48 
Unexhausted Improvements. 
5. — An allowance ought to be made for lime and carriage for five 
years. 
6. — An allowance ought to be made for four years for the cost and 
carriage of all bought dung and night soil, which may be spread upon 
the land. 
7. — An allowance ought to be ipade for bones for four years. 
8. — For rape dust, one third of the bill after a crop of corn, hay, or 
clover. 
9. — For marling or claying land, an allowance ought to be made for 
carriage and labour for seven years. 
10. — For Imseed-oil cake and corn used for feeding cattle or sheej), 
one-third of the cost ought to be paid for the first year, and one- sixth 
for the second, where the manure belongs to the landlord. 
11. — Where the manure so made from oil cake and corn belongs to 
the tenant, an extra allowance ought to be made on the value of the 
manure, in the same proportion as in the foregoing rule. 
12. — An allowance ought to be made for turnip fallows; namely, 
the working, rent, and taxes to be calculated, and the crop of turnips to 
be valued, and one-half the value of the turnips to be given to the 
outgoing tenant. Two-thirds of the turnips to be consumed upon light 
soils. 
13. — The above allowances are made on the presumption that all the 
produce, except corn, meat, wool, and the produce of the dairy, are con- 
sumed on the farm ; and all allowances are to be made in equal pro- 
portions in each year for the period over which they extend, except in 
the 10th and 11th rule. 
14. — Such system of cultivation ought to be adopted as may be most 
suitable for the quality of the land; and an allowance ought to be made 
to the landlord it such system be not adopted, and for any dilapidations 
in the buildings, fences, gates, and drains. 
13. — At the termination of each year, the tenant shall give an account 
to his landlord or his agent of all money expended by him during the 
previous year, for which he is entitled to claim any allowance on quitting 
his land. 
16. — If the outgoing tenant refuses or neglects to enter into an agree- 
ment with his landlord or his agent, on-or before the 1 7th day of October 
next precedmg the termination of his tenancy, then the landlord ought 
to have the power of entering to sow wheat where the crops do not 
belong to the tenant, the tenant receiving compensation for herbag^ and 
stubbles. 
17. — The landlord ought to have the power of entering to plough for 
and sow spring corn on the second day of February previous to the 
tenant quitting the farm. 
