£96 
; GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE., . 
was estimated at 3,304,3712., while Mr. M'Culloch, i in 
the eme (1849) of the 
gives 36,000,000/. as yes value of the goods annually 
l. 
annual wages; w 
Me Calloch ae t hat Ae 
bles achers, &c., and 80,000 
whereas Mr. 
woollen and 
8,645,1752., pr number 
275,000 the mber 
s | freedom 
ttempt to regulate w 
under inns 
orms of amelioration: | 
1 oaths, 
manner, iHe. 
of 
ERIS 
[Novena 5 Á 
by th 
We hee "2 of d 
2 n influences b 
chape els and schools, 
these bui ldings. 
We probably 
ai ate of pes pes on "int 
ast TM 
without tum 
TI 
nere rema for ms of interferen nce wit ux persor 
Moral intimi 
eeded to Weng the isolation. 
who wi 
tion rem suce 
* knobstick ” or “ black sheep ” 
stitute 
tiol 
ed as 837, 500, and the annua 
nufacture as 20, 290, 
It was — tn Ed cens X the 18th century that Flax- 
— ng m ted it n England or Scotland. 
h 
of Un 
e of 
} 
KNOD: 
+} 
3 
K with uS or 
3rd 4 
e use of the 
"eni M 
— for Diffusing 
5 has res 
me thé great. MT 
the pena LE 
mato e 
in any trade to the orders of the directing committee. | 
If the representative system of such associations „were 
yards in 
vidi to 
lared value an linen 
N increased x 
voi the dec 
55,000,000 in 1825, a 
582. in 1834 to 4,225,895/. 
64.1 in 1857. 
ntity of iron made in England and Wales 
in Yn mated 2t 17,130 tons, had increased in 1858 
0,95 59 to 
to 8 
1755. 
tury m Med. me pect canals of England 
alone exceed 2200 miles, e the n cq cue rivers 
exce in length, ma ing a tot tal o f 4000 
ex 
Though only a cen- 
n cuneate at bes 
pure; T ihe bad a more comprehensive news 
of N principles than they have ever shown, iti is 
that 
irymen | 
clear would | 
t irre 
ocqueville e — vely Shoes to be the fata 
8 — ee ani 44 9m wey of any purel 
| dem stitutio; 
ect of a a rise of wages among & rude 
he f 
Tr 
f the majority — 
l| ord 
peo commonly been the ree of t 
forms of sensual enjoyment, Thus M 
yan «m — the amount of beer, spirits, dr 
by workin the United 
ple 
1800 miles 
miles of inland navigation. T 
for hire in Grent Britain he Co 
plied | with passengers — the Clyde in 
ere built and | registered in 
met, N. 
1811. 
the United Kingdom and 
; the spirits amounting gm 
. Porter, some 
ka gd 
7 810, 2087., the beer and porter to 25,383, 1657., and 
he tobacco and snuff to 7,218, 2427. Proba ably n no 
n | standar d of the moral and intellectual condition of o 
672 tons. 
vessels of 15, 
the ag 
increased to 2,115,052, 
In 1803 the vessels of all classes belonging to the 
United Kingdom and its dependencies numbered 20,803 
255 with 2,000,000 tons burden; and in 1858 to 
18 
20,071 ships, with 4,325,242 tons burden, exclusive of midst of h 
— sc the last Ies 
m 1822 "160. British and pm, steam- | use of intoxicating drinks and t 
In 1858 | proof that, though the pauper he ia d by the law 
tonnage "a ord cleared inwards had | settlement is our- last 
| manipulations o of the 
CO. 
actual Slave, -Bome of the w wors sb 
of 
24 realised. The 
theory o 
only a 
tions s mu 
ating agricultural 
n Trish bog, He may settle in ho 
the vigorous life of the English coalfields. 
rained g grad ually with I foo od, lodging, 
b 
district, or from a 
may be t 
and eoi 
t pass before in on x 
consequences sie rfdom remain. The nerally y Been pes operate a 
to emigrate from the moorland cottage, or the hut in| school How — a BM — be required 
the fens, or thes mud hovel in a stagn - o ES waste 
mestie 
or into capital for the elevation of io who wok 
nds ! Wha e the e 
A: is conv 
into a means of rior enna ieo 
their ha ver 
| cular energetic Arie me for outdoor ak or e s gained 
a wiry, ighly nervous do ion for the skilled 
factory. He mays 
submit his will change 
n the ben 
im whei er in the gr 
ces n — animal TN or in the ep 
teaches us that as 
be 
TI 
į bee 
cdi 
lax 
An 
fait 2 
great providentia pos whi 
material for Cor 
All h 
„506 m 
exist for the construction of 2, 070 
railways have d 
and in 1858 grec 139,1 passengers, upwards | wi 
merchandise m minerals, and 
1,326,006 of bem stock, wit n aggregate gross 
in come of 491. 
