraordinary, and charged to 

 the land with rent. 



Some favings may be made, it is true, 

 by ufmg broad-wheeled waggons j for 

 which reafon, they fhould ever be ufed 

 on farms large enough for 9 or 10 horfes; 

 but then others not fo large will raife 

 greater quantities of corn than I have cal- 

 culated, and confequently cannot have thofe 

 machines for want of the proper number 

 of horfes. 



Thefe hints, I apprehend, are fufficient 

 to prove that goodriels of roads, and a 

 moderate diftance from market, are cir- 

 cumftances highly ueceflary to be attended 

 to in the hiring a farm; and that, if they 

 arc wanting, the rent ought to be estimated 

 accordingly. 



