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The Salopian Journal

27/10/1824

Printer / Publisher: W. & J. Eddowes 
Volume Number: XXXI    Issue Number: 1604
No Pages: 4
 
 
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The Salopian Journal

Date of Article: 27/10/1824
Printer / Publisher: W. & J. Eddowes 
Address: Corn-Market, Shrewsbury
Volume Number: XXXI    Issue Number: 1604
No Pages: 4
Sourced from Dealer? No
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PB- MTEP MY W, & J « EPBOWra*- This Paper is circulated in ike most expeditious Manner tktovgh the adjoining Counties of England and Wales.——. Advertisements not exceeding Ten Lines, inserted at Six Shillings each. VOL. XXX1.--- N0- 1004.] WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1824. SURE iiSMJR Y HUNT. rjpHE Members of the SHREWSBURY FL HUNT are REQUESTED In. meet at the LION INN, mi MONDAY, the 81 h D « . v of Nomnber, 1824, to spend the Week with t! ie President, THOMAS IE EKE, Esq. FUNTSHIBE, VAIJS OP CLWYD. Fo fee ?£ Ct, FOR A TC! OI OF YEARS, Avr! entered upnn ut illichaelma* next, rjrtHE desirable RESIDENCE called I l'ONTRU- 11TU, BOW. held by Thomas Mos- tyn F. iUvards, Esq situate in Ihe Parish of RAdfarry, iii the County v( Flint, with Conveiiieut Offices ; ail excHlent and early Walled Garden, Greenhouse, and Pleasure Grounds, with 7 or 1.- 2 Acres of Mea- dow and Pasture Land of the first Quality. The House comprises an antique Entrance Hall, Dining and Drawing Rooms, small Breakfast llonni, Justice Boom. Housekeeper's Room, Butler's Pan irv, Cellars, Ivilcli n, ! Scullery, Larder, Servants' Iliill, and other OfKctSs adjoining, six beat Bed Uoonis, one large Sitting or Dressing llooiu, two other Dressing Rooms, besides Servants' Bed Rooms, all on a Scale of Sizes very eligible for a middle- sized Family of Distinction, recently paint- ed, sun! in good Repair. The Outbuildings ( at a convenient Distance) consist of a Coach- house, three 3- stalled Stables, Saddle Room, with Granary and Cowhouse, Pig- stye, and all other necessary Conveniences. Tine other Part of the Buildings t with the Fanti. The House is in the Gothic Style partly thrown over a Colonnade, it is beautifully situated as to Riellness of Lawn, itc. and presents In every lies pec t an elegant Retirement. It is on the Denb'gh and Mold Turnpike Road, aboilt S Miles from Denbigh, where there isa Daily Post.* {£ 1/=- May be viewed npof) Application at the Jloiie. and " urther Particulars had from Mr. Stssov, Plai. coch, near St. Asaph. THE FOLLOWING WORKS Will be published in the Course of November and December, By LONGMAN, IICRST, REUS, ORME, BROWN, and GBBEN, London. The Wonders of the World, This Dav was published, a new Edition, ill a very thick Volume, with above 100 Engravings, Price 10s. fid. hound, rfHHE HUNDRED WONDERS of SL the WORLD in Nature and Art, describing, according to the llest and latest Authorities, every extraordinary Object iii Nature, and in the Produc- tions of Man, in the Four Quarters of the World. BY THE REV. C C. CLARKE. The Sale of nearly Fifty Thousand Copies of this interesting and pleasing Volume, within the last Ten Years, is a palpable Proof of its extraordinary Merit; and there can be no Doubt that, in a few Years, it will find its Way into every Family Circle in the Civilized World. Further Evidence of its acknow- ledged Value is afforded bv the Circninslaiic'e that it has been translated into mast modern Languages, and published with equal Success in nearly every European Capital. Printed for G. B. WHIT- TAKER, Ave- Maria- Lane, London ; and lo be had of all Booksellers, Of whom may be had, by the same Editor, 1. THE WONDERS . IF IHE HEAVENS DIS- PLAYED, wilh numerous large and fine Engravings, Price 10s. 6d. bound. 2. HUME I SMOLLETT, abridged, continued to Ihe Death of George II!. by Dr. ROBINSON, wilh 110 striking - Engravings, 9s. 6d. hound. 3. NIGHTINGALE'S ACCOUNT of ALL THE REIC'. ONS and CEREMONIES in the WORLD, with 100 Engravings, 10s. 6d. bound. 4. PRIOR'S HISTORY of ALL THE VOYAGES ROUND THE WOULD, wilh 100 Engravings, His 6d. bound. 5. PRIOR'S UNIVERSAL MODERN TRA. VELLElt, 10s. 6d. bound. A Cyclopedia in One Portable Volume. N EW, revised, and improved Edition I „! W ATKINS's PORTABLE CYCLOPHD1 A, general Dictionary of all Arts and Sciences, was published Ibis Day, at 16s. bound, and may be had of every Bookseller. SFurtipifcc i^ cctsng. TOTICE is hereby f>- iyen, that the ^ GENERAL ANNUAL MEETING of the Trustees or Commissioners of the Turnpike Road leading from Morton Bridge, by West Feltou, to Ellesniere, in the County of Salop, will be held at the New lull, in Ellesniere, in the said County, ou Saturday, the 3tith Day of October . Instant, at Two o'Clock iu the Afternoon, for the Purpose of audit- ing the Accounts, and reporting the State of the Roads w ithin this Trust, and on other Affairs. PH. PRITCHARD, Clerk- to the Trustees. Fllesmere, 4th October, 18- 24. SNOOK'S GENUINE APERIENT family pills, A most excellent Medicine for Bile, Indi- gestion, Pains, Giddiness of the Head, Piles, Dropsical Complaints, AND ARE IN A COSsiDKRABLE DECREE A PREVENTIVE OK VARIOUS OTHER DISEASES. •% J2 EMOIRS of the LIFE of J. P. KKMliLE; Esq. including a His'. ory of the Staj'e, from the Time of Garrick to the present Period. By J. BO ADEN. In '•! Vols. 8vo. with a Portrait front a Picture bv NirT. Lawrence. T RAVELS a the ARAB ' i HI i'. c. S inhabiting tin (' on. it- o- s Ea> t ' » ; S\ ri: i an. l Palestine. By ,!| 7!>'. N BUCKINGHAM, Esq. Aurliur of Travel's iu Palestine. i>: c. in - tto, w iiii 1 tins! ration* ai. d a Map. the HISTORY „ f the . O 11 NISI \ ! SON of the. iiighi Hon. HENRY I'ELHAM, drawn from A n'Mientie Sources ; with Privaie ami Onginnl Cor resj onden- e, from 1713 t'i 1751. Bv WILLI AW COTE, !-'.({, S. V. A. S. Archdeacon of Wilu, & c. Jn 2 Vols, 4ro., vvitli a Portrait. Am I^ CYCLOPiEDU of AG ill CULTURE ; or the Theory and Practice of the Valuation, Transfer,, I m pro w men i, anil Management, of Lauded Pi- openy; and the. Col « iv! Uii? n an< l Economy of she Anuftiti and Veg^ taHe. Productions of Agriculture, including al the latei. i improvements • a General History of Agri. culture in all Countries, wad a Statistical. Vi « ' » v • of. its piemen! Ssafe, with Suggestions for iis fulun' Progress in the British Isles. BY J;. C. LONDON, F. L. S. H. S; & e-_ Aotliu- r- nf. the Iiu « * yclop< o'of Gardening, Illusirnied with upwards of 000 En gravin*; s on Wood, by Branston. SF. itiVlONS and ciiAlfGE. S, I » y 111o Right Rev. Father ill God Thomas Faushaw i\ Iiddle: on, D. I), late Lord . Bishop of Calcutta; wilh Memoirs of his Lite. By HENRY KAYE BONNKY, D. I). Arcli- deacon o" f Bi'dr'ord. With Portrait, & e. ANNUAL BIOGRAPHY and OBITUARY, for ] 8' 2&, lying the Ninth, Volume. Authentic, Conunn. nicatjvns' from liie Friends « tf those distinguished Individuals whose Decease has occurred io the pre- sent Year,, will he thankfully received, if addressed to tin- . Editor of . the \ Vork, to the Care of HwPub- lishrtrs. ' ' IVJEODRSC. A Domestic Tale. And other Poems. By THOMAS CA/ l! T, ELL. Esq. Author of the Pioasor'es of; Hope, Foolscap iivo. QUEEN HY NDK An Epic P.. eu|, By JAMES U0GG, Author of J hi'Queen's Wake, Poetic Mirror, Pilgrims ol the Sun, 6zc. Sn LVol. 8yo. SPEC1M ENS -( selected and troi. ihlMted)••' of the Lyric POETRY of the of ihe Beig- r) ' of,|' Ve;} eri « * K" . Barha'rsvisa, and the succeediiig- Emperors c. f .. t! ie. Suabian Dyiiastv:, ilitistratfol hy similar kSpecimeiis of the Troulnidovirs, and other Contemporary l. yrie SchoiAs « » f Europe. With His- torical, Critical, and Biographical Rfinai lys. 8vo. llECOLLEt. VnONS of Foreign Tiavel, on Life, Literature, and Se! f- K nowledyo. By Sir S. I BUY DOES, Bart. xc. Xr. 2 Y- ds. Post Svo. A VOYAGE performed iu Ihe Years JS22 ' 23 24 ; o inil) U' " it Examiutniun of the Antarctic Sea to lhe74th D.'^- rec of Latitude; ami a Visit > o Terra de! Fneoo, w i 111 a particular Account of tin- Inhabit- ants. To which Will he added, much useful Infor- mation in the. ;( 3oa. stMi! r Naviyati hi of Cape Motu, jiud the ndjaeer'U ii'L- inds, xviih Charts of Haibours, icc. By J v WED DELL, E* q I Vol. 8vo DOMESTIC- DUTIES, . » r I. Mtroctioiis to Younji;- Married Ladies on the IVlanayement of their House jiold, and the U'ej/ ulalitui of their Conduct in the various Relations and Daries of Married Life. Bv Mrs. FKANCES PAltK. ES In i Vol. Post ILl. USTKATION. Sof LYING, in all its Branches. By A M ELI \ (> P! E. Ia - 2 Vols. ) > mo. FIltE SI 1>? 7, SCENES. By the Author of Bache- lor and Married Man, & c. & C." in 3 Vols. 12mo. DECISION A , T, alc. Bv Mis. HOLLAND, Author of Integrity, Patience, See. in I Vol. l2mo. I'routispieco. The SISTERS of NANSFIELD. A Tale for A'nijiii'- Women, By the Author of the Stories of Old Danicll, & C. In YQIS. V> H » O. A THEA I'ISE on the VENEUEAL DISEASE jn all its Shapes. By UlCIlAUD CAiOIJCHAEl M. R I. A. Surgeon, Dublin. I Vol. bvo. with Plates A COMPENDIUM of MEDIC AL THEORY and JMtACTICE, founded on Dr. CULLEN'S Nosology which will he ^ iveu as a Text Book, and a Trans Jation atiuexed. To which will he prelised, a hvief I) issedation on the Nature and Object of Nosology with , a succinct Account of the Treatment of each . Disorder, nu Estimate of Modern Improvements in l'alh( do!> y, and ait Enumeration of the best Authors for the Student of Medicine to consult to the whole will he added, a List of Doses of Medicines, with ti few of the best Formula, and an Alphabetical Index to Diseases ; intended for the Use of Students, and as a Work of jj- eu. ernl ' Reference. By D. UVVUNS, M. D. Iu 1 V< » i. l2mo. An APPENDIX to the PHAItlMACOPCEJA I, ON DINENSlS, coniprismo- a concise History of the Materia Med tea, as well as of the Preparations contained therein. By W. M AUGllAM, Author of the Pupil's I'harmncopmia, printed uniformly with the small Edition of the Pharmaeopqjia Londiuensis. A VIEW of the PRESENT STATE of the SAL- MON and CHANNEL FISHERIES, and of the Statute Laws bv which they are regulated : showing-, that it is to the Defects of the latter that the present Scarcity ol' the Fish is to b' attributed. Compre- lii'itdii)^- also the Natural History of the Salmon, together with the Form of a New Act, designed to remedy the Eviis so generally complained of, and an Abstract of the Evidence before the Committee of the House of Commons upon the Subject, with Notes, by the Author. By .). COKMSH. I Vol. 8vo. ' MEDICO- CUUiUBOlCAL TRANSACTIONS, publjsi ed by the Medical and Chirur^ ical Society of London. Vol. XIII. Part 1, with Plate*. ^ jTUI EIRComposition is truly excellent a. as they do not contain any Antiniotiial or Mer eurial Preparation whatever, and therefore when ! » ken do i/ o$ require the least Confinement or Al tenitiou <? f Diet ( modpj'aie Exercise promotes their good Effects); ihey seldom operate until ten or twelve Hours after taken, and then very gently; they de- stroy Worms, purify the Honumrs, and evacuate all fool Corruptions to which the Intestines are so liable, whereby so maifv Diseases are produced _ never gripe unless the Inside be very foul, and then but little; by removing Obstructions,- they cause the Food to pass to its respective Parts, becoming a good Restorative and Preservative of Health to both Sexes, and to those of a costive Habit a truly valuable Treasure. ALSO, Snook's Pectoral or Cough PUl' 9 For COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHM AS*, and SHORT- NESS of BREATH. It. is wel l known that Coughs and Colds ( if not soon removed), are in many Cases intended with considerable Danger, for ihe Removal of which the Pectoral or Cough Pills-. a/ e with Confidence recom mended as an excellent Medicine, and in most Case a certain Specific •, a single. Box will be a sufficient Trial to prove their good Effects. Each ol' the above Pills are prepared and sold Wholesale and Retail, by ,). SNOOK, iuhymist and Druggist, Bridgewater, Somerset, in Boxes, at Thiitcen- penee Halfpenny each, Duty included, or Family Box, containing three smalt Boxes, at Two Shillings and Nine- pence ; being a Saving of Seven pence Halfpenny to the Purchaser. The Stamp on each Box of the FAMILY and ' KCTOBAL PILLS, has the Proprietor's written Si nature, none else are genuine. Sold Wholesale and Retail,- l » y Messrs, Barclay and Son, 95, Fleet Market; Sutton & Co. 10, Bow Church Yard ; Newbery and Sons, St. Paul's Church Yar ' IV!/. E. Edwards, 6(|, St. Paul's Church Yard Messrs. Butlers, 4, Cheapside, and 220,. Regent street, London; Waterloo- Place, Edinbu it iid! 34, Sack ViHe- street, Dublin; Mr. Hill, Drug, gist,. Ext ter ; Mr. Clarke, Druggist, tcc. Bost. I Retail by the principal Medicine Venders iu the Kingdom. SMITH'S PLOUGI! MAN'S DgOPS. ^ g^ H K Commissioners in a renewed Com- mission of Bankrupt awarded arid issued forth against THOMAS HOME, late af BISHOP'S CASTLE, in the County of Salpp, Mercer, Grocer, and Linen Draper, intend to MEET on . the 2d Day of November next, at Ten o'Ciock in the Fore*. noon, at the Castle Inn, in Bishop's Castle afore- said, in Order to make a FINAL DIVIDEND of | the Estate and Effects of the said Bankrupt; when tsi4 where the Creditors who have not already- proved their Debts are to come prepared to prove the same, or they will be excluded the Benefit of j tlie said Dividend ; and all Claims uot then proved will be disallowed. TITOS. JONES, Solicitor under the Commission. Bishop's Castle, 9th October, 1824. Extract of a Letter to Dr. SMITH, of Upton Magna, near Shrewsbury. Snt, JTN 1816, 1 contracted a certain Cotn- plaint, aii. il, was under it Doctor's Hands two Mouths, for which I paid two Guineas; but getting worse, I left him, and went to another Doctor nbout one Month, but getting worse and Worse, f went to bother Medical Man two Months; at one Time . be ild me I was cured, and about four Months after i bfoke out worse than ever. I repeated my Attend- ance upon that Gentleman, but got still worse ; 1 then went ti^ an Infirmary for ten Weeks, and underwent two Salivations, but instead of getting better, I got worse and worse. I then applied to you, and having taken one Bottle, J received En- couragement io proceed, and by taking, six sumll Bottles, I have received a safe Cure, for which } relut'u you toy humble and hearty Thanhs. J am, Sir, your's, tespeetfnlly, T. G*'-* 4****. TICE is hereby $* iven, that Appli- cation is intended to be made to Parliament in the next Session, for Leave to bring in a Bill for continuing the Term and altering, amending, en- larg- iug, and making more effectual the Powers of three several Acts of Parliament, made in the second, twenty- third? and forty- fourth Years of the Reign of his lute Majesty King George the Thirt^ the' Hrst intitled'" A- n A ct'foi* amendi11g, widening, and keeping in Repair several Roads leading from Cleobury Mortimer, the Cross { louses, " Glazelev, and the Turnpike Gate on Abberley c{ Hill, iq'tlve CoiuUjes pf Salop and WoVcester ;" the second intitled " An Act for continuing the " Term and altering and enlarging the Powers of " an Act of the second Year of his present Majesty, " for amending, widening, uijd- keeping in Repair l< several Roads leading from Cleobury Mortimer, " the Cross Houses, Glaze ley, and the Turnpike " Gate ou Abberley Hill, iu the Counties of Salop u and Worcester;" and the third intitled kt An Act for continuing the Term and altering aud " enlarging the Powers of two Acts made in the " second & twenty- third Years of his present Majes- ty, for repairing the several Roads- leading from tc Cleobury Mortimer, the Cross Houses, Giazeley, " and the Turnpike Gate on Abberley Hill, in the " Counties, of Salop aiid Worcester,;" or for repeal- ing the said Acts and obtaining new Powers and Provisions iq Lieu thereof; which said Roads do lead from the Town of Cleobury Mortimer through the Wall Town, by the Vicarage iu the Parish" of Kinlet, and through the Parishes of Billingsley, Deuxhill, and Glazelev, by the Cross Houses, to* a Village called Morville, in the County of Salop, being the great Road from Cleobury to the Town of Shrewsbury; and from the Cross Houses, on the one Side, to Cleobury North, and through Prior's Ditton to the Foot of the Brown Clee Hill, ansj on the other Side to Bridgnorth, in the said County ; and from Giazeley, through Oldbury, to Bridg- north ; and also from the said Town of Cieobury Mortimer, through Milson aud Spirtree Labe and the Parish of Burford, to the Ludlow Turnpike Road in the Road to Tenbury ; aud from the Turn- pike Gate on Abberley Hill to a Place called PouIters, in the Turnpike Road from Cleobury to Bewdley, in the County of Worcester : In which Bill Provision is intended to be made for making a new Line of Turnpike Road along the present Road or Common Highway, leading from aud out of the Turnpike Road at or near Abberley Turn- pike Gate, to the Tenbury Turnpijse Road, both in the County of Worcester, of the Distance of Five Ho inured and Fifty- Nine Yards/ or thereabouts, and to widen and enlarge the same ; and also for mak- ing two other Lines of Turnpike Road branching- out of tire': ' Turnpike Road leading from Cleobury Mortimer to Bridgnorth at or near a Place called the Six Ashes, in - the Parish of Neen Savage, in the County of Salop, the one being the present Road or Common Highway leading into the Bewd ley Turnpike Road at Mavvlcy Town, in the Parish of Cleobury Mortimer, and the oilier being the present Road or Common Highway leading by Eleot and the Hall Orchard into the Turnpike lload on Bagginsvvood Common, from Bewdley to Pres- cot, in the said County of Salop, and to. widen and enlarge the same respectively^ and which, said Roads pass from, through, or into the several Pa- rishes or Townships of Cleobury Mortimer, Neen Savage, Wharton, Bardley, Stotesdon, Kinlet, Bil- ling- sley, Deuxhill, Giazeley, Morville, Earding- ton, Quatford, Oldbury, Saint Leonard and Saint Mary Magdalen in Bridgnorth, Cleobury North, Neenton, Chetton, Upton Cresselt, Prior's Ditton Milson, and Bin fOrd, in the County of Salop, aric the Parishes or Townships of Bay ton, The Rock, Lii- fdridge, and Abberley, in the County of Wor- cester. And NOTICE is hereby also given, that it is intended in the said Bill to increase or alter ihe Tolls, Kates, pr Duties now payable by the said several Acts or some or one of thetu. SAML. NICHOLLS, SAML. PHILLIPS SOUTHAM, Solicitors to the Trustees. OCTOBER 19TH, 1824. TO FIiAMTEBS. J. CAVELL, Dorrington, near Shrewsbury, %/|" OST respectfully be< js Leave to in- ! i'Jl form tlie NoUlitv, ( Sentry, and the Public, tluit lie has if'ot a very tine Slock of all Kinds of FOREST TREES and FRfilT . TitEES for this Season's Planting- : viz.— Beech, 15, OUO, from 3 to 5 Fret; Scotch Firs, 25,000, from to 4 Feet; Spruce Ditto, 15,000, from 1 toji Feet; l. arcli" Fir, 35,( 101), from 2 to 4 Feet; Oaks, 25, i « K), from 3 to 5 Feet; Thorn Quick, 20,000, from 2 to 3 Feet Limes, from 4 to 0 Feet; Laurels Common, from 2 to 4 Feet; Laurels Portugal, from 2 to 4 Feet ; Mountain Ash, from 4 to ( i Feet; Poplars of Sorts, from 1 to 8 Feet; with Chesnuts, Sycamores, Hornbeam, Privets, & c. and fine trained Apricots, Peaches, Nectarines, Cherries, Pears, and Plums; also Evergreens and Flowering Shrubs ; which he is determined to sell ou the most reasonable Terms. CAPITAL HUNTERS,- HACKS, & c. TO BE SOLD~ BY AUCTION, BY THOMAS PARDOE, III the Castle Inn Yard, BR1DGNORTH, on Fri- day, the 29th day of October, 1824 : LOT I. HOAN MAKE, 8 Years old, a ca- pilal Roadster. LOT II. A Grey GELDING, G Years old, by Comet. LO. T 111. A Bay DITTO, 5 Years old, hy Sir Sampson. Lor IV. A Ditto DITTO, 5 Years old, by Why. Not. ^ Lor V. A Black FILLY, 5 Years old, by Sir Sampson. LOT VI. A Ditto DITTO, 4 Years old, Sister to Lot 5. LOT VII. A ?, ay GELDING, 4 Years old, by Fitzjames. _ LOT VIII. A Grev FILLY, 4 Years old, by the Vines in the Hot- House, and the Trees on the I F'' z> mes, with great ' Power ; likely for Harness.' nog and ill a fine bearing State. LOT IX. A Brown GELDING, rising 3 Yeai or suction. Desirable / Residence, THE GRANGE, N3AH ELLEfSMEHS. BY MITBOWEN, AT the Bridgewater Arms Inn, in Ellesmere, iu I tri- t; County of Salom on Saturday, October 30th, 1& 24, between the H airs of four and six o1 Clock in' the Afteru ion, subject to Conilitions: to be ^ declared at the Time of Sale : LL that CAPITAL mbdern- hiTilt MANSION HOUSE, called THE GHANGF, delightfully situated near the Town of Ellesniere aforesaid, containing-, on the Ground Floor, Draw- ing- and Diniitig- Rooms 24 Feet by IB each, Library 17 Feet by 19, and small Parlour 17 Feet by four Bed Rooms on the First Floor, with Dressing- Rooms to two of them ; and twogjood Bedchambers ! on the Second Floor, beside Servants'' Rooms, and convenient Closets ; together with 8' 2 Acre's or thereabouts of excellent Meadow & Pasture LAND. A new- built Cottag- e and Garden is attached to the Premises, and will be sold therewith. The Mouse has lately been put in a complete and substantial State, fit for the immediate Reception of a respectable Family, and the Offices, & c. are most cofi^ plete and convenient. The Garden is walled and near the House ; and [ Price Sevenpence. LONDON, THURSDAY; OCTOBER 25. Wall, are young aud in Hue bearing-! The Premises nv> y be viewed by Application to I the. Gardener, at the House ; and for further Parti- j eulars apply at the Otiice of GEORGE KBN YQN, Esq. Solicitor, in Wrexham, where a Map" of the Estate may be seen. MtHtfTGOMEB YSHIHE. At the Wvnnstay Arms Inn, in the Town of Llan- fyllin, in the County of Montg- omery, on Thurs- day, tlie 4 « h Day of Novernber, 18* 24, between the Hours of 3 and 5 o'Clock in the Afternoon of the saine Day, in tlie following-, or such other Lots as may be ag- reed upon at the Time of the Sale, subject to Conditions then to be produced, unless in the mean Time disposed of by Private Coutr'act, of which due Notice will be given : LOT I. A CAPITAL MESSUAGE or Dwellin t\ HOUSE, Garden, Stable, Fold, and two small Dweliing- s attached thereto, situate in SWAN HILL, old, by Comet; very promising-, possessing- great Power, and also well calculated for Harness. LOT X. A capital Drown PONY, 7 Years old, very useful for Saddle or Harness. The above may be viewed the Morning of the Sale, at the Castle Inn Stables, from Eight o'Clock to the Time of Sale, which will commence precisely at Eleven in the Forenoon. TO AiBcmnTBOTs AMD BUILDERS. T having been finally determined by the Parish of PONTESBURY, Salop, legally assembled in Vestry, to ERECT a NEW CHURCH and TOWER, exclusive of the pr. sent Chancel, which is to remain; the Sum of TWENTY GUINEAS will he given to any Architect or Builder who shall deliver such a Design as shall be approved of by the Committee. The Interior Plan must he such as will provide for Three Hundred Free Sittings and Seven Hun- ree in the Town of LLANFYLLIN, in . the County of | died Private oues, either all on one Floor or partly Montgomery, in the Occupation of Miss Parry if! Galleries. The Exterior of the Tower and Church must accord with that of the Chancel, which is plain Lancet Gothic. The Dimensions of the present Chancel in the Interior are 4l? i Feet in Length by 21 Feet in Breadth Da vies and her, Undertenants. Lor II. AM that TENEMENT, Outbuildings, and LANDS, situate in the Parish of LLAN FECHEiN, in the said County of Montgomery, called PENYMYNYOD, containing' by Admeasurement 2* 2 Acres or thereabouts.. LOT III. CAERARTHNAN, a Piece or Parcel of excellent Arable LAND, situate in the, Parish of Llanfeclien aforesaid, containing 3 Acres or there a bouts. LOT IV. DOLPACH, a Piece of good Meadow LAND, situate in the Parish of Llaiifecheu afore- said, containing 2A. oil. or thereabout LOT V. GWKRGLODO GAM, another Piece of Meadow LAND, situate in the Paris!