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The Salopian Journal

03/12/1828

Printer / Publisher: W. & J. Eddowes 
Volume Number:     Issue Number: 1818
No Pages: 4
 
 
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The Salopian Journal

Date of Article: 03/12/1828
Printer / Publisher: W. & J. Eddowes 
Address: Corn-Market, Shrewsbury
Volume Number:     Issue Number: 1818
No Pages: 4
Sourced from Dealer? No
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raiMTEP BY W. J. ED1DOWES, 77 « * Paper is circulated in the most expeditions Manner through the adjoining Counties of ENGLAND and WALES. Advertisements not exceeding Ten Lines, inserted at Six Shillings each. VOL. XXXV.— N° WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 18 28. TO ROAD CONTRACTORS. ANY Person desirous of Contracting for llie Widening, Lowering, anil Improving PALM'S HILL, near Went, may nee a Map and Specifications of llic intended Work at Mr. CLAY'S, Went, Treasurer and Secretary to the Committee. The Committee will meet at the White Horse Inn, Wem, on THURSDAY, the 18th Day of December, 1828, to receive the Contractors, at Twelve o'Clock. auction. TIMBER J1SD UNDERWOOD. BY MR. WYLEY, At the Angel Inn, Ludlow, on Tuesday, the 9th Dny of December, 1828, at Four o'Clock in the After- noon ; rp\\ E following Lots of TIMBER and FI UNDERWOOD, growing on BOSTON FARMS, in the Parishes of DI DDLEBUKY and MUNSLOW, iu the County of Salop :— LOT I. Forty good OAK TREES, growing on Upper Poston Farm, iu the Holding of Thomas Wheelwright. LOT II. The UNDERWOOD growing in Poston Coppice, which adjoins the said Farm, containing upwards of 10 Acres, which includes divers good Larch Samplers, now fit for Rails. LOT III The UNDERWOOD grqwing- in a Cop- pice called Cock shot i Wood, containing upwards of 8 Acres. LOT IV. A Quantity of LARCH, & c. POLES, suitable for Rails, growing in several Plantations on Poston Hill, containing iu the whole about 4 Acres, LOT V. A Quantity of ALDERS, containing about 3 Acres, fit for Turning Purposes, being chiefly above 6 Inches Girth, growing at the Top of a Field belong- ing- to Lower Posfati Farm, iu the Holding of Benjamin Gwilt, called the Cow Pasture. Richard Kelly, of Poston Hill Cottage, will shew the different Lot?; and any further Information may be had from Mr. VICKERS, of Craumere. CAPITAL Elm^ Ash, and Oak Timber. BY MR. WYLEY, At Whiston- Cross Inn, near ShifFnal, in the County of Salop, on Thursday, th « 11th Day of December, 1828, at Five o'Clnck in the Afternoon : TBIHE following Lots of very capital JI TIMBER, marked with a Scribe, aud growing on an Estate al CHRSTERTON, HI the Parish of Wor- field, and County of Salop, viz : LOT I. Fifty- frve Elm Trees, numbered I to 55; twenlv- two Ash Trees, numbered 1 to 22 j and six Oak Trees, numbered 1 to 6. LOT II. Forty- five Elm Trees, numbered 56 to 100 ; forty- eight Ash'Trees, numbered 23 to 70; and seven Oak Trees, numbered 7 to 13. LOT III. Twenty- four Elm Trees, numbemMOl to 124; twenty Ash Trees, numbered 71 to 90; seven Oak Trees," numbered 14 to 20 j ten Poplar, six Aider, aud two Withy Trees. LOT IV. The Underwood growing: iu a Coppice ( of about two Acres) near Rudge Heath. The above Timber is chiefly of large Dimensions and excellent Quality, and is situate about 7 Miles from Wolverhampton, 8 from Shift'nal, 12 from Wei ling- ton, aud 6 from Bridgnorth. MT. SIMMONDS, of Chesterton, will appoint a Person to shew the Lots i and further Particulars may he bad of Mr. WYLBT, Admasion, near Wellington, Salop. ^ alcs by auction. ELIGIBLE FREEHOLD PROPERTY. In and near to the pleasant Village of IIINSTOCKt ill the County of Salop. BY MR. WRIGHT, On Thursday, 18th o. f December, 1828, at the Cock Inn, in Hinstock aforesaid, between the Hours of Four and Six o'Clock in the Afternoon, subject to Conditions : LOT I. t Comfortable FARM HOUSE, with ~ J » necessary Outbuildings and other Appurte- nances thereto belonging, together w ith lOA. OR. 38P. of excellent Arable, Meadow, and Pasture LAND ( capable of Irrigation), situate in Hinstock aforesaid, in the Occupation of Mr. George Jackson. Also two DW ELI. INC, HOUSES adjoining, with good Gardens attached, in the Holding of Ambrose Sale and Thomas Wags la ft*. LOT II. A rich Piece of old Turf LAND, adjoining the Cock Inn, in Hinstock, containing 2A. OR. 7P. in the Occupation of Mr. James Machin, LOT III. A Piece of excellent Turf LAND, in Hiustock aforesaid, called the BAR CROFT, containing 4A. 2R. 20P. in tbe Holding of Mr. James Machin. LOT IV. A DWELLING HOUSE and Appurte- nances, with good Garden attached, situate in Hin- stock aforesaid, in the Holding of John Ray, contain- gtlA. 2R. 7P. LOT V. A good DWELLING HOUSE and Out- buildings, with 3A. OR OP. of excellent Arable and Pasture LAND, situate in WOOD LANR, near Hinstock, iu the Occupation of William Perry. LOT VI. All that excellent FARM, in fourteen Ill- closures, lying together within a Ring Fence, ( sur- rounded by Lands the Property of Henry Justice, Esq.) containing' 58A. 2R. 37P. of Arable, Meadow, and Pasture LAND, called the LEAS, near Hinstock aforesaid, in Ihe Occupation of Mr. George Jackson. LOT VII. All that convenient FARM HOUSE with necessary Outbuildings, and 25A. 0R. 4P. ( in sixteen Inclosures) of Arable, Meadow, and Pasture LAND, adjoining Lot 6, in the Occupation of Mr. William Ausell. This Lot is nearly surrounded by Lands be- longing to Henry Justice, The w hole of the Land is of excellent Quality, and possesses Abundance of Shade and Water; and Lot 6 presents a most eligible Sile for Building upon, em- bracing an extensive and delightful Prospect over a highly interesting and well cultivated Country, abounding iu Game, and is thickly clothed with lofty Timber dispersed over the inclosures in the most Picturesque Groups. There is a Bed of rich Marl under the Whole ( except one Field), which contains valuable Building Stone, and a copious Spring of ex cellent Water near the Surface, altogether offering an unexceptionable, secure, and permanent Investment for Capital. The Land- Tax upon the Whole is redeemed, and the Timber must be taken to at a Valuation to be produced at the Time of Sale. The several Tenants ( who are under Notice to quit at Lady- Day next) will shew the respective Lots ; and any other Information may be obtained on Applica- tion to Mr. CHALLBNOR of Ellerton ; Mr. WATSON, Solicitor, Shrewsbury; or THB AUCTIONEER, Market Dra y ton. ELIGIBLE FREEHOLD PROPERTY, Dray con- in- Hales, Shropshire. BY MR. WRIGHT, ( BV Order of the Assignees of Mr. JAMES BAKBR, a Bankrupt,) at the Phoenix Inn, in Drayton- in- Hales, in the County of Salop, on Wednesday, the 10th Day af December, 1828, at five o'Clock iu the Afternoon, in the following, or such other Lots as may be agreed upon at the Time of Sale, and sub ject to such Conditions as will be then produced ; LOF I. ALL those Two COTTAGES, with the Gardens thereto belonging, containing by Ad measurement Twelve Roods o. r thereabouts, situate on Little Drayton Heath, now in the several Holdings of Job Larewood and John Brindley, Senior. LOT II. All those TWO COTTAGES, with Ihe Gardens thereto belonging, containing by ^ Admea- surement Twelve Roods or thereabouts, adjoining lo Lot 1, now in the several Holdings of John fcJriu. djey Junior, and William Blandford. LOT III. AH that Croft of excellent LAN D, called by the Name of Tbe Pinfold Piece, adjoining the last Lot, containing by Admeasurement 2A. 3R. 4P, late in the Possession of Mr. Baker. LOT IV. Another Croft of excellent LAND, ad joining the last Lot, containing by Admeasurement JA. 2R. 4P. The two last Lots have a valuable Common Right on Little Drayton Heath. LOT V. All that spacious & complete TAN- YARD with the following appropriate Buildings, Pits, Vats & c. situate iu Drayton aforesaid : 24 Handlers, Bloomers ( under Cover), 18 Vats, 10 Spenders, 5 Limes, 2 Mastrines, 2 Drying Sheds with con ve nient Ware Rooms underneath, Beam House with Drying Room over, Bark Mill with two Rooms over aud one of Heighway and Wheeldon's Coffee- framed Patent Bark Mills, with Water- Wheel attached capable of grinding one Ton of Bark per Day, 3 Bark Bays capable of storing 150 Tons of Bark. Lor VI. All that excellent TAN- YARD, with Three COTTAGES for Workmen, 3 Gardens, Fish pond, and the following Buildings, Pits, and Vats, situate iu Drayton aforesaid : viz. 32 Handlers under Drying Shed, 8 Bloomers, 24 Vals, 12 Spenders, Limes, 5 Mastrines, I Water Pit, Beam House and Room over. Lime House, 2 Bark Bays to store eight .• Tons, 1 Mill House, with one of Heighway and jVVlieeldou's Patent Bark Mills and Room over, Dust llmise and Room over, Counting House and Ditto, jurying Shed,' dud 3 Ware Rooms. LOT VII. TWO undivided Third Shares of and in comfortable DWELLING HOUSE, situate hi tbe Staffordshire Street, in* Drayton aforesaid, iu the Occupation of Mr. Morris,' Butcher, containing two Parlours, Kitchen, Brewhouse, Cellars, and suitable Bed Rooujs and Attics," with Maltkiln, ' Slaughte House, Siuble, CoW- lJouse, Baril, 2 Gardens', large Fold- Yard, Pump of fine Water, and all other Appurtenances. N. B. Lots 5 nn( I 0 are bordered by the Rjver Tern a powerful and excellent Stream of Water, which makes them exceedingly desirable for their present Purposes. Lot 5, at a trivial Expense, may he eon verted into n'public Brewery, for which it is particu larly adapted - by its local Situation, there being no Establishment of the Kind nearer than Newcastle and Shrewsbury * and when the Birmingham and Liver, pool Canal ( w'fiich passes within a short Distance the Premises) " is' completed, it will greatly enhance the Value of ihe property, by ihe cheap Conveyance it will afford for the Carriage of Goods to distant Markets. Immediate Possession may be bad of Lots 5 and and of llie other Lots at Lady- Day next. Any further Information may be obtained from Mr BELL, New House, neaV' Newport, Shropshire ; M JOSEPH SILLITOB, FordlWtll, near Drayton ; THE AUCTIONEER, Drayton ; or at ihe Office of Mr. STAN LBY, Solicitor, Newport, Shropshire. VALUABLE OAK. and oihor growing TIMBER. BY LAKIN & SON, On Friday, the 19th Day of December, 1828, at Four o'Clock in the Afternoon, at the Lord Hill Inn Whitchurch, Salop, in the following Lots, and sub ject to the Conditions then to be produced : LOT I. ^ N the ROUND OAK FARM, situate at v WHIXALL, in the Parish of Prees, in the Holding of Mrs. Sandland, Widow, 36 large Oak Trees and 5 Cyphers, 4 Ash Trees and 3 Poplars. LOT II. Upon a Farm at LEA HALL, in the Parish of Whitchurch, in the Holding of Mr. George Moss 216 Oak Trees and 3 Cyphers. Lor III. On the said Farm at Lea Hall, 55 Ash Trees, 11 Poplars, and 7 Alders. LOT IV. Upon a Farm at PREES HEATH, near Whitchurch, iu the Holding of Mr. John Nunnerley 29 Oak Trees and 3 Cyphers, 17 Ash Trees and'l Cypher, 2 Sycamore Trees, and 1 Elm Ditto. LOT V. Upon a Farm at HEATH LANE, near Whitchurch, in the Holding of Mr. Samuel Moss, 38 Oak Trees, 21 Ash Ditto, 1 Asp Ditto, 12 Poplar Ditto 3 Sycamore Ditto, and 19 Alder Ditto. Lor VI. Upon a Farm called EDGELBY DAIRY HOUSE, near Heath Lane, in the Holding of Mr. William Botts, 54 Oak Trees and 1 Cypher, 8 Ash Trees and 1 Cvpher, 5 Poplar Trees, 1 Sycamore, and 19 Alder. N. B. The above capital Timber is all marked and numbered with a Scribe, is of large Dimensions and sound, and particularly useful for Ship building, ni nny oilier Purpose, and is well situated for Removal lo distant Markets, being nearly all adjoining Turn- pike Roads, and most Part of it is about oij. fi Mile distant from the ELlesmere and Chester Canal. The Tenants will shew each respective Lot in their Occupation; and any further Particulars may be had on Application to Mr*. BENJAMIN LA KIN, Attorney- at. Law; or at THE AUCTIONEERS' Office, both in Whit church, Shropshire. MONTGOMERYSHIRE. BY MR. R. DA VIES, At the Wvnnslay Arms Inn, in the Tows of linn fjllin, on Thursday, the I81I1 Day of December next, between the Hours of Four and Six in the Afternoon, subject to such Conditions as shall be then produced i ALL that capital MESSUAGE, FARM and LANDS, called RIIYSCOG, situate in the Parishes of I. lnnfyllin aforesaid and Mfifod, in Ihe said County of Montgomery, containing about ninety Acres, in lite Occupaiion of Mr. James Batten. The Buildings are in good Repair, and Ihe Land ( which lies in a due South Aspect) is capable ofgreat Improvement. There is likewise an extensive Sheep, walk adjoining the Farm, which is distant from I. lnn fylliil 1 Mile, and from Oswestry 11, to each of which Places there is an excellent Turnpike Hoad. The Timber ( which is in n very thriving Slate) to he taken at a Valuation. For further Particulars apply at Ihe Office of Mr BIBBV, Solicitor, L. lanfyllin. Li. ANFVI. MN, 2* 2D NOT. 1828. DENBIGHSHIRE FREEHOLD PROPERTY. BY MR. EDW. ROWLANDS, At the Coach and Horses Inn, in Llanrhaiadr yn much mint, in the County of Denbigh, on Wednes day, the 21st Day of January, 1829, between the Ildurs of Four and Six in tiie Afternoon, either together or in Lots, as below, as shall be agreed upon at the Time of Sale, subject to Conditions : LOT I. 4VALUABLE Farm, with conveni . ent Outbuildings, called TYNYFFOROD aud GARPDEN, situate in the Parish of . Llanrhaiadr- yn inochnant aforesaid, in the Occupaiion of Margaret Jones. LOT II. A very eligible FARM, wj,| h convenient Buildings, galled PE^- Y.