AVGUST " 1864.] 
nent he, 
nant of a re 
se. Ine ither ease he 
a hous id not Mak 
upon, ^ He wanted it to be a mate o [9 
ed b pec in his own house, at 5d. or6d.;| — Gi ea : 
: one to contradict that assertion *AWevielos, 
a d Mr. Wood for what he i Land: its Registration idis ied Dat 
tood w what e (the addressed to Land: Il - efit arising fro 
É title, and the mo bt it. 
He woald ivl them ad B P Hows res i ^. FS n Effingh tek i -— À oa 
he would a game farm rent free. 
He nes ‘ll are Ho beue he shoal À expect his 
ndlor 
s T got um lt 
and he challe: ande 
d RIVER 
xcha: 
Tuis pid explains the grea& advantages of 
an 
towa as hb ould inde fea sible, and | at a = nee, obvious title to land; it 
to go 
E He did not wish the tenant to be 
of obtaining it, recites the various 
damage, [s would not t 
me 
e ga 
WIS: 
oblig: zation to him, any more than he 
Hav 
ps 
conditions upon which it was to j^ ys 
wards a man might become an encouraging 
e 0 
en prevent « a i landlord iem 
ad criam insertions in. his leases e in| diff 
teps of the process, relates exa mples of the — 
compensta him not with which transfers mea be afterwards = cted, 
his farm " he coul ta |^ prim vun di cede hiections o£ sol 
min nd. He let yd d ida M the xf d 1 
ld refully 
ft a 77 ree p 
5 i. d it, because that would n 
forts 
and wasted 
terat it of a 
ay, an 
pc 
e possessio on of land. Mr. Howard Reed 
Pa d, He 
for protection against $ bod kneh | 
thik z Mes Rd in force to ood one, It was 
agree me m i 2 hi m in 
au - 
to come 
is 
s t nd ble Ve discuss- 
it, ek wot to ind master of his — a capable of discuss 
int z in still fuller detail w ose who 
him on the 
over it, to ask the labourers all about 
back and say T» at he would give d 
him afterwards. 
Jain to 
bad 
usines, Bu 
| that did not aff ag ant OF a | the followi 
a|b 
would subjec 
omer agoney "oe the conveyance of laud us diee ibed in 
| following passage y fe om Me Pr — 
mis write tood that he has, in 
wing pages, 
lawyers fro 
tains the hig hest x 
eaudidly avow “it, thas he would not hav 
Many men took a different view of thei 
mat a should, therefore he let ,uim 
thong i thet a& thes — 
m the Ri, solar the | peni 
ary nature, and 
stona 
11 
was that if he had 
would let it for 9002. He blame ^W “the mal “for 
gicens the, conduct ofa landlord for having Ld 
2 n he Nous 
o raléod the 
d wh ent 
an unsound basis dd 
fully into, and that was the different 
c 
mode of treatme nf, the different practice, and the very bees sf yi atikta Xu d mem- 
s again 
io Shey met ng its PERRE £ i 
different a mount of profit that was derive rom sheep | Westbury's Reform, not beca: 
here in Dorsetshire and some other parts of Enghind- A in law, but because it is li cg g lessen Pra Poh, 
for instanee, in Nottingham and Norfolk, Some time on this eee e of mim ue d is only tem They 
since Messrs, Squarey & Rawlence took the — to 
bs w 
+ £ 1 A 
use. It a fallacy an 
the intercourse "ieee a Faris, and tenant tor 
peat of ob b 
5 |geb information. as to the percentage o of la m 
in 
that the liberality should in point of fa oun M pH of Salisb s d e hi | receiv: all ones, which will more th: 
givi a year. within 25 or isbury ; an as ey thoug: t A ere inne 
$ The Tenant Farmer.— Mr. v Woon, one of the it would be interesting to him, they supplied him with vation, it oath 1 with dis gren i ooa Mw. thes. 
successful exhibitors said; with r He thought it was 90 per cen ore o will, eri on derive from it the greatest benefi tile 
the farmers, he did think it aM ad more considera- | he came here not that he had come with a set speech, | i; the cas fens nd ig uj ze. ie as EL people used 
tion than had hitherto been giv He did m he — d to some returns of the percentage of la — Msc: in 4 be rity--th bd mime um v4 
mean particularly in respect to the landlord , though|and ewes which he had obtained from various flock classes. That at the community may not lose the sica of 
th ere some things which he os ught u t Sktan in Nottinghamshire in 1861. In m instance | the amended law, pendiug the engan of opinion oa the of 
be altered between landlord and te 361 ewes produced 442 lambs—that was the number of hors qup a o shouldbe perform o they € x 
t to t! the n weaned, | no objections to 
landlord and. t He was no advocate for low | Another Ms Fal ger, ae said | necessi by the new Act.” wt cp - 
m" he ~ not of think Me b “tenants e E it; but | that was the DLE year jv r had in fis life, and 200 Mr. Reed thereupon proceeds to enumerate every 
they for reasonable re that ould live. | Leicester ewes p ced 2s pa and 191 dow tep tal der the old system and under tha: new 
Les M pum "felit of of te. tenants that produ uced 219 mbs, Her was another flock of before the title to land is ct pe ine 3 the main differ- 
for auy or eb a farm and t that ned and deelared 
tock it himself was not I. TC EL He | lar mbs, and i d 71lambs He by a pu ablie offer, " mu w afar ‘declared 2 him 
w tere more many opinions as to the injury which 
as the 
ae: anot thir return RP a friend of as Calcraft’s, Mr. 