} of Llanfechen aforesaid, dontainitig | A. 2R. or thereabouts LOT VI. DAUWR DODO, a Piece or Parcel of LAND, situate in the Parish of Llaufecheu afore- said, containing- 2A. 0R.. 39P. or thereabouts. Lot 1 contains an excellent House fit. for the All Designs must be sent to the Rev. J. WILDE, Council House, Shrewsbury, on or before the 27th November, 1824. iSiretton and Condover llouds. TO ROAD- MAKERS & CONTRACTORS. r| pUE Trustees of the Turnpike Roads . jsL leading from Coleham Bridge in Shrews- bury, to the Miirket- Piace, in Church Strei. ton; stfjd from near the third Mire- stone to the Village of Coudover ; are desirous of CONTRACTING for keeping- the said Roads iu Repair, for the Term of not less than three nor more than live Years, com mencing the first Day of November ' next. The Specification for performing- the Work may Residence of a genteel Family, and all the Bujid- he seen upon Application to Mr. JONES, Clerk to. ings are in good Repair. . . .. , the Trustees, in Shrewsbury ; or to Mr. PENSON, ill. Oswestry. The Contractor will be allowed tlie Benefit, of the ' TO THE BIJND. A genuine statement forwarded to Dr. SMITH, of Upton Magna, near Shrewsbury, from a persoM nearly blind, when the candle or optic of the eye was nearly gone. We broach no puffs, those foolish mushroom things, < k Which lasping tune Into'discredit brings; ki But well- cleuch'd facts,-— and facts are stubborn things." Sift,— I am o native of Shrewsbury, in the county of Salop, by trade a cor< lwain » r ; as. afflicted with a dimness of sight for above twelve years ; was iucar pa, hie of working for two years; no human skill could be found for my relief, tiii S heard of your Ploughman's Drops; ! made atrial, and, for the good of the blind be it spoken, 1 found great relief by taking two smafJ bottles ; aud J continued ti. li I entirely received a safe cure. 3 am now in the decline of life, and can see and work as well as I could 14 years ago.. Gratitude induces me to publish it for many reasons. Witness iny hand, 19th of March, 1823, J. I. Witness, J. LARGE, of Wolverhampton. These Drops are to be had in square Bottles, with these words moulded ou each, " Mr. Smith"* Ploughman's Drops" ( all others are spurious;., at £ 1. 2s. the large, and lis. the small, Duty eluded, at PLOUGHMAN'S HALL, Upton Mag near Shrewsbury ; also of W aud J. EPDOWES, and Cookson, Shrewsbury ; Capsry, Wellington ; Yeates, Salt Warehouse, Iron Bridge ; Partridge, Bridgnorth ; Griffiths, Ludlow Waidson, Welsh- pool* Price, Oswestry ; Bauoh, Ellesmere ; Jones, I'urker, Whitchurch; Procter, Drayton ; Silves- ter, Newport ; Holmes, No. 1, Royal Exchange, London; and all other Medicine Venders. I IYI PORTA NT \ N. FORM AT10N. " p^ ME Amateurs of Regional Attraction M are earnestly invited to a Proqfof unparalleled Excellence, bv the Use of ROWLAND'S KALYDOR, a Cosmetic of vital Importance to the Support of Female Loveliness. Powerful of effect, vet mild of Influence, this admirable Specific possesses Balsamic Properties of surprising E- iergv. It eradicates FRECKLES, PI VIi'LES, SPOTS, REDNESS, and iii! Cufau^ iiiis Eruptions, gradually producing a delic^' elv clear soi" t Skin : transforms even the most SALLOW COMPLEXION into RADIANT WHITE- NESS ! resists the scorching Rays of the Sun ; suc- ccsfully opposes the Attack of inclement' Weather, aud renders harsh and rough Skin beautifully soft, smooth, and even ; imparts to the NECK, FACE, and ARMS, a healthy and juvenile Bioom ; diffuse a pleasant Coolness, and, by- due Perseyerance iri the Application of ROWLAND'S KALYDOR, promotes i free and uninterrupted Exercise of those important Functions of the Skin, which are of the utmost Necessity for toe Preservation of Health, and Attain- ment and Continuance of a Beautiful'Complexion: The KALYDOR is equally indispet/ sible iu the N vser. V as at the Toilet. Perfectly innoxious, it may be used bv the most delicate Ladv, wi. th the Assurance of Safety and Efficacy. To MOTHERS NURSING their OFFSPRING, » ' gives, in all Cases of incidental jnfiammation, immediate Relief; cools the Month. of the Infant, and enhances internal Pljiasure iu the Act of administering Alimentary Nourishment. To Gentlemen whose Faces are tender. after Shav iug : — A o ieat I nf. eiicity which attends ihe Operation of Shaving, is thje Irritation of the Skin; many Gentlemen suffer greatly from this Cause.— ROW- LAND'S KALY DOR will be found excellent beyond Precedent in ameliorating aud allaying that most Unpleasant Sensation. It removes unpleasant Harsh- ness of the Skin, occasioned by intense Solar Heat or Cold Winds ; and thus to the Traveller, whose A vocations expose him to variousChanges of Weather, prows an infallible Specific— a prompt Resource — and, as conducing to Comfort, a pleasing Appendage and invaluable, Acquisition.— Patronized by the Prin- cess Eslerha^ V, the Persian Ambassador, and recom- mended by the most Eminent of the Faculty. Finally it is the most beneficial Preparation of any extant, and should be a VADE MECUM for every Family. Sold in Half- Pints, at 4s. Cxi,; and Pints, al 8s. Gd. each, du'v included, by the sole Proprietors A. ROWLAND and SON, No. 20, Hatton Garden, Holboru, London ; arid, by Appointment, by VV. & J. EDDOWES, Journal Office, Shrewsbury, and by most Perfumers and Medirine Venders who vend their celebrated MACASSAR OIL. OBSERV jS, none are genuine without the Signature, A. ROWLAND & SON. Lot 2 is a very desirable small Farm, situate within a short Distance of the Lime Kilns, and i about 6 Miles from the . Market Towns of Oswestry and Llqufyllin. Lots 3, 4, 5, and 6, arc detached Pieces, which, ] together with Lot 2, are in the Holding of Mr. | John Owens, of Peutre, Llanfechen, who will shew the Premises; and further Particulars may be hod by applying at the OiYice of Mr. WILLIAMS, Soli- I citor, Llanfyiliu. S/ t r op shire,— Freehold Estate. At the Castle fun, Bishop's Castle, on Friday, the 5th Day of November, L< y> 4, between the Hours or 4 and ( 5 in th< j Afternoon ( iinless previously disposed of by Private Contract, of which Notice will be given), iu one or more Lot or Lots, as shall be agreed upon at the Time of Sale, and subject to Conditions to be then produced -. A LL that desirable ESTATE, culled L% t. - THE M AR- i^- Y, consisting of a convenient Farm House, with Ram, Stable, and suitable Out- buildings ( tli. e whole of which have been newly erected within the last4 Years), and SOA. UR. 9P. more or less, of excellent Arable, Meadow, and Pasture Land, situate in ike Township of WHITCOTT KKYSETT, in the Parish of CLCN, iu the County of Salop. .'•••.- The Farm possesses vepy valuable Common Rights on the adjacent Hills and ( Commons, and a co. usider- able Portion of it. may be irrigated by The Mardy Brook, which runs through the Estate. The Estate is conveniently situated as to Markets, being, within 3 M. il. es of Clun, 7 of Bishop's Castle, 8 of Knighton, 12. of., JVewtowii, and 19 of Ludlow, all good Market Towjis. Possession may be hod at Lady- D. nv next. Tlie Tenaut, Mr. JOHN BRAMOND, will shew the Estate; and further Information may be obtained at the Office of Messrs. WELLINGS and CLARK, Solicitors, Ludlow. Statute and Composition Duties ( to be apportioned by the Magistrates), and will lie required to give a Security for the due Perionnaiiee of bis Contract. Persons desirous of undertaking the Repairs must send Proposals, for each Road separate ( sealed up), to the Clerk to the Trustees, by Ten o'Clock in the Morning of Monday, the 1st of November, and must attend the Meeting of the Trustees oti that Day ; but none need apply who is not practically conversant in the modern System of Road- making. The Bridges of Meole, Wayford, and Quak- ingbrook Bridge, and One Hundred Yards at the End of each, are not included. Shrewsbury, Oct. 18,1824. TO BE And entered upon at £ ady- dny next, nnHHEE very COMPACT desirable I FARMS, in" a good State of Cultivation, situate within about four Miles of Welsh Pool, in the County of Montgomery. Particulars apply to Mr. JONES, jun. Pen'bryn, near Montgomery. Tuesday's Gazelle announces, that his Mnjfsty has oiili'ced that the Piulianii- ut should he |, io- i- o » uetl from the 4ih of Npvemhcf next to the fitli of January ; but it does not say " then to meet for the disjiateh of business, 11 The deaths of the two successive Chief . Justices, and of so many other civilians', so soon after tht it- arrival al Calcutta, is an extraordinary circum- stance, aud would appear to reflect no very gnat credit upon ihe medical skill of Ihe persons I'here, who, one would suppose, might by this linn- have learned to recommend such a rc » imen and precau- tions as would be calculated to season the European constitution lo the change of climate. CHRISTIANITY IN INDIA.— The first Protest, ant Missionary in Calcutta was J. F. Kiemander. This humble preacher of Ihe Gospel came to Calcutta in the year 17i> 8, and was received with marked favour by Lord Ctive, aud the members of the Supreme Council. A bouse, rent free, was assigned lo him, and a subscription was laUtii (••> enable him to open a school, which was soon attended by a large number of children ( belonging to Heathen, Mahommetlan,& Portuguese parents), who were instructed iu Ihe English language, wad ing, writing, arithmetic, and the principles of Christianity. In 1767, Mr. Kjeruaiider, beiug obliged lo give up, for the use of Government, tile house which he had formerly occupied, resolved tu build a Church at his own charge, and on his own ground, a work which dining the nexl three years was brought to a successful termination, at Ihe expense of 60,000 sicca rupees. This edifice was opened for Divine Service in ihe year 1770, and, with some subsequent improvements, is uo. v the elegant building known by the uauie of the Old, or Mission Church .-^ Calcutta Scotsman. A BANKUBS' PARCEL STOLEN,— On Tuesday morning, at- 6 o'clock, a bankers' parcel, directed to Ihe house of Sir P. Pole aud Co. was stolen from Ihe coach nflice al Maidstone. The person who was entrusted with it, led it for a moment on the counter of the coach office, and, on returning, he found it had disappeared. An alauu was im. mediately given, hut we understand uot the sli- ' rl- est trace of the thieves was obtained. An express was immediately sent to town, and application was made t. i Mr. Brown, the City Marshal. Measures were promptly taken to stop Ihe payment ol iiie bills and notes, and Mr. Brown, accompanied by two aeliveofficers, went down to Maidstone. The Police have, we understand, obtained in!< lligeuee of Ihe track of some family men, or experienced thieves-, iu that direction, hut Ihe particulars have not transpired. The parcel was from the bank of Messrs. Edmonds and Co. Maidstone, and con- sisted of the sum of ±' 1,518. 16s in cash or different country notes; £ 4,167 in drafts payable at sight; and £ 7,202. Os ed. m bills; iii ihe whole £ 13,183. 5s. 6d. But ttie value of Ihe booty obtained by the thieves will he greatly diminished by the prompt measures taken by Ihe Police. It has been asserted, on what may be deemed competent authority, thai the profits of the cele- brated hell* in St. James's street, during the last season, amounted to upwards of £ 150,000, over and above the expenses of the establishment, which are calculated at £ 100 a day; and there was actually £ 1000 given lo be divided among tile waiters at the close of the season. Fourteen of the very largest English dray horses have lately been purchased in England for Dams!) account. It is proposed to introduce their breed ilito Denmark. CHRONOMETERS.— The indispensable use of Ihe chronometer in determining longitudes at sea is well known. It has therefore became an object will) Ihe Government of this country, and of every other maritime stale, to render this instrument as perfect as possible. The variation of a few seconds from mean time, might occasion lo a navigator a mistake of some miles, and, consequently on a dangerous coast, or in a dark night, render Ihe loss of life and property inevitable. The Lords of ihe Admiralty, alive lo the great importance of the subject, offered lasi year a premium of £ 300 for the best chronometer ; and ihe eagerness of Ihe competition excited exceeded the value of Ihe reward, No less than 36 instruments, made by Ihe most eminent watchmakers iu London, weie sent to I be Royal Observatory at Greenwich. Their respective rates of going were observed with Ihe most rigorttusastronomical accuracy, and care- fully noted in the books of the Observatory. The pproximation. of some of llictn lo perfect accuracy iii easily be admitted, when we mention thai I he one which obtained Ihe prize ( Mr. Murray's, of Cornhill) ilid not vary in iis mean daily rate more 111 an one second eleven hundred pails of a second for one year. This instrument was purchased by the Lords of the Admiralty, aud is now with Capt, Parry on the Polar expedition. Freehold Estate at U'i en in or, At TO BE LET, And entered upon immediately, \ N EAT and convenient COTTAG E, L pleasantly situate*! within Hajf a Mile of the Village of RUABOW, Denbighshire; consisting of a g- ood Kitchen, a Back Kitchen, aud Wash- house ; a small Parlour, a larger Ditto IS Feet hv 13, a Ruum of the same Size over it, three P> cd Rooms of a smaller Siise ; a g- ood, Cellar ; Stable and Cow house; a g- ood Garden, and any Quantity of LAND from One Acre to Ten. For further Particulars'' apply TO Mr. GRIFFITHS, Surgeon, Wrexham. BY MR. BROOME, the Crown Inn, 111 Church Stretton, in the County of Salop, on Monday, tii. e 8ih Day of November, 18* 24, at 3 o'Clock, in the Afternoon ( unle> s previously disposed of hy Private C< tract, of which due Notice will he given), in one '< or more Lots, as may be ng'reed upon at the Time of Sale: Jk FREEHOLD M. RSSUAGE, or / m. Tenement and Farm House, with the Out- buildings, L.^ NDS, and Appurtenances, together with a COTTAG F, and Gardru to the sum; belong*, ino-, situate in the Parish of WENTiSOR, io ihe County of Salop, containing' together about 29 Acres, in the Occupations of Edward Jones and Thomas Manghan, us Tenants at Will, at the yearly Rent ui £ 35. For further Particulars, and to treat for the same by Private Contract, apply tq COQPEH, Soli- citor, Shrewsbury, To be LET, Furnished or Unfurnished, FOR A TERM OF YEARS, AND ENTERED UPt> 3 AT MICHAELMAS NEXT, ' r| HH E desirable Residence QK BODFACH, - SL near LLANFYLLIM, in the County of Mont- gomery, now in the Occupation of .} U. Leth- bi idg'e, Esq. with eyery Accommodation for g- enleel Family; c.{ jutuiiun< y Entrance Hall, Dining and Dravyiijg Roomss four hrst Bed Rooms, second and Servants7 Ditto, Water Closet, Kitchen, House keeper's Room, Butler's Pantiv, Servants1 Hall and other suitable Offices ; two' Coach- houses, Sad- dle Room, three 3 stalled Stables, two Hack Ditto, two loose Ditto, Cowhouses, Hfc &. e a g- ood Garden, Pleasure Gfonnds, and K> Acres ( or more if je- quired) of capital Pasture or Hay Ground; also considerable Extent of exclusive Sporting Ground The Grounds and Scenery at Bodfach are much admired : there is a Daily Post to Llanfyllip from Oswestry, and the Roads are particularly good. May be viewed upon Application at Bodfach Lodge. Qf^ 3 For further Particulars apply to Mr. TIIQIWAS Solicitor, Lianfyllin ; Mr. WILUAMS, Solicitor, Market Square, Shrewsbury; or SISSON Piuscoch, uvsjr St. Asaph. T11 consequence of a statement published in the Times, Sir H. Davy has addressed the following letter to the Editor of that Paper:— Sir,— Having seen my name in the Times con- necied with u copper shepting and patent copper •• I think it right to inform you that every thincr relating to me in that paragraph is false. Yon probably will not wish statements which are erroneous^ which some may think calumnious, aud which may mislead the ship- owners of the country, 10 he noticed any where but. in your own p: ifes. f trus', therefore, that you will insert an immediate contradiction of them in vour Paper. ' J ani. Sir; H. DAVY. 1st. It is uot true that any committee of the Royal Society was formed to investigate the causes of the decay of copper sheet jug, at the request of the Lords of tiie Admiralty. The Commissioners of the Navy Board consulted with the President of the Royal Society on this subject, and he proposed to them to refer it to the Council, who formed a committee for the investigation of it. This was in 182- 2, Ion"- before patent copper" was heard of. 2 ! t is false that any vessels, protected according to Sir H. Davy's priuylples, and sent out upon short cruises by the Lords of the Admiralty, have returned infested with worms and harnaeles. 3. ! t is false that any failure has taken place in my experiments. As far as they have yet gone, they see 111 to show that the deeay of copper may he entirely prevented in harbour, and to a gieat extent in sailing, by the protect'. rs; and the ravages of worms, sc, upon protected ships, is an entire fiction ; indeed, it requires peculiar ingenuity to imaging how worms can prey upon the bottom of a ship, the copper of which remains untouched. 4. It is not true ' that ihe President of the Royal Society has made ajiy voyages at the public expense. The Commissioners of Longitude having resolved to ascertain the longitude of different points of oreat importance to imvigajiou in the North Sea, by chronometers, the use of the Comet steam- boat was granted to them by the Admiralty, jtud she was put under the. difectini of the President of the Royal Society for this purpose, and lie took the opportunity of trying certain experiments on the protection of copper, going- iu her to Sweden, ami coming hack in Iter from the north of the Weser, making- his journeys aud voyages in Sweden, Denmmk, Hol- stein, and Hanover, at his private expense. 5. It is uot true that he had a pleasant voyage. He bad a stormy passage out, and a yiiii more sun my passage home; and he wishes ihe author of the paragraph in question no severer punishment for hi$ inaccuracies and ill- will, if be be a landsman yn^ liable to sea sickness, than a similar V « ya » p. October 17. FOi Los o<>. v, A/. •> TSCB1? T. iwwV/. v '/ V}( l, 0c7. 25, 18* 24. I'LUPLS . OF, K I'd. 3 JHM Tls. jx- r r'i ( • ( i ] snp'wai 3 I (•);.(.• rs. 3', per ( W*. - 4 eer C'- iii New i per I'eifl ft ."'{•() S. ttS AX Til; P. CfcOSR, i Hiiiik Stoclc ^^. i 1 i. on. ii' Ai. i. ii • .. lludiu '# fi> c, k — India Bond* lOY | Bills ( Hd- J 54 ! Co us. < or Are. Mr F..* u Ihis uui » vi<; uai- took course « ' » ('' wli. rh t'v » e amount' < jf £ 6.5 ! 7, fo 1 —^ TliO Tsit.- I examination of place os) Tuesday ; * i » the' iiiiff 11 ioua 1 forties, to the eve'Yvroved.' He was ordered to be * rm » :*:< « { to N « u- « a'te « v » Thursday, mrd" was removed ai'- i uitiMJijiv. ' Hi*' trial' will tak'c: plaCe this wft k . is. ihe ' Old- tUiil'y. The total amount of the fWgeVics I or winch' Tie iscommitted is !'> A N K a V t'TS , O C/ r O R F B " Newgate- street,: Ton d « Vn; hatte Abrahams, of ftjai.^ ejl- streM M iddU'seX, Ultift jUMl J 4UHtC I-' Meha.!) i,> Surii. T' fif Piui. iaii Corner, ... Ess, ex., hor:- e.<! 4' a^ r..-~ S; Hun<; ( ienrjfe JaekVun, of Lougfi buroug h, Leiceistershire, earn- merchant'; - VVi! lianr HaSstil'lyof • and. hos'er.— Ten is , ( jinultiiaii- s fields, > Tjekifer, . late, of on,-. Sussex, . but noiv Brussfis Papers of the k>' Oih instant, contain the SfMMvh « . f the K'i » u » - f the ftetheihiuds a) opening I he Sessions of the States ( Jem ial H*. s Majesty sins, u The aluimlaisre- ol' ' provisions has had favourable effect on t- he means <>• sid* jsteueeo/. the people," and . yet be miimatis, that tv suiin' •- bansj. es in the tanii'of iuvpuvt and cxpoij duties v. ill be required far tike - « nivantage of the naUonal: ut. ianfaetHj'eSj: knd mate evpeeiaJfy of ugricuj 1ute/ r St MOAV AP|> eai « heypnd < l(> nbt that the Procla- mation ( if Sir F. A( iaiii,'" as wrli as the oilVnsiv<- one on the jmit < » » ' ' the Greelis, has liet- ii rov<> kH{ ri h « j eoiuiitidlis of this mutual concession ai « iwl yet known. THK GH KKKS.— Victoi V still favours the cause of ( i) e ( iii'irk Jiatrii. ts .- icrounts, irceivcif through various nnconniM teO channels, V<>; nt> innicftfe tin- lh ws that the jrreat flt- e. t of the Vu\ roy of I'^ vjll, coiw!> in<( i with Ihc rnunanl of I lie Captain I^ ar'ouV foK- o, was toiiAih. ( IrfraU'ii on tlu' 5th u! t.. with th* J loss of one ship of. fhe Tuny two frigates, 1 hiee CMi; v( ttes, aiid fat e ly^-* huriud ; and thi; ee c « > r- vcttes, six hn » s, forty ^ uti lh> ats, an< i HI'ty trans- port taken.—' i' fcV (' n't* a <; e'iV) e i \\ t > k | • lucre h el ween" Cos and Ilhod< a, and the battle tasted for near!) seven hours: The Pans journals of Tuesday give a repetition of the sann; >: e< iies of disorder and violence wliich intve for sou*'- pr « » vaih'd in Spain. rS'he late Minister of War, Generah Cruz, and the ex- IV! mister of Finance, Eno, are still kept in close confinement,. Couin Ofaha, tliee^ Minister, who, when he was lately < lisihist-:(' d the Cabinet, was banished by the Kingf lo Alnnria, his native town, was openly iusnlfed on his arrival by the RoyHlis! Volunteers. ' I he French/ eyideutly begin to be tired of I he expense 6f keeping up an arjny in Spain. . Accounts were on Thursday rcce'f%' e « l at Lloyd's, the sailing of an Aig; e » jue squadron from . Orinf, flestine( f to aet against the vessels of Spain and Sardinia,- these powers not having- paid their stipu- lated tribute! " SHHEWSBUIIY. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER - 27, 1S24. The Sale of tlie Fiefliokl Ksbite at' Wentnorf advertise! in « ik first pups to t » k » plaM on the 8lli of November, is POiiTPOSEa to the IStb of Nove. nlier, r,.^" ' V! ie J < ( tti Vi.! of the in tlie Vale of Uan- wetiwitl, hi'- h [ I[ iji. Mrs in onf - Stii pajie, should have liren rtsertivl in o'. ir Ust . loarnal, lint it did not come to ( land until after thai uuiutoet of our I'aper hlid l> een published. MARRIED. On tliP If inst. l » y. tlit; Rev. T. Brown, ( lis Rev. r. St. ;>; u' 1m', Hecfor of S: niU.' nuk, nrar " i., ilii: oh], am! of Stockton, Wiltshire, to Miss Monev. dnng- iiter of T. Money, Rs<| of Tlie Minster Ynrd,' Lincoln. On Mondny last, at St. Alkiaond's, I » y the Rev. J. Richards,' Mr. Henry Wat kin*, of Ohisiviek, Middles, ex, to Jane, eldest tlaag- liter of Mr. Corhet l. ojfli, of IViilc Hill, in this town. Mr. Tlimims . Sparrow, of Claiues, to Miss M, Morri., ofCleohnrv Mortiajer On the I4ili i. ist. at Kllesmerc, Mr Wilkinson, officer of excite, to Miss Marsh, both of that place. DIED, OnTiiesday. the 19th io » t. lit Glaiivrafon Hall, in the prime of life, Mary, wife of David Hauler, Esq. ti'. icerely re^ rcltei! hv all her family and friends On the 18lli insl at'Mr. Partridj.' e's, Syehainplon, Hired bS, Mrs, Dallaway, relict of John Dallawav, ifsij of Borastoiv, near teiiljarv. On the 2< l insi, at Oswesirv, at ( lie iidvaneed asje of 8: J, Elisabeth, relict oi" the late Mr. Join) Jidwards. Visitina (" lerirymaii Ibis week at the Infirmary, the Rev. Julio Richards :— House. Visitors, William Hurley and William Cooper, Es< ps. rUMUinnal Snbsciil> er to that Charity. Mrs. Povev, Oswestry I 1 0 The Fonrleenlli Anniversary of the SICK MAN'S FRIr. NI) and l. Viio iii CHARITY, in this Inwri,' was held on the 1D|!) inst. in the School, li0.011 ol S. van Hill Chapel. The Annitill It. pu t was of the most satisfactory nature, inasmuch as it afforded llu't- ratifyini proof, that while the splieie of the Institution's , usefulness had become enlarged, the public liberality had also become cvitcoileil in its support. O'liina the past year 171 sick and 54 Ivlni; iii eases have been relieved; to the former the sum of lis. ft I. was tlist. ibulcfl, anil to the latter £- i: i ; beside other requisite assistance. The whole disbursements of the year amounted to £ 100 ; anil a total ofi' 14<> 7 4s, ii), l. has been bestowed in the relief of ' 2703 cases since the formation of the Institution. COAL — The price of this absolutely necessary article of consumption has, we are sorry to say, attained a price Which must be alarmint; to the working and humbler classes of the community, when the near approach of winter is considered. The pi ice of the best coal at tit/ Shrewsbury wharf is ltin 8d. per ton 5 and we are informed that poor persons, e iio boy coal in small quantities from I lie retailers in dili'evfitt < ftr< s of Hie town, have many instance* to pay Is. per cat. for a very in- ferior article. On Friday last, John Mvltou, F. sq was sworn im 1 the office of Mayor for the tiiw. i and borough of OsAestiy, for the eiVBuiusf year. SrOKM, A N 1> l) « F, H) FUt ACCIOFNT.