200 
Farm Agreements in Reference to 
compensation on account of such variation ; they shall then settle the other 
claims between the parties upon the following basis : 
6. The said landlord, or his incoming tenant, shall pay after the rate of 
fifty shillings per acre for all land in excess of one-hall' which, under the above 
copditions, is fit to be planted with white straw crops, or shall be paid by the 
said tenant at the same rate for all short of one-half of the arable land 
so fit. 
7. Not less than one-fourth of the clover or mixed grass-seeds shall be 
mown for hay during the last year, for the use of, and to be paid for by, the 
incoming tenant ; for the remainder of the land whereon clover or other grasses 
have been grazed the whole summer by sheep, the incoming tenant shall pay 
after the rate of forty shillings per acre, provided such land be clean, and 
that only one crop of corn has been taken since the previous fallow. 
8. The said tenant shall be entitled to the sum of fifty shillings per acre for 
all clean fallows, whether after vetches eaten while green, or bare fallows ; if 
not clean and ready to plant with corn, the cost of making them so must 
be deducted. For all root-crops he shall be paid the value, not the cost of 
cultivation — provided the land be clean, — if it be not so, the cost of cleaning 
it must be deducted. 
9. If the said tenant has not sold haj', straw, or roots, and has purchased 
manure within the last two years of the tenancy, or if he has purchased 
manures in excess of the quantity required to replace the hay and other 
produce so sold, he shall be paid one-half the cost of all such purchased manures 
in excess of the quantity so required which shall have been applied to green 
crops or grass land in the last year of the tenancy, and one-fourth of the cost 
of that in the last year but one, such cost not having exceeded forty shillings 
per acre. All unprepared bones and lime used upon any part of the farm 
during the last four years of the tenancy shall be paid for, deducting one- 
fourth for every year's use; and on pasture land during the last six years, 
deducting one-sixth for every year's use — provided such pasture land has not 
been mown in that time; and for every other fertilizer of a permanent nature, 
such allowance as the arbitrators may determine, and also one-half of the cost 
of all oilcake or linseed consumed during the last year, and one-fourth of that 
in the last year but one — provided that such oilcake or linseed lias been given 
to cattle and sheep, and does not exceed the average of the three years pre- 
ceding the last year of the tenancy. 
10. The said tenant shall be paid such sum as the arbitrators may determine 
for all permanent improvements made with the sanction, in writing, of the 
said landlord or his agent. 
These outgoing covenants, numbered now for reference, apply 
to Michaelmas tenancies, and to districts where it is not cus- 
tomary to leave the seeds down more than one year. For the 
Cotswold Hills, the following are substituted for Nos. 1, 2, 
and 3: 
One-fifth of the arable land shall, on such expiration of tenancy, be clean 
and in good condition, and cither planted or fit to plant with wheat after 
second year's seeds grazed during the previous summer. 
One-fifth of the arable land shall have been cleaned and planted with roots 
(turnips, swedes, or mangolds) in the summer preceding the termination of 
the tenancy ; these crojis to be taken by the incoming tenant. If the land" be 
not clean, the cost of making it so shall be deducted from the amount of the 
valuation of the root-crop. 
One-fifth of the arable land shall have been sown, in the s])ring of the year 
preceding the termination of the tenancy, with clover or other proper mixed 
