,1-1849.] 



THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



MAM RE COMPANY «, 



•■■■-- 



■ ■■."'■■■•' . ■ ' : 



CJ., 11 L\ 





parent, collect sustenance for he 



ment of mind and matter has bee 

 service of agriculture, and -till 1 



JJYDRAULIC ENGINES, WATER ] 



i^^ix. 



EMICAL AND AGRI. 



P F;: '^' 



— Very large crops of TUB 



:.;,.;■.'.- 



^rSlSSirF^ 





) BOLIVIAN GUANO ON SALE 

 CO., LIVERPOOL 



iALy'SNEWBOILEiT^The 



--a 





SH^nr5,Eia , p5S brd - w 



"A-RUBBER pliES-^NB 

 psrwS^ c *> Comnw Coi "P an i", Brewer?, Distillers, 



gT. THOMAS BAKER, MANOR-HOUSE, MAJS T OR- 



"' ;V"-'. : i ';:''i : ":. ■' " • ' - : ••■•'■"■ - 





should be 



:,! .! V -,,■- 



th sober, discriminating 



hat has incontrovertibly 



? Right o'r wrong, the 

 in has acquired the dis- 

 y successful in the culti- 

 quadrupled its value in 



have been sustained by 

 of other causes : capital 



aTfie agricultural ©ajette 



ITCRDA V, MA 



dp forward. Perfection the 

 i ledge is slowly 

 The object is i 



.-'•Battle of Life." For son 

 ears have the human race been struggling oi 



eneration has contributed to the " Tree 

 l Knowledge," is recorded i 







!;;".; 



nd roses complete, re-, • 



', amTthe 61 





healthy and rapid growth, ; 



been her condition, hi 

 dependent her posit: 

 luxuriant branches a 

 and which, instead c 



ents are not peculiar to Scotland, far from it ; it 

 il is not naturally fertile, nor its climate favourable 

 vegetation, its proprietors and farmers were not 

 ginally wealthy, nay, their povertv was proverbial, 



the Tweed have, in the face of great natural disad- 



■ ■ ;■■ i . • • ■ . 



ther in Europe 



,18 80 obvious, 



"that he who n be clearly 



: : doption'of a wiv and. 



recognition of the mutual rights and obllg 

 landlord and tenant. 



The introduction of the 19 years' lease into Scot- 

 land after the d more espe- 

 - firmly seated 

 ii throne, has done more for agriculture 

 -i oil vears than the tV 



- 

 true principle of action, in order to insure success 



pore, without the independence of th 





FhrtenanSn-leasTo^the contra^ 



iT realfy and 



;ruly bound to the soil by the tit 





interest and prospective possession. 



The land- 



ife-proprietor, and if liberal in the ha 



de of letting 



observance of mutual obligations, then may his 



enants. to the third and fourth genera 





;o occupy the same farm and acquire a 



m attachment 



o it, deeper in degree than that experienced by the 



eal owner, because more localised in i 





more closely associated with the affecti 





md the present, and also with the hopes 





It is this feeling which in some degree e 

 ation between landlord and tenant abo\ 







linary comaun fit be based on 



he foundation, not merely of a legal 



locument, but 



of moral "obligations and mutual int 





panied with an enlightened cultivati 



on of the soil, 



hen have we all the exactness of bui 



siness transac- 



