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The Salopian Journal

28/07/1824

Printer / Publisher: W. & J. Eddowes 
Volume Number: XXXI    Issue Number: 1591
No Pages: 4
 
 
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The Salopian Journal

Date of Article: 28/07/1824
Printer / Publisher: W. & J. Eddowes 
Address: Corn-Market, Shrewsbury
Volume Number: XXXI    Issue Number: 1591
No Pages: 4
Sourced from Dealer? No
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FMIMTE © BY W. Sc Ja EBBOWE& P^ RM^ IIAMBT This Paper is circulated in the most expeditious Manner through the adjoining Counties of ENGLAND and WALKS. Advertisements not exceeding Ten Lines, inserted at Six Shillings each. VOL. XXXI.— N°- 1591.] WEDNESDAY/ JULY 28, 1824. [ PRICE SEVEN PENCE. From an ancient Imperial Recipe. THE CORDIAL BALM OF ZURA; OR, PHOENIX OF LIFE, And Grand Be animal or of Nature: iprepawl anil Sold, Wlmltsale and Retail, at Dr. LAMEUTs London Medical Establishment, Queen- square, Bristol. INTRODUCTION. BR. LAMERT, in recommending; the celebrated Cordial Balm of Zura ; or, Phoenix of Life, to a discriminating'Public, disdains the Idea of following the Steps of those Precursors, who, by a vain Display of a little Learning, and a great deal of Ingenuity, mislead the Public; a Truth too frequently exemplified by Pretenders to Science in the present Day. Actuated by a spirit of genuine Philanthropy, he feels it his highest Gratification to announce, that in Vhe Balm of Zura, or Phoenix of Life, he possesses the means of alleviating, and bv due Perseverance, of completely annihilating tliose insidious Disorders, which not only deprive Life of its every Enjoyment, hut- sap the very Foundation of our Existence, and involve the Patient in a Vortex of premature, hut unavoidable Destruction. Governed solely by such Motives, so humane, genuine, and disinterested, Dr. L. cannot but ensure the Gratitude of the afflicted, the Approbation « if. the good, and th sincere Benediction ofMankind. On that Assurance he takes his stand, and invites the Suffering to come and be healed. ITS VIRTUES. u Like one condemned to leap a precipice, " And sees before his eyes the dept hs below, * 4 Stops short, and looks about for oiie kiuil shrub 4,1 To iueak his dreadful fall; so I look here 44 For friendly aid against the fears of death " The CORDIAL BALM OF ZIIRA, or Phamix of Life, ' forms the most powerful, stimulating, and highly flavoured Medicine in the whole Materia Mediea. I t is prepared from au Asiatic Berry, strongly resemb- ling that of the English Whitethorn ; and was tbe Result of the Labours of the renowned Remhert Dodoeus, Physician to the Turkish Emperor and his Harem, In 1578, a most Splendid Case of this in- valuable Cordial was sent by the Sultan to Queen Elizabeth, and was taken bv her Majesty as a nobl Renovator of the whole System. It has been found bv a most extensive and respectable private Practice, to he ihe most efficacious Medicine extant, for strengthening the Nerves, removing all Obstructions in the Stomach and- Lungs,- - cherishing " the Heart, reviving the Spirits, strengthening the ^ Memory, promoting Digestion, dispelling Flatulencies, dis- persing the Heartburn and Choleric Affections, pre- vents Apoplexy, purifies the Blood, removes Scorbutic Eruptions as well as Scrofula, and is of the highest Distinction in Gouty and- Rhenjnatic Disorders. It vivifies the Spinal Marrow^ and restores the Frame to Health and pristine Vigour. NERVOUS DISORDERS. In the tremendous catalogue of Diseases incidental to Mankind, those of the Nervous Description are the most complicate and difficult to cure. They resemble almost every Disease, and . scarcely two Persons are affected in a similar Manner ; thev are continually changing their Action, Shape, and Con dition, while, under every fresh Attack, the Patient feels some Syntptoins . be never before experienced. Thus the Mind often becomes a Prey to the most fatal Apprehensions, while the diseased Imagination forges those wild Chimeras, u hich perpet ually hannt and distvoss the Brain. " The Sun as it were goes down on the Heart, and the Shadows of the Evening close in on the Soul !" Such are the. sad Thoughts nnd distressing Feelings which agitate that ical Oojpct of Commiseration, a Nervous Patient. To such, what a Treasure will be found in the Cordial Balm of Zura ; or, Phoenix of Life ! The vita! Prin- ciple, under jts divine Operation, like the fabled Phoenix, springs from the Embers of a decayed Con- stitution, and rises to Happiness and Life, lleani* 1 mated. Renovated, and Ethei eatised. GENERAL SYMPTOMS. The Symptoms which precede, accompany, and follow this distressing Complaint are very'numerous. The following are the most prominent :— Great De- pression of Spirits, Tiuvidity, Starlings, Melancholy, Fickleness of'Tewapety Restlessness, Anxiety, and a painful Presentiment of Death. With its Increase, frequent Attacks of the Cramp; Head Ache, settled Pains in different Parts of the Body, Ihe Eyes are clouded, a continual Ringing in the Ears, Dullness of Hearing, alternate Chills and Flushes of- Heat, Weariness, Nausea, Loss of the, Appetite, Decay of Strength, Burning Heat in the Palms of the Hands and Soles of the Feet, a Sensation like that of cold. Water running down the Back, the Pulse quick, weak, and irregular, parched Tongue, violent Pal- pitations of the Heart, Difficulty of Breathing, and Convulsions. It is not difficult to point out the Means of relieving the Patient, but none. have ever proved so powerful, so efficacious, as the Cordial Balm of Zura ; or, Phoenix of Life: as a Restorer of Strength to internal Decay, it stands unequalled, ami may be relied on in producing immediate Relief in every Stage of Nervous Complaints. The immense Numbers re- stored to tbe full Blessings of Health within the last ( eighteen Months, from the very'Confines of the Grave, will best vouch for its surprising Qualities, and a single Trial urge more in its Behalf, than all the Powers of Rhetoric combined ! FEMALE COMPLAINTS. The nutritive and cleansing Powers of the Ralm of Zura, or Phoenix of Life, are peculiarly adapted toi the Delicacy of the. Female Habit and Constitution, under those necessary Operations, designed by the Great Creator, for the Preservation of Health, tbe Continuation of- 1 lie liftman Species, and the Felicity of Domestic Existence. It removes those Obstruc- tions, which too often nip in the1 Bud the Promise of the future Blossom. It promotes the Secretions, and preserves the Course of Nature from Impediment; comforts, exhilarates, and supports in those import- ant and peculiar Periods, Puberty," Maturity, and tbe Change of Life: for the want of which, many of those lovely, interesting, and •• valuable Ornaments of Creation sink into an untimely Grave. The - most sovereign Remedy yet found, is in the ' exalted and jnestiiriableVirtnea of the Cord i a I BaJ m of Z u r a, p r Phoenix of Life; the greatest Restorative of ex- hausted- Nature; by a due Perseverance in which, the whole' Muscular Fibres become invigorated, all the Solids which were relaxed, are braced, evely Office of iNatnre is properly performed. Seize then the Opportunity which offers, for the Cordial Balin of: Zura, or- Phoenix of Life, possesses Powers which almost exceed Credibility, in restoring languid Na- • ture, and invigorating the whole; Constitution. COLD BATHING. Nothing is more conducive to Health than the frequent Use of the. Cold Bath, when- not taken to Excess; a single Immersion will answer every Pur- pose ;• for remainrngi'too long in the Water is veVy injurious. Judiciously pursued, it braees the Fibres, and in every Period of Life gives Tone and Vigour jto the Body, it enables the vital Organs to perform their Functions, it hardens the Frame against Cold, Damp, and changeable Weather, and restrains ex- cessive Perspirations. Sea Water, for stimulating, cleansing, and bracing the Nerves, is far preferable to RiV^ V Water for any Debility.. To prevent. any ill Sensation after Bathing, such as Trethbljng, Pain in the Stomach, Cramp,. Giddiness, or Head- Ache, take a Table- spooiiful" of the Cordial Balm of Zura, or Phoenix; of Life!, Half ah Hour before Bathing, which will comfort the ' Intestines, throw a warm'Glow over the whole Frame, and create an excellent Appetite with a good Digestion. The CORDIAIL BALM or ZURA is prepared only by the sole Proprietor; Dr. LAMERT, ; tnd Sold; Whole- sale aiid Retail, at his Hous£; No. 54, Queen- square, Bristol; also by VV. & J EnoowtiS, Shrewsbury ; and by the principdf Medicine Venders ill this and the surrounding Counties.' Iu Bottles at 4s. 6d.; lis.: and £ 1: one lis.! Bottle contains, three at 4s. 6d. and lhat at a Pound six Times as much, wJiereby is a Saving of seven Shillings; Duty included. { fjr1 Beware of Impositions, as none are genuine but where the sole Proprietor's Name is blown on the Bottle; with the Initial of the Doctor's Name on the Cork, enveloped in the Asiatic Arms aud Directiuui. TO- MORROW. Ellesmere and Chester Canal NAVIGATION. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, ^ HAT the next GF. N ERAL ASSEM- . BLY of " The United Company of Propri- etors of the Ellesmere and Chester Canals," is appointed to he held at the Canal Office, \ n Elles- mere, on Thursday, the 29th Day of July, at one o'Clook in the Afternoon; when and w lie re the Proprietors of Shares of One Hundred Ppunds. euch, or upwards, in the said Canal, ate .- requested to attend by themselves or Proxies. HENRY POTTS, Clerk to the said Company. JUNE 28TH, 1824. TURN PUCE TOLLS. NOTICE is hereby given, , that the TOLLS arising* at the Toll Gates, imon tl| e Turnpike Road, leading from Morton Bridge, by West Felton, to Ellesmere, in the . Comity, of Salop, called or known by the, several Names of Retlnall, Whip Lane,. and Blackwaters'Gates, with i'. ci| nall and Tetchill Side Gates,, will be LET by AUC- TION, to the best Bidder, at ihe House of jlr. Baugh, known bj the: Sign of the New Inn, in. Ejiesmere,, in the said County of, Salop,, on Satur- day, the 31st. Day of July next, between the. Hours of Three and Four iu the Afternoon, in the Manner directed by tbe Act, passed in the Third Year of the Reign ( if His Majesty King George the Fourth, " For regulating Turnpike Roads ;" . which Toils produced the Inst Year the following Sums, above, tbe Expenses of collecting ; thein ; viz Rednall Gates ....: ...£ 53 0 0 Whip Lane Gate.., 10 0 0 Blackwaters Gate .78' 0, 0 Whoever happens fo be the hest Bidder, must, at the same Time, pay one Mouth in Vdvance ( if required) of the lle. it at which such - Toils may be Let, and give Security, with sufficient Suret es lo the Satisfaction of the Trustees of the sai. l- Tiirir. iikc Roads, for Payment of the Rent agreed for, and at such Times-, as they sljall direct. Pit PRITCHARD, Clerk to the Trustees of the said. Tufn. pike Roads Ellesmere, 29th Jane, 1824. Shrewsbury District of the Walling Street / load. TO CONTRACTORS. CgTIB Trustees of the above- mentioned ® District have, determined to make a NEW LINE OF ROAD, near tl'.'- KINGTON, to. avojd llie Horse Shoes Inn.— A Survey and Specification for executing the Work will be prepared on or, before the 3d Day of August; and they will he left with JOHN liAVKNslIAW, Esq . for tiie Inspection of Persons willing. ro contract for the Vork.— The Day for receiving ' readers will he ttdv. erli. sed in a future Paper; and, in the mean . Tim © S';. riu>, ili. i- s inSV be known at the Office, of Mr, PENSON, in Oswestry. Imposture Unmasked. m> WENLOCK RACE ® , Thursday, July 2.9th, 1824. ^ WEEPSTAKES of Ten Sovereigns each, for Horses, & c. of all Agep. Beilhy Thompson, Esq.' s gr. Ii. Sir Edward, 5 Years old M. G. Benson, Esq.' s Triumph, 4 Years old Francis Lawley, Esq.' s cli. c. Hero, 4 Years old Sir W. W. Wynn, Barl.' s ch. f. by Comus, 4 Years old John Mytton, Esq's Whittington, 4 Years old Sir Robert Lawley, Bart.' s oh. c. Hengist, 4 Years old SWEEPSTAKES of Five Sovereigns each, for Horses, kc. not thorough- bred. M. G. Benson, Esq.' s h. g. Mopus, 4 Years old John Mytton, Esq.' s ch. g. Sylvauus, 5 Years old F. Lawley, Esq.' s ch. g. by " Brother to Maidstone, ti Years old W. C. Curtis, Esq.' s br. in. by . Young Sorcerer, 4 Years old Ralph Benson, Esq.' s ch. g. by Brother to Maid- stone, Dain by Don Quixote, ( i Years old Beilby Thompson, Esq's . gr. in. by Fitzjames,. 6 Years old Mr G. Untlcrhill'sgr. g. by Friend Ned, 5 Years old Mr. Walmsley's g- r. li. by Bustard, 4 Years old. Sir W. W.' Wynn, Bart. F. Watford, Esq. John Beck, Esq. ami'Mi-.. Jobsou were Subscribers, but did not name. . * For Pi kc. for the abo •" No. 2. FIFTY POUNDS, the Gift of BEII. BY THOMP- SON, - Esq. for Maiden Horses, Bsc. of all Ages TJiree years old, tist. llllb.; four- years old, 8st. ; five- yeiirs old, 8st 10lb. ; six- years old and aged, 9st. Mb. '; Mares and Geldings allowed 31b. Heats, twice round the Course and a Distance. Horses, kc. for the above Plate, to be entered with the Clerk of the Races, al the White Mart Inn, iu Wenlock, on Monday Evening, the 26th of July," between the Hours of Six and Nine o'Clock. The Stakes to be paid to the Clerk of the Races before starling, or not. entitled though a Winner. All Dispute*.. to be determined by the Stewards, or whom tliey may appoint. The - Winner of each Slakeand Pli) te to pay One G, iii. ntfa ! o Ihe Cle, rk for Series and Weights, and Ten Shillings and. Sixpence tor ( he Trumpeter. No Person will be allowed to erect or . hare. any Booth, or sell any Liquor upon, the . Race Ground, except yearly . Subscribers, of One . Guinea to the Race Fund, nor without agreeing . wilh the Clerk of the Course; n , r will aiiy Shed, Stall, & c. be allowed without first agreeing with him for the same, M. G BENSON, Esq. ? S ds It. COLLINS, Esq. s Mt" aras' THOMAS PARDOE, Clerk of the Races. N. B. A MAIN of COCKS will he fought oil Thor- sdoy- and Friday, at the White Hart Pit, be- tween the tientleinen of'Shropshire and- Hereford shire, Jones aud'Erans, Feeders. | WEN OWENS left the Neighbour- ' hood of Llanrwst, in Wales, upwards of Forty Years ago, and went to live ut a Place called Hampton . Wood, in Shropshire, and as he was working in a Marl Pit ijpar that Place, Thirty- three Years npxt August, a Quantity of Marl fell upon him, and he was thereby killed; he was buried at Welsh Hampton Church Yard; he left a Daughter named Charlotte, who married one John Hayley or Euley ; he was a Tailor by Trade ; this Daughter, if living, would be ahout .42 Years of Age : If living, or ( dead) leaving Children, or if her Hushand'is living, On Application at Mr. EVANS'S Office, Carnar- von, they will have an Account of a considerable Property being due to them. lst June, 1824. IC. Particulars as, to Weights, Distance, above, Stakes, vide Racing Calendar,, HE progress of MF. IUT, although frequently assailed, is not itnpeiled by Envy and Detraction. The aggression of ambuscade terminates, it) dtifeut; and conscious rectitude ultimately triumphs in the attainment'of the grand object- puhlic approbation. The test of experi- ence is the guarantee of favor, . and has established WAURKN'S BLACKING in ge- neral estimation ; of which, there exists wot a stronger proof than the tacit acknow- ledgment ' of a host 6f servile . imitators, who, surreptitiously obtrude on the unwary a spurious preparation as the genuine, article, to the great disappointment of the unguarded; purchaser, and manifest injury of WARREN, whose . character ami interest by this iniquitous system are equally subject to detriment. It becomes there- fore an indispensable duty to C A U TION THE'FUBI. IC against the manoeuvres of UNPRINCIPLED VENDERS, who bavin; no character to lose, triad stimulated by avarice in their nefarious pursuits, aim at the acquisition of . money through any medium than that of honor! The original and matchless BLACKING bears, on each bottle a short direction, with . the; signet life '/{ istruwi, All others are- counterfeits; and in many instances the imposition labels are art- fully interlined with a different address, in very . smalt characters, between the more conspicuous ones of " No. 30," aitd " STRAND." It is earnestly recom- mended to Shopkeepers and others who are deceived by. baseilubrications of VVAII UEN'S- BLACKING, to return the detected trash to the source from whence it. came, and expose the machinations of rascality to merited obloquy. W Aim EN'S BLACKING is- sur- passingly brilliant;— it excludes damp ; gives pliancy to the leather; retains i- t. t- pristine virtue in all climates ; and, com- bining elegance with cimifort, is an article equally of indispensable fashion and utility. Sold by every respectable Vender in Town and Country, in bottles, at'id. lOd. 1 _! d. and 18d. each. SOLD AT Next of Kin of OWEN OWENS wanted. EPSTASTOJf IIOUS ® , NEAR IVEJI, SALOP, Co t> e ilet, FCR- JFLSHF. D, FOR A TERM OF YEARS, And entered upon at Michaelmas next. ^ aie^ bp auction. R0DINGT0N. At the, Bull's Head. Public House, in Rodingtot^ in the County of . Salop, ou Friday, the SOth pay of July instant, between the Hours of four and six in tbe Afternoon, in the following*, or such other Lots as shall be agreed upon, and subject to such Conditions, as will then and there be produced : LOT I. 4 I L that the said PUBLIC HOUSE, HL called the BULL'S- HEAD ( being a well- accus toined House), with the Slaughter House, Barn, Granary, Stables, Piggeries, and Appurtenances thereunto belonging. LOT II. A Piece of rich Pasture LAND, called the Townsend Piece, containing 2A. 0R. 33P. or thereabouts. LOT III. A very productive GARDEN, lying in a Southern Aspect, near : itodingtbi\~ Church, con- tain i ng 25 P^ i'clies or thereabouts. LOT IV. A Piece of excellent Arable LAND, called the Hemp Yard, containing oA. l- R. 3fc » P. or thereabouts. LOT V. A Piece of excellent Arable LAN D, adjoining the '. last- mentioned-.. Piece, called the Upper Broomy Leuspw, containing' 4A. OR, 5P. or thereabouts. LOT VI. Another Piece, of the same Quality ( adjoining the last. mentioned Piece), called the Lower Broomy Leasow, containingA. III. I3P. All the above- mentioned Premises are situate at Roding- ton aforesaid, were late in the Possession of Mrs. Hulse, deceased, but now of the surviving Trustee named iu the VViir of the late. Mr. oros'eph Hulse. Mr. PAGET, of High Ercall, will appoint a Person to shew the Premises ; and further Particulars may be had of him, or of. Mr. NOCK, Solicitor, Welling-- ton. flE MOUSE consists of Dining, Drawing, - and Breakfast Rooms, Butler's . Pantry, Store Room, and excellent Kitchen, with every requisite Office complete ; five Bed Rooms, together with Servants' Apartments ; two Coach- Ilouses, Stabling for six Horses, Cow- Houses, & c. 6: c ; a Walled and Kitchen Gardens, weli stocked with choice Fruit Trees ; with Twelve Acres of good Grass Land, and Six more may be had, if required. EOSTARTON HOUSE is on the Road from Shrews, bury to Chester, from which Places Coaches pass daily ; it is. distant from Wem 2 Miles, Whitchurch 7, and Salop ! 2. For further Particulars enquire of Mr CHURTON, Auctioneer, Whitchurch ; or Mr. THOMAS IRE- tNo, Wem. ( j^ . This Advertisement will not be continued; but shoul. d the House be Let, Notice will be given'. Murray's Grammar considerably improved. _— _ 0 This Doy i « publikbeU, tb^ 37th Eilition, considerably improved, Price 4s. bound, of AN ENGi. ISil GRAM. MAR. ada > t eil to ihe different C, lasses of learner*. Willi .011 Appendix, coutiiining Ru| es nn. l Observations tor as. lsliug Ihe more advanced. Studellls to write wilh Perspicuiiy and Accuracy. By LINDLEY MURRAY. Primed for Longman, , l) urst,; Rces, ( lrme, & Co and ( jarv<> v and DiirtuH, Lmiilon ;, and Wilson and Sous, York, Ofu'hon mai/. he had, by the same Author, An . A Bill OG\ i ENT . of - MURIi A Y'S ENGLISH GRAMMAR. . Dejigtled for the. younger Classes, o Learners : 80th Edition. Price Is. bou| uf. ENGI. ISil EXERCISES, adapted to MURRAY'S ENGLISH GitAMMAR. Designed for. ibe Benefit of private. Leai m IS, as well as for Ihe Use qf Schools ,31s( Ediiion.. P. ice- 2s. 611, bound. A, KEY lo . the.-' ENGLISH EXERCISE^, paleo- laled lo enable private Learners lo, hei'oilie their own Instructors, in Grauiui'ir aiid. Composition. Ifltl Edition. 2s. till, hound. The- Eveicises ami Key may he had together. Price 4s. ( id. An ENGLISH GRAMMAR, coniprehending l) ie PKlNCiPl. ES and RULES „ f tiie LANGUAGE, iilii'slruteil by ajipropri'ate Exercises, mill a Key to the Exercises. In 2 Vols. Svo. The F- uirlh Edition. Price , t'l. 1-., in- Boards. VVe are of Opinion, that this . Edition of Mr. Murriiv's Work on EagTish Griuinnar, deserves a Place in Libiaries, . atld will not . fail to, obtain it." — Ifn't,. Cril. FIRST. BOOK, for CHILDREN. 15th . Edition-. , 6d sewed. Au ENGLISH SPELLING BOOK ; with Reading Lessons, adapted to llie Capacities of Children. 31st Edition. Pi ice, l. s, fid, bull ml. INTRODUCTION to, the ENGLISH READER ; , a Selection of'Pieces, in Prose aud Poetry, See. 20th Ediiion. 3s, bound. THE ENGLISH READER; or, Pieces in Prose and Poetry, selected from Ihe best Writers. De- signed to assist young Persons lo read with Propriety d Etfeet. Willi a few. pteliatinary Observations oi I lie Principles of good Reading. 17th Ediiion. Price 4s. ( id. hound. SEQUEL to the ENGLISH RF.. ADER; or. Ele- gant Selections iu Prose and Pot- try. ( jth Ediiion, Price 4s. ( id.' hound. INTRODUCTION AU LEC'TEUR FRANCOIS : i Recueil de Pieces choises: avec I'Explicaiion ties Mioiistiies et des Phrases diffieiles, qui s'y trou- vent. 4ih, Edli. in l2mo. Price 3s. 6tl;, bound. LECTEUR FRANCOIS; ou Recueil tie Pieces, en Prose el eu Vers, tiroes this Meiiloures Eerivains, pour selvir a pttdVeiioiiiier les jeuues Gens tlaus la . euliite; a eiehtlre leur contioisuiice de la Lungiie Fraiifoise. 4tTi Edition." 5s. bound. FIRST . LESSONS in ENGLISH GRAMMAR, ndapletl to ibe . Capacities of Children, from Six to Ten Years old. Designed as an introduction to the Abridgment of Murray's Grammar. A new Edition. Price 9d. sewed. GRAMMATICAL QUESTIONS, adapted lo tbe Grammar of LINDLEY MUKRAY, wilh Notes.; By C. BRADLEY, A. M. Price 2s.( id. boiiud. The Filili Edition. . For Worms, Fitsr Pains in the Stomach, tj'C. orn at 12 CAPITAL EU EE HOLD ESTATE, SHROPSHIRE; Comprising 815 Acres of excellent Land, Tithe- free ; with. a Gentleman's Residence, Farmitig Buddings, a Manor % Advoxason. BY MESSRS. BURIIFLE & SONS, At Garraway's Coffee House, Change Alley, C hill, . Loudon, oii Friday, the ,30TH of July, J o'Clock^ in Ooe'Lot: A \ TAl. u4Bhbi and compact Freehojd t\. Property, called PREEN LODGE, situate at CiiDR^ H PREEN, 5, Miles fiom M ich. Wenlock, , and:. 9fMill's from Sl) vevysb. ury, in a, fine, Part. of the County of Salop : couipi isiug a suitable Residence for a GeotSeman, presenting from the Terrace, of the HoIIfee a View of the'CIce Hills, the \ Vrekin3 and a great Extent of magnincent, Scenery.. Tlu House avid 272A. 2R. 2> P are in Hand 174A. 311 21 P. are let to respectable Tenants' « » .: hWill, at Ueiits anioniitiiig to:£ j. i5. per AnniinV; and 307A. 2i(. ; 29P. let on Lease in 1762 on two Lives now ogKi 73 and 7d Years, at the low Rent of-£ J60. 10s, per Annum, / The Estate is novv of theatinoaf'ValiVe, o- f !'