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AND

Industrial Resources, Statistics, etc.

DEVOTED TO

COMMERCE, AGRICULTURE, MANUFACTURES, INTERNAL
IMPROVEMENTS, EDUCATION, POLITICAL ECON-
OMY, GENERAL LITERATURE, ETC.

"Commerce is ing."

EDITED BY

J. D. B. DE BOW,

PROFESSOR OF POLITICAL ECONOMY, ETC., IN THE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA

VOL. XXII.-THIRD SERIES, VOL. II.

WASHINGTON CITY

AND

NEW ORLEANS.

1857.

OUR SOUTHERN NEIGHBORS-VERA CRUZ-by Frederick Doring, of Mexico, p. 1. LA SALLE AND THE MISSISSIPPI, by the Editor, p. 13.

STATISTICS AND GEOGRAPHY OF IRON, by A. S. Hewitt, before the Ilistorical Statistical Society of New York, p. 44.

THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA, by A. Roane, Esq., of Washington city, D. C., p. 62. THE CONSTITUTION OF MAN AND SLAVERY, by W. S. Grayson, of Mississippi, p. 74. THE RELATIVE POLITICAL STATUS OF THE NORTH AND SOUTH, by Python, p. 113. THEORY OF POLITICAL INDIVIDUALISM, by Geo. Frederick Holmes, of Va., p. 133. DR. DEWEY AND HIS ELM TREE ORATION, a Review, by W. J. Grayson, of South Carolina, p. 149.

RELIGIOUS INTOLERATION, by R. M. Johnson, of Georgia, p. 166.

THE RELATIVE MORAL AND SOCIAL STATUS OF THE NORTH AND SOUTH, (concluded,) by Python, p. 225.

CAPITAL AND LABOR-The laws of wealth, etc., by George Frederick Holmes, of Virginia, p. 249.

CONNECTION BETWEEN AMERICAN SLAVERY AND THE BRITISH COTTON MANUFACTURE, by I. T. Danson, of England, p. 265.

OUR ISLAND NEIGHBORS Sandwich Islands, climate, population, Government, productions, reciprocity treaty with the United States, by Dr. Wood, of Honolulu, S. I., p. 288.

EARLY PHYSICIANS OF THE SOUTH, by Dr. E. D. Fenner, of New Orleans, p. 299. THE SOUTHERN STATES, No. 2-Georgia, Florida, and Alabama, by J. G. Kohl, of the Coast Survey, p. 302.

THE CONSERVATIVE PRINCIPLE, OR SOCIAL EVILS AND THEIR REMEDIES, by George Fitzhugh, of Virginia, p. 419.

THE SOUTHERN STATES, No. 3-The State of Mississippi, by J. G. Kohl, Esq., p.

359.

Revolution in the COTTON INDUSTRY-Mr. Henry's Enterprise, p. 387.

COOLIES-CUBA AND EMANCIPATION, by Hon. T. L. Clingman, of N. C., p. 414. TOBACCO TRADE OF BALTIMORE AND OF THE UNION, by Charles De Ford, of Baltimore, p. 372.

STEAMSHIPS AT THE SOUTH, by William C. Barney, p. 410.

THE SLAVE TRADE, by George Fitzhugh, of Virginia, p. 449.

THE AMERICAN UNION, by Charles W. G. Smith, of Ohio, p. 479.

THE LABORER-HIS RIGHTS AND DUTIES, by Dr. D. Lee, Agricultural Professor in the University of Georgia, p. 486.

A POETICAL DIGRESSION-Poems of James Barron Hope, p. 521.

CANNIBALS ALL; OR, SLAVES WITHOUT MASTERS, by the Editor, p. 543.

AGRICULTURAL FEATURES OF VIRGINIA AND NORTH CAROLINA, by Edward Ruffin, of Virginia, p. 462.

MANAGEMENT OF A SOUTHERN PLANTATION-Rules enforced on the Rice Estate of P. C. Weston, Esq., of South Carolina, p. 38.

PROSPECTS OF SOUTHERN AGRICULTURE, by George D. F. Jamison, of South Carolina, p. 180.

CONNECTION OF OUR ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC SHORES-The several proposed Isthmus Connections, by Captain Cram, U. S. Army, p. 365.

SUPPLY AND CONSUMPTION OF COTTON-PRESENT AND PROSPECTIVE, by John M. Cordoza, of Charleston, South Carolina, p. 337.

AGRICULTURAL ASSOCIATIONS AND UNIVERSITIES, by Philip St. George Cocke, of Virginia, p. 495.