501 
agana B comers in the form of a simple c cate, 
ridgeman Sir n, of Nottingham, who from refere 
tific 
e to the national "i in Meo it 
gam 
pent of 25 or 30 years? experience, that rabbits and 
npso g 
fee ter ewes weaved 636 lambs, Another return was 
Cham appeared 
did a great deal of damage to the land— much rom Mr, on in from a 
more damage to the lan p surveyor -| that 249 e b 4 294 nasce one = MIROR bess gh 
mate on looking over a farm ut seeing here a quae eee another eee from a gentleman which from | be ( the is 54 dinem 
of an acre red and there a quarter of ae acre = to 1860. In 1853. 51 ewes produced 56 lambs; | to his lordshij d 
má. That was , 40 ewes 72 lambs; Jom 1855, 82 piles of musty ments for á 
damage was Min. d that if es PEE. part o wa produced ahs sisi ; in 1856, 45 ew uced 61| want money, he simply presents his ical 3 
the farm to be stocked for ral Li ars in succes- mls; in 1857, 60 produced 71 lame; in 1858, | banker, who co it with the register a 
sion, the land isoned, d wes prod s ambs ; in 102 | accessible only for such purposes) and without a 
10 years before they got the la As pe ed 152 lambs; and in 1 1C wes | day's venio makes the sajon — 
p again. Now he did not "dn this prodélsd 135 lambs. The most MT thing | parties transaction are 
uestion, that not one of these ewes bs, would [mius e x gt receives, w. best 
of truth, but he did believe that to bean honest o opin ay ever tas ay, but not than had ible security ;—the ee without tab ti EL not 
Then they would allow him to say that the cause To f turtle or veni They were u Turnip req ired to wait -— his title be proved the 
farmer did not stand os as it no: mih Nerd to| and allowed to run on the after-Grass. Ton A solicitor to the bank use the accomm f 
Cn egiriaion of h of the co tm ft had al luded said that they did not keep so mauy per acre. Mr. can be obtained a with more. ded than under the 
rig the ra th had at hi ficate ou page is 
iture. very ueri ed honestly he farmi o on the 5-field s system. n € Tis document, pe result 
allowed that the rights, as he (Mr. Wood) had e ndan Nos ag in Barley or Oats, 00 fn in Taras and | 200 oft the vestigation of an abstract of title consisti 
voured on another ion to ghts, did or a - p io Part of his and was The oa ner of ew proper 
belong to the d ges ; and he. thought it only tolerably” good, a very light pen: e n he wan ie seli it, have notbing to do but to. 
Ww were in a Ww 
a part 
should say it was te i = S aver: Mim 
hat | went in this county. d about acres Tj the 
carry its obe to r^ se rere "n iod M ME 
uu. will have nothing to do ba to 
pres question, to do it. He did not|very roughest sort of edis which could n document corresponds with the e pene 
w what proceedings it was necessary fi m as | Sanata, at more than 100 acres of good. Now, pé stead of entering into an iavostigation gaa for 
farmers to take, in order to ipdn fhem a MA reage he kept 530 ewes. He never sold ae six perar or, Pado for two or e y 4 an 
w was ly admitted, ere | lam t tl ction of £ he registry a nts hi i ; 
another griev: and a very great grievance, sold his tegs in the spring of the year, sending boni fn - of the case, € € S y T - 
for the —— of which they had been ing out as tv wo-teeth. In Nottingham and d they ys dds the aA of the moderate stamp imposed b 
during the last two years—he refer mA to the — never gave any hay; they cut more woo than was done vernment, the purch i hi d ^ 
of the Malt s A great been said; it|here; t 1 bd BORO | iod ren a decent uten nt ase 
ag om pis a ned: ere; the animals were in good con ition ; and they the book, and oed, a icum 
i 1e one just produced estate is convey ed 
canvassed in the hy f Parliament, and he mus Mr. da of Knighton, said he had | him for ever, puc au indefensible aeo If he i a to 
that the nins that had ae place 
p in Bi on aia h rig dd counties, and when th Nae ae has to hand o 
e to that question had shown to him that it was | Bath a nd Wes x f England sh hesiha : rres in oan t, hic — 
y understood, neither in the couutry nor in th an" ores here be sitlionqnd | oe aa eae CT 
a ae i 21 e | five Inshire emen to show t If he does not wish 
Commons, id not say it was not under- | stock was kept on pm was simply tc 
" generally. le talked about it county. The fact was that they 
that only, iå id it was that over their pas they ` 
and others us ts ee t a producer's question; | the large folds on such small pieces 
Mis hr question which referred to the | that if they had the 
in i Bar ys in England, and not to any o be no dealing « 
ad no — proves the inde 
} 
aid that d we x red de 
eys grown iu this 
the noble fre in his very interesti 
: the labourers, 
t 
question e referred to all far 
ans mm when 
Reed adds:— “Land i dg 
Mr. a. 
| very different part in the this 
the largest head of cattle that he knew of on such : 
a » = substanti yc 
mg. This liberative mensure will DAA s EF 
Mr. GROVES, gro be burn d did not keep so 
| much stock as in Dorse 
Th Cua IRMAN We pe into an estimate of 
à Des z gm and said he 
p 
"misi is » true, for owners eu SR have had for the 
d with the mere enjoym at 
diff an account what | m buda of their land, now they will be able to 
had 
oe and um propriate 
of the 
o ae P v th mo aey ki va spon ^, Tificulty Je gos 
-house only m ould tor 
Marias w ete: it - of Be. 8s. a de a week thi 1 
Rid, * Rem i. ihe Tax, emove the 
ifficulty ey. - now = R ‘the 1 
n dra it. 
the carcase of the sheep paid i " "tal but he found will be raised upon it are dient, br 
make 
T a 
y feeding bullocks, | for yn own improvement or for any o rpose 
whatever. 
In sara K propo mel ^ Success a Dota H 
Sth palon ia NAE 
e for himself, himeoif. 
Agricultural Society. The special interest of this journal on the subject is 
