— pe lt and the 
HEA 
recommended the mode detailed below + ; 
‘and burn and fow with t 
in reser 
hay, which is excellen yiehamn § direétly on one stan! fow 
with turnips without wists though it would certainly be 
a valuable addition, if attainable; after turnips, barley laid 
down with feeds, either for one year or permanently.” It 
is obvious that, in this method of proceeding, there are five 
n ~— a with feeds in three 
an icciatidorabsle crop, but the 
m the paciacuaing 
pinbin of fianteerag: ‘Gunn aii boner Ph after them. 
‘Seme may, it is conjectured, object to corn crops coming 
io feldom ; to this it is anfwered, “on the moft corn fown, 
is not always the moft reaped, but the very reverfe ; for 
thefe two corn crops will, at a coe produce more grain 
than if eve = had been of that defcription, while the 
groun an improved condition inftead of being left 
wholly deteriorated 
~ Upon or heath, on a chalky bottom, Mr. Wedge 
found the mode of cropping detailed below to be jaghiy 
advantageou: 
ee year burnt wheat, . 
gth -—— feeds, 
roth —— half-peas, half-feeds, 
with Selipier 4 tares alter- 
require 
——— this kind of land. The eventh year after that 
operation is the 
period at which prs is at all requifite, ) 
in a deteriorated con? 
t 
beret 
couascll as er riesieal 
ig ge aaa 
9 where oe 
o the im 
oc 
RSPR 
ied psi teeny Fb ‘the 
amount +t0 the tenant free of 
conftandby. take the fold, and . 
has been ipgctet in confidering the cultivation ud 
lands —— — eath ki ts have 
HE “é 
intereft for three years; the former to be reimburfed at the 
termination of that period; the tenant being in return bound, 
not only to improve the Jand ‘on a plan to be laid down wn by” 
the landlord, but alfo to be fubjected to a cértain method of 
cropping, when the —— has been effected, By 
adopting this fort of arrangem a great extent of heathy 
Jand might fpeedily be plead ‘into a highly prodatie 
ftate of cultivation 
TOTL, in Ornithology, the name of an Ame 
rican bird, defcribed by Ni 
we 
— 
bid 
es 
a 
Loot 
oO 
3 
ss 
™ 
—— | 
rr 
rt) 
o 
oe 
= 
oS 
5 
FS) 
VE, at Sea; pa to throw away or fling any 
thing pedbeand, 
Wherta fhip, being at anchor, rifes and falls by the force 
of the waves, the is alfo faid to heave and (+t. 
To HEAVE a pee. ck. See Perk 
To — at the capftan, fignifies to turn it about. See 
Carsta : 
To i. down. See CAR 
To HeEAvea flag aboard, is to Apes it side " See Fae, 
and SIGNAL. 
To Heave a-head, is to make the fhip advance by heaving 
in the cable, or other rope, ab is faitened to an anchor at 
fome diftance before her. To heave a -flern, is to draw the 
i er avaige by the fame operation. 
AVE the vee See mous 
Ts Hea AVE out, is to unfur a, throw loofe a fail from 
the place es em it had been willed and f fattened. |The phrafe 
is more particularly applied to the ftay-fails : as, inf od 
ee a and dew out the fiay-fails, which is done, in 
or dry t 
“Te ban viflert. is to draw % moe of the cable into the 
fhip, by means, of the capftan or windlafs, as that. by ad- 
vancing fhe will be almott pespendiculary above the anchor, 
and in a proper fituation to fet fail : to Leave taught, 1 1s to 
turn about the capftan, till the rope applied to it becomes 
ftrai ape and ready for action. 
érings, under the Jewi/b Law, were things of 
ated up x God, by lifting them up on high. of 
in Mining, fignifies a fault or rade ent 
the att fee that article. M m obferving the 
worn ftate of the edges of faults, as jai a thofe which 
do not derange the ftrata vertically, or very little, as eA 
which do fo in the greateft degree, infers that the furface 
Son ect nad leds acho 
aa ee oe 
ing our earth; 
motions, — 
peagent: 5 aera heaven 5 cetherial, 
heaven, gr cee Q 
VEN, si Sa at th ae 
es wot Goo Bai, igi Jat 
and the fouls of the rig eda>: : 
