— 
olent men. 
inistration 
wit th many r ned and “benevolent 
valuable time to the practica adm 
perise 
THE — — —— 
rench pro- 
ag P 
their patch of land, — children as 
As people acquire educati 
2 become — 3 ‘of acquiring 
The — 
the distant — AOE pa of having a legal 
em i of fi I 
of the Highlands, the fact is, that necessity alo 
m forth. They, like their Celtie brethren of 
oe dinari to go from 
‘foun — Glasgow and other owland towns 
l and London, performing 
would 
ms irom using every 
ven 
cuse 
4 e knew an illustration of this in the 
tance of the ‘wife of a Scotch farmer. 
, 
abandoning the voluntary — 
ciple is too evident when the selfishness and heartless 
on of the employing classes 
— circumstance: 
of ‘individuals, that there ean be no, implicit reliance on 
relief for pauperism, which are n 
by — —— every one of means ce su ce to 
n of the burden, accordi is abilities. 
But; aisi — the practicability o of f providing — 
for th oor 
mendicancy ich is a paramount 2 where money 
and zealous committees agement may be found, 
considered. Ex- 
perience proves tha egraded condi- 
tions of life, 
vails, 
rudential considerations. 
uos t com- 
mon in the lowest errs „ for — among 
Scotsmen and 
* the re 
vy 
“an pope to have e to support them 
d also e belief that they “ busch be 
has remarked with 
Doctor of Edinburgh, 
N from early an 
ide 
a 
8 
fan 3 is impossible, the: 
extreme ; a where re employment, Sey * 
shall be provi ded for them ur rate 
* 
a degree which, with 
registrations of bgt ag ee will, in ee wo gy 
be hardly eredited when in 
as a pte istration in France, 
* the 
he 
r. Carr, 
most 
jective. So s 
the effects of the French cmc 2 — Pean hina 
equal division of landed p 
1851, with a Parliamentary gran 
al relief, the 3 ſor — poor o 
Ma t of 10,0007. for 
media f Scotland 
— 4 — e 
Restare pon 2 
* eral sanitary 
Medical relief 
— — se buildings 
£20,311 
25,917 
1,038 | 
ord 218 
— expenses 
Con su 
r 
al ditt k 
Insane verte — ditto 
Orphan deserted children 
The rate of pauperism ap ut 
per poor on the — — ta by — last census, 
in the number of registered poor 
the decrease in the number of casual 
ee relieved, within the year has been N great. Ye 
ost parts of 
the o Highlands x and islands, and to, the temporary relief 
d 
eans, — — and caprices a 
v 
suppressing 
rred 
the pra of bettering pom 
d which has so tel 
rtifications are ands or or moneys un at — death of the | 
I 
—.— — 9 amt that 
a ae r, there has been on the days on which the 
returns were made, viz., let of January an — Ist of July 
* j relieve age — 
ery * parish i 
R hy 3 (whieh — — distin ight 
relief between temporary an rmanen — Waal +). 
that “all destitute persans n hip though 1 — 
o for want of suffi 
sickness, accident, or any other cause ;” and 
did not acknowledge the plea of inability tomake suitable 
not f 
refused relief perish from of food, would 
subject yourself to be indicted by dl the public prosecutor, 
on a — a of culpable homicide, as accessory to the 
rson so re $e 8 
tute — 8 are e from t, 
longer able-bodied, ha a legal “right to Teller; 755802 
paroc 
nds in the W 
of 
serable st an 
— 
l aim under 8 * . 8 wit 
ps boards are by iw required to provide the funds — 
u their necessary to reli 
— — will for the. — 
star vation. 
— 
Home Correspondence. 
The Harvest of 1852.—I am sorry to inform you that 
>| the crops in this part of Hampshire are mn 
by the storm of rain and wind of Wednesday, llth 
í most severe ever 
rooted, limbs torn i 
“their thatch and tiles 
— 1 
tell you how the crops suffered by such a storm, 
A eigion of mine that has some Barley near ane 
shore told m were blown off the straw ; mine 
and others is i very m „having b blown on to 
the ground an — and from the ears 
mi apg h much —— 
so near the 
be 
ough 
generally, | became utterly à ain when the failure of 
occurred, 
manufac- 
2 they did not = 
While the ie 
00 any Highland districts the families of | 
abourers, i in 2 or are called good circumstances, move 
course, without shoes and 2 
red extrem 
ins 
which they are willing to wor 
eee 
the farm 
really ed 
— farmer rege 
Pei for the — of certain en endowments 
which m 
F: 
aaar atas 5 fiaa” extreme, 
test of a principle—it bears 
ag rood 
rea! 
—— Lrochial In 
on nary get br exist 1 pak and oth 
and are increased by grants from the “Town Councils 
al sit t in some country parishes ne support 
Since t pulsory Pap reste 
re pege not arj bien: left for the pcor, but 
been heard of tor the aid of poor scholars. 
— a 
they may have 
which we . L been Fotki com hitherto 
loss to many of us, situated as L am with a heavy — 
