47—1852. | 
under the provision last 
each party, or named by sach 
K e and sha it be Fc oF allowed in account Behn, 
To a casual observer, th 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
bard slowly decomposing manure, and would not be 
worn 2 for three or fo 
He thought the * * 
the last year's b l 
was a very good plan, and qui nite fair for — 
Mr. e gmk * wey” ary if Mr. pume went to take 
a farm es * 
— would bid piis it fd 14 ingly. 11 pts t the 
in poor co crag} tion, he would not “a disposed to 
s| offer en to be 
A t 
the landlord, not ‘of the the in com ‘tenant; Sand he thought 
m aid f other 
m s pop 
an tion the erer ad erden of nne the Poor, 
— 
P 
749 
the poor presses most heavily—not, as in other 
tries, upon meea hs 1 towns, but ‘ipod the d fair 
nly | fields of agricultu 
Mr. Pashley shows that in Scot- 
i ce, er 
which t in En 
it is fa 
investigations Mat in 1847 the average 2 
penditure in relief of the poor amounted as 
on the rateable 
p 
and Wales to ls. the pound the agricultural 
stricts to 2s. 2}d., and for the manufacturing districts 
e 18. 28d. only; 80 Arw in resp is pound rate, 
iet i 
But on examination | it wilt: 15 4. s 
aN it 3 boon at all, as the consent of the land- during 7 of the lease Should fall apon Slib manufacturing is fai below the gen wf ie 
in writing uired befo y of these stem landlord, not on the tenant.—Mr. R. Russell said, Mr. trast of the agricultural districts with Tonia | is also 
or can be erected. ch clause Honeyman and hi were, in effect, saying. the i e the former 3 in the ing Lady-day 1850 
e land He is not bound ee take thing. I dlord would pay the out-going tenant | in London, a population of 2,362,236, the sum of 
= buildings from the tenant except he chooses ; and | for the high condition of the farm, he could not ricer 741,722/. was expended in lief of the poor, being 
ing the tenant not to injure the rest of his money more profitab ll that was wanted was a in the proportion of 6s. 39d. per 2 on the population; 
the buildings in of his own erection, | fair ci 3 for the im rovements of the out-going | whilst in the same year, in unties, taken to repre- 
amply confirms the security of the landlord. I there- | tenant.—Mr, Honeyman, after a little further conver- | sent the agricultural district, and havi ing a population of 
fore consider the act as childish, and a little better than 2 vey he vd ae tender his dissent from the 
E 
wh 
„better dan nothing; but then in u the concluding 
clause, it is specially provided that the act shall no 
extend to to poor Seot an Tow is this? If it is siege 
sary to provide by any law, however 1 800 od 
accommodation for stock in England, is it n 
would as 
footing with out "English | bre lds 
t 
equal o this 
a Tag nsent of the landlord, 5 and 
delete the words, 
alf of all 
ee har 57 1 the pin for ede o 
ſor the last y 
cially on g there withou 
— not ere it could be ani Paer thuri it would work as 
well with leases i 
of the tev valek bill for | 3 
4 Yosdingatate By this ‘means 
ontgoing tenant would have a fair allowance for his 
oe and w — — 
last year of h 
iven him recompense for 
ly made, while che landlord will not 
— taken — 5 by the 
orah improv: 
se 
improvements 
; are the ad- 
enant ma unne- 
g the last year of hie lease. 
manure was e 
E 
respect 
ir both for the i aas, and out-goin E be 
il bei say, with respect 
last year’s bill being allowed for SEA chat if 
t fed ed his c ed th 
Se 
FE 
HG 
7711 
|! 
dung. 
ien dor and ene 
th are not be use 
1 
ae 
17 
r annually expe 
d After w. 
0 e 1 $ 
s 
‘ano, | = ven yen period, out 
| tion 
y 2000 0000 and fr from 
ae 9 5 70 
1749, 1750, ee”: 
e 
th 
guano, for he rather | 
ded i 
to bones he thought one- f 
nant. | Ww 
e half in 
d that it was yet an renin 
He be 
ute 3 nihet oil-cake benefited the in-coming tena 
to the extent of o 
SSK — —————ñ— 
Review. 
By — Pashley, Q. C. 
Longmans 
HE mere fact "that the sum rai d by rn and 
nded in pee ae 1 Wales, in te a a 
of kx poor, has during the last s bee 
ge no than five milos 255 K qua wt Pha 
ling, the average 4 . 1477. the same tithe bein 
out 17 millions, is sufficient to show 
Pauperism and Poortanis. By 
428. 
through innume 
fully come os the sig gs the poor in England with 
that in 
uch of t 
the poor and the community at large would be matė- 
rially diminished. 
r space does not allow us to follow 0 buien? step 
by 15 through the trains of argument by which he 
r to lay before lers such a sketch 
omii ‘of the work as vill w. e hope, lead them 
chapters the W ives the 
t leases, he it a 
ords, 
air Neighbours, an aid ‘that 3,000 etd (or from 1 in 5 
e pop on) re ief to 
tent in the a year. The 
children tifa 16 wee for a longer or 
of 12 course of a 
pro oi Ch 
paroshial tery ot 75 “old charities 
s, and anh 
early ; 
or nine millions of money 
veen e 
By co 
en in the ‘oo hg 1 
similar! 
t corres 
ing 
appears ae “whilst 
threefo 
rism, m 
assizes 
ng 
K 
2,514,637, the sum of 1,137,250“. 18. ty par hd 
in th roportion of 9s. 
spent, being in the 
his state of things is caused by Ciit r man alon 
and as it has been produced, so it ‘may b be removed, by 
legislation. To th 
remarkable fac ee epes with the foregoing. 
—.— slight éilid nerease in p n of ane 
eems, on the continent, y simply to 
the town element of the opie lation ; but in England à a 
r proportion of crim foun in agricultural 
g the 
ne 5 ds the 
former, so 4 is it 557 e with being the cause 
of 7 475 
nen, that although the evils consequent on 
the detect * te of the poor-laws have been long 
pointed out and expressly r by the s 
their jt had been suffered to remain act e the 
day. So. ret ago as the reign of William TI 
was h the following 
Forasmu Ak id man 
for the me 
own parishes, orto rif 
itted to inhabit elsewhere 
of a grea i 
reamble to 35 Geo, ine: 101. 
It is 25 ores by the statute i terena in 1846, which pro- 
145 pe h removed 
of paupers resident rage ts 
ttled and pre Road . mnt by funds 
crease of paupe 
the increase of poporo à 
las 
ricte 
geir into 
5 to seek labour 
burden of ates eving 
: n 
pour te Sand 9 Vie C., e. 6 
tadina the 5 N man hea ** his sett! 
ou 
of the previous 8 80 far r as it tended 
the 
ntly increased some bodes which y 
|p teviously 1 by both ‘aupers pa 
d 
1 turn 
