De Bow's Review, Nide 15

Etukansi
James Dunwoody Brownson De Bow, R. G. Barnwell, Edwin Bell, William MacCreary Burwell
J.D.B. De Bow, 1853
 

Sisältö

VIITENNESSEE PAST AND PRESENT
65
Coal FieldsThe Mississippi valley
67
VIIIIMPROVEMENT OF THE OHIO AND MISSISSIPPI RI VERS
73
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY COAL FIELDS
79
THE COTTON PLANT
84
THE PROGRESS OF FRANCE
90
151
93
THE QUEENS DREAM A Sequel to Uncle Toms Cabin
95
THE CITY OF SAVANNAH
105
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
107
OFFICE NEWORLEANS
107
THE TELEGRAPH by J W MOORE of Pennsylvania
109
ArkwrightInventions
111
IndiaInstructions to officers
115
THE WHITE FREE COLORED AND SLAVE POPULA TION OF THE UNITED STATES by Dr JESSE CHICK ERING of Massachusetts
129
FishFishermen and
138
AlabamaDelegates to Memphis Conven
141
FISH AND FISHERMEN by Dr A W ELY of NewOrleans
143
NewBrunswickThe fisheries
153
English policy in regard to the
159
BANCROFTS HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES
160
Rice LandEffect of drought upon
185
LEADING TRUTHS IN POLITICAL ECONOMY by Dr F LIEBER of South Carolina College
186
Free TradeDefinition
190
AGRICULTURE
191
ArkansasDelegates to Memphis Conven
192
XXICOMMERCE AND FINANCES
196
York
200
281
201
Factory SystemOrigin of English
204
RAILROAD PROGRESS
207
GeorgiaRailroad of East Tenn and
211
XXIIIEDITORIAL MISCELLANY
213
BrazilRemarks on the policy
214
555
215
GuineaDutch island on coast
216
GROWTH TRADE AND MANUFACTURE OF COTTON
217
Crompton Sam Inventor of the Mule
229
DUTCH COLONIAL EMPIRE 282
232
RESOURCES AND WEALTH OF CALIFORNIA 185253
237
THE EAST INDIA ISLANDS by Dr ALBERT WELLS ELY of NewOrleans
243
THE MEMPHIS CONVENTION
254
BuffaloTrade
268
GoyazThe city
273
RELATION OF MASTER AND SLAVE IN LOUISIANA AND THE SOUTH
275
MISSISSIPPI BONDS
278
THE RAILWAYS OF RUSSIA
279
THE STATE OF NEWHAMPSHIRE
281
579
287
GalvanismRemarkable power
288
ARTICLE PAGE XXXIII SIDNEY AND HIS COMPATRIOTS by S F GLENN of Washington City
291
COMMERCIAL AND FINANCIAL
296
Sugar a staple production
297
PhiladelphiaReceipts of gold
299
341
300
CoffeeAverage prices
301
272
303
Internal Improvements
304
AGRICULTURE
306
CaliforniaExtraordinary fertility of
307
PROGRESS OF RAILROAD IMPROVEMENT
310
Sterility of land in vicinity
312
14
314
XXXVIIMISCELLANEOUS
318
CopperDiscoveries in Tennessee of
319
GoldNorth South Carolina mines of
321
EDITORIAL AND LITERARY
322
THE NORTHWEST by Dr KILPATRICK of Louisiana
325
GalenaShipment of lead from mines of
335
XLREVOLUTION OF SOUTHERN TRADE by J E TUEL Esq
341
CoalIowa fields
345
GenesseeImports and exports
354
Cotton MillsSwitzerland Belgium
357
THE GREAT LAKESTHEIR CITIES AND TRADE
359
ElectricityApplication to telegraphing of 115
399
THE LAKE AND MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS by T M Coo LEY of Ohio
400
RESOURCES AND PROGRESS OF PHILADELPHIA
403
Girard CollegeInfluence
404
MISSISSIPPI BONDS
411
AGRICULTURE
414
OhioImprovement of the rivers of
415
CaliforniaTrade
417
XLVIIICOMMERCIAL AND FINANCIAL
421
PorkExports from NewOrleans
423
INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS
425
EDITORIAL NOTES
430
CropsEuropean grain
432
WHAT IS FAIR AND EQUAL RECIPROCITY by J MCORD of South Carolina 483
432
WHAT IS FAIR AND EQUAL RECIPRO
432
Coasting TradeRetaliatory measures
439
THE ARMY OF THE UNITED STATES by Colonel GARD NER Washington D C
448
SugarSandwich islands
457
ProduceReceipts at NewOrleans from
458
LIILTHE TELEGRAPII by J G MOORE Philadelphia
460
Owen Dr Geological report
461
CottonGrowth trade manufacture of
470
Exports and imports
471
31
475
THE GROWTH TRADE AND MANUFACTURE OF COT TON
479
Cotton FactoriesNotices of the first
481
LVSOUTHERN SLAVERY AND ITS ASSAILANTS by a GEOR GIA LADY
486
MurderKilling a slave
492
DOMESTIC POULTRY by Dr ALBERT WELLES ELY of New Orleans
496
GuianaThe wild fowls
497
GeeseBremen and China
505
Estimated population
507
THE STATE OF IOWA
509
Gulf CommerceInsurance tax
515
INSURANCE TAX UPON THE GULF ETC
516
450
517
THE COTTON CROP TRADE
518
261
519
NEWORLEANS COMMERCE MORTALITY ETC
520
Queens DreamSequel to Uncle Toms
521
Egg TradeUnited States
524
Religious toleration
525
BaconExports from NewOrleans
527
101
528
AGRICULTURE
531
California seed
533
INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS
535
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES
537
China and the Indies
542
CHINA AND THE INDIES OUR MANIFEST DESTINY IN THE EAST
542
IslandsThe East India
550
CommerceEgyptian Phoenician and Car
557
CommerceBritish with Europe Africa
565
Java exports and
567
NegroCauses of the movement South
571
EARLY LIFE IN THE SOUTHWEST
572
LiteratureEarly paucity
573
Tributary to Savannah Ga
575
TocantinsThe mouth of the
581
AMERICAN INSTITUTIONSTHE MONROE DOCTRINE c
584
TribesAboriginal
587
THE PLAGUE IN THE SOUTHWEST
595
53
612
TehuantepecRailroad
616
InterestRate at London
618
IllinoisDelegates to Memphis convention
627
Yellow FeverFrightful ravages of
628
RussiaThe railways
633
358
635
LXVIIITHE EFFECT OF DROUGHT UPON RICE LAND
636
329
637
XIINTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS
640
BOOKS
644
REMARKS ON DR CARTWRIGHTS PAPER Extension of Sugar Region
647