— Yes terdav nioroitty; this town and its vicinity were visited by a tremendous storm of wind ( accompanied by occasional rain) from the sontli- oest. Several of the line lime trees in the avenues of The Quarry were greatly injured, by their tops and larg- e branches being- blown down. A li. ie hoy, about id years of a^ e, uainvtl Kiebard Peaiboa ( whu. e pa rents live in Barker- street), was. picking: up sticks in The Quarry, when a lai'^ e • limb of one of tfte trees split otf'atul fell np< » n him,. whereby his scull was dieadfidly fractured, bath his thighs were broken, and a enmpoaml dislocation of the aiude vvas caused. He was iinwediately conveyed to, the i'iifirinary, v where lie received every surgical « iid, wiiich, however, was quite unavailing, and he diet ia a few hou. s. — A'lnoug the diversified elfeets of this treinemloit'i g- ale were chimneys thrown do-\ 11 roofs natiled, titc. •, and hud we tini" and sp iC* e to detail the other minor incidents of the storm,, we mMit' mention numerous hi, stances of trees torn up by" tlie roots, or broken asunder, in our neighbour- hood, particularly on the . Kin « » ; s! nnd bank of the river. Of these, o; ne lar^ e healthy tree, within few yards of Severn Hill House, was snapped thro' the middle of the trunk ; and another, equally strong and sound, fiirtiiei'. <|"> vn the hill, was Sitni larly broken over, on Mr. Reek's land Of a third by the side 6f" tbe public road, ill Mr, Cleuieut field, a larj> e portion was blown down, and fell with a crash across the l^ iyhway ; luckily, no team or passengers were on the sp > t at the time, else the oonsequences mi^ ht have been fatal. But, n, doubt, when time shall deyeldpe the variousdevits • ations of the boisterous element. 4, we shall have fcausc, amou"- the' many disasters of the niorniiit mark also the hand of Providence, in the many miraculous cscapes that have taken place. On Tuesday, the Irth ij^ f, nt the nrpret of. Thomas Whilmoie, . K. Kq. IV1-. of llie^ Royal PVeuliai- and - E^- rapt., t'^ ip of, tf} ei; pen'iiery of Bridsjtuulb^ the L » u: d* K^ h<> p of fj< ld and Coventiy -• held a; Church of iSi. Mary uignoiiliv.' ^ he liiiirfbef « » f jt/ nnff" pmsoKs who pri^ enled tlrtiiN Selvf'S amovinu d i'w bet Wei n fi\ e~ hundred and' six, hundred. The galleries ttue n « > v\ de< r with the inhabitants of the town and ueWhbonrho/' d, v; ho flocked" To witness jnt, ei'e> i_ H. vi> anti Hiein liovel ordinance, , n.<> ( Unjihiiiauoij, having taken piaCe i 11 Bi i< l4for a, . j> er; i,< ul tvj eni v sewen years'.^ The Bi:> hop: ev| ncss^ d hi. mscif funei> phia « ed with the ' oider and deeore. i^ that prevaiied, Rf'joicvitjs on the. Mart tag? of Henry Lyster, Esq. As announced iii our last • joiiyual,^ If^ fennutrV and. friends on the ROWTO- N F. sraie, and in its vicinity, to the i. . nber of betu ee: i 500 and ( OM,. assenibled on ^ Veduesday Su> t ; iit the VV'indi. iuiil luu, when ihe noble ox, which ; h; td been i repafed for the occasion, Was placed on a and the tenants and friends (> fit, id two), yvjiji ti< 4gs,;', tvvo hands of music, foriued a procession to ti/ e Castle; on tlx ii; return, ll> e ox vva;- cut rip, and distiibuted, with a due priVponion of aie,''• &. c. to; the poor of toe neig, hbourhv » od 5 and the- tenants and friends afterwards spent tire; evening in hilarity ' and conviviaiity, which was prolonged to a very late hour.. On Thursday, a large. party assembled at Mr. J. I/ h- yd's, of liowton, to celebrate ttie event ; and we need only say, that the well- known hospitality • > f Mr. Lloyd was fairly met by the agreeable unison of mirth and sentiment, which was ke|> t up by the company''. with undiminished spirit. On Friday nitfht, there was a Bali' and Supper i » t the Windvnill Inn, aiid the cou'ipany was very liuuierous, and respedvable. A hont. ei « lily sat down to suppei4arid dancing' did not termiu'ate until after day- lig- ht Oii Saturday inornino-; On Monday last,' a nlirmerons parly of, Gentlemen ined. too- Vther at ( he ijLion Inn, in this, town ( W. W. How, Esq. in the Chair, and J. Moore, Esq. ice- President), to testify ' heir ' respect to the House of ilowton, and their g- ood wishes tor the ' a'ppiness of its present nirist woi'iiv Representative and his Bride. An excellent dinner was provided by Mrs. Tompkins - the- evening was spent with { fieat festivity and yood; humour ; and the party reluctantly, separated at, n late hour,. After the; usual eii'usions of Loyalty in drinking to the health of the Kiny, and other Members of the Koyal ' aoiily,—. the haporness and piosjVerit'y of Mr, yster and Lady Cliarlotfe were proposed " by the President, and received with lo.; d acclamations, id every testimony of te- peci and attachment, he healths of Mrs. Lyster - the youuy- Ladies — and Captain Lvster, next followed. The Earl of Shaftesbury — Lord Ashley— and the other branches of Lady Charlotte's family. The llijrh Sheriff— The Members for the County, and for the Borough Lord Uiil — Mrs. Powvs— The Earl of Tanker* ilSe — A rchdeacon . But er — M r. Lloyd, of Astou -- The Earl of Denbigh — Sir Eraiiei's Hill - Archdeacon Cm bett— and ninny others rtf the friends and well • hers of the toWti of Shrewsbury, weve success- ively named, interspersed with uuinerons 1' uyal, patriotic, and convivial toasts and sentiments, and several excellent sougSft" from individuals of the ompany. On Thursday ( to morrow) rejoicings will take plac'^. at jtlie Bo^ Mines, and among- st. Mr. LysterVs tenants on'lrrs ^ KjNNKKTpr? Estate, when it is pur- posed to make an immense Bonfire 011 the summit of the Stipeistones Hill. eUNTH'JG. S H R OPSll IR E Ho I! N* l) S. B. Graham's , H<) vnth me ft on Wednesday, Oct. 27th ( this dav)... Acton Bnrnell Thursday, Oct.-' Sill . Battlefield Saturday, fVt 30th.....: Iltiwkstone Inn Monday, Nov. 1st ; I'radoe roesdav, Nbv. 2d Aeton llevnald Thursday, Nov. 4th F. rcatl Mill Saturday, Nov. 0th ...... Tweinlows At half past ten. Sir ~ \ RON — A fter„ luiticVng the advance e. f "£* 2 per ton » vu iron, a « iee< l toby the. it: d, i; rHas. teis asseinbUrl . at' V^ olvei hampton , » > n \ V, f( im sflay. se'uni^ bt," the, exfer i( jernifi says, The pJiice of 11 ou-' lias since., wc. « n" » U istand, adi aviC'ed Irok THAI) k.— The whole a< hana" on iron wiiiviu the fast year lias bVen, oil P:< i Iron from £ 4. .10s. to £ 0; aad on Biii fioin £ 7 to A l » t » miuiihaui Paper stales, that fat Tn'. m tiie advance havin^ i^ risen frouK any pai tiC: il; y.^ utciuise' in tsie'eonSeujplioti of the & » .;" » t « - Je,. U fr< Irn t be i etfed iat e scar « -' Vi y of, i uvij^ tyed ! r>. the. want ; of vna'terV. rK ' tor • - w » « ;' kiusr;.- t.-^ f* ex^ I• furnaces, riotr ertfe't'iV'ml jwlntfinwe' ii- - to correct - that) many fninaecs are^ coi » st » - « etini!', i the iron- masit » s feel perI'm-' IV Siili-' awl Chul fwriiaCt'S i'liiijiti 1M' < V » Wed- iui a » vy length of t| n'> C; on areount of | he « sfreat scarcity oCfnC'eirr, Curfls, ae. tl other ne^- eksaVy' nmiefials f'- r tltat porp< fet• A worthy Load on A h j r » n a n hose VI » n f pn i >> i • r 5 y' lies in Uiiiies of, this tiu: ial,, wi! i, . it. us. derive an addilimt of the mritiei. se snin of j<> hu^ anneal income from this cause, pro* Jfie< t: lire, in . CreaSed value ts nt ifnt aiived. The re! n) tv^- iro. o. sir. e Mneite'd at his Work's is e'siimattd at , weekly. Richard Pnle. st< m's Fox Hounds MEET ON • Thursday, Oct. 28th Bangor Bridge Monday,' Nov. 1st Card en Wednesday, Nov. 3d. Bridge Friday, Nov. 5th ..... vOteley Park At Eleven o'Clock. Mr. IlfVf's Fox Hounds will meet on Thursday, Oct. 2sth .. ............. Black Brook At half past ten. The Cheshire Hounds wiU meet on Thursday, Oct. 28th Ast- m Graiuve Saturday, Oet. OOth., Fox and Barrel Monday", Nov. 1st ......... Sandiway Head Wednesday, Nov. 3d. Ox Hayes Farm Friday, Nov. 5th .;.... . ...... Duddou Heath Saturday, Nov. fith Highway Side At half past ten o'cioclf. RKPRFSENrATioiy OF iCtif^ IIUTE—— The Chester (\ oiitant ( wliich Paper, however, it should be observed, is strongly opposed to the ( iuosvenor interest) says—" As it is very g- eneraily under- stood that our worthy county representative, Mr. Davenport, intends to retire on the approachiir dissolution, rumour has already supplied a new candidate in the person of Lord Belorave. Whe- ther the report be true or other wise, we pretend not to determine, but. eer- ainly there is some reason ro . believe it. In our vjew of the subject, this presinhptiou is.., sireiiytfiened by the pufelicatmu of a letter front his Lordship, [ which will be found in our 4th pa^' c, ] in which lie announces his secession fro.' n tire Cheshire Whio- Club, and disclaims some of the political doctrines most objectionable to the Tories. If his Lord- hip really entertains the intention imputed to him, this- publication, as far as it ^ oes, may tend to serve a material object, as it retains as much of Whiggism as may secure the partial support of one party, and embraces as much of Toryism as may not render him insuperably objectionable to the other ; but it is of that, mixed character, that will not. command the exclusive and vigorous support of either. In the mean time, the manufacturing' parts of the county, which we believe are much more powerful thati what; is termed the landed interest, are looking up for men of practical knowledge and experience; arid we know also, that several gentlemen, who, from their vicinity to those districts, possess considerable local influence, have announced their intention of oiler ing themselves to 1 lie county on the first vacancy If, therefore, Lord Belrave should urge his claims, we do think there a IT but very slender grounds on which his friends can calculate on success." GREAT RAILWAY FKO. M BIRMINGHAM L( vv. ftj*()! j>, L — The Chester Chronicle says, i grand survey of thiS line of road has been made and several profcssioe. il gentlemen connected with the stupendous tindert. iking are now in this city employed in the final arrangement of the prepara tory measures previous to applying to Pariiament for legislative sanction. The line of road from Birmingham is through the townships of Smeth wick, Scdgley, ( iospel End, Upper Gonial, L wer Gonial, Woodsitton^ ( yoseley, Ettingshall, Brier ley, Bilston, Wolverhampton, Bushbury, Wed. ies field, Wombourue, Penrieford, Ganslou, Horsebrook Chilirigton, Brewood, Strettou, Wheatnu Aston Blymhill, Briuetou, Great Chatwell, Woodcote Little Chaiwell, Moretou and Wilbrighton, Stock ton, Chetwyud Aston, Field Aston, Meertowu Newport, Fortou, Obetwyud, Prison, Pickst." ck Samhrook, Hinstock, Howie, Pixley, Hungry Hut ton, Stoke, Ollerton^ Wolleiton, Lossford, Sutton Longford, Longslow, Spoonley, Adderley, Betcji lev, - Moreton Say, Styche and Woodlands, New Street. Lune, Cloverley, Culverhall, Shavingtoii Ti t! ey, T lie Morrey, Dodc « » tt- cuin - Wi I kesley , N e w. hall, Soilnd, WoodcOtt, Baddi: ley, Eddlestou", Hurls, ton, Borland, Bripdley, Spurstow,, Houghton, War- die, Bunbtrry/ Tiistou, Beeston, Tivertmi, Newton f'oatk Hiapleford, lluxley, VVavertrtn, Cotton Ahbat. Christleton, LiftletOnj ( ireal Boirguton, Guiidei Sutton, Hnole, Neuton, Upton, Most on, Caughall Backlord, Cliorlfon, Great Sutton, Capenhurst, Ledshahi, Little Sutton, Childer Thornton, Hoo( ot) Eastham, Willaston, Rahy, Little Neston, Bront borow, Poril tollmen m- S pi tal, Lowt.' r Bebington Higher Bebingtoif, Tranmere, and Birkenhearf There are to be erected at Birkenhead the, neeea sary wharfs and basins ; and the carriages on the railway are to be propelled by loco- motive stea engines of ample power. Manv persons, never theless, entertain great doubts of the pVacticabiiiiy of the scheme, and the expense will be enormous. The road- way is to be 25 yhrds wi-! e ; the distance Will be 9> miles; the tj lantity of laud required about 90') acres, which at £ i> 0 an acre will amount to £|) ft, 009. This is independent of every other expense, which some estimate at more than on million sterling," At the Sessions '' fvr the Town am! Liberties of- Sln- cwSb'. jry., held jrn lu nlay b^ t, . folio 0^ et » and iM; rry Owen, both of Smfj^ oti's; ' Square,;' were; lUglit beii're. the Court, under the provisio n f the Statute of the 3, d Geo. IV. c. 40, ?" iieglefliug to apjxar at tire last Shrewshu: ry Mf*,- summer Sessions, the former to prosecute t^ vo persons for felony, and the latter to give e- v^ hmec, as hy a rece'goizam'C they Miidcrfook to do:; * he; t. the Court, ; U| er a co'nsideiation of the ct; Cn i stances, ordered the forfeil'etl rccoguizanees;; « % ih i amounted to £ 15, to be mitigated to -> 0s. ; l. t. i understand, it is the intention of tin- Magistrat< s H'I fufui'e strietlv'-'- to enforce the penalties iu^ it/ ircd u » inliilar < ases —^' I he, only prixoiiers in the Calejui. r , for tria. 1 at these . Sessions, \ v. « rre a pooi old wontan, a « » ed charged with a petty iaieenv, who vvijj be passed h. er parish-, ahd a uian charged wuii ill- treating his wife. ...• Shropshire County Sessions. At the General Quarter Sessions for' tin- Countv of Salop, on the 19th, instant, fhun^' iretf Swiijfy fb?' several petty larcenies in the. vicinity; of ' WeSliiig- , and itichaul li. lK alius. Coo pgr, for stealing/ a frock coat and othei articles at Shidcal, were . sen'- teuced to ( 1 mouths' impiis- onment to hanriuhoitr.--'- Ro. he) t Herbert, employed as a gamekeeper on the Morfe Common, near Bridgnorth, for an aggra- aled assault on a labouring man ua'med Joseph Jones', ( j{> years of age, and for uV- ihhyfid'ly kiliiog Joneses dog, was sentenced |, o six'moatlis"' iitipri ' soument.— Edwin Goe/ wv'r?, for stealing la. ui'es from' desk in the office of Messrs Macmichael', at Bridgnorth, to be imprisoned I I days. ; The ense of Robert Herbert, the g- a^ mF'keeper abovementioned, excited a good deal of fotfet& jilv—'' .\ » : r. " BATHKR, was CouiK- el ( of the prosecMson, and in 0|> ening the case, he des'eriSied the assault as on** of the ' most feroei" ous,. in- ut. a!, and agoT& vatetf, that4 ivas ever brought before a Court of JiisticCi' He then proeeeded to ca 11 his evidence, JOSEPH - JONES.— T" l) ve ' iii " St: Mary's- PaWsh,- Bridgnorth ;..' on the 14th of dune « ast, nbout six o'ciock in the evening, J was returning froth the Stepping Stones'Hill by a footpath which leads directly from that place to my house *, a little whelp, 9 month's old, accompanied me, and whilst we were quietly proceeding homewards, and neither ofuis straggling from the footpath, we met the prisoner,' who was charging his gun, in the company of three other individuals. Herbert ( the prisoiier). had a large Newfoundland hitch at Jiis foot, and , as sodri: a s li e per ee i v e d us h e c r i c d 0 u t— u D— n y. o: i r eyes, Jones, J1!! shoot your'dog for you " t said 44 If you have a right to shoot liim on the footpath, you may ." Herbert then set his large Newfound- land birtch on the whelp, and the poor whelp was worried terribly. 1 tried to rescue the whelp from the hitch, when Herbert seized nie by the collar^ and' threw me backwards on the bank. 1 had no sooner got up than lie took hold of me again, and threw me down, where I .-- must have tumbled over the rock, had 1 not caught hold of a tree. All this while the hitch was worrying the little cur in tire coppice, and Herbert cry iug < jut, " Seizeh\ m, Jij).'" ~ » VVhen 1 got up, I saw my little whelp quaking by the hedge; 1 took It in . my iirms, and was conveying it towards the road, when HerbertHigain called out, 4< Seize him, Jip, kill him, Jip*' - and the- large' bitch seized me by the arm in air instuiit, whilst llerbert took bold of'the. little whfip by the legs, and, tearing both my coat and my aim in Hie struggle, forced the whelp from me, and, dashed t to the ground! Finding the poor brute not yet dead, the prisoner seized him bv tho two hind lc and dashed his head against the upper; bar of a S'ile *, and whilst the bitch was worrying it on the ground, the prisoner took a knife from his pocket and eut its throat ! ! 1 cameawa^ directly, and the prisoner gathered up the remains of my whelp and threw them after: me, crying, 44 Now take your dog. 1'' I. was so much hurt in the seufHe, that• I had to employ Mr. Hall, the surgeon, : of Bridg- north, whose assistant attended me for several days, all of which 1 was oft" work from the wound in tny SAYINGS BANKS— ThefoHuwIN'G ES^ act from the Aet of Parliiunent, prohibiti'ng1 depositors from iVayiiig fuiids in more than, one Savings B;, tiiky is, j,! vliapS, not gem rally known, and cannot be too *• xttu'isjVciy••'. p » ; « . » n 1- s. alc> l. A violation . « » )' fhe Act - in- thts respect, it will be, sect.,', involves'- a > fi-. i( in e: vf the xfftn'e ( fepv. yit V 5th Geo. s V.. Ca- p. - 0* 2. ?* ce. 25 if any person• shyl- l at any. tune iiftcivtheiSOtU yl^ Ntwc. rtt- be. t;, iK- 24, haw- any deposit or "" funds iu- Miure . that, one Sav inus' Bank, vi triviu' me' ITivite(} : : i'i. ing4oai, , eve: ry .- suci) perspn sh:> lt alV right'asul'title. t< » any deposit in a ny a in! ' even kt. elr; Stivi'noS Bank, ansi > l; v Tin^ tes. s . shall ili sui Iv « ; aik'' VI• tti( f. tt. ee » vmvt » > t- ( snell <' epoSit » » r, . asuh e.\ H, fje. the suui so forfeited to t> c fvu- rhuitb i n to th c Ba o k of Efi g I a v « d o r Pat \ k. * >: t J. t! a n.< 1, I. ic ease Vna\ 1> e.,' to uht accoiiiif of the C, un • 4Mt^ » o) i, 1 si| fo're. i'fti » V. f ' tl'ie Nat ional Debt —• This eohctiaeiii' w as j « is: wVt in oVd> r h> on vrn! f » aud b\ peiinvi sti » . g their property in Savings.- •! h » « ik- » .,' w^ D.- c sitc. a> lh). n In life is sueh as not to ; » inii. h-- ttivlo to the; beiutil- of those insiitntions, - v.- hie! r wen1 established,' not to form dep.< sii< n les , fOr the ' ae<- aiin: iatioi; s of the rieh-, l> ul f" r the tugs of- t. he- working. classes' , ; or^ tNebr', andthe Rev S LdVurs Ivufflii,'^ f Henley Mall, have bveu dec led • iifrfj, vpi .. ibv," Tow a of LmUovV, for the year R- al ph: Berisots, Esq. of'Lu't wyehc, has atimmncc( i 4iis' InUiituMi- nf bec* » iniug a, catuhdafe f.-' r the ' Borough of vStafTord, at the next General Election IVo- icester fiaafd. FREEHOLD EST. ITE. thttibfr •>.:$<!, re? 4. rpUESIMY, the S « - oiid Day of No- w. V : II. b'.' l' tlt- Xt, beiil^ t.|. ltj ( ; f 111 I jftllT- yttll Iv Kitiii- ii,- tin.- Trtisti- t- s iiie li'. siit- il tti attei. d ill tli.- liitii'iiiiir) , at I1'. Iv'civ,* t11- ici.. J'. HlN JONES, Secretary. To hallnt f » r six new Directors; > n Lien of si. X .( t'llie ( iresent i;: ti),' s, u ' in jr., i. iu Uy ICetntiim Shropshire W ILMA. M STATU AM, TEA- DEAi. BE, GHOCEH, ORT> OSITK INT- NIB B A IT K,, ilIG- 11- ST- ftEf? r, MlIt. R. U'SIIfjIIY, || KYiJhNs his iiiRst sjMttei'uI Thanks H ^ in his fiieuiis ami tlie Public, for the Patron- age vi. iiIt ntiii- fi he. lias-' 1)^,- 11 latniiresl since I, is Keiiiintil to [ jieseut Sittialioaa\ i; l . res tbeiu tl will aiv\ ays be ttis Study tr. give . uitiveiv. d SatisfiK- tinti. IV. S beys to iufnnn bis Fiientis, tluit he lias Itr- Dt'CF. O THK 1' itlCliS of hi, < ieaaiu.- BK1- '! ISII H INKS, viz. < » .,! iiaisin t,. > s pei Gallon, Oili « er '•> ' S. i t!, per ( Jtillnu, and Cowslip, I'alca- vella, » ; t- to Ss. ( id. per tiniloii. N. B. I'limHies supplied with Wax, Spei- iiviiceii, I. i). ( lo, u Moulds', D ps, ite.,; to^ e'tju f w itb'nt, Sorts of ' East nipt *>. « liidiii Ptckies, Tiible ' Ki'nits, I ) » h and ntber San.-. and yeiiuliie I'liaev tilts ft, mi l-' ribonrg and ' 1 revel's, liiiymirkei', London. ., » I. ODGINfiS TO LET, g- enteellv Fiiniishf d, . « To tsr t » i> spriijatf Contract, CAIUTAL iVn: sSi A( iK, TifKlv PVT. fertile KAIl! W.: sitiinte nt W'At. I.- Jft.' EY liWIOD, in ll'f Parish of iliisbbiiry, in the County of Salop, eontaiuiiiy- npw ai ( is ot ttl' 2 Aeres. of Arable, Mt mbiw. Pltsluie, and VV. nid nit!, in the Occupation nf Mrs. Sarah BloX'JileJ;, as I'cn-. aii at Will. - Mi • - The Ltud- Tax bus been redeemed ranirulars may be bad oil Application to Messrs. PM IW'S tiiid SAI. T, Attorneys, Shrewsbury, at whose T'tlHee a Plan ut tl,.- Estat'- may be seen. " dsapehy, . AMD HABERDASHEHF. ANTED inimerliately. TWO AS- SISTANTS in the above Business.—,' Vpply toJfTANMRR anil GITTIN*, Pride- Mill, Shrewsbury. if A M ED, in a 1 iedtieinaii'b Katnilv, ' » jinoie. dlately, a (^ OOK. A g' 0?> d Character vv| H he reqnired. F< » r a lie fere nee enquire of THE JfniNTKRS ; if by Letter, Pi- st- paiil. & ' ANTS a Situation, either as CO ACH- ? MAN or GIvOOM, a mi< ldle- aoed Man, who. perfectly? uuderstauiU his Business, jind can he , YVCIt,, recononended .— Apply to THK POINTERS;} if h> y Letter, Post- paid. I ^ patent Utiiins JBadjm^ J. BEL IJ AA1NG purchased one of l!) e above- * JL nanifed Machines, - most- respectfully informs FJookselJers and Tradesmen generally of that Cir- citin^ tancp, as it will enable hint to execute any Orders he hiay receive fir ilulin. u* Bankers' and Tradesmen's Ace Aunt Books, Printed or Kng- raved ftiri- Heads, with such Neatness, Accuracy, and Uispatch, tirat Ire is; eon( i< lent th . se Advantages, combined . with' Moderation in Expense, wilt g\ yt) Satisfactiun to those who may favour him with their Orders. . JV B. ac know ledges with Gratitude the increasing- Patronage his.. Cirenlati. ug' Library receives from his Friends and the Public ; and, by the Addition tjifhew tiud popular Works therein, will endeavour to retain ilie puirlic. Favour; rle takes this Oppor- tunity to mention the following; Works'( some of wbicn are just published), which, with other.-, have been lately added to his Library :— The Pilot, by Author of the N^ py ; Reginald Da 1 ton ; Life of ( ieorg- C IH. ; Percy IVIallory .; hedga- uutif?, by A'tVtbor of V^' averley ; , Monnngs at, Bow- Street y The. iuheriialrce ; Tales of a Traveller, by Wash- ington: Irving; Our Vtllng- e.; . St; iii, inore Castle Raynard ; ( loethe's Wilhelm Meister; Life of Lord Byron ; and Lueuliratioris of lluinphrey Itaveliu Tales « » f the Crusaders, tlie ex peeled ue\ v Work by the Author of Waverley, wiil be procured as soon as published. J. B, invites Attention tt> the improved System on which he hinds Bankers' and Tradesmen's Ac- count Books ; and returns Thanks for the Favours he hasueceived in his Business as a Bookbinder. Maudol, SWREWSBUNY, OCT. - 2i\ 1824. with ! > aralt OlHee TO MILLERS. E N T Black morr & Co v p at ItiM. TlMi CLOTHIS, without Seams, with regard to. l) hraliiti'iy\ aird • Oinju- itvh-; and • /• revision. Dressing, excel ev ery: olhtM i ( i vpy^ ou of;, the Kind, as ihe great a. ui tuCiVasing Weunuid' ioi iheorclearly evsuces. The Pioprico'- s,. g- raiefu! iv acknovvledgiug the liberal 8| ip| ioft they: have ie\ cei ved,. uud respect fit I ly soiici tiog- it's' (.' oVt'i nuan'o'e," beg* Leave to inform their Friends, , attd Gentlemen in ilie Flour Trade in general, that their Patent Bidtinj*- Cloths are sold at their Mauiractoiy » t w A. N Ds wo in a, S urrey, Agents: viz. Mr. Win. Ilazledine ... • Mr. J . I. Guest A! r. Thomas Evans Mr, Morris Jones...^. i, Blr. Itichard Jones .... and by tiie following ............ Skrt- ir$ hury I fh; n.* i> teff • ... J.-........ () su eslr. tf. thh Puot S <?> r, own Mcsssrs. Wel- iiu'gs and Edwards .. /./ nilow, Messrs.. T. Webb and Sou.; ... . Hereford Messrs. J. Meredith and Sons ... Kindlon Mrs. Ann North . hrecon Mr. William Davies.. .