WEIGHING ENGINES. 
51 
I shall conclude this article with a list of implements 
from Mr. Carpenter’s Agriculture, lately published, 
who is a Worcestershire farmer, and who advises every 
farmer to have such things in a place of safety ready 
for use. 
Waggons and carts, ploughs and harrows, a proper 
assortment; sickles, weeding hooks and tongs, forks 
and pitchforks, rakes, sledge, roller, hopper, scythes. 
Meadows and Pastures. 
Pitchforks and prongs, hay cutting knife, dung and 
mole-hill spreaders. 
Barn and Stables. 
Flails, ladders long and short, winnowing machine, 
measures for grain, sieves, brooms, sacks, scuttles, 
buckets, curry-combs, mane-combs, whips, harness for 
horses, goads, harness and yokes for oxen, panniers, 
packsaddles, bridles, saddles, surcingles, side-saddle, 
cart ropes, and corn screen. 
Other necessary Implements. 
Wheelbarrows, handbarrows, hammer and nails, 
gimblets, saws, pincers, scissars, axe, &c. Hedging 
hook, ditto mittens, garden roller, grindstone, whet¬ 
stones, beetle and wedges, hurdles, iron leaver, sheep, 
and hedge-shears, hoes, hog-yokes and rings, geese- 
yokes, scales and weights, marks for live stock, spades, 
shovels, &c. Elkington’s borer for under draining. 
Mr. C. remarks, “ He that goes a borrowing goes a 
sorrowing,” and so often does the lender of implements 
by having them sometimes spoiled, or in not finding 
their way home again; and though it would be un- 
neighbourly to oppose, or object to lending or bor¬ 
rowing upon urgent occasions, yet he recommends to 
make a trade of it as little as,'possible. 
CHAP. 
