48-1847-] 



A£H^iiI£RAL GAZETTE. 



-Pare samples o 

 nder-Edge, Gl< 



2— 



D K "V 





. 



lit* Egrtcuitural ©ajetie* 



Si TUHDA Y , NO VEMBER 27, 18 



Is our remarks, last week, upon the Keport or 

 Tenant Rights, presented by the Real Property 

 Committee of the Law-Amendment Society, we 

 endeavoured to shew what has not been perhaps 

 id ieath adverted to in any of the views put forth 

 upon the subject— viz., the great extent to which, 

 m this country, the ownership of Land, though 

 nominally vested in one proprietor, is in fact a part- 



mmr Under the double operation of 

 of tbe Law which leans so strongly in fav UU i l 

 entirety, and of those grievous difficulties and 

 expenses or Title and Conveyance which render the 

 transfer of landed property, except in very large 

 quantities, an almost ruinous procedure, it is not 

 to be wondered at that in a vast number of instances, 

 the nominal proprietor is not always even the most 

 beneficial owner. In those things called Family 

 Arrangements, money in the funds, shares, and 

 almost everything that comes under the description 

 <iy, is at once divided amongst 

 the parties beneficially interested, with little 

 attendant expense, each share to its inheritor or 

 owner, with its own separate burthen oi care, 

 ililies and expense. But in the 

 • u — dealings with Lund, a 

 iin9 : a sort of shuffling 



rent process obti 

 wong the acto 



firi«ll Na i Ure u Which made k useful ™* bene." 



The Landlord of fifty Tenants is the subject of' 

 fi% separate claims for Tenant-ri s l,t. Ou'L-h 

 Farm a thousand pounds on an aver"a >o m-ln i er- 

 haps be well laid out, and make an ample return, to 

 the Tenant in produce, to the Landlord in Rent, 

 to the Community in home-grown food, to the 

 Labourer in employment. Why is it not? Ask 

 the Drainage Commissioners 'who found Two 

 Millions of money me!' through their tin vr* ' ~<- 



idj could 



Great Proprietors for v 

 originally conceived as 



tion of Life-owners. 



Could anything have 

 the result would be if tl 



mat the want of security for money laid out l>y oc- 

 cupiers arises from the "indisposition of proprietor 

 to afford it. Exceptional cases may no doubt exi?l 

 But take the country as a whole, and some deepei 

 seated cause will be found at work, some law t 

 "ature and of Society infringed, *hicfa ibewi [tad 

 the one hand in a deterioiated Fee simple, am 

 the other in a state of general cu'itivut'mii t,< 

 hind even the practical knowledge of Agricultun 



To the first of these results we shall have ore. 

 sion, hereafter, to draw the attention of our reader 

 more in detail, in presenting to them some extract 

 from the Report of the Real-property Committee 

 made some time since, on the subject of a Genera 

 Map and Registration of Tides to land in this kini: 



ownership 

 remedy, l" 

 imperfect 





, „s The Owner or Proprietor 



« what everybody sooner or later knows pe.fectly 

 ^ oteim Son a 1 " tllG SameSenSe aS the P r °- 

 Jtoe appears before the public. Brothers and' Sisters 

 Ancles and Aunts, Cousins and Friends Mothers 

 ^^^S^^V^ 101 ^^ 668 and bondholders, 

 Pnl R e»t-charge owners, Annuitants and 



HewenTave e eV f y , d< : scri P tion and name und « 



*™*\ partition made, to compute his Land-ta: 



^taZ c r ments ' (God save thc mark 



tonorf t ! and Called England and Wales, do not 

 ibitants? that the reailient ener 

 Uoftw are Cram P ed by the general prcva- 

 ^eouRlr \1 se P j rate causes which operate, simul- 

 °*ners and tl f r ! untran sferable acres fettered 



Tha , nwarte d occupiers, 

 '^im "^ f. Ca P^ " -vest itself fa 



-rtion. You rarelv hear a person 



10 *C£h ? ow " a - riaj ' s - who " does not al,ud€ 



^bedone ee Vh 0ne aS \ mere s a™P»c of «hai 

 8o methincr „r nere ™ay be som e exaggeration, 



for, StleL^et ^ • indefinite . notions to allow 

 Stv^ 6 "' 8 ^ ^t factTthat there t7a 

 *** could L \ those thirty -seven millions ol 

 t^^habhanr 11 "' a [! d P rofita o»y too, to support 

 •NiTecuJt Jet - l r at , ,0r Some mysterious pre- 



A reason f i 1S htt, ° P r esent prospect oi it. 

 f°* « sel!° r t ^ iS T^ there » U *< be - AS 

 H halt, K . H Gach oiher > wfa «° * Train sud- 

 >th mo ll between two Stations, there must be 

 V ** irJrty , uT ewhere - Is il t0 be found in j 



Crop ? The Bur 



operations are such as tend to 



can be proved th 



crop is, whether or not their 



surely they are competent to c 



But the question suggested by " E. 

 babW • 



if 



:„it .,.,.. hi. 



'e imagine agri- 

 irm this; aud 



„ ._ the mode in which the a bulb 

 jf fallowing follow its operations, and the 

 ;ionmust therefore be carried 

 .. „„ admitted, we presume, that the drill hus- 

 bandry of which the Turnip crop is susceptible, is as 

 ranser of the land as a hare ht.l.M ; 



_ influence on the soil, rabt) 

 This, independently of the manure applied during 

 it, by which direct addition is made to fertility, and 

 independently of the action of lime that may also be ; 

 plied, by which -; ;cak > . 1S purpiew « 



•akened, is due to the action of atmos: 

 uses. A rough measure oi the fertility ol a soil j wint 

 itained by subjecting a seed 



g tter which a soil contain, tl fSlStbe ^ 



ability to feed plants. Now carbonic acid water is j ™ t ^ ^ ^^ advam 

 m0 re powerful than -fa-*™* ™ ■"» ***_ - 







' : .'.',^ : 



-' ,!, IV 



of the mineral i 



mum hitherto been insoluble, ai 

 soluble, and therefore useful. It is i; .:.«■. e- nv u> \ n . ih> .-;> 



,-:.;_.- . . ■•?<:■ 



carbonic acid water, and that its effect on t, - 

 therefore, is to bring out of it - 



havegiven up. This.n 

 he udv ant aire which 

 r land so often in I 

 ich make up the pro 

 rfauTw.* " Now *>- nnwrfion is whethe 



fallow. Now the qaea < » fr">!°^^!- 



underthedriK : ich ^ ?*Z 



not as effectuallv stirred about and exposed *s place, Old Jewry, 



