Jory 6, 1861.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 635 
— tent has not been | 
1 wo -— be found in a Simple contract being entered into| Mr. e L—The extent has no en defined. at any rate yet 
> : yet. 
dlord and кей, that should define the | ,, Mr. Ма due but he thought it "v къ imited. Мові of 
too hi 7 
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lord. an 
i 1 ап е 'у were not 
bourhood, an address on this subject was | affix certain penalties to the non-performance of 4 ceodingly careful in — 2 у did harm instead of 
i i тас ries Не 1 
о 
s such һе n 
en by hn venture а рл Paer yield of Wheat than well-cultivated farms pro- 
idgement of Mr. Peel's address:—He said: The |draw up the form of an agreement enin might | duced. He wi ould, however, have a perfectly dry cultivation 
t of rec i eb i 
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bly effect th nd and have farms well 
3 те forth to the world that they could hav 
ps which had been raised on certain farms | might be ped ibd that if even this were not go forth ^ the eie t IA aT end bee 
such as would have appeared fabulous in times | deemed a good an valid kin d of agreement, he wou ht were those Sof Mr. Peela He thought hat if compensa- 
and it had been — "ru a doubt recommen d rim p their lega al i vae iven for the tenants MER it ш Bonet = а 
, to eeling of security, which wou! nquestionably . 
of the earth vd let him see that it was likely to carry out Eus ARGYLE had been for more than pese of а century 
ái ll and capital. Agriculturists fi ll a осет uld be fo en rd ee gite оү oF bi E 
of skill and са ita т a men с ийе Qon e found who would complain of his land- 
| po r i Ж « lord, d the one was occupied without a scrap of paper, 
T of the world had visited this country to see ; jm pe. BETWEEN Hoan BnoApAcCnEs, Esq > pu secun 
amer capab 
toan almost indefinite мании Љу the cundi ipia the purposes for n it was intended. The agree- 
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with which every —: must have та A: . ines ments of the other estate embodied. pretty а, por pro- 
ali 
would perha -À zh Br 5, е scarcely 
agros to let unto the said QE eren who bered instan e h не ai. 
the very best princi бро or the on day, and ho for himself, his heirs, and assigns, agreos to take, that messuage to reme o the опорен, "Where E a pod un nder- 
would look with wonder upon the amoun е [wes g and | or ud opm vim LU M stables, pa: standing between landlord and tenant В М да affect that 
LEE Hou; b after seeing ао pardon. buildings there on › toge agre t indi: ven. 
| he would be indu iced to А me those closes, Sr paroels оГ атаа men meadow, е ета с Ы * very desirable 
oput or. t ' be something which 2344.4 
little further, and visit the farms im mediately surround- aming about — acres of land, with the rights and appurte- | death of the mpi might fall back upon, and say, “ Hee 
it—farms perhaps of equal capabilities to the one thereto belonging, to have and to ho fa the same for the | į a Ma: 
ing p ps q P ес! 
he had already, inspected—and оп comparing the E EE, meer Р; -— "grs 2j pue m - merely agricultural persons, they affected the public. It 
" ^ e | sira з f 
annual — — fr e pu e of |n hd said d n Y — | i eem jr» Ей зл ars te rem а a open ee Ё pes phe с» 
those employed upon them he АИ “The said Hugh Broadacres, Esq., engages to deliver up |а ossible. се ublie had а cla on e e; апа if, 
ridiculously small. His natural impression would be the said George Thompson the said farmhouse, with the | for P want A: oper understanding between landlord and 
that it was surely for the good of this country that the | | bulldings and Locos gates, ditches, and fences, in perfect | tenant, t that е did not produce by one bag of Wheat what it 
| condition and repair, or to put dm. (^ such — with h д h d 
whole surface of the land should have the benefit of ап possible des toh. it being agreed that shall | 9280! 7 cad pend luce t ew Бүл "he oss E ke 
these —— in ла j ст кише -— E due until the execution of such necessar kg pets been re ^ referred uld be made, for hough in 2 A Mr. 
farmers о ngland were wanting in 1gence eted. ay © € — tan r^. d t be 
E, and й sens ОР ийе ow Inés or Tha «fne said George Thompson engages to uso, manage, and one to- y, thoro mig 
energy, & Y. | oultivate theland in a farmer-like manner, p^r according to the cum Vra dinde "ud оша сил ai Tae ns 
would follow the example of those who had attained | improved ву EA LM re, and not to plough, break up, mis ELT y whioh "ool be im roved to a considersbl ex- 
such eminent success. е were to ask the ог convert into inae -— irt of the жа кы ор! or and lt produce oonsequeatly т ? 
ae peip nder a — per acre; and to К in 
pre i were о! f 
rial . 
с dii T у m e — Abd their ev dátéredis and provision not. being made within one m onth after the zioHob oW — he would v ^f Area to sellanything off 
the publie good, but it was that Pigh farming was very Siven, the said George 1 mart and dedust the cost thereof trou | The CmarRwaw maid 
e i at it 
3 d each of these mud favoured the argument for е" ments. 