THE POWER OF COTTON, by D. D. Deming, of New York, p. 540.

LETTERS FROM LIEUTENANT M. F. MAURY AND JOSEPH SEGAR, ON A LINE OF STEAMERS FROM THE CHESAPEAKE TO EUROPE, p. 513.

ONE OF THE EVILS OF THE TIMES, by

P. 562.

MIDDLE PASSAGE-SUFFERINGS OF FREE AND SLAVE IMMIGRANTS, by Geo. Fitzhugh, of Virginia, p. 571.

CONSEQUENCES OF ABOLITION AGITATION, by Edmund Ruffin, of Va., No. I, p. 583. PRIVATEERS AND PRIVATEERING, p. 593.

NORTH AND THE SOUTH, by Elwood Fisher p. 623.

WAR UPON SOCIETY-SOCIALISM-by Geo. Fitzhugh, p. 633.

FREE TRADE AND Direct Taxes, by the Editor, p. 645.

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African Slave Trade-its history and mode of Direct Taxes, history of, 653.
conduct, 579. (See Slave Trade.)
Animal Food, high price of, 213.

Agricultural Associations and Universities, 495.
Agricultural Features of Virginia and North
Carolina, 462.

Agriculture of the South-Its prospects, 180.
Agriculture-Weight of a bushel of produce,

520.

Atlantic and Pacific, connection of, 365.
Artesian Wells in Texas and New Mexico, 488.
Alabama, 305.

Banks of the United States, 532.
Book Notices, 112, 332, 445, 549, 562.
Baltimore Tobacco Trade, 872.

Cotton Industry, revolution in, 887.
Cotton-Sole reliance upon slave labor, 265,
Rules and Statistics, 286.

Cotton-Present growth and future supply, 197.
Cotton Statistics of the United States, 211, 582.
Cotton Spinning on the Plantation, 327, 387.
Cotton-Supply and consumption present and
prospective, 338.

Cotton in California, 214.
Cotton-Its power in the world, 540.
Commerce of the United States, Exports, Im-
ports, &c., 204, 532, Revenues, Expenditures,
334, ports, 535; Exports, manufactured and
unmanufactured, 537.

Commerce of the Indies, struggles for, 604.
Commercial Progress of the United States-
Imports, Exports of the Union, and of each
port and State, Tonnage, Ship Building, In-
direct trade, &c., 349.

Commercial Statistics for 1856, 325.
Charleston and the Western trade, 443.
Charleston College, its history and graduates,

505.

Conservative Principles; or, Social Diseases
and their Remedies, 419, 449.
Coolie Trade, 414.

Coinage of the United States, 537.
Cuba and Emancipation, 414.
Capital and Labor, 249.

Convention of Southern States at Savannah,
81, 216, 807.

Cannibals All; or, Slaves without Masters, 542.
Census of the United States-Its Curiosities,
215.

Catholic Church, 567.

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Disunion, effects North and South, 588.
Dred Scott in the Supreme Court, 404.

East India Commerce, its value to the world,
604.

Education in Charleston-The College, 505;
Education Statistics North and South, 517.
Emigration, horrors of, 570.
Evils of the Times, 561.

Free Trade, 809, 555,

Free Trade and Direct Taxation, 884, 645.
Free Society-Its Tendencies-The New Dis-
organizing School of Andrews, 183.
Florida, 303.

Georgia, 302.

Great Britain-Her Dependence on American
Cottons, and the maintenance of Southern
Slavery, 265-Miseries of her Working Class-
es, 547.

Honduras Route to Pacific, 367.
Hope's Poems, 521.

Immigrants, sufferings of, 570.
Indirect Trade of the United States, 358.
Iron for Railroads made or imported into the
United States, 519.

Iron-Statistics and Geography of its Produc-
tions, Prices, Furnaces, Cost of Manufacture,
Production in the United States, Iron Furna-
ces of the United States, p. 44.

Laborer-His Rights and Duties, 486.
Labor and Capital. 249.

La Salle and the Mississippi, 13.

Middle Passage of Africans, 577.
Mississippi, 359.

Mississippi River-Its Discovery, and the Early
Explorers, 13.

Manufactures at the South-Lonisiana Cotton
Factory, Mobile Cotton Factory, Mobile Pa-
per Mill, 110.

Mormons and their Doings, 492.

North and South, Morality of Public Life in,
491; Education Statistics, 517.
New Orleans and French Steamers, 318.
Naval Establishment of the World, 601.

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