£ 900, independent of the Adytlwsun of Church Preen, and Manor " extendipg ov'er 1100 Acres 1 of Laud. The Estate . may be viewed 54 Dav j prec('< liug the Sale, when Printed Particulars,' with a Plan of the Estate, may be had on the Prehiises ; at t) i White HartWeftIOCK ; " Fox, Shrewsbury ; Castle, B f i d gn orth: Talbot, C h urc Ir S tret to n ; J e r n i n g h a m Arms, Slwtfnal ; Talbot, Drayton ; Angel and Grown tnns^ Ludlow ; Crowii, : Kiddi1 rminstoj' the Place, of Sale ; and of Messrs. BURSELL aud SONS, No. 13, Tokenhouse Yard, Lofh. bury, London SHROPSHIRE. TO CAPITALIST'S. EXTESSIVE COMPACT IN THE COUNTY OF SALOP, • COMPRISING . iBiUscro of eOigjnorc an35 © hretton, AND UPWABDS OF 1101) ACRES OF FF. RTII. E LAXD. TO BE SOLD BY AUCTION, BY MR. VVYLEY, At the Lion Inn, in Shrewsbury, on Saturday, the 14th Day of August next, at Five o'Clock in the Afternoon : ng^ H'E MANOR of WIGMORE, in the Countv of Salop ; with au eligible ES- TATE at WIGMORE, in the'Occupation of John and William Sambrooke, William Jones, David Evans, and John Jones, in the Parish of West- bnrv, containing Upwards of 288 Acres of Arable, Meadow, and. Pasture Land, situate near to Coal and Lime, and adjoining the Turnpike Road, about Midway between Shrewsbury and Welsh Pool. Also, the M ANOR of GRETTON, in the County of Salop ; with several valuable FARMS and LANDS, in the Occupations of Daniel Lowe, Mrs. Margaret Harris, James Galliers, Thomas Hainer, William Sankey, and Francis George, containing upwards of 80( 1 Acres of Arable, Meadow, Pasture, liml Wood Land, situate at URETTON, in the Parishes of Cardingtoii and Rtislihury, and at THE GIL BURY, EAVHVALL, and W A I. LrUN DER- I1AYWOOD, in ihe said, Purish of Rushbiiry, near and adjoining the Turnpike Road leading from Weulock to Lud ow, distltlit about 7 Miles f oni ihe former Place," 18 Miles fr. iui the latter, and 12 from Shrewsbury. Laud- Tax redeemed and Parochial Taxes niodcr- rate-. The Premises will be put op in the following, or such other ' Lois'. as shall be agreed upon at tbe Time oi Sale, namely : Waters Upton, Shropshire. TO RE SOLD I5Y PRIVATE CONTR ACT, AVALUABLE FREEHOLD ESTA1 E, si- . tuate at WATERS UPTON, in the County of Salop, containing upwards of 208 Acres of Arable, Meadow, it Pasture Land, io o high Slate ofCultiva- tion, well adapted to the Turnip System of Husband- ry, in the several Occupations of Thomas Timmis, John Meadows, John Matthews, Thomas Bates, John Turner, William Pidgeou, and Anne Evans, OS Tenants at Will. The Turnpike Road from Wellington to Market Dravtou goes thiongh the Village, which is four Miles distant from Welling, ton, and near to Lime and Coal. The Tenants will shew the Premises; and for further Particulars, and to treat for the same, apply to Jllr. EMERY, Burcott, Salop; or to Messrs". DCKES k SAT.!', Attoruies, Shrewsbury, al whose Office a Map of the Estate may be seen. CI}* fistrfrton fpaU ^ uts. To be SOLD by Private Contract, AVALUABLE Freehold ESTATE, divided into TWO compact FARMS, with convenient Houses and Buildings in a good Slate of Repair, situate at ASTERTON, in the Paiisli of Noi bury, and in the County of Salop, containing together upwards of 233 Acres of Arable, Meadow', Pasture, and Wood Land, with extensive aud valu- able Right of Common, and Let to respectable Tenants at Will ; subject to Tithes, and also to a , anti- Tax of £ 7 7s. 2d. per Annum, ami to a Chief Rent of 8s. 4d. payable to the Earl . or* P, owls The Estate is near lo ihtfiTiernpike Road lending rom Shrewsbury to Bishop's Castle, and is six iles distant from the latter Place. The Tenants will shew the Premises ; autl for an Inspection of the Map, autl for further Particulars and Selling Price, apply to Mr. WVI. EV, of Ad- inaston, Salop; or to Messrs. DCKES and SALT, Attornies at Law, Shrewsbury, bv Auction. Mo ntgomerysh ire. FREEH03LDJE35TAT 3. At the Eagles Inn, in the Town of Machynlleth, in tlie said County, ou Saturday, the 7th Din of August next, between the Hours of six and ei- rht o'Clock in tbe Afternoon, subject to Conditions then to he produced: ALi. that M tssuAGE, TENEMENT, and LANDS, with tbe Appurtenances thereunto belonging, eal'etl or known by the Name of TYDDYN. Y- PLAS, situate in Ihe Parish of MACHYNLLETH, in the said County of Montgomerv intaining by Admeasurement 90A. 2R. OP. ( be le same more or less) of A raid", Meadow, Pasture and Wood Land, with an ex'ensive SHEEPWALK adjoining, now in the Occupation of Mr. Rowland Pritehartl, the Proprietor. For Particulars apply ti, the said Mr PRrrcHARn; Mr. HUGH DAVI- KS, SO icitor, Machynlleth, at whose Office a Map of the Estate may be seen. TI' T " 0 SJ1 — i -- — ; ' ll. il i .</>• IW _ : -- ; V> : • • — • , o Z > H - = 3 - c; P ^ ~ : 1 i.' a-. a.; 12' y. s C? 3" ^ 2 : o = : P- O : vZ > & C 3 J- » ~ » " ' = o = 5 o=- = s TI S-"' S c. S ? Sr § g^ s » S to c. t = i. ^ J I g ??• 2 ; , Shrew/ iIrvry,\ ry EnDO\ vnsv ROGERS AT Co. URATTON, STATHAM, — ;—— . PRL'RY, MOKGAN anil ,. ASTEHI. BY, JON ES^ D. wir. s, —' NEVETT, — ILL'M PHR EYS. Wem, KYNASTON. Oswestry,... EDWAHDS. . Ellesmere,.. BAUGH, —— FURMSTON. H elthpoirl, EVANS, OWEN, JO- MES, ——— - GRIFFITHS., It'ehlock .. (' LIVELY. tladnet, PACE, lllGinis. Drayton,... Rinr. WAY. Newport... JONES. '. OWE. Shiffnai,.... IIARIMNG. WELLINGTON, HOI I. STON 8C jSjlJTH. Ironl/. rJt/^ e, Cii. iLZiiR( iooK. LLWOOR,.... HUGHKS, - I- . GHIEFITH. lifda ( DALIES. Carnarvon,, O. WEN, WILLIAMS. t) olgtlly,\ V) i.;. iAM9ts SOM Hfilyhecid,.. JONES, RICHARDS. A* aph, OWEN. Alierxely,.. DAVIES. Aydwch,.., ROBERTS. Convua.;/,..., ROBERTS. Hqrrnouth,, GHIEFITHS. Beaumaris, , AW- EN. MS, are . the cause of many inter- nl f- a ill i-. t io ns, which vary so much; in their eav- cts thai they may lie mistaken bv the most emi- nent physician, iSnd prove equally fatal to tbe cousti-' unions ot adults and chifdren ; though tbe latter more. ^ xteysively sutl'er from their destructive ra- vages. Their more usual symptoms ate FITS, PAINS IN THE STOMACH, SIDE, AND HEAD, Loss OF APPE- TITE, AND PALE, LANGUID, AND EMACIATED. APPEAR- ANCE IN THE PIVTIENT. The extraordinary efficacy of CHiNG's PATENT WORM LOZENG& S in ail such Complaints,, as well as iu Obstructions in the Bowels, and every disorder where opening or cleans, ug physic is reqnivetl, is so universally known, and has been public!) jis kn'owledged by so many per^ tniis of ( listitkeii-. il ami rank in society, that it is unneces- sary here to enlarge on their peculiar virtues. Soil! in Boxes at Is. ljd. aud 2s. Oil. by Butlers, Chemists, No. 4, Cjieapside. and 214, Rcgeni- Street, ( near i! m A/ gyle- Rooms), Lootlon ; 20, Waterloo Place, : Ediyb. urgb ; and u4, Sackville Si reel, Duhiin ; by W.' ac J. EDDOWTS, Shrewsbury ; and by lh, e principal Medicine Venders throughput the United Kingdom, Smpertant ^ FvfclioRJ icstaifs, ( LAND- TAX REDEEMED,) With Farm ijpuseSi Water Com Mill and Buildings, . Producing a reduced annual Rental of £ 10511. •• BY MR, WMTSTEVENS, At the- Auction Mart, London, on Friday, August 5th, 182- 1, '^ t 12- o'Clock,. in two Lots ( unless an acceptable_ Offer be previously made by Private Contract): AVEIIY valuable and improvable Free hold PROPERTY, presenting to the Capi- talist an excellent Opportunity for secure Invest- ment, situate in a beautiful Part of the County of 8- 4! op, only. 9 Miles from Ludlow, and within au ealy Distance of the neighbouring Markets, abound- ing- With Game, aiid affording excellent Fishing fro m a R i v e r w h i ch b 6 rd e r s th e Estate. LOT I. A very : fcligvib! e " and compact Freehold Estate: comprising WM ANO. Rof BRONCROFT, situate in a pictiiresijue and delightful Part of the County, adorned with sttfteiy Timber and thriving Plantations^ comprising in" the- Whole 827 Acres, 3 Roods, aud; 3l" Perches of exceedingly fine Arable, well- watered Meadow, Pasture, and Wood LAN D, bounded by the River Corve, the Whole lying ( with a ' trifling* Exception) within a Ring Fence, and including a WATER CORN MILL, with Meadow, Croft, and Mill Lands adjoining.— The Farm Houses and Buildings are conveniently placed upon various Parts of the Estate, in good Order, and let to respectable yearly Tenants, at extremely reduced Rents, amoitnting to ,£ 890. LOT II. A desirable Freehold ESTATE, capable of considerable Improvement, most eligibly situate at I N G A U DIN E, only 10 M iles from Ludlow, 12 fronVB'eWdley, and 14 from Bridgnorth, all excel- lent Market Towns.— s- The Estate comprises a com- fortable Farm House, with all requisite and- con- venient Outbuilding's, a Cottage and Garden, and 213 Acresj 3 Roods, and 38 Perches of Al'^ bje, Meadowy nnd Pasture Land, abounding , w, ith Gaine, ahd the Brook which is used for inigyting the Land affords excellent Trout Fishing-; in the Occupation of a respectable Tenant, ai; a very reduced Rent of £ 180. The Poor Rates upon the Whole of this f| esjruble Property are extremely low, and the Land- Tax is redeemed. The Property may be viewed with. Leave of the respective Tenants ; and Particulars,, with- Plans annexed, may be had at. th, e Crown, Ludlow ; Castle, Bridgnorth,; Lion, Kidderminster; White Hart, Much Wenlock ; Hop PoleJ Worcester.; Taibot,' Sbrewsbury ; of MrI TEnch, BYbtiifieId ^ near . Ludlow, who will forward a Person; to shew, the SRsiates^ of Mr. JOHN EILIOTT, SoliLMtor^ Rochdale, Lancashire ; Messrs. ELLIS, SONS, WALMSLEY, and GORTON, Solicitors, Chancery- Lane, aud of Mi-. WILLIAM STSVENS, Auctioneer, 36, Old Jewry, Loudon. T » 0 • » o 05 : ^ to Ci to JO cc: ( O « : © KI W ; » •>: to © to © : to — icr C : : — -- o JO © • : urfv K- J CO M 1- 4 os o » CO. 00 0* CO 10 to < 9 co -> CO © Ml- 5 W O C ^ CO © © s co fO ; ' i- f CO - H- A Plan of tbe Wiginore Estate will be - left with Mr. DAVID EVANS, of Upper Wi<; iiiore, ami another Plan of the Estates at Gretton, The Gllhury, East, wall, anil Wall- under- Haywood, with Mr. DANIE LOWE, of Grettou, on Monday, the l' 2th Instant and'other Plans, together with piloted Particulars^ will aiso he left, on the 26th Instant, at the Offices pf THE PRINTERS of this Paper; RICHARD GRIF- FITHS, ' Esq. Solicitor, Southampton Buildings, . Chancery- Lane, London ; Mr. WYLEY, of Admas- ton, near Wellington ; aud Mr. WILLIAM JEFFREYS, Dogpqle, Shrewsbury.' July 7thy 1824. For al! Disorders originating from Impur- ity of Blood, OS OBSTRUCTED PEESI'I RATIO N, SOLOMON'S ANTI- lMPETlGINESi a powerful Alterative and Purifier of the Blood and Juices. It requires u<> Confinement or llestrain in Diet; i^ Operation is gradual tlnjugb efficaci* and it seldom fails in. a. very sljort time to . evidence it salutary Effects. In the most inveterate Stages of Scurvy', Scorbutic ' Eruptions, Scrofula, or Ki Evil, Leprosy, ftp* 1 lie Venerea! Disease, as we lias all Disorders wljich originate from an impure or imper feet Slate of the Blood, the Auti- Impetigines a remedy of the greatest { efficacy. Sold, by Vg.'& J. EDDOWPS, Shrewsbury, and Ii all respectable Medicine Venders, Pi ice lis. per Bottle,- or .. four in one Family Botile for 33s. by which one lis. Bottle is saved, with tbe w, ords Saiiii. '• Solomon, ' Liverpool," engraved on th Stanip, witlvont which none are genuine. Patients desiring- Advice, may have it by inclosin a £ j Nofe with their Ca^ fc, add'res'sed to Gilead Ho. nse, nea. r Liverpool, and paying double Postage - Where may be had, the celebrated ASS TEH G EM' L O Tl OA\ ai> effectual Cure; for Eruptions on the FACE qiid SKIN, pai ticniarly Pimples, Blotches, Tetterp, Rin; worms, Tan, Sunbiirni, Freckles; Shingled, Prickly Heat, Redness of the" Nose, Neck, Arms, « kc. and Scoi- b'utTc and Cutaneous Eruptions of every' Descrip- tion, heiiig a most, valuable'Acijnis, iti'o'n and Appen^ dage to the Toilet. *** Price 4s. 6d. arid 2 » . Pd. a Bottle, Doty in- cluded.— Be ciiretnl to observe the Words..." ml. Solomon. Liverpool," engraved in the Stamp, with- out which none are genuine. Eligible Freehold Estate. BY TVTOVVE. At the Talbot Inn, Cleobury Mortimer, Salop, on Wednesilay, the 1Mb Day of August, 1824, between- the Hours of three and six oU./ ock in the Afternoon, and subject to . Conditions then to be produced : LI. that M ESSU AGE, Garden, with substantial and convenient Outbuildings, Hop Kilns, aud several Pieces of excellent Orchard ng, Meadow, Pasture, Viable, and Hop LAND, lying within a Ring. Fence, and containing 70 Acres or thereabouts, . ailed MAY HILL, situate in the Parish of BURFORD, in the County of Salop, adjoin, ing tlie . Turnpike Road from Cle'obtiry Mortimer tn Ten bury, within 5 Miles of the fortue'r and 3 of ilii latter, now in the Occupation of Mr Benjamin Palmer, one of the Proprietors, in the best'Stale of Cultivation, and Lantl- Tax redeemed. Mr. B. PALMER will shew the Premises; and for further Particulars apply to Mr. THOMAS 1 OXALL, Dudnell, near Clcobury Mortimer ; or Messrs. Fox and SotirnAM, Solicitors, in that town. The Timber lo be taken at a fair Valuation. Westwood, neur Much We it tech. At the Raven Inn, in Much Wenlock, in the County of Salop, on Monday, the Dili Duy of August, - 1824, at fl o'Clock Iu the Afternoon', either toge- ther, or in the. following Lots, us shall he agreed upon at the Time of Sale, and subject lo such Conditions as will be then and there produced : LOT I. \ LL that MESSUAGE or Duelling IS House, with the Barn, Stables, and other Buildings, Garden, Orchard, and seveial Pieces or Parcels of LAND thereto belonging and surround- ing the same, situate at WESTWOOD, in Ihe Parish of Much Wenlock aforesaid, containing together by Admeasurement, 84 Acres or thereabouts, and now in the Occupation of Mr. Robert Chester. LOT II. All tliose Two Pieces or Parcels of LAND, with the Appurtenances, dividetl from ihe last Lot bv the Brook or Drain which passes through the said Estate, containing together, by Admeasure- ment, 14 Acres or thereabouts, and now also in the Occupation of Mr. R. ibert Chester. Lor III. All that Piece or Parcel of LAND, wilh the Appurtenances, situate on the East Side of the Road which runs through the said Estate, contain- ing, by Admeasurement 8 Acres , ir thereabouts and now in the Occupation of tbe said Mr. Chester The Dwell ing House, which is unusually com- modious and fit for the Occupation of a Family of Respectability, and also the Buildings, have been lately erected ; and the Lands are of verv good Quality, and principally well adapted for ihe Cultivation of Turnips and Barley. The Estate is situate in a Country abounding with Game • within a short Distance of Lime ami Coal; H bruit' I Miie from Much Wenlock, 9 from Bridgnorth, 10 from Shift' ual and Wellington, 6 from C- oalbrookdale and 13 from Shrewsbury, and a Field's Brendlh from the Turnpike Road'leading from Much Wen- lock to Church Strettou.— A very considerable Quantity of young healthy Timber'is growing on the Property. Mr. Chester, the Tenant, will shew the Premises • and further Particulars may be had ou Application to Mr. MARSHALL, Solicitor, Roughtnn, near Pi id"-- uorth ; or to Messrs. PRITOHARD, Solicitors, Brose- ley. Pursuant to a Decree of the High Court of Chancery made in a Cause wherein MARGARET I'KE and others are Plaintiffs, and GEORGE WATKIN MARSH and others are Defendants, with the Appr.. batiou of JAMES STEPHEN, Esquire, one of the Masters of the said Court ; rjHHE MANOR of HOPE BOWDLI R, S ami the ADVOWSON or Perpetunl Right of Presentation to the RECTORY of HOPE BOWDI ER HOPE BOWD. LER HALL, and sundry FARM* TENEMENTS, WOODS, and TITHF. S, compi is' ing nearly 1440 Acres of Laud, situate in the Parishes of Hope Bovvdler, Eaton, Stokesav, and Church Stretton, iu the County of Salop, late the Property of WILLIAM CHENW^ HART, Esquire, deceased. " Notice of the Time and Place of Sale w ill shortly be advertised. Olid Particulars and Condition's wiii be printed. In the mean Time, Information wspeci. ing the Estate may be obtained of Mr.-'' BIGG Solicitor, Southampton Buildings, Chnneerv Lane, and Mr. Ta\ citi-, t>, Lincoln's Inn, London ; uf Mr. WOOD, Solicitor, Shrewsbury ; or Messrs. PBIT< JH A RD, Solicitors, Broseley. POSTSCRIPT. , Las oos , M, onduj/ Night, July 26,1824. PRICES OF FUNDS AT THE CLOSE. . Red..') per Cts. « 3| 3' per Ct. Cous. 92JJ . Imperial 3 per Cts. —- . 34 per Cents. 1011 , .-. 4 per Cent. Cons. 1O0| New; 4 per Cents. IOoJ. Bank Stock — Long Ann. 53 India Stock 287 India Bonds 84 Ex. Bills ( 2d) 40 Cons, for Aec. 92 § It is now slated, tbat neither British nor Hano- verian troops will be sent to Portugal but that our . naval force on that station wilt be considerably strengthened, so as to enable it to act as circum- stances may require. Wc believe ( says the Courier) that it, is intended upon tbe renewal of the Bank Charter, to alter or expunge the clause which restricts the number of partners in Banks, that the same freedom of trade iu banking may exist in this country as in Scot- land LIVERPOOL.— His Grace the Duke of Bur. eletigh has, for the last few days, been on a visit to Mr. Gladstone at Seaforth, having been introduced to that. Gentleman by Mr. Canning. This young Nobleman is now about 18 veais of age, has been several years at Eton College, aud soon to enter at Oxford. On, coining of age, he will succeed to two Dukedoms, those of Bucctengh aud Queeiis- berry, and the Earldom of Doncaster. It is also said lie is tbe direct descendant of tbe unfortunate Duke of Monmouth, and that be lias also a just claim. to that ancient title. The estate to which tbe Duke of Buccleug. il succeeds, ot the same time, is probably the largest, properly in the United King- dom, being a rental of £ 11111,000 a year in Scot- land, and ( on the death of• an old Lady.) a nearly equal amount in England. A claimant as heir al law of the Emmett estates in Yorkshire aud Lancashire, residing at Bradford, and now iu humble circumstances, is advancing his pretensions very vigorously, and the matter will soon be before the gentlemen of the Jong robe. It is staled that this properly is of the value of £' 20,000 a- jeai'.— Ltct/. s Mercury.. • A lei lei from Belfast slnies that the Marquis of . Londonderry, anxious to render his tenantry on the 54omit Stewint estaie contented aud happy, has re- duced the rental of his small farms from IDs. to 15s. per acre ; and is expending also a considerable sum in repairing the voltages, & c. with a view to in- troduce a system of cleanliness and comfort which can not fi. il " to contribute materially to the health of the inmates. If the proprietors of estates in Ireland would genpraikyfallow the example - et hy the Noble Marquis, we should not hear so much of Irish dis- tress.— Durham Advertiser. BANKRUPTS, JULY 24. — Nathaniel Lipsioinb Kentish, of Si. Michael's, near Winchester, land- surveyor and map- seller.- William Hilton, now or lale of, Brixton Hill, Surrey, stage- coach- master.— Richard Fancetl and Joseph Atkinson, of Albion- place, B ai tholgmeut- close, London, colourmen.— William Buttcy and Edwaid Bailey, of Stafford, boot and shoe- manufacturers and eordwaiuers.— Francis Nichols, now or late of Otley, Yorkshire, com. merchant and corn- badger. - Win. M'George, of Lower Fore- street, Lambeth, Surrey, brewer.— Charles Dubois, late of King- st. eet, Coveut- gard^ n Middlesex, auctioneer. — William John Wake and Thomas Martin Wake, of South wick, Durham, liin'e- hnrners and ship- buildeis. On Saturday last, John Kendrick, innholder, &.<•. late of Toddiugtou, was committed to Glouces- ter Gaol, for not giving satisfactory answers lo questions proposed by the Commissioners under, a Commission of Bankruptcy awarded against the said John Kendrick. A series of Calcutta Government Gazette* have keen received lo the 6th of March, which contain siutie details of the first operations of the war against lite Burmese II appears, that the enemy h< i poured down io great numbers, and attempted to secure possession, of the country by erecting stoekmles to cover his positions, skilfully selecting the strongest and most advantageous grounds to establish himself and plant his fortifications. From several of these he was gallantly driven by Ihe force Hiider Lieut.- Col. Buwen, though at one time there appeared to have been not less than 5000 Burmese engaged. The last attack, however, was not so successful, and the British detachment was obliged lo retire, after experiencing a loss of several officers and 150 sepoys killed and wounded. That of ( Ire enemy was still more severe, though he repelled the storming party. It is said to have amounted to 500 men; and a few days after lie voluntarily eva^ cniited the stockades which he had so bravely de. fended. The British having by, that time received reinforcements, had resumed the offensive and moved forward in pursuit. A. suivey of the River Thames has foecn taken hy several noblemen and gentlemen for the purpose of. considering a plan for improving the bank of Ihe river; the Duke of York, llie Duke of Wellington, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Mr. fluskisson, Lord Palnierston, the Duke of Rutland, & c. were present. The plan, as stated by Colonel Trench, M P. was to make a magnificent quay of com niuniratiou from New Loudon Bridge to Scotland Yard, thus connecting Charing Cross and White- hall with the heart of Ihe City, and afford- ing to the inhabitants a healthful and beautiful promenade and carriage- road. The quay to be 80 feet wide, with a foot path on each side, to be separated by rows of trees and lamps from the Carriage- road iu the centre. He proposed to pro- ject a pier into the river from Scotland- yard, and from its extremity lo carry a terrace on arches to the extremity of Waterloo Bridge 25 feet high, and to be 110 feet broad, for the purpose of erecting bouses, to combine profit with amusement, In fact, it would be a new street, of 2000 feet in length, 70 m breadth in front of houses, which would be 40 feet, The facade to be divided iulo three buildings, witb two intervals, ou each of which might be placed a handsome fountain, and by using tide- mills to command a supply of water, they might be formed into jets U'eau 50 or 60 fce| high. Government have given orders for every alien lion and respect lo be shown to the remains of the lale King aud Queen of Ihe . Sandwich Islands in their conveyance to O. vyhee, for which purpose the Blonde frigate, Lord Byron, is ordered lo receive them, together wilh the Admiral and suite, and lo proceed lo that Island. Saturday moroinir, about 4 o'clock, an alarming fire broke out in the bouse of Mr. Jones, a milk man, No 117, Chancery- lane, which raged with great t'urv, and notwithstanding tbe exertions of Ihe Bremen aud engines, totally destroyed that, its' well as the IwO adjoining houses, occupied by Mr Bailey, a printer, and Mr. Newman, a butcher and . damaged several houses situated al the back of these premises. Some of the inhabitants very narrowly escaped with their lives. To the. Editor of the Salopian journal. SIR,. The number of fatal cases that have lately oc- curred from HYDROPHOBIA, obliges me iu common humanity to state a ease that came under my own observation. The first symptoms were observed about 8 o'clock on a Friday afternoon, ou a thin tall man, a perfect stranger to all about him: by ten Ihe nature of the disease was ascertained beyond all doubt.; the convulsions were most violent, it re- quired four strong men to hold him-- at 11, under the direction of a very experienced surgeon, sixty ounces of b| nod were, taken from .. the arm ; he be- came gradually caltn, and remained nearly half an hour in a stateof insensibility ; an anodyne draught was Swallowed without great difficulty, and the patient was able to give an account where his friends were to be found ( he had been bitten by a rabid horse six weeks previous) : lie enjoyed several hours' sleep, and awoke with only a slight liead- ach and excessive debility : about six the following evening the convulsions returned ; the bleeding could not be repeated ; two ounces of strong mer- curial ointment were rubbed in on the sides by two men : at. 12 the violence of the attack began to abate : the mercurial, friction was repeated in the morning, but in a much smaller degree ; on the following evening the convulsions returned more slightly ; the effect of the mercurial frictions was now become very great, excessive salivation eame on ; Ihe symptoms of hydrophobia did not again return ; and in fourteen days alter the first attack he was able lo return home, and continued in per- fect health for two years, since which time I have not seen him. 1 have given the above ease in as few words as possible ; you are at liberty to refer any person to me who may wish to make further enquiries ; hut the sole treatment of any importance was the mercurial fiictiouaiid bleeding. SHREWSBURY. J. W. We have the melancholy satisfaction of slating, that the body of Mr. J. H. Wicksleed, whose untimely death by drowning we recorded in a former journal, has been found ; and that two of his friends' kindly went over from Glasgow lo Loch Katrine, in order. to pay Ihe last mournful duties to his remains. Ou . Saturday night hist, between ten and eleven o'clock,.'