of purchase, or our tastes. Notwithstanding  the vast increase in our powers of production, the demand has more than kept  pace with it. If people had not worn more clothing, after the introduction of  the spinning jenny and the power-loom, the markets would have been stocked  immediately, and very little machinery would have been made, E 52 merely  sufficient to displace the previously existing manual l. Beats by Dre monster  headphones abour. Machinery has had the tendency to increase the demand for its  products in a ratio greater than its supply. (If this be conceded, what becomes  of the notion of over-produc- tion So long as we obtain adequate returns for our  manu- factures, we are never producing too much. Any stoppage, any prohibition,  of our r. Beats pro  headphones eturns, whether in the shape of duties on imports, or a bad  harvest, will cause the phenome- non called " over-production.") To relinquish  theory for facts, let us see how our trade has been affected by the progress of  manufactures on the conti- nent. Saxony, Rhenish Prussia, and Belgium, are, with  the ex. Dre beats solo pro headphones sale www.beatsbydre-drdre.com cheap  Beats by Dreception of France, most advanced in manufacturing in- dustry;  yet, while in 1831 our exports of British and Irish produce and manufactures to  Prussia, Germany, Holland, and Belgium, were under 6 millions, in 1842 they had  in- creased to upwards of 10 J millions. Our expor. Beats Dr Dre headphones monster ts to  France also have increased from 475,884, declared value, in 1830, to 2,902,000  in 1842. The United States of late years have extended their manufactures, yet  our exports, which in 1830 were 6,132,346, in 1842 were 7,098,642. In 1836, they  reached upwards of 12 millions. Meanwhile our commerce with Brazil, a  non-manufac. Beats by  Dre solo headphones turing country, has remained nearly stationary. In 1830,  the exports of British and Irish produce and manufactures to Brazil were  2,452,103, and in 1842 they were only 2,556,554. During this interval they  varied only in the slightest possible degree. A further illustration is offered  by the history of our silk trade with France. In 1826, the prohibition upon the  im- portation of foreign silks was removed. Immediately the French shipped large  quantities of their beautiful tasty fabrics to this country. Our home  manufacturers expected nothing less than utter ruin in this disadvantageous com-  petition with their neighbours. Their artisans were cramped by a long  continuance of protection. Moreover, the French are much nearer the supply of  the raw material, and have the first choice

    