Novzamzn 5, 1864] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 1069 
Colonel agg icy Mr. Dent, M.P.; Mr. Druce, Mr. | 1865, was named for the opening of the Plymouth | deprive themselves of their power over the land, Well, 
€ a pas Mr. Ho land, M?.; Mr. Wren | meeting. what did those objections mean tenant's alarm 
nce, Mr. ward, "Mr. Randell| Carre SHOW AT SrETTIN. — The following letter | might easily be ^ posed of, and, if the meeting would 
M eden, Mr. Senis. Mri Shuttleworth. Mr. Robert | was read :— bear with him, he would appeal that answer which 
Smith, Mr. Wells, Mr. H. Wilson, Mr. Frere, Prof. in ve cpm October 18, 1864 was the result of "practical experience, and which he 
Sim mon nds and De Voel cker. The reci new |, Bin —lam hs cns Arne "I mph ye pa to you for the 
lect it Barani, m eM amener of the Royal Agri er > Show who entertained this view. On the part of the tenant, 
pent James C., Herne Hill, Faversham padi General E xhibition of Tor iar ee P A and alao es and on the part of the landowner m well, be — no 
4 o e an e ne x no ndustry wW. 
Barron Randall: Hoveton Hall, Norwi wilt be simultaneously am — in the month of May nex - xt. Dm un aed that prop ig onl 
| mo 
d 
p'Az my Benoist, 88, Rue de Gre nelle, St. Germain, Paris. & igned) James MUR 
Fonny teer e House, Ludlow, H. Hall Dare, Esq., Sore y 
a illiam oa y to the Royal Agricultural Society ot England. us with their std over the land, and if they could 
Leigh, Joseph, Belmont Hall, Northwich. “Tn the second half of the month of May, 1865, will be held | dive into their minds, there would be found there 
Maple, John, Earlswood, Horley. at Stettin, under the direction cf the D Agricultural | lurking feelings about game an politics. He was 
Musters, John, Annesle Park, Tin; y, Notts. Society, a General Cattle Show, as well as a GeneralEx hibition | afraid there might be some landowners who would not 
Ne eb meg, ee eed Po cm ve of Ac. Silvieultural, and Horticultural Machines, |). g 3 il th that 
Neame, Robe: versham. Implements, Utensils, and Products, which will be open to like what he had said, but he would te em 
Parr, deor 3s n. Manchester qeu tdi, Ex ES SE ar nie. í "t | they ought to come round to his views, and he believed 
uffle, John, wal reet, Portman Square, London, * Competition wil ree and prizes awarde i : 
Spencer, John, Bowood, Calne, Wilts. 2 “ Exteni epe ases will be made ot z aor of articles : he time bir pe for peri e y vd 3 at € ovna 
iddowson, James, Hucknell, Forkard, Nottiagham. exbiti ted (s urpose of gw and, in pe ne i d the Moe Y d T med par 
ar as Exhibitors pw deem it expedient, n mao on of | #1 and erroneous. ith rega gam 
{NANCES.—Major-General the Hon. A. N. Hood | Exhibited Articles will take place, ^ ne would eny that he looked upon it as a money 
Secretary's recei T during the past three — had | fro rv omg ae the pem d on has i OE | question on the part of those gentlemen who chose to 
been examined b d b the Pad cni NE obire: secured on all thelines of the North German Railway Union, indulg e in nit. Ifa g entleman was _ of M and 
: "hem ere are grounds for Stpan, will be secured on t he must make up 
Quilter, Ball & d the Society's oA ment and were ES other eerie Railways also. mind to things—first, he could not expect 
found correct. The balance in the hands of the bankers| ‘No charge will be made for Exhibit io gs i 
E Oct. 31 8661. 6s. The ba 
d 
n Roo 
for the All th agb sic ag Implements, Utensils, po, Products ry have good samuel and next, a good income from 
uarter énded September 30 dye éltonieht ut win TES fire * = -— s aue. his land. On the other hand, he thought M — 
, r ctus shor j 
subscriptions and arrears, were laid upon the table; |“ Stettin, Se th, , 18 361,” i Rm ry ao it Pr ugar 2 i o gs ya a 
the amount due being 12527. Cox demie . Hagen-Premslaff, President of the 
The Secretary, by the direction of the Committee, | Bom nranian “Agrioultural Society Flüsse Spook, M Manora fenis a enjoy P di Ti "inl it eut dM 
has Nerei, ero rae to those members i 10 | Hering, Professor: y. Kuyl Sant "Roggow, aan rial Pro-| w ile o any to rh — 
rietor o ^ t; t, vo 
mend that the sum of 20007, part of 30007. now on Counsellor ; Wartenberg, Head Ran Sie eer anes di of pe ivation in che o — Ó 2 oe TA p 
A: with the London and Westminster Bank, be — tn TE k go f hi 
ested in the New Three per Cents. Stock. "The ground of politics, for. a sx. eno sn à 
roniti was adopted. EvEsHAM.—At the annual meeting of fils Society, | estate, because at some election oes Tory owner mi 
Veit T «M Raymond Parker presented the | the clair was occupied by Sir J. S. Paxryaron, M.P., | coerce & Radical t enant, or some Radical landlor 
Bepont from tie Giovanni “0 hu Royal Veterinary - C.B., who - : vu to the subject of Leases, as | Tory tenant. 