AM penalty or ЕЕ . From all the m — he had been able to gain 
E the - the rp he believed the worst cases of litigation which 
mede t refro -x 
г. Kn mns and М: eatle had both. 
was e | the nex t of rent. un 
Б. permanent outlay of a great amount of capital in «Тһе said George Thompson shall not at any Вә during who bore a high reputation ; fat he (the chairman) thought 
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made from the last year's for the ti who gems the 
by e the incoming tema i E — det Pr ol those farms in T cultivatio 
consideration for the & farms їп a bad condition, whereasthe practice should Ье гет s. 
le h а Hugh ree ger No , e incoming tena: haod value : and if land at 
take any hay or straw M ay | б ін 4 d 30s, and 27. were improved so as to be worth 
iods, and in others as let from year to year; |thetime p TAN (not exceeding — tons of the former and | 21. and 50s. respectively, he thought the tenant was entitled to 
ра 6 ће believed, with [^^ (^ ception of one favoured | m of the bom т) аба consuming price; any further quantity | the difference. Where land-valuers were employed, they never 
жыш on the 
spot hz Спра and, the m of i ot Lincoln, ther Е bo r their т 
or th of the мы Hogh Bro: ad- studied the capabilities and what he called the natural v alue 
ining, tena: nt, w vithou апу со = of the lan. d, but шашу looked at the state of the gops nd its 
feel that perfect оК t Gs LAA eir fi i аа, the land уеп atlen oppor 
which would indu o Shall be divided à bllows :— or bones — nnl Kem тч еа а universal s 
hat liberal and 249 hand with -n a woul T ро rtt paris, an ty der manuresin | jg of f the m л е н ап agreement, every опе who- 
ma ii belonging to themse proportion to tbeir aura ^ mper 30 the said | had spoken had said it was better to have one. 
In arts of the ii again, th а не T * The CaAtRMAN said that as 
Та асгев, T muh of suc A shall be ipm proportion toa rcu cuml he hada 
lo "эя nS to such number „жу ЫЛ, 1 short of — or — follows : БЫА this m 
occupancy of the after incurring su te 
ex - and shall also be allowed one-third 
and other corn artificial таб отит 
Which ch. they formed we were more амаг жа gom me ^Y that it is 
= n. qp Rc — ud elase sh ен ice inv. M 
ving full usted i 
еттен, t 
Mr. BARTON moved that the resolution be altered so as to- 
= embrace the ы-ы» Thess it is essential that a written con- 
umpire, who shall be | tract should be made in every instan ks 
part of the сач. ina nm worse than a [doc in they ко into arbitration, and whose decision The resolution, p^ the amended form, was then put to the 
_ the beginning. Ата гот eases ou the viole meeting and carried unanimously. 
to be very disadvantageous to € bütt ie wie » ballousl PT M d body were convinced 
Е А of England that гетто of | tha eir advantage that covenants 
1 T —- Po E DUM stall Generally ing, | 9f this kind ові Кет Speaking generally, he be- 
he believed, the system nd especially in A own | lieved that nine-tenths of them were favourable to the 3Botíces of 3$ooks. 
Е neigh for farms to be let from year to year. system, It was the qo pem who did not desire A Pa Arl Di 
Ё There was still considerable difference in the mode of | it- From his own experience with the landlord class, * — B M pude fane € 
- letting land on different estates even here; for with there was not one in а hundred who would wish to do et prse y Ө. Н. Dean, Agricultural En 
1 ice was to e ments tolerably anything wrong, and would not wish their own duties ўн 
- lengthy ones some of them—signed by the tenant, and | as well defined as those of their tenants. He did | This thin octavo volume, giving (1) an outline- 
Кеше e ед ar, however, as these | 106 &nticipate the slightest difficulty if once the. ten- history of Romney Marsh ала of the great level « ue the 
| agreements had come under his own observation, they | ®пбгу should be fedet that the system proposed | F s 5 (2) = list of Ac ts of P. 
simply amounted to this: they bound over the tenant | Were desirable. f Publi : Drai 
to go thrgngh a certain E of cropping, to do| Mr. Кхтонт lookod upon the aristocracy of Engla and with | pex s, and those grant ted t 
І tain things and to abstain from doing others, under the greatest respect. There were not poe ids pm better | purpose of assisting land. iral ai in improving urs 
Serious if not ruinous mut . In none of these | o ссе оче ontod - чц ате to be lies mds ; ) zegona. бок ebtaining a до prehensive 
j had ever found equally stringent clauses | ship ; and from the mutual confidence which existed between | д arteria 4 кыры < outfall, embankm. ent, and reclamation 
upon the lan.llord for neglecting to do his iandiondand tenant, their tenuro,thongh a yearl ET 
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4 H i з. | connected with the aristocracy of + , such an agree- | 4 — Steam Engine in its various various Appli- 
m pour iin a фа зла? Tf т pes жыз т rie ers to prove ТГ considerable serios. ttet) Cations. By John Bourne. end x Fifth Edition 
irue that he could nof go u of any min of contracts in a very plain, common sense, and ааа ofa "Treatiso on the Steam y the Artizan- 
among them and say, Wi ‚у don't y do во and so? but | light. Circumstances were now so changed, and — s| Club Lon 
he met with the reply, When shall I get my money | 2203.8 етеді kind of agriculture bes 2 шоей, steam: | A quarto volume of 500 pages, fall of information for 
back ^ sum а 3 should wish to go into some other|aiteration, and of course buildings and other matter wculd | the m e man, vt eara r, and 
hi : 
kind of busin ow much of my money shall have to follow in their train, that some additional security | agriculturist, for Е the * various a de ek e 
in the land ? "Tf they told him mi a ой жав жибе оша наа ч dug o himsel вета of the engine" here wan m e to agrieulture. 
they might come to the fair conclusion that there was Тапа! ЗМЕН fhát lib could imi B v qoe omm unlimited | We do not ик уы) any din nce to rom steam. 
mot ient security to induce that amount of ie pt. and DA feel товду male. But exceptional cases were | machinery n mployed in the cultivation of the 
tion of capital to the land which would best general on remark made by ў Мт. Poel, that "and land. The ае зуу is сү ilustrated by no fewer 
the welfare of the people. He believed the eh v farle ef oprorement to an indefinite extent, ће оп | os 27 plates and 546 woodcuts. 
