THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
uae 22. 
nired for the Potatoes, (May) anes is 8 from í 
under the cattle, by which time the mulated heap 
under their * the roof of 
the byre. The continual tramping of the cattle so con- 
lidates the matters under them, that I never remark 
any escape of ammonia from them. los 
alluded, is the application of man 
ce to a growing crop, in these mou 8 the 
tatoes “being ers as is common! 
n beds, r e the usual shovelling from the 
—. sdiri are e about 6 in 1 Her eee 5 
the 
5 
f 
old school ones, and which I have kira offered to the | 
notice 8 the readers of the Agricultural Gazelte.— J. 
ment on the Action of Drains . r en 
Having lid two parallel drains with pipes 3 
straight down the descent of a mo 
the blue lias cla iou 
soil i : havin ng be 
I had h 
of the s sur- 
at II feet roby the 6 feet 6 inch drain. Sixty hours 
the R water had abated in the 
latter to 10 inches from the surface. Dec. 15th, seven 
days after rain had fallen, the water stood 15 inches 
rface at 4 feet the 3 feet drain, and 
£8 inches at 11 feet from the 6 feet 6 inch drain. I had |‘ 
then a hole cut 5 feet from the 6 feet 6 inch drain, that 
as much from the ewe as keeps it alive for three or four 
ich, as the ewe regains ane gr 
e 
2 N. it 
mes 
ost hou il 
and we consequence is it is crabbed a puny l its 
life. To avoid both these extremes, let 4 — wes have 
nce, 
ts and f adik d 
says, p 
white t nsumed duri ason. 
n us to uld not be 
milk, and are, 
re apt to produce 
l than other — _ The 
forth almost with violence 
Lo 
na . in the year 1846. 
15 subjected by law to difficulties, expense 
that the committee are convin 
66 that 
e anxious to impress on the house he neceastty ete 
thorough revision of the whole subject of conveyancing, ang 
the disuse of the present proli; expensive, and vexatious 
system The committee, by way of ran for these 
recommend four hiiia S first, the imp ment of the 1 
real property; secondly, simplification ‘of tithes ; ti 
the rag chess on orms veyance ; fourt rthly, th 
establishment of 
eeds. »” 
y or 
Now there is one oiher im 
bwiet from any hardship, proved mitted, a 
against any injury which he might suffer from the great pren 
best sro for e as far as n, is the 
| green- — yellow. it produces more m milk a any other 
1 we are acquainted w and keeps well either 
ts or growing in the el till the middle of April. 
aay Berwickshire Flockmaste 
So tieties. 
SOCIETY ror TIR AMENDMENT or true LAW. 
MR. STEWART’S REAL PROPER 1 TRANSFER OF 
duties 
orn. Now, gentlemen, need I say then ho ow important it ia for 
the landowner—yes, and for the lawyer, — see that these recom. | 
tuon Wwmen 
thu: iry, even — 
posing it to bea partial one, yet i it behoves us who are desirous 
ecommended by the 
lords, should not om be inquired into, but sh ould 
t, wary, and steadfast, 
4 
Jun m the Transfer of Real Property * 
the — N Which 8 ite sale, was delivered a 
the Society’s rooms, 21, — = Street, by James Stewart, Es bee 
who spoke nearly a as fo 
that that 
sary 
h a f 
hands of those 
7 
4 
d who are ready and willing 
* help them so — as — are be able, and this is to be done by 
5 FPR us be thankful 
sidered a highly deairable soo 411 great 5 on this sub- 
whether we take European jurists or our own, me a 
the right of pam ar rs 2 inseparably Connotea with th 
4 eto idea of property inland, It is, indeed, the definition 
of pr roperty to pak — nat the power of aliena ation ; and 
has sont at all events for the last two centuries, th e — 
of our aw k Facilitate the transfer of land. As to ~~ 
indeed, I c — de. better words than those of our 
e B Kstone, who, when speaking o 
stating that under the feudal system alienation was much 
restrained, wed : “ But by degrees the 
aoe severi d experience “has shown that 
erty | 
fe 
unr 
We hare 
inquiry, or to know that their recommendations were 
into —.— ait —.— mmission, 
and th 
t go far to prove as the s — 5 git whlab: "regulate the 
pees of other things > 8 also to land. I finda 
n Locke’s Essay on the Vales of 
that are hee pa and sold raise 
Alles, and is t — why in England, at the same time 
that land in snes places is at 17 or 18 years“ purchase, it is in 
others, where es —— fi ster ang man ufacture wo or 
— and twenty years“ th 
and Ae . y by th their 8 ant i willing: to leave their 
satura until the more — ev apora- | 
tion of the N —. da and — 
the de A sa! the 
n in land, as the and m mos t la sting 
w 
we are giaa 
on Ewe: 
to see “thie farte taken up | in Jour columns, as we are 
which ane a scarcity of buyers 
lower its value, he afterward 
tit 
ing the proper ement of ewes before 
attending to the con 
evils are to be a 
lambing. 1 
avoided ; the ewes should neither goer 
1 in 
af te 
pom high condition that it was 
grues — could be 
-faced ewe flocks, which are seldom in 
high condition, it is very rare indeed that any 
ance is required from the shepherd, except in =e of 
ee years ago, when 8 were 
very abundant, we 9 our black faced ewes nearl 
eat for about eight weeks before 
8 tong 5 ; in 1 they are 
two. In rag e ewes were n 
; still, better —. — should be 
3 uld taken 
ex 
ition of the ewes at this time, one > 
t 
| reasonable wish : they are — by. ihe expense, 
m gu 
says Lor 
. — . and merit in dre — or the profession ¢ 
omen s were far m rous than at present. 
pre the present state rm “this Li — of the ie of 
the 
oun try. It is notorious that ners of land ha ve been 
Aa 
come ow 
their children ; and "yet h 
alty of no 
Xpenses 
ps 
re practically mad intricate, tedi =F. ein De 
ahr bd cate, tedious, an = si 
What, * is land but e w material of th 8 
—— —— as cotton or th 
a rof those articles Í and 
pr e in this 
— 4 in it, 
s the Aai 5 the 
state, ll its Kar Hoata e arhi inger 
or se pe render tae pag of Sn as free a 
g the bed te — — 
g, it — a 1 y 3 law. 
etn ether 5 rty 
roperty, si 1 “le 2 
ation of which — ee . ‘injure the ow 25 1 
two — — of pers bared have 
be 
tion, 1 
o th expen — — ction rey 
in e brag 3 he great aon ot vantage under mt 
“ e labour 8 What we do want is, Ist, Security a 
2 n — in slate land 
3 m borro wo 1 3 son 4 
arrange ments — oting it. r a 
moderate. and * càls of expense attending 2 : 
ee. Sep jg 
ee 
evil, ind give you some Babee of what is e 
of title. And here, gentlemen, you must gain pam 
inguish between the theory or principle and ” 4 
law in this res Nothing by the the eory o 
d, more in nstantaneous, — the —— of land 
person to another. If I, the ow: 
eminent wine 8, page 
1826, 
grievance which re. 
i effect on the 
lamb is equally bad. T thing to spare for 
the necessary supply of milk w en rA is epa i 
must with cow’ or, perhaps it gets 
|} ma — e to, or not 1 attended to, bursts 
— — that a — ed into a 
chase is e. cliable to fai bis contract. anioni koi ca 
to the title ge ae existence of d 
duced . 
defence. 
