716 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
[Nov. 6, 
THE DIFFERENT yee OF TENANT RIGHT. 
Tue follo aper is from the 
Kikners 3 T s e is abridged e. the Fife 
k in their 
© 
* 
— 
e most o 
grity. 
The eee 7 this 3 which were unani- 
e last a ual discussion of the 
e extreme desirableness 
liberal covenants possible in leases, 
establi 
some 
going tenant, beyo 
in this neighbourhoo 
themselves, nor, so far as 
reced 
tical carrying ou 
was anything whatsoever done tow ards removing or 
diminishi 
be more 
el this matter 
ess of the 
deterioration of his property, and of having to pay — 
for that deterioration a equal to several years’ re 
of the 3 wo 
o doubt chat 3 is the view which is taken 
tenant right 
a tenant right 
is a pni in which they | ° 
8 confirmed b by many sie — had the means 
amongst the latest, I am sorry 
Saat Mr. Caird, for 1 ability’ and general sound- 
of opinion Res respect.* Butin — 
4. 2 
y to 
t —— a tendeney, as 
a more careful e 
great number an 
ments which he pe fo 1 made. It often amounts, 
of the Devon commission, to 
nt. It m 
than double the e 
absolutely indeed, for he, too, m 
vee his su 2 * at Ty of 
rest on it dur the whole continuance of 
* — the landlord its effect is to rs —4 choice 
possessed of a unt of 
* 
e fi pii compe 
3 ad too 
n the ed worthless 
acceptance, bein 
It has been attempt 
others, in several late aes of Parliament, to extend 
it by act to the other parts of the island. But a 
the attempt has been unsu uccessful. Out of Irelan 
gh 
therefore all which it is Bas ot to say of a 
n 1 different from anything which is sought "for in 
untry. 
some counties in pm aars. there exists a ois 
mbling that of true |i 
1 
8 and mis- 
ur hands a much 
the 
m Subai at 
* in order 
poi ee — distinction betwixt it and 808 — to detect | 0! 
of the — — which it has been -ya rvedly 
of Surrey, the 
an portion of North Notts, 
est Riding of Yorkshire, — I believe, the 
whi =» this c m has so far 
e absence of 
ney. How 
=- parts of or England in 
as to be rec 
ia yomi stipulations, as the law 
it originated in these isolated districts is — 1 TAAN 
has existed, in almost the same form as it wears n 
for a long period—for, at least, many generations 3 
As it is now, the items for which it awards p — — 
ing tenant are very numero ms 
The parti 
farm, 
to most — for half the x value of the fallows of the preceding 
2 
ard any system of com- 
nstrument by mre Good (a 
sn ili which 
Smg whatsoever as an i 
ing is not promoted, but is 
ted — — pe 
cour 
time or other, bres he l find a tenant at all, he — 
purchase up and 
In common with most of the members of th 
views of th 
st farmin 
any praction to Pe Kept after. aa 
co ies tit 
the introduction of E . Z| 
h a 
the part of those 
| 
nd t 
f his 
| e 
1 
ter. estates, he gets 
ealds of to b 
and the 
iculars include ‘payment wm 
th i 
year, fr 
a — and bie half the value of the dung which he had 
nt for 
crop. y include also pa 
the 40 2 "that is for the one-year-old Clover, which of usual waste. 
ay be ploughed up for Wheat — p — ae a a 
paid for in the ung, 
olding of sheep upon ere land e aa to 
— article of charge. 
rate at whicli these several i 
re rated at exactly the half of the 
valuation of the full fallows, The Cleese “lays” are 
times valued as hi 
ge ape of the valuation seems to v 
acre over the farm. In practice it is almost 
not appearing in 
It is a heavy — to 
ee at very — hen he needs 
be filled. He might not — * if it were 
given om what is really beneficial to him, But it is not. 
Much of i 
advantage 
strated from $ oe pocket of 
what he ought 
not to be called on to pay 22 since its full value 
5 his E 
e 
is conse — ently done, may 
for the fellows, from which a 
is not 
7 success T of so nae 
882 portan 
In first placo, then, I wish to remove the miscon- | 
i 
Snap 
A for the Elles of aw 
> oor evil, 
the | that for a year has 
| detect 
Sor ster god eae oe the farm-servants, it is 
ear reaped; but it 
y for their bad cultivation, as if it had been 
godta Pay for more ploughings than they needed— 
carelessly, and done at 
as if had been — 1o judiciously — 
it certain! 
ao — xact payment 
le year — which a full 
in exacting 9 for the dung of the year preceding 
which has al itself in the straw of the 
last year’s growth, Worse meee, 
unreasonable 
„ give 
in tempting facilities pee hold to fraud. 
rotted in und, m 
from the unchecked pat. of the tenant Alon tone 
must the number and deseription of the ploug 
year-old fallows received, rest simply 
No valuer, 5 
misstatement of matters so long passed. If he 
‘ae ell 
e * 
. paid yA the Seoni 1 e landlord | asce: 
| — — l. 
ment of nea f and — — — wa. will take 
8 
8 that it onl extends the sphere of Sia 
— E dally pe 2 ties for the er 
— 4 ribe his se suppo Boing 
— nts 15 tiiir testimon Ppors ie own fale 
perfectly agree with Mr. Caird and others, who 
aird 
right, 
z 
entry ; but for dnn exeo by fa fav 
— ees a 1 ber af 
an — — — for 0 
of 
For any buildings x: kp < erect — and 
urrey farmer ne 
neces, or fo vin and 
of. hedgerows, h he will get nothing—he is 
peppy 2 = get bare permission to do the work at his 
and risk, In short, pmi not n single opèra- 
l called permanent 
No o one who understands this to be the actual postin 
of the — antry of Surrey will wonder to hear that 
Surrey enjoys a oe amongst the worst-farmed 
pooch f in Englan 
(To obe concluded in our next.) 
Home Correspondence. 
Chaff Cutting. we 5 feel very much obliged by m 
promise to make chaff question the subject of 
i y 3 —_ that even 
t estimate of 
a farmer 
w easy before-h 
comparatively 
lled 5 ** poe by 4 
an 
My attention se calle 
l Boussin e-work ; and I have 
my first first im) 
rusal of Boussingault's admirabl 
ce to con 
ast 
the “oe ebb by this system ; but 
ined e working oxen on 
owance, and 
i , 
that the 
the chaff 
in favour of | 
done throu? 
ch will be — ice ee 
— on the 
rege 
which were, as I have mentio (prepn 
substituted 3 of hay and 
beasts did well under the change ! 
mstances to the risk of 
| 
| 
| 
0 
a 
made iy mye hat 