E the influence of opinion on soci e. 
ith 
He may co 
rfect respect to the law to adjust the relations 
of labour and capita al. But, a in ‘= this there 
8 ain, the animal nature of ond reappe a 
23, 
12,000,000/. (11,738,8077 " 
and foreign írade in coal have advanced until ir 
65, 008, 649 tons "t dni were raised in Great Bri 
in — tendencies have 
the 
t e well 
ordinary stimulus given to tetur — by by higher 
— e Fa arly" employment, and ea rly The 
y marriages, 
J 
.) | 
uri wd a cen sun of mechanical invention the aome capri 
1858 0 self-control. 
his lor v h 
power 
aos mind of the Spears 
APA sold as 
55 
when 
He has not "risen 10 Ten] rem until he 
Emancipa e 
e has become hi 
to control his — In his 
and social tra Ih 
done m ys and |n 
be - 
iem 
nstitu e that Mes are 
Tera prs rity caused b d 
by the nen per ity wars, by defective * 
rrors of our — legislation by th 
irresisti ble. 
to . ar ourselves whether o we 
e have, therefore, 
value e per- 
b and 
0 
moving those weeds so that t| 
the growth of Clover. For many years 
Him with whom 
man pe 
under his own Vine and his o 
— to make him afraid. 
AT TITEL ET ag 
Home Correspondence. _ 
Hoeing Clover.—Your recent exposé ona si 
sen weeds in Clover isi 
they may not i i 
ears I have i 
terprise, have all — ne by the si — nt 
t — 5 8 crises 
riched our colonies and — United States with the 
Bes geb, surplus ied e United 
ere 
of en 
— uence of colo 
- mixed political power of this country, and whether 
e cannot preserve it, while we proceed to fulfil the 
apparent destiny of ou r race, by completing the freedom | i 
when the Clover and weeds develop ‘themselyes ti 
2 out gd 1 baling 3 ce in gr 
rapid 
0 
ou, 8 
iari 
fx 12 x ig 
y Bois 
iH £4}, 
ca have, since the failure of the Pota 
D 
crop and t — 
ims — in Ir 
migration, im 
of 1 1846, sent 9,000,000“. 
— to = an f X MB 
gratio on, in the| v 
ir g ues mpara- 
ition on 
for. Raikes 
int the latter 
during 50 years 
s ; Were chiefly educated in the 
Legislature was igno 
P aid of commercial drum to such an extent 
cen a 
commenced been 
end of the last | imp: 
ars of the last, and 
th 
rant of the true principles a | 
t 1 by the recog- 
S more direct P ma 
in our erbe id Jh Something has been 
> lone eque this r esult. The ei ti es, towns, and | e 
Z 
AN of Roo 
fear it is ee 0 
J. Mechi, Oct. 25. y 
46. — The following o 
e taken from the Coventry Stam 
coming on ge suddenly, many cx us have ve of te 
means 
the —.— hare “migrated were irre 
structed, 
sewered, the h "us 
houses often rude. 
of 
Tos Vn. The physi cal 
o been grea 
od and clothi nd all 
of me chile ese habitation ns and 
e protecti 
in town 
ego le 
ded of f 
he other necessaries 
improve 
Eve gettin 
| the appearance of f his Sent is 
melio- | partial 
| safely 
* thes 
ery iet 
Per riod, 
pportunit 
popuii xm m 
by public opinion; " 
— 
A or the 
er M 
riots of Yorkshire, 
y the spinning-j 
er in 
villages, | à 
h rri d * 
Rs ised 
ids t appears to us that joer 
ess that i 
"iem 
ing c Th 
serf” is j Just the SEDE natur 
en uncontrolled: by hi 
— et — itself in i a ger 
mice es tyrannis 
asses, Ep. 4 cultural Gazette.. 
ne which "d ls to its k 
The 
: feci md "e cellular 
to 
will not probably 
Other roots bare done t 
ndividuals of all | Plaint respecting Swedes is 
They 
eeping P! 
ind s im 1 115 ay y 
ake to 
ecompositi A x: is 
Ve w 
Dh p hun vot tont ike 
he 1 
were later sown than usual, an 
