114 AWAKENING OF ENGLAND. 



to find a purchaser for his own individual 

 holding should he wish to leave, but with 

 the necessity only of transferring his shares 

 to some one else. He has the welfare of his 

 co-partner almost as much at heart as his own. 



A credit bank has been formed, and all 

 buying and selling will be done in co-opera- 

 tion. A Danish extension waggon, costing 

 £20, has been imported. This is a wonderful 

 waggon, very light, and serviceable for every 

 kind of work on a farm, from that of drawing 

 timber to carrying hay. It can be shortened 

 or lengthened as desired. Stripped of its 

 sides at a moment's notice, it can be converted 

 into a trolley with a platform. Shortened, it 

 can be used as a dung cart or as a market 

 cart. Altogether it is the small holder's 

 all-purposes cart. 



Every one must wish success to this enter- 

 prising undertaking to resettle on the slopes 

 of the old British camp this new race of self- 

 supporting English yeomen. The husbandman 

 has come, and come to stay ; but he, unfortun- 

 ately, still goes to his daily toil homeless. 

 There is still the crying need of cottage 

 accommodation. 



The Norfolk County Council have, on the 