College for the past year, which was read and referred e of the m mportant questions connected w ith| gir John then alluded to a pamphlet recently published, 
to the Journal Committee. ma annual grant of 2007. the whole tahjeot. of agric ax He held in his hand id he said was well worth the og AK of A agriculturist 
or the current year was voted to the College on the | ^ series of re pem which were adopted as the result ngland, with the exception © rd ad var e gar oy 
motion = Mr. Raymond Barker, seconded by Colonel of their deliberatio and ina constituted a very | pamphlet was by} "San a mi id dnd. agen t, 
Challon: well-devised code, owing how p e compensation | who delivered an address before the Oxford Farmers' Club, 
UC Y m CowwrrrEE.—Lord Feversham | to the — tenant of a bs: for unexhausted | and at whose request it had been "e Peart? 
reported that Mr. ‘Tort and Mr. Randell having been improvements made. He expressed his regret that, the cos whether it was for the interest of the landlord or 
deputed by the Council in August last to settle w ith instea d. of tha t code of regulations, or at all events i in | the tenant to give long leases ots oe ^ ore = ^ t 
d PA cotland, 
the pe th Executive Committee the y mentio aw were grante nd rise duisg Cho tent 35 
boun of the Showyard there, have to report that of long leases, The more he had reflected upon this | long POM : 
ab t.. but in England, where yearly 
on the 8i Sth of that Fonik they m subject, the more he was convinced that no — Tenancy prevail "they had, uring thes wins period, not risen 
other members of the said Committee at Plymouth, of tenant right, however well devised, would be a real | 20. He would mention another case in the north of England, 
and satisfactory substitute for the security a iv where. farms S» rge and rents were high; it impressed his 
re When he spoke of leases, he did not mean cubes P Mr. Gray, 
to speak of seven years’ leases, for he believed that | Dilstone, gh the usual c minent man,a man of great experi- 
It ds hey would be little better than an penal holding, | ence, infor ied the Hexham Farmers Club that he had two 
tbe uderiigned Coun: he land tl med e whole those erii, W 
show yard shall be Bren uns Wn poH tbe plan fees H county who held their land upon any Praire y, who Ee cul Bii and it dero E pep on 
the Chairman of the said vommite and the said members of hit: not tenants from year to year, and who had T tope who Fished to take it that it should be let under a lease 
the Council, the extent being 35a. Or. 30p. d : vd einn : l or reme whate ver? He | ito Aber or21years. He received a many tenders, but 
elieved t "s i 
i the fences within the said pisos of land shall be ould 
he sites thereof sown with Grass seeds by the 15 years, 
majority of those dyes held their land u d made two tenders, and the first - offered for tbe farm under 
which he thought could not be —Á ilishetory the 15 years' lease the <2 per annum, and for the 
and which he ed had not and n would con- a Jeah 17601. ; ‘the second cy “for the 15 years’ lease the 
duce to stem of high cultivati “The hant ik of 1620. per annum, rere 21 years, 1730L ; and the 
a sys igh cultivation, i thira tender for the 15 years was 1400/., and for the 21 years, 
said on every side, * We A vem and do not want | 16264. This was a fact which spoke for itself, No doubt the 
leases, as we ha - rfect co! our len dlords.” | farmers who tendered were men of spilti , men er tent to 
as woul ce d 
of a landowner he (Sir John) sprained such an idea there were ere differences in the first inetatios between the 15 
(Signed) Massey Lores, | altogethe: He — nly t ex t that confidence in a | the 21 years’ leases of J30L, in the second of 110L, and 
he 
Royal al Agricultural Society, Plymouth Meeting, 1865. 
