FUR 
RRIER, : ae who trades, or works, i in furrs, or 
lines robes, &c. t ith. 
Furrier’s ihapinn 
Sy In eres ii refufe clippings 
produced in large ae étor 
es by furr ; and which are 
the lands at the expence of 
nd they are applied by 
ver the ground, by the hand, from a feed- 
{cuttle, at the further charge of about pen aae the quar- 
ter, where wheat or barley is defigned t own, being 
immediately afterwards turned in by the * eaghs and then 
the feed is fown and harrowed in. After this has been done 
clippings as are left above the furface 
are aaa dibbled, or thoved into the mould by the point 
° ick made for the purpofe, in order to pres their 
being carried away or devoured by dogs, crows, which 
of eating them. The quantity ee rally 
fe) ftatute acre is about three-quarters. 
hey are found to anfwer Asrens well on light, dry, 
chalky, « or gravely omy where they are fuppofed to hold 
the moifture in rove of a. ai 
the crops in fuch en as are hot a 
forts of land they are not believed . a meh “benefit, 
See ManuRE. 
FURRING of a Ship, is laying on double ares 
ier fides. ‘Thisis dune after the fhip is built, and i 
failors called plank upon plank. But there is eee 
which is more properly fo called ; and that - 
aes a {hip’s planks are ripped, and new timbers are put 
on the former timbers, and on them other planks ; which 
is done fomctimes to a the fhip bear the fails the better. 
Furrines, or Fur. n_ Architedure, are ufed for the 
saat good o ai i ear in the cornice. 
n rafters are cut with a knee, thefe furrings are pieces 
w hich go = a slong with the rafter, from the top of the 
knee to the c 
When ion are rotten or funk hollow in the middle, there 
are pieces cut thickeit in the middle, and tapering towards 
each end, which are nailed upon them to make them ftraight. 
Such pieces are called furrs; and the putting them on is 
called | furring the rafters. 
IPOUR, in Geography, ; town of Hindooftan, 
in Rohilcund ; 12 miles S. of Barcill 
FU W, among | Gar deners, denies aridge or {welling 
on the ul of a tree, , or fruit. 
< Fusnowne i 
ROW oro eae a name applied to 
fach Plough as are pe are in a double manner, or 
fo oduce two furrows at the fame time. See 
ow-roller, a particular tool of the roller kind, 
eae fo as to operate in the furrows of the ridges. 
Furrow-/lice, the narrow flice 
— over by the plough, in breaking up or ftirring 
cae tiy oe about two hundred and a. 
or flip of earth raifed and’ 
FUR 
The Scotch writers on hufbandry frequently denominate it 
fur-Slice. 
Furrow, Water, a deep open fart of trench or furrow, 
made by a plough, contrived for the de ed or otherwife, 
in ands under tillage, in order to pai and drain them 
of the water that may ftagnate or prove injurious to the 
growth - ie oo bi Ria fhould conftantly be 
drawn in eCctions as are the moft liad for readily dif- 
Garis i water, even flanting acro{s the where the 
aes of os fituation requires it ; 
open by means of the fp 
e crops are of the wheat he forming of thefe 
furrow-drains fhould be executed immediately after the fow- 
ing of the land has been finifhed. T ey are particularly ne- 
ceffary on all the more ftiff and retentive forts of land, as 
without them the crops feldom fucceed well in fuch 
Ss. 
FURROWING Proven, a fort of plough conftruéted 
for the purpofe of ots water-furrows in lands of the 
more gh — 
This wor i s much more seadily; as well as 
much more vf oer by ous ie of plough 
e PLo 
than thofe of the common kin 
FUR. KABAD, in i ee ae has of Hindooftan, 
in the circar of Ro hilcund: on the weit fide of the Ganges, 
and capital of a diftri& belongin gtoa prince of the Patan 
Rohilla tribe ; about 30 miles in length along the bank of 
the Ganges ; 76 miles N.W. cf Lucknow is {mall in, 
dependent territory has been added to the Britith gg 
N. lat. 27.723’. E. long. 79° 52’ Ifo, atown of 
— in the a, of Bengal; near ‘he Ganges ; ; ne 
miles N.N.W. of Moorfhedabad. 
Y’s Pow a town of the ifland of Jamaica, in 
the ee of St. James ; 20 miles N.E. of Savannah-la-Mer. 
FURSEY, a a ifland of England, at the entrance 
into a harbour. 
F OUT. See Farscnour. 
FURSTEMBERG, Ferpinanp pg, in Bi ography, an 
eminent prelate, was a defcendant from the free barons of 
that Hay n Weltphalia, and was born at Bilftein in 1626, 
He ftudied at Cologne, where he paints an intimate 
friendfhip with Chigi, eho was then 
acardinal and pope. During the cardinalatelhip. of Chg’ 
he invited Furftemberg to refide with him, whom he raife 
to the bifhopric of Paderborn in 166 Iy qin he himfelf was. 
feated in the papal chair, under the title of Alexander VII. 
8, when he was sali by the pope apels 
tolical vicar of all the north of Eur 8a zeale 
ous catholic, and anxious for the conven of hots wl @ 
were not already within the pale of the church ; but at the 
ame time he did not negle& the cultivation of the belles 
lettres, either by his | own 7 or - of many learned 
ied in n aue 
nd eG of ane 
were many ity. 
A anon edition of thefe poems was abies & in the 
fame year in which he died, at a Louvre, at the expence 
of the ane of France. More 
e 12 FURSTE« 
