20 
same Field,—reaping, of this “ Omnium,” 
frequently upwards of Eighty Bushels per 
Acre, where neither, separately, would 
have furnished Fifty. 
Although it is generally admitted that 
Wheat cannot be grown after Wheat with 
any prospect of beneficial result, yet, it is 
certain, if the matter abstracted from the 
Land by a Crop of Wheat, could be re¬ 
stored, Wheat might be again successfully 
cultivated to the end of time' in annual suc¬ 
cession,—and, in all probability, should 
this desideratum in Agriculture be ever as¬ 
certained, in Quantities per Acre, of which, 
at present, we have little or no idea. 
Every Farmer, in the Vicinity of Exeter, 
is aware that the quickest growth of Turnips 
is promoted by the use of the Scavenger’s 
Dung, composed of Ashes of various sorts, 
and the Sweepings of the Streets;—the 