- BRYN, situate in the aforesaid Parish, iu the Occupation of Richard Jones. N. B. The superior Slate Quarry al Llangynog and that much- admired Cataract called Pisiillrhaiadr are within a short Distance of this Property.— More Descriptive Particulars will appear iu a future Paper, Further Particulars may be bad ( if by Letter, Post paid) by' applying to Mr. EDWARD JONES, Laud. Surveyor and Valuer, Cyhwyd, near Corwen^ where Maps and Surveys of thg Property may be seen. PREPARING FOR PUBLICATION, BY S. LEWIS &, CO. 13, COLEMAN- STREET, LONDON, Ifgl'i OF EKGJLAMPf From a Personal Survey through every Parish in the Kingdom, COMMENCED UNDER THB IM M E DI A T B PATRONAGE OP HIS MOST GRACIOUS MAJESTY THE KING-. INHERE will bean ASSEMBLY at the I - B- UON ROOMS on the Uiili of December. PATRONESSES, Mrs. ANDREW CORBET, and The Hon. Mrs. KNYVETT LEIGHTON ; Assisted by J. A. LLOYD, Esq. and E. W. SMYTIIE OWEN, Esq. His Royal Highness the Dnke of Gloucester Her Royal Highness the Princess Augusta- His Royal Highness the Prince of Saxe Coburg Her Royal Highness ihe Duchess of Kent His Royal Highness the lale Duke of York His Royal Highness the Duke of Clarence His Royal Highness llie Duke of Sussex Ills Royal Highness the Duke of Cambridge His Grace the Lord Archlilsllop of Canterbury The Right Honourable Ihe Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain:. UU Grace the Lord Archbishop of York. His Grace Ihe Dnke of Norfolk His Grace the Duke of Baccleueh His Grace Ihe Duke of Richmond His Grace the Dnke of Grafton His Grace the Duke of Beaufort His Grace Ihe Duke of Bedford His Grace the Duke of Devonshire His Grace llie Duke of Argvll His Graee Ihe Duke of Marlborough His Grace the Duke of Rutland His Grace the Duke of Newcastle His Grace the Duke of Northumberland His Grace Ihe Duke of Wellington The Most Noble the Marquis ol Stafford The Most Noble the Marquis of Bath The Most Noble the Marquis of Downshire The Most Noble Ihe Marquis of Bute The Most Noble the Marquis of Wellesley The Most Noble the Marquis ofThnmonil The Most Noble Ihe Marquis of Ely The Most Noble the Marquis of Sligo Tbe Most Nolile Ihe Marquis of Northampton The Most Noble tbe Marquis of Camden The Most Noble the Marquis of Anglesey The Most Noble the Marquis of Cholinondeley The Most Noble tbe Marquis of Worcester The Right Hon. the Evirl of Shrewsbury The Right Hon. the Earl of Errol The Right Hon. ihe Earl of Morton The Right Hon. the F. arl of Oa. silis The Right Hon. ihe Earl of Pembroke The Right Hon. the Earl of Westmoreland The Right Hon. the Earl of Sirathmoi e The Right Hon. the Earl of Cork aud Orrery The Right Hon. the Earl of Stamford 8t, Warrington The Right Hon. the F. arl of Essex The Right Hon. Ihe Earl of Carlisle The Right Hon. the Earl of Aberdeen The Right Hon. the Earl of Plymouth The Right lion. Ihe F. arl of Oovenlry The Right Hon. Ihe Earl of Darnley The Right Hon. the Earl of Rosehery The Right Hon. Ihe Earl of Dartmouth The Right Hon. the Earl Filzwillium The Right Hon. the Earl Cowper The Right Hon. tbe Earl of Carrick The Right Hon. the Earl of Guildford The Right Hon. the Earl of Hardwicke The Right Hon. the Earl of Shannon The Right Hon. the Earl of Fife The Right Hon. ihe Earl of Arrail The Right Hon. the Earl of Coortoivn The Righl Hon. the Earl Spencer The Right Hon. the Earl of K'ags. lo. a The Righl Hon. the Earl of Seflon The Right Hon. the Earl of Mount. Cashel The Right Hon. the Earl of Enniskillen Tbe Riglit 11 on. the Karl or Carysfort The Right Horn, the Karl Tnlhnt Tbe Right Hon. Ihe Earl Grosvenor The Right Hon. the Earl of Wicklow The Right Hon. the Earl of Clare The Right Hon. the Earl of Malmesbtiry The Right Hun. Ilie Earl of Craven The Right Hon. the Earl of Baudot) The Right Hon. Ihe Earl O'Neil The Right lion, the Earl ofCaledon The Right Hon. the Earl of Limerick The Right Hon. ihe Earl of Powis The Right Hon the Earl of Gosford Tbe Righl Hon. the Earl of Noriiuiiiton The Right Hon. Ihe Earl of Charleville The Right Hon. Ihe Earl Grey The Riglit Hon. the Earl of Lonsdale The Righl Hon. the Earl of Harrowhy The Right Hon. the Earl of Harewood The Right Hon. the Earl of Verulam The Righl Hon. the Earl of Falmouth The Right Hon. the Ball of Dudley Tile Right Hon. Ihe Earl of Biinlry The Right Hon. the Earl of Ossory The Right Hon. the Earl of Belfast The Righl Hon, the Earl of Rective The Right Hon. the Earl of Mnuiiieharles The Righl Hon. the Earl of Kilaiorey The Right Hon. the Countess of Shrewsbury The Right Hon. the Countess of Newbuigb The Right Hon . the Countess of Tankerville The Right Hon. Lord Viscount Kiugslaud The Right Hon. land Viscount Sydney The Righl Hon. Lord Viscount Melville The Right lloj.. Lord Viscount Anson The Right Hon. Lord Viscount Granville The Right Hon. Lord Viscount Beresford The Righl Hon. Lord Viscount Gort Tbe Righl Hon. Lord Viscount Tamworlh The Right Hon. Lurd Viscount Kilcoursie The Right Hon. Lord Viscount Cole The Righl Hon. Lord Viscount Stopford The Right Hon. Lord Viscount Beerbaven The Right Hon. Lord Viscount Newry The Right lion. Lord Viscount Kingsborongh The Right Hon. Lord Viscount Kirkwall The Riglit Hon. Lord Viscount Nevile ' I'M* Right Hun. and Right Rev. Lord Bishop of ." London The Right Rev. Lord Bishop of Durham The Right Rev. Lord Bishop of Hereford The Right Rev. Lord Bishop of Lincoln The Right Rev. Lord Bishop of Salisbury The Righl Rev. Lord Bishop of Ely The Hon. and Right Rev. Lord Bishop of Lichfield nnd Coventry The Right Rev. Lord Bishop of Chichester The Riglit Rev. Lord Bishop of Oxford The Right Rev. Lord Bishop of l. lnndaff The Right Rev. Lord Bishop of Chester The Right Rev. Lord Bishop of Elpllill The Right lion. Lord Kinsale The Right Hon. Lord Le Despencer The Right Hon. Lord De Clifford The Righl Hon. Lord Audley The Right Hon. Lord Sooierville The Right Hon. Lord Carliery The Riglit Hon. Lord Monson The Right Hon. Lord Farnham The Right Hon. Lord Lisle The Righl Hon. Lord Sondes The Righl Hon. Lord Searsdale The Right Hon. Lord Rivers The Right ILiii. Lord Bigot The Righl Hon. Lord Southampton The Right Hon. Lord Riversdale The Righl Hon. Lord Rodney The It I k hi Hon. Lord Greuville The Righl Hon. Lord Bayning The Right Hon. Lord Bolton The Riu- ht Hon. Lord Ashtown The Right lion. Lord Arden The Right Hon. Lord Crewe The Right Hon Lord Colchester The Right Hon. Lord Slowell The Righl Hon. Lord Delamere The Right Hon. Lord Foresler The Right Hon. Lord Bexley The Right Hon. Lord Feversham The Right Hon. Lord Durham The Right Hon. Lord Downes The Right Hon. Lord Oshorue The Righl Hon. Lord Arlh. nr Ifill The Right lion. Lord Oxmanlown The Right Hon. Lord George Bere « foril The Right Hon. Lady Rolle The Righl Hon. Lady Rodney NEWTOWN. F. LEPHANT and CASTI. E INN H ANNUAL HUNT DINNER will take Place on FRIDAY, Ihe 5th Day of December next, when Ihe Attendance of the Friends of the Presidents, unit those of the House, are requested.— Dinner ou the Table at Three o'Clock precisely. N. B. A Bng. Fox wiil be turned out near the Town at Ten o'clock. V. TILSLEY, F.. q. > D F. BRANDSTROM, Esq. S Pbfsidekt » - NEWTOWK, Nor. 24, 1828. [ PRICE SEVEN PENCE. Castle House, Oswestry. RS. F. nW A R OS beSR to inform Iter Friends and the Public generally, that she. intends, immediately after the Christina's Vacation, with the Assistance of her Daughters, to- open t\ SCHOOL, for the Reception of a limited Number of t oung Ladies, whom she purposes instructing ill every Branch of Female Education and Accomplish- ments. Parents confiding their Children In the Care of Mrs. F. mvABDs mttv depend that their Education anil Morals will be strictly attended lo. N'. B. Cards of the Terms mav be hud on Applies, lion to Mrs. F. IIWARDS, Castle House. This Dag is Published, BY W. & J. ED DO WES, PHINTFRS OF THIS PAPER, ( And may be had of ihe Booksellers in the County, and of the Newsmen who distribute the Salopian Journal,) PRICE TWO SHILLINGS,, THIS S2IIIEDIP3LEl'Jia23o Cheshire, and North Wales ALMANACK, AND SfrreUJstnirp Entcltigcnccr, FOR THE YEAR 1829 PRINTED IN RED AND BLACK; CONTAINING A general List nf Mail and other Coaches, Water Conveyances, and Carriers, to and froiu Shrewsbury, the neighbouring Towns, and North Wales; THE FAIRS In Shropshire, Cheshire, Staffordshire, Herefordshire, Worcestershire, Montgomery shire, Merionethshire, Radnorshire, Denbighshire, and Flintshire ; The Ironmasters' Quarterly Meetings ; The Bankers in Shropshire and Montgomeryshire; a Table of St Tabls? of Terms, & e. W. and J. EDDOWBS have also on Sale TUB ROVAI. ENGAGEMENT POCKET ATLAS, SOUVENIR ( or Pocket Tablet), Pot. TTE REPOSITORY, ROYAI. REPOSI- TORY, SOVEREIGN, REGENT, Stc. in a Variety of Cases COURT KALENDARS ; Marshall's and Poole's GILT- EDGED POCKET- BOOKS, IS GREAT VARIETY; I. ADIPS' and GENTLEMEN'S POCKET- BOOKS of all Kinds; TIME'S TELESCOPE; WHITE'S EPHBMERIS- and an extensive Assortment of Moore's, Partridge's', Clerical, Gilbert's Clergyman's, and everv Almanack published by the Company of Stationers. I'. tKRWlsp, The following SPLENDID ANNUALS for 1829 : THE FORGET ME NOT, LITERARY SOUVEMI3, FRIENDSHIP'S OFFEaiNG, ABIULBT. BIJOU, KEEPSAKE, ANNIVERSARY, JUVENILE FORGET ME NOT. CHRISTMAS BOH. DR. BUTLER'S GEOGRAPHY & ATLASES. This Day, is published, A NEW EDITION, I \' OE. 8vo. 9s. BOARD*. A. SKETCH of MODERN and AN- CIENT GROWUPllV, for tbe Use of Schools. By SAMUEL BUT LEU, D. D. F. R. S. & c. Arch, deacon of Derby, & c. lu the present Edilioft of Ibis liitle Work the Author has mode some very important Additions, chit- fly m the modern Part of it. By the same Author, ATLAS of MODERN GEOGRAPHY, consisting f 22 Coloured Maps, from a New Set of Plaies, cor- rected to 1828 Pis. Half- bound. ATLAS of ANC1BW GEOGRAPHY, consisting of 21 Colot> red Maps, with a complete accentuute< l Index. 12s. GENERAL ATLAS of ANCIENT nnd MODERN GEOGRAPHY. 43 Coloured Maps, aud two lo. dexes. t'l. 4s. Half- bonnd. j(,* The Indexes contain the Latitude and I. ougi inde of all the Places-, and- in that of the Ancient Atlas, the Quantities are marked. OUTLINE GEOGRAPHICAL COPY- ROOKS, m 4to ; intended as Practical Exeicises on Dr. Builer,! i Atlases. 4s. each, sewed, or 7s fid. together. OUTLINE MAPS, of ANCIENT GEOGRAPHY, selected by Dr. Buller from D'Anville's Ancient Alias. Folio, 10s. 6d. A PRAXIS ou ihe LATIN PREPOSITIONS, being an Attempt to illustrate their Origin, Significa- tion, and Government ; for the Use of Schools. 2< l Edition in 8vo. Price ( is. frt. Boards, or 7s. ( » d. Bound. Printed for Longman, Rees, Ormey Brown, ami Green, London. The Lords Commissioners of Ilis Majesty's Treasury.