MEMORANDUM, Augus: 18, 1864. 
is this da; ed N the E. 
ed of "October next. 
D the made aval of land below the show 'yard marked A on 
plan, be e available as an approach to the entr 
any pif uei det 
d of the fences, to be done under the ditestod rof Mr. 
Moore, assisted, subject to the approval of Mr. St, Aubyn, by 
Mr. Ash. 
„That the railway riding as shown upon the plan be con- 
h 7 
The plan of = rre Mid in approved, subject to | talking of earn È their m on the land, as they set off 220L more for the far 
such modifica tio’ in y is bat neun; the | would do in lar, mercial — he said, let oA i LE ear, vig eanewor to the Jandowner, hi 
minary phn "to y^ on the scale of the, them deal et | it Y" they would do mmercial | said that he did not like to part with his over the 
preliminary plan a The Committee | transactions of any kind, and prefer of tania in | Was there anything ibat a landowaet ex wet up be ree ane 
enid that B0 hore boxés “ot the strongest kind | confidence to their landlords, to place their confidence MES einst those incrensed sus of additional income the 
ordained 25 of the second kind, and that the con-|in a written — 5 fr i A ? ae 
> Sr eh ^ iiam 
horses, so as to make them er — ft objection made to system E leases, and that was, such farmers give up their calling than change from a lease 
fortable than he ordinary o ui dhel s not | that if xs veris lt a farm on a long lease he was vog E 
exceeding 2l. E horse, including the Sedition: ; dod M his — wor luring the last t M 
also to state the cost. ofa d manger for each. VE oon the occupancy. Well, every one knew 
The contractor wo uld do bone red to estimate the | that an ni oe ea yer ann with sufficient means to | mons on the “Tenant Right nid ” One of the most 
ener eret Ho bam a larg zo farm, would not wo ork it quite on the intelligent fermera in this © country, in giving evidence 
S 4 feet, and of "gm AM the ends of jas n parish, said reme were 27 farms, six of 
IT me rait was à early pa par e; his te enancy ; ; but in a very ese propor- | | whieh w uae c hel by owners, three were let on lease, and 
Holland, TE, having moved | tion of Instances they wo ould fin d t that d |18 were yearly holdings. Those held under security 
de the [my ori me to time appoint [ ll, the | formed one-fourth of the parish, the others were the 
examiners net Eidem in practical t ld be | remaining three- fourths, and Se i said et there 
lür on occasion of any NE en iie into for a mii "OF course that n not k kept up o e-fou upon 
h examin and compli gp oia doubl 
i P T i 
belo e E Puse ey's aenda of zin enge f Com- 
mide: foe puo ed | be the invariable rule, and cases would arise where the | the remaining : tj 
= te is qiiis! by the Society: pihcaheniesene mai dr oar ae lease. | amount of stock fatted off the one-fourth, and there Ee 
Council may mos uri his ust first o 
improvement “of the education of those who depend | motive which influénced the dislike to leases? He! concerned with the real Le the points to be 
upon ^^ — of the soil for = ten believed not. He ows speaking with — and he | observed, , then ME must make the tenant fit for the 
On ger in amendmen carried by | did not hesitate to e ress his — s tha & farm, and avs upon him the habita 
15 iis m x part of the — ES the bserved ; pg d (Sir John) thought that all such 
The following * "my was then proposed by Mr. | motives at On the part T rs tenant there was | ped pen present, when all persons con- 
cland, seconded y Lord Fovorsham, and carried | the fear, ue many “aid not hesitate to avow, that | nected with agile d meet together to expand 
unanimously n That "ne e n Education be | bad times might come, that prices might fall, and that | what best d be done with the land, were mos 
instructed to endeavour sul further in-|they might ‘ind themselves hampered by a farm for a valu X 
formation, v pattie laty § to i eps tron the bed great number of years, and that they would have to| Mr. Hortan said—Upon the subject of the nage 
ness of existing examining bodies to co-operate with | run the risk of being ruined. He, as a Ran ment of inex the right hon. baronet had in 
iety. ought he should not be doing an injustice to som al and ample a manner, so clearly, so distinctly, 
Prymovura MEETNG.—On the motion of Mr. Mil-| other landowners of England if he were E y that i ia i 80 AR ly Mame before them the present 
ward, seconded by Lord Tredegar, Monday, July 17, ! some cases their onion was, that they did not like to ! position of landlord and tenant, and the causes on the 
