THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



^BOLIVIAN GUANO 



iant Right. Princi] 



fully advocated as when illustrated by r 



'ts n -nil- in p irtieu , r cases : <iiid the t 



: roue of it- strictures, tl 

 -' 

 ng upon the question at issue. 



Z\)t agricultural ffiajftt^ 



SA T UIWA Y,JANUAR Y i 



S^^K^t^Si^MiS 



l^^tg^uT^nrs? 



, -,:-.■■ ■-: •: - t 







• . :• . 



'.:; u' hive been quite us valuable as any 



-. -• iecosor*. Certainly it is one great ad- 



•;,,: an imorcsfmir and intelligible theory of 



- • its practice is thus rendered agreeable 





- 





, , oi cultivated mind, who, possessing the 



purj)oscs should as much as possible be classed 



means, have also the «i.l and the intelligence - ,- 



MIt to test the probd'jili- es oi agricul m. specu- 



3* and attractively to display the results of 



:. x; orience ior the trencral good. Mr. Hux- 



\g out the first of these prii 



■ 



should be placed close to those in " 



e ha* justly stated that the great opprobrium 



pared, and these a.t.n ii'\.r t<> where it is to be 





consumed. Ihus the position oi the barn as the 



great storehouse oi food and litter, i 



. 



f* sheep lie o 



adually aecum.; 



former method i 



other column, by our 



not be foregone except to secure 

 balancing advantage, as shelter, \ 

 power, or for the supply of stock, 

 of roads, fences, and other tempi 

 ould have no weight in determiti 

 - ot arrangements 



; i. T ,S 

 n_- in v 



i separate purpose, 



There are BCai U h the same 



situation and 

 of management, exist, and consequently a 

 tead made to suit the exigencies of one case, 



is rarely applicable to any other. Still much may 



y considered as in a great degree affecting the 



-.. ;. ■ ;■;..-.■■■■: ■•-.;:. ' ■ ■'■' ; • 



temselves. The si 

 rms, the houses foi 

 ad those in whicl 



•Js 1 



ch the collected bui 

 allelogram. The h 



■.' 





; power to be employed in thrash- 

 ments of the higher buildings for 

 :d situations, and'the like, all tend 

 iid prevent the application of the 

 sir integrity. The judgment has 

 rted in the perception ot what to 

 it to secure, and the endeavour 



)re propose very shortly to gi 

 such plans, with descriptions of the y 

 the farms for which they were des 



they have been erected. 



of plans oi buildings 

 arities of 



TENANTS' RIGHTS. 



umber of your Journal [see Dec. 19, 1846], on my 

 to you on this subject, in attributing to me so 

 of introducing the obsolete con- 

 of lord and serf. [Excuse us— no such desire 

 ttributed. Pray, look at the article again.] The 



f " Clodhopper 

 lem, an idea, by the bye.which 



". .."-'■ 



. Spearman, to wbos 



lie bye.whic 1 - 

 ■ of things must 1 



; I.d system. An order of 



ilready weakened and depraved by the coarse contact 

 f trade and sen replaced 



: 



. "is there for this present 

 clamour ior tenants' rights? No tenant 

 farmbycompul-; atract with 



■ 

 ■ 



■ 

 ate not, and he has made a bad bargain, 

 of whom ought he to eotnpk 



■ 



- 



ened leases (like Dean and Chapter leases, 21 years 



in your last week's Journal) ; 



. he necessarily be dependant, any more 



than the artisaD or the shopkeeper. So long as he pays 



n why he, 



3 of society. But if the tenant 

 n bad seasons, falling markets, 

 ord and expect, 

 the landlord does not recipro- 



[There would be no analogy, we acknowledge ; but we 

 may ask, is not such a wretched condition ot the 

 tenantry as this very {generally found, if not as the 

 v as the suspicious concomitant of that 

 species of wardship in winch you would keep 

 them.] Doe* - whja a glut 



n than the average 1 

 Such a situation shoui 