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Sivu 284 - It is therefore ordered, That every township in this jurisdiction, after the Lord hath increased them to the number of fifty householders, shall then forthwith appoint one within their town to teach all such children as shall resort to him to write and read, whose wages shall be paid either by the parents or masters of such children, or by the inhabitants in general, by way of supply, as the major part of those that order the prudentials of the town shall appoint: Provided, Those that send their...
Sivu 285 - Knowledge and learning, generally diffused through a community, being essential to the preservation of a free government, and spreading the opportunities and advantages of education through the various parts of the country being highly conducive to this end...
Sivu 228 - The warp was placed perpendicularly, the reed fell with the weight of at least half a hundred weight, and the springs which threw the shuttle were strong enough to have thrown a Congreve rocket. In short, it required the strength of two powerful men to work the machine at a slow rate, and only for a short time.
Sivu 216 - Among other remarkable things which he describes, he relates " that the people of that country possess a kind of plant, which instead of fruit, produces wool, of a finer and better quality than that of sheep, and that of this they make their clothes.
Sivu 109 - Canst thou lift up thy voice to the clouds, That abundance of waters may cover thee? Canst thou send lightnings, that they may go, And say unto thee, Here we are?
Sivu 285 - ... it shall be the duty of legislatures and magistrates, in all future periods of this commonwealth, to cherish the interests of literature and the sciences, and all seminaries of them; especially the university at Cambridge, public schools and grammar schools in the towns...
Sivu 508 - Westwardly along the said Northern boundary line of the State of Missouri, as established at the time aforesaid, until an extension of said line intersects the middle of the main channel of the Missouri River...
Sivu 429 - School Architecture," or Contributions to the Improvement of School-houses in the United States, by Henry Barnard, Commissioner of Public Schools in Rhode Island, p.
Sivu 351 - ... the one-thread wheel. This great invention is said to have been made by a Scotchman of the name of Bell, and it was first successfully applied in Lancashire, about the year...
Sivu 219 - He then stretches his warp by fastening his bamboo rollers at a due distance from each other on the turf by wooden pins. The...

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