— His Majesty's Honourable Board of Ordnance. His Majesty's War Office. — His Majesty's Stationery Office. The Honourable ihe Commissioners of His Majesty's Woods, Forests., and Land Revenue. & tc. & c. &. c. ^ B^ HE immense Labour and Expense attending a Survey of the whole Kingdom have JL prevented any Individual from attempting a Work of shell Magnitude, since the Publication, i » 1690, of the < L INPEJT VIM, ARTS" of the indefatigable John Adams, Esq. from which numerous Topographical Diction- aries have, ina Measure, been compiled \ but the Historical Mailer they contain having been collected from County Histories, and oibrr Works more or less incorrect, and of which the greater Number was published very long since, these Dictionaries give but a very inaccurate Representation of ihe present State of the Kingdom The Projeciors, therefore, of the present Work, bave commenced, aud are npw actively making a Survey through every City, Town, and Parish ; and as the principal Residents will be personally waited upon wilh jhe View of procuring from them such local Information as will contribute to the Accomplishment of this National Under- taking, ihe Favour of their Assistance and Patronage is most respectfully solicited. The WORK will be publUbpd in Four Volumes Quario — Price 30s each Volume, in Boards; and on large Paper, 40s. each Volume ( to. be paid for on, delivery of the ichote Work); ami comprise % iu Alphabetical Order, tbe several CITIES, TOWNS, BOROUGHS, PARISHES, TOWNSHIPS, CHAPBI. RIBS, HAMLETS, and TyTHiNcs in tbe Kingdom, wilh the COUNTY and DIVISION of the COUNTY in which they are situated, and describe their Distance and Bearing from their respective POST- TOWNS— Tbe Patrons of Livings— Ecclesiastical Divisions- Peculiar Jurisdictions, and olber Matters relating to tbe Church Establishment— The Population of each Place, from tbe Returns made to Parliament for the Year 1321— The preseni State of the Trade and Manufacture of each Town, and every Particular relative lo its GOVERNMENT— PR, IVI. LBGES — CORPORATION— CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS PUBLIC SCHOOLS—- ANTIQUITIES— MARKETS — FAIRS— ASSIZES — PETTY SESSIONS and MIS- CELLANEOUS OBJECTS; thus forming A CONCISE AN?) ACCURATE DELINEATION op. THE KINGDOM. A Skeleton Map of England, ( in which the principal Roads, Navigable Rivers, Canals, aud Post Towns, will be distinctly shown,) Maps of tbe several Counties, of a Quarto sise, and the Arms of every Corporate Tow n, will be given ; aud, in Order to preserve Uniformity in the Impression, the Maps will he engraved upc. n Steel Plates. 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In Consequence of ihe very extensive Patronage already obtained in tbe Prosecution of this Wo$ k, and in, Order that Subscribers may bave the full Beuelit of the- Encouragement so liberally afforded, the Ediths pledg themselves not to dispose of a. ny Copies, through the Trade, after Publication, at a less. Price than 50s. each Volume, being an Advance of £ 4 upon the whole Work. No more large Paper Copies. wi| l be printed than those subscribed for. *#* Communications are received for Mr. WRIGHT, the Agent for the County of Salop, at the Office of the SALOPIAN JOURNAL. ON SALE, SEVE RA L Hundred Thousands of stion< r QUICK or THORNS, 2to5 Years, transplanted, at Ills. fid. 12s. 6d. 15s. and 2 « s. per ItKiO, and man} Millions of FOREST TREES of all Sixes, and even Article iu the Nursery Line at proportionality low Prices ; also Corse and Broom Seeds, Black Thorn, H. azel, Tree Box., and other Trees used for Cover. Orders will huVe every ^ Itenlioy, and where exten- sive, will be deticered free at Edslyscon and Maesbury Wharfs. STRONG STANDARD APPLE TREES for Or chards, 75s. per 100. V. AND J. DICKSON, Nurserymen, Chester. \ LL Felons to whom WILLIAM BRISCOE, of CAYNTON HOUSE, near Newport, and of WAPPBNSALL, near Wellington, in tbe County of Salop, Esquire, stood indebted at jhp Time of his Decease ( and who lately carried on Business al Tih- bertou Paper. Mill Cay it ton Oil M ill), are requested to send au Account of their respective Demands 10 THOMAS JUCKES COLLIER, of Newport, Esquire; to THOMAS BO ULT BEE, of Chelwyud End, near Newport, Esquire ( the Executors named in his Will) ; or to my Office in Newport aforesaid, in Order that the same may be examined and discharged : and all Persons in denied to the Rstaie. of . the said WILLIAM BRISCOE, are desired forthwith to pay their respective Debts to ihe said Executors. R. FISHER, Solicitor to the Executors. NEWPORT, IOTU NOV. 1828. Lately was published9 Price 4.?. SOME ACCOUNT OF THE ANTIQUITIES IN THB COUNTY OF SAI. OP, ILLUSTRATED WITH PLATES. ( Cj* A few Copies 011 > » rffe Paper, with Proof luipressiuns of the Plates, Price Cs. Shrewsbury : Printed bv VV. and J. EDDOWES and may be had of the Booksellers in Whitchurch Weui, Drayton, 4tc & c. Also, an extensive Assortment of new French and English Lithographic and oilier Prints, adapted for the Portfolio, Album, and Scrap Book. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. II^ HEREAS RICHARD PEMP. REY * " ofSuAnE- OiK, in Ihe Parish of PJIesuiere, in the County of Salop, IVmer, h » iU, by Indenture bearing Dale tbe 18th Uav of ibis present Month of November, assigned overall his Eslaie and Effects unto JOHN WII. IIAMS, of Weigh Fmnklou, iu the Parish of Wbitliiijftou, in. ihe said County, aud WiM. IAM DAVIKS, of WhiUi. ujftou aforesaid, Farmers for ihe eijunl Belief}! of such of his Creditors as shall execute the said Assignment on or before the Ifiih Day of December next: NOTICE is therefore hereby If'veil, that tile said Indenture is deposited in on Office fur the Inspection aud Execution of those Creditors who may choose to avail themselves of the Benefit thereof; and that such of the Creditors who shall neglect or refuse to execute Ihe same, on or he fore the said 16th Day of December, will lie excluded from all Benefit and Advantage arising therefrom. PETER Pit ITCH A RD, Solicitor to the Assignees. EM. ESMERK, 19TH NO?: 1828. A REAL BLESSING TO MOTHERS. ^ SPHERE is not, perhaps, in the whole IVJaleria Medica any one Remedy which so effectually relieves Ihe Pain of a suffering Patient ns ihe AMERICAN SOOTHING SYRUP. Who can walch Ihe writhing ToK'Hres into which a lovely Infant is often Cuutt| lsed during il] e Period of Dentition with- out feeling Sympathy for ils Sufferings ? Aud who would hesitate 1.0 procure a Remedy, when a Remedy can lie found, which is obvious hy Ihe effectual Relief afforded 111 so inuirv distressing- t uses which ar. e daily eoinilig to III,, Notice of Mis. JOHNSON ? Therefore, Mothers ought urver to be without Ihe American Soothing Sirup in ttie Nursery for it a Child awakes iu the Niglii willi Pain, hv only rubbing the Gums Willi a few Drops of the Syrup., it will immediately open the Pores, lifnl ihe Gums, and thereby prevent Fevers and Convulsions: for should it. coiue iu Com- petition wilh any oilier Disorder, il often destrois the Vlollier's brightest hopes. To lie had, Wholesale mid Retail, of Johnson and Co. 28, Yoik Place, City- Road, l. oudoii; and, by their Appointment,, of all principal Vli dieine Venders iu Town aud Country, at 2s. yd. per Bottle. N. B None are Genuine, n. nless signed on the Stamp with Mrs. Johnson's own llaud- wriliug, as there are several spurious Imilulions, FOR BILIOUS COMPLAINTS, INDIGESTION, AND. HABITUAL COSTIVENKSS, DR. J EBB'S STOMACHIC APERIENT PILLS, Prepared from a Prescription of the lute Sip Richard Jebb, M. />. AND PHYSICIAN EXTRAORDINARY TO THE KINC. COLDS, COUGHS, ASTHMAS, & C, |> UTLER'S PECTORAL ELIXIR. ii - 8 — Experience during 11 very long Period has iiicontesliMy proved Ihe superior Efficacy of ibis Medicine HI all Cases of Coi. ns, COUGHS, and Asm JFATIC AFFECTIONS. By pro ling genile Expeciorn. lion, 11 very shorlly relieves ' he Patient of a slight or recent Cold, and a few Doses are generally sufficient lo remove those which Neglect has rendered more confiitoed and obstinate, and which are accompanied Willi Cough, Spitting of Blood, nnd oilier serious Symptoms. Ils peculiar balsamic Powers lend lo Ileal Soreue. s, and allay the Irritation of the Longs [ 11 Cases of Cough.; and in Asthmatic Affections it iissists and gives freedom lo tbe Breath. Sold in Bottles at Is. l| d. and 2s. 9( 1. hv ihe principul Medicine \ enders in the Kingdom. Of may lie bad, BUTLER's BALSAMIC LOZENOES, used in recent C'OUCHS, HOARSENESS, & c. and for rendering the Voice Clear and Flexible, and protecting iis Organs from the Effects of Exertion, lu Boxesai Is. I Ad " and 2s. 9d. N. B. Ask for BUTLER'S PBCTOBAL ELIXIR. fT* HESE very justly celebrated PILLS - M- have experienced, through private Recoup mendalion and Use, during a very long Period, ihe, flallering Commendation of Families of the first Dis- tinction, as a Medicine superior to all others in remov- ing Complaints of the Slomach, arising from Bile, Indigestion, Flatulency, and Habitual Cosliveness.— Tbe beneficial Effects produced iu all Cases, for which ihey are here recommended^ rpiider them worthy the Notice of the P- ublic and- Travellers in particular, ta whose Attention they are strongly pointed out as the most portable, safe, and mild Aperieut Medicine that can possibly be made Use of. These Pills are extremely well calculated for those Habits of Body that are subject to be Costive, as t\ continued Use of tbein does not injure hut iuvigoraiem, the Constitution, and will he found to possess those Qualities which will remove a long Series of Disease*, resulting from a confined Slate of the Bowels* strengthen Digestion, create Appetite, and be of distinguished Excellence in removing Giddiness, Head- aches, & c. &, c occasioned by the Bile iu the Stomach, or the ill Effects arising from impure or. tou great a Quantity of Wine, Spirits, or Malt Liquor. Perspjis of the most delicate Constitution may take them wilh Safet y in all Seasons of the Year; and iii all Cases of Obstruction, arising from Cold or other Causes, where an opening. Medicine is wanted, they will be found the hest cordial Stimulant in Use. Prepared and sold, Wholesale and Retail, in Boxes at Is. l* d. k2s. 9< l. and 4s. 6tl. each, by the sole Pro- prietor, W. R1DGW/ VY, Druggist, Market Drayion^ Salop. To prevent Counterfeits, each Bill of Direction will be signed w ith his Name in Writing. Sold Retail by Humphrey*, Shrewsbury ; Rmdbury, Beeston, Wellington; Silvester, Newport; Evanson. Hassal!, Whitchurch ; Franklin, Wem ; Painter, Wrex* ham; Baugh, Ellesmere; Roberts, Oswestry; Ed- monds, Shiffnal ; Griffiths, Bishop's Castle ; Jones, Welshpool; Williams, Carnarvon; Jones, Ab& ry » i- wilh ; Rathbone, Bangor; aud by Medicine Venders iu every Town in the United kingdom. Sold Wholesale and Retail by Edwards, 67, St. Paul's Church- yard ; Barclay and Sous, Fleet- Market ; and Butlers and Co. Cheapside, London, 73, Prince's. Street. Edinburgh, and 54, Sack ville Street, ftu •' in, JOHN LEEMIMG'S GENUINE HORSE MEDICINES, Prepared ./ row the original Recipes (" late in the Possession of George Boil, of Nottingham), by Barclay a> id Son. i, the st> le Proprietors. J EEMING'S ESSENCE for Lame- ness iu Horses ; a certain Cure for old Strains op Swellings, Slips and Strains of the Shoulder, Stifle, Hough, Wbirlbone, I& uee, Fetlock, Pastern, iind Coffi-. j Joints, Strains of the Back Sinews, &_ c. Price * 2s. 6d. per Bottle. LEEMING'a MIXTURE, for Ch., lies, Gripes, Belly- ache, Fevers, Coughs, Colds, Strangles, Yello » y Stagaers, & c. Price 4 « . per Bottle. LEEMlNG's SPAVIN LINIMENT for Spavins, Spleats, arid Strains in the Back Sinews, Price 2s. 6d. per Pot. LEEMING's SHOULDER MIXTURE, for < W Shoulders and Swellings, Qalls of the Collar or Saddle, & c. Price Is. per Bottle. LEEMING's BALSAM, for all fresh or old Wound* in Horses, Price Is per Bottle OBSERVE.— None of these Medicines can beQenuinp, unless the Names, of U BARCLAY and So. vs, Fleet. Market, London,' 1 a'e affixed ; they having purchaser} the original Recipes from the Execuiors of GEORQB BOTT, OI Nottingham. Sold also by W. and J. Enr- ovyES, Broxton, Onions and Hulheri, * Shrew$ bu- i; y ; Burley, Market Drayton; Houlstou and S » ' it| i, Wellington ; Smith, Iroubridjje and Wenlock ; Gitton, Bridguofjn ; Roberts, Powell^ J. and R. Griffith*, O. Joiie< « , and Robins, Welsh- pool; Price, Edwards, Mrs. Edwards. Roberts, S- uiaiL and Weayer, Oswestry; Eduionds, Shitt'ual i Silves- ter, Newport; Hassa. 11, Whitchurch ; Griffiths, BisbopNj Castle; Griffiths, Ludlow ; Baugh, Ellesmere ; Evau- son, Whitchurch ; Franklin, and Onslow , Wem. Where also mat/ be had, BARCLAYS ASTHMATIC CANDY. 11 AYMAN's M A R EDA NT's DROPS. DREDGED HEAL- ALL. BLAINE1* POWDERS aud BALLS for DISTEM- PER in DOGS, fccc. ' jpH E K E is no Medicinal Preparation $ of the present Day, & o valuable as CHURCH's COUGH DROPS, which removes recent Col. ls, ob- stinate Coughs, and tbe common Disorders of t!\ f » Breast and Lungs. In Asthmatic Affection its Eflrcacr is held in high Estimation, eyen by Professional Gentlemen, who do not hesitate to recommend it. It never disagree^ with the Stomach, and common Cold$ invariably yield to its beneficial Effects in a few Hours.. CHURCH'S PECTORA. L PILLS., When, witktUe Cough or Cold, there is great uneasiness and shortness of Breath, attended with Wheezing, the Pectoral P- itU should be immediately taken, as ihey will speedily produce Relief. The Drops 2s. Od. and 4*. 6d. per Bottle; the Pill? Is. l| d and 2s. 9d. per Box. The Genuine. Medicine will have engrnved on the Stamp " F. VAN EDWARDS, 67, St. Pauls;" aud may BE had of W. and J. EDDOWES, SHREXYSBURYJ aud* alj respectable Medicine Venders, SALOPIAN JOUIMAL, AMP COURIER OF WALK BRUNSWICK CLUBS. We make tbe following- eloquent extract from the Monthly Magazine on the subject of the Brunswick Clubs. The distinguished writer, we think, cannot he mistaken 5 but as he Writes anonymously, we shall nut lift hi « veil " In the spirit of Burke's immortal language— bad men conspire, good men should combine' • < ve rejoice at the establishment of Brunswick Club?. ] No measure could have been more essential, for treason was already stalking through the land ; and no measure could have been more suitable to the manliness of the British mind, tlie'- dignity of the cause, or the secure triumph of reason, true policy, and the uncomipted Constitution. We saw an insolent and ignorant gang of bigots assembling daily in open scorn of law, uttering sentiments unheard of since the reign of'- the French revolution; and while their characters were as base, ard their intentions as atrocious, as any that marked the blackest time of subversion, ' held, up, On the one hand, as the public organs of the Irish nation, and, on the other, con- fidentially received and cherished by the public instruments of the ministry. " Whether the Irish Government was capable of feeling the degradation of this pusillanimous and short- sighted policy, or adopted it in the mean and hypocritical deference to rabble clamour, which characterizes the tenth- rate minions of office— whether the familiar reception of individuals whom no Irish geutleman would permit to cross his threshold, were the natural impulse of manners Teared in early licence, and giving proof of their origin by a career, whose description must be left to its associates and its victims— the fact was un- questionable : the reception, the gay confidence, the familiar conviviality were there to the astonishment and alarm of every man capable of knowing right from wrong, or of estimating the irrecoverable depth into which public functionaries could be flung by the con- tamination of such names. " But, whatever were the results to those who thus stooped their necks under the heel of the popish asso- ciation, its results to the country have been of the most signal value. When the intellect, the property,, the principle, and the religion of Ireland— all inclu- ied- in the single word PROTESTANTISM— found that they were cut off from their natural connexion with the source of British polity in Ireland, fticy remembered the strength that was in their own manliness, union, and knowledge. Those were strong holds, that neither the temporising of an unpurposed cabinet, the tergi- versation of lawyers wfeo had betrayed every side in succession, nor the loose co- xcombry of a legislator of spurs and feathers, could shake. In the language of a British peer, whose words will pass into a proverb, and the proverb into the principle of safety to the empire, they felt that i they mu^' r not put their trust in princes, nor in prelates—- in the depositories of power, nor even in the chosen guardians'of religion ;* they roust, look to the defence of the national interests by ihe national vigour, and where every man had to Ib> e by inactivity, by giddy confidence in th « corrupt, or guilty fear of the overbearing, privileges without which life would not be worth preserving for an hour — they must call round them their fellow- possessors of freedom, and spe how far their muster might fight the battle of the Christian faith and of the constitution of their country. " It was on those principles, the noblest that can stir the heart of man, that the Brunswick Clubs were founded ; and who shall say that it was not full time? The cry of civil war had gone through the land. It was trumpeted from the lips of every orator of the popish association. ' We are masters of the whole force of Ireland,' says one—< we have a!! its military passes in our hands, all its provisions, all its munitions of war, all its people.' ' We have America, aft our back,** says another; ' and, as we once invaded America to keep up the despotism of the British government, so shall America- invade us to put it down.' ( Let England tremble,' says a leader; < let. England, brutish as she is bloody— tremble— let the • country of our tyrants be reduced to her original in- significance, and feel that the chains of Irishmen may be converted into their sword's.' * Look to the new aspect of Europe,'" says another authority among those infuriated fools: 4 with France, Austria, and Spain, popish; with the steam- vessel bringing invasion to a matter of calculation, and the English shores within sudden reach of every power of indignant Europe; ; ire there no hopes for the renewed energies of Irish independence? Again, look to Ireland!-— was there ever a country. so organized ? I tell the government that the whole land is bound by a great secret con- federation— that every county-, every town, every village, has its leaders, and its troops— that the men of Ireland are regimented, armed, disciplined, a. nd eager for the first summons/ " The government listened to this. The language was repeated in a thousand forms ; they listened still. I he metaphoric treason, was soon embodied into more vigorous figure. Armies of popish ruffians by the twenty thousand, breathing blood aud rebellion, accoutred in the established uniform of Irish insur- rection, and manoeuvring with the discipline of regular troops, .- darted up at the summons, marched in the face of day through the country, with the menaces and the power of conqucrors, and gave the most insolent ahd ostentatious defiance to the law. Will it. $> 0 believed that the government stis! looked on ? But a memorable example soon showed what the nation can do, and ^ r. ust. do, for themselves, if they will be saved. A. tool of the popish association, one of the most vulgar and base of its brawlers, big with the triumph of riot, and secure in the supineness of authority, Mas sent— will the words be capable of credence?—' To rouse the north." He proceeded in jthe true spirit of his mission, and moved forward, at { the head of every disturber whom he could gather, U> the amount, by his own statement, of from fifty to a hundred thousand men. He did rouse the north. Kut it was to a sense of their duty, as honest'and brave men, who found that they must rely on no strength but that which God and the constitution have given to every man " to defend himself. The r. oith were roused in arms— they knew the absurdity of waiting to claim tardy justice ; and, on the borders . of their province, . the men whose fathers had bought the revolution of li> S8 with their blood, stood, mus- xjuet in l. and, to repel marauding aud murder, under whatever pretext their cottages were to be sacked, and their lives sacrificed. " Then the secret of this boasted heroism was found out; the Catholic army of the faith shrank at • onceT— the brawler at their head trusted for his safety to his heels— the popish parliament suddenly dis- covered that the time of g lory was not fully ripe, and discountenanced the warrior; and— last and most unexpected result— the dormant, cabinet opened iiK eyes, discovered that mobs of legislators and j'poMies, gathered by the hundred thousand, from the raggedness, ferocity, and superstition of the Irish hovel, were not the safest settlers of the slate, and ^ ic'u:; lly ordered the seizure of the defeated chieftain. " Yet even thio lagging deference to common sense was due to the . English cabinet. The Irish were at the moment involved i. ii an interchange of gracious civilities jv'tfh the hero, . which' might have compen- sated a lc. s ser. siti. ve spirit for the withering of his laurels. The young secretary, a. nobleman whom we lament to . see plunged from his accomplished pursuits j into the mire of provincial office, was occupying his ' j;; ln- hed paragraphs in elucidating the law to the law- breaker; and the old viceroy was smilingly con- ducting this model of native graces into the presence of his daughters and his wife, when the misgive . of the privy council came, like a thunderclap, to break up the whole commerce . of republican and royalist ( Courtesies. " But one act of resolution, wrung from the reluct- ant. bosom of Ihe cabinet, was . enough for one season; and the blacker offenders are suffered still to insult the feelings of the country. The popi> h . afliameijt js still furious, and labouring in if « vocation of spread- ing fury through the laiVd; and tbe whole tribe of ilie scribblers and fpouters are hourly pouring out hbe. ls op individual character, treasons against the Connexion pi' the countries, and open incentives to rebellion, that, in less lender times, would have sum- moned indignant justice to raze the walls, burn the journals, and scp. d orators, warriors, and scribblers to IVew Sout h Wales for the term of their forfeited lives. " I nder those circimvsstances of insolence in the lessors and supineness in the defenders of the con- stitution, the Protestant community has been com- pelled to take its defence into its own hands to assem- ble, and show its numbers—- to speak, and declare its principle— and, by its firmness and vigour, show that it is not to be extinguished at. the mercy of either indolence or bigotry. England, in conformity to her character, took the lead, and the British Bnrnsw- dc Clubs already comprehend a vast multitude of the most honourable, informed, and patriotic men of the empire. " Well and wisely hare they takeri'their* defence into their own hands, waiting for no ministerial subtlety, or proud contempt of religious and moral principle, to make its bargain of their privileges with the" cunning or the cupidity of Popish rebellion. Let their respect for the ability of the British Cabinet be what it may, woe be to those who leave themselves to be trafficked for in a Concordat., or bandied from Pope to Populace by a Cabinet Vote. Let the Protestants of the Empire raise their voice, and if the depositaries of power be treacherous, they will be forced to learn wisdom from fear; if they are honest, they will welcome this irresistible auxiliary. But, in all events, let the Protestants raise their voice, and their triumph is secure." LON L> O N _ S A TU K D A Y. The reported fall of ' Silistria is acknowledged in the Hamburgh Papers to be incorrect. The Rifssians are stated to be occupied in fortifying Bazardjik as a central point between Silistria and Varna. The Grand Vizier has taken up a position between Choumla and Pravadi, and is supposed to be in immediate contact with Hussein Pacha. Of Omer Vrione no fresh intelligence is given; the last accounts left him on the south of the river Kamtschik. The main Russian army is believed to have retired upon Bazardjik. The Russian Admiral stationed in the Mediterranean has announced in a circular, dated Malta, Oct. 13, that the Dardanelles and Constantinople are in a state of blockade. A Russiau squadron sailed for Malta on the 21 « t ult. Mr. Cresswell, the cashier of the navy, in whose department Perryman, the defaulter, was ehief clerk, lias been officially called upon to make good the deficiencies, amounting to £' 20,000.— Morning Paper. LUDICROUS SCENE. Two men were lately apprehended, charged with the brutal treatment and robbery of Mr Greenhill, at East Ham, Essex, and committed to the gaol of that county, by the names of Michael Cashom and John Prien, both Irishmen. They had been in the employ of Mr. GrCeniiill, but absconded after the robbery, and were taken at Bristol. They are young men, and in their prison dress have not that ferocious appearance which might have been expected from the mur- derous attack they are supposed to have made upon their master. Avery ludicrous scene followed the introduction of these men at the gaol. They were, as is customary, taken to a bath, provided for the purpose of maintaining that cleanliness which is so observable. in every part of the prison ; Cashom first went through the ceremony without objection, and was conducted to a yard in the gaol uniform, ut: perceived by Brien, who was then required to undergo the like wholesome discipline ; but on his entering the place, and observing a copper boiling with water, and an oven in the process of heating, at the same time casting his eyes upon the clothes of his late companion, which contained neither flesh nor bones, his ignorant mind became alarmed, and neither promises nor threats could induce him to enter the bath. He was frantic with the idea that he was either to be boiled or roasted alive, which he concluded had been the fate of Cashom. Afler a struggle, in which the prisoner struck one of the assistants upon- the face and drfew blood, he called loudly for' a priest, and begged to have time to pray ; for nearly half an hour he was allowed to remain on his knees, apparently in devout prayer, but at, the conclusion, he was not convinced of his safet y from either water or fire, and in order to get him into the bath, his clothes were torn from him piece- meal, and at last he was thrown in neck and heels; having, however, enjoyed the luxury for a short time, he was as unwilling to be again clothed, and in the necessary force obliged to be used, he received some bruises. He afterwards expressed his contrition for the trouble he had given, but still declares that, it arose from his fears that his partner had been either boiled in the copper or destroyed in the oven. Yesterday, two stage coaches laden with sovereigns, and silver of a new die, left town under stn escort of military for Manchester and Liverpool; and other coach Loads are stated to have been forwarded to Leeds, Birmingham, Sheffield, and other manufactur- ing districts. BONDED WHEAT.—" The quantity of this grain ( says the Farmer's Journal, J now liberated at Is. duty, may be stated at nearly 500,000 quarters: of which about 200,000 quarters have arrived within the last eight weeks, such has been the activity of the speculators, in consequence of the certain prospect of getting it 011 our market on the lowest duty. We know those who held foreign Wheat bought at 30s. to 34s. and who might have released it at, 70s. and acquired fortunes at the rate of 100 per cent, upon the capital they employed. But they spurned the chance of doing so-—- so confident were they of their power to drive the average up the few other shillings, which would enable them to release their corn at the lowest duty, that, they held back every grain in their possession. The result shews their confidence to have been just."— The writer goes on to argue, that at the present rate of duty the foreign importer can undersell the British farmer, and yet realize a hand- some profit. e Salopian: journal. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1828. M U1R1F. I). On tlic ISili ult al Bridekirk, Cmnberltmd, John, second son of John Marshall, Esq. M I', for tlie county of York, lo Mary, eldest daughter of Joseph Dyke's Ballutilyue Dykes, Esq. of Doveuby Hall, Cumberland. On the2mh Nov. at St. Mary Wootnfllll, London, Mr. ! VI Burrows, third sou of the Rev. S. Burrows, ot Pi'jhlev. io this county, 10 Margaret, eldest daughter of Mr. George Figg, of Mansion House- street, London. DIF. D. On the 22d ult. at bis house, Stockwell Common, Francis Waring. EM|. iu the 83d Year of his age. Ou Thursday last, aged 4 years, Eliza, only daughter of Mr. George Whitney. On ihe 15th ult. in his 3oih year, Mr. William Tipton, of Ludlow. Oil Wednesday last, in ftis 78tli year, Mr. Richard Hollioak, of Hinlon, in Ibis county — lie was the fa her of 13 children, aud grandfather of upwards of Ml Ou ihe 28d ult. aged 70, Mrs. Trevor, of Cotton Hill, iu lliis town. On the lfth ult. at Went, awfully sudden, in the 70th year of her age, Mrs Boughey, relict of the late Mr. Bonghey, of Sandfnrd, in ibis county, sincerely regretted llv her family, friends, aud lieigli. hours. Last week, at Ronghton, near Bridgnorth, in the 7nth year of her age, Mrs. Hayward, formerly of Monk Hoplotl, ill ibis county : a woman li'lucb respected. A few days ago, al Bridgnorth, in her 71st year, Mrs Goodwill, widow of Ibe late Mr. Edward Good, win, tarpaulin- maker, of that town. Al Ceylon, on the 2!> ih of May, aged 38, Henry Matthews, Esq. Puisne Judge of the Supreme Court of Judicature iu that Island, author of tbe well- known 4 Diary of au Invalid " He was ibe fifth son of the late Colonel Matthews, of Belmont, Herefordshire, whose virtues and talents he largely inherited. f> u Ihe ' 21- 1 lilt in her 79th year, al her seat, Little Malvern, Worcestershire, Mary, widow of Walter Wnkeiimn, E « q. of ihe family of ihe Wakeuiuiis, of Beekford, iu Gloucestershire. This lady's grand- mother was a Russell, descended from a younger branch of ibe eminent family of the Russells of Siren- ham, Worcestershire, whieh obtained a grant of tbe Manor, Advowson, and Priory lands, of Little Malvern, iu ibe reign of Philip and Marv; and by her father's mother ( Elizabeth Moiling ion) she was the last descendant, in a direct line, of the renowned Owen Gleudwr, one of whose daughters married Ralph de Moiiiagton, of Motiinglon and Sarnesfiefd, in Herefordshire, which estate this lady enjoyed Her loss will be deeply fell bv ibe poor ami needy, to ' whom she was ever a kind and liberal benefactress ; her extensive charities were only known to a few friends. Her estates in Worcestershire aud Flintshire are devised to William Beringlon, Esq. of Wintercot, Herefordshire. .,„ .,. We have authority to state, that the affairs of Messrs. Corser, Naylor, and Hassall, bankers, Whit- church, ( who, in corisqucnce of their connexion with Messrs. Frys and Chapman, have suspended their payments,) are undergoing an examination, which, so fa r as it has gone, is so satisfactory, as to lead to the hope that tin arrangement now in contemplation will ill a short time enable them to resume their payments. Collections made in Aid of the Funds if tin Incorporated Society for Building and Enlarging Churches and Chapels. Stoke upon Terue £ 12 3 0 llaumer, Flintshire 60 15 9 Igblfield I HI 0 Moretou Say & 12 6 Tilstock 2 4 8 Whitdbureb 19 15 0 Alberbifry 6 3 6 Worthen 5 15 0 Minsterley 1 ( i 0 Hahlierley 1 0 ( I Castle Cuereinion 7 6 0 A ddit tonal Subscriptions towards the Erection of a Free Church in Castle Fwcgatc. Mis Briscoe, Dngpnle £ 4 0 0 Mr. Richard Oakley 2 - 2 0 Mrs. Heigl-. way 2 2 0 Mr. Cnruamusaz. 5 0 0 A Friend 5 5 0 Mrs. C. Gabfll 1 0 0 Tbe Earl uf l'owis 100 0 0 MESSRS PERSONS A" CO. Hankers. Newport, Shropshire, respect fully inform the Public, that Sir RICHARD CARR GLYN, Hart, and Co. Bankers, London, will make all Payments in Town on Account of their Bank,— Messrs. FRYS CHAPMAN having suspended their Payments. Newport, ' 24th Nov. 1828. rOSTSCRIiPT* LOSDON, Monday Night, Dec. 1, 182B. PRICKS OF FUNDS AT THF CI. OSB. Ued. ii per Cts. 3 pet Ct. Cons 8( ig pei Cents. — 31 pe. Cts. Bed. 4 per Cls. 18' 2H, K><• j 4 per Cents. 1023 Bank Stock 207 l. ong Ann. IP 7- 16 India Bonds t> 8 India Stock — Kxcheq Bills 02 Cons, for Ace. 87 LUDLOW DISPENSARY.— We have much pleasure in informing our readers, that at a meeting of the subscribers to this valuable institution, lately held,, it appeared that the Ladies had realized by their Bazaar, held in July last, no less than £ 532. 13s. 9d.; which sum being placed at the disposal of the Com- mittee, it was resolved to invest the same in the pur- chase of Exchequer Bills, in order to increase the annual income of the charity; and as the demands on the institution for the current year have been con- siderably increased by the expenses attending its re- establishment on its present scale, the Ladies of the Bazaar Committee have agreed to patronize a Ball, to be held on the 2d of January next, in aid of this year's income.— See Advert. Visiting Clergyman this week at the Infirmary, the Rev. J. E. Cotnpson:— House- Visitors, Mr, George Grant and Mr. Thomas Birch. r INFORMERS.— Three men have been in- the town and neighbourhood of Bridgnorth, lodging in- formations, for the last fortnight. Their principal aim has been against farmers and others, for not having their proper names and placejl of abode on their waggons and carts, agreeably to Act of Parliament. ACCIDENTS.— Thomas Pearee, driver of one of Mr. Goolden's waggons from Welsh Pool to this town, fell under the wheels, and was killed, near the Cross Gates, on Friday week. It is supposed he had been riding on the shafts, and had fallen asleep. On Wednesday, two waggoners, named Harley and Bowyer, were taken to our Infirmary, with fractured limbs, having fallen under the wheels of their respective waggons, in a state of intoxication. FIGHTING.— William Wilkes has been com- mitted to our County Gaol, charged with the manslaughter of Thomas Davies, in a fight, at Grinshili Wrake. MANCHESTER, NOV. 24.— The Anti- Catholic meeting took place this morning in the Manor Court Room, and at about eleven o'clock nearly one thousand persons had assembled. The chair was taken by Mr. Hardman, senior churchwarden ; and the, first resolution was moved by James Norris, Esq; Chairman of the Quarter Sessions, and seconded by Mr. Bradshaw. This resolution— which declared the opinion of the meeting, that " to concede to the Roman Catholics the same political power as to other denominations of christians would, from the nature arid principles of their religion, and the foreign influence atfecting it, be a measure fraught with danger to the Protestant Constitution of these realms as established at the Revolution of 1688"— was carried by a great, majority. The succeeding reso- lutions were moved and seconded by Mr. Joseph Birley, Mr. J. H. Wanklyn, Mr. Francis Phillips, James Brierley, Esq. Mr. Bradley, Mr. Jeremiah Fielding, Mr. Cross, Mr. Watkinson, Mr. Joseph Green, Mr. J. Wheeler, and the Rev. Cecil Wray. A petition was afterwards prepared, read, and ordered to be presented to the Lords by the Luke of Welling- ton, and to the Commons by Mr. Peel. VVORCESTER BRUNSWICK CLUB.— On Thursday last, the public meeting of the Worcester Brunswick Club was held at the Guildhall, in that city, pursuant to adjournment from the 13th ult. for the purpose of submitting the resolutions agreed upon by the Com- mittee, together with Petitions to Parliament and an Address to the Throne.— Richard Spooner, Esq. at the head of a number of individuals of that, class of whom there are to be found some in all populous towns, attempted to set aside the proceedings and formation of the Club, as uncalled for and in- expedient; but in this he was defeated by the majority, who supported the resolutions, & c. pro- posed by Major Bund, the chairman of the Bruns- wick Club,—^- Mr. Spooner being thus defeated, retired to harangue his partisans in another part of the Hall.— More than 100 names were that day added to the list of the Brunswick Club, and more than 600 signed the Petitions and Address. An inquest was held on Wednesday by Mr. Whateley on the body of an Irish labourer named John Dwyer, who died early on Monday morning, in consequence of injuries he received in London ' Prentice- street., Birmingham, on the preceding night. It appeared that the deceased, who had been drinking, quarrelled with a man of the name of Dillon, and that blows were exchanged. Proceeding to his lodgings a short time afterwards, he was beset by Dillon and two other men with whom he lodged, and was beaten so dreadfully about the head and back with spades, that; his death shortly ensued. The evidence having been gone through, a verdict of wilful murder against the three men implicated, Thomas Carr, Thomas Murray, and Handy Dillon, who had been previously apprehended, was returned, and the prisoners were committed to Warwick on the coroner's warrant. The spades with which the murder was perpetrated were found in Carr's house. The failure of Messrs. Fry and Chapman, bankers, London, has been the topic of the reading articles of most of the London newspapers since its occurrence, — We do not affect that acquaintance with mercantile affairs which it is the humour of the London Press to affect; we profess no competency to expound the reason of this failure, which some of our London contemporaries have discovered to be a certain over- eagerness to make money in Glasgow, three or four years ago ; nor shall we trouble our readers who are bankers, with speculative instructions, which must appear to them vefy impertinent, concerning the means of avoiding such a catastrophe as has befallen the said London bankers. All these matters we leave to the wits of our profession in the metropolis. We shall presume only to notice the fact, without remarking upon it at any tedious length, that the principal in the bankrupt banking- house is the husband of the benevolent Mrs. Fry, who was recently in this neighbourhood, endeavouring to enlighten us concerning a new and patent method of benevolence. If the newspapers have any know- ledge at all respecting a matter on which they assume to be perfectly well informed, we may give credit to the fact, willcb they disclose, namely, that the failure of the house has been long anticipated, in consequence of well- known embarrassments. Now if this be true, it follows that Mrs. Fry has been practising her fantastic benevolence at the expense of others : in other words, she has been doing charity, | and omitting a prior obligation.— Liverpool Satur- day'' s Advertiser. TO BR SOLSJ BY AUCTION, In the GREA T ROOM at the LION INN, Shrewsbury, on Thursday, the llfA Day of December, 1828 AND SIX FOLLOWING DAYS OF BUSINESS, 1 * BY MR. WHITE, \\ 7 UO respectfully informs the Nobility, Gentry, and Families general, of this and ihe above Articles from ALE without the least Reserve, v V the surrounding Neighbourhoods, that be lias received a large Consignment of ihe above Articles from a Manufactory of Ihe first Eminence, and which is submitted for POSITIVE S. I ' " '' to meet a heavy Payment al Christmas THE STOCK comprehends Table Services, Dessert, Breakfast, and Tea Sets of China and Earthenware ( Gilt and 1' laiii, in every Variety of Colour and Pniiern), a similar Variety of Toilette Sets wilh Gadroon and other Edges, Sets of Jugs, Porter Mugs, Foot Pails, kc. ; also a large Quautilv of Blue and White Earthenware, in Plaies, Dishes, Baking Ditto, Milk Bonis, Sic. Sic. which will be sold in suitable Lots, and will a fiord a eon \ enient Opportunity of making up broken Sei vices The SELECTION' of ORNAMENTS can with great Confidence be recommended. It embraces every Article that can he thought of in rich Burnished Gold on Puce, l. ilac, Crome, Green, and Mazarine Grounds & c. & c together with every oilier Article usually found in Slocks of this Kind. * Mr. WHITK respectfully solicits the Patronage'of Ibe Public ON this Occasion, as he can with Confidence stale that, both in Extent and Quality, the Slock in this Sale has not been equalled for many Years • and as it affords such a desirable Opportunity, it should not be lost Sight of even by those who ure not iu immediate Waul of the same. May be viewed on the L) ay preceding tbe Sale.— Catalogues of the above are preparing and will be distributed in due 1 iilie Gtj* The Sale to commence at Eleven o'clock in the Forenoon, nnd nl Six in Ihe Evening. VV. & J. EDDOWES Have now ON SALE a LARGE STOCK of iPLF. NDtD FOR 1829, AMONG WHICH AFIE mm KEEFSAKE, AMULET, and BIJOU, JPST PCBllsHSO. LUDLOW ASSEMBLY. His Majestj' held a Council this day at Windsor; and, we are happy to say, was in good health. The anxiety we have felt for the arrival of intel- ligence from Constantinople, after the fall of Varna was known, has been gratified by an account from that capital, dated on the 29th of October. The news was received on the 15th, and i » said to have greatly exasperated the Sultan-— first, on account of the trcachery of Jussuf Pacha - and secondly, on account of the alleged inactivity of the Grand Vizier in attempting the relief of the fortress. Jussuf's property in Macedonia has been confiscated — the Grand Vizier has been deposed and banished and the brave defender of Varna, theCapitan Pacha, has been appointed Grand Vizier in his stead. Now, without pronouncing any decisive opinion against the late Grand VV/. ier, we must say, that no honours and rewards can be too great for the Capitan Pacha As to Jussuf, the confiscation of his estates would not be the only punishment inflicted upon him, were lie within reach of the Sultan's power. He is at Odessa living in great style, and exhibiting himself frequently at the theatre. But the fall of Varna, however it may have in- censed the Sultan, has quickened the activity. of his preparations They are carried on with more vigour than ever. Troops from Asia arrive daily — among the latest arrivals is the celebratedTchassan Oglou at the head of several thousand cavalry. From these military operations we cannot derive any iu*. ference, either favourable to negotiations or hostile to them, Hovve. ver, upon the old principle of pre- paring for war if you wish for peace, the Sultan may suppose that he is most likely to obtain honourable terms of peace, if he prove to his enemy that he is fully able to prosecute war. The letters received this morning from Mar- seilles are to the 23d ult. The accounts received there from Alexandria mention that l() 0,000ardeles of corn had been purchased in Egypt for the service of the Sultan, and were to be forwarded with all possible expedition to Constantinople. Owing to the blockade of the Dardanelles by the Russians, the corn was to be forwarded in trans- port to Smyrna, and from thence by laud to within a short distance of the capital, for which purpose an extraordinary number, of camels had been pressed into the Government seryiee,. The Shropshire Fox- llounds will meet Wednesday, Dec. 3d ... Friday, Dec. 5th Saturday, Dec. 6th Monday, Dec. 8th Wednesday, Dec. 10th Friday, Dec. I2ih Saturday, Dec. 13 « h — ST. GILES'S CHURCH. To the Editor of the Salopian Journal. SIR, Tn addition to the judicious improvements already effected in the interior of tbe long- neglected church of St. Giles, and which have been occasionally noticed in your Journal; it may give pleasure to those who are acquainted with that venerable and interesting memorial of the p- iety of our forefathers to be in formed, that- the' wooden frame and " patched up" glass, which had for many years disfigured the large painted window on the south side ot the nave, has given place to stone tracery of hand- some desig- n, the quatrefoil head being filled with fragments of stained glass, whilst the other portion of the window is neatly and appropriately glazed in diamond- shaped panes.* It is but justice to mention that this alteration, which adds much to the exterior of this part of the building, was accom- plished at the expense of the Rev. William Gorsach Rowland, M. A. whose zeal. in. the decoration of this, as w « il as of the ancient structures of the Abbey and St. Mary, which excite the admiration of all who visit them, is deserving to be had in particular remembrance by every triu* Salopian, and to be known and emulated by those who desire to preserve the S;> cred remains of antiquity^ v, those precious morsels of religious awe, and perfect aptitude for devotion, from barbarous innovators and modern incongruity. I am, Sir, your's, & c. N. H. Y. Shrewsbury, Dec. Ut, 1828. " A very judicious specimen of glazing in this manner has lately been effected in the windows of the north and south sides of the Abbey Church : tbe general improvement is strik- ^ jpriE next ASSFMBLY will he held at § the MARKET HALL, on THURSDAY, the 1 lib instant. Mrs. JOUNES KNIGHT, Lady Patroness. The Hon. R. 11. CLIVE, Steward. IUPLOWo THEKF, will be a'BALL nt the Market - Hall, MJDI. O'W, on Friday, the 2d of January next, under the Patronage of Lady LUCY CMVR and the other Ladies of the Bazaar Committee, in further Aid of the Funds of the Ludlow Dispensary. r"-- Tickets for Ladies 5s. for Gentlemen 7s. Tea included. Dancing to commence at 8 o'Clock. *** No Money taken at the Door. A IB A LL} UNDER THE PATRONAGE OF Ladv F. DWARDES, Mrs PAN TON CORBETT, Mrs. R A. SLANF. Y, and Mrs. LLOYD, of ASTOX. > f RS. M P. RC iTrOT and SON respect- " a. fully inform ibe Ladies and Gentlemen of Shrewsbury and its Vicinity, they intend buying a JUVENILE BALL at tbe Lion Assembly Room, on FRIDAY, 121 il December, in which ' heir Pupils will display a Variety of Fashionable Dances ; to com- mence at 7 and conclude at 9. Mr. & Mrs. M RnncROT beg to acquaint their Friends it is two Years since their last Ball ; and they most respectfully solicit a Renewal of the Support " which at that Time was so liberally bestowed. Every Eo- ...... ninl Alieilllllll Hill lie jj i rcrf iu n. nhe the Evening agreeable. Tea will be handed immediately after the Pupils' Ball ; after which the Band will attend for the Amusement of the Company. *** Single Tickets 7s. 6d.— Double Ones, 12s. FASHIONABLE FURS, SILK AND FINE CLOTH CLOAKS, & c. ROGERS & PAGE, HAVING completed their Purchases In Loudon, Manchester, ar. d olher Markets, of every Description of Goods adapted to the present Season, most respectfully solicit their Friends und the Public la an early Inspection of their Stock, consist- ing of Furs, and every new and fashionable Shade in rich Silks, fine Cloths, Merino and Scotch Plaids for Cloaks, Dresses, and Pelisses, rich figured and plain Silk Handkerchiefs, Gauze Scarfs and Handkerchiefs IU every new Design, Canton Crape, Anglo. Thibet and Silk Shawls, rich Gau/. e and Fancy Bonnet Ribbons, coloured l. esses aud Gauze Dresses, Hosiery, Lace, Gloves, ( Sic. & c. R. and P. have constantly on Sule a well- assorfed Slock of Blankets, Counterpanes, Marseilles Quilts, Sheetings, Table Linens, Scotch Hollands, 7- 8lhs and 4 4ths Irish Linens, Long Cloths, aud Welsh Flannels, With every Description of Goods for Charf. table Purposes, INDESTRUCTIBLE TEETH. LEVASON & JONES, SURGEON DENTISTS, 22. White Friars, Chester. GR . Mostyu, Lady of I. ee Brid The Citadel Pilhian's Gate Suudorne Pradoe Hardwick Grange Tbe 5lh Milestone ou the Baschurch Road At half- past ten. Mr. Boycott's Hounds meet Friday, Dec. 5ib Middleion Gorse Monday, Dec. bill Lizard At half- past ten. Sir Richard I'uleslou's Hounds meet Thursday, Dec 4lh Garden. Saturday, Dec. litli Oteley Park. At eleven. jyiorfe Com sin/) . Meeting. On Thursday and Friday last, a Puppy Cup aud Goblet were run for by 16 Dogs; ihe Value £ 48. NAMES OF TUB WINNERS. TUB CUP.— MI*. Vickers's Volunteer, by a Son of the Morfe Remus. GOBLET.— Mr. Lyster's ( of ISowton Castle) Lara, by Mr. Davenport's Douglus. Davenport Stakes of 1 soy. each ; four dogs. 1st Class— Mr. Davenport's Dandy, bv Riddiesworih. 2d ditto— Mr. Vickers'. Dandy, by Mr. Davenport's Druid. 3d ditto— Mr. Dicfceiv's Dico, by bis own black dog. J ! . B FniDAy.— All- aged Stakes of 1 sov. ejaeH-; 4 dogs. Ist Class— Mr. Vickers's Villager, by Lord' llivers's Reserve. 2d ditto— Mr. Bacbe's Phsebe, by his Topper. WALK'S. BIRTHS On the 23d ult. at Calcot, the Lady of R. J Esq of a son. Qn the 24th nit. at Maesg waylod, the Thom » s Lloyd Fletcher, of a son On the 2f) th ult. at Bi vubella, Flintshire, the Lady of John Price, F. sq. of a s « > n and lu ir. On the- 2( iih ult. at Threapwood Parsonage, Mrs. F. Parry, of a son. MARRIED. On the 21 « t ultimo, at Welsh Pool, M-. William Yearsley, to Ann, second daughter of Mr. Clarke, hatter. DIED. On the 15th ult. Rebecca, eldest daughter of the late William Jones, Esq. of Ltanei ebrugog Hall, Den- bighshire On the !."> th ult. F. tnily Dyer, eldest daughter of Edward Foulkes, Esq. of Meefod Bank, Denbigh- shire. On the 21st ult. at Camberwrll, Surrey, aged 67, Anne, relict of the late Rev. Edward Parry, of Mold, and Rector of Llan vei'ras. On the 19th ult. at Ewenny Abbey, in the county of Glamorgan, Elizabeth, eldest daughter aud eo heiress of the late Rev Geryas Poueli, of Llauharan House, in the same county, and Prebend of Llandntf. She was the widow of Richard Turhei ville Pictou Turber. ville, Esq. the eldest brother of the gallant and most lamented Gen. Sir Thomas Pioton, K.. C. B. who fell gloriously at the battle of Waterloo. II. LEVASON announces to b'ts Pa- trons of Shropshire, he is at Mr. PARSONS'S, *, &. e. Market Street ( opposite the Talbot Hotel), Shrewsbury, and will remain till next Saturday Evening-, the 0th, during- which Time be may be consulted, a* usual, on all Cases of Dental Surgery and Mechanism. Indestructible Mineral, Natural, or Artificial Teeth fixed on unerring Principles. N. B. Mr. LKVASON attends in Shrewsbury the first Monday iu every Month, aud remains till. the Saturday Evening- following*. L nnd J.' s superior TOOTH POWDER, may be had at Mr. HOLBBRT'S, Hig h Street, and of * Mr. BOWDI. FR, H: iir- Dresser, Market St reet. MONEY. NOW ready fO'lO, at Candlemas £< 2500, at Lady- Day £ 40W> and £ 2000, to be advanced ou good Security.— Apply to Mr. HATIRKR, Solicitor, Whitchurch, Salop. MONEY. '•" M- IE Sum of £ 4,400 now ready to be H. advanced upon Mortgage. For Particulars apply ( if by Letter, Posl- paid) to THE PRINTERS of this Paper. m& IBi& lElT LRMm& iLlDo in 1. d. 11 6 5 111 0 8 Sweepstakes of 1 sov. each ; four dogs. Mr. Burgess's Brutus, bj his Beppo. Puppy Stakes. Mr. Win, Mulineux's bitch Malic*, by Lucius. Aged Slakes. Mr. Will. Molineux's Moorcock, by his Monarch. Sweepstakes. Mr. Wm. Molineux's Mignou. The sport was excellent, and many of tbe courses ( particularly those for the Cup) were very severe. CAUTION TO FARMERS' SERVANTS, AND POACH ERS. On Wednesday last, Edward Edwardv, servant t » Mr. Richard Roberts of Ty- yn- y- graig, in the parish of Llanrbaiadr- yn- Mochnaot, in the county of Denbigh, was convicted before two of his Majesty's Justices of the Peace, under the Act of 9th Geo. IV. rap. 69, for using Nets and Gins in the Night, to destroy the Game, and was committed to the House of Correction, to hard labour for three months. CARNARVONSHIRE. A Protestant meeting was held at Bangor on Friday, aud an excellent petition agreed tj. THE CATHOLIC CLAIMS.— The Caivinistic Me- thodists' of Carnarvonshire address a d petition to ihe King, against any further concessions to the Roman Catholics, was signed by eleven thousand persons, and 011 the loth ult. was sent to t'ie Home Office for presentation to his Majesty. On the 22( 1, Mr. Hughes, of Pwllheli, received the following communication from Mr. Peel: « Whitehall, 20th Nor. 1828. SIR,— I Tiave bad ibe honour lo lay before the King the dutiful and loyal address of Ibe Ministers, Elders, and Congregations of the Welsh Calvinislic Method- ists in the comity of Carnarvon, which accompanied your letter of the 15th instant. Aud 1 have the honour lo acquaint you, that his Majesty was pleased to receive the same very graciously. 1 Hin. Sir, your most obedient servant, ROBERT FUEL. SHREWSBURY. Market, on Saturday last, Ihe price of Hides was 4d. per lb.— Calf Skill. 5d.— Tallow 3id. » . d. Wheat ( Old J, 38 quart* 10 9 to Barley, 3R quarts.... 5 4 to Uuts, 57 quarts 6 0 to CORN EXCHANGE, DEC. 1. We had a fair supply of English Wheal, with a large arrival of Flour, together with au immense sup- ply of Foreign Wheat, which have caused ibe mealing trade lo be very heavy— still some line picked samples of Foreign Wheat obtained last Monday's prices— but oilier qualities were evidently cheaper. Malting Barley was also dull sale -, the finesl samples scarcely obtained 43s. per quarter, while the general runs were froin 37s. to 40s. per quarter. Beans and Peas of boilt kinds were ready sale al last week's currency. Oats, except prime fresh corn, were dull sale, aud Is. pcr quarter lower. In other articles there is no alteration. Current Huce of Oram iter Quarter, as unner: Wheat 7'.> 1 to 8fi » ! White Peas.. 40s lo 42 » Barley ...,„ ... 4!) s lo 43s Beans 40s to 44s Malt tSSs to 72s I Oats... 30 » lo 33s Fine Flour 70s to 75s persai- k ; Secoiidsti5s to 70s SMlTHFlKLOfim't . ot Mb. sinking of/ at). Beef 3> 6d lo 4 » 2d I Veal 4s ( id lo 5s 4d Mutton... 4s - Id to 5s Od | Pork 4s 8d to 5s 8( 1 Lamb .... Os Od to 0s Od Areiage I'ricts of ( torn per Quarter, in Kntfland and Wales, for the week ending Nor. 14, 182S.- Wheat, - 7os. 0d.; Barley, 40 « . 7d. ; Oats, 20s. 4( 1. LIVERPOOL. Wheat 10s. Oil. lo lis. Barley 5s. 4d. ' to tis. Oats..' 3s. lOd. to 4s. Malt Ss. 4d. to 9s. Fine Flour 50s. Od. to Ois. 1UUSTOL. Spring price of Wheat, per sack of 33 libs Foreign Wheat per Imperial bushel... English Wheal, ditto Mailing Barley, ditto Mall, ditto „....,... Dais, Poland, ditto ,... Flour, Fine, per sack of 2e. 2q. 5lbs.. • Second* ditto ,,„...„,.,, WOOLLEN & IJNEN DRAPERY, Hosiery. Haberdashery, Sfc. AT LOWER PRICES THAN HAVE YET BEEI4 OFFERED THE PUBLIC, MARDOL, SHREWSBURY. WILLIAM ANDREW OUI. D want Gratitude indeed d[ id he not tender his most sincere Thanks aud Acknowledgments to bis numerous Friends and the Public for tbeii" very liberal Support; nnd takes this Opportunity of acquainting them Hint his exlen. sive Stock of Goods is now complete, and well adapted lo Ihe present Season ; also begs lo slate that he can afford them on much lower Terms than any who do Business on Ihe Credit System : in future, therefore, he intends selling ENTIRK'I. Y fur READV MONEY, and ibe great Advantages which any Purchaser will experience hy it is too obvious to need. Comment. W. A. humbly solicits, with Confidence and Plea- sure, for a continued Share and still further Increase of Public Favours, which be will most carefully aludj lo deserve. Woollen Cloths at very Reduced Prices. Narrows, from Is lo 6. per Yard. Broad Cloths, from 2 » fid. lo 2I » . in every Varietj of Colour, of superior Make and Texture, warranted not to shrink nor spot w ith Rain. Super Saxony Broad Blacks and Blues { West of England), warranted to keep tbeir Colour to • the U. t, from 1- 2.. to 21s. per Yard. , Best Water proof Drab Kersey Hunters and other Colours, of superior finish, and for Durability rarely to be equalled. Ladies- Pelisse and Habit Cloths, Coatings, Plain nnd Napped Beavers Plaid Cloakings, & c. in abun- dant Variety, Prices low in the extreme, nud, Qualitie » superior. Woollen and Cotton Cords, Moleskins, Beaverteens, & c. of every Description, al lower Prices than an, hitherto offered. Waisicontings of every Description equally lowr. A most choice Assortment of Merinos, Plair, and Checked, in different Widths, Qualities not Itr be surpassed — the Prices particularly low. Bombazines, Norwich Crapes, Plain and Plaid Stuffs, well worth Public Notice. Au almost endless Variety of beautiful Manchester nnd London Prints, suited io the present Season, at unprecedented low Prices. Black Gros de Naples and Sarsnets of a most snpe. rior Make and Colour, ihe low Prices only to b « credited hy an Inspection of them. Neat Silk and Spun Silk Shawls of the newest Patterns and Colours— Prices cous'- derahly reduced. Cotton, Cashmere, and Worsted, Shawls in great Variety— low in the extreme. Silk Handkerchiefs of every. Description ( British and India), from 9d. to 4s. 6d. each. Muslins, Cambric, Jacconet, Mull, India Books, Cheeks, & c.— Prices very moderate, Irish Linens, Suffolk Hemps, Barusley and York, in every Width and Quality, Scotch Sheetings, tee. much under the regular Prices, Hosiery, Haberdashery, I. ace Veils, Nets, Gloves, & c. each of which will meet the Expectations of tbe most minute Purchaser. Best West of England Cassimeres 2s. 9d. per Yard. Yorkshire Ditto, from 4s to fis Ladies' real Norwich Plaid Cloaks, made complete, in superior Style, from 9s. lo 21s. Blankets and Charily Clothing cheap beyond all precedent. N. B. Country Shops supplied on the most liberal Terms. Funerals completely furnished ; and Family Mourning of every Description. 2* per Cent. Discount for Cash on any Amount from 20s. and upwards. No Abatement can possibly be made. HOUSE, SIIOP, AND MALTHOUSE. TO BE LET, For a Term of Years, with immediate Possession, AConvenient DWELLING HOUSE and spacious SHOP, eligibly situated for Busi- ness, in the Town of WEM : also an excellent MALT- HOPS E, nearly adjoining to, and lo be Let wilh or without the above Premises. For Particulars apply to Mr. RICHARD IRELAND, Wem, if by Letter, Post- paid. rpnE UFFINGTON COAL and L1MF. I COMPANY beir lo inform llieir Friends, thai their LIM F. PAY DAY will be held ou SATURDAY, thirteenth Instant, al the Haven Hotel, Shrewsbury. fid. per 701 bs. Oil. per bush. 3d. per 4511, 2d. per bush 0d. pi r- 280lbs Luton Lime Works. rpriE PAY- DAYS for LIME carried S from the aboie Works will he at the George Inn, in Shrewsbury, on Tuesday, the 9th, and Wed. uesday, ihe lOlh Day of December next — All Lime unpaid for afler Ibe above Dates will be charged One Penny per Bushel extra. Bv Order of the Proprietor. Nov 27, 182S. Messrs. Booth and Harrington's Creditors. 43 8 7 3 59 & d. ... I) lo 53 0 lo 9 0 lo 9 0 to 5 0 to 8 fi to 3 0 tji 62 ( J to 58 ^ pil E Trustees named and appointed in S. and bv a De- d of Assignment executed by Messrs. BOOTH and H ARRINGTON, late of BROSS. l. KY, iu tbe County of Salop, BI ickmak. ers, for the Benefit of their Creditors, intend to MEET al ibe Lion lun, iu Broselev aforesaid, on Tuesday, ihe sixteenth Day of December iuslnut, at 12 o'Clock at Noon, for the Purpose of making a Final Dividend of ihe Estate and Effects of tbe said Messrs. Booth and Harrington; when and " here Ihe Creditors wfco have not already sent iu a Particular of their respective Debts, are required to produce ihe same, or they will 0 j he excluded ihe Benefit of the said Dividend. The .0 . Dividend may, on any subsequent Day, be received, P . ou Appliculiou to Mr, IIQJJEBTS, Mercer, Broselej. SAlLOiPIAN JOURNAL, AMID COURIER OF WALES* J1DV0WS0N. ANTED TO FUECHASE, the ADVOWSON of a LIVING ill Shropshire or • nine adjacent County, with a Prospect of icry early Possession. llicoiue £ 500 per Annum or more. Apply ( if by Letter, Post- paid) to Mr. J. O. BBETTBLL, Uunley, Worcestt rsliire. COOKE'S Indian Condiments. RS. SCOLTOCK respectfully ac- quaints her Friends anil the Public, that she lias been appointed by Messrs. COOKR. & Co. of S! 9, Halloa Garden, London, SOLE AGENT for ihe Sale of the above at Shrewsbury, and which ure now so much admired iu London. Tliey consist of INDIAN CUI1RY PASTE, to prepare Curries. MADRAS MUI. LIGOTOWNY, dilto. BENGALCH ATTNY, to eat with Meats instead of Pickles or Mustard. BENGAL CHATTNY SAUCE, admirable with Fi » li. All with ample Directions for preparing Dishes in the Indian Manner. N. B. The following is an Extract from die Sunday Times:- Lonn MAYOR'S DINHBII — Among the No. tellies introduced this Season Hi lliis celebrated Revel were Cooke's Indian Condiments. The much loved Turtle of John Bull seem to have lacked much Want of Patronage in Consequence, from the repeated Calls that were made for Mulligolow ny Soup; hut the Lachrymose Facet that were exhibited by some City Gastronomers on partaking of the Bengal Chattily, proved that it was ever piqnante for English Palates, however much it might delight tiie asbestos Throats of Bengalee ® . Alva Marina Mattrasses, & c. J. HE IT, ( Importer of the genuine Alva Marina, J AMERICA- SQUARE, LONDON, BEGS respectfully to announce to the Nobility, Gentry, aud the Public, that ihe following Upholsterers iii the Town of SHREWS- BURY tire supplied bv him from his Depflt with his GENUINE ALVA MARINA, in ORIGINAL BAI. ES AS IMPORTKP, which lliev manufacture inio Mattrasses, Couches, Easy Chairs, Foot- stouls. & c. & e : — Mr. SAMUEL TUDOR, College HiU; Messrs. J. If R. SCOLTOCK, Market Square; Mr. JOHN BIRCH, jun. Castle Street; Mr. B. PEARSON, Claremont Street; Mr. J. WHITE, Wyle Cop; Mr. T. ANSLOW, Market Square. They are also furnished by him with Copies of Attestations and Certificates of Origin, signed " J. BBIT," to imitate which is Felony. The peculiar Properties of this invaluable Article are,— that it retains iis Elasticity for au indefinite Period, is not operated upon hy Climate, resists Dump, REPEI. S A LI. KINDS OF VERMIN, and imparts » Refreshment and Vigour to the Human unknown to any other Article; and it is i recommended by the Faculty. t)? Suction. ihm? mmmm^ SALE UNALTERABLY FIXED FOR MONDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1828. Messrs. TUDOR & LAWRENCE RESPECTFULLY BE^ LEAVE to'in- form Gentlemen of the Profession and others, that thev hnve had consigned lo llieih, TOR SALE BY AUCTION, THE EXTENSIVE AND VAI. CAHLE LIBRARY OF LAW BOOKS, CONSISTING OF Slate Trials, by Howell, 33 Vols. Statutes at large, !) Vols, Folirf Statutes al large, by Tomlius, 11 Vols. 4lo. Reports by Salkeld, Brown, Banbury, Strange, Espinnise, Coke, Vesey, Duruford and East, Easl, Taunton, Maule and Selwyn, Barlienrll uud Alder- son, Barnewell and Cresswell, Smith, Saunders, Jacob aud Walker, iic. Conveyaucing, by Wood, Powell, Barton, Preston, & c. Election Cases, & c. by Douglas, Fraser, Clifford, Corbett and Daniel, & c, Hal. ell's Precedents. Williams's, Bum's, and Dickinson's Justice of the Peace. Blackstone's Commentaries. East's Pleas of the Crown, Frame itrongly Madox's History and Antiquities of the Exchequer. Bale's Chrnnycle of Syr Johan Oldcastell. New Annual Register, 1812 to 182<> « Cobbett's Political Register, 31 Vols. Hederic's Greek Lexicon. Buxtorf's Hebrew Lexicon. Ainsworth's Dictionary, 4to. Hebrew Bible, 17111. Elzevir Virgil, 1636, genuine Edition. & c. & c. The whole late the Property of THOMAS JONES, Esq. of Bishop's Caslle, deceased; and which will be otiered for SALE BY AUCTION, at ihe Fox Inn, in Shrewsbury, on Monday, the btli of December, 1828. Catalogues will be prepared, and may be had of THE AUCTIONEERS. © ales Dp auction. RESTDUE OP y& Mi& Mm nuMFiECBirso Of the late W. H. Watson, Esq. AT WHITCHURCH. MR, PERRY respectfully informs the Public, the SALE BY AUCTION of costly 1 ATIIES, Turning & other TOOLS, choice WINES, London- built CURRICLE, OFFICE DESKS, aud Residue of FURNITURE, will positively take Place on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, the 15th, 16th, aud 17th of December iuslant. The WINES, LATHES, TOOLS, & C. will form the First Day's Sale, commencing with the Wines, ut Half past Twelve. The Second Dav'i Sale will consist of the excel- lent KITCHRN FUR'NITCRB, BREWING VESSEI. S, CASKS, OFFIC* DBSKS, and Sundries, commencing at Eleven precisely. The Articles in each Day's Sale are inserted in the Catalogues prepared for tiie former Sale, aud will be expressed in new Catalogues to be had on tli. e Pre- mises three Days previous, and at the Sale. Crown Inn, Cockshutt. Early in the Month of January, 1829, will be submit- ted lo Auction, BY MIL PERRY, ALL that old- established and well- fre- quented INN or Public House, called Ihe CBOWN INN, situate in COCKSllUTT, in the County of Salop, together with the commodious Stabling, Cow- houses, Piggeries, Garden, and olher suitable Offices. And also Two Pieces of capilal Meadow LAND nearly adjoining, containing about four Acres. The Premises are in full Business, aud arc situate on the Chester Road, where the Mail aud two other Coaches pass daily. Further Particulars will appear in a future Paper, DESIRABLE SMALL FREEHOLD PROPERTY. GENTEEL RESIDENCE, Near the Quarry, Shrewsbury. BY MESSRS. TUDOR & LAWRENCE, At the Lion Inn, Shrewsbury, on Monday, the 15tli of December, 1828, al 6 o'clock in the Afternoon, subject to Conditions then to be produced : ALL that GENTEEL RESIDENCE, situate on ST. JOHN'S HILL, Shrewsbury, near St. Chad's Church and the Quarry, now in the Possession of Miss Peuiberlon, held under Lease ( al a small Ground Rent) for 99 Years, of which 32 will be unexpired at Lady- Day next. The House comprises a good Kitchen with Cellars, Entrance Hull, Dining and Drawing Rooms, six good Lodging Rooms, all of which tire iu excellent Repair; and also a commodious Garden attached thereto, with a Back Entrance. The Premises may be inspected from 12 till 2 o'Clock ; anil Tor further Particulars apply lo Messrs. DUKES and SAI. T, or the Auctioneers, Shrewsbury. The valuable Fixtures now belonging to the Occn. pier will be sold with the Premises. THIS DAY, TO- MORROW, & c. LIBHAHY OF BOOKS. MESSRS. HULBERT & SON ESPIXTFUI. LY announce that they will SELL by AUCTION, in the Shop lately belonging to Mr. PIBBCY, Market Place, Shrews- bury, ou Wednesday, Thursday, & Friday, December 3d, 4th, and 5th, 1828, the LIBRARY of a Gentleman in the Medical Profession, removed for the Conveni- ence of Sale ; comprising valuable useful and interest- ing Works iu History, Medicine, Divinity, Law, Poetry, and general Literature: Catalogues of which may he Inid ou Application at tlie Office of THE AUCTIONEERS, High Street, Shrewsbury. Sale to commence al Eleven o'clock in the Morn- ing uud Seven o'Clock in the Evening of each Day. Ladies and Gentlemen unable lo attend the Sale inay have their Commissions faithfully executed hy the Auctioneers. BRUNSWICK CLUB. 4T a MEETING, held at the Lion Inn, Shrewsbury, oh the 10th of November, lSk28,' for tRe Purpose of establishing a BRUNSWICK CONSTITUTIONAL CLUB for the COUNTY of SALOP j The Hon. THOMAS KENYON in the Chair: The following Resolutions were moved and seconded, and unanimously agreed to:— Resolved, 1. That a Brunswick Constitutional Club be estab- lished for the County of Salop. Resolved, 2. That the Object of this Club shall be to secure, as far as possible, the Prolestanl Ascendancy, and to preserve inviolate our unrivalled Constitution iu Church and State. Resolved, 3. That a President and Vice- President be appointed annually. Resolved, 4. That THOMAS WHITMORE, Esq. he appointed President for ihe first Year, and that ihe Honourable THOMAS KENYON be appointed Vice- President for the same Year. Resolved, 5. That llie Vice- President for ihe first Year shall succeed as President for the Year ensuing. Resolved, 6. That a Committee he appointed, for the Purpose of superintending- the A ft airs of the Club, and of reporting* to a General Meeting from Time to Time as Occasion may require. Resolved* 7. That the Committee for the first Year consist of the Officers of tlie Club, aud ihe following Gentlemen, with Power to add to their Number: — The Earl of BII AD FORD Sir ANDREW CORBET, Bart. Sir TYRWHITT JONES, Bart* WILLIAM CHARLTON, Esq. THOMAS BOYCOTT, Esq. EDWARD CLUDDE, Esq. WILLIAM BOT FIELD, Esq. WILLIAM OR MS BY GORE, Esq. G. A. MOULTRIE, Esq. THOMAS BULKELEY OWEN, Esq. FRANCIS BLITHE HARRIES, Esq. Kev. EDWARD PRYCE OWEN Rev. C. R. CAMERON EDWARD GATACRE, Esq. Resolved, 8. That those Gentlemen resident within this County who are favourable to the Principles of this Club, and who are not already Members, hut desire to become so, be requested to signify their Wish to the Secretary at Shrewsbury. Resolve dy 9. That such Gentlemen as enrol their Names pre- vious to the 1st of December shall be considered as oiiginnl Members. Resolved. I, 10. That no Individual after that Period be ad mined a Member of this Club without the Recom- mendation of ut least two of ihe original Members. Resolved, 11. That there shall bean Annual Meeting of this Club; and that the Time for the first Meeting shall be appointed by the President. Resolved, 12. That each Member shall pay a Subscription of Five Shillings annually, for the Purposes of the Club. Resolved, 13. That the Rev. JAMES EDWARD COMPSON be appointed Honorary Secretary and Treasurer. THOMAS KENYON, Chairman. The Honourable THOMAS KENYON having qnitted the Chair, THOMAS WHITMORE, Esquire, was called thereto; when It was una? iimously Resolved, That the Thanks of the Meeting be given to the Honourable THOMAS KENYON, for his Conduct in the Chair this Dav. THOMAS WHITMORE, Chairman. Josiali Boy del I, Kilhendre John Boweu Thomas Lloyd, Shrawdr- William Morris dine } Richard White Samuel Lee, For ton W. Ha « erk « m, Church Stret ton, Jam- s Cross, Cruck Meole William Bow en, Churton Richard Davies Thomas Fenton Hon. Arthur Trevor H. C. Cotton, Clerk, G/ eat Ness Benjamin Bromley, Eyton Joi n Howell, jun. Charles Joy Charles Wollaston William Oakley, Stapleton John Harrison Thos. N. Parker,, ^ wteney E. Vuughan, surgeon Sir John Chetwode, Bart. Henry Bloxam, Ellesmere Richard Jenkins, Hie ton Richard Staiiier, Upping- T ho in as Broeas ton. Henry Morgan, Clerk, Edward Stanier, Wro* eter Downton Beniamiu Flounders John Whitehall Dod, C/ o- Edward Bymock, Elles- verley Hall John Murray, Clerk, Whitchurch William Kent, Clerk, Whit church Thomas Price John Clements Whateley, Dallicott Richard Higgius S. Barber, ii< « / cot Richard Emery, Bmcott Charles Emery, ditto Griffith Breese Joseph Breese Henry Hubbard John Marshall, Bradney James Marshall, R& nghton John Bow. dl. er mete Benjamin Edwardes Aml> rose Brookes, Solicitor, Newport Thos Git ton., Bridgnorth Richard Topp, Whitton Benjamin Howell, Clerk, Hugh let/ Christopher Scott, F. t/ tnn William Bay ley, Sh'ffnal Thomas Withy, Upton Magna William S. Price, Chilton John Jones, Preston Thomas Salter, Berwick John Jones, Clerk, llab- be? ley Thomas Sutton m& pns Riddel I, Clerk, John Boolhliy " H el'lingltin James Hiles John Scott, Clerk, Stock- John Ruscoe ton ' William Gittins, Moiitford Francis Povey, F. llesmete Robert Phillips, General John Da rise v j The Folle'y Robert Phillips, jun. Edward Meredith, Clerk, Thomas Dethick, Clerk, Newport Old but if G. Chessuutt, Clerk, Chel- William Pickering, Cruck- wyvd ton Thomas. Bayley, Black Thomas Salke'd Birches ' ' Henry Baguall, Clerk, Edward Williams, Clerk, Stanton Eaton Theodosius Wood, Clerk, W. W. Wat kins, Shotton Eas church Rectory, Kent William Nealor, Minsterlejj William - Purton, Fail) tree John Neaior, sen. ditto Thomas Pardoe Purton, John Nealor, jun. Hogster Faintree Mill John Hineksman, West- Edward Nealor, Minslerley wood EdWd. Eddpwes, Grimmer John Baker, The Down VVillfnm Eddowes George P. Aston, Newton John Eddowes George S Swinny, Clerk, T. Mortimer, St. Mart/ s- Bridgnorth street Matthew Pilkington, Clerk, He. u ry'Legh Bridgnorth J P Johnson, M D. Samuel Burrows, Clerk, George. Ash by Mad dock, tjigley The Roman Catholic Que slit. C'Jerk Walter- Minor, Moreton S~ ay Robert Pepl ow, ditto Thomas Peplow, ditto Joshiia Lewis Men 1 ove, Ellesmere Charles Henry Chandler, Job Hunt ' ditto' Daniel Pritchard Thomas Turner, Clerk, Thomas Birch ditto James Brat ton James Farmer, Dry/ on William Pulteney Win. Jellicoe, Beighter/ on Albright on hn Vaugban, Onslow Stephen Hassall, • Vein Robert Burton, Longver W. J. Hughes, Clerk, Robert Burton, jun. Salop Cardington Samuel Dolphin R. Parkes, Clerk, Lo/;. ping ton Charles Wright Daniel Wilson Davison, Brand Hail Brack ley Priehard Ralph Leeke, Longford John Sutton, Ken wick Charles Clark, BridgnorthC. Guest, Broseley John Barnfield, Eudness W. Turner, Dot hill Watkin Watkins, Sbotton B. Bowdler, jun. Joseph Birch, jun . Castle John Evans, Clerk, Whit- Gates church Robert Williams, Clerk, Charles Bigg Wort hen John Pritchurd, Broselei/ Oswald Leicester, Clerk, John Wood, Clerk,.'• ihiffnal Stoke- upon. Tern Charles Gabert, Apley William Lawjey, Lee William Townsend, Bridg- Samuel Bennett, junior, north Members of the Shropshire Brunswick Club now enrolled. BY MIL BROOME, At the Cock Inn, ill Dorrington, on Friday, the 12lh Day of December, 1828, between the Honrs of three und five o'Clock in the Afternoon, subject to Con- ditions then to be produced ; ALL that DWELLING HOUSE, Out- buildings, end about Four Acres of excellent LAND, in the Parish of S VI ET11COTT, situate near to Ihe New Hall, about two Miles from Dorrington, in the County of Salop. Mr. IIAYWARD, the Proprietor, will shew the Pre- mises; and for further Particulars enquire of Mr. JOHH LOXDAI. E, Solicitor, Shrewsbury. FREEHOLD DWELLING HOUSES, PLEASANTLY SITUATED In Barkhill, WHITCHURCH, Salop. RY MR. CHURTON, At the House of Mrs. Goodall, llie Red Linn lun, in Whitchurch aforesaid, on Friday, the 20th Day of December, 1828, ut Six u'Clock in the Afternoon, subject lo Conditions then and there to be produced ; ALL those Three Freehold DWELLING HOUSES, with extensive Gardens and other Appurtenances thereto belonging, situnle nt the Upper End of BARKI1II. I. aforesaid, now in the several Holdings of Mrs. Llnjd, Mr. John Beckett, uud Mrs. Dawson. • i^ J1 Part of the Purchase Money may remain ou the Premises. Further Particulars may lie known on Application to the Auctioneer; or at the Offices of Mr. lUurbu, Solicitor, Whitchurch. MILL, MESSUAGE, JIM) LJ1ND, AT VVHIXALL, In the Parish of Prees, inthe County of Salop. BY MR." CHURTON, At the Red Lion Inn, in Whitchurch, iu the County of Salop, on Friday, the 20th Day of December, 1828, alfive o'Clock in the Afternoon ; PH E FREEHOLD aud Inheritance of and ill all that WINDMILL, HOUSE, and LAND therewith occupied, situate at W'HIXALL aforesaid, in the Occupation of Mr. Walmsley, whose Tenancy expires at May next.— The Mill works three pair of Stones. This Property is so situated as to ufford a good Living to the Occupier, or lo answer as nu Investment to small Capitalists, the Neighbourhood being popu- lous, a very short Distance from the Ellesmere uud Chester Cannl, mid good Ruuds. Part of the l'urc| i| i « e Money uiuj' reuiuin on the Premises. Further Particulars may he known on Application to the Auctioneer; or Mr. llABt'EB, Solicitor, VVItiU church. Shropshire. At Whitchurch, in the County of Salop. BY LAKIN & SGN, On Saturday, the 13th Dav of December, 1828, at Ten o'Clock ; rglHE FIOUSEHOLD GOODS and H FURNITURE, Brewing Vessels and Ale Bar rels, PLATE, CHINA, GLASS, HYDROMETERS, BOOKS, Blunderbuss, and other valuable Effects, of the late Mr. JOHN GREGORY, Gent, deceased, which will be removed to the Red Lion Large Room, in Whitchurch aforesaid, for Convenience of Sale, and may be inspected the Morning before the Sale com- mences: comprising Fourpost, Tent, and Servants' Bedsteads, Feather Beds and Bolsters, Flock Mat- trasses, Bedside Carpets and. Bedding, 8- Day Clock with Arch Face ( in a beautiful Mahogany Case), six Mahogