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be heft. This compoft, well mixeciy 

 fhould be laid on before Lady-Day, be 

 well worked into the ground with bufli- 

 harrows, and repeated at leafl every fifth 

 year; which will not only be a very high 

 improvement to thefe grafles, but be the 

 means of producing a great deal of white 

 clover. 



TliQfotefefcqiiey or marp be?ji, another 

 mofl valuable grafs, is found in moifl 

 lands y is to be improved beyond all 

 others, and at a lefs expence, merely by 

 flooding ; which I fhall endeavour to fhew 

 hereafter. 



Mr. StilH72gfieef was very earnefl, in 

 advifing hufbandmen to gather, and fow, 

 fome of the befl of thefe feeds in their 

 ground, inftead of filling it with the ftale 

 rubbiih which they generally make ufe 

 of. Great advantage might certainly be 

 made of this hint, particularly when 



land 