! working engineer, named Shaw, ran with such violence against the ripples of a cart negli. gently left standing in Hil.' s Lane, in this town, that he was so much injured in ihe chest as lo cause his death on the following night.— The Coroner's Inquest found a verdict accordingly, with a deddaiid of £ 5 on the cart, & c. A handsome monument, with an appropriate inscription from the pen of the Rev. J. Gilpin, A. M. of Wrnckwardlue, lias been erected iu the church yard of Wellington, in this county, to the memory of the late Rev. J. Eytnii, Vicar of that parish, and Rector of Eytou. This monument w as erected by the parishioners, as a memorial of their unfeigned respect. MR. C. ROSE, SUHGEON- DENTIST, At Mr. PALMER'S, Pride Hill, Shrewsbury, KESPECTFULLY returns Thanks to his numerous Friends and the Public for the. continually increasing Encouragement lie lias' received during this his Fourth Annual Visit to SHREWSBURY, which has detained him since the 12th of April ; and begs to inform them that his icted before the Mayor, in damages and costs I Engagements in DUBLIN will require bis Presence " ' " " - - 1 tlvere i « r about a Fortnight. HIS ARTIFICIAL TEETH Are WARRANTED to appear an exact and beautiful Resemblance of the Natural Teeth • to answer ef- fectual ly for- Mastication and Articulation ^ and to he perfectly secure and comfortable in the Mouth, without the . Else of Ligatures, Twisting- Wires, or of any Thin. gr injurious, painful, or offensive tothe Wearer,, who can. take them out and replace them at Pleasure.- • porting. SHROPSHIRE FOX HOUNDS.— A MEETING of the Commiltee of Subscribers to these Hounds took place on Thursday last; when a subscription was entered into for the purpose of erecting County Kennel and Stables in this town or neigh- bourhood. At the late sale of , the stud of E. L. Charlton, Esq al Ludford Pai: k, that geiltlcttirfn declined selling the celebrated horse Master Henry for 1850 guineas, B r id cf north Races.— Thursday, July 22d, t he Sweepstakes of .60 guineas,, for three- year olds, was won by Mr. Painter's b. f. Sarsaparilla ( rode by J.. CheswassJ, beating S'ir'. ti. Pilot's b. t. Miss Robsoa.— The Member's Plate of ^ 50, gi ven l) y; T. Whitmore, Esq. was won, at two heats, by Mr. Gisborne's b. c. by Fillio da Puta ( rode by H. Arthur), beating Mr. Patrick's b. f. Actress; Mr. Lord's c. Clansman, fell.\ On Friday, the Sweepstakes of GOgs. for all ages, was won, by Sir G. PigOt's Patshull ( rode by - H. Arthur), beating Sir | l yrwhitfc. Jones's gT- h. Sir Edward.-^ The Member's Purse of1 £ 50, given by W- W. Whit, more, Esq. was won, at two h& its, by. Mr. Geary's br. b. Libertine ( rode by" J. Carr), beating Mr. fio wmuns; : br. g. Little Driver, Mr. Lord's Clansman, and Mr. A,; Jones's br.' gi by Lismaba^ 4- Tbe , Hunter's Stakes of. £ gs. each ( 7 subscribers), with - 15gs. adHed by the toWn, Was walked over for by Mr. T. Picker, mill's ch. g. Sylvanus. ' Nottingham Races — Tuesday, July 20th, His ] Majesty's Plate of lOOgs. was won by Sir W. Wynne's O^ ghovit, in two heats, beating Lord Hancliffe's Fear nought and itnotheFi-- rThe. Year- iing Stakes waswoii by, Sirs. W. Wynne's Rebecca, beating Mr. Platel's Contention," The Gold Cup was won by Admiral ^ Sotherou's,. Active, beating Mr. Heatlicote's Rem Deer, and four others.— The SHREWSBURY. WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1824. rgfp The Sale of the Broncrnft nnd Ingardine Estates, will lake place on THURSDA Y, tlie& th of August, and not pi Friday, as advertised in our Ist page. A " CONSTANT READER," who writes about the Abbey Clock, should have favoured us with his name. MARRIED. On Saturday, the 24th inst. at Ashford Bowdler by the Rev. Dr, Sytuons, Mr. Jaines Dnvies, at torliey, ' if Ludlow, to Miss Bright, of Birmingham On Monday last, nt St. Alkinoud's, by the Rev J Richards, Mr. JamesGiltins, to Elizabeth, third daughter of Mrs. Hanmer, Pride Hill, in this town DIED. On Monday, the 10th instant, at Oswestry, aged 88; Alice, relict of the ' lii'te, John Cro, xoU, Esq Maiiy of her poor neighbours, whom she fed ii secret, will have cause to lament her death. He unostentatious piety was hest known to her ovv fiiinilv. It may be said of her, if it. ever was trill, said of any woman—" He. r children arose up and called her blessed, her husband also, and be praised her." • On the 15th instant, at Islington, after a long and severe illness,' Mrs. Susannah Sparke, sister to Mrs. Chambers, Walworth, Surrey, anil aunt to Samuel Chambers, Esq Abbey Foregat'e. . . Ou, Wednesday last,' at Bridgnorth, iu his 81st - year; Joseph Spnrkes, Esq. <} n Thursday last, in this town, after a lingering . illness, Sirs'. Ann Bather, aged 60. Visiting Clergyman this week at the InfimVary, the Rev. James Matthews : — House Visitors,; Mr. Thomas Brocas and Mr. Thomas Cooke. ' The Degree of A B. has been cmifi rrid upon Mr. Stephen Donne, of St. John's College, Cam. bridge. ..,,,.; As tbe Chester and Hereford mail roach was coming from the former place to this town yesterday morning, on passing by a place. called CaJjes Bank ( about three miles from Wrexham), where there is a small bridge and a new piece of road making-, whilst the old road is narrowed so much as barely to leai e room for a carriage to pass, the horses swerved, aud the wheels of the coach going against one side of. lhe bank, if was unfortunately upsc); there were thiee. inside passengers, and six { lujpM'dfpj the coachman aud guard) outside : two gentlemen Were very much bruised ; and, we are extremely s'drrv to say, that one lady ( an outside passenger) had her thigh broke, and was obliged to be left at a cottage near the spot. We ane happy to state that no blaiue whatever is attached to the coachman or guard, and that the coach was going at a slow pace at the time ; but onr informant hopes, that the trifling job of reparation or alteration, which has been so long in doing, at the place where the accident oceurred, will have the prompt attention of the Road Stirveyor. and Commissioners. CAUTION Yesterday, James Edwstrds was* convicted before the Mayor, 10s. 6d. for throwing stones over ihe walt « - of the County Prison on Sunday morning lasf.-. TIie offender had, previously to committing the offence,, been confined iu the Gaol. Committed to our Comity Gaol", Jvillti - tee, charged with stealing a silver watch and a pair. of. shoes, the property of Thomas Watkiss, ofCleobury North. Edward Downesy of Bishop's Castle, charged, on the oaths of the Overseers of the said Borough, with running away and leaving his family charge- able to the said; Borough, has been committed to our County Gaol! for. three months, to bard labour, {; — On his." way to prison, when near PlilWrbatehi Dowues so violently assaulted and beat. With a ham- mer James Weaver, the constable wirertad him in charge, that the assistance of some'persons who I happened to be near the spot was requisite m. ordfer to secure him. Weaver now lies in ibis town in a very dangerous state.— Tbe prisoner was conveyed . from Bishop's Castle ill a cart; the hammer formed a pait of some tools which he brought to work with in prison; and having contrived to loosen, himself from the chain which seemed him inside the cart, he jumped oitt, and committed the assault as above stated. FREEBOM OF THE CITY or CHESTER — The Chester Courant says—" We cuirnow inform our readers with an assurance bdrdering ou cer. t& inty , that a cause of vital importance tothe city, will come on at our approaching assizes, which commence on Monday, tile6th of September. The nominal plaintiffs in' the cause are the Treasurers of tbe city versus Williams, tanner, who has ob- jected to petition for his freedom ; and the substan- tial question to be decided is, whether the corpor- ation can compel persons exercising trades Within the citv to purchase their freedom. We are very glad that this point is likely to be set at rest by this action, particularly as great. mttrmurings have arisen from a doubt as to the legality of'the prac- tice hitherto adopted ; and we wish that another point could be settled with it, but which we fear will not he involved in the decision, if it should be favourable to t! " Corporation right, namely, whether the corporate body possess the poweV of. fixing at. its own discretion the amount of the fine to be imposed. Great preparations are making on both, sides tor the legal contest, the result of which is viewed with in- tense interest. Of Course it will be a special jury case. It is understood, that the Solicitor- General, Mr. Wetherell, Mr. Tyrwhitt, the Recorder, Mr D. F. Jones, and Mr. George, are retained for the plaintiffs; while Mr. Sergeant Cross, Mi'. Willinnis, and Mr. Parke, are to fight the legal battle of the defendant.'" igOMSf- JOarmtttg. OAT SHEAF, PITCHFORD. FREDERICK CORRtNGHAM OST respectfully informs his Friends and the Public, that his HOUSE- WARM- ING will take. Place on THURSDAY, the 5th Day of, August, when he shall feel obliged to those Gentlemen who please to favour him with their Company. PRESIDENTS. Mr. J. GRIFFITHS, Cound, Mr. J. W. WATSON, Shrewsbury, Mr. W. C. CURTIS, Dorrington', Mr. J. BOWDLER, Shrewsbury. (£ § » Dinner on, the Table at Three o'clock. WJOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the ASSIZES for the County of SALOP i will be held at SHREWSBURY, in and for the said County, on WEDNESDAY, the ELEVENTH Day of AUGU ST, 1824 ; when the Jurors are required to be punctual ill their Attendance. All Prosecutors and Witnesses are hereby re- quited to take Notice, that they must be parliculat aud exact ill attcudiug in due and proper Time to give Instructions for their several Bills of Indict- ment, in Order that the Business of the Assizes ] may not be retarded. JOHN W1NGF1ELD, Esquire, Sheriff. tOGIEJRIAKr'SYSTfeM ' S V J- Wf • : . v • tr Mlisic. fiL EDUCA TlONt Dr. Butter'. Classical Geogra\ <: phy, Sfc. . Jljlaidett'^ l^-' wkS^ wdA'by Mr. Thompson's Evelina, after; three heats, beating Lord Fitzwilliam's Nitrogen and ano- ther.. Nitrpgen won the second heat. On Wednesday, tlie Sherwood Stakes of 25gs. each, for threes- year oldsj was % on by Mr." Houldswortfi's The But- ler, beating Sir W. Wynne's Rebecca, and Sir J. - Byrig's ch. c. Ama'dis.— 6 to 4 on the winner.— The Macaroni Stakes of 20gs. each, was won, by Mr., Charlton's b. f. Fair ROsaluVd, in three heats, beating Mr. Platel's Glumdel- clith, who won the ' Second, heat.— 1Tiie County MenSbers' Plate of £ 60 was won by ; Mr. Houldsworth's br, f. Miss; Ma I thy,, iu two heats, beating Lorti ' Anson's br. f.' Cheshire Lass: 3 to 1 on the winner. • . ;; iOu. Thursday,.. the Handicap. Stakes of lOgs. each, with £ 20 added, were oil by Mr. Mouldsworth's br, c The Butler, beating Mr. Heath, cote's Rein Deert and the Hon. Mr. Petre's br. c. Izenoff: 5 to 2 against The Butler, 7 to 4 on Rein Deer: won cleverly.--- The Sweepstakes of 25gs. each, for two- year, olds, was won by Mr. Platel's Convic- tion, beating Mr. Houldsworth's Miss CrackLiami, and the Hon. Mr. Pp. tie's b. f, by Interpreter; 5 to 4 against the wirtner.--- Mr. Wigfull's br. g. iiittle Driver walked over, for the all- aged. Sweepstakes of 25gs. each, Cheltenham Races, last week, were remarkably well'attended, and the ui> varying fineness of the weather tended much to add to the splendour of the scene. The course Was daily honoured by the presence Of his Royal H ighness the Duke of Gloucester, arid hosts of fashionables from Cheltenham, besides, an immense concou^ e of persons from all parts of the surrounding country • and the sport in general was productive of much gtatification to all but the knowing ones,. who, in several ot the most interesting rvms, were on the wrong side. ' First Dny, Wednesday, July 21.— The Prestbury Stakes of 30 sov. each, h, ft. with 50 sov. added from the tund, for all ages; three- years old course; 5 sov. forfeit if declared, \ The winner to " run on the third day of the meeting with as many of tlie bedten horses as may challenge him, for 30 sov.. each, he Carrying 5lb. extra, same distance, pro- vided they challenge before 8 o'clock on - the evening of the race, to the Secretary of the Cheltenham Turf Cliib: The 5 sov. forfeits to go to the winner of the Challenge; if no challenge, to go to the original winner ; second horse on the first day'to'siive his stake. Ten subscribers; five declared forfeit. : : Mr. G. Yates's Guy Fauxv 3 yrs. - - Mr. Mytton's Whit, tiugton, .4 yrs. - Tli e Gloucestershire Stakes of , 25 stW. each, 15 forfeit, or 5if dec1kred, 77 subscribers, afforded a beautiful start for eleven horses, but the palm of victory was won by Mr. F. Craven's ' bl. c. Longwaist, by more than two lengrths; Ro wis to n came in second, and Whittingtori third; but, it was difficult to place the others. Orator, Bertram, and' Fille de Joie wete the fi;- st favourites, all of: whom were beaten easily. These stakes ai^ ounted to nearly ,^ 850.. i.; ^ ' he St,. lieger'Stakes of 25 so v: eacli, 8 sri 6scribers, wer^. won. by Guy Faiix, beating* Mr.. Toraes's Sir Gray, aridiCol. Yates's Fill © de Joie. , This was a gooxl race, k^ ehlV fcoil-' tested be tween , th'e two first, ' arid'WOii only . by a head.' Sir Gray the favourite." - .•;.• j Theye were three heats and spme capital running for the Sweepstakes of 5 ; Soy'.' each, with 30gs. added, which was decided as under: ' : , Mr, Lamb's b. g. Tripoli - 13 1 Col, Yates's b. f. Lizzie, Lundie - - 2 1. 2 Mi-. I. Sadler's ch. f. by Usquebaugh - 3 2 dr V".- Setioud'The Sweepstakfes ' Of iS'sOV: each, for two- year olds, 6: subscribers, was won by Mr. Rawlinson's ch. f. by Anticipation, beating Mr. West's b. f.- Mystery,, Mr. r> a. y's cli. c. l^ nte U us, and Mr . Canning's bl. f. by King of Diamonds. A'very good race. The Produce Sweepstakes of lOOgs. hi ft. was walked over for by Mr, E. Jones's b. c. Ecarte. .,<:. , , - The Sweepstakes of 7 soy, eacli, with 25 added,- was won at two heats, by Major Gore's b. f. Pheasant, beatingiTri. poli and Ecarte. The . Himters',, Stakes of 15 sov. each, with 20 added, rode by gentlemen, were contested for as follows: Mr. Benson's Fencer - - - - 3 11 Mr. Y. Dolphin names Aspasia - - 4 2 2 Mr. Goodwin's Why- not - - - 14 3 Mr. A. Moreton names ch. m. by Sir Ulic, 5 3 4 ' Capt, F. Welch names b. m. Maria - 2 dis. It will be seeri that Fencer came in winner in the two last heats ; but; Ave understand the stakes were awarded to Aspasia.,, Fencer being disqualified oi\ the ground of jostling.. .,. .. . •. ,., Last Day, Friday. r- r.^^. 3 we5epstakes of 100 sov. each, h. fi;^ four subscribers^' was walkea— Sir Gray. :•' ; ••' The Oold Cup of. 100 sov.,. , value, by subscription Of 10 sov. eMn, the surplus in specie, 23 subscribers, > vas won by WAI. SS, MARRIED. On Wednesday, at Aber, by the Rev. Q. Rey- nolds, the Rev. J Vincent, FelloW of Jesits College, Oxford, to Margaret, eldest daughter of the late Admiral Crawley, of Gorddinog, Ca> narvonshire. On Thursday, by the Rev. the Warden of Ruthin, Jonathan Beever, Esq. of Cefn Cbcfi'^ tn Hannah Maria, second daughter of Lieut.- C^ l'inel Peeri of Plas- newydd, Vale of Clwyd. iij" 1 DIED. • On Wednesday, of a typhus fever, Mr. Thomas Hughes, who for many years was tlie assistant and. managing clerk of Mr. Foulkes,' of Wrexham, solicitor. He was a verv amiable young man, and by his death the public have lost a worthy member of society . - > ~ On the 19th inst. at Brecon, aged 72, Mr. William Price, formerly of Bougltrood Castle, Radnorshire. Festivities at Rug, Merionethshire. These festivities commenced 011 the 20th inst, on the ocCasi » wi; tif Mr. Vaughaii's Comiugi, df. age ; and the assemblage of persons desirous of testify in their respect for the families of Sir Robert an his brother Colonel" Vaughafi, far exceei| ed any expectations that could have been formed., Ninety, five gentlemen sat down to dinner ill the dining- room, with Sir Robert at the head of 011c ta, hle, am! af the other Colonel Vaughart. Every part of the house was filled with guests ; venison, turtle, aud choice Wines were in the greatest profusion, with every production of the hot- house tot, the . dessert. Among the company were Sir Edward Price Lloyd, Bart.; Captains Jo'celyn, Byron, Theiwall, Yale, AiiW vl, & c . Sic.- Rev. Messrs. Howard , Owe « , Roberts, Fletcher, Clough, Robson., & c UH: Sic.; Messrs, Price of Rhiwlas, Price of Bryn- v- pys, Llovd of Rhaggat, Madocks of Vron- Iw, Wynne of Eyarth, Lloyd ( jun.) of Crogen, Jones of Cefn. Rug, Griffith of Dolgelly, John Humphreys of Bodhilin, & c. & c. & c.^" Not only Tuesdayj . hut every succeeding day last week; was spent in the utmost hilarity ; and the Urbanity and attention of Colonel Vaughan were the themes of * universal admiration. Of a Family 110 less renoW'ned for their liberal hospitality thai! for their extensive . charities, and, what is perhaps of more consequence than all, for their living as much as possible aud spending their princely fortunes among their fellow- countrymen, too much canilot be said. In Mr Vaughan there is th6 fairest promise of every thing so naturally to be expected from the son of Sir Robert and the nephew bf Colonel Vaughan. Ewnigton's Continuation of the Annual Register, published by the- late Mr. Dodsley. in the Press, and will appear in September next, in One large Volume, 8vo. THE ANNUAL REGISTER; OR, a View of the History of Politics and Litera- ture of the Year 1800. This Volume will complete the Series published by RIVINOTONS, from 1791 to 1811 inclusive, any Volume of which maybe pur- chased separately. The Volume for 1812 will be published with as little Delay as possible, RIVINGTON'S have lately published the Volumes for 1820 ( commencing with bis present Majesty's Reign), 1821, and 1822, Price 18s. each. The Volume for 1823 is in the Press, and will be published on the lst of December next; the Pub- [ Ushers having fixed that Time with a View of comprising some important Matter which could not be included in a more earlv Publication. MARKET HEHALD. SHREWSBURY. In our Market, oti Saturday last, the price of Hidet was 4d per lb.— Calf Skins 5d— Tallow 3d. In our Market, ou Saturday last. Wheat was at from 9s. Od. to Ills. Od. per bushel of 38 quarts. Barley sold at from 0s. OOd. to Os. Od. per bushel of 38qiiarts. Oats sold at from 6s. 4d. to 7s. 2d. per bushel of 57 quarts Average Prices of Corn per Quarter, in England and Wales for the week ending July 17, 1824 : Wheat, 60s, 7d.; Barley, 34s. 4( 1.; Oats, 27s. 4d CORN- EXCHANGE, JULY 26 Although our arrivals last week were far from being large, and the supply fresh in this morning but moderate, our market is exceedingly dull, owing to the continuance of favourable weather for the harvest, and to effect sales a reduction of full 2s. per quarter has beet) suhmitted to, and even at this decline the sales were very limited, and confined only to superfine samples of old wheat. Barley is also heavy sale, and full Is. per quarter cheaper. Peas of both kiuds are extremely heavy sale, at a reduction of Is. per quarter; . and Beans and Oats with difficulty call nnd purchasers at the same abatement, flour is very dull sale at 60s. per sack. Current Price of Grain per Quarter, as under: Wheat 40s to 72s , White Peas 32s to 34s Barley 32s tf> 35s Beans 34s to 38s Malt 50t to 60s I Oats 28s to 30s Fine Flour 55s to 60s per suck; Seconds 50s lo 55s SMCrtiFtE'LRfper st. of% lh'. sinking offal). RECENTLY PUBLISHED, ASK ETCH of MODERN and AN- TIENT GEOGRAPHY, for the Use of Schools. By SAMUEL BUTLER, D. D. F R. S. and S. A. & c. Archdeacon of Derby, Head Master of the Royal Free Grammar School of Shrewsbury. I11 8vo. the 6th Edition, Price 9s. Boards. 2. An ATLAS of MODERN GEOGRAPHY, consisting of Twenty Coloured Maps, Price 12s. Half- bound. 3. An ATLAS of ANTIENT GEOGRAPHY, on the same Plan, Price 12s. Half- bound, compris- ing Twenty Coloured Maps. 4. A GENERAL ATLAS of ANTIENT and MODERN GEOGRAPHY, comprised iu Forty Coloured Maps, 4to, Price £ 1.4s. Half- bound. 5. OUTLINE GEOGRAPHICAL COPY- BOOKS, iu 4to. with the Lines of Latitude and Longitude only, intended as Practical Exercises for the Pupil to' fill up, from Dr. Butler's Atlases of Autient and- Modern Geography, and designed as Price 4s>. each, sewed ;.' or, JAND C. AMOTT beg to inform • their Friends and the Public, that they intend forming their Logierian Classes on Friday, the 30th Instant. SHREWSBURY, JULY 21, 1824. Shrewsbury, July 2- Z, ISjM. To the Directors of the Shrewsbury House of Industry. WE, the undersigned Guardians of the Poor of the Six United Parishes incorporated wi Itin the Town & Liberties of Shrewsbury, request that you will call a SPECIAL MEETING of the said Guardians, tor the Purpose of appointing what Number of the Committee named at the last Meeting of the Guardians, held on the 12th Instant, " for obtaining an Act for the Repeal of the present Act of Incor- poration," shall be a Quorum to manage the Business assigned to the said Com- mittee : to fix the Time and Place for the first Meeting of the said Camtfiittiee :. and to determine the Funds out of which the Disbursements of the Committee siiall be paid. an Accompaniment, j 7s. 6d. together. 6. OUTLINE. MAPS OF. ANTIENT GEO- GRAPHY, being a Selection, by Dr. Butler, from I D'Anville's Antieut Atlas, intended as Practical Exercises for the Pupil to fill up, on Drawing Colombier, Folio, Price 10s. fid. 7. A PRAXIS on the LATIN PREPOSITIONS, being an Attempt to illustrate their Origin, Power, I and Signification, in the Way of Exercise, for the Use of Schools. In 8vo. 7s. 6: d. hound. Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown, j and Green, London ; and may be had of W. and J. | EDDOWES, Shrewsbury, and " all Booksellers. Concentrated Ginger Beer. THE extreme Heat of the Weather renders this elegant Preparation a most agreeable Beverage. A Quantity sufficient to make Twelve Glasses being compressed in one small Half Pint Bottle, renders it extremely convenient for Carriage, and for the Use of Travellers it will be found invaluable. A single Trial will convince the Purchaser of its decided Superiority over that sold in Bottles. Sold by Messrs. WHITNEY and CO Chemists, Wyle Cop, Shrewsbury, the sole Invent- ors and Proprietors— Also, their superior SEID- LITZ aud SODA POWDERS. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL IRONMONGERY and NAIL WAREHOUSE, Market- Place, Shrewsbury. THOMAS STIRROP HAVING, in Consequence of his ill State of Health, been obliged lo decline Business, begs to inform his Friends and the Public, that lie has disposed of. his TRADE, SHOP, and PREMISES, to Mr. J. PIERCY, whom here, spectfully recommends to their Notice as his Suc- cessor. T. S. takes this Opportunity of returning his Thanks for the very liberal Patronage and Support he has experienced during the many Years he has heen in the above Business, and hopes that his Succcssor will continue to merit the like Favours. LTOBT. PHILLIPS 1>. WATKIS WM. TAYLOR J. DAVH5S RICHARD WHITE RICHARD TAYLOR JAMES. HILES WM. HILES T. DONALDSON 3. DONALDSON T. . IONF. S T. G. GWYN JOHN BRAYNE N'ATH. BETTON RICHARD BETTON WM. HAMS EDW. WOOD JOHN BROMLEY JOHN LAWRENCE W. E. WOOD J. SHUKER WM. CARLINE WILLIAM LEAKE JOHN ROGERS J. HILES HUMPH. SANDFORD EDW. KEYSELI. EDW, MATTHEWS A. S. WILCOX •'•.!, JOHN EDGERTJIY JOSEPH ROGERS GEO. WILSON •;', J. MUCKI. ESTON JOSEPH PARRY W. WILDING WM PIODIIK THOMAS JONES JOHN HARRISON It. BEOXTON JOSEPH TURNER JOHN JOBSON ROWLD, WILLIAMS . ROBT. WILDING: JOSEPH HUSSEY. J. PIERCY, HA VING entered upon the TRADE, SHOP, and PREMISES, latelv occupied by Mr. STIRROP, begs to assure his own and Mr. STIRROP'S Friends, and the; Public in general, that it shall be his constant Study to supply them w ith the best Goods ou the most reasonable Terms, and he hopes, from his Knowledge and Experience in the Trades, and his long Residence among the Manufactories, he shall he able to give them every Satisfaction. June 8th, 1824. DANCING^ MR. SINCLAIR, FROM LONDON, ( Who has studied under Masters ofthe Jirst Celebrity from Paris, Madrid, Vienna, St. Petersburgh J, KES the Liberty most respectfully I. to inform the Nobility & Gentry ofSHREWS- BURY and its Vicinity, that, having an Engage- ment af the Royal Free Grammar School, lie is also enabled to attend Private Pupils on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays, and he intends opening a , ' bANdNO AjCADEMY, near of) At Mrs. Trehearn s, poxlnn, Shrewsbury, Air. West's Sharper, and Mr. Robinson's Bertram. This was a very good. race, and won in capital style by old Euphrates, to the gre, at dismay of. the knowing- oues, witb whom Bertrapi was the. decided favourite; the odds being 6 to - 1, and in some cases 5 to i on the latter against the field.--'- Mr. Mytton is reported to bea considerable winner. The Town Plate, of ,£ 70 was won easy, at two heats, by Mr. Mytton's Whittiugton, beating Mr. Tomcs's Felix, Mr; Davis's Valentine, and Mr. West's Sharper. The Prestbury Stake Challenge was walked over for by Whittingtnn.) as were also the Berkeley Hunt Stakes of 15 sovereigns. each, .5 forfeit ( 13 subscribers), by Mr. T. Gwynhe'S ch. nV. by Sir Ulic. Tin: Course was more crowded this day than on, any former, occasion. Robert Canning, Esq. of Hartpury, anil Henry Klvres, Esq. of Coiesbourne, are appointed Stewards tot ne. it year. CHESTER CIRCUIT. The Hon. C. WARREN, Chief Justice, and the Hon. T. JERVIS, the other Justice, f Montgomeryshire, Thursday, August 19, at Pool. Denbighshire, Wednesdav, August 25, at Rutibin. Flintshire, Tuesdav, August 31, at Mold. Cheshire^. M on day j September^, at CtjpftSr, NORTH WALES CIRCUm.' TIIP Hon. JONATHAN RAISE, Esq. Chief Jnstiee. aiid the Hon. WM. KENRICK, Esq. Second Justice. Merionethshire, Thursday, August 12, at Dolgelly Carnarvonshire, Wednesday, Aug. 18, at Carnarvon. Anglesey, Tuesdav, Angust 24, at Beaumaris. BRECON CIRCUIT. Before MICHAEL NOLAN & R. M. CASHERD, Esqrs. Radnorshire Tuesday, Aug. 24, nt,. Presteigne. lireconshire Monday, Aug. 30, at Brecon. Glamorganshire,- Saturday, Sept. 4, at Cardiff. ' CARMARTHEN CIRCUIT. Before Mr. Serjeant HEYWOOD and JOHN BALGUY, " Esq. Carmarthenshire, Monday, AUg. 30, at Carmarthen. Pembrokeshire, Saturday, Sept. 4, at Haverfordwest. Cardiganshire, Friday, September 10, at Cardigan WHITEHALL, JUNE 15, 1824.— The King has I been pleased to give and grant unto Henry Warier, of Pentrebychan Hall, in the county of Denbigh, Esquire, his royal license and authority, that he and his issue may ( in compliance with the last » ill and testament of his late maternal nnfcie, Tbrtmas JIci<; dilh, lale of Peutrebycljan Half : afyjeesaid, Doctor of Physic, deceased) take and " Use t he ' sur- name of Meredith, in addition to his present sur name of Wai ter. And also In command, that the said royal concession and declaration be registered in His Majesty's College of Arras, otherwise to be voiif and of none effect. CARDIGANSHIRE.— We understand that an amended Act of Parliament has been lately obtained I to extend the improvements in Ihe Gene'rglyn la closure, which comprise that extensive tract of marsh and fen laud called Corsfochno, containing about seven thousand statute acres, situate ba the banks of the Dovey. These improvements consist of embankments, drainages, and roads, Sec. which | are carriel on uiider the direction of Richard Griffithes, Esq. of Bishop's Castk, llie sole com- missioner. Beef.... 3s 8d to 4s 4d I Veal 4s 6d lo 5s 4d. Mutton 3s Sd to 4s 4d I Pork 4s Od to 5s Od. Lamb 4s Sid to 5s 8d ...... FAIRS TO BE HOLDEN. August 2, Battlefield, Bridgnorth, Northwich, I Reddjch, Mold— 3, Northwich- 4, Northwich- 5, Shitfual, Wattlesborough, Altrincham, Middlewich, Longnor ( Staffordshire), Stone, Wednl sbury, Dud- ley, Kington, Wigmore— 6, Whitchurch, Rhayader — 7, Howey, Machynlleth, Newtown ( for wool), Wrexham. At Ross fair, on Tuesday, there was a small show of cattle, which sold a shade lower than they fetched at the lale fairs There were few sheep and all kinds sold well, particularly store ewes— fat sheep went from 5d. to 6d. per lb. The quantity of wool was small, and every kind sold at un advance of from Is. to Is, 6d. per stone more than obtained at former fairs this season. In the fail of last year, Mr. Michell, of Sheldon ar Chippenham, Wilts, in sowing a field p. wheat, through mistake mixed one sack of Sprinp wheat with the rest ; this Spring wheat stood the winter remarkably well, aud was reaped on Tuesday last, an abundant crop. Nothing can look more luxuriant than the crops in this neighbourhood. We have cscaped, as yet, the heavy storms which have visited other parts of the kingdom; every description of grain stands well to receive the ripening influence of Ihe sunny weather : the wheats begin lo put on the ever- wel. « e a, Chas^ et '"'. e Plain Minuet, Cohte tinge, aud in another ten or fourteen days, \ ^^^^^^^ » unless an unfavourable change should take place, harvest will af least have been partially begun, if not generally, in this district. The public will learn with deep regret, that such has been the damage occasioned to the crops of grain in many parts of Essex, by the storm on Wed- nesday se'nnight, that many " respectable farmers will be sufferers to the amount of from £ 400 to £ 1000 each, & some, it is feared, are totally mined. METEOROLOGICAL JOURNAL, From July 19 to July 26. Taken daily at 8 A. M. and 4 P. M. Thermometer in open air fixed to a N. N. W. aspect, in an angle of two walls. - 3 3 O • to EF SAT. • TJ ? S W O CI IS 2 .•. FF- A = R 10 03 SU ( O to o- TO M M ¥ g¥ s g'S ' SS'g I £| SB s s Vo oS o„= I o o c ™ s ? On THURSDAY, the 5th of AUGUST, 1824, Af 11 O'CLOCK IN THB MORNING : Where he will make it his Study to iutroduce every Thing that is New and Elegant iu that Fashionable Art. The following tire a few of the principal Dances I which he intends teaching, viz. The Minuet dels Cour et Gavotte de Vestris, the Devonshire Minuet et Gavotte, Fervall's Minuet et Gavotte, the Minuet I nnd | ... ... . . j was so delighted ou his late Visit to Scotland), Sic.; Fashionable Quadrilles, wherein he will introduce a Variety of elegant Steps, now in Use in the most Sdite Circles; a Number of Pus Seals, Pas de eux, Pas de Trois, Pas de Quntres, and Figure Dances for six, eight, ten, twelve, fourteen, and sixteen Ladies; several Spanish Castanette Dances ; the much . admired Shawl Dance, Skipping Rope Dance, some beautiful Spanish & German Waltzes, a few Garland Dances, with a great Variety of Hornpipes, including Cane and Sword Hornpipes, SEE. & C, To those who are well acquainted with this polite Art; it will only be necessary to look over the Dances enumerated to say how far Mr, SIN- CLAIR is qualified to teach Dancing in nil its Branches; and'with respect to his mbial Character, he will give References ( to those who will honour hiin with the Tuition of their Children) to Families of the first Respectability in the Kingdom. N. B Ladies and Gentlemen Adults who have not had an Opportunity of acquiring this elegant Accomplishment, may receive private Instructions either at Home or at the Academy. *** Terms to be known by applying at the Academy. f 4- t Boarding Schools and Families attended. " To write with ease is art, not chance, ' " As those move easiest who have learnt to " Dance." Agreeably to the above Requisition, we, the undersigned Directors of the House of Industry aforesaid, do appoint a SPE- CIAL MEET IN G of the Guardians, to he held at the said House of Industry, on FRIDAY, the THIRTIETH Day of JULY Instant, at Ten o'Clock in the Forenoon, for the Purposes contained in the said Requisition. JONATHAN PERRY, CHAS. B. ALLNATT, G. MOULTRIE, JOHN TOMK1ES, WM. B'VRNES. Montgomery and Pool House of Industry. WANTED a steads'active Pet-' sbn to execute the Office of GOVERNOR and STEWARD of this House, lu which there are usually about Two Hundred Poor Persons main, tained and employed, and an Accountant kept. He must be well recommended fo. r Sobriety, In- tegrity, and Abilities, bv some respectable Person known to a Director or Guardian, and must find Security for the due Execution ofhis Offices. The Duties are nearly similar tn those in the Houses of Industry atShrewslmry,. Gswestry, Eiles- mere, Whitchurch, Worcester, xc ; and further Particulars may be known at this House ( at. Hem, between Pool and Montgomery), and at i « y Office in Montgomery. The Steward must assist the Directors' Clerk at the House in, preparing Letters and other Papers. The Candidates are desired to attend the Board of Directors, at the Hons,., on Wednesday, the 4th of August next, at Eleven o'Clock, when the Appointment will take place. E. EDYE, Clerk and Solicitor tothe Directors. 7th July, 1824. Mytton's Bankruptey. E Commissioners in a Commission B of Bankrupt awarded and issued forth against JOHN MYTTON, MATTHEW JONES, and PRICE GLYNNE MYTTON, late of the Town of POOL, in the County of Montgomery, Bankers and Co- partners, intend to meet at the ' Royal Oak Inn, in the Town of Pool aforesaid, on Saturday, the 7th Day of August next, at Ten o'clock in the Fore- noon, in Order to make a fiual DIVIDEND of the Esta'e and Effects of the said Bankrupts; when and where the Creditors, who have not already proved their Debts, are to come prepared to prove the same, or they will be exclnded the Benefit of the said Dividend ; and all Claims not then proved will be disallowed. RD. GRIFFITIIES, Solicitor under the Commission. Pool, 19th July, 1824. Diincal/ e's Dividend. rr* HE Creditors who have proved their A Debts under a Commission of Bankrupt against JOHN DUNCALFE the Elder, late of DONINGTON WOOD MILL, near Shiffual, in the County of Salop, Miller, Dealer and Chapman, may receive a DIVIDEND upou their respective Debts, at the Office of Mr. NOCK, Solicitor, Wellington, on THURSDAY, the 19th Day of August next, between the Hours of Ten in the Morning and Four in the Afternoon. * N 5S a Moon's OTICE is hereby given, that on the Second Day of July, One Thousand Eight Hundred aud Twenty- four, an Order Was signed by JOSEPH CORBETT, Clerk, Archdeacon, of Salop, and RICHARD CORFIELD, Clerk, two of . His Majesty's Justices of the Peace acting in aud for the Hundred of Coudover, in the said County, for stopping up a certain unnecessary Footway, situate in or near to the. Village of Condover, iuthe Parish of Condover, in the said Hundred, commencing at that Part of the Turnpike Road which leads from the Town of Shrewsbury, iu the. suid Coun. lv,- towards aud unto the Village of Ryton, in the said County, near to the Dwelling House of Edward Jones, extending til rough the Lauds or Grounds of Th omas Gosuell, Gentleman; and Edward William Stnythe Owen, Esquire, aud ending near the Cottages occupied by John Davies and William Dnvies, where the same Footway goes into the Turnpike Road which leads from Condover aforesaid to ihe Village of Atchain, in the said County, containing iu Length One j Hundred and Niuety- five Yards"; and that the said Order will be lodged with the Clerk of the Peace for the said County, at the General Quarter Sessions of the Peace, to be liolden at the Shirehall, iu Shrewsbury, in and for tbe said Countv, on the Eighteenth'Dav of October next,; Sind also that the said Order will, at the said Quarter Sessions, be confirmed and inrolled, unless, upon an Appeal against tbe same to be then made, it be otherwise determined. TURNPIKE TOLLS. as •,. 1- ir .2- 3 f « • rJi 01 " © 21 •• a> to 3: as • as M z 5? M 2! • I •• loqjnow - i Greatest height of Bar. July 19th. . Least height ditto July 24th 30,36 inch . 29,73 i Range 0,113 Greatest height of Ther. July 224.....;.... 69.< Least height of ditto July 21st.:.. 60 Range 9 ^ T^ HE Public is respectfully informed, that a new and elegant LIGHT POST COACH lias cotmnenced running this Dav from SHREWSBURY to WELSH POOL and back. The Proprietors, in announcing this Conveyance, ( hope, by. Civility and Attention to the Safe'tv and Comfort of PaiSsengers, to share a Portion of Public Approbation and Support. It will leave the TALISOT HOTEL, and the General COACH and VAN OFFICE, High Street, Shrewsbury, every Afternoon at Five o'Clock, and arrive ' in Welsh Pool at Half past Seven. Will leave the Bear Inn, Welsh Pool, every Morning, at Half past Six, and arrive in Shrews- bury at. Nine. Performed by WALLINGTON and CO. London ; and SAMUEL JOHNSON and SON, Shrewsbury and Welshpool;- who will not be answerable for , inv Parcel or Passenger's Luggage above £ 5 Value, unless entered as such and paid for accordingly on Delivery. 31 s - " , • " V^ OTICE is hereby given, That the I ^ TOLLS arising at the' several Toll Gates upon the Newport Division of the Turnpike Road leading from Whitchurch, through Ternhill, to Newport, in the County of Salop, will be LET BY AUCTION to the best Bidder, nt the Dwelling House of Mr. William Liildle, the Red l. ion Inn, in Newport aforesaid, on Monday, the 30th Day of August next, between the Hours of Eleven in the Forenoon and O ue in the Afternoon, in tlie Manner directed by the several Acts of Parliament passed for the Regulation of Turnpike Roads ; which Tolls produced tbe last Year the Sum of £ 609 above the Expenses of collecting, and will be put tip at that Sum. The highest Bidder must, if required, par One Month in Advance of the Rent al which such Tolls may be Let, aud at the same Tinie give Security, with sufficient Sureties to the Satisfaction of the Trustees of the said Road, for Payment of the Rent agreed upon at such Times and iii sqdh" Man- ner as they shall direct. .1 R. FfsHER, ' Clerk to the Trustees. Newport, Hth July, 1S24. WANTED, a NURSE, wlio can be v. cll recommended. Also a KITCHEN and DAIRY IVIAID. — Apply to THE PBINTURS. To be Sold by Private Contract-, MMWO SHARES & HALF aSHARE * hi the F. LI BSMEKE CANAL.— For Particulars apply ai the Office of Messrs. BURI. EY and SCARTH, Shrewsbury. at 12 PURE SOUTHDOWN RAMS TO LET ; And 130 Ewes for Sale by Auction. ril BLUCK respectfully informs his » • Friends and Breeders of Sheep, that his SHEW of HAMS and SALE of EWES will com- mence on THURSDAY, the 5th ' Day of August; when he hopes those Gentlemen who please to favour him with their Attendance will lie highly gratified witbtlie Symmetry of the Flock. N. B.. The Sale of Ewes will commence o'Clock ; aud the Ratna Let after Dinner. WETMORE, JULY 26, LT> 24. To be Sold by Private Contract AN eligible FREEHOLD ESTATE, consisting of 18& Acres or thereabouts of excellent Arable, Meadow, and Pasture LAND, TITHE- FREE, with a good Farm House and Build- ings in'cOhtylete ilepair, situate close to a Canal and within about 9 Miles of the Market Towns o Shrewsbury,, IJ) s\ vestrjr, aiid Ellesmere. Eor Particulars apply at the Office of Mr. EGERTON JEFFREYS, Shrewsbury. On the I st of July was published, Price Id. or lOd. per Dozen, with Two WoodCuts | ( to be continued twice a Month), No. VI. OP rjHHE NATIONAL SCHOOL MA-[ August, 1824. & GAZINE.— Contents : Industry & Idleness, I The MAID ~ r the Two Apprentices, Part 2d.— Questions from the History of England.— The Way to be Happy.— Natural History of the Crocodile.— Hymn on early Religion.— Ail Evening Hymn. Primed for C. and J. Rivington, St. Paul's Church- Yard, and Waterloo- Place, Pall- Mail. Co 2Let, mmmymmsm With immediate Possession, WITH IO ACRES OF GRASS LAND; As also with or without the Game upon about 700 Acres of Land. THE HOLTSE consists of an Entrance Hall, a Billiard Room ( 34 Feet by 24), Dining IMEG BV TO- MORROW. Milliing Cowsj Store Pigs, - Saddle or Gig Horse. Rlckoj 1 Hay, Implements,' House- hold Furniture, and Chamber Organ. BY 31R. PERRY, On the Premises, oh Thursday, the 29th of July instant, rpiiE OUT- STi) CK, F, u RN ITU RE K and Effects of the late RICHARD JAUNORELL Esq. at ClllJRCH POLVERBATCH: consisting of two capital MILLING COWS ; fourgood strong STORE PIGS; a BAY GELDING, useful for Saddle en- Harness ; about Five Tons of MOST EX CEI. LENT UAY; Ten Dozen Hurdles; and sundry small Implements. The FURNITURE comprises neat Fourpost Tent, and Half- tester Bedsteads, with Murine Chintz, and other Hangings; nine most excelle Goose Feather Beds, Bolsters, and Pillows; Mat tresses, Quills, aud Coverlets; Dressing Tables, Bason Stands, and LookingGlasses ; sevcial capita Oak Linen Chests ; Oak and Walnut Bureaus and Chests of Drawers; a capital Chamber Organ with three Barrels, thirty Tunes, Mahogany Case ten neat Cherry- tree Chairs with Hair Seats, and one armed Ditto; Mahogany and Oak Pembroke, Pillar, and other Tables; an excellent Eight- Day Clock, Moon Dial, Oak Case banded with Maho- gany ; three single Fowling Pieces; eight good Ca « ks and Other Barrels, other Brewing Vessels and a general Routine of Kitchen Articles; Garde Tools, Stone Roller, tivo Saddles and Bridles, Child's Carriage, & c. & c. & c. The Sale vviil commence with the Cows, and begin piet'isely at Eleven o'Cloek. Bishop's Castle Races WILL take phtee on THURSDAY and FRIDAY, the 5th and 6th Days of The MAIDEN PLATE to be run for tire First Day, and the ALL- AGED the Second Day, as . usual. - Horses- intended to start for tbe Plates, & c. must > entered at tbe Crown and Star Inn, Bishop's Castle, on Wednesday, the 4th of August. © BAYTOM MACm, OVER DRAYTON HEATH, : Oil Monday and Tuesday, the YQth and 17 tk of August, 1824. O ON MONDAY~ tWl6th, CAVALRY STAKES, a Purse of 3i> Sovereigns, the Gift of the Officers of the North Shropshire Yeo- manry Cavalry, added to a Sweepstakes of 5 Sove- reigns each, tor Horses that have been regularly • . .1 i.„ it, 1 - . r . I . - r.- . t....:,... . i.. I..,?. Room ( 24 Feet by 20), Drawing Room < 24 Feet by exe,. cjsed bv Members of tbe Corps dnritfg the last 18), small Study Water Closet, Still Year's Service, and bona fide the Ffcopertj of a 1 lm , ieni a<. 0l( Sjdera. ble quantity on the ground, __..,„.„ V..- i.„„ R » » h « n » . Member at the Tunc of Siting. To te;* odebyb,, n, ie expectations so fonn « dv4re disappointed 1 SHROPSHIRE General Agricultural Society. It having been resolved, at the . Special General Meeting of the Societv, held at the County Hall, ou Thursday, the 13th ^ November last, that " itis expedient tbat theSoeietv be dissolved," and " tWt the Committee should offer. Prizes to the Extent of . the balance in hand, and adjudg. e them in'July the Committee, in pursuance of those resolutions, . met on Friday last for tlie adjudication, of the Premiums advertised for the present year, aiid the final closing of their Accounts; when, after the payment of all claims on the " Society, . and" the jtrelit'turns to the successful candidates, it appeared prbhable that an ultimate balance of upwards , « f ^ enly'' g; Vi| ieas'wbji| d reiiiain undisposed of. This, pursnaut tothe resolution of the last general meet- ing of . the Society, is to be paid to the Salop Infirmary, and the Committee unanimously re- quested their worthy ." Secretary, Mr. Egertoa- Jeffreys, should it amount to that sum, to accept the office of Governor to. that institution, to which this payment would give a title. • It was expected by many persons that, as this was the last time of exhibiting stock, there would J. ants' Hall, Kitchen, Larders, Brewhouse, and capital Cellars, one Vaulted and Leaded. On the Second Floor, a Breakfast or Dressing Room ( 20 Feet by 18), 5 good Bed Rooms, small Dressing Rooms with Fire Place, and several other Closets ; 6 good Attics for Servants ; Green House ( 4Q Feet long), Coach House, Garden, and Stabling; with 10 Acres of Grass Land, and the exclusive Privi- lege of Sporting over about 700 Acres of Land, well stocked with Game ; and excellent Brook Fishing, as also in the River Severn, only a Quarter of a Mile from the Premises.— Several Packs of Fox Hounds & Harriers are kept in the Neighbourhood. N. B. Mr. WILLIAMS, of the Buck Inn, Shineton which is near the Premises, will shew the same. For further Particulars apply to THE PRINTERS; if by Letter, Post- paid. The Premises are lo LET, with a suitable : Quantity of rich Meadow Lund. • tflie Situation is delightful.— The House contains tw » Sitting Rooms, five Bedchamners and Closet, Kitbhen, Brewhouse, • Pantry, and suitable Cellar. ing1 The. Outbuildings are a capital three- stalled Stable, with Gig House attached, and Granary « ver; with Entrance Court, and Garden well- stocked with Standard Fruit Trees and Vegetables. Tlii Whole forming a most charming aud comfort- able Residence for a suiall genteel Familv, and Ualuairtc dFm& olti Uropertp, In. the Counties of Salop and Montgomery; HOUSES IN SHREWSBURY; And Turnpike Securities. 2To iur Sola Hp auction, By Messrs. TUDOR & LAWRENCE, At the Uuicorn Inn, iu Shrewsbury, on Saturday, the 7th Day of August, 1824, at 4 o'Clock in the Afternoon, subject to Conditions to be then pro- duced, and in the following, or such other Lots as may be agreed upon at tbe Time of Sale : LOT I. AMESSUAGE or Tenement, called BROOKIIOUSE TENEMENT, consisting of a Farm House, with convenient Outbuildings, and several Pieces of LAND, containing 24A. 31t. 39P. more or less, situate at TKEPNANNY, iu the Parish of Myvod, otherwise Myfod, in the County of Montgomery, in the Occupation of Robert Davies or his Undertenants. LOT II. A M ESSU AGE or Tenement, with con- venieni Outbuildings, and several Pieces of LAND and COPPICE, containing 95A. OR. 37P. more or less, situate iu MinDLF/ rowN, in the Parish of Albe'rbury,. ill the County of Montgomery, in the Occupation of William Jones or his Undertenants. Lor III. Eleven Pieces of LAND, eontaininr together 36A. 1R. 29P. more or less, situate i Middletown aforesaid, in the Occupatiou of Robert Poole and Thomas Brown. Lor IV. A capital MESSUAGE, FARM, and LANDS, containing 102A. 3R. 8P. more or Jess, situate near Lots 2 and 3, in the Occupatiou of Thomas Parry or his Undertenants. LOT V. A DWELLING HOUSE and Garden, about, a Quarter of on Acre, situate in PONTESBURY, in the County of Salop, in Lease to the Parish Offi- cers of Pontesbary. Also FOUR DWELLING HOUSES and Smith's Shop, with Gardens belong- ' ig thereto, containing 0A. 2R. 30P. more or less, tuate near MINSTERI. EY PARK, in the Parish of Westbury, iu the said County of Salop, iu the Several Occupations of Zachariah Lin lev, Martha Members of the Corps. Four Years old fo carry lOst. 71b ; five Years list. 6lb.; six, and upwards, l- Jst. The best of Heats; three Tinies round? the Course. Four Subscribers or no Race Same Day, the INNKEEPERS' PLATE of 15 Guineas, added to a Sweepstakes, of, 10 Guineas each, for Maiden Horses. Three Years old to carry fist. 101b.; four Years old 8st.; live Years old 8sf. " 101b.; six Years old, and upwards, 9st. lib.; Mares and Geldings to be allowed 31b,; 4 Subscriber^ or no Race. Best of Heats; three Times round. On TUESDAY, the 17th, the HUNTERS STAKES of 10 Guineas each, with a Picc. e of Plate Value 20 Guineas, for Horses not . thorough- bred. Four Years old to carry 10st. 71b.; five. Years old list. 81b.; six Years 12st.; and to have been regu- larly hunted the precediug Season with Sir Richard xpectations formed were disappoi the total niiBibe'r of head of cattle and sheep shewn for premiums being only forty- two; and the. extra s^ ock consisting only of six heifers of the Hereford breed, which were remarkably good ones, and much admired, belonging to Mr. Ravenshaw, and a bull and two heifers . of the same breed, and of like . quality, belonging to Mr. Boothby, of Lyth- wood. The number of persons at the field was very small.— The Judges of the Shew, were Mr. Broome, of the Isle, aud Mr. R. Legh and Mr. N. Ilughes, highly- respectable butchers, of Shrews- bury-— The appointing, of, two butchers to one riner, as appeared after, dinner, was not, bow- ever, much approved of byrtlje more, eminent agri- culturists and candidates, who, without at all reflecting on t, he gentlemen abo ve - loum- it, were of. ' ° , , ,, ,, opinwvrtlrat,. rii6wever competent butchers gene- Puleston s, Sir Bellingham Graham s, or Mr. H, ay s rall » ij « Arc to judge of the weight of animals add of, Hounds Certificates of Age,. and ot having been. . jhosVthat were best for the knife, thev were not regularly hunted, to be produced to the Satisfaction equally skilled- in the knowledge of tliose which of the Stewards before starting^ Best of Heats j, , wcre best to breed from, and which formed one of three Tinies round the Course. Three Subscribers or no Race. Same Day, a PURSE of 50 Guineas, for Ponies not exceeding 13 Hands high. The best of Heats.; three Tinies round. To carry a Feather.' A MATCH, for 50 Sovereigns a side. The Horses intended to run for these Plates and Stakes are to enter at the Corbet Arms inn, Dray- ton, on the 14th of August, between the Hours of Four and Eight in the Evening; to pay Ten Shil- lings. Entrance, and Five Shillings to the Clerk of the Course. The Winning, Horse of. Plate or Stakes to pay the most essentia! points iu the utility of Agricul tnral' Socioties.^ Tiie premiums at this meeting were distributed as follows;— To Mr. Roger Blake- wayv- of Wootton, £ 5, for the best one- year old sbort- woolled rani*. To Mr. John Eduiunds, of Tbe.' RuiUliags, ;£ 10, foe the best pen of ten sliort- woolled tbeaves. To Mr. Cooper, of Barton, £ 10, for, the best pen of tea long. woolled tbeaves.' To j. Thomas Beale, Esq. of Heath House, £ 10, for the best; pair . of Durham heifers To Mr. A. D. Jones, of Court, Calmore, £ 10, for the best pair of Heie- . fordjhci& rs. To; John Raveiisbaw, Esq. of Uckiiig- ton,-£ ltl, for the best Hereford bull. And to Mr. Ten Shilling's to the. Clerk of t| ie Course each . Day I Bl'aL- evv » y, ef Wootton, 10 guineas, for the for Weights and Scales. To Start, precisely at Three o'Clock each Day, and only Half an Hour allowed between lleats. turnip, premium for 1823. Tk « Society beiiig considered as dissolved, and they shall. appoint.. Ordinaries at the principal Inns.— The Theatre | will be open during the Race Week.—- All l) ogs found on the Course will be destroyed. WINGFIF. LD HARDING, Esq > stewards CHARLES WARREN, Esq. \ " tewarrts. ROGER CHIDLEY, Clerk of the Course- Mesf bp auction. Capital CROPS of GRAIN. BY MR." SMITH, On Monday next, the 2d of August, At the Lea Cross Public House, ill the Parish of Pontesbury, in the County of Salop, at Four o'Clock in the Afternoon ; '' i^ HE following GRAIN, growing upon R a Farm at the LEA, and the Property of the late Mr. RICHARDS ;— may be entered upou immediately.— The Village, Astley, Widow, Joseph Blower, and James Perkins. Church stands within Two Minutes' Walk of the Also several Pieces of L AND, containing 28A. OR. :,. . T. D...:; I; .. I- M-„. L .. 1*. : .1 - 1 1Io| ise VALUABLE FARM FOR SALE, NEAR SHREWSBURY. BY MiTpERRY, At Mrs. Crowiher's, the Castle Inn, Castle Fore- gate, Shrewsbury, ou Saturday., Xhe ,31st July, 1824 ( aud liot on the 24ifi, us before advertised), at 5 oHMoek in the Afternoon, IN ONE LOT : ALL that EXCELLENT FARM and LANDS, with good HOUSE, Buildings, and siinHry Pieces of Arable, Meadow, and Pasture Land; situate at LITTLE WOOLASCOT, about three Miles distant from Shrewsbury, now iu the Occupation of the Proprietor, Mr. GEORG6 OARE, and containing hv Admeasurement ONE HUN- DRED AN •) TWENTY ONE ACKES AND THIRTY- SIX PERCHES. A Map of the Estate may be inspected, and further Particulars may be had, at tbe Office of Mr. WILLIAM JEFFREYS, Attorney, Shrewsbury, or from Mr Pebbly, - Pride Hill. N. B. No Property can be better situate for Market or general Convenience. The Estate ab tunds with Game, and, from its Locality to Shrewsbury, is most eligible for Investment. MACHINERY. ( For absolute * ale without Reserve.) BY MR. PERRY,* At Tbe Isle late Flannel Factory, near Shrewsbury, on Friday, tbe 6th August, 1824; precisely at Twelve o'Clock : PWENTY EXCELLENT WEAVING capital WARPING MILLS; I ele SPINNING JENNIES and other T P. situate in the Parish of Westbury aforesaid, in the several Occupations of Williarn : Lee. » nd' Joseph Blower. it ' ; LOT VI. A DWELLING HOUSE, situate in St. Alkmond's Church- Yard, in SHREWSBURY, in the Occupation of Joseph Tannatt. LOT VII. TWO DWELLING HOUSES, situate in tlie Butcher Row, in Shrewsbury aforesaid, now or late in tbe Occupations of James Wilding and William Browne. Lor VIII. FOUR DWELLING HOUSES, with tbe Appurtenances, situate in Princess Street^ ih Shrewsbury aforesaid, in thp Occupations of William Williams, John Jones, James Jones, and Thomas" Gee. LOT IX. TWO DWELLING HOUSES, with the Appurtenances, situate in Barker Street, in Shrewsbury aforesaid, in tiie Occupations of Wm. Wood and James Williams. [ Leaseliold.] The above Estates are subject to Land- Tax and Tithes.— The Timber on each Lot to be taken at a Valuation produced at the Time of Sale. LOT X. Two Mortgage SECURITIES for £ 150, secured upon the Tolls arising from J^ re^ ton Broekhurst District of Roads. LOT XI. Two Ditto Ditto for £ 1Q0, upon the Leighton District. LOT XII. One Ditto for £ 50, upon the Cr'essage District. LOT. XIII . One Ditto for £ 50, upon the Bala and DolgelIv Districts. . ' : ' LOT ytlV. Tliree Ditto for £ 51.13s. 4d. uponjthe Llanfyllin District. The respective Tenants ofthe Estates and Houses will shew the same; and for further Particulars apply at the Office of Mr. WILLIAM JEFFREYS, Solicitor, Dogpole, Shrewsbury, where Maps of the different Estates may be inspected. the Pfesidefrt- nor the Vice- President considered it caeces^ iryxto attend in their official capacities; cmnsetyaentlyv the accustomed annual dinner, at the M. i(?| i ^ fin- did not take, place; but; a highly- respect- able, party of Agriculturists and others assembled - at the. Uavcn Inn, where a most excellent dinner, handjsome dessert, and choice wines, were pro- yided b. y Mr. Wheeler, for their' participation Ani^ ug- st tliose present we, noticed— John Raven- Shaw,, Esq. ( who was requested to do tbe honours of President), William Egerton Jeffreys, Esq ( Vice- President), Panton Corbett, Esq. M. P. Thos Beaje, Esq. Rev. George Pardee, W. Cooper, Esq W, Bavley, Esq. Mr. Cooper ( Burton), Mr. A. D Jonps, Mr, M. Jones, Mr. T. Bluck, Mr. Dansey Mr, Las^ brev, Mr. R. Legh, Mr. N. Hughes, Mr Boothby, Mr. Blakeway ifWoottou), Mr. Oare -•' the'c'l^^ was withdrawn, the foi lowing toasts were drank " The King' 1 " Duk^ of York. an- d the. Army,'~-" The Lord Lieuteuan of the'County, the. Earl of Powis"—" Lord Hill1 " The Members fo/* the County"—" Membe well; intended^^ could'ddharm^ v^ ie.' nriiotwarfiiirni-^ ' ers should have attended tlt'e meetings, hnd then the funds of the Society would have been distri- buted only: to the most deserving jiart of t1i: e> agricuirurtenterestj-- Mt by% ot comiiig forwaid Si/ nie' pampered thing's,' similar to smne exhibited that- day, w^ e siift'ereA to take the prizes Some of those he exhibited could have been panipered, and made not only, as fat, but much fatter'; that, however, was not the object of the premiums. The real object was to p: roduce good sheep to breed from, and good jodgeS of sheep nerer fattened those. they intended for breeders, as they never did So well afterwards ; and, in proof of tiie corrects lVes's of his asse r tion j he appealed to M i*. Cooper, of Burton, who said that- he had nuulc up his mind never to make a y earl ing e'. we fat. agalit,,. for he never had one that did so well after.— 7' liis pro- duced , a ,^ o4d deal of interesting, conversation as to Agricultural Societies!— gentienien taking the prizes— the impossibility of the tenaiitrv to. compete with g. entlenien of fortune for - premium's,' and the like impossibility ofthe regular farmer's competing w- ith; the higher class of. agriculturists, and the necessity of the judges being" persons who knew a good' animal to breed from, whether there was neb flesh on. its bones or not. Mr. A. D. Jones ; aid, that had the farmers generally come forward it first,,, and exhibited stock, their opinions of the mode i n \ vhich thevpremi. uins were proposed or were disposed Of might, at the next rent- day, have been communicated to the agents of their landlords, who would have carried; tlvese opinions to the landlords themsel ves, and then, every thing, that the. tenantry Considered as injurious or wrong flight have been ectifted— one instance of which that, occurred some me ago was liientioned.. Some discussion also took place- as to the qualities of land, and. the effect different qualities would have in the improv. einent of stock. After which, was drank. 4 4 Liberal Land- lords and good Tenants11—" The Fleece well sold., the Manufacturer remunerated,, the Tradesman attsiiedy and' the Wearer ^ plef& eThe Presi dent then'-. retired ;, after which, on, the motion of Mr. Lasbrey, the Clfftir was ." faUen by Mr,. Cooper, of Burton. * u May the next. Agriciiltural. Society be better ffei ence of Opi- OiV never destroy Friendship1"'— 4' Happiness to those who wish it to oihers11—- 4< The Nobility and Gentry. of the - County of Salop, and may- they b- y their, Liberality to their' Tenantry , est; « t> li » b » an Agricultural Society that will be heheficial botluto Landlord . and Tenant11 — ** Live an'. d let live. 1 " May the honest Labourer ever know a good Master. 11 The course of conversation having turned upon good land lor ds^ Mr. A. I). Jones., in a neat speech, paid a high compliment to Sir Robert ", awiey, as a landlord who had, by his praise worthy an< l noble conduct; evinced that he had the " nterest: < vf bis tenantry at heart; he also remarked on the beneficial results arising both to landlord and tenant from the valuabW . services of Sir Robertas qsteeined and worthy agent, ? v5r. Cooper; after which, the health of Sir Robert Lawjev . was drank with the greatest enthusiasm, as were those of Mr F. f/ awley " and"^ ir W. W. Wynn, Bart. M. y. Jones, of The Court, Mr. Cooper,, of Burton, & c .'& c. Though this meetino was, to the regret o? the more eminent agriculturists of the county, th finishing of the, Society, it was spent in the most c h e arft 11 a n d s oci a I ma ft her.; m uch inte re sti n g con versat. ion took place ; and, from what passed, i. here is little doubt that a new Society, modelled so as to meet the ideas, & c. of the practical farmer., wi" if rtf t. K » > « A. R. P. 6 2 0 5 2' 0 8 0 0 3 0 0 LOT I. Moor Field ( Corn) LOT II. Briarv Acre ( Ditto).,,... LOT III. Sour Leasow ( Ditto) Lor IV. Part of Dale ( Ditto). . LOT V. Middle- Leasow ( Part Oats and Part Barlcv) ........... 6 0 0 LOT VI Part of Dale £ OAt*)... 3 . 0 0 A Deposit (> f IT) per Cent, must be inade at the Time of Sale, aud a liberal Credit- on the Remainder, upon approved Security.- The Purchasers will be entitled to'tlie Use of the Machine and Barn, and Convenience for the consuming of the Straw. Mr. THOMAS, of the Lea Cross, will appoint* a Person to shew the Grain.—' Sold subject to Tithe-. the Borough' 1 — ^ Viscount Clive, a noblema attached to Agriculture, and who did not wish the , Soc(^ ty - given up, but was for its continuance11- ^ f'Pidsperity to Agriculture.. 11 In prefacing th ' toast, , the wbrthy President observed, that, it. w hot very'pleasiant Jo attend and witness the dying- p'miiprs of ffio SLuiititv avlSitn1 ill hortly be established at or in the neighbourhood of Lndlow, a part of the eouutv in which there are many of our principal agriculturists. iiSro^ inciai ann'Miztclimtm ® - ABRIDGEMENT.— A Chinese " Lady of rank ilie^ London tast week ; she was the first female of that singular nation that ever atteutj> ted a voyage • to this distant country.— On Friday week, the Roman Catholic PHest of Ba'. lvmore:, in the county of VVexfoi: 4, tranieH'Cari olt, iti a^ tate of fanatical ; nsanity ,. kiiled a childc3| years ol4; a^ d dreadfully njured a man and a woman, under the pretence of working miracles by expelling, cktfils ftbi » > tlte parties : these acts of iusanity were'c. orivmihedKin the presence of. the paren! s of the child and numbers of Roman Catholics QfMhe Jdvver' orders; who, fnstead of attempting to prevent tire commission « t sueh diabolical ; deeds, i ivaited-^'^ atiei^ tlf the. fulfil- ment of the expected- miracles^ aild oVe ' rf^ fuaH v said he saw the devils coming- out of the injured woman's, throat1..• The faaiat- iSal - p- riesf lyeeu committed to gaol.— A quack named Janiesr other- wise Dr. Biogg, lias been nousuifcd tti afii attempt to gain by, action at law the. sum of £ 180 from the executors of a weak old luau named Piiiker, of Key us ham, Somersetshire^ lu an aetion broug'Sit in the Court of King's Bencij,, , oit . Monday, * Nicholson versus Nassau,^' the plainfifi^, ayouiig woman of unblemished reputation, and biar- maid at the Castle Inn, Salt Hill, sought to recover, ( bv mages from the defetkteift, a gf1 ut! eman of'eUcentnc habits, residing in Baker- stieet, Porfirmn^ squaret. London, for a breach; of promise of nnirriagGi;, The Jury returned a verdiot for the plaintiff, with damages.—- A fine boy, aged 15- years, died' in tbe Skibbereen Dispensary, last week, of hyrfrofihobia^ having been bitten in the cheek, by a young dog, five weeks previous.— William Riley Ferry, One of Carlile's shopmen, wa^ convicted at the Old Bailey, on. Monday, of selling blasphemous publications : he was sentenced to be imprisdned tliree years, and afterwards to give his own- security in. , t'i( HV for his good behaviour for the rest of his life.^ Thiity- five years ago tlier^ were Only 69,378 Roman Catholics in. England V there were seven years ago more than 500,000.— A subscription is now on foot among the leading Nobility and Gentry, for the relief of the necessities of the present Lord Erskine, who, with family of tlvirteen children, has an i nconic of barely £- 200 per annum. The late Lord Erskine, with all h| s splendid talents, was niostincousiderate in pecuniary matters, and" as related. to his ) eg* itt- tnat^ childreu^^ IiVt'he. Sh^ n. ff^' CAtirty " Lojidon, on Friday last,, a Jury was impanelled;.. to assess the damages,; in an action brought, by Ers- k. iue against Sir George Mhrray, &> r the seduction of th e pi a in t i ffrs w i fe, for ftie r I y Lad y Lo u i, s a Page t; when, after hearing th^ case^ the Jury returned a verdict for plaintiff, . with damages £^ 500>— On Thursday,, ia the Court of King's Benehy Mr. Warburton, the keeper of a lunatic asylum, obtained ' £ 500 damages against a Mr M itford and William Benbow, printer, for a libel, stating that Mr. W. ill- treated his patients.— In the cause tried rn the Court of King's Bench, on Friday, " Bodkin, Secretary to the- Mendicity. Society, V. THe Times Proprietors, for libel, the Jury were kept locked up from three in the afternoon of Friday, till the- bpen- ing of the Court on Saturday moroiug, .!^ ' ore they returiied a • ver^ i^ ty damages 3.0s I'wo of the Jury, upwards of 70'^ etvrs^- old j WeYeindulged' with a, glass' of . water : e^ Cfpt tha^' - n^ ne of them had any refreshment from nine in the morning of Friday till ' th'eir liberation —- in tli^ Criurt'of Exchequer, on Friday, Mr Slee, a spiiVit'rectifier at Brighton, was found guilty of having six permits in his possession, fraudulently obtained for the removal of foreign spirits into his'stock. Penalty £ 500 for each • permit. •• - '•"" • for LOOMS; three ci seven complete SPINNI Jenny Machinery ; large Quantity of Reeds with new and used Helds; Yarn Rap; Spindles and Bobbihs ; Winding Wheels; Roller Frames with Clioih; Pyramid S^ ove ; two Pullevs; large SLUB- BING J ACK and SLUBBING RiLLY; capital large Iron Weighing Beam with Scales Weights ; Iron Vice | ' large Turning ' Lathe ; two Pair - excel- lent- STOCKS, good as new, with tabbit Wheels complete ;••' fiye Drums, Shafts, CaSksi,' Tnbs, ahd a new Planking Table with four Frames and six Iron Rods. The Sale will* commence at Eleven', for Twelve, o'Clock to a Minute. ' 1 . Catalogiws may be had of Mr; PERRY. " " SHROPSHIRE. :. Manor, if valuable Freehold Estates. PH E M \ N OK of WHIX A LL, the Parish of PEEES, in the County of Salop, with several excellent FARMS, and sundry small TENIiiVlENTS'and LANDS, situite in tbe Town- ship of ffRlttU, aforesaid, containing together about Nine Hundred and Sixty Acres, will be Ottered for'SAI, R BY AUCTION, in various Lois, in or about the Mouth of October next, unless pre- viously disposed of by Private Contract. Timeai. d Place of Sale, with further Particulars, will appear in future Papers. Applications may be made to RICHARD FOX, E « q. Citadel, near llawkstone, WII. LIAM JFI. LICOE, Esq. Beigliterton, near Shiffnal; or Mr. NICKSON, Solicitor, Wem ; all in the County of Salop. ( li'tui, . lull) 2FL/ A, 1824. TO THE PUBLIC. II T AV1NG advertised the new Scheme at Length, all of which is 10 be decided in One Day, 5th OCTOBER, I now state its particular Features; All the Tickets are in the Wheel All decided in One Day, 5th OCTOBER All the Prizes are Sterling Money All the Prizes will he drawn. 5th OCTOBER Every Number decided 5th OCTOBER Thereare not any Blanks There are not any- Stock Prizes There are not any Fixed Prizes There are Four £ 20,000 Prizes There are Thirty. four other Capitals It is Part of the final Lottery Bill. The Tickets aud Shaies for the above are on Sale al my Offices, where, in the late. Lottery, i sold 5,' 299 a Prize of £' 20,000 14,618, another £ 20,000 AND 19,412 .. another . . £ 20,000 Besides many minor Capitals. The Three £ 20,000 Prizes were distributed as fol- lows, hy which it will be seen every Part of the United Kingdom partook of tliein VALUABLE Brood Mares, Colts, and Hunters, ACTON. BURNELL, NEAR SHREWSBURY. BY MRTSMITH, At Acton Burnell, eight Miles fr. oin Shrewsbury, in the County of Salop, at Eleven o'Clock in the Morning of Thursdav, the 5th of August, 1* 24 ; '- g- UlE valuable HUNTING STUD, 8. belonging to Sir EDWARD JOSEPH SMYTHB, Bart. LOT!. Chesnut Mare, by Regains, stinted to Victor. LOT- 2. Bay Ditto, by Grouse, Dam by Spear, stinted to, Juniper. LOT 3. Black Ditto, by Old Sultan, Dam by Old Revenge, stinted to. Ditto. Lor 4. Brown Ditto, hv Cesario, Dam by Snap, Stinted to Ditto, with a F'iliy Foal at htr Side, by Strepbon. 1 LOT 5. Grey Gelding, 6 Years old, by Fitzjaines, out of Lot4 ( lias been hunted). LOT 6. Chesnut Ditto, rising 5 Years old,, by Conqueror, out of Lot 2. Lor 7. Brown Ditto, rising 5 Years old, by Ambo, out of Lot 4. LOTS. CliesIIlit Fillv, rising 5 Years old, by Ditto, Dain by Lord Stamford's George, Grandam by Pot- 8- o's. LOTR. Bay Gelding, rising 4 Years old, hy Fyldctier, out of Lot - 2. LOT 10. Brown Gelding, rising 3 Years old, by Jupiter, out of the Dam of Lot 8. LOT II. Brown Ditto, rising 3 Years old, by Ditto, out of Lot 4. Lor 12. Black Filly, rising 3 Years old, by Prince. LOT 13. Chesnut Ditto, rising 2 Years old, by Jupiter, out <, f Lot 2. The above well deserve the Attention of Sporting Gentlemen and Breeders. Tlie Brood Mares have stood high iu the Sponing Circle; and the Colts, from their extraordinary Size and Power, promise for first. rate II inters. The Whole may be viewed any Day prior to the Sale, ou Application to the Stud- Groom at Acton Burnell. I MONTGOMERYSHIRE. IN TIIE MONTH OF SEPTEMBER. NBXT, \ MOST desirable ESTATE of 170 Acres of excellent Land,, with a comfortable Residence thereon, called GARTH, in the admired , VAI. B OF GCII. SFIELD, about two Miles from Pool, 011 the Road to Oswestry ; with a good Stream of Water running through the Estate. Also, that well- accustomed INN, called the BEAR INN, and LANDS therewith held, in and near tbe Towuofl'ooL. And a good FARM and LANDS, called FRON « ANI. I. WVD, in the Parish of LLANBISTBS, in tin County, of liailnor. Particulars wi|, l appear in future Papers ; and jn fhe mean Time further Information, may be bad by Application to Mr. RICHARD GRIFFITHES, Bishop's . Castle ; or Mr. WILLIAMS, Solicitor, Shrewsbury ; - with whom Maps of the Estate will be left Tor Inspection.- , Oae , Sixteenth to- Kidder- minster lOne Sixteenth to Liverpool One Sixteenth to Ludlow One Sixteenth to - Margate ( One Sixteenth to Maidstone One Sixteenth to Plymouth One Sixteenth to Sunderland. [ One Sixteenth to Whitchurch Genteel Furniture, Foreign. China, Glass, valuable Prints, Linen, Man- gle, and other Effects, the Property ofthe late JOSEPH BROMFIELD, Esq. One Ticket to Dublin One Quarter to Glasgow One Quarter to Northampton One Eighth to Chester One Eighth t6 Edinburgh One Eiglltl? to. Liverpool One Eighth to Stockport ' One Sixteenth to Berwick One Sixteenth to Doncjister One Sixteenth - lo Edinburgh j The other Five Sixteenths were all Sold in Lon- don ; One, was registered 10 Five . Maiden Ladies in, Yorkshire ; One to Thirteen Silk Weavers in War- wickshire ; One to a Naval Offioer in Hampshire ; One to a Servant Maid iu Norfolk; and Oue not registered. I have tbe Honour to he, The Public's devoted Servant, T. BISH, 4, Cornhill, and 9, Charing Cross, London. Tickets and Shares are also selling by BlSII's Agents, as under, sotnc of whom sold Parts of the above Capitals : R. JONES, Cheesemonger, SHREWSBURY; B. PAIITRIDGE, Bookseller, BIHDCJNORTH ; POOLE & HARDING, Booksellers, CHESTER ; T. GRIFFITHS, Bookseller, LUDLOW ; E. JONES, Bookseller, NANTWICH ; J. SMITH, Printer, NEWCASTLE ; W. PRICE, Bookseller, OSWBSTRY ; \. MORGAN, Bookseller, STAFFORD; P. DF. NMAN, Bookseller, WOLVERHAMPTON. BV MR. SMITH, On the Premises, in SAINT JULIAN'S FRIARS, Shrewsbury, on Monday, Tuesday, and Thurs- day, the 9th, 10th, & 12th Days of August, 1 « 24;! riifJE entiie genuine Property of the JL late JOSEPH BROMFIELD, Esq.— Particulars, in our next.— Catalogues- will be- prepared, and may be had at THE AUCTIONEER'S Office, on Saturday, tbe 31st Instant. - • Six , iTrec! 5Ol5l3tt} dUngD( Ht0ESi, WITH GA DENS. TO BE SOLD BY AUCTION, BY MR. SMITH, At the Unicorn Inn, Shrewsbury, on Thursday, the; Hth of August, lS- 24, at Six o'Clock in the Afternoon, and Subject to Conditions then to be produced ; All those SIX comfortable and convenient Free- hold DWELLING HOUSES, wilh Gardens, situate in SAINT JULIAN'S FRIARS,' Shrewsbury, in the several Occupations of Messrs. Pearson, Prosser, Wheatley, Jones, , Broughall, and Fallows.— The above are free of Land- tax, and in good Repair>- For further Particulars apply to TBE AUCTIONEER. Aho, to he LEI, A good KITCHEN GARDEN, well stocked with Wall and Standard Fruit; together with small HOTHOUSE.— For,. Particulars enquire^ THE AUCTIONEER. ^ . (' One Concern. J and excellejit^ g; fl « ti1tiirists, it should be suffered to die awfhy- j^ I'f the f'entteMen^ ha'd rdtle their hobby-, horsc mHis they were1 ti red, he u aS sorry for i t, but , tfeey had not, he hoped they would yet support it, ; If the agriculturists would like to continue, he • sl^ o^ l'd he happy to subscribe, and if any one thought his motives were actuated by his having taken so Wia » y^ pt^ » iiumsvsince the ci> uimeiiceihent of the- ^ Society, - lie- ( wild ^ ake no more, but . relinquish them to the second- best. There were many of bis broker agriculturists, he knew, who thought that Societies of the kind were productive of harm ; he. was himself, however, of a very different opinion"; and co'ild not see how it . was possible that, they could do harm ; he Certainly thought they had doile good, and, in, proof of it, would tell them an. nujpcddte, which occurred at Shrewsbury soon after ^^ SjiVopslii. re Geiieral . Agric. niturai Society was established. A farmer, whose name he did not think it requisite to mention, brought a ram to the Sbew, with horns spreading- as wide us the table, a pelt so thick that a musket- hall could not. pene- trate it, and legs with bones so large that they were almost ( a% e. enough to make a conin for anv one in company ; and a gentleman at the Shew said it was the bestauimai in the field. This, j> e. ntleman, hovy* •' eye'lij'' l^ efore Iong, vvas conv i nced his .) udg: nent was i wTOngf . aiid he soon, afterwards, bred bett. erjhjngs fimjself.---*' The Committee of the Agricultural Society, and many Thanks to them for the trouble they have had"* Mr. Eo- ertot) Jeffreys, in pro- posing this toast, assured the meeting, from his own experience, that the greatest attention and anxiety had been paid by the several gentlemen of the county who had. acted on the Committee, lo make the regulations agreeable to. all parties, which, however, would always be found a very difficult task, to accomplish. Mr. Pantoa Corbett, M. P. as a member of the Committee, returned thanks, and .^• presised. his regret that it was the last occasion on vvh. ich they should meet. Mr. Beale also returned thanks,, and lamented that the distance of his resi dencefrom. Shrevvshury. Was so great as scarcely to :. aflow him. to atteild the Committee.— u William Egerton Jeffreys, Esq. and many Thanks to him for bis Exertions and Services"—" Col. Chidden and the South Shropshire Yeomanrv" Mr; Beale, ill . returning thanks as a member of the corps, paid a high compliment to the troop he had the honoui to command.—" The Judges of the Shew, and many thinks to them'*—" The President, Job RargnShaw, Esq. and many Thanks to hiro for taking the Chair, and thereby bringing us together this - Evening- 11 Mr. Rayenshaw returned thanks and said be should much rather have been sitting a the beginning Of a Society of that sort than at. the ending of it.— v< Rev. Mr. Pardoe1'—" The suc- cessful Candidates." Mr. A D. Jones, as one of # 16111, returned thanks, and observed^ that though he was not quite satisfied with the proceedings of the day, and still morfr- dissattsned with the Society being gi. ven tip, he could not but be sorry to find that their worthy President's proposal to continue-, it should not have met with a man to second it in the county of Salop. He regretted that the county of Salop should produce only one man who would endeavour to rekindle the flame that one- 1 - had biirned with vigour. Had lie himself resided in S| l. ro pshi^ e , b e. sh oul d, with ou t any hesitation, have seconded^ it, but living in the county of Mont- . goj. nery, be considered it proper, in. him. to abstain from dj; xing ML Bather, N strenuous Sup- ;^ o^ er.. 5f4; he; 2;^ ficftttn- r& of the" County"—" Lord . Berwick" — " Bliu'k." In.. proposing .. this toast,. Mi:^ Beale said Mr. Blnek had the best lot of Southdown . Rams he- ever saw.—-" Mi*. Corhett, of JLeigh'ton Hall ( 3 tines 3)"— Earl of Bradford, the fit'st President oPthe, 4 Society." , At this, period, louie conyersatidiV g< ung; on about having another i '^ ciety, Mr. A ' D/ Jones remarked to the Presi- dent,, that, if the gentlemeu of the county should feel - jliiclilied to have another Society, he should, recommend them first to attend Sir C. Morgan's Shew, where they would see the gentry coming forward jn the manner they oug- ht, to encourage the practical agriculturists, and not carrying the pre- miums away. — " May the Tears of the Salop Funeral be dried up at Ludlow." This toast was allusive to a deterovHi^ tion that had been entered into by several - agriculturists, that if the ' General Society should be given up, they would establish a fr. esh oue . in the neighbourhood of Ludlow, whicli, there is, little doubt, will take effect Mr. A, 1). . Jones said he considered the Society as productive of good, indeed he was not aware that, a thin. , ipi to Mr. T. Bluck, of Wetmore, which are advertised iu « iir third page. Birmingham is in a state of cons'uVerablc alarm io. consequence of '/ persons having been bitten by rabid, a+ rimals,- Among the numerous letters, t the editor of • lhe\, BfrnTm<$ hn^ week on j he suSiject of hydrophobia, t here is . one from v.. H Hav. i ison, of the Sea Coai Oiiice, statin that he was bitten iii the cheek mauf years a « o by a favourite, pointer ( his teeth " making'' three holes), vvls. ich was in a state of inadnessat.' the time. 44 He. had bit a- horse- w! ii « ii died liiad, te- aVmg his flesh from his hopes. ' Flie insiant" M i. H. says, " i « y . dog had bit me.,_, or at Ic^ t . as soon as 1 c. ot* W PTO- cur- e it, 1 rubbed rr. y clwek- with two or three hautls, fut of common salt, and the last rohbinj; . J^ let the safi lie on for some- sime. I am therefore confident, if any person is bit, and instantly apples my 1 xr » « « 5y (>* tii. « -' h is at A- ays' easily p'roeorcd), the venom will be eradicated, as,, thank God, I iieverexpci;!- rnced any ill effects from the said bite.— The news papers report that ao ItajUn genii, email has be « n ured in a case of dreadful hydrophobia, , by copi- ous draughts of vinegar. . PREVBNTfVliS OF H Yt) ROPf! OBIA,^ r- Sir AstVey j Cooler, in allusion to this sut » ject in one of . his ; lectures, says— The best mode that can be adopted is, iminpdi- vtely after the part, ( ifts been b'nten, fo cot it out ; ou should tii'st ascertain at what depth the teeth have entered by menus of'a pro: > e,: and then . take care - to excise a sulHcient quantity, and leave no part ofthe injured integument, cellular membrane, or muscIe reniaiiVing. If perso'iis slibuId objec11o he use oftlie kii i fe— fo. dishj y object tb ha ye the. poisoned? pai't- cut away, I advise you in such eases to let si ik into the wound a smail piece of the potassa fusa ; this will T. eadiiy diss lve, and be- coming l iquid j its cauterizing -:' h » 0ii'ence ' will be i* ominuuicated to each part of the wound, and thus destroy the influence.. of the poison ; the best plan decidedly is the immediate excision of the part, and where it, has been done directly after the injury, it has, I believe, in every instance, been successful in_ preventing the disease ; if this practice should be opposed, the next best plan is the employment of the potassa fusa. I ams^ eaktrig of these means, you will observe, as preventives, and as for medical remedies, when the symptoms of hydrophobia have once appeared, I am not acquainted with any Every medicine, I believe, lias been tried over and over again, and, all have been found alike inef- fectual ; the only thing in the way of medicine that I think calculated to do g'ood is that which has lately been adopted in « Franee, viz. tire injection of warm water into the veins. To make the employ ment ofthe remedy safe, however, and to prevent pressure of the brain, tlie same quantity of blood should be previously abstracted, as it is intended there should be water injected ; with this precau- tion, I think the remedy a very proper and feasible one. 1 would here remark, that the blood need not be abstracted before the injection of the water,: but may be jet. flow from One vein while, the water is thrown in at; another, and this probably would be the better plan." R ) G3Eiiy.— On Saturday night, James Randall, an Irish pigman, slept at the Talbot. Public- house, DuHley, and on rising the next morning dis. • covered that he had Iveeu robbed of 18 sovereigns 18 oiH'- ponud notes, and four pounds in silver.— Suspicion immediately fell upon two yonng men named John Challiner and Thomas Rycrofr, Vvlv had slept that night in an adjo'miug nwnri, and wh< had left the house atan^ aiiy hour oil the Sun^ a morning for Birminghatrt. Ihfoi'mation was speedily forwarded to Mr. Adkins, prison keeper of that town, and on Monday morning that active officer found Ryeroft at the Rose and Crown public- house, tyioor- street, and instantly took him into custody. A short time after his companion arrived at the sat^ M? house and was secured. On searching the prisoners, a part of the stolen property was found in their possession, the prosecutor fortunately being abie to identify it. The same morning they under- went an examination before Hvia nolden, Esq. the result of which was the r being fully com mi I ted to Worcester g^ ol to take their trial at the ensuing assizes. On Sunday morning, the 4th instant, six persons embarked in a pleasure boat, near Ulverston, in- tending to proceed to the Isle of VValney. The boat swamped opposite Aldingham, and all uufortuuately perished I— Westmorland Advertiser. At the Oxford Sessions, last week, Miss New- berry, a lady of property residing at Benson, brought an action against a Mr, Grant,' for wooing her against her consent, and with having tormented and terrified her with his importunate addresses,, and most obtrusive and alarming conduct, for the last five years, which had deprived her of health, peace of mind, and comfort. It appeared, that John's love- was very constant, though hottest in the month of May— at which V. mcs, locks, bars, garden wails, were quite ineffectual ; bul all was of no ayaii— the Lady ,* as firm, aud John was ordered to keep the peace, if be could iiVit conceal his love, in his own recognizance for £ i() 0, anil two others of £ 50 each. . The dwelling house and premises occupied by Mr; Stein, surgeoif, Kftig street, Manchester, were totally consumed by fire on Monday night. At the O'd Bailev, on Saturday. au( l Monday last, Wiiliahi Ramsden Robinson, the young man who was charged a few weeks ago with several felonies bv a number of'shop- keeper^, but on whose behalf evidence was- offered to prove his innocence, and that the witnesses against, hitn mast be mistaken as tothe identity of his person, was tried on five sepa- rate indictments . All the vvituessesfor the prose- cution, in eai. di. ciise, expressed their firm couviction that he was rhe person wbo compiittecl. |, he^ thefis * - with which he was charged ; while, on the other haitd, individuals' of unquestionable ' reputation proved a complete ( itidi,•••' and that he Strongly re- sembiled anothemyoung man vvbo about London comniittiug . felonies. The- vprfsoner was acquitted o^ jilI but? tbe second; eharge.- In deliver- ing in the verdict iti the last ease, the foreman of the Jury said, " We do not wish by our verdict lo throw an imputation' upon the evidence of any individual ; aud i, for my own part, beg leave to say, l am quite satisfied, tlie witnesses have mis- takeu tbe prtsooe^ i-,^ fir- another person. 1' fHe vvas not tried by- the same Jury on all the indictments.] In the Court of Common Pleas, on the 17th inst. nn action was. brought by a gentleman liamed Williams, ' against' the Proprietor of one. . of ' the Kentish_ eoacbesgfoi;,: dan » ag'e!?.'' si « tt » . i « <? d, J^ two of his sonsi hayii, ig b^ en. tj^ wn- out.- of the. < tT(: lcey, o\ Vjng to the bad, State, of; Ms ... repair.- After the pleadings of CmVVisel'.". aii'd' ihe exam. iuatronwit- nesses, the . Learned Judge siunthed iip thg evidence, observing that it was tire;_' duty'of the coach- t> wuer to examine 16l^ eacH jrtirVney* * V » - d make sure of its safety.^- The'^ ury, after a short consult- ation, gave a verdict for COURT OF KING'S BENCH — 1 Joveiipevvi/ v. Hartland.— This was an action brought for com pen r sation of labbuV. The plaintiff hud been employed to make draughts'and estimates; and finally^) build a. bridge over the Severn, near Tewkesbury; oppo- site My the hill:; Several witnesses were called to prove the work done. Mr. Mgrryiitt; for the de- ence, complained that the work, was badly done— the foundation being defective, and much expense having occurred in consequence. He further ob- jected that the plaintiff was a subscriber to the bridge, and that the'specification was proceeded in before the Act of Parliament was obtained'.— The Chief Justice said, thaP it an engineer had incurred any expense by making surveys, by order of a committee, While an Act of Parliament was in pro- gress, the committee were liable to pay his expenses if the Act. should not pass ; but if it did pass', then the engineer must look to the trustees appointed by tlie Act of Parliament for that purpose. However, fhe trial might go on j to see whether the present defendants were answerable,-— JLt^ appeared that another plan bad been made . by Mr. Telford. A discussion took place on the, merits of the respective plans. Mr. Mbueypenny's^ estimdte was £ 1000 short of the real expense incurred ; and the, Chief Justice observed, that as tliis extra expense had been incurred by Mr. Moneypenny's negligence in not. examining the bed: of the river previously to making his estimate, it was a questidirhow far he was entitled to rem line ration, having pat the com- mittee to so much unnecessary texpeu. se. The esti- mate was £ 20,000, and tbe expenses were £ 21,000. — The Attorney- Oeueral'apprehended, t. liat- if an engineer were bouiid exactly Jto the estimate given, few would be found to venture oi) VV estimate of siich magnittide.-^- Tfie Lord Chief J ustlcfrthought that eng'iiieers should be bound by thei, r estimates, unless a^ > rctasonable^^ eaiise appeared to justify the extra charge from unforeseen circumstanced^- The Attorney- General said, that Mr. Moneypenny's plan • h^ d saot- 1 beeu. strictly adheied to.— M r. Marry- att observed, that if. the - bridge Irad beeif built according to Mr. Moneypeniiy's'plan, it wduld have fallen to pieces, the foundation, haying beeii: laid on a bed of sand, vyhich. obliged them to drive piles of 20 feet, in order to secu'rVthe abutments,—• The Lord Chief Justice was decidedly of opinion., that if an engineer, however clever, did not use due care as well as due skill in makiug- hM estimates, he was not. entitled to remuneration. It - was too much, after ah engineer had misled his employer by a false estimate, caused either by neoTrgejice. or inattention, that he should put in a claim for compensation.— Plaintiff nonsuited. The rage for building is such, that, o: i all the roads leading direct to aud from Loudon, wherever there may be any spare ground fronting the road, there is sure to be a board up for the whole or the greater part of such ground to let on u building" leases.. This is particularly the Vase on the western road,— at Knight abridge"; at Kensington ( where an amazing extent of building as well as brick- making are\ proceediug, under Lord Kensington), at Ham- mersmith, and ou to Brentford and Islewortb, this is particularly the case. The phraseology of some of these boards is highly amusing : there is oue, for instance, between Hammersmith and Kensington, which states, after announcing that the ground is to let on " building leases," that " bricks, money, aud timber, may also be had " The iron trade has recently assumed an uncom- mon briskness, iu consequence of which the inanu. factu- rers in • Wales and Yiu kshire have advanced the price one pound per ton This difference pro- duces to the'house of a " worthy City Alderinan an additional elghteeu., iho. nsaud pounds a. year pro tit at least. ,. At the late meoting ol the Horticultural Society, a new kind of Strawi> erry, called Wilvnofs Superb, wjjs exhibited; which measured nearly three iuche* across^ • « - » 4 •• To the- Editor of ' the Salop fan Journal- Will you' liiij'e the goodness to insert itr your ,' next Paper the fuliowing extempore ENGLYNION, which w^ reredied by Mry J- Jo NFS ( Myllin), on , tbe < lav. vyl. eji R. W> V.\ UGHAS, i: sq. attained the a « e of t weuty. one •,'• » « ;(! which were omitted to be Kent by me until the present time. . , • L remain. Sir, Your obedient Servant, DAVID JONES. : UanfyttLn, ihi July, 1824.'" . ' a gyfansotUhcyd yn ddifyfyr zV . Wtrhyritiddus • lleutu JSannau, Syr Robert, sj w r bybaich—- yn ^ haeddu -.- . Ei b- yddo. et. ii fwyu gyfareh \ JJu I^ yt'w- yu yw, diliaf'arch, L!' on:- i l> au b, a I lawn o fearch. Mir oe. sirt;; ci ri oes w r ar'a$> i noddj Ei t^ y'fteiddwych••($ yjrifa- h'j,- Yn • gadarn ; bo mewn gvviwdab, A by d o / fc/ bocd Pyv Fab. •- ,01 e'i O;! hoed tra v bydd— yn deg ., . Yrt u. h e. i. DAD heunydd . FelJy cjod, is rhod yn Hi y d- d ../;.', Drjg iddo y, n. dragy wydd. Iw hardd Fan/, ddinam ddynes,— hoed llwyddiant B v d Ikwyen a mawr( es j • Mi fagWy&' PeK. dejiges • Iw Gwlad, yn fvvy o lad 16s. . ,, tV Gwoiuiaid, rhag inawr gyni,— yn rhwyddwyeh Y I'liydd ^ iuseui Yn lou,. am ei daioni,. Mil o hyd' ai liiola lii.„ Tra bydd y i.' iront/ dd, arr liryniau,— a'r Haul Ar ei hwyl irf Delia u Yn Nghymru bydd clodydd clau 1 en- viog Deulu NASNNAU.' MY I, UN. flints on the Cultivation of the Straw hern;. From the Memoirs ofthe Ca! e, Ionian Horticultural , Society,-. No,. XI. 1' [ INSHRTUL') BY. REQUKST-] TUB Strawberry ( Fragarid'J, of wbieh there are several species, ami numerous varieties, is oii'e of the finest fruks- of the season, ahas long been in cultivation in every garden, from that, of tMVvtyty down to the peasant, and it may'be supposed that little can be said upon- its - culture, as it is a plant that thrives almost in every place. Ai! that is meant at this time is* only to point out where part . of its cul. tiire is erroneous,;: arid by, what methods it may- reason ably- be improved*.•• : v; The iiist e^ ror we shall, mention1 is., cutting o. ver tlie. plants after the fruit is. gathered. This is practised in many, places, ami probably originated from the rambling growth of the plant, which j'omi runs into confusion, it being necessary to keep if within bounds. Therefore, soon after the straw- berry season,. the plants '- are all dressed ; . which, is done by cutting oli' the leaves and'runners, hoeing between the; rovvs}.. and raking . ol}' the rubbish, making the whole neat and clean. However desir- able it'is to have every part of the garden in the best order, . having the plants . to, produce bette crops aud finer fruit would doubtless be preferred. : This cannot r. easOJitibiy be expected, when we con siiier, that., by cutting oyer the leaves, we divest the plants, of all the sap they contained, and which WHS in preparation to be deposited in the buds, for the production of the next year's crop, in the same way that taking off the leaves prematurely from a vine shoot, prevents- it from producing fruit the next season, : as., vvhHrever a leaf ^ as taken oil', that bud wiil not jjhow a single bunch. It is nation! J Suppose tlK1- s:) iii. e. eilet't., to'a certain extent,, will lie produced by tbe strawberry leaves. Further, the plants being exposed to frost, are apt to be hurt in winter, from the want of that protection the old - leaves would, have'- altor- de. d,.. and the- wicakness- of themselves, fi; oui what Should have strengthened the plants beiiug. forcibly token from them, ft is true that, by cutting over tlie plants at that time they will put forth a new set of leaves. So inncl the" worse,.. This being an . extraordinary effort of tiie living principle, to restore what had been pre mature. lv destroyed, and only exhausting the plant faster, as the autumnal frosts generally set in and destroy . those leaves, before they can /. perform their functions. It is in fact putting nature to the ex- • pence . Of. two suits in a season, when she would have been content , with: one,, and to better purpose - There is another part of rthe general culture which is improper, that is, digging between the rows every winter. Sometimes this, is done, for the sake of manuring theui, by digging in a little rotten dung among them, or' Sometimes, it is done merely to expose the soil to tli'te; action of tl' e weather, both of Which are"' wrong/'' From" the state that the ground should he in " at the time they are planted they will not require to be manured, unless they are'allowed :; t. o reniain too long in one place. The roots on each; side of the plants, being all cut or broken in the operation, do not produce iibi- f freely ; therefore, the plants cannot, set off in sprin^ with" the same- vigour as if undisturbed. llenqe they show their blossom weakly, at a time when all the strength of the plants is requisite to resist the changes of .. the weather that frequently prevail at the time ihey; edme into flower. This renders;? great number of the l owers abortive, and - eyei'i' those that set do not- swell freely,/ so that the fruit- is hardly worth the gathering. By the tiine . t. hje piauts liave regained their strength and vigour, Which is perceptible upon their foliage about the time the fniit ripens, they have again to submit to being cut over, before their leaves can, perform their o'frice, which has been tikpw'ise considei- ably '' retarded, hy their roots beilig- disturbed and broken off.' This repeated annually, no wonder that lire :" crop- gets'Vi'orse and w. orse every, yCar, till at length • the plants become almost barren, and require a eoiVsiderahle breadth of ground togivea dish daily, for tlie supply of an ordinary faniily. Moreover, in soils that are apt to ' throw out. in winter, the dig- 1 ging between the rows hastens it ; for the ground • being bare, allows the frost to act with greater force, and ' th'e side- roots being broken in the'ope- ration, only the downright or tap'roots remain, • which are easily torn asunder; thus the plants are in no better state in spring than if they had beep liewly planted; Having'- mentioned what we consider errors in the cultivation of the strawberry, We come next to point • out in what mariner it may be improved. In the fi^' place, the plants, ought, to be planted in- good rich ground, and in an open situation, in a compartment by themselves, riot.- as edging to walkjs or borders, as is sometimes done, nor between thp rows of gooseberries, & c. in all which places tlieV may be considered as secondary, where their culture must, be regulated by the principal crop, of what- ever kind it. may be.' Where they, a re cultivated iu a spot by themselves, their culture can be regulated on their own account entirely Spring is to be preferred to autumn for planting ( the plants having been takeri off and planted in nursery lines the end ofthe r.' unmer preceding), as it is seldom that those planted at: the last- mentioned period are sufficiently established to resist the severity of winter, which commonly throws a'' great number of the plants out of the gi'ound and destroys them ; and although the deficiencies are inade up in the following spring, they never come away sp^ regularly as if planted altogether at that time, when they have the whole growth ofthe summer to establish themselves before the winter sets in. If they are allowed sufficient room between the rows, a slight crop, such as let. tnce or small salad ing, may be sown in drills between them, which will all be removed before their runners have made much progress. All the care necessary for the season is only to keep them clean, which, after the runners are considerably advanced, can only be done by hand- weeding, allowing them to continue as they are till the fol- lowing spring-. Then, as soon as the weather sets in dry, let them be divested of all the runners* of * It is a question whether the strawberry runners exhaust the plants so much as is generally imagined. When tlie plants shoot up into flower, they throw out their runners, having each a bud or young plant in embryo upon their extremities, which, after being pushed forward a Certain length, strikes its tender roots into the soil, expanding its ' leaves at the same time, so as to be able to generate sap for itself. After it has gained , strength, it in its turn pushes forward a runner, and sometimes two, whose bucis also strike root, and again push forth runners in their turn, and so on fi- OTO one to another, till the growth stops for the season. This th'ey will do, although the runner be cut or otherwise destroyed, which'connects the parent plant and the first bud or'young plant, provided it be sufficiently ' established before that is done, and " so on with alt. the other plants or buds in their turn. This is t6* be uiulerstood of plants growing in. the natural ground, as those, growing j in pots, for early fruit, in peach- houses or vineries, have not an opportunity of taking root, in the. soil, except a few \ yh'icn may chance to fix themselves in some of the neigh- the preceding year, ho. eing the ground/ between the rows, and raking ol£ alj jiaujni of rgtten leaves or runners, makiug- the whpie neat. They will need i: i, o other culture during the, sumnrer but only to be kept clear of weeds : a good preventive would be to give the ground another hoeing, before their fofiage be so far advanced as not fallow it. to be done with safety. They may be expected to give a : mo, derate crop this season, if the weather is favour; able, and will require no other . euitu, re_ j, u future than what has been already stated^ keeping clean of weeds in summer, aud dressing- in, spring. The ad vantages of this practice^ are these: All the sap that \* as prepared, in the leaves is thus allowed h\ be deposited in the buds for the produc- tion of the liext year's crop.:, the runners aud foli- aoe protect the plants, from the inclemency of winter, by. fheir falling down. as a covering for that purpose : ird, lastly, in ground where the plants are liable to be throw. i out by frost, it pr, events by the whole being, as it we're, an entire piece of network, which consequently . nuist'rise in a: mass. ' An objection, may be made. j If th; e rows are not to be dug between, how are they to be manured, as they generally are allowed to reumin a number of years in the same place? In,. answer to which it has been said, they should be ^ planted in. good, rich ground, which may be, supposed to produce several crops before it, is exhausted,. But. where it < uay be necessary to apply manure, it should be . gi ven in a liquid'fonn. The drainings of a dunghill are excellent, and may be, given any time in winter, if the' weather is open, or in spring,. Pigeou^ dung makes a very good manure, when so slightly pointed or forked in as not to disturb the roots, at the, time tire plains get. their spring dressing ; the, '. good effects of . which vv ti i soon be visible from the dark coIour of. their fo 1 iage. But the most eftectual method to have straw- beriues vigorous and fruitful, is not tballow them to remain too long in one place. The period will vary according to the soil. In, light, sandy soils, they will not stand good near ; so longt as in deep Iqain -, in the one they will do little more good after the, third crop, and in the other after the-. fifth. On the first, they a, re at their best the second crop - on t; he other the third ; after" those periods at an y.' e. ragiij. t'lie - produce' ' d- ecliue on , both.. The Hantb- ffis and Chiii kinds are exceptions to this,, as thry will continue a year or two longer in Rigour, according to the soils they are planted iu. Therefore,, io have straw berries; in the greatest Miction, : m . quantity should he / planted every IXKiiig', in, proportion to ; the soijwthey grow/ upon,. That us,' on liglitsoils a third, and heavier soils a CiOh part, trenching or digging up the same quan- tity after the crop is gathered. Bui the proportions be planted or dug. up: annuaily, will be best understood bv the person vyho has the management of them, as he will be the best judge at what time deterioratio'a< of their produce commences, wliich, in some sorts and situations, will be sooner, un<! in/ others later, as above hinted, after which period no art will bring them to their former fruit- " iilum; but the crop will continue to grow worse ind:. worse every year, the plants losing that ener- getic power for the production of fruit they pos- sessed when they i were young, and appearing to expend their/ strength on a luxuriance of foliagef . By thesp means there will always be a healthful stock of. diCer- eat ages, ill " regular succession, which will produce plentiful crops in ordinary seasons; consequently require less ground for the supply of faniily, and give greater satisfaction to their owii'. r, as well as to the person who has the charge of them. / . - , . , ..-•.', '• ;- - Tlie strawberry season may be eontiuued from the time they ripen in, the o, en ground, till they are destroyed by the frost in autumn, by planting a few of ihe various kinds in different situations ; a practice familiar to every professional man, and which need not here be detailed farther, than to . mention that they may be arranged in the followin manner. The Scarlet or Virginian, and some i . on the 18th of Nov; 1818, by which he bequeathed the great bulk of his property from his child to bis two nephews, Thomas and Valentine Clarke, who were the parties to this cause. Of this will those gentle- men duly took out letters of administration, but at the instance of Mrs. Dew, who. affirmed that her father was, at the time of " making his will, labouring under , a perversion pf intellect, and incapable of1 making a rational testamentary disposition of his property, they Were recalled, and in the result both parties were put to the proof of their case. From the circumstance of the respectability of the testator's practice as a surgeon, some of the witnesses who were conversant with his habits and dispositions were of the first classes. Amongst, others vvas/ the aged Bishop of Durham, who was a patient of his, and his Lordship's evidence was a good deal relied upon. ; Hcsiated, that calling upon Mr. Stott one day, that geii. ilemaij began to complain in violent terms of the cb id net of his daiigbter, and upon his Lordship rising to leave the room, as lie deemed this an unfit subject. for him to interfere in, the deceased placed himself, agaiiist the door, and refused to suffer him to wi. th- diaw tor a considerable time. Several other facts were spoken to hy different witnesses, with a view of establishing the testator's incapacity of intellect^ and it was mentioned that he left a legacy of one hundred pounds to- a Mr. Gough. " for assisting him in reforming his daughter," although Mr. Gotrgh declared that he never had done any thing to render him worthy of such a bequest, and that he was Ignorant. that liis assistance in that respect was needed. On the other hand, the fact of Mr. Shut's having enjoyed an extensive and respectable prac? tice in his profession was put forward to show that h<? was a person capable of managing his domestic and pecuniary concerns. Tlie quality of his patients was also a good deal relied upon. It was stated that the dislike which he had entertained for his child, and which seemed to have transferred i I self from her to her mother, s however little in accordance with • pa- iieutul affection, did not amount to a proof of the abseuee of reason. Some statements were also made with a view of showing that this daughIer was 11ot exactly, of a disposition to endear herself much to the kindly teiideruess <. f her parent. tJpon this state of thing'sthe Court below had admitted the alleg- ations of cruelty as against tlie daughter, and, coming to a conclusion that such conduct from a parent towards ch'dil could be accounted for only by a supposition of insanity, had declared deceased to have died intestate, and that the property ought, therefore, to follow tbe& ordinary dispositions of the law. DI- S. ADBAMS and LUSHINGTON and Mr.' J. WIL- LIAMS were now heard in support " of the AJRPETIL. The chief ground upon which they went was, ' hat the . Court, beiow had, contrary to the rules, of the Civil Courts,.. admitted particular allegations of cru- elty exercised towards the daughter, and that the Learned Judge's views of the justice -- of the case were warped by a consideration of its harshness to- wards the child. Drs JENNGR and PBILMMORB were heard against the appeal, and they went as well upon the broad facts of the case as the presumption derived from the acquaintance ot the Learned Judge of the Courts below with the forms, of the Civil Courts. Counsel having concluded Uieir arguments, the Court was cleared for the Judges to consider, when, iu about a quarter of an hour, the doors were again opened, aud t- be judgment of the Court vvas decki. rcd to he against the appeal. rmitours Were abroad, and precautions taken to exclude all troublesome visitors. Mr. George Lane Fox was deceived fry a pretended summons from the Speaker of the House of Commons. The Earl of Orford was taken in by a man dressed as a por- ter, who said lie was the bearer of a lost bet on the Oaks, on. the settling day, at frattersalS's. The Ear! of Thanet, and Mr. Edward Moore^ Were • intruded upon in their respective dressing I'ooms'y and Mr; H. Baring, though particularly engaged at the moment, was deceived by the assumed'urgent nature of the messenger's business.-*—— Morning Paper. The will of Sir George Wood, Knight, late one of the Barons of the Exchequer, was registered in the - FreiiJgative Court, Doctors'- Commons, on the 16th instant. Probate was granted to Thomas Bayldon and William Bayldon, the nephews, the executors. The personal estate was estimated afc under the sum of £ 140,000. The w ill is dated the 29th of November, IS' 23. The testator reqhesls, should he die liear Loiidoii, to be buried in the Temple church; ami, Villi:. permission of the behchers, lo have a monument or tablet placed there to his memory • but if in the north, to be interred at Royston, and a baudscmie monument erected : in that case he makes a bequest, of £ 20 to; the vicar, and £ 10 to the parish / clerk.. His house, furniture, and provisions, are given to the use of Lady Wood for life, with the { niheipal sum of £ 50,000 3 per Cent. Consols, absolutely ( to be iu lieu of dower) ; it is, however, subjected to a disc. reliohary jhoviSiOn " foi4 her Ladyship's sister, which, in case 6iv^ e. cond.. ai'arriag^, is to be fixed at tlie annuaj charg^ of £ 3^ 500 Consols; for her sister's life. The, testator's real estates], which lie in Yorkshire, he has ajjjiortioned among nephews, subject to annual . chaijges for female relatives. He has left many l^ acVes, but/ they are almost all to relations and servants; £ 60,000 Consols in sums varying from £ 4,000 to £ 10,000, are given amongst nephews and nieces, and the • residue seems to be divided amongst individuals of the same kihtired: there is IK> mention of any ; children. His law books, precedents, Grose'i Antiquities, Doomsday, Dugdale's Mohasticonj State Trials. MSS. & c." are left by the will to his wife and a Mr. Allen ; but a codicil, written in feeble hand, provides that, should Mr. John Alex- ander Wallace marry his niece Lduisa Bayldon, s I / think they are engaged " ( the young lady appears to - be a fav<) urite), some of these books should lie. his ; he alludes to the.- former . appropriation,, and adds, u if my. vvife and Mr. Allen cannot agree about them, let Godfrey Sikes decide the same." niece might have been with the husband of her first choice? I remember that when I. remonstrated with him, he exclaimed :-—" Why, Cbhbett, the fellow's a beggar."—" Weil," said I, " but her father has \ money enough." Alas, what has resulted froni bringing her to England and marrying her td a rich husband ! ^ M^ S^*^ MLiMtU& ncQm EntdHgencc. The most invaluable Cosmetic iii existence is ROW- LAND'S KALY'BOR; although of recent discovery, t has already become tlie iudispensible Accompani- ment of Rank, Fashion, Ta^ te, and Discernment, liir^ ughout the British Empire, and is rapidly ex- tending its renown to all parts of the civiliizetl Universe. Every possible refinement of Science is resorted to, by which to enhance the charms of Fe- male .' Beauty, and to possess the virtue of sustaining- the reign of .. Loveliness against the inroads of Time, Climate, " and Disease. This Desideratum has been effectually attained in Rowland's Kalvdor. In all uiaiieous blemishes, inclnding Eriij/' truft, Freckles,. Su'n. f, bu'f: n> Rbu^ hness, Tension, ; Hai'siiness,;& c. the ! K A L Y DO R is p re- e mi rich tl'y s ucc^ essfli I i n ei it'dica. tiOn : renovates the ski'u to mdre tliah f) riktine radiance, imparts the roseate hue ; of health, wrth elasticity and velvet- like softness equally delightful to feeling as to sight, - and pre^ ervies * the bloom appaiehtly bf youth even niaugre the Cdnscioiisuess of age. These ate incontrovertible facts proved by d a i I v e x p e ri e nCe, oh the te st p f w h ich M e'ss rs". ROWLAND clieerfully rely, satisfied that ihe Cele- brated KALYDOR, as a Cosmetic of vital import- ance to ihe preservation of personal attraction, is unequalled by any other in existence. others,: ripen nearly together, which make the first crop,. These are succeeded bv the Hautbois, and the different varieties of Chili, & c. Then the Wood and AI pine sorts continue the succession ; ;: V'd by planting a few of the true Alpine Straw- berry iri spring, in a Warm situation, these being protected in autumn frrt- ni sliglit. frosts, will con- tinue to give a dish as long as the weather remains open . As these are ineanc to staa< l only one season, IV)!' the production of a temporary crop, they may be planted considerably tliicker than ordinary ; which would give protection to a greater uumber of plants on the same space of ground. These hints must be known to many, and may Induce others to torn their attention towards im- proving the culture of one of the finest and earliest n- fiiis of the season- bouring pots. Consequently they must draw al! their support from the parent: It is Observable, that, the young plant never fixes itself till its parent has pushed it. forward to, its utmost limits, which- is known by the connecting runner being always in a straight line, if it meet with no obstruction, ' which, was it to extend in length after the young plant fixed itself', would make it form a curve, more br less, according to the length it grew. t The following may probably be the cause. Every bud that informed, either upon the plant itself, or upon the runnerSj throws out radicles. These striking into the ground, draw additional nourishment for its support, besides wha, t it may receive from its primary roots. But vvhen an elongation of the plant takes place, which is the casein a few years, the buds which are situate upon the top of the plant, although they invariably emit radicles in quest of food, are, from their elevation, finable to reach tlie ground. Hence they wither and die Off, without fulfilling the intentions of nature, and the plants being deprived of their secondary support, the deterioration of their produce naturally follows. Any person may satisfy himself'of the trUth/ of this by inspection. In young plants the radicles of the different years will be. visible in distinct series oiie above the otsher. While on the old plants,' which; are/ con- siderably advanced. in- height, there is none above the sur- face of . ti'. e soilTexce. p. ting those of the present yeari, twisted and warped amongst the axil. l ® of . the foliage in search of food, which are destroyed in the course of the following winter. High Court of De leg ales. ce of t he King's Commi w J II ( lores, MR. Justice Last week, in pnrsna, two. of ( he Cpinmnu I,; and Mr. Banon Unliock, assisfed by Drs. Aruol Coote, Buruaby,. Daubeuey, Gustling, and Lee, sat in error in the Judge's Chamber, Seijeant's- inu, for the purpose of hearing an appeal from the judgment of Sir John Nic'oll, Judge of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, in. a testauicntaiy cause. 01. A UK E AND ANOTHER T). DEW. The circumstances which ga e rise to the proceed- ings were these. On the 18th of November, 1818, died JRly Stoit, Esq. at. the advanced age of seventy- two, who had for many ye » >' s practised as an eminent surgeon iu !! art., street, Bloomshury. He was a man of eccentric habits, at)< l at his- dissolution left proper- ty, in real aud personals, to the-- value of £ 40,000. He had married in 1774, but his wife died in 1788, leaving -' one daughter, the sole issue of the marriage, whose name was Charlotte, now Mrs. Dew. Against this child the deceased^ app^ ared, from all accounts, fo have imbibed a most unnatutal and unconquerable dislike,- even from the moment of her birth. At so ear. lv an . age as eleven, he was represented in ihe depositions as placing her in ( he same bed with a lunatic patient, on account of some childish act of disohpdicnce ( in her part. He often said that she was a daughter of Satan. Several other instances of similar treatment were spoken to in the depositions, and his treatment of her became so severe that she left his house, and obtained a situation as Governess, first iu the family of a gentleman of the name of Abbott, on Blaekheath ; aud lastly in the house of a Mr Dew,, of Guildford street, tow hose son she has been since . married. The old gentleman made a will COURT OF COMMON PLEAS.— Saturday, a erim,. con. cause was tried, ' Honey sett v. Bveklti. n- d.~- r Plaintiff is owner of the Swan I my Tun bridge • Welly; and defendant, • a. married man without childrer « j was described as a sort of gentleman farmer. The criminal intercourse was pretty clear ly established, but there was an important set- off by defendant : the lady, who Was married at 15, previously had a child by her husband ; and it ap- peared also that she had cohabited with her husband subsequent to the criminal connection with Buck land, and had assisted him in procuring- evidence for the present trial.— Juror withdrawn. Iu the Court of Common Pleas, on Wednesday last, a dispute arose between the Chief Justice and Seigeant Wilde, ou the subject of an exception tendered by the latter to an instruction given by his Lordship to the Jury, in the case of an alleged fraudulent sale, of no public interest. The Chief Justice more than once threatened to send the Sergeant fo the Fleet; and the latter each time observed, that his Lordship might commit him if he pleased, but nothing should., deter hipj from doing his dmy to his client. COPYHOLD TENURES.— In the case'of Gar land v. Jekylt, which involved the question of the legality of seizing the late Sir Charles Bunbary's horses as heriots for the copyhold property he held of tbe manor of Week's Park Hall, Essex, Chief Justice Best, on the 5th instant, laid it down as the law, that when a copyhold estate had been divided it became necessary that every heir should pay one hejiot on the decease of his ancestor, be cause he made a distinct claim, and was benefited by his admission to a distinct property; but on a union of these shares, that necessity ceased, and the Lord could only be considered entitled to what would have been due to liim on tbe original grant By this decision the Lord ( Mr. Garland) receives two heriots instead of fpurteeilj which he had claim ed on Sir Charles's death. THE NFW BRKAD ACT— Amongst the other provisions of the Act passed during the last Session for amending the Act of the 53d of Geo ILL l. itive to fixing the assize of bread, it is provided, that " By reason of the great decrease vviiich has takeii place in the price of the several articles used in the making and baking of bread since the pa sing of the Act in question, it is become expedient that the bakers and makers of bread for sale should receive a less allowance for., their charges arid profit than. is given by that Act. Be ii therefore enacted, thai from, and after the 1st day of July instant, the Mayor, Aldermen,' and• Magistrates, in cities and towns corporate, and any two or more Justices in towns where there is no Mayor, or in counties generally, or in their respective jurisdictions, shall set an assize of bread, in execution of the provisions of the said recited Act. The allowance to the baker to be when the assize is set from the average price of wheat, 13s. 10j; d, per quarter, and vvhen set from the average price of flour, the allowance to he lis. 8d. per sack, being in each case a decrease of one half the assize, or one farthing- io a quartern loaf, of the allowance given to bakers by the Act of the 53d of Geo. 111." GAMING HOUSE.— An action will be tried in a few days, in the Court of King's Bench, to recover penalties to the amount of £ 80,000, for monies won from several Noblemen and Gentlemen, at a certain first- rate gambling house in, St. James's- sth- et.— ' Fhe Master of the establishment has used every precaution to guard his fry from the cormorants of the law, but neither the privity of a club house, a strict ballot, to which only Members of Parliament, or of the principal Clubs, were admissible, or the seven fold fence of doors within doors have been sufficient to exclude the inquisitive eye of the law, or daunt tbe perseverance of the individual who has undertaken the action. The list of witnesses con- tains names of high rank and fashion, and the following have been, actually served with subpoenas to attend and give evidence. The messenger em ployed to perform this duty was obliged to use various artifices to get access to the parties, as MRS. HENRY BARING. The following statement respecting this unfor- tunate. Lady, coming from the p6n of Cobbett, affords matter for serious reflection, moral and pol it Ic. al. Morally Speaking, here is a lesson against that degrading worship <> f the Golden Idol, tp which youth, beauty, innocence, and ultimately reputa- tion and happiness, are too often sacrificed, in all countries calling themselves civilized Politically speaking, we perceive that a Reputi Hears form of Government is so far from affording a safeguard against public injustice, that Cobbet himself admits a more impudent act of tyranny to have been practised by the/ Legislature of Re pub lican Pennsylvania than^ would or could have been done by M onarcbieal England or Des pot ic A us. iria 1 A lawful marriage was annulled because the Stunsiwr GJtmute, 18* 24. Mondyy July 26 Wednesday . .". 2IS Tlmrsdav 29 Friday..' 30 Saturday 31 Monday — Aug- ust 2 Tliursday Saturday.. 7 Monday 0 Tuesday Ill Wednesday 11 Saturday 14 Monday I ' Tuesday I Saturday 2 Monday 2 Tuesday 2 Wednesday 2 Saturday... S Wednesday, Sept. Saturday CIRCUITS OF THE JUDGES. Norwich Leicester , Coventry and [ Warwick Lewes Guildford'" . Carlisle Monmouth... . V, Bodmin Appleby...... , Lancaster Gloucester ... Wells. Bristol husband was a poor Frenchman, aiid the wife a rich American; it could not be annulled by any Court of Justice, and therefore the two; Houses of Assembly'and the Governor of the State ' formed themselves into a Court of Injustice to do it by legislative enactment. It may; be said, the3 En glish Parliament also annuls marriages which the Courts of Law cannot annul. True; but thje only ground of divorce which it admits is! onje which has a strong, moral, and scriptural founda; tion. Parliament, never proceeds but on a cri- ihitmlity alleged ami proved in ihe fullest manner Whether the Engiish system be in other respects good or bad may be elsewhere cousid( u: cd; but w perfectly agree with Cobbelt, that so shameless and unprincipled an act as he describes the Perm sylvanian Assemblies to have passed would not have been listened to for a moment in a British House of Lords or Commons. The statement in the Political Register is as follows:— It is how twenty- six years, or thereabouts, sine I saw Mrs. Baring in her native town of Phih delphia, a place famous for the soft and beautiful features, of its women ; and she was then deemed the most beautiful of the beautiful . Her features Were the sweetest that my eyes ever beheld; and she was, all taken together, the most perfect beauty that I had ever seen, or that I have ever seen since. You know, Sir, that the laws of the petticoat ( more powerful than those of the 44 omnipotent" House) require that we, upon such occasions, except our own wives; and this I hereby do in obedience to • hat law. During the cross- examinations, the witnesses were asked, whether Mrs. Baring had ever been married before she was married to Mr. Baring. No positive answer was given to this; and an iiislhuatipriseemed to lurk under the question. The truth is, then, that she was marred at , Philadelphia when she: was not more, I should think, than fifteen or'sixteen years of age. The history ofthe marriage is this: — Mr, Bingham, the lady's father, who was one of the richest meii in the country, lived in Philadel- phia, where he kept a house more like an English Lord than a Republican citizen. lie entertained all the Noblemen and Gentlemen from England and from France, and indeed from Europe, who visited Philadelphia— the Dukes de Noailles and Liancourt, the present Duke d'Orleans, aud his brother; andj, in short, all the Noblemen and Gentlemen wh<> visited that city. Mrs. Bingham Was a very heanti fill and accomplished woman, so that the house of Mr. Bingham, who was a Senator of the United States, vvas really bv far the first house in the country. Amongst the foreigners who, at the time here alluded to, visited at Mr. Bingham's, was a Count de Tillv, a French emigrant Nobleman, He was about 22 years of age, I should think, and the younger Miss Bingham, now Mrs Ileiirv Baring, was, I should suppose, about sixteen. The Count was not what a. man would think very handsome; but women do not see men w ith men's eyes; and besides, he talked well, was very gav, had a good deal of wit, and was ( I'll be bound for him) very ardent ( a prime quality), and the bare sight of him would make you swear that he never thought of a loan in his life, except, indeed, as a borrower. Nothing but what was very natural took place between these parties. The Count was poor; con- sent of parents was out of the question. The lady escaped from her father's house They were privately, but lawfully, married in the evening; and that they did not sit up to wait for their pur- suers, you will readily suppose. Those pursuers got at them, however, before morning ; and a party, in great force, under the orders, and in the presence of an uncle of the lady, took her and carried her by actual compulsion to her father's house. I, at that time, published a Daily Paper in Phila- delphia The Count came to me to make his com- plaint, bringing me a written statement of all the faefs^/ or me to publish ; and I did publish it. Be fori the publication was out, however, the above- men finned uncle, whose name was Richard Willing, came to me to beg of me not to publish the Count's statement, I knew Mr. Willing a great deal better than 1 knew the Count; but the former did not deny any part of the Count's statement, and there- for'e l published it. There now took place one of those things that have made me dislike Republican Government. The Count endeavoured in vain to get at his wife. Some creditor of the Count soon put him into prison. He got his release upon condition, as I was told, of quitting the country ; and ( hear it, Jerry Be. ntham !) that famously honest and pure body, the two Houses of Assembly and the Governor of Pennsylvania, setting all law at defiance, passed an act to annul the. m arriage ! Co u. l d this have been done in Eng- land, France, Spain, Austria, or in any State in the whole world, except Pennsylvania? Never was there a more impudent piece of tyranny practised upon the face of the earth! and do we not now behold the fatal consequences ? Mr. and Mrs. Bing- ham are dead • but W is likely that Mr. Richard Willing is alive; and, if he be, what must be hi: sorrow, especially when he reflects how happy his It is- stated in an Evening Paper that a Coiil^ ahy is fbrhVmg iir Loiidbh for the purpose bf extehding Branch B^ iiks thi bti'ghdht yarldiis parts of Ireland on the following plan :-— a The Bank to have capital of £ 2,000,0^ 0, subscribed in shares of £ 50 each. To have a Board of Directors in London, and establishments for business in the principal towns iii Ireland, which are distant above fifty miles from Dnb'Vn. Ait'each of th'eSe places part of its Stock to be subscribed, and from the Stockholders a Local Board of Directors to be chosen. The establishments to be managed by steady and experienced per sous sent from this country, with the advice add under the inspection of the Local Directors, but subject to the entire con fro! of the London Board, to Vv horn accounts shall he regularly transmitted." The'Beffast Chronicle gives the particulars of a plan for a Bank in that city to be called the Ulster Joird Sf. Och Banh, with a capital of £ 500,000, " in shares of £ 100. The business is to be conducted on, the principle of the Scotch Banks. Each share of £ 100 shall entitle the Holder to a vofe in the election of Diri'clbrs and other Officers — Two of the Directors are tfo retire from office annually—; No person shall hold more than hundred shares—- These shares in the first instance are divided partly among the neighbouring country gentlemen, and partly among the residents in Bel- fast and the circumjacent towns, hi the first- few ho'urs after the proposed plan of ihe Ulster Bank was l& id open, u pwards of £ 75j000 was subscribed for by inhabitants' of Belfast and its neighbourhood, DREADFUL SHIPWRFCK.— The Jessie, a fine new vessel of 310 tons burden,,, commanded by Captain M'Alpine, distinguished for his general talents, and for his skill as a seaman and a naval architect, sailed from Three Rivers, in Prince Edward's Island,' on Dec.' last, a period of the y^ ar sofaievvjiat later than usual for an Euro pean voyage. Nothing was0 known of the vessel and erew, till on the 19th of May last, the master of the mail boat from Prince Edward's Island to . Picton, discovered part of the wreck of the Jessie si landed on the - Isle of St. Paul's, a bah en rock about half a mile in circumferelice, ^ 200 miles from Cape Breton, and 300 to 400 from Three Rivers. On landing, the'boatman found a weatheiv beaten ' tjemporary hut, and within it the awful spectatdc!'' of the" passehgers and cie'w of the Jessie, ' 22 in number, all dead! ^ having perished under the united rigour of famine, and the storm of an ahfipst pbjar winter. There were amongst them : pMid-' M* Ka'y, the owner of the vessel, and M r. Forbes^ of Miiamiehi, a partner of Mr. Drink, vvat er, of •. Liverpool. His Majesty's ship Athol ; has aVriveSfrom'North America. She has been out'of EngiaiulnearTou years, and visited several stations' for trial, being built of larch, from'the woods of the Duke of Athol, iu Scotland she has been found to answer in every respect remarkably well. ROM E.— Two peasants of MaCerata- FeUre, near Fort Leo, in digging a pit, at the be » inningof May, discovered something concealed below the surface. They in formed t hei r5 IhuaSfer, iv li<> i mined iitely ca me to the spot with three friends and a smith. With great difficulty they raised from the ground a brass chest hound with iron. The smith opened it, and they found in it the following valuable articles: many rodsand vessels of gold ; a crown ornamented with diamonds ; a great quantity of fenialc orna nients; cloths of AmiaiHhus with borders em. broidered in gold - j gold candlesticks, viith ahcient inscriptions, & c. The chest is five feet long, two brdad, and two and a half deep. We impatiently ex. A new fruit bas lately been infrtiductsl to liiis country, called C/ ieritnoi; a by the natives of Mexico; it has yet no Knglifeh name, but is a species of the Annona of Linwaens. It is esteemed a more delicate fruit than the pine apple. The fruit is covered by a green scaly substance Iii size and shape it resembles the heart of a calf, and the iiiteriOr substance isi similar to thick cream, svveefehea with fine sugar. It is arranged in the natural order Coadunatcp, and is of the Poty- andriu Polyginia class aud order. The flowers have only three petals, lanceolate, coriaceousr, tomento. se. RIVER NAVIGATION— MR Matthew Robert- son, of Glasgow, has contrived a float, similar it* principle to those used by the Dutch, for enabling a loaded ship to pass up and down rivers whose depth is not equal to her usual draught Of water. It consists of a decked flat bottomed boat, twice or thrice the sifce of the ship, with an opening in rlie m^ dle lai ge enough to receive her. This flat boat is fo'rtWea lit two |> feces, WHItli are iritited by a slrOtag liitige at the prow, aiid a strong dlasp at the stern. This i- lasp lieitig loosened, the two sides of the boat are made to diverge; I lie ship sails into the open space in the middle ; after which the sides are again closed and fastened. Four strong chains ( more, if necpssai'j) are then passed under lire ship's bottom, and atiaiTied lo screws fixed to the deck of the float; the Screws are then worked by whei'ls lind pinions, the chains are Shortened, and the vessU is gradually raised by transferring Hie pressure to Ihe float. The weight of the vessel is thus diffused over a surface twice, or ( if need be) thrice the size of her own bull, and of course the draught of water is proportionally diminished. It may thus be effected that a ship", drawing 16 feet of Waler,' being raised nine feet by the chains, shall depress the float three feel, and so her actual draught will be reduced to 111 tee I. PLATED G- AN I> LES.—-- Every Imdv knows what are plated candlesticks, but every body does not know what plated dandles ore, . although rliey are as common as plated candlesticks ; they are manu- factured as follows. The Maker dips tbe cotton and I'he incipient candles from time to time, until they are nearly finished, in tallow of very inferior description; and when they have almost' attained then- required thickness, he gives them a finishing coat. The outside bears tiie same comparison with tlie inside 6s the shell of the egg does lo its yolk; when burning - you will find ihe inside consume faster than ihe outside, Hie melted grease rouud Ihe cotton resembling oil iu a tallow lamp. These candies are usually sold at Oil and chandler's shops, who retail them a penny chcaper than Ihe tallow- chandlers. Plated candles are dear at almost any price; ydu rtiav - discover them by their snie 1. There are Other plated articles which, we shall strip of their covering at a convenient opportunity. The Economist. MANCHESTER POLICE QFFICF, TUESDAY, Robert Ellis, a confidential servant iu ihe empl. y of Mr. Jones, coach proprietor, and who had Hit management of the Mosley Arms Coach office, was committed for trial, charged with various acti of embezzlement, in receiving fares and not ac- counting for them. • Upon searching the prisoners private drawer the si I'm of £ 1,78!.' 6s. 0| d. was found in it; a lid the sum of'£ l37. 8s. ( id. upon his person.— It appeared, however, upon Ihe ooss- examination of Mr. Jones, that the piisouer ruikh) not have defrauded him of any thing near ihat amounl, as lie had been in Mr. Jones's employ only since February last, though previously iii the late Mr. Lcary's, at the same office, aud Ihe sums w ith which he was charged as having embezzled were mostly for short, fares. Ou'MoiWIay WRT- k, John Clarke, a red hot Hu bemian, applied at tlie' Polite Office,' ManclitsSer, in great agony of mind, under the following cir- cumstances:— It appeared poor Pal had driven some catlle to Mansfield Fair, which he sold for in five- pound Bank of - England notesi and sovereigns. As he was counting his money, in a public house, two Swells, in all Ihe sivle of Corinthiant, ocrosted the unsophisticated Irish- man, and offered lo allow liitn one shilling iii ihe pound, to exchange country notes for Bank of England, showing at the same time a large handle of them, and pretending Ihe reasoii they wanted to change them was they were going to London, where country notes would not pass. Pal, ftiink. ing the profit good, Immediately caught the itiail, and parted with his Henry Hose's and gulden George the Fourths. On his ariival in' Maqches. ler, he found, to his utter dismay anil mortification, that the well- tlressed gentlemen had bilhed, him with hire- Guinea Notes of the Povtefrar. t Bunft, which slopped payment some'years ago! We are sorry to observe, that1 horse stealing has now Income so " prevalent, lhat within the present year upwards of 20 horses have been stolen from this neighbourly od, and within rhe last few days scveil have been stolen from the neighbourhood of Retford., No trace whatever has been discovered of the offenders, although liberal rewards have- been offered.— Doncasler Gazelle. A youlh about - 10 years of age; of the name of Fleet, on Mohday last, drank from a bottle a pect farther particulars of this interesting discovery, poisonous mixture used by bis father, a shepherd Some persons conjecture that these jewels may have belonged to Berengar, Duke of lvrea1 and King of Italy, who in his war with the Emperof Otho I. fortified hiutself with his Queen Gilda, iyi the celebrated rock of St. Leo, where lie was besieged, and, together with his consort, fell into the hands of Otho, Who' sent them both to Germany. GOLDEN TREASURE.— A few days ago, some workmen were taking up a floor at the Malt Shovel public- house at Newbold, Breedon on- lhe Hill, in this county, they discovered a box conL tabling a considerable number of guineas, report says 250, which the occupier of the house claims as at Graffham, for washing sheep, which lie mis- took for niTIk, and we regret to add, he lingered in great agony for three days, when he expired. FATAL ACCIDENT.— On the morning of Tues- dayweek, about half past nine o'clock, the steam, boiler belonging lo the fat- tory of Thomas Darwell, Esq. Mayor of Wigan, suddenly bilrst, and wiih great violence threw down ' the liuilding which en- closed it. Immediately over the boiler was a room used for sizing the warps, in which werd I litre persons, each of whom when taken up appeared almost inanimate: oue of'lhem, Christopher Ken- you, died about noon, and the other two are in a his properly, his ancestors having lived there nearly I hopeless state. Avery liberal subscription has * ' —'— ' ' * been entered into on behalf of Ketiyon's widow, who has 7 fatherless children to support. REM ARK ABLE COINCIDENCE. - Three consins, of the name of Brancroft, all of Box, Wills, were killed last week, viz. Thomas, on Thursday, at Mouckton Coinbe, by the wheH'of a w aggon goiiio- over him;— Robert, oil Saturday, by failing from a building at Twerton ;— and John, also on Satur. day, by falling from thd: battlement of Mr. Long's house at Farley t a round of the ladder broke just as he had gained the'top. They have all left widows and families. COAC II AcciDENT.—- On Monday last, the Crown Prince Post Coach, running from Birming- ham towards London, was overturned between Daventry and Weedon, by which accident seven passengers were severely injured. One gentleman ( the clergyman of Davduti y) was unable to pro- ceed on his journey, and was conveyed back upon a bed provided by the officers iii Weedon barracks, who kindly sent six soldiers lo carry il upoil their shoulders, and an escort of six" others to relieve them. Evdry assistance was afforded by the officers, and ill about half an hour the coach was enabled to proceed on its journey. Tbe coachman escaped without any injury, having jumped off Ihe box as; soon as he perceived the danger. The accident, it is understood, arose from one of the horses falling,, and the reins breaking as Ihe coachman was en- deavouring to pull him up ; the other horses, being, thus at liberty, set off, and the coaclr Immediately upset. a century.— Leicester Journal. The Iron Trade, it is said, during the whole extent of the late war, was not impeded by grealei- difficulty in the procuring of iron than at the pre- sent period. Pigs have advanced nearly 20 per cent, and bars have followed almost in the same alio. Advances are, at each quarterly meeting of the masters in this important branch, expected to follow Ihe predt'ding, Catherine Ward, a female who till lately lived in the humble capacity of servant,' arid w ho died on the - 27th ult. has left £- 200 lo Ihe funds of the Belfast Academical Institution. There are no less than 598 Newspapers pub- lished in the United States of America. The post of Ambassador from Spain to this country, which has been for a long time vacant, has been filled up by the arrival of Don Francisco de Zea Berroudez in that character. The health of Mr. Serjeant Lens is said to be in very precarious slate. FANATICISM.— A woman of Grub, in the Can ton of Appenzel, Switzerland, giving way to that unhappy fanaticism which now misleads the ignor- ant classes of society, has just killed her child, lo save it from the persecution of fhe evil spirit whom she thought she recognized in the features of a stranger who was passing through the village ill which she lived. Our worthy member, Colonel Oavies, bas, we understand, taken up his abode, with his Lady, at Pershore, where he intends making some little stay, that he may be near his recently purchased estate, Elmley Castle, upon which considerable improvements are in progress. It has been very currently reported here that an endeavour has been made, by a requisition from Evesham, to induce the Colonel lo desert us at the next election, and offer himself fpr that borough. We give this as mere rumour.— Worcester tlerald. A nephew of the ielebrated Opie, now in his 14th year, has discovered an extraordinary genius for taking likenesses, though he has not received any professional instruction. The total quantity of tobacco seized iu Scotland, ill the two years ending 1st of Jan. last, was 69,192 pounds. The King's share of the seizure came to £ 1- 232, and the officers'share to £ 157. The quan- tity seized in England in the same period was 414,394 pounds ; and in Ireland it was 780,466 pounds; the rewards for seizing which amounted to no less than £ 144,327. BANKRDPTS, JOLY 20.— Jariics Wintle, of Nortli- street, City- road, silversmith. — Windover Fry, of Peckham, letter- founder,— Richard Nicholson, of Plymouth, Wine- merchant. . Richard Rooke, of Halifax, Yorkshire, merchant.— John M'Rae, of Liverpool,- grocer.— James Watson, of Broinsg- iovf, Worcestershire, draper. Joseph Swindells, of Briniiiagton, Cheshire, house- builder. Printed § published by W. § ./. Eddowes, Com . market, Shrewsbury, lo ichom Advertisement's err Articlesty Intelligence are requested to be addressed. Adver tisements are also received by Messrs. Nen ton and • Co. Warwick- Square, Sewsate Street, Mr. Hurler, Aio. 33, Fleet- Street, and Mr. Keynell, Gazelle Ad- vertising Ojfice. Chancery Lane, London ; likewise by Messrs. J. K. Johnston and Co. A'o. 1, Lower Sacfarille. Street, Dublin. This Paper is regularly filed as above ; also al Garraway's, Peel'Sj and the Chctptet. Coffeetlouses, London.
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