42 facture and its ultimate value will be best ascertained by the Tabular Statement which is immediately subjoined: The Quantity The Value of Yards. Sterling. There were made for sale, according to a 5 years average,} ending the 1st November, 1735, 4,554,128 £171.887 According to a 5 years average, ending 1st November, 1740, 4,667,424 184,334 The same, ending 1st November, 1745, - 5,073,721 209,778 The same, ending 1st November, 1750, 8,886,809 292,277 The same, ending 1st November, 1755, - 8,621,150 394,542 The same, ending 1st November, 1760, ... 10,302,886 433,644 The same, ending 1st November, 1765, - 12,253,635 539,183 The same, ending 1st November, 1770, 12,855,339 639,013 The same, ending 1st November, 1775, - 12,172,037 543,298 The same, ending 1st November, 1780, - 13,581,684 622,972 The same, ending 1st November, 1785. - 16,802,997 829,643 The same, ending 1st November, 1790, - 19,104,206 864,883 The same, ending 1st November, 1795, - 20,478,312 795,969 The same, ending 1st November, 1800, - 22,528,498 931,490 In the year 1801, -----. 25,271,155 1,018,642 Such, then, were the origin, the progress, and the greatest amount of a manufacture, which added to the opulence of the country a million a year. Yet this manufacture has been vastly surpassed by a rival, the cotton, which has arisen during late times, and has been called the staple of Scotland though the rude material of it be brought from afar (f). It is supposed that there are invested in this staple, for buildings and machinery, half a million of capital; and the annual produce of it is worth, to the many persons who are interested in this rich manufacture, upwards of three millions Sterling a year. Connected with the cotton manufactures is the printing of such goods, which, in calicoes and muslins, have been yearly carried much beyond four millions of yards. There has been introduced into this country a silk manufacture to a great length of ingenuity and value. Scotland has also woollen manufactories, which, according to ancient practice, work up many of the fleeces of her flocks for domestic uses. To all those must be added, amidst many smaller manufac- (j) Of cotton wool there were imported into Scotland, during 1755, 105,831 Ibs., which evince the infancy of this manufacture; and during 1800, 13,204,225 Ibs., that prove its youth.