(' heater. Mr. P. Denuiau iloh erlunnpton Tviessrs. Hong hton and Rnhcrta .. lun) tiv< r> lm// i . Mr. Joseph VV^ g- stntl'...........,.,.../('(// cesier DiJi rioNAi. SV tiSCH f PrFtOJS'S", n- r » ward* the ElOiCTION of » iif,\ S£ l, i j STABLES. • A'imoi( nt before adveni- ed £ lir » , 10 i » Hon. Capt. Bridjjeiiiaii, It • jO- JO Mii| or.< ieneial f. elhlii ii> u ... ;.. '" ft I! I . Walls, r. l. !- si( JO* 0 Mr. ( ieorire Umlerbill .... |(> Mr. ( Hover, t- i- iii. ii- / f, Mr. Spur row, I'i. x- kfmd. ..'. V. 4 Mr. K. Corrms- linni. ililfn , J' | Mr. Jones, liin.- k^. Ileud, ' jitov I > ursrll, I ' I Mf. , Instill, / 1>' u>!.... . .. i J Ml-. Has It'. w Ahi/ ri, foieQati* ....,....'. J [ M r. . lull, i ijavies, ( Joot. H- Jikfis, JlO'h Shrr! •> l Siik Mcrrtry an( i fyikmt^& y. S & trhOYD, ' P- RiTCIIAR b IS. rtMtiniin-; their extent.: ve l* iitrotntpe li- st TluifVks Vo'r t! m . tl- s'v btwfr - jecl.- r. ved, IM-. spectfully tictjntiiiit tlieir Coiuiexiiin*,'' t'lir' IfiiVe completed llleir P'ircli. ses in fiil'IJ Sll> v- rELlS. SK CLOTHS and Ft'KS , an. i f'i,. nf tlie Pi. iiis wlirib be ee been- taken Jo- sebxt none ; li.. it; . fashioniiljle uiul-^ ood ni ticli and a i.' eiMa- ltutrbwi - to oiler tlieni nilli a instlr.- Hl* Ptulit, th<- v linn more than nstf- il Confi. len.- e in subiiiittin-. th- ni la the lllsptction of their l-' iieiuls. A lar^ e Assnrtinent of Family. Matiniin^. Kj* Funerals Fnrtilsiictl. Prince.**- v^ r^ e/, Oct - i7th\ Ci. ASS7C. AX. AJT3 CO< VS: a- l3aci T. E. JfliVivS pFTrUNS Wvlxst T!, a., ks to those X. ^ Parents who h ive hiihert) eoaftd,.} -„ he_ v^ rc . of their Child: en, u. ri r,,^ ct. u] iv MA3. SET HSBAI S!! KKWSHL'RY. in our Market, nn Sntnrdav last, the price of flidefe was 4d. per lb.~ Calf « kius £> d~' l allow ; Jd. Wheat. Old.,.. New .. Barley...... Old Neu Oats Old New ........... Average Prices of Com pei 10 i) 7 5 4 to 5 Quarter, in Eripjuntl tl/ e ijuiuiifs: them ami t!;>• Pntdie ifnmcdiateiy' after' the Chrisrmas a SCHOOL upon u System" cotss Pestaloz/ J, Dr. Bell, and the !> Society. The Buildiag in which the S- h. ml will he con dueled is beauti- ful; y situate in an airy be. dtbful rart. of tin-: J own, . '. that he. intends, V a cat ion, t( j < » p<* u ><: e;| f; oiM th< j~ e uf ' i-' iii and Foreiuui the Liitin a. » ch of CJas- ItisT. K. J.' u Iiit- Pntio!!, withthe competent- Tutors, to instruct Yondi and ( ireek Laug'uages, and everv? Ev ! » ical and ; Conritiet: vi; al E- dncnt- ion." Tiie Pupils will be pnblucly " examined Ha! f- ye » r ! y, and their Parents furnished m » n? Ttlv' wi<' r an . Account of their A>'< Jnd;* uce and '' Pv. wvVi ss *#* Terms; n. r>< lerat& v S II ft tjw? B v- R ; ILST Ocr: CENEiiAL toisB w& mm i, that T.- Supply of arm. On bis cro « : s^ cxaTnination for the prisoner, by Mr. Slavey, Jones said— There is a Cover on each side of the. footway, b:: t my dog never was hunting- it. The; prisoner did not tell HIP to keep my dx^ g at Inene ; neither did I any I w- orrld iceep him in; Spite « f hi in. I: know tire prisoner is^ a^ n^ keen*^ to the gentlemen at large iu the neighhondiood, but I do not know that he. iicts iii that capftcrty for Mr. Whitmore. -- Two of the fli ree personsiwh, o were the pids^ ner^ ii company when the assault took placeyg- ttve evidence very similar to the above ; adding- that the New fouudland dog- was one used for picking up gamp ; and that after Jones was first thrown downy a con- siderable altercation to, ik place between; biui and the prisoner; . Mr. VICKRRS stated that the surgeon could not attend having- yone iutO'Norfolk some time ag- o Mr. . SLANtev,. for the defence, combated the vari ous statements made by Mr.' BATH tvK in liis opening speech, and called F. R. 11 ARRIKS, Estj-: who the prisoner tin exce! lcntehnracter, addino-, 4,1 1 - do not believe he would injure a creat^ rei which . w. as not interfering with the yume. 0- '; Mr. BATHEtt.— Then Sir, you believe he-: would injure a creature, if that creature was meddiiiig- with the game ? -. i:-- Mr. I! ARKIES. t-. I- don't think you have- any ri^ ht to put such a question ; mv character is before the Court, which will decide on my- evidence. ' • • Mr. BATHER— Sir, I have. a ri^ ht*. to put arfv question to a witness, who steps torw; ard to ^' iv.^-' evnlence in this Court. I have ueither the will nor the- imprudeaee to doubt the respectabi^ tt of . your: character, but the ' iiiihiral intcrene^ vio. be dr.\$ iv- u{ from your answer was, that he would ij'ijure any t> nx, f- \ Vh< » was nreddliug- with the ^ aure ; ; ' an Mr. Harries. — S don't believe lie wmildv Th « CaAtaan ( T. Peniberfon, Esq!)," iiraddrc^ Sr • iny the Jury, said, there" were iw o ^' iVint'^ for fhett coasidr'ration ; the first was, vvhetiYvr the a'saulf' was proved as lai. l in the ayyravated of sjcciiif counts of the indictment; and the second A* a: s, whether aii assault, was proved under the yene'iai count, The'speCial counts stated that tlie iii- g': " Wa> j excited to bite the man; and as this, in ! a\ v, vm. ust he proved exactly, it was far them to consider how far the evidence supported tIris stafemeut. r-^ ltf5 Chairman then commifiitrd upon tlii1 evjihMice^^ itb told the Jury that if they were not satis& ed ns-" t'oth^ evidenee relati ve to tire ayyravated" a^ a• 11111icy had better find their verdie! on tl. veiast or lieneral count ; because a yeneral verdict \ vouVd He- ( jiKlihtf the evidence as proving; the charges laid only in tlte special cuiints. . As to the other corVutVth'e^ c' could' be no. donbt but tiiaf an assault, y: id!: that of a Htosi serious nature, had' been prov » ( l::: •, " ; • "• The jury re, turned a generalyeVdiet, ihereby" ii n d i ay t he p r lso u c r g'uij. ty .- of the assaiilt and ' of - its a^ yravaibu)... . •'. ,• • • --- , v . The it a i RATA v j i n pass) n y sen te^ Me; sai'n^ f g the - pr. isou. c. r — 4' 1 j is. uecc « stiry • . to 14re* v?> • you tliat the sLluntion , yott oucup v a\ a f^ » im. e. k, ejfpei' can gi ve you no ritfbb^ hatevt'f to nbuse or. ftAS » tdt an individual ; still less- to- set-- a | ifti « u> i- persoti who was in : noways di. sturbiny iAOji,. -: Yon. seemed to have no reason whtt'to^ er- r 4 duct; and it- is necps^ nry that you- sho; eid be mude -' aa example to others in similar, sifiKtt^ uvsy. that. lb niav be careful of what they are nbaut-:. - I. sho. olil liavf? bepfi inclined to |> ass a niuch tufKe, . Sf> vere: seiVteuce upon you, hud not the yood eSiar-. u. ter y ou have received induced uvy brother Magistrates--. to mitigate the severity of tW luw. The seuience^ of the Court is, that you be iiupris- rvncd for (> IHMUfits'' [ the Statute riot empowering tbem to add haid . labour to the iiupnsonittt'ut.} WA'LSS, BlilTJI. f) n the 19th inst; at Stratford Green, E; sex, the Ladv of U'il'stin Jones, Esq. of Geilyyynan, Den- bighshire, of a daughter. At Newtown Fair, M uit^ oineryshire, r> n Satur- day last, the qoantity of sheep pemnd w'* ys unusually loftje, ami most of tItem were disposed of: fat . pM<? S iaverH^ intj 5|< L to f)< l. Pigs also sold well there- w » s a jjirge shew of Cattle, but noti many fat one^ : the fot ones that were there • s » Vd- readily at ( 5d. per lb.; stores were also freely, Wtight: and good HorseS obtained high prices. HOLYWELL HUNT, ls- 24. On TUESDAY, Oct. 19ih, the TNFI'v Stakes of 25 sov. each, for 3- v r. olds ; 7 subscribers. Sir'T. S. M. Stanley's b. e. by i'llho da Puta, ( S ichoison) 1 Lord Crosvenor's ch. f. Hvbla .' 2 Sir Thoums Moi> tyn\ s b. f. Archduchess 3 - Won- easy. Produce Stakes of 50 « js. each ; h. ft, 13 subscribers. r. E. ( i. Stan lev's c. by Camiilus, mitked'over. ; The': Chief: aiu Stakes of 50 sov. eaeh, for 3- y r. olds ; ri. ft.,; 7 subscrit. ers. •:..•• Lord'Stamford's b. c. Portrait, walked over. A Sweepstakes of 25 sov. eac'i, for 2- yr. olds j 3 subscribers. Mr; Mvtton's b. c. bv Manfred f Darling J. 1 Sir W.' W. Wynil's ch. f. by Blucher 2 Won easy. The Mostyn Stakes of Kisov. each ; subicrihers. Mr. E. LI. Llovd names Mr. Mytton's br. c. O. swest ry, 3 y rs. ...... ( fV. I. ear ) i Mr. It. it. Price munes Mr.. Toines's b.? c. Sir ( irey, .3 yrs;.,, v ..:..'.. % Sir T.. Mostyn's Mei- caiufottl", 4 y rs.. .............. Wh E. G. Stanley's gr c Griidrig-, 3 yrs.,...... 4 Sir T. S. M. Stanley1* b. c. Hadif Baba, 3 yrs... 0 M r. Mytton's Com'e. d'Ar. tois, 4 yrs.; 0 Eurd ^. irosvenur's. Etiquerte,. 4 yrs; 0 A yood raee. A Hirtidicilp . Stakes of •-><> sov. each, h. ft. with oQ s. » v. added by the Club. Sir Mns- i^ u's Princess Hoyal, G yrs. ( Scott j 1 Lord Gr- 4 » s>:^ nors Etiquette, 4 vis 2 Mr. Mynon's Couite- d'; Artois, 4 yrs... 3 Sir S. M. Stanley's br c. hy Miio, 3 yrs\.. i.. 4 , Sir W. W. Wynn's * cb. f. by Comits, 4 yrs... dec. ft. A g- t> od race. Qn TH v us DAY , th e •> 1st of October, a Hand iea p Stages of so^; eachh. ft. • Mr. f. 11. Price names Mr. Toines's br. c. Sir • Grey, 3 yrs firt- bur) .1 Sir ' I? i S' M.' stanley'. s Portrait, yrs.. 2 Lord?( Jrosvenm^ s Uybla, 3 yrs.. 3 Two declared forfeit. The Hawardeu Cattle Stakes of 10 sov. each; 0 Subscribers. Mr. Myttoii'S br. c. Comte d'Artois, 4 yrs. -:.- ..-•.,... • • ( OarIhurJ I sir T. MjKtvn's PriiIeess R• tva 1, f 1 yrs 2 ; A ifodd race; woir by. half a1 head.-:' ' bnti- rig' f) to'- 2 oir Princess lioyal. The llaikiu Stakes Of Itjo Jov. each, h. ft.; 3' "' " •... subscribers., Mr. jVlytfon's, br. c:' Oswestry, walked over. A Ifciudicap Stakes ol' ] « ) sov. each, h; ft. with 20 s<> Cy, added l\ y the Hunt; the. best of three - i-' uiiie bents. ' Mr. E. Mostyn Lloyd names M r. Ho^ ers's ' Sir Edward,.! Vrs ....,.( Oafhr^ j Sir T. Mostyn's Madoe, 4 yrs........ . Sir VV. W. VVynil's Couius silly '..;. Mr. P. R. Price names Mr. Toines's Sir Lord 0; oiiyenjr's Aigrette.. ana Wales for the week ending Oct. 16, 1824 : Wheat, 58s. ( M. ;' Barley, 37s. 5d. ; Oats, « <) » . Cd CORN. EXCHANGE, OCTOBER 25. We had a tolerably lar^ e supply- of H'heat fresh in this moruiny j'roni Essex', Kent, " jind Suffolk, and a great pint of last week's irnivals rpmainin » : unsold for this day\ tua. ket, fine sauipteS of AVhent metdnl! sale at a decline of full 2s pCr quarter on the prices of this day se'nni^ hi. whiie the interior sorts are also extrempl. y hea » y at the samp aWaiemeut. Fine ma t. irt< r l> ttrley fully supports its price, the Brewers and DisiiileVs exert in u-- every nerve to op » - u ihe pn< is f. » r the ji'lmisslon of ibis article. Be » ns and P. as of luith kinds are heavy sale, and foil 2s. . lower. O . ts are also on the deeline, but we- can- not quote the price lower than our best currency. In Fionr aniLofher articles there is no alteration. The following;,; WE are informed, has been stuck Up in the Corn Market this inorfiing :-—. " CUlilOUS FACT. 4k From '^ Oth to 25th Sep'emtier - - 412 27th to 2d O. tober - - - - (> 3l 4th to « , th - . . . - - c, 7({ 11 ih to I6ib 34- 27 Quartpis 5446 u The Quantity returned by the Coin Factors, as <' xlni> ited on Friday, ai, d stuck up there hy the Receiver of Corn Retuins, as having hecn sold and delivered, in the w< .- k from the 11th to the iGtb of October is Quarter* 5507 Beino- more, by 61 quarter?, than had anived in the port of London tor four weeks, including the one up ; o the K) th of October. Can any thing- nioie clearly prove the disgraceful attempi that is making' to open the ports, for the importation of Foreign Barley, than the above statement, which is taken from official dneuments, and is uicoutroveitiiite'. It liot^ add to; the wealth of the distillers and hreweis— hut wiil it not have a contrary effect for the Innneis of this country, hy occasioning such a redurtioii in the price of Bni'lej,- as will not oiily lie ruinous to the growers of that article', but be attended with the most lamentable consequences to the landed interest in general." : Current Price of Grain per Quarter, as tinder: Wheat, 50s to White Peas 36s to 40s rpUE Nf)!) ility. Uvuc. y, tr d PuMir- m a if eh era I, a in respcetfiiHy in ormc BROi'A- S has ju-. t . received his lVinter i i .- h fine- flavoured To.- i sTl- NG C11E ES E friSu/ 4 f » e imvst celebrated 4> ni. y I'aro. s iu Deriiv- hire. — . Vlsui on S.\ LE, Prime Old Chesl- ire, IV. MiOfe tind Si(. o-|,. Berkeley, Ripe Cream S'iiloit-, D< » ublVund Si » | 0 Co! ten ham, Farm, sati", WiliMhjre, C — Orders will be most grateful! v with prompt Attention. ^'_ The CHIN A, GLASS, and EAR Til EN- B'-.' inches,< vf TruHo carried on u^, i^ ciul. ut ?) PITLCF. S. edder, eceivtd, and- meet ' VA li V RKDIX FROM LONDON. J. GWYEW, JUX CI. OCK AND WATCH W AN UP A CTUKEH » IVt/ le (.'<>!>, S/ iieicshi/ n/, ( OPPOSITE MR. Bl. uxrs, CHEAJIST), Cicclvsi ana JO. itc!! cs OF ev. ry Description properly repuVt mill iiwle I Hi to any P. ii- p. fletui- ii m cliuiijj- p ullimf- iTTni- Twelve Moiitlis. NEW CASES. Gulil, PIUMI, nnil Tint,- il- EUNNN L Dial.?, 8> « * I * UI) liuliv <' vli, iilHr « , Vf- ru- is, niiri othi- r Repairs, lin'- lie sioom- st Notier-- jxiiisisieiit wiili rimjier Att-.- ntiuu. IE » rsiOAI. 303I13S cloaiipil nml i- opaireii ; unil every Tliinir Win king- Jp>< elii- ry Of purtllleiit, En^ ia. iil, |) ro| » ; i- jv iiiiilertaki i and exeniK- U. • the G. D. OWEN. Sffitiiu ansy Spirit / EctJlj- mt, 03WESTH. T, OECIS t'> inform his Friend* that he ltqs S > Umi'O'VED from I- ailey Strict ( wliere lie lias l. iilit- rln Ciu- rierf on the abnve piuiness) to more coin mod ions ! vienii-, i- s in ^- t{ OSS- S'riiF. ET,. a< lj,, in- injf tVose ol' Messrs, C'KOXO* MHI I. I- CAS, » « cre lie. respectful ly s. ilicits a i iiiiiiii. iuiii- e. oi'ilirir Paii on- age. — Clow- Street, i& l Oct. IH' 24. Mil i ley.. Milt 44s In 48s t) 2 » to ( ici Beans,. . Oats 44s In 48. ' 25s lo Q7s Fine l-' loiir tills to ilos per sat- k ; Seeomls 5,' is to oil. SM 111 I ri F. /. I) ( per sknfSlti sinking offal). Be.- f... : U ( i. l in 4s - 2- 1 j Veal 4s 0.1 to" 5s ( til. Mutton 3s l!) il In 4s ( i » l I Pmk 4s fid lo 5s ( nt. Lamb ( Is ( Id In 0s ( id BRISTOL COliN EXCHANOE. TO THE PtilLlC. Spii 12: price of Wheat, per sack ot 33M!> s Foreign Wheal per hnsli, of 8 £ « ll. !-" ao'lish Wheat, dilto '. Mailing Barley, ditto Mali, dillii.... 0 in' 48 G in 4 >) ti, 8 ( i to ft U t.. 8 Floiir, l-' iue, per sack of 2c. 51 lis 54 | i lo 58 "" 0 In 53 9 to 3 EXCHANGE. Mi emids riittii. Oats, Old, per 8 g- all LIVEUI'OOI. COiJN Wheat 7s. Oil. IIarlev 5s. fid. flats.! 3s. Id. Mall Ps. ed. i Fin* l-' loni- 45s. Oil. 44 a 4 6 50 lo C. l. piM- TiMl. s. l) d. pertiOhis. 3d. per451hs. ' lid. per^ dqis.- 0d. pt- I'iS. iihi F. TU'RN Their- most HIIW- W Thimk* for ihc unprecedented Paironiijfe i! K- Y re- ceived in llleir laic Conlract, and i ejf rel exeeed'iiio- l y that tfiev were iinaWe to supply many of liii- ir Friends u ith Tickets and Siiares'ihe liisl liny, vvhicli arose entirely from the Deinand having i- Xi- eeili- d ihe utmost Calculation that cm!. I lie made fi- oin lite Sales of former Loiici- i. cs HAZARD < K CO. derive g- reat ricasnre fioui ihe Apjirohatioti beslowed on Iheir Mode of Drawing ihe clear am! simple Manner- til VTEliA-. it 11 the Prizes were dliirttt, and tin.- Whole of the N;>< ii>\ n- » decided in One Day, is llfilled in the ^ iew mmmm, which they respectfully' recuiiVmehd to vhe AMenrion of, the Puhlii*,. as'it euhtniiis Jill the popular Points of the Last, With the additiomil luduoemen! of THIRTY THOUSAND POCN'D PRIZES ! . .4> f.. . . 2 1 1 2 3 dr dee. ft. FAIRS TO HI; HOLOR. N'., November t, . l- iuT- wistje., i. a. vf . l^ i- d;- . iVwraslle.., Ida n hi IF— A- si « pH—: F, IVoyj'r, t.: l? i » r' tb-' nd— ( ihri>{ U.!- t « > n,. Lyunue-, • L'l.- iiihry. n. uia. iV, (.' uerivys— ( j, LeiuCvvardiui', UoweY'-". ' H E it i R 0 ix i) \! i q if IJVII^ A s FA t V. .— Titere., NEVT » R was a liner or In- rjffT. sheAV. iii rai tii', - in any j> r- rrfd.. iu^ yea'ti, than that t- xhihiie* l on Wednesday inst, thv. | » riiu* it> al - ytrrets . bviu t . erowitt'd at an t- arlv ! i< iur wit'i sut'ii amm as cannot h © <- qnailed nj an\ t. sit " m the kinydiuii ; and there br- in^ H <> i<•<. « ns< iu\ tmyers, < Vj) i'eially'' for - tiuii- oeU'V, urarlv the whole were. sold In fire two in The ahvrnuM'i at , a<- l va . J<' ed'. " prices.-— G<, » od horsey are at |> resent in murii re- ouest, jmrtieutarly roadsters • and the lew (>,} this fieaeriplhm which vv » - re in the fu » ", as ,\ ve{| as . ami cultural h'- irses, fviehed their tail value.— Sheep . ami jut's were, in gtv. xl ahuiulatx e : , lhe furaicr vinaiiYtamed their prins, hut in the hitter there v\ a> a rednetiou, ami they wert privU'ipiliy s- old — This yeai's growth ol' hupp"-;' oeuci-: ally: speaUmsiV is' cellent in ( juality, and a c » > nsuh rahh- ( juantHy vv as hrini'tjht iVir ; - very little husiuf^ s mdoueon the first dav, hut on the niurid^, the sale . wiis brisk, and; both days about pockets we! e weighed.; good ones aeeriJ-' in^ front £ 0 to t'ii. I;") s. and sonie snpei M- r samples, it is fwvtd, reach* i\ ill p(; r ewt -^~ The < jnan » iJV < « f suit butter was some- what jefs titan- farmer fmtn lii'e ii) « h piuvs • asked on tii « - first < 1 ay not much was sold, but on i'iirtrstlny tt went briskly at a leduction, tiie average betn- y fro:> i iOs. to t Is.. 0d. per stonc.~~ l- iiere was but one n> 4 of Shropshire ciierse, VMOCII sold nt about 7Ss. per ewt. Best GIOIIJ e- lcf cheese averagedsfrom 6t) s. to 74s. tvFij. uie. il, lr./ iu 45^, to tiOis.— OaioiiSj per peck. o 2. V, 4.: . m:' 10.. 0 . £ 1 . £ jm . £- 2 0- liesh e v e Tjli v - N- u s- atn- e'- r i be c will; ••• peri ion of oi he'" ! ia . ,- i-' i; e PiUtnUs there are the A si ml I'JO BLAHKS, hole lo Or decided ih One Dm', ' XT \ V ednosd'M\ r. HA/. \!<:>.\ ( If), and se( iui •-, on had ( a; i e SrilisfHetiiMi n . Instiiut, li. e f,. 1 ' v in:;- 10,69:') .......... £^ 0,0( K) rs x!. 0:? 0 1^, 744 .......... Xl& Q'r BRIDES inaiiy others tfjO \ . t'?,^), N- id r ihftr uld and fot tunate Oiih- ns., Roval Ks Si « i, l- ornl, ill, end Jilli <>\ fn- rd -. Strivt : wii,-,- IFRTUTEYT V urieiy ; of N IIUVHI'V* UVE IHIW, EU Sale I ALIO, hy their, AYENTS— T. Nl^' VMNO, ttnSkseller, ni^ h. vt ry ' at he sU BwsjiI,;; y, - Mreet ( v. hu ' List Lottery ^ CHEFSffli, J. Street. sold n Prize of A." JO,>:•;?() in S- EACOMR, Itt » ok, ellcr, ] Uu\> The above . t'^ O^ Tf'l), " ns div- ( Fifteen Share> j w- hichwe. e yold at the'fo. iii'r Plate's, v Sixtt- enU'. at liATtt JS- Xiecxitji i5lHjVtlN'GUA. M ixBee:. uh at fiR tSTOL . S, i, xte.. ntl) at Ti\ SW< ti; n HisteeuHi a" LBICESTBR z. Six( ej » at. h » ir. Lome:* -' i:: tet- ntli. ai Lynn , ' Lxtecnt. h at ^ I i.-,-: roU v. SixtOi- Uili « t N KVv( j ISTi. K 8th at \ V cLv\ in h^ r'TOX.' » M M > r. ; riMiu imii |. m' u uu'iu 11 urn S Cliof- i- in ll. e'Sliaile « itliin llie Cnncli maker's Yard " 1 liit- lu!> r Shrewsbury Fair, is reqiK- ilt- il « o ! i « ivrtniii whitlifir llinfft a- iiy P. rrnr in ihe Quan- tity, nii; l to ^ ivi- InKMUFV. H"?! of THE same to Wi- i:- 3.1AM Momifs, I lie Owniir of'rhc Promises'. OCT. 20, 1824.: , .,' . Melon and Cv ember Frames,- TO BE. SOIL © , ONE capital' Three- Li* hr MELON FRAME, ami Three Tvin. Lig- lit - ClJCtfM- [ BKU FRAMES.— W » v He ) i: irt loseilrer or s « -| ra- V lately.- Apply U) M.-.' PSRBT, FrW*- HI « , Shrews- bury. Tli' » Ailvert'oement will not tic rep- n- teil". & tig auctpii. BFOvTTQOMERTTSHIRE. ValnaBU jfrreStciS fircpcrla. - BY MC£ E8RV. AT '. lie Tftlimi INN,' SIMU'VYSIMII- V, T. N, Natiinlav, the 31 nil l) a>' rt- f'Of- Kilier:, ; tv at Tniee .-' Clack in the A ft Ml, I, in till- . Wtoniiig- ( w « neli nt'ie. r l. otS 11 « Hill", lie I.- IT' 1'! Iljl-' ll : it the xinu' of Sal.-, diiliji'vt to Cotithluiits then in. he | n- ml. ie<-. l; fpi- l K u: i:! fi'- itifti'i< i valuable Prrf.- ' Hor. ii I'K'M'EliTY,- sinmtc HI ( JWYN Y GO, in the I'uruli of Llaiiilrinio, lii'tlie County uf 51' iiil^ oinei'y - r— l. or 1. A Piece rif. vill . inWe ncli'Me- atlaw I. AN I), adjoitiinjf the River Severn, enn- I! OT H. Fonr Pieces of rich Araiile, Meailnv, anil Pasture L A N i.>, eontainin together .-... I . iT Ml Alt t" iat TF. NE 31KN" r, with a Haiti, ( ianliMi,. U- icliiui!, and 3 Piece* » f excellent Ari. liie, ' Meadow, and Pasture • lON'D, eoiitaitiins' together 33 f. OT IVr. An Allotment of rich Pasture LAND, iidi'tiiiiiili.' tlie Turnpike Rnail lemjinjf from Lluuiii'iuio to l, lunyin. vnccli, eontaininj ,.'; i 2 tC| f> Mr. THHMA* J. - oop., the Tenant, will shew t'- e Premise* ; and for I'urther Particulars apply to M r. I. i. OVi), OF linwmii; or to Mr. . Ions IVJI. M AMK;: Solieitor. Slirewshiiry, where a Map of tiie Pre- mises may lie seen. I^ MWISR OF LAST ITAttVBST. BY MRTPERTIY, On ihe Premises, culled B- E- B BAItN I'IF. l. D, near . Kiiiifslanil, HI. S \ TPKDAV N EXT, tiie :'< Hli of Octotier Instant, at four o'clock ill the Afternoon, To A MIXOTI-:• t STACK of UPLAND H W. mtvl- l\ leu! in Quality and harvested in the best 53aimer, ijoniniiiiUif about Twelve Tons. Mr. Pr. RiiC'will direct to Ihe Hay. A. it. 4 1 Ui 0 16 0 35 1 16 \* T ii'ceas UICW A KD N iC ' H() I. LS, ! f of Wpv. i. WFLTOK, iu the Couiitv of Salop, » mt MAilG- AUKT iEDVVA ii Lis NK.' 110iil>, his Wife, did, by IndenSiire bearing Date the ! © tli of October fnstaisi, assijfji over all their personal Estate aiut Elects- tnito JOHN llAflft. es, of WWfitiy- ti. il aforesaid,. Gentleman, IN TKtJsT, for ihe equal Heuelit of all theilr Creditors who sliuil. exe- cute the Klid Deed of Assijfnnieiii : NOTICE is lieiehv ( xiten, iliut the said Deed now remains at the Office of Mr. Cra » A « « , SoiieiKir, VVellu.- ton, for tlie > injniture of those I reditora who iuleud to avail thenisi'Ues of the lieuof? t thereof. - h A Fveehahl Est a I/', ( tf ' linstock, Hi TtfB CWSTy Ol' S. VI. O'P. Co Dp prtitat? Coulratt, Either together » r in l. ots, At tire Coek Ion, iu lliiistnck afoiesaitl, between flic Hour's of 3 atiil ft » • Clock i| i I he Ai'teruoo.. ol Snhll'thiV, lilh » t: N- tn'emiier, lb' 24 ; & I. L th. it Messft> j$ i- or UWELUNG / » IIO'tiSK, tvifli tiie OutbnildiuL'S and Apilur- tenances tiiercunfo lH'lon- i; iriy, commonly culled or known by lire Name of IlitjiiOtrK ( iiiANtiK, togt ( her with'the several Closes-, Pieces, or Parcels of I, ami, Meadow nu4 Pasture ( irontid, tliereiuno beltiinriiijf, contiiiniirtf to » ether 71A OH. 3bP. ol excellent i. aiitl, IWIW iu Ihe Occi. piitiou ul Mr. liichnrtl Ash, Mr. Edward f, ockley, and Mr. Wil- II. nu Moreton. N. R. If sold before the Iltii Day of November, Notice will be given. VViHia. il Moreton will shew fl. e respective f. ots ; and for further Particulars apply to Mr. VV. IlKt)- so\, of Spoon lev, who is authorised to contract for Sale of the i> f me. To the C/ errfy,. or others having Parish, Hetjixtet** ' 1/ 57" ANTED « . C » py of t!; « Rep- wtcv ol ' V ihe Marriage of ( leorgv MV/ ev, Ptiriy/ t " f I'Dvleslmrrir S!,!< ip\ tni>• r un t nf ihe Uaji- lisih nj his ° ian,.< t Wil. lmm urjrt '! rn/ nt v. lie vv-. istinpli:', od: in October-, IWi ?, at P) iutes! m5v, iiuti WHS buried aim. it IB'J or i7 « !'. Me liiaile a- VVitl, ilnied I7. tli Deeeniher, IV. p. w iiichiwas proved his Grautlson, liie Son of Th.> mas.--' flic Son iUut-. H ii... n i.' il ahont 17 Iti, a. id was bin letl in loitcesiershirc about \ 7" t'j.— l'!> ou<" i WHS t- liricd at Pontesbury, iu I7t!'.\ Whoever s- iall discover the above MHrriaoe jtinlr apliMII: VI iie « ' islt rs, shall, mi. an authenticated V lieiutj' ifivento Tie: PIIIN IMUS gf t^. e Salopian nur'nal, re,.' cue a ItKWAli. i> of ONE Ul'lNEA, • Ii. H. ALF- A- GUINJVA it LAVA RD. On Sunday last, from liaven- Slieet, Shrewsbury y Liver ik W iuU'Coli. ii. vii | N). X V E'. i WIEM', aiioiit ei « ' l., t Months ttltl, l| tt « a White Stive ' in ihe I'orelieatl, and a lillle A'hiie oil e Breast. Whoevei lias, found lliill, and wlil lirilljf him to THE PiilM'tlis of this Paper, shall receive the a . ove Bewitnl ; hut whoever detains' him afler this Notice w ill lie prosecatt d> its op auction. ST3CS1, Old U( t) j, and jj'tei math. 15Y MkTsMlTH, At WOODCOT, near Shrewsbury, on Thursday,, the 4th Day of November, 18- 24 ; O ART of the choice LIVE ST< H'K, ffl the Property OF Mr. JOHN BUSCOR : com- prising 2 excellent* Heifers with capital Calves, 1 Heifer near calving, I prime Cow, Pair ol yearling Martin Heifeis ( very superior), I Pat llcifer, 1 fresh Ditto; a Brown Driiu^ ht Mares, seven .. and fou; Years old, perfectly sound, and scarcely to he equalled for their Symmetry and Power; 32 pure Southdown Ewes, 1 Ham ; 6 struiig Sture Pigs ; small ijifto. Also It! Toils of prime old HAY ( at per Ton, trussed and delivered iu Shrewsbury) ; 10 Acresot • AFTBltM ATI! to he LET until the 2d of 1' ehruary next. * t* Sale at One o'clock. TAKEN IJP, • - SUPPOSED I'O BE S! BAYED, HACKNEY M A U E.— Thr- Person to wl » o, n slip . hf lon^ s may hs » iv<?. Ju'i: Uy an acctu- ate Description ami paying'' HIP iiicuVtecf Exppiiscs to SIr. PowE. Lt., of Marcliamipy. o r ICE is he ebv t; iven. That a M EEtING-.- « f t'i » e. Tni* » < Vs of tl » . p Shrpus- lujry net^ of'- liw^ '/ Wat! iug Street ( tuail, and'nf. ISK; . M. in. stevlpy, Westhaiv, Sl » « itou, Poal, anil Basp! inj- cS » Districts'of Tuni;> ikp Uoads, will be lipid at the ( iUi'liMia)!), in Slirewslinry, - Mo\. r> AV, ' e ist Day of NoVeiiiber uext, at Half past Tvs ei ve CiocL. JOHN JONES, Clerk l< » t lie said Tins tecs, \ SiiBEWPBCff?, OTT'. 4' 3D!; IK- 24. I) US I P.. ] B l E EST A TP. by .\ I? LTE'N; V. At. the Ciistie Inn, Si'. reiwsliurv, on Se- lnrdny, the 41 Ii ' Jav trf Decoiuiier iiiixi, at live o'Cleck io the Afierliooil ( unless fli< posed of iu thfc mean Time by Piivate Contract) : MESSUAGE, FARM; & LA NDS, c iiitniuinLf by Atluieasurt incut 110 Acres tir ( hereabouts, si? latc'at II A DN A I. L, and now occu- pied by Mr Emv. vun ACTO. V, the Proprietor. The Estate is siliinte within 5 Miles of Shrews, bury ; the Utilise is spacious and nearly new, and the B'lililintjs are in gtiud Rejiair. There is a Mo- dus iu ! i/ ii'of Tj'lie ! lay —! he prineipal Part of Ihe Meadow (. and may be irrigated; and the Estnle ahau. ids with Ga. ne. Priatetl Particulars. may he had on Arplication at the Ottico of Messrs. Bt'Hi. i'V anil SCAKTH, Salop; and Mr. Aero* wrU. shew. the Esttrte. VALUABLE WITHIN AND Sl! 4lt TO THE © OIJSN OF G. TIVCU5SJ! 3MVY. ^ BY MR. PERRY, At the Lion Inn, Shrewsbury, on Tuesday, Wed- nesday, anil Thursday, the a3 I, ' i4; h, . and' 2t » ih of Noventber, lS" i4 ; SIXTEEN M ESSU AG EN or Dwell- H ing li aises, with the Cartlens and Appnrlc- nauces ibe. cioiio n spectivelv helaogiu^', situate in ( Asrr. K FoitiidATii, n Pie Tie. vu of SlnewslMry, i [ in1 Dcc ipniiou of Messrs. lavinsoo ii. itl Company or iheir E. dericnauts ; mill also severul other M i'. SSlf All ES or DwetliiiU' Utilises anil Bniidiugs, ami snndri Closes or Paicels of rich Meadow and Pasture LAND, called by lhe se. eral Names of { Jo,. se I, ami, Moni. Eyes, pox Holes, !,< mV, l''. irioag, Clay Pits, Homer Healll, Crol't, CnrbnV l. eiisnw, Clii'fou I'ieltl, Windmill I'teId, tipper Coinui a. Pieces Itcgar's I'urlolig, Cro:; s porloitg, Little Wet UeausfBig W. t Beans, Lesser Sh. llon Pieltl, Great Sheltoil P el. l, Sttiney Crof , U , i.| ier '( la ves Acre, and Croft, Haiier's ( field. Big Meadow, Lee's Leusow I'ieltl, Upper Salmon fit Litliii Mead . w, Hovel i'ieltl. White Little Sat'lria I'lei't, Baud Field or *' oat, la aso,;., Well Meadow, Mill l) ain, West ttail liehro ' k pieltl, Lower SaiuiOa Field, C all Leas. m, Mill Dam, Crawford Meadow, Crow McoleFieitl, 1' rowMcote Piece, Trisiiigle field,( Tow Meoie Farm House, Buildings, ( iaitlen, & Oia;! iai- i, West Yui'd, East ^ aid, Barn Ya tl,. East En. l of iVI-. ar, East Pan of lioundab. iilt, Mi. Idle Part of lloand- abonl, West Part of itnuilih. h. ial,' South of Houii'hlb'. ilt, Ox Leusow, C. ieei. Leasow, West End of Moor, Ferilev Gl-' sebull, I'll l. ensow, 1, title Leiisos, iliiM's Vle. ulow, Little Hull's Barn Yard, Common Wteee, BU M Pi. ee, Well Field, t on Lea. sow, Ox Field, Ley Leasow , laltle Cwlip ce, Upper Piece, Smith's Piece, siiuate in FIIAXKVVKI. I., SHKJ. TOX, and. C. to. v SIEIIU, iu the several Parishes of Suiat Chad » oil Saint . luliao. iu ' the County of Salop, tin. I now in the tev. eial Holdings of Mr lleurv Newton, Mr John Miller, Mrs.. Anue Bowlantl, Mr Bichard . l. uie>, Mr. . losepti Phip., s, Mr. Joseph Smurl, Mr. . lob i Kent, Mr William llnrie. y, Mr. J. mi . ilavm, Mr Edward Vo. el ' Mr ' i nomas l',. x, Mr. William Huberts, Mr. Itie. iurtl Simon, Mr Henri l. egll, Witlialll Co . per, En|. Mr. fal'Va. d Mr . S. iai'lel Taylor, Mr. .{. noes Jiowyer, Mr. Cm- bet Li'gh, the ; te[ ire- eu: uiiies >. f tlie lire Mr. Thon. ns Cartwrisht, Vf » . .1 itin t! » rri. son, Mr. Soui- iel P. runilev, Sir itohert Legh, Mr ' I boinas is. iat. e, Mr. llic'luisd Wililmg, VIr.'- Villiinn Junes, Mr. John Llavie-, Mr Nutliauiel ll'i| tlie. i, Mi llichnril E. I'var. ls, Mr. Witliani UriMighaU, Mr Holvrt Wilding, Mr. Siuberl ' Voodwnrd, Mrs. Mary Bromlev, Mr. . io'an I'hitiips, Mr. . tohu Joaes, Sir.' William Lee, Mr. Ed win! I is. lale, Mr. John. Jobsan, Mr. Paul' Band, Mr. Thntim- Lew in, Mr. T homas . loaev," Mr. Joiiii Crane, ' Mr'. Johii .(.( itlins, Mr. Andrew Jone.,, Mi. Peter Hales, Mr ( reorge Witiia. ns, Sir. Th- urts P. sgh, M- t. John Ituse- n;, niitl Mr. i-' raucis Asloii, or their rcspeeme ija. ler- touauts. ... Also, sundry Other ME- tSU. UiES or Cottage*, Outbuilding*,' Garden's, Fish Ponds, Pieces or I". reels of I, vN ',), situate i. i MOSK Mi'. ot. n itther. wise CuO'V iiroi. K anil Bicrot, m the. Parisii til' Sai. 1t Ctiat! afore., aid, iu the salt! County t. f Sa> p, noy or late ia ihe several Holdings of . tlo Jnne « , Miis prnhert, J. ilm Parccil, John Si « . - s, Thomas 1.1,- i. il. —— Vnuglitm, Widow, Ma; y It uit, ( ie- irgii Williums, Etlward llatrhes, Ed viird Cadwallnih- r, J- ihil, ii'lehiirds, John Rd varils, John Parruck, Sarah r. ti. awyn, VVilliam Lewis, Ed- w'ar, d Thamiis, Join llod.- rick, . loliu i) aties, Wi liaiii. James,., 1' i'lll Huberts, Sm-. tli ^. aiiseil,. Mary M'. nl- t. in, Sumut- I Evans, Edward Edwai'ils,. Mr. J jjm Tud > r, Jtihn Thfi- iijisi) ii, Th- o. mas VVeJiiugs, Mrs, Ann Sim . a, G- o: ge Wh'uehni- u, Jinn- Jones, Ann . lackson, Thomas Ward, mid Th " mas Cotl-. a, or their rc- nec ive 11u. deiteuauts. Maps of tlie several Lots of Land ma v he seen by Application, to Mr,' i'lto. vi 4S Tisi. Ai. n, Naw'Sireet, I',. inkwell, nod lie will iippoiat a Person to shew t!, e Lauds. — Printed Particulars of the different J, its . are prepaeing, :, nil,. when comojeleil,. may bj lntd by applving 10, OIK AufVIO NBKIt. Pride, ii ill, Shrevvsburv, or to Mr. Tliot'l Tt. sli. vl, n, New Sirf'eet, • Fulukwell, • - Shrew soury ; or l.* Mr. l. ONGt'KVtu. K, Solicitor,, ( tswesiry, (. aim who n nliv further Ia'oilii. itiaa may be oblaiue'l, and Where Hups a:' the Estate in. ij' also be iuspejied. FOX INN BOOM. This Day, To- morrow, anil Friilayi Foir/ imf Pieces, Pistols ; valuaUe Books ; Grand Piano Forte; BY ME. IMiI. BERT, [ a ( lie larg- e Room at tiip F; » x Inn, Siirpws'niry, on VVediiPMinv, T Wars day, and t'ridav, Octoi » ,- i- 27 th ami : » ? tli, if- 24 • 0) UK. best Dotjh! e- l> nrrePe(! Fowlin I.. Pieces, w. ii!< Lotidoiutnade Pprenssion and Flint Locks, I\;> puf Brp- eplj. es, T\ vi « te<! Stab Bar els, Silver and S!(> el Monntin<> s^ CI - » 1 ci Reads Psatiiuij Conductors, &<•-.; twelve capital Single barrelled Ditto, with Percussion and Flint f4.; cks. inc. as Ifoe'preceding ; four Pair of Pocke! Pistols, and four Pair of Onelling- Ditto; several exceilen (. ienUeinen and Ladies' '. Watches,., ice ; a most valuable ( iollection of Books ( ail o- ennine Editioiis a considerable Portion of which are entirely new ineludu!<_ r Kacycioj/ ii'dia f- ondiiiensi'S, 12 first Vol Locke's Wo- kV, P) Vols.; Johnson's Works 1 Vols.; Popp\ r Ditto, 8 Vols.; Pidey's Wori, 5 y- ols .; SjnollettTs Novels, 9 Vols British EaMty ists, Vols.; Shakspcare's Pluys, 12 Vols. Gibbon's. Rome, P>., Vols. ;-. H: ninn, s Ancient Mi: torv, 8:- Vols.; I) 1 Horheirt's Bibliotheqne Orienta fveVy > seaice, 1, {•', Vols. ; vAik'uPs Po^ tfjy 10 Vols Lord Byr- iii's Works, 5 Vols.; Sir Walter Scott Pup! iiai Works, H Vols.; Hume and Smollett' f'] ii{>' iand, I) Vols.;" Moshviai's Ecclesiastical Hi t..,- y, 0 Vols.; L- uin home's Plutarch, G Vols. ; ii bi'ii, son's ilistoricul Works, pi Vols. ; Home hitiodnctioii to' the > M. udy of the Holy Scriptnre « _ '•• I'" Vols'!; SliickhiVuse's ilist, ory of the Bible, by ' Bishop Gteifcf, Vols ; Stanhope's Kpistles and < jojipel's, 4 Vols.; Clarke's Sermons, 7 Vol's Hewlett's Bible, 3 Vols. ; Browne's Ditto, 2 Vol Wilson's Hiwiorv of Dissenting Churches, 4 Vols Job us os. i's Dipnnnitrf (' Quarto), ' 1 Tois.; Buyer French; Ditto ; ' A ins Worth's Latin Ditto; Grafton Chronicles ;' Pulter. ey's Liiiiueu% 4to. ; Dwi^ ht's Theolony. '> Vols.; and ubont (>' iO Volumes of NTew and S « . ond- h: i! id Books, equaily interesting tin the above, iricl- ulin^ Works in every De. j> artiiient or Literature. The whole Property is of a very superior Descr: p- tion. Tiie iS-. tle of Fowlin^- Pieces and WaJcbes, will couinis^ uce at' F. even o'Clock on ' Ved'. mola*-,;• on which. Dav, will also, be Sold, a powerful Grand Pij. no Forte : the Bi> > ks tiie san » e Seven. Cioek ;• ajid on Thursday, at F. leveui in thejylor. u- ihi>- and Seven in the Evening ; and on Friday the same Honrs. --.../ ; N. B (' on! missions will be faithfully executed by Tft B AOCTION'BKHu '•"'„. , C' 5?> As tiiPre are duplicalP Sets of sev'Arnl of the > t i ito P * H IHE C « A <) L A N f) liO Ub I OF COM H EC I I ON. Task- Master fi - Untler- Tunike}!* \ l Visiting Maoist rates wiH } itteiv< L; tt t, he Gaol, iii Shrewsbury, on W'KDNKSOAY, tiie lOtli- Noyeiiiber, « 8. « , at Twelve ivTlock at Noon, amoii^ st otlier Thiiiits to receive. Otters; from Persons desirous of being1 appointed to these Oftices. The Ta^ k- Mastk!} shall have a Salary of t': 5<) a- year, a House unfurnished, Cnalss>.. aud it), P';, r Cent, on, ti; e act Famines of all $ la! e Prisoners ( except those at the Mill) ejnployed iby- the Count;, !<• shall no!, directly » > r iiidirectly, be eiig"- a » *. ed ia. any Trade or Business. ' ! ; j e I'Inobk- TUHNKFY sljail have a Salary of Fo, ui: teP( i Shillings a Week, and shall no5 leave tlie Prison I ja v or Nij » ' lit without Lea ve of the. Governor The Duties of both Olfioers may be known from the Governor. Every Person desirous of becoming a Candidate mu- t send his Testimonials ( sealed, np) to the Clerk of the Peace, in Shrewsbury, on or before JIK1 9th Da v o f N « » v e n i be r, 1824. I. OX DALE, Clerk of the Peace for ( be County of^ alop. The newest I{ ecrifit- tt< ok. ACKENZI?:? FAMILY LTBHARV, or IIN1VFHSAI, K liCElPl'- BO' ) l\% con- taininy above I'ive Tl » . uisand useful and approved kVpeipt*. in all the Domeiitic and usrful Arts, may be had of all Bowk sellers within the Circuit oi' this Paper, at I0s.( id. bouml. AUo, the same Anihor's THOUS \ ND EXPEH1 MF. NTS nti. l PitOCF. SSES i„ ( HE. VIISTRY and . Vj ANUFACTH BES, P. iee 2h, Boards. The Western 0. oJ. » sti of .. A/ Hea from tl » r? Cape of Good . Hope to St.. Felipe de Ben^ nela ^ af v eyed • b. y Captaju ' Cli. upu'uu,-. in his Majesty's ship Lvspi; e- ^ le," in January, iHebroaryrinhd March laU'f'he j Hsj| ien le T| I « i aloi'i.^ the con- « t anont the <) i: in. y e Kiver, AvIiiXrh was found' - to- be uiBjali. y lo\\, oud' t- iie iiiterior: sandy and . dry,, and; apparently unin- ha hi fed • tbe. i coast thence froni Au^ ra, Pequuia to F/ l- i^ ab^ tb-' Bmjf, - y^ as found' R » cky, nivd without thy l eas t' si gr'^, 6 f v e t at io : t, and' w a l- • r. 7' h e out V a n it- mtds- fcyeu; |\ vn; e wolves^ aithouifli the tracks t> f uuniy. orhens^ we'i P;; seeti: m\ ihe s-. Vnds,- imrtK'ul^. uly - of the ijo-, u: aiiVVbiiflVilO ; oa all paitx • of. the . coast near t| je, att'ehorojjeeMojuid the bouesof whales,, which w?? i?)>' i « V a4>' urda: nee -- - On the ITtb. Jaoiwrr. y,, the" vejs- s&' l ; nia- ile S^ e: ijrerr. P'ay., wisich.. rss.- S|) a. eioii, s,... and • all .- wi. ads,, except, tb<;;., I^, b, rtli ; ' i'riiiiii it, ov 1 y t pro{ V. c?' ed.- Tlie : coas » • i's/ ir ^ iwl^ u- o. >," jj* iiv, « Vf water hY ' \ eyetiVtViVii * tioi'. s, d, eers.,- IIMJII. '. yirl yes in abii'mbiucV' ; whale's.: *\ ere also seen . lat ^ e nu. uiiiei s, aasl sh'ark- i of a moirsyrU^^ : . tiie inJsiiyvr is bin h but jl-*- i< ti. « ee ot wibnoitiiii s 7' luy tfVetf' {; MV<' M'V(.} ea' io '{- ish B iyv^^ o'li^ coast pffssesxiuui iiti iote'. Kvsf, hut v\ hat is- dt- rin- ed fii> m. ihe dispa'. es v " on lisei'r. retiirnof a river about' >?> miies Nortti. of WaiH- ise. h Bay :: this ri ver i; oV bein^ pureed in. an v ehui i s (' aptl tooK- upon hrinsf- lf to natne it Si'uiK- rset iii vet!-. Trey also di- rotewd another •< lu- e'r: rii'laf. 17. ; S. which w- a>, uaivjed' No « u> e . • R! vi* r; tbef « ^ e;, t; be e^ tht and iatvriov are a!! sandj uod a heavy iurf i> ieaiiiu£ 01.1 rh- e- siiwe. On iea\ 4i'fn^ fish. Bw'V tr. e vessel liiwiled elosv round- • Tiyf r's Isfand.. The bay i- s spact'ous, ao-. l ^' uvcoast , partipiibiriy biifb. They, the 11 V- i^ ited Fort AleX- auder., an ( j saw ei^- ht calves ( uii-^ iP cast era & b' « re-, u ho appeared pr- iieefiy iiiiserabl. « they wefre : tbe onfeasts of sOine trii) e> Port Ai^ xajwlcr is uh » sJ » " excellent aocboratfp, and may ride safe.. Little Fisit Bay, hit. S5. 8 S.. i- y. <?->:. t. eus- ive,. w. ith-- deep vyater., the.- son! hr rn shove iai a deep v? t 1 — ley, wi> h .< v, ery la roe. trees, and'much; vegetation,: and tbf mouth of a river. 7' he natives entered inti> r ia. hiii'ar < my^ « n: nMjt. i. ou> and tratacked, cattle and ' vegetables " lor (; ioi'hiVi<>-. Deer, zeHi- Hs, and the tracks of lary- e ajiinmi?, were st en aioho- the coast.. St Bay, hif lot. 13. - 27. S. is de. « : ribed as b » iui>-, a-: ^ ooci entrance j ifinl Eiepiiiiui's Tray, ib lat. 13., 13. S. appeals ib have been so called frOui. the nuinber Of elephants seoi, and from an attack • made< on a Iserd by a land ujf party In ! a- t. 14. 15'. S. -!<- uiff\ j * 2. is the mimfit of Victoria Uirer, where- c4ur. iluu c'Urlon ' wns had with ' the iuuLv- e*,. who proved tv be.. deceitful, with, no; the least idea oi' . lNiv lalio- aa^ e but their own, although s< » ueni Benyneia ; iin re was but litfle culfivaTion in ti-. e inierior. The c. mciudino- observaiioas are, that nei. praiiy, is j- ert'ectly safe; the climate .. jfer# » i$ Bj> ^ ob-, 1 ; . and. froui ihe appei^' aat'e oF v.- illips alon- y ihe: coast, iio^ vubi of fresh \ v'aier iii the ruiiiy sea. Voii.' • • A- letter frorn !; ieaf,... Clapperlon conimutiietiles the^ delill- i of h'is- iVH >-. v ArVica^ tv. veiler, Dr. Ou'd- ney,.^ va | t? ie. v w'estenu, frontier, or- Bonriion, isi the interior of : Ni> rth< » r, u A triea. ' t tie inimeijiate cause « » f his de- 4' vj) opei. j, s to onr Vievv aaiew and astouisbiay- fe. a. t, urp ta the raphy of interior Africa in- stead^ f b'truiuj^ sands and a. country^ arid from heat, we tb- JiJ iire cold, wa^ so severe, ( hat. it froxe ie ' wVtfer '^ k. ius.; a sol id mass. T he p: i rt; w he re this toHk; place,, jfi. for. fiier: tac. co lut. sJVom these tea VVIUM- S'IM1 CIIRRE. ct!,,: is- ahoiit J2 dej.^ . | a<". It. is • anircety? aeeessa ry to observe, jbaL tliis .. th ree of cOid can only take place, ui that parui; el from a very g'l. jeat jide- vari^ i,.- and •..-• which elevated country| while, it jvars^ the pi- oo- vi- ss. of the Nin- er to- the eastfvtjrd ajuj io the' Niie of E^' f- ptmust j » i v< « blr't h/ f <>;; inauti « ii'. a; bU' po-.'> erfu!• streams;. w hiii w> i-| ie.} i( i| fO / swell, not decrease, ihs'; st'j4fam i\* it dow'^ .. ai. i. il souvUward., C'eot'lUrcrao^' this, we are. fy no . lass. to. u^ oiint for live ii oods.- vv! » . i. eh • 4Uvi. r., ' iHe .. y^ tlaut'C rn the Bt^ his of Beniif and Biafra. - Leo Afpc^ nns told• " us1," J bat the country ,- situated' about tliis part' of Africa, was oxo. eeiFrjiydy . cold x i » ut his narrative was. treated b 1 ifjicide. Siibscqoeiirtra \ eiiers o- i ve us „ s iisi I - lar repdrtsvbut. they \> ere" laughed at, and the low i'iiiiips wfiie. h a, l> M>! bed the_ Niger, were placed here we iiiid a couatry so. e'le^ vate. d as in 12' de- grees N. fat. Jo he visited bv frost in Decuiher, tjnal to any vv. e feel in - this parariei of lat. On the suin 111 it of. the Bine 00utains' in Jamaica, in i> i dey. \ T. iat. and at an elevation o? 80tX)' feet above the level of the sea,' frost, is' altogether unkuo- wn. ErejH ihW; we may judife. of tiie o're « r elevatio!! of that . p. artj, of Africa vy here Dr O'id - iey died Bi'd'ore frost cdiilfj be felt;: to such a deg- ree^ the elevation in dey,. N lat. would probably exceed lifi^ t above the If ve! of, the sen, C:^> t: Laiun- ascertaioed that tbe son reps of the domo'. exveeil i iviK> l^ i:::. si. b Aii iutie. Its passage tothe Nile, H » e « iy be set down as ph ys ic- a- 1 iY*\ ni p.: JSSi h i fr. — ()/ « ~ nm Ch > mtit'e. tales, or can- verse only on the amusements. With respect to piop. riety of dress, we shall offer , a fe « !. ob^ ervationst A person, who is preparie<* ; for the Church on^ ivt not to clothe jiniwdf in ali th% iraudy oohuti^ wliioh' some fai » bibiiaidW- beau nmv wear;, { or'rflie do, v^ tm^ dt^ smy that Ire is like. jr JN « H- to a-> tnasfjnPrade, - for. the purpose of either b. din^ fTis own real character^ orassinuiMo- on# tlrat d^ S'- mw be! nn- » - to Siitn-. Aad a^ ain, pei- 1- . sons^ ji- anced in- y'earv- ouy. ht ah' fiiem-- Rei- yeviiii fbV- att'ire ot you » ! » ;.;• yet'how fre. qii. f> n, t! v <! o we see people iu the la^ r sta « ie of cxistr- nce uctiiio- so inc. oii » is ci> Uy. Another part of the pro- priely Weces^ n'rv to l> e observed i^ i our dress is, - auliiicji*, indeed this strict I y attended to will not utifrctj. jieo* ! y taitii away the disan re- eaIs! 0 feelinwbieh- a wwfi of jrobd' iii tbe - ii r rini^ e nf^ irt,' i s- apf t o in ..- p i r^. - if th e I i m^ j e> pec! n; lv be e'eau, we orVen l- ok over its coarse- ness, and we feel : « . decree of satjsfe^ ioti in eventho^ e. iHuci; bvaeittb u4 i. ii . V': bo| e » ouiC- attire:. CONTRACTOR WITH GOVERSMBST FOR T'H P. PRESENT ." LOTTERY. ( Belofe he solicits NEW Favours) is desirous ol convey iny to his best Friends, the ' Pirolic, bis ^ ratefiii Aekiiowied^ ments, for the verv tiistiuj^ uistied Pit trotia^ e his OHice< experie. toed iu the Loltcry jus drawn ; and is ha- py to o!> servc that. FORTUNE ( as usual), continues to fin our - ii'ho furnt/ r h. iw as the t'o'IloM injf Capital Prizes, drawn on Tuesday tne 5th Instant, were ALL SHARED AND SOLD BV mmi wm imsmw^ 15,556, a i'i izi- " f £ 40,050, Nt. (!!)!!, iiiiollier Pi- ize nf £•>!>, 000. lt), S3. r) S.-. l- l IS, » 78 S, ll « 7 I'. lf tlieil' ti'in 230 2 rj 7.. J04 - ! ld.! l.- » - i u.;> l I - lis, 073 42 220 23,1 2. e I'lili'liHitiiiiis, the \|. ii- niii{ r''- t S-, ile- will fnntnin iM'in. v lit the siime Works a* tin- Cteiiiti^ s eneh Ihi. v. CiltnloL'Ul's may be lint) lit the Aiie i. meei's ORee. Market - Place .— SfUHrdtiy iie- it. HTJIHERT, P. Y MR In the MurklM- Pluee, Shi evvslmry, ' in Siitfll- ilav, Ihe : s till of Oelniiei-, IKJ4, ul One n'Cftiok ; LOT I. 4 CAPITA J. liimwN GRLDINO, ,! r% rising five Years old, nearly Ifi Hands, a line Figure, reinai kably steady nnd fleet, an exi- fdlent - Bun, tec. • I. OT H. . IJan'dsouie Bb » c; k j? SFT, risiitjf ftve Years old, Hands big- h, a clever !> oad> ter. Neitlver of- he abo. ve are Sold for any Fault whatever. — Particulars will be staled at the Time of Sale, N. B. Severed other Horses are ex pre t CM 1 to be o fie red O i Miianers and Ore . [ SKLKPT'- r> Fxmt- W FfJFTVrU! - WORK5 OA h hE D A TRCA- rfSE ON Ot VI i. iTV ." J It woijld be very di^ lipnlt to lay down, general rtiles tor vvbat is called' a- becoming demeanoiir> T for all aat. ioiis to foiiovv, because we - k- novv fnyur expei^ t- tiPe: tlint Vvhaf i's-' Coosidered ; Uecv » mJng' and a^- reeanie. in. one . contitry', is ri. dicui. ms arid unjdea- s; nit iii auotber; and even t'nul wiieou rs re- aily i. nstj'ueti. ve in oite,.; part of. the ^ lohe heeo. nes in arw). tb<? r. part offensive. It is also well knou u that at s( M'IP tiiiie a thing- ' may; - be: a^ reeauie, and at auoiher. irksoine^ - , i' 2,.() 50 10.- 55U - 1,000 , ] t, » ,)!)(: » . - 1,000 I 1 t,. J78 - 510 j 2, t> - : - olO 3,2.> 9 - H invites the fortunate Holders to reeeiv Money, a'lid ; pureiVuM' ( i'. ustead" of ThOusandsJ THIRTY TIIOUSAXOS, in, The . A etc Lottery Scheme, BISH, the CoiUrnctor. '••' Thi « beiiifr.. Part of the last Grant of Parliainmif., the Minister having detenu. ited to discontinue l. olteries al. toyether, BLSM has i'elt more than com- mon Anxiety in forming, the- Schema - so as to, meet • univer> aS.'.... Approbation ; as it is too probable tins wi. l be the last, as Contractor, lie shall have fire' Honour of submitting' to his Benefactors', the Public. It eontaios TWO Grant Prizes of a0,0fK>! as. On lite Pi- einises : it GI. AMI!! EI !> OI., on Tiiwila. v, the t'th til' Niiveiuhei- next, itiitl 1' ilSnwiiii.- Ilnyt, • \ U, tne 1 inn-.(' holt I I- UK N1 I'lTJ K K, PLIVMK*. f'lU NTS, N')!> KS, 1'!. \ TK, UN'BN, '. VIM-, ( J'. ASS, CHIN ice. I. IVK ' liit, I DU AO STOCK, i HI'i. KMKNTS of Mushiuitl- i- v, nail tit her Pi-. - p rtv « -!'. the Ju t- ilBOHfit-; lio. vjt. vi. i,, Iv- ij lire, il. , re: e'. eil : ul . vUie. h l'nt; il..:. rue; i, s| iee. i!> l. i. Lt' i lie rYf lie It's iiiteiule. l ftir eaeU M- v's Sule, will tie sllerlly ( liiilltMl, ail, I ine. y he inul .1 llie Tiilii. it III. I, Slirovslinrj- ; li. i ii', Sleiui Iii). » , Ciii- initi'lien ; T. it- lnjt Inn, Aiiervtt. villi ; 11: 1.1 at all tin" j> it. lcij>,; l lulls i-. i Itlf. Neij- lllllMM- llsieil, l); i ifii I his 14' 4 /> « » nfVctnher, 1824.' THERE are NO BLANKS ! EVERY Ticket must he a Prize ! AM the i- Vizes are Sterling- Money I Th'ire wift he no StKtxwise, as Ail wi! t he drawn in ONE DAY! Next Mouth ( NOVEMllSlt). The unprep » v<. iented Sate . two's tbe" Drnw'iu^ of the :> r! j October bein-< r a in » )- « J cohviac- Pi'oof of the Popiilarity id' that ^ cbeiwej Bi^ H been induced to adopt a! i lhe. u. voiirife Points Mbfiest. y is aniy: another imme for . humility. ! tk'u'.- KV i'weil, itiid-. e'Very , dayvexpertetsce' ( irovvs it, • that: ^ ifjiitrbers vjfnp'erSoas a. re to- ine'mel . with w ijo- are ve « y- i-'- c'. ivi}-' , a; ad vei^ y and : yet. whien jtbelr he^ avionri'ls sc- ruriuised,.• it wd!: he'di. s- co^, v « | d tliat they have tioi a tittle of rent lun. ricty, - b! itXfisitvf ht- tfeict, ' Viid er i I-. e <* m HI a^ eee- of modVsty, m neb % id- n - g'. i- U'y a ad - set f - i oy e. S je ii id d en ;• Huf^ ii- ity. con. s'ists not only i'- o mavpr^ Miniinij any" t; ifin<£ Towards ou- rset- ves,-;^ a .- in p> eiV. r-: i'jt|<.^.: wv- t'istaotkwi a; » d co- n'oris- iof others to Voir HmH- j hrtjib- 5. l » ? sii 1 a. if.- c, v> » : f.. y tj. in'y biclrnmy distress or b » Vr| our fViiow- creaHires. Perhaps t'uis fee iVi^- uiay bifvr. eya'l ,'. ed iato chnrity. Toe effects- of this yjr| aie » oo « . pereeived ^ bnV- notiiiay. wins the he a r'i ^ or" ca'j > t- j v ate*- 1 h e 11 n < I e- r . standi ng" so i n u c h a s ai( aI>; t. it- y; aud ks. i « tess. 0: i. tiie!' oihx.- r h. ind, sm- fiij'H'iV U ' so foi'biudiu^ in society as vanity and pride, bo Hi of: wh!<? h spring .. tVir; ij exc:- s. si ve self- l ve. The" VU. exty ba: s isa;. riated tip- io every virtue a some-' thiijo- ;: exceedin^ ly attractive, by which ir may: be in standi y- e c^ jfi e< l, u wl ei icr^ s he < 1 . wl i. e rev e r it is , fo iii'd c: but'above all vir! ije. s; he bins clothe- d charity in brilliancy, lit ace arises tlott excuse which the Wivrld '. Vitl insrt iiitlv o. iei- to .1 ehantabU' man. if he iie: N'oiie^ ha' atvlvward in the manner ' be performs bi:< d- 1' iev 5 whereas tiic politeness of a pr- m ! ih. iu bein'fTstpl;: and' constrained, acc- o'iioan.' ed, as ii too We a^ aiu remind our readers, tliat, bv mi ... Act parsed it) the last « » f Pnehament, a - total aiteiat'. « Mi will take piaee,, on |{ » - J- si of ay nest, in | he| r » al weights and loeas- ures i. f the ktu^ doin ; the ohj. rf of the- act ' eslab'- fish an tiuifuun sys- t'iji, to enfoice ivhicli penalties are enacted a:>'- » !:! p: t 5lu » se who sell ijood. s by » iiv. oiber standard. ^' lo^ iiierable briskness, we tuulerstaad, pr< vaila at ihe itre^ eoi lime in tbe carpcf manufactories at Kidderminster, and not a loom is- idle. H<" UT l. A n " « > — The Mlai « l rot ton umnnf. ietorie* at P. osiey me said be hi- a stale of aopicccdenled « ipti « fj-< v. - - - ^ e stated hi ONR tht » 4 ' JVffr Henry Hunt, the ladtpii black. t^ j mercbaut, has signified bis infen^ on to off^ r himst if as a candidate for the repn scitta! km ui the c. rnniy of- Soin. erset— It is now said that Mr. WiUmm= Cobbetf, of u c( j, uilable ndj^ o- 1iMPut, 7" & c. notorietv, on the Strength, ot the Uoiiifwi, Catholic • ptrrs^ collected, undpr the title of u' Ca- MjyiPi. c rem," will fa vow Pai liaateut, wiMi bis, presence, even tllfmirb be should eoine in ( under the w itio- of a base Borough- moaner.) for a Dotted boroiri4v! Thus will the Ivoman Catholic ea- use be well nd'vVicatr* d SV V isc< m • 11 ha^ beca himoufjpd with a vtails' from tbe. Duke of Sussex, who , arrived at- Shu « f bor noh on Tuesday, the 12ih instan'^ and left it < m Ttiesd tyr, the 191li. ft in imnecessary to Say livat the Il « ) ya} Duke was eutertniucij in a style-- of ele.^ n! ce altou. tlier wortby of la is ifl'ostilous station. —• On Snt nrday fvis SX'oy. a1" Hiabitess was present at the ceremony of cbristeiriiio;- the infant dan^ htVrst f V' « - counJ ami Viscouiitess Anson and the Baron and Baroness, de ( iulzen by the Archbishop of Vorlv ; and a ma?> uittcent dinner was oiveu on the iireas'. on. The Dn!; e made seva'ft. l'excursions io the nciijlvboioboml durvbif his stay, amimi M'ondav be visited Staft'ord, siccompastied trv Lord Ans, F. ai ITaibot, k\\ and iosjucted tbeiomnt- y Asylnnv, Prison, and Infirmary, with the whole of which he e\|> r: sscd hims! If highly plefised, On leaving Sbugbyiouoh his Royal Highness proceeded to Mewstead Abbey, the seat of Colon « I Wild man. Durnisj the nigiit of Saturday, se'nuight, Thomns *> nifh, under sentence, of imprisonment in the Worcester City Gaol, and who was to have been whipped; before tbe expiration of his sentence, made his escape, and has, not- yet been, re taken, th. ddig - at search. lias beet} made. It appear that he cont i i vpvl to act a brick ou t of t he. wall of bis < cell, and by dint of perscveiant* e Vnade a '• hole suiiicient t » get bis body through; the brick work beiti new, was of- coarse'' in his favour. HYDROPHOBIA.— A most shocking case of Hydrophobia was reported at the Liverpool In ijrmary last week. The name of tbe unforiunati indviv. i< l « ial was ThreUaii: . lie resoled at VValton, where he was bitten by a dog in a rab'ul sttatc, long since as last Noyemlver. He expired on Prniay week, in ilreadful agojiies. Mr. Sew el, as- osuut j> rofessor of the Veterinary College, Camdea- town, has found a re. iiiw. ly for the hitherto incurable disease, the (' on / tup'ok'K Gland- erx, in the use of sulphate of copper, given as a boins or ball uf fr* im otie to, two . ounces daily for several weeks. Th. c Committee of the Colltrge have voted iVTr: S their tlianivs, with a fiamlsomc aug- iJietitatum of his salary. At thejast <.* lo\ u; v^ « Pr Assize tju1 Gr. ijad . JtW'y found a iris bill a^ aisist Jviward At. irulge, Esq" ' one of tbe Mag. stratrs of t'lat county, for ' laving refused to grant a licence to one Win. Gardiner, of Bisley, unless he undertook ti> ptit- Chase his beer and tide from a - brewer al Strouil, named Just pb Waits ; and for having corruptly procured a licence to be granted to one Peter Mason, in the parish of Bislpy, in o. der that the said licence should- afterwards by transferred to a certain oilier person to be nominated by the. said Joseph Watfs. We stated last week that the " sale of the town j, ami' manor of Vyeiberbv, i, ht; property Id' the Duke id Devthishire, produced'.£} f> 8^? 71. Great com petitioM prevailed for some of tbc hits ; one. rose from £ 8000 to £ lf>,'? 80. T he property sold on the Tuesday for upwards of. £. 55, » ) 0(), yielded renial of only -£ l5i><). ... Wednesday's; sale produced € 4|, 305,- the rental of which was but £ 702. 3s. Reports have prevailed of extravagant sums hav ing been given fm- some of the lots-, but that is ac." Cfrunted for by the ver- v low' rents paid. As an example, Sir. Half, of Harnesle'v,. jjav. e £ 250 for a su » dS ^ ruadow, willed by a widow at the trilling ^ n: n < d' 20s. . per autium ; yet, notwttbsfanditig the low rents, the tenants signed, about a year since, a round robin, soliciting' a redip tiout Wetherby is sit; oate< l m t We,.. AYest Holing ol Yorkshire, oil tlx river VVr » nf , distant 12 miles from Leeds, and 14 from- York. Sheriffs of the City of Chester took place; when Ahh ' rinaw George Harrison, was elcttcd Mayor j and Mr, John Hairisoii,. surgeon, was elected the. • Sheriff of the Corpojatio**. The Mayor then nominated nSr Sheasmgvdruggist; the othefror popular Sht'iiff; whu4i 1'. l. eacnd't,. Fsq pro- posed Mr. T. \ Mj'ittaker% woollen draper, as HUM i ff oft he C i t i ztvt s. A poDing ttmk place, which last* th » ee < iaysvdm% ig w bieh 1 he cit y was- a scene of bu. s, tler <| uarn I, and Coiiiiiioiiott; amHw. Mon- day morning the poll closed, when the oumbeis were for. Mr. Sbeanng r< » 5*— for IVXv. Whit takers — IVrr. Leaeroft then sniunitted io ihe lU'cmder tiiat ali the proceedings of the pr<- seni election were nuii atid voidj. the (.' l^ ar. tf.' icqoir'Uor, " ihat il,,. M- Hyiir, Sheii^' s, ami Aldermeti, tor tiie time pre- sent, or the- if renter part oft hem, then asseii) bb d," & c. Now he ( yi*. Leacrofi) inan; iained,. that Hie great. » • nnpiber of the Aldermen wtre riot: prexant ( 1 here wereoaSy ej^ y present at the election on fM'- iday); and on this ground he entered his prot « s> against'; the pr. ocecding « v; The ftecoMlep said, there waa- great: strength m Hie objection,. and it * uss cutit! ed<: to- ousideralion.— Ikis supposed the question will treeonie a suiiject of inquiry in the ^ ourt of King's Bench, '. * . JJlT5ii iloTCAX (' ATrionixes.— lit is to be the intent ion, of; i< he Catludic Assoeiation to hav^ their genera! petition ready to be prcstiihil by sir Francis BuvdeJ ^ on the opening day of Parliament, and to pour in three on ( am petitions every We; k during the Session. '.' Adverting to the activity, which at pr^ seut peiv ades the E- mail Catholic body v\ ith reference to their ' political state, the Manchester Chnonicle snjsv u we are regu tarl. y, bringing - bcf\ » ne the the objects of the ( vaiholie meetings which are 111 the eomse of being held thruuglmut the . Empire, that Protestants mtiv he fit Hit ftrepare( ty at the proper time, fo take such steps as their duty will naturally suggest." Wednesday evening at the gas works belonging id Messrs.. Str- nft., at Belper,,. the g: as- sneter retj^ iir-, iog- some aiijustment was taken to pieces, atui dur-' in^ r. that afternoon the men had put it togethe^^ l^ n^ but whilst the. y were-^ liu^ it with w alei-, aittf'before, the bole throitgb w'. icli the shaft passes had been sealed by the water, the gas was turned in. Of ( foui" se the yas formed mi explo^ iv- e mixture, with the cmanuHi, ait- within the meter,, and tliis mixta re driven out besides the shaft, was fired by a candle which one of laen heJ. d in his band. The meter was consequently blown up, and the * hoeJc was so violent ibat Francis HoUiwell, a cloc- ic- maker, w ho in tbe meter house,; was so much, iujured that he died in a few minutes. John Bniiks, the foreman or the works, had his collar bone iwokem fuid.' receiyetd 1 sev'Hie contusion boulder, but gueat hopes are entertained, of his recovery, A man who had just e ate red t h e bui I d; i n. e* w a- s sli lly h ti r t, a 11 d o tie of the men on. the outside had a piece of iron driven jv. to his cheek, but is doing; well. Holliweli has left a widow and nine children to tlepilore his- loss.-—— DERBY Re? ORTE « » • . , ,' S. MUGGLKFL SHOT.— Stork's^ one of the Pre- ventive Guard from Southsea Castle, came tip wit a u party of snwigglers about midiiight, on the 20th ' est., near the . Royal Clarence Promenade- llmuu, • • Briii- htwn. They iimnediately' a signal to- their associates, and Stoeks^ raW alou>^ th. e bea< di to, give alarm at the Castle, lint iu his way stiimbled ovjijr. souie tabs that, had just been lande< T. In a momeirt the body of smugglers appeared; ais. d began carrying off the casks/ Stocks tired a pistol, to alarm the gtuud at ihe Castle, and threatened to y sb< M) t the next uian who touched thesei/ ure. .. The smugglers, however, hearing- some soldiers ad- vancing, became furious, and . endeavoured to close^ upon him- with bludgeoa.> i,; he lired, and• one - Harris, a bricklayer, fell 5... and. the soldtcrS', j. osi came up in time to save Stocks' life. Tliey seized one of the gang ; but they baying no ammunition, were overpowered, and; ihe man rescued. Harris, soon afterwards expired. - Thirty- Jliye tabs of gin were'secured. A party of Custom House Q'licersfc pon the look- out. inland, met with, the retreating " Higglers, and, upon going up to challenge them,, one of them jmidp/ a chop at. the Of^ cerv . vv- xichy it. taken eti'ect, wdui< l have proved fatal; the Officers,, however, succeeded in taking him, with wo tubs which were near him. His name is Bur- nett ; and he is now outboard tlie Ferret. SINGULAR. CAPE —' The, foUowing s-' msjular OC* c,. ti; rr^}: ii. c, er„ AUiicii. happnaed'. it, tew days since' itr the nPigTihfinrhrtod of Woodtnrd, Tfas excited a very con- siderable sensation there ; — pifoab'eth Cave, an in- teresting youBg woman, about 19 years of age, \ fha lived in ihe servi- ee of Fonesi, Ej( f. in consei que, ace of getting her feet wet, caught a severe cold, wlrieh brought on a fever She was confined to her bed « everaI days,' When she, to ailup^ earaiice,' diedj An umleriaker• was sent for, and the next day she was placed in a cofSii, ami the" iateHige^ ce of her death <'. onveyed to her mother, an industrious woman, with a lavge family, u ito was almost broken- hearted at Ihe- nielaricholy lidiitgs. FrOm heV good conduct bile iit the service of air. Finrest, that geutlemati had resolved to defray' the expenses of the funeral, which it was arranged should take place 011 Sunday la* t, a we^ k after her supposed death. On 1 hat day her mother, and several other relatives, ^ mp. ti); pay the last tribute of respect to her meniory, and pr. e- yu oil', to the eoftin being' scre\ ypd dyvyn, went to take a look at tiie body, when one of them observed slse had not u> idergoue tiie change usual oil such occasions, and that her face appeared rather flushed. He sug- gested the propriety of sending for a surgeon, which immediately, done, who ordered her to be. placed » n a warm bath, and applied the remedies usually resorted to to recover persons apparently drowned, and which were, happily crowned ' with success, as the young woman was so far recovered in a few hours, as to be able to speak, and is now in a fair way of recovery. The anxiety with : which her friends witnessed the progress'of the means resorted to for lo- r restoration,' and their joy; at its success, mav be easily conceived; often vy.; itb a •• oareles'sii. esx disgu^ tSsj? i « l, ode. ads ail mauk' . Mode'sjy amv u he sai 1 jiunitlltijj fouu le iorr ci> ariiy . ft ui'asi., Imweive. r; be ndmitt. e » uP( i0. ii. i< i. y- be very hunib'e, yet ii" At •. sum « time, and desirous o/- paasia- b{ i't^ r be cannot, he ; t veiymo ons tol l?., to be tlie etlVct of . Copy hotel Astute,, at Wem. BY- J OH . At tlii Whit*- Hi » r* f> 1.111, « l W'rm, 11: 1 ' I'IH- SIIHT, tite i. itii. Uiiv 01' \. i. i" iiitici-, is.':,. r i'. i, ii- o; Cl<> c! t . in llic A'Vi- ii. iou, mibjrct In Ciniiliuuiis IlKMl io l>' iir. nl. ici.- ii : \ V, i: viV.<)'' sinihlt> EST ATE, Cot> yh( » !', l nf . he Manor of AVem, situate at and . called Id) V Hi LL% in the Parish of Wem, and C-. emty pf Salop, on ( he ilaad leading from Vem io '. Vhixa- l! and. eiliesiiiere, co; iusti, ig of a Farm House and Outbuildings, ant Seven rloses of Land ii't a Ulug pe„ containing to^ eMier » b ) at 27 Acres, i; i' the 0.,.\. 1. i1) ntiou of fVe'iij'dmio' ( ji'oo. n, as yearly. Tenant- For I'uriher Particulars apply to Mr. . Jos'T" Solicitor,' Temple: Street, or TUP, Auf- TIO. N SBII, Nu . v Street; both 111 liii'iujii^: ia; ii. in hij it contaiued ; but as the Inter* ai to trie Drawing is so very . short ( only a few f) u> s). ami Lotteries are so soon to be descontiirucd altog- et'uer, be so'iclts au j eaily Purcliase at either of his Loinlon Qilic- s, 4, Co- nhtS. I, or,- J), Charing Cross ; or of amy of the fniiowiag A: y r^ to fh « Co v rn inron; U . J'AN F.^, (' h » « ei:' em'onger,. Shtt- K'. vsficri v •: !' \ UTti! j.)( iK, PoikseHer, B> ti t> r,. vo, rnr; POOI. F, HANDING, Booksellers, CniiSTEa ; T. ( ilH i'lTHS, Bookseller, l. rni. mv ; n. IN, [ io. jkM I ler, N A Tt vten ; . I, S VI ITH. Printer, N F/. VfA; VV. P i i C F, Bo feller, OSWKS rn v ; \. al t\, fj- ioiiseltor, STAHfo « . » V. DKN Vi i N, ' Hoakse- Ber,, Wo 1, v.^.' AI^ to^ ' Vhe. never f30,0t) 0 P. aZfS have formed Port . of the Scheme, HlS'- Fs Office^ have lieen inure, lliiiu usually successful : — he sold the. JV'sfc ever drawn ; : . J. h. e last ever dra. v\| i.-? and Three all in One lafttery ! nn Instance of |, nck unparalleled in Ldftery . Alimils. It is t! » ii. Surce:,;;, which induces BlSU always t(> Have £ 3 ', 000 Prizes iu the Scheme, whenever he is Contractor. gjS* It is a well- known Fact that the Demand was so great before the last-•'•' Drawing, that some of, the Lovnov . OF FT OPS. . ami many of ttse Cbn'ntry Ag:^ n ' but>//)• « • t'icket or ' Xhtire for Sula fai ' Fu^' iuj- f'>>, ' '/'/>'•> before the ' IVr'nHn^ '' hegtin.-'!- ' ' iieeoBec ( herefo'- e, the 3d of nvcut'jfcr ( N/ x- t' SioiiHr; Verv itc- ar at Hand. that aithough a 1 be slup- d at the olT as « singula i' est ns. iu. Good uutuiul ssense, . a, ti;/ l Ci>, reef . tiotieui of morals, are requisite to distiiigyisb between rhinj's whieh nip iii thpoTscdves hec< « « i.- in. g- . oi not. Custom', - w hi eh has frequent! v estaidis;!, pd. a- uma- g us. what ilePno U deC'ut, ;. n( U. st'I'k. e'. yise t> amended- tit, and m: us avoof ov- ej- y thi.- o- pronounced to be uii. becoming In doing this,; n;,< v « . ver, ought nut to enuio- uud faiiiiliarit^, vi'iih it. ^ Vhen any of. oi'. r. friends are in \ ru! es; of j> ol'teness rei. pi. ire. us p- ft'elii| g'! i, t;!: o snch a manner too, : i inust jier. ceive tiiat we r'.- nU v ore i we! fare.. This coudact is geie; ! V or sorrow, tiie r.' ici. pa'e in, their i ihc individuals • terested in their salty designated complaisance,-. a. id .. it.- is so highly necessary for civilized - I- that it is tbe ceu: ent of all friendship: w'hiitvyei^ ,. 7 he contrary; feeling to it is rudeijess, or a eertaiiv air which i: idi : ates P. wish to iuioost- harsb laws on tho<- e vvitji wjioui we. " e' a. ss-> c. ialed'. ha a word, cn. JiHSla'. saai'e is a c > uuV. iuitig oe. r- seUu'S.;!,!!' . m. iitd and ex'eri- ijr to 1 lie.' person with avhour've 11 re iu'- coiiVeJ- se. Tiiat jiuM : who'- knew) the wOrld so avelj, has represented an exampt'e^'- of this de^ tfi- iptit.- va.. • He- observes, that '. vi: fii.'> np per- son vvi'siied to go. a huatiug, ann. lvert wotij- d not insist ' it'll, malc. iXg verses. t'. Ve uius' say here-, Irovy- ever, ' H » : V- f w- ouHt- m>, t TO lend ourselves do tbe a:)' i> iffH'al': of. a; iiv ' tbfcag . evil oh ^ ujii t - a'ii ; that iii.^ i^ Cii' i? espectii) g'thevpra'.' Vive'pti< h: jvi only extended' to.- aWmas..- which are either hna- v » ur> . able: omuvtitfer^ nt hv i'uemselves-.. 1 a deed our ve, y -• clot liing ild be pOaforma'de, i to the^ eatimints' of iv hpart, as - well as op. r- vy. ords-: andvatfiisiis''. -- Do not'iraitute i- Uose Hdicuious . peo- ple, who, when thev - eater a house iiere joy and gladnP^ s."- d- wwli,^- dis- e inePrt lire whole by a - so. nbre "" oft rhe att'^ r- hauil , tliey visit a tae v- tg'i. v '{ lec. ke. d-. o. il in gaiu! v SYSTEM OF BANKING IN AMKRICA^ S— A list of- the banks in the . United States has been recently published, containing between ill ree. and four bun dred : although there ls\ every' reason to believe that if is tid. complete. Some of the memoranda iu this catalogue are not a little inexplicable, to stranger, U nder the name, of o e of the banks you will find, *, The. notes-, of this, hank, sighed \ uth red ink, at a. discocnt of' 05.. per cent,' Jbo. se signed with black' 5 per cent discoatit;' after ilie naiiie of another, 4" not in g'ood crtalit. The" pyper of one toNvn u> not received by the banks of another, unless whe. 11 specially payable there.; and fhe. c on sequence is that ii. requires a little ^ irc; tu. » spectio- i, ' si range r yv 110 i s t. r: j ye! i' in g a bo - 11, to a v 0 id I osi 11 g oy i. be dtscoua. t upon notes, which increases regu l irly as he recedes from the place whpre they are ' issued. This in the paper of private companies is less remarkable, but the United States' Bank, . which, has eight or ten branches scattered , over the coun - try, issues notes dated at eaeh of these places, n uie of which will he revcived. by any of the other branches, except for government, duties ainl taxes • so that e, merchant his poeket full of th. e notes of the United States' Ra> rk at '' iiiladelpiVia, cannot pay bis bill in ; iie ooiee. of the^ sanre b ink at .. New' York, ii'J Ive lias gone to n broker and paid him a pre- iKiim for -' eve ha aging' tiieai- " Tips discount noon bank- notes has g' 1 veu rise 10 a regular trade, of buying an<| selii g thejiiv a'n t with < 1 hitle fore- sight and aiM- atS^ emeut, i- f you. are . travelling- ti) a oy, constdera- dp, distance, vou. iuay sa v. e a few unMat's i. i y'. ui 1. expences' by previously- buying i- Ue . no'r s of th rt. p t rt - of t'liC « M> untry to ^ hicli y. o? i are going. Trie br ibers, or slr'av- ers-, as tliey are i'u. nti- Ifarlv designated, are Tintuerous in all the towns.— ' The legal rate of interest in the. state, of N'ew York is seven-- per cent, but bills- at O'i days are discouate*} by the banks « t six. Tire banks n » uke a dividend on their'slnek- once ia six months; whjch at presant varies in am unit from- eight to twel ve per cent, per annum . Each " cimipaii v must be ini^ v'•)>'* rated _ by a;.: act of the ^^ ate-, LegU'iatnre, • ir.: js to cmnmenee b.- uuki. ag'. w iibo:.'. i-. r. s. o„;; dv:. a. n.>\ pi- • Thi> si- Vi un v\ i -' P prf> vi-. itfuVV. en, e ba* i IPS- v ^ open, as ' iu Scotland, fo. iodiv'tUtid enterprize a> id ea- m peti- tion, the public . would . baye security.- for fii. vir" pro- perty to the full extent'.-' of the. f/ rintic -. f'ortojtf. 5vfA-. IT the parfiiers in the company, and the ntiinb'r of cum. panics - wou'ld Ue- reguiate< l b. y fr! » e, natural opera, ( ion ohsnpply and demand ; but when a .. eo. mvmu v • is/ bo^ tev- ed up by a State enactmeur, antl the capital stock declared to be i^ looe- i- mlv'e.- iW. its. en. gajfeni'eat- Sy ! ( Greatest height of B o the public bavp. nn definite and. tang bie security (" Least height ditto for their- property, a facility is uiforded ?',. » • the most unUuHjiedi . speC'ilarioii, an ! .: Sume, ti * •. the. bank heeomes- a-. fo. mplpte ;' System, o. f.- f- i'a.- d and robbery. The number also is'. increased, beyond, all bomi'ds;. METEOROLOG1CAL JOURNAL, From Oct. 18 in Oct. 25. Taken diiily at 8 A. M. anil 4 P. M. Thermometer In open air fixetl to a N^ N. W. aspect, in nu alible ol' two . vails. O. • J) a SAT. "• FJ JO, • S O - i C y K) W TO Kt ..' ,. - m I O O) LO FO Q> O JC? JO < 1 O' O C O FO 10 • pjp CO OB C O 29, ! 20,80 O O' ' J} O1 W O1. W iO C5 o Oi S d ress - and iiU' ; -. o;>• if; b. u i -. e.- of' m ./ a rntUi^ Eaoge 0,75 part of therw- become bankrupt;, are solvent provide work and pru — D uaca}?$ America. and those t* hich t. ibr the brc- kers. atest height of Ther Oct 21.. st height. of {. iitto Oct. . 5( » deg. 43 • SOMG. From Ackcrmumfs 44 1' ort/ et me not," 1 for 1825. ••.• 0. L/\ T> Y, . leave iiiy. silken' thread .. And flovrery tapes! rie,--''''' v '•"•••' There's living- ruses on the bu& K, And blossoms on the -. Stoop where til on wilt, thy careless hand Some random hud will meet.; 7' hiiu canst. no? tread hot thou wilt find 7 he da's:-.} at. thy feet. '' S is like the birthday of the w orld, When Iv- rTii wits' born in bloom ; The ii^' ht is maVe of many dyes, The air is all perfume ; There's eriui'On buds, and while, and blue— The very rui nbow'show'fs. Ii'. tve tumM to blossoms w lie re they fell', And sown the earth w ith fiow'rs. There's fairy tulips in the East, 1 be garden of tliersnn •, ' I he very streams refieet the hues, And blossom as they run: While, morn . upes like a- crimson rose, ' Still wet w ith purly show'rs ; Then, lady,, leave the silken thread Thou twin est iirto fiow'rs ! YALE OF LUJJVGED WlN. On Saturday, the 2d inst. RICHARD MAUHICE lioNJU. ti, Esquire, Heir to the Bryny<>\ valie £ s- tuf£, in the Yale of Ltau& edwio, aiiaiued the age of * 21 years. The morning WHS ushered in by ringing „ f be. Is, bonfire?, and a discharge of can- lion, followed by coursing, horse racing, and ii varh ty of other rural amusments. . A. t two o'v^ ifk, , w0 0X4" » 0,, e given by John Bonnor, lisrj. the worthy yomig gentleman's father, and the other by his tenants and well- wishers,- were conveyed in- waggons through the village of Llangedwin to the mansion ot John Bonnor, IKsq. preceded Ixy., an excellent band of -" music, and there divided amongst the neighbour- . xp& yjpiv, who had fiie satisfaction of returning 16 . i^ fir fe/ tae^; /- with a sufficiency of undressed meat fc) Vierve tWefcg'and their families with a Sunday's dlower!. '•-' •••••'''< . , .... .. /. Al three o'clock, the various apartments in the house were thrown open,' and about " 200 of : the netgiibouring'" gentry, the farmers- and their wives, sat down to a most sumptuous dinner, where flowed, in the ^ rearcst abundance; thid most choice • tvive^ and pletrty of that good old stuff, curw da, which bad been for yeaiS confined within its oaken cuaty attaining that nut- brown counte- nance so peculiar ip itself. " Al'lvr ilmnee, upon the health of five young ^ enUeimru being drank, lie rose to give thanks, and ir. a speech replete with elegance, ami digni- fied with that honest ardour ami affection a Welshman always conceives towards his counlry- rnesi* thanked them for their warm and friendly attachment to himstlf and famdy, and hoped he showid long remain amongst them, and continue to deserve that good opinion,- which On that day appeared to be entertained of his conduct. At seven o'clock, all the youth* and beauty of the Vale assembled in the, Ball room, and the merry dance was kept up till 12, when Sunday morning put an end to the mirthful scene.-^ The festivities continued for three days. wui <> et enT. ugti Wrnrn ere <• « = sniv>>^ « tTiy.. jt " is then a ruled point that \ shall not blow my I. rains on?.— Cm mv throat-?- No bad notion. Yet siltip a w liile. Dues not the objection of - bedaubing myself hold he;<- als<. ? O VUrely, and in a ient'uld degree \ V" u m. n,$ i, besides, g- ive yourself- the iron hie ' Of taking* off yoilr - cravat : antl" yoiViuay miss there t< » 0. 1 have koowij people to slit the weasaud;, and \ et have the WTMIIID cobbled up by some tailoring- surgeon, and live, as the newspapers have it, re- spectable members of society. 1 never eottjd hit the earoiid, for T do not know where it rs;. jvndif 1 did, there would be gome fit lying perdu with his jest, ready to Call toe Carotid- ariery cutting* so- and- so." i am, moreover., of opinion thai it mfist hart a man' sadly to cut his throat. I remember once upon- a time how a barber cut me into the bone w bile shav inxg' me, and 1 was so sMiiig with the pain that I got up and knocked him down. Should not I then be a jarkass of the first ear to hurt myself ten tftnCs wot>€ than the knight of the pole? Just think of a jagged razor going through your windpipe! The mere thought is .." hideous:- Razor, avauaii I'd not cut my throat for a'thousand pounds. Shall I poison myseif? What! die the'death of a rat ? Not I, J thank you. That weie descending in the scale of creation most scaudalou> ly. Then what a pretty account of my personal appearance there would be in the reports! '' The body of the un- fortunate gentleman was blow n tip like a tun,, and there were livid and pea- green spots ail over liis countenance. His right eve was diawn dovvu to his mouth, and his left twisted up over his eyehmw A pretty picture, in truth ! Ami just take up a sheet medically descriptive of poisons, w ith their efl'e. ets, symptoms, & e. Griping: ot. the guts, burning; of the stomach, parching' of the throat, shivering of the sides, lolling' out of the tongue, twisting of the mouth, and ten thousand other disagreeable abojni. na- tions. Besides, you, would, during the time of ih<; operation, be wishing' yourself all manner of ill wishes for being so great a goose, and praying the " deed undone. Believe me, you- would repent it sadiy. If you were discovered; what a tumult there would he* and what a vehicle for all kind of uncleanly draughts your unfortunate windpipe would be made. " Pour down a tureeuful of tweited butter^' nue. fe. ijo, w vvould exclaitii,-- 4' pour if ' down without a momenCs delay," —" If it he ait, alkali; poison be lias sv\ allowed, 1' another would put in his word, " neutralize it with an acid."— All my life long I ' hated the jargon of the chemists. " Give him tarlarized antimony," would be the cry of a third. Nothing iu the w hole world is so efficacious in such misforturtes," a fourth would exclaim, " as the tincture of poiuphloishoi'o." f-. N. B.- This fellow would be a tjitack tlottor, who bad taken out a patent for the tinc'ture— a Coinpo^ iliun of brandy and tobacco water.]. In Japan, a gentleman, when he falls into disgrace at Court, has the privilege of takitrg a sword and tipping out his b. iwefc. What is to be thought of that ? Cato of fJfica did the saute". " What Catodifl-, and" Adtfeoa approved/ Cannot be wrong-!'- . said Eustace Bir'dgeii, and flung' himself oVef the side of a wherry into the Thames, with a couple of nihe- pound balls in his coat pockets. It was rather a queer way, after all, of imitating Oato if I had written Hrese lines, I' should have ( lone what the old .( Jtrc- anian did aupied. de la Let ire. But, in good truth, 1 have no such notion. Faugh ! a man to die with- Iris puddings oW, like the foolish? two headed giant deluded' bv Jack. } he- g- » iant- kille?. I never approved of Cato's principles, having- been all my life a Tory, - who, if I had breathed the. vital air in the ( lavs of Julius Gassar, w<) uld have voted for him through thick $ nd thin. I therefore do not find myself at all bound to follow. Catii's practice. As for th- e Japanese, there is nobody in these parts of the world that f know of bound to follow their example, except liobejt Warren, of No. 30, Strand. He may. emboWel himself, it he likes—/ shall not. Hanging is. obviously not even to be named. It does not accord w ith a gentleman's ideas. I have always lived independent, and have no fancy for dying dependant on any thing, A man is a long time in suspense. ! hate yoiivpaaseui upon nothing*, and never should wish to earn thirteeu- pence half- penny bv such a plebeian occupation, particularly BB* staicii" iu" liave bemi agreed tipiui bv" tlie ' uicjiAiei*^ w- lien' ex'eeulerl up.... myself.. I do „„ r see, more- . , ••'. e • , ,, over, hut it would oe an uurair and poaening kind of the (. dub, - Miie-; point ol tins " Uewaration • . ; • ,, ± r c . i •> r i .. f . : , ot intrusion on the office ot the Kings final magis was, 44 I harParSi- anu'uts '• BbouUiM. e'jc. ciea more frequenUy.'" It appears trial, a prior u Declara- tion," more, comprehensive and. extended in-. its details had b^ cn. agreed upon by the Goniniittee of the € iub,, in which a pr- iucipa- l point protnulged was, that Pa » iiauients should nut merely; be ejected 44 more' frequently," but that they should be elected 44 eves v three, years,"' A copy of this prior 4k Declaration' 0 had been sent to each of the mem- bers of the Club : of course Lord Bel grave re- ceived one: and, in consequence, he addressed a letter, of which the subjoined is a transcript, to the Secretary, of the Club. Probably the 1,4 Declara- tion," of which- we' gave a copy last week, owes its moderated time to the sentiments contained in his Lordship's letter Retirement of Lord Behjrave from the Cheshire Whig Club4 In noticing the anniversary meeting of the Cheshire Whig Club in our last Journal, we gave copy of the 44 Declaration" of their principles, OieTn a unman sasrn'ony sm- nunng bosom like Lucretia, or falling on my sword like Brutus. It would he sometliiug pathetical and romantic. I am afraid, however, that the days of pathos and romance are most considerably gone by. To coniess the fact honestly, I do not think I could ever, muster up courage, to drive a long- spit of cold steel into tny breast* and as to faiiing on my sword, iu the first place I hate not a svynd to fall on, and it would he quite absurd to buy one tor such a purpose ; and, in the second place, if I had one, 1 am perfectly certain that I should miss it, or make some other fatal blunder— or rather some hfnueer which would not be fatal— if 1 ai. ieinjjied to Hirig myself on it. Then how like an unfortunate gaby 1 should look ! Let me comitate for a short while. I have dis. missed, as unpramreah; e, shooting, throat- cutting, poisoning, nnboweliing, hairging, drowning, luni bliag, siorving, stabbihg. V\ hat remains .; $ oft! y a vvh'ile. My . niicle;: Nlchohis used: ai ways say,, t hi\ j; many a man killed - himself by drinking—^ and thy uncle Nicholas was a man of observation. - IVihaps that would be au easy, comfortahJe, . eosey kind, of way of doing the loisiiiess, after al, without tumult or stuff. However, 1 have no idea of doing it- al a glass, ami going before a coroner stretched upon a door, smelling like a rum cask, and open '<> the opprobrious verdict of " Died bv excessive drink, iug." Tliat is evideruly low. 3, mi the contrary, shall try if my uncle's prediction of such suicide being slow but sure, were right, and if it poisons me, let it operate on me like a slow poison— So glides the meteor throug'l) tlie sky,, Am! spreads along- a gilded. tram, But when its short- lived beauties ale, Dissolves to common air ag- ajfa." Is not that very pretty and very poetic? . Here, then, Anthonv, get you down to the IJaiulmw, and fetch me a stoup of liquor, as the Grave- digger in Hamlet has it. 1 am bent on death. " Come fill rrie a glass, fill it hig- h, A bumper, a bumper, I'll have-- - lie's a foot that will flinch, I'll not bate him an inch, TUoug'h I drink myself into the grave." I a. m bent on death. Perhaps, too, I may have the- good luck to go off in a flash of flam burnt to death bv voluntary combustion, thereby to afford a subject for a new novel by a new Bi; ockden Brown. 8o now. " Farewell, fair world ! and light of day, farewell!" For 1 have closed the shutters. I have received the communication you were good encMJg'h to forward to me'on the subject of the annual meeting of the Cheshire Whig- Cltib on Monday next, and I feel my self called upon, from the object ions I entertain to the intended proceed- ing, to trouble ybu with this letter, in justice to myself, and iu fairness towards the Club. Although, Sir, I fully think that public . meeting's mid disciissio'ns out of Parliament are not only to b e t o I e r a t e d, b" u tare' hi g h lyase f u I o n pa r t i c u I a r measures and occasions, I have yet always felt averse myself to attendance at political Clubs and periodical Meetings, but it is a great additional objection to my mind where, as iu the present instance, it is attempted to form a precise standard of principles, particularly at a time when most political differences are rather differences of degree, than of principle. With respect to the matter contained in the Reso- lutions, although I am far from thinking the pre- sent, system the most perfect that could be devised, and should be glad to see any means adopted by which the House of Commons might become a more effectual eoutroul upon mismanagement and abuse, yet J am too little confident of the successful results of most experiments that have been - suggested; to be a sanguine reformerand I should certainly think a recurrence to Triennial Parliaments one of the most doubtful experiments that could be tried with that view. I do not wish, Sir, to enter into detailed opinions which would be difficult to state, so as not to be liable to misconception and cavil. Bat, as I have, as far as regards myself ( particularly as a Member of the Legislature) a very decided objection to abstract declarations of opinion generally, out of Parliament, it would be manifest inconsistency on my part to continue to belong' to the Club. Trusting- that some practical system of Reform, which it will be consistent with my opinions to support, may result from the united talent and respectability of the numerous members who com- pose the Club,— I have ' the honour to subscribe myself, Sir, your obedient servant, ( Signed) BELGRAVE. Trentham, 7th Oct. 1824. To the Secretary of the Cheshire Whig Club. THE StIiC'IDE. [ From Blackwood's Magazine.] BASTA.— I'll think no more about it. I have closed the accounts, and bring myself in debtor to death AH that remains to be considered is,, how I am to do the business, 1 have been reading all the suicides I could gather, during- the last week, and I do not find one exactly conformable to my ideas on the subject. Shall I blow my brains out ?— it is well my uncle Nicholas is m » t present, for the old rogue used always to say that I had none \ but he was ever a calum piator No, I shall not blow my brains out, even supposing I have any. It is a dirty way: a man's collar is quite disarranged, and his shirt most disa greeahly stained with hatter and blood. Then you are quite a disgusting- looking devil, actually a bore to a sensitive coroner and < i sympathetic court of pie- powder. Besides, after all, you are not sure. Robes- pierre, for instance, as we all know, disfigured him self awfully, and yet lived long enough lo gratify the kind people of Paris with a guillotine exhibition, al fresco, at his expense. 1 f you miss, the cursed report of the pistol calls tip the household, and you are restrained hy their civil interference from committing the " r » « h act-," and iu anv ease, you ( ill the room with a filthy smoke, smelling. most diabolically of sulphur. There is not a eoou- maid in my kitche but would say, 44 Ay, ay, poor master was wanted sure enough— the oiild ' mi was looking for him. When he called, he could not help coming, poor gentleman ! there wau a smell of brimstone, my dear, in the room, that vvould knock down a horse." On which eouphee vvould remark, 44 No doubt on' ate. Sheriff Laurie— I beg his pardon— Sir Peter • a. nrie x'vould have just cause of indignation against me, if 1 were to cheat his new drop of its legal right turn off all pensile people, w ithin his baiiiwicksof ondon and Middlesex.— There .. jnusf Ire a great many disagreeable sensations about being1 hanged. " ' new a mati once, who had escaped the fallows after having been turned off, and he told me that you felt as if a lump of something' edible stuck in your guile?, while yon were at the same time knocked with a chuck down an interminable precipice. Then yon saw all kind of flashing fires before your eyes, ithd after yoti were at rest, a flaming bolt appeared to enter each of the sole, s of your feet, and to make ay up rapidly, ' but gradually, to your pericraniuin. Who could feel pleasure in a posture of this kind ? Your neck- attitude, too, is mighty unseemly. Look lit the picture of Lord Coieraine— heretofore George Hanger— in the second page of his Memoirs, or of old Izaak Walton, in the present, exhibition at Somerset- House, and , ou will see how awkward a crick- i'- lh'- neck- likeposition it is. Why Waiowright thought proper to exhibit, bid Izaak as just after being hanged, i do not know, and firmly believe that be has no warrant for it iu any biography of the old piscator; but look at No. 268 in the above exhi- bition, and yon will see him there evidently with the, wry- neck twist of the g- allows about biin^ ' In- a word, do not choose to l> e strung tip. Hang*' puppies and highwaymen with- all nijr heart. Drown myself? The sun is shining bright on the Thames, as I see it from one of my windows in the Temple. It looks templing.. Says she, my dear, the wind sets fair,: And you may' have the' tide.",, So sung Katharine Ha, y. e's a hundred years ago— but so sing not I. There are many grave ' objections* to drowning a man's self. First, you are choked w ith water, and I never Could prevail on myself to swal- low as much as half a pint of that liquid. " Had Neptune, when first he took charge of the sea, Jieen as wise-, or at least been as merry'as we; He'd have thought better on't, and instead of his brine, Would have fllled. tlie vast ocean with generous wipe." '. In that ease there might have been a ditferer^ eftin my ideas; but water— and Thames water too.^- the thought is intolerable. If you succeed, what a neat article you are when you are found ! In nine days, am told, a body. inevitably rises— and how xloes it rise ?, A colony of prawns and shrimps have, fastened themselves on yon, and are making free with your person in the most gourmand fashion, A crab has eaten out your eye's— a cod is fattening- his sounds on the drums of your ears—- and .. a turbot has revenged himself fpr all the liberties you have taken with his tribe, by making your face as fbit as his own spine. As one of our prtets— I forget his name, says on a unilar occasion-^- " The perch did perch between his ribs; the sole Sole, reveller, feasted on ti is nibbled jowl; The plaice was placed where'er he pleased; the pike Shouldered itself, yet lay levelled in act. to strike; A maiden, sought, his. hand, but sooth to say, Tluit amorous maiden was a maiden ray,'' kc. I never could agree with old Demonax in Luciau, that it is merely an act of gratitude to let the fishes eat you, after you have eaten so many of them. Then, too, there are many chances of your not. suc- ceeding. There is the whole body of the Humane Society, including Alexander of Russia, regularly leagued and bonded to pull people out of the vasty- deep noletltes volentes. Ilovv awkward yon would look ou awaking, to find yourself stretched out upon a table, with a fellow puffing a bellows into your very nostrils, or rubbing y ou with a hot cloth i As for jumping off the Monument, V like Levi the Jew," ( Rejected Addresses, hem !). or any other height, thai is quite out . of- the question, I get giddy even looking out of si three pair of stairs window ; how odious to my nerves it must be, therefore, to jump from one ! Poor Levi, I understand, after he was fairly off, made a grasp with his hand back again ut the balustrade of the Monument. How he must have felt during' that second, when perfectly con- scious of the entire desperation of his case- J I shud- der to think of it just now, and am obliged to shut, the window through mere nervousness. And when you are down, w hat a pretty- looking lump of smash and abomination ! Yon lire lying on the ground like a lump of bloody monar, prepared for dashing the front of the house of. some Ogive- like King of Da- homey. Nor would starvation at all agree with me. I fasted one day oil a pound of beef and a half quartern, and \ could have cried when evening came on. Oh no ! whenever or however I die, let me go out of the world with a full stomach. When a man is hungry, hideous and. beggarly ideas are apt to get info his head, and he cannot see his way clearly . before him. A windy vapour rises from the stomach, which fills the Strain with odious chimeras. 1 never could stand it. All my firmly fixed resolves on death, if I were to attempt it that way," would be knocked up by the smell of the first cook's shop, or the distant prospect of an Alderman waddling up Fleet- street, It is impossible. BANKING. [ FROM TIIK NEW TIMES] Much has been said and written about the cre- dulity and imprudent confidence of the people of this city in money matters. The recent failure in Bei uers- rstreel has plunged many persons in deep distress who unthinkingly lodged their property in some cases their all— in the batik of iVle. ssrs. Marsh and Co. • but our Irish neighbours go beyond rrs in unthinking reliance upon the faith and stability of bankers'*. Men have been known to start into eminence rn that line there without a shilling of capital ; in some instances from their desks as clerks, or fro^ n their shops as . retailers of ironmongery, r slops. Of the foimer class there was a notable xample furnished by Messrs. Williams and Finn, bankers in Kilkenny, Waterford, Newry, aird Dub- lin- and who failed: in the spring- of 1805; the account of which we have beCii furnished by Correspondent, who pledges - himself for ih accuracy as to/ fiyets ; it vvas iii substance thi> s .: r~ i '* - fiiid that on the ———— ( mentioning' some day about the year 1802). William Williams and Michael Finn commenced business'as bankers with a capita1! of two thousand pounds (!) which was the sole property of the said William Williams. I find that in the canrse of the ensuing year they paid iu ' the purchase of houses to serve as banks in Kilkenny, New\ ry, and Dublin,— in fkting up tire same, in Clerk's salaries, & i » v tile snln. o, fi twelve thousand five hundred pounds."—( More than six times their original capital !) I find that ( on a certain day in the beginning of the year 1805) there were outstanding, bank notes and post- bills, the engagements of the said Williams and Finn, amounting to the sum of four hundred arid ninety ihreg thousand ( and odd) pounds.' ! The Report then proceeded to state, that in con- sequence of a run upon them, Williams and Finn paid ( to the last shilling in their power), in the space of two months, no less a sum than. £ 435,000^ thus reducing their debt to . t' 58,000. Their business as bankers must have been profitable, for notwith- standing' their payment of a bonus to Paymasters of Regiments and others to disseminate their Paper, together with other enormous disbursements, eleven shillings iu the pound were divided under the com- mission of bankruptcy awarded against them, on their outstanding bank notes and other enga^ e'irte'nts." It is a positive fact that the poor peasantry of Con- naught would refuse Bank of Ireland, notes in payment af SBH The critics of the fair sex have- often fold us they are vain, frivolous, ignorant, coquettish, capricious, and what not. Unjust 11s « I we are! it is the fable of the Lion and the Man. But since the ladies have become authors, they caw. take their revenge, were they not too generous for such a passion. Though they have learned to paint, their sketches of man are gentle and kind. But if the ladies were what surly tfirsan thro pes call them, who is to blame? Is it not vte who spoil— who corrupt— who seduce rhem ? Is it surprising thai a pietty woman should be vain, when we daily praise iu her face her charts, her taste, and her wit ? Can " we blame her vanity, when we tell her that nothing can resist her attractions,— frhat thene is nothing so barbarous which she cannot soften,— nothing so elevated that she cannot subdue ? when we tell her, that her eye$ ; arc brighter than day,-^ thaf her form is fairer than swnmier^— more refreshing than spring, that her hps are vernriHion,— that her skm combines the whiteness of the lily with the incar- nation of the rose? Do we censure a fine woman as frivolous,. wh< n we oneeaeingly tell Iter that no other Study becomes her but that of varying her pleasures j that she requires no talent but for the arrangement of new parties, no ideas beyond the thought of the after- noon's amusement ? Can we blame her frivolity, when we tell her, that her hands were not made to touch the needle, or to soil their whiteness in domestic employments ? Can we blame her fri volit. y, when we tell her, that the look of srcr. ous- ness chases from her cheek the dimple in which the Loves and the Graces wanton that re flection clouds her brow with care; and that she who thinks sacrifices the smile that makes beauty charm, and the gaiety that renders wit attractive ? How Can a pretty woman fail to be ignorant, when the first lesson she is taught is that beauty supersedes and dispenses with every other quality ; that all she needs to know is, that she is pretty ; that to be intelligent, is to be pedanticy and that to be more learned than one's neighbour, is to incur the reproach of absurdity and affectation ? Shall we blame her for being a coquette, when the indiscriminate flattery of every man teaches her that the homage of one is as good as that of another? It is the same darts, the same flames, the same beaux, the same coxcombs. The man of sense, when he attempts to compliment, . recom- mends the art of the bean, since he condescends to do with awkwardness what a monkey can do with grace. With ail she is a goddess, and to her all men are equally mortals. How can she prefer, when there is no superiority ; or be constant, when there is no merit ? Is she capricious ? Can she be otherwise, when . she hears that the universe must he proud to wait her commands ; that the utmost of a lover's hopes, is to be the humblest of he slaves ; that to fulfil the least of her commands, is the highest ambition of her a<. > rers ? And are men so unjust as to. censure the idols made by their own hands? Let us be just ; let us begin the work of reformation. When men cease to flatter, women w ill cease to deceive; when men are wise, women wili'be wise to please. The Sadies do not force the taste of the men ; they only adapt themselves to it. They tnay- corrupt and be cor- rupted; they may improve and, be impioved. fitisjdiatmuis Er. tcIUgfrcre. fairs or markets, and cry out, " We don't understand your Hank of Ireland— give us Lord Ffrench" — meaning the. notes of Ffrencli ana Co. who subsequently ( in 1814) failed. SHEFFIELD PITT CLUB, On Thursday last the Anniversary Dinner of this Club was held at the Tontine Inn, Sheffield ; James Stuarl Worthy, Esq. M. P. in the Chair. After the usual toasts, Mr. WORTt. KY said, Gentlemen— It is now my duty to propose, as a toast, the memory of a person whose virtues and whose talents we are Ml is day met to celebrate; and I confess since we parted last year, if I had a doubt as to the path 1 have chosen, the events which have since occurred would have con- vinced me that I have chosen the right path. No political party ever existed, that had mon* reason to bp proud than that baud of persons who, during the life time of iVIr. Pitt, supported liis ministration, and who ha ve since endeavoured to follow the principles laid down during his life ; arid there is no political party so degraded as that which was opposed to Mr, Pitt. Gentlemen, we have supported' Mr; Pitt in what was . c. OiisideVed b'ad times~- and we haye fol- lowed hii'n in good times. We have heard the pro- phecies of our enemies, we have seen these prophe- cies completely refuted, and we have now only to look round, and can appeal to the Character of the country, after a long and protracted war, after a reat expeuditure of nioney beyOhd w hat any other country could have expended, and the exertions of such astrengJh as was scarcely ever brought into the field ; and I only a » k of the people, w hether any country in this world is in so flourishing a state as England is at present ? During all the lime when this country was in a stale of distress, we have been supporting those councils that have carried us through, w hile our opponents have been sneering at us, and telling us the country would be ruined. But the reason of our prosperity, say the Whigs, is this, u That we have adopted . their principles." This, Gentlemen, is a common way of persons who have been defeated and disgraced. It appears to me, it only adds a baseness to their former conduct, bv trying- to take from us the reward we have deserved ley pur steadiness. And whv, Gentlemen, do these , people say we have come to their principles? : They say the same men do hot govern the country that did in former days— that my Lord Londonderry is dead, and that Mr. Canning fills his situation, who is of different principles. Gentlemen, I beg to remind you how these persons ha ve sneered at Mr. Canning, and endeavoured to detract from his well- earned character— how he has been told that he was a caterer for his own ends. Gentlemen, the present Adminis- tration acts upon the same principles as it did then — upon the principles of Mr. Pitt, and upon prin- ciples which appear to be deserving of Mr. Canning'. But iu fact, whatever may be said of my Lord Lon- donderry, 1 think, ' how I hat he his gone, we may appeal to the acts of Administration in which he bore apart. During that time we resisted Prance, we overcame France, he made the Peace, and we have now had eleven years proof of the blessings of that Peace. But whether, he made the best terms, he might have been supposed by some persons to be capable of having- made, he bus given JIS eleven years of solid peace, and this country has been rising- to a height which no country in the world ever reached ! before. Gentlemen, I say we have a thousand reasons tp he proud of the principles that bring' ns here to- day ; they are principles of good go vernment, which I hope our soils and grandsons vvrilj. eontinue to maintain. In introducing' the health of the Right Hon. George Canning, Mr. Wort ley said, Sir, 1 give it not only as the health of a person who has managed the business of the House of Commons in a way highly creditable to him, but especially because have known Mr. Canning the greater part of- my political life, and I know the first feeling- of his heart is, that he should be a close follower of the prin eiples of Mr Pitt. He was a friend— it may be said, he was a pupil of Mr. Pitt. His object has been to follow up those principles; and as having* followed up those principles, I beg- leave to propose the health of Mr. Canning. On Tuesday morni% last, one of that rare species of bird, called the Great Northern Diver i ( Colymbus glacialis, of Linnaeus), was shot in the Tyne, near Newcastle quiay, by a keelman. Various ; ineffectual attempts were made by different per- sons above the bridge, before it was hit. It is supposed that the severe storm and hurricane of the preceding day had driven this unfortunate visitor from? its northern haunts,- as not one of them is remembered lo have been seen so far south before.— Newcastle Courant. The autograph of Edward the Black Prince, which antiquaries have been in search of for many years, has at length been found on the Roil of the Artillery Company, where the names and hand writing of some of the. most illustrious patriots and heroes of early times are inscribed. The archives and antiquity of this Company entitle it to a dis- tinction greater than it has yet received. A few days since, a leaf of a most valuable and ancient manuscript, intitled the Exon Domesdap Book, preserved among the records and charters of the Dean and Chapter of Exeter, was restored to its proper place, having been accidentally found al some distance in the country, after being missing, it is said, upwards of a century. About 8 years Since, the above TvlS, was printed in 500 pages folio in a supplement to the Exchequer Great Domesday Book; when the learned Editor and Antiquary, Henry Ellis, Esq. had occasion to regret, iu his preface, the imperfection caused by the lost leaf.— Exeter Gazette. A melancholy and fatal accident occurred to the gamekeeper of Sir T. D. Acland, Bart, at Hohn- cote, Somerset, on Monday. In going over a hedge he missed his hold, and in failing turned his gun ( which lie had placed on the hedge with the muzzle towards the next field) in the direction of his body; and it immediately exploded, lodging- the contents in his side; the piece Was not cocked when placed on the hedge, but probably became so in turning over; the poor fellow lived but two hours after the accident ; he was a most excellent servant, esteemed by his master, and beloved by all the neighbourhood.— Sherborne Mercu ry. On Wednesday last, at. Gretton, near Upping? ham, a pernio naiiied.. Milled a gamekeeper, went into the Talbot public house, and laid down a loaded gun, which the landlord, David Spencer, took up, and in a joking manner presented towards Frances Barrett, a charwoman at work there, when the gun accidentally went off, and shot the poor woman dead On the spot. An effectual remedy for the destruction of bti^ s; by the celebrated chemist, Mr. Murray :— Take a table spoonful of red lead, mixed with two ounces fluid of the spirit of salt, put it in a cup, and place the cup in a basin . of warm water to float, this to be put in the middle of the room* which should be kept shut up for 24 hours; the smell thereof proves destructive. A Cambrian youth, fresh from his native moun- tains, was sent by his mistress with a brace of partridges to No, 4, Richmond- place. The lad, being a perfect stranger to the town, inquired of a ma$ i rmet in Richmond'! pslt> ce, which was No. 4. 44 Oh I" replied the man, retreating towards a hoube, 44 this is No. 4, and the partridges are mine, a lady promised to send them to me." 4 Eery well," said our Cambrian, 44 but fat is hur aty's name?" 4* Her name ?— » oh, aye, yes, no, responded the man with considerable hesitation, I've forgot her name." 44 Oh, ten," said the lad, smoking the* Trick, 44 1 hope hur may get ' em safe;" and after a little more research, delivered his birds at the real No. 4, and received many com pliments for his ingenuity.— Brighton Gazette. GREEK MANUSCRIPTS.— There have been found in Greece, " ia digging the ruins of. a temple dedicated to Saturn, a great number of manuscripts that date from very remote periods. In Macedonia the manuscript of the famous Iliad is said to have been discovered, enclosed in a cedar box, with plates of gold, which belonged to Alexander the Great. ENGLISH TRAVELLERS IN AFRICA— It is probable that we shall receive some new and inter- esting details from the English travellers in the centre of Africa. A trunk was lately sent from Tripoli, iirBarbary, full of manuscripts ami papers, which is not to be opened till it arrives in London. Dr. Oudney, after reaching Soudan, died from the climate; and Mr, Toole also died of a fever at Kouka, in the kingdom of Bornou, Major Den- ham and Mr. Tyrwhitt were both there last May, while Lieut. Cbapperton was proceeding alone through Sedan, beyond the Nile of the Negroes. These details are contained in a letter written by M. Graserg de Hemse, Consul- General of Sweden and Norway, and Correspondent of the French Institute. His letter is dated Tripoli in the West, August 20, 18- 24.— French Paper, traile, To a tlealer in Uriel port, states the advance on cast and bat- iron to be upwards of 45 per cent, and more orders have been received on that aid vance than will be executed in three months from this time. There is nothing like the prospect of a General Election t » t> open hearts and unloose piirse- strings. Accordingly, we already liegin to hear of coals and blankets being distributed in places where^ for the ' ist five winters, nothing of the kind has been heard of. The plunder of their pewter pots from publicans in London is carried on to an incredible extent. One person alone is said to have lost 25 dozen within the last three months. Could not some other materials— such as iron- stone, or double block tin, be used in their stead? All that the public want is a'clean vessel, • The widows of Wetherby, at the late sale, on becoming mistresses of their mansions, declared that a master w as essentia! to the well management of a house; the lads of Wetherb- y, who arc not dull of comprehension,' immediately took the hint, and several leases for life will be granted ; the day fixed for the termination of courtship, it is said, is that of the completion of their purchase— and one of the stipulations is borrowed from the conditions of sale, 44 that no one retract his or her bidding." The wonderful ox, bred and fed by Sir William Maxwell, of Monteith, was slaughtered at Ayr last week. The four quarters weighed I05st. 16! bs ; the tallow we'rqhed ! 3st, 5ibs. and the hide ^ M- Slbs.; and. exclusive of the offal, the beast weighed If' 5st. I3lb. Fifteen years ago^ land at Leamington Spa might have been purchased for £ 100 per acre; ten years since it rose to £ 1000; and last week £ 4840 per acre were given ! The tunnel of the Leeds and Liverpool canal, af Fouiridgre, near Cofue, has, been so far contracted in depth by the rising of the bottom ( which has been forced up from some cause not yet ascer- tained), as to prevent all vessels passing which draw more than 3 feet 4 inches of wafer. NEW SOUTH WA-^ ES.—- The Mac Adam system of paving- has been' introduced into Sydney,' A Presbyterian church is to be erected at Sydney. A Religious Tract Society was formed in Sydney in September last, A Bank is incorporated iu Van DiemenVLand. An agricultural society has been already established there. A new almanack,' calcu- lated for the meridian of the island, is also expect- ed to make its appearance, under ihe sanction of the Government. MAD FOXES— For Several months il has been remarked that the Foxes on the country bordering on the Rhine were attacked with a singular dis- order, and bit all kinds of animals tiny encoun- tered. It is now ascertained that they are mad, and the same malady has shewn itself iu every anin'ral they have bitten, lii.- several villages, par- ticularly at Aretnberg', the farmers have been obliged to shoot their cows, the disorder having shewn itself among' them in a terrible mariner. ~ French Paper. MRS. COUTTS.— We see with perfect shame the ' fuss that is made about this lady's 44 progress" throughout. Scotland- A paper published here has a paragraph about her actually commencing thus- — u Mrs. Coults and suite, accompanied by the Ear! of Lauderdale, arrived at Dtinkeid," & c. A Scottish Earl made an attendant upoai Mrs, Contts! We have no objection to Mis. Coults, who, for aught that we know, is a very respectable woman, and certainly very willing to give away her money, as all the papers tell os0 Mut to give this preposterous eclat to this rich widow, merely because she is rich, or perhaps because she was once very much the reverse, does seem to be. most deeply discreditable to the Scottish. press.—• Edin- burgh Weekly Jour vol. A. NONSLCH PARTY.— A friend' who lately Visited Paris, af one of M. Arago's Soirees, met the following distinguished persons, all of them remarkable for having performed jnarnies, or adventures, Of which there was no parallel :— 1st. There was Professor SimonofF, who was Astronomer to the Russian Expedition into the Antarctic Cir- cle, and who had been nearest to the South Pole > f any man living:— 2d. Ca* pt. Scoresby, Jan. who had been nearest to the North Po> e of any one living.— 3d. Baron Humboldt, who had been higher on 7) iounfafrts than any other philosopher.— 4th. Madame. Fieycitiet, the only Ladv who had ever ton, having engaged wstli some others, in what is generally termed a spree, got into some difficulty, but upon being relieved from it, he determined never again to be brought into a similar situation, and from that moment resolved never to go out of bis father's house any more. Singular as it may appear, he has fulfilled his purpose to the very letter, for from that hour, to the present time, although he enjoys a good state of health, he has never quitted his parent's iooC— Nottingham Journal. MR, HA? NE AND MISS FOOTE.— The affair between these parties was noticed in our last ; and it is presumed that the follow iu? paragraph, from the Cheltenham Paper, has a reference to Mr. H. : MODERN NOTIONS OF LCXCRY.— The following- circumstances have been communicated- to. us by a correspondent who is intimately, acquainted with the. party alluded to ; and upon who* e veriicity we place tlie utmost reliance. A few mouths ago, a wealthy commoner, who is now reaping- a harvest of no very enviable celebrity, and who,, like Mil- ton's cloud, 44 turns forth his silver lining after taking his temporary possession of •— P. irk, meditated a t: ij> to Bath, but declared to: one of his friends that 44 lie could not drink the d— « — d Bath wines — they have no wines in Bath,^ then ordered his butler to 44 pack up some wine, and i wiil p « iy tlie people of the house so much per cork— but d— n these Bath wines 1 can't drink ' em. By the bye,'* said he, resuming- his refined discourse with his friend, 44 1 have just given my wine- merchant an order for wine to the amount of four thousand pounds, and as I have taken the Park for three years, and shall remain there three months in every year, I l& mk that quantity will nearly serve me. Do you know I have some devilish handsome equi- pag- es, I have, let me see, six oarriag- es here at —;—- ; I have seven iu London, and another heavier carriage buifding, in which I mean to travel'abroadFourteen carriages! for the sole use of one individual ! Can it then be wondered at, that his expenditure in tiie last, year only, has exceeded one hundred thousand pounds. His dressing-. case, which is of gold, cost him one thou- sand guineas! The property which devolved to- him when he was but four years of ag'e, consisted; of a large estate in the West Indies, and the accu- mulation of interest during his minority amounted to one hundred and eighty thousand pounds. About twelve months ago he proposed for the daughter of- Colonel , then living in Wiltshire,' but the honour of his alliance was decli. A d by the lady's father, in consequence of some, enquiries which were any thing- but satisfactory. Young Hopeful has been for some time the distinguished Patron of the pugilistic Fancy— and during his short slay iu Gloucestershire, a fortnight since, Cannon and WEite- headed Bob swelled in his train. One anec- dote, illustrative of his humanity, is worth pre- serving. The Bacchanalian orgies of the Pyr/ c- Hwse bad been kept up on a recent5 occasion to an' hour beyond the deep 44 witching'time of nig- ht,' 5 atid his fanciful associates, already intoxicated^ yelled: aloud, like the drunkard in the farce, for 44 more Sherry V The servant, little anticipating the consequences, had retired soberly to his bed,; leaving- a considerable quantity of wine in the eel- leret. ^ One of the Favcf. was. dispatched to his- room to demand the keys of the cellar,' but, doubting- his authority, the faithful servant declared that he would deliver them to no one but to his master, and if assured that it was the wish of the latter he would' instantly get out of his bed, late as it was, and attend opou him. The offended dignity of the hruiser did not fail to represent the circumsfanc. e in such a point of view as aroused' the w rath of'his- patron,, and the fellow was sent, back with one of bis companions to turn the servant instantly out of the honse. One Xvord more,, and' we have done : his spkris measure,- froin tKe edge of the boot lieei to the rovvell, only seven inches in length, P; 0'( JIHSM.— On Wednesday moraio-^, the ! on^ » talked of fi^ ht between White headed f? « » b ( Bald- win) and O'Neale, fov 200 guineas, took place on Raff shot Heath. Bob, who, as it is stated, ln. fi' taken physic that morning for a complaint in the stomach, was hacked by Mr. Haync, of Bnrdcrojy Park, Wilts, whose affair with Miss Foote lias lately, made so much noise. The attendance of the fancy of the higher classes was pretty numerous. After fighting 40 rounds in 1 hour and 13 minutes^ O'Neale was declared the victor. The following song has been sported on the occasion :'— BOB & HIS BACKER AT BAGSIIOT. AIR-.--" O young Lochinvar is come out of the west."- I. O young Mr Hayrte is come out of the west,* Through all the. wide Fancy his tits are the best ; • Vud, save his good ej/ e- g./ ass% be w eapons had none, accompanied a voyage of discovery, and circnm j ™ navigated the globe,— 5th. M. Guy Lussac, who So favhful in love, 4nd " stidonv at a train f has, we believe, been the highest in the cur ot any There never Was gallant like youn<- Mr. Hayne. 6 th. With JJ . ® man.— 6th. M. Callien, who had travelled with the son of the Pacha of Egypt further towards the Sources of the Nile than any person now living.— Mechanics'' Magazine. WOMAN, Woman , has conferred upon us many blessings, and brought upon us as . many miseries ; of. the origin of misery woman w as made the instrument; and it. must be acknowledged that the greatest crimes have been committed by the influence of them, and them alone, and the great est ravages made: it was woman that caused Troy to be laid low, that conquered the great Caesar, and lulled him to rest iu peace, while every sur- rounding country called him conqueror.- It was woman that caused that division between Antony and Augustus which brought'sons into the field to combat with, their fathers, brothers against bro- thers, and citizens against citizens. It is asserted by some, that they ought to be excused on the ground of weakness ; but " The weakness they possess, themselves create." And it is to he doubted, whether or not the influ ence they possess over the passions of men is not more than adequate to that weakness: if they are weak in themselves, they are not at a loss for strength in others, there being always some to be found zealous enough to maintain their cause, either with their talents or their sword. After all that may or can be said on either side, it is certain that without woman we should not experience any portion of happiness ; we should be no less than a species of animals,' moving about this nether world, searching for society in vain— no society among ourselves; those refined ideas and high- towering thoughts, those glorious virtues they inspire within the breast of man, would be sunken oblivion ; we should be uncivilized beings, void of all the fine feelings, aud possessing hearts neither warmed by pity uor affection, but cold and obdurate as the adamantine stone, capable of no impression — Economist. MISERIES OF A COUNTRY MANAGER— 1 was intolerably annoyed, too, by the great actors who came down starring, as it is called, from Loii don. Of ail baneful influences keep me from. that of a London star. A first- rate acti; ess, going the rounds of the country theatres,- is as bad as a blaz- ing comet whisking about the heavens, and shaking fire, and plagues, and discords, from its tail. The moment one of these * 4 heavenly bodies" appeared in my horizon, 1 was sure to be in hot water. My theatre was over run by provincial dandies, copper- washed counterfeits of Bond- street loungers, who are always proud to be in the train of an actress from town, and anxious to be thought on exceed in good terms with her. It was really a relief to me when some random young nobleman would come in pursuit of the bait, and awe all this small fry at a distance. I have always felt myself more al ease with a nobleman than with the dandy of a country town.~~ And then the injuries T suffered in my personal dignity and my managerial authority from the visits of these great London actors ! ' Sblood, Sir, I was no longer master of myself on my throne. I was hectored and lectured in my own green- room, and made an absolute nincompoop on my own stage. There is no tyrant so absolute and capri- cious as a London star at a country theatre. I dreaded the sight of all of them ; and yet if I did not engage them, I was sure of having the public clamorous against me. They drew full houses and appeared to be making my fortune; but they swal- lowed up all the profits by their insatiable demands. They were absolute tape- worms to my little theatre. The more it took in, the poorer it grew. They were sure to leave me with an exhausted public, empty benches, and a score or two of affronts'to settle among the town's folk, inconsequence of misunderstandings about the taking of placcs,— Tales of a Traveller. fop: He staid not for oilo, or eau de Cologne, Lie swallow'd his breakfast, and cried 44 Let's bo > one !; ' But Robert the Baldwin felt'Siek in his crop, Mr; Hayne gave him rhubarb the sickness to $,. . Though a laggard in love^ J would ask you again, Did you e'er hear of backer like voung Mr. Hayne ? ill; 1 So boldly thev enterM the well crowded ring, Among lniifsinen, and coves, and all that sort of thing*; Then spoke Mr. Jackson— his hand to his ///<?, ( Messieurs Baldwin and llayne aiun- in- arm all the while), ' ' O come ye for pleasure, or come ve for pain,— Or fairly to Footf it here, young- Mr. Un'vue ?•' IV." 44 Pshaw! I lov'd the young lady, an< l was not; denied, But love, swells like Sohvnv,' find ebbs like its tide — So now I am come with this Babby oj' mine, Of O^ Neale and his backer's ' to take out the shine— And I'll always find. ladies, or lovely, or plain. That would gladly he bride to the young- Mr. Hayne.'' V. 44 The Jackson" smiled gaily, O'Neale whistled-- whew ! As much as to say < c now I doubt if, that's true ;" Even honest Tom Crib wh. isper'd Spring in the ear, 44 I say, master Tommy— all gammon that ere !" But the men were now'peeVdy and shouts went up amain, 44 Now go it, my Bobby !" cried young Mr. Ilayne, VI. O'Neale took the lead, and with jobs on the nob, lie pestered the pimple of white- pimpled Bob ; While his seconds look'd blue, as to cheer him th they his lemon- kid strove, And Squire Hayne stood dangling glove, And 44 the Jackson" low whisper'd his friend Mr, Pfivne,. 44 Good bye to the guineas of young Mr. Hay tie !" VII. O little they thought what made Bob such a spooney^ ( For nothing was said of his rhubarb' dejeuneJ But he stopp'd to be beaten, and that was euougb, Aud his patron then took to barouche in a huff— 44 We are done /— we are gone, thro' field, road^ and lane, They'll have fast tits that follow," quoth young Mr. fkivne. VIII. There was mounting ' mong coves of the Fancy- full .;-. clan, Swells, buzinen, and buffers, they rode and they ran ; There was racing-., and chacing, on nag-, or in drag% And soine got the shiners, and some g- ut the bag. For love and for lumps did you ever see twain, Like Bob, the white- headed, Si young- Mr. Ilayne ? 11 Qiieyv, by Mr. Scroggins, " West end— or West hinges ?• ( Tpdies)--- To which the poet answered " Both— or either." + Not a lady's? train, bat a train- m^". BANKRUPTS, OCT. 79;-- Claudio Arch angel o, of CI on ce st e r - 1 er r a c e, Bethnal- green, feathcr- mer- chant.— Uriah Plant, of Wharton, Cheshire, grocer, — Thomas Edging- ton, of Wells- street, ON ford- street, coach- maker. William Harris, of Mon- mouth, grocer.— Henry Cooper Peckham, of Bushy- Rough, Kent, paper- manufacturer. Printed fy published by IV. § ./. Eddowss^ Com. market, Shrewsbury, lo whom Advertisements or Articles of Intelligence ate requested to he addressed. Adver- tisements are also received by Messrs. Newton and Co'. Warwick- Square, Sew irate- Street, Mr. Barker, No. 33, Fleet- Street, and Mr. Licyneti, Guzetle Ad- vertising Office, Chancery Lane, London ; likewise by Messrs. J. K. Johnston and Co. No. 1, Loiver Sackville. Street, T) ublin. This Paper is regularly filed as above ; also at Garraway^ s, Pcefs, and the Chapter Coffee Houses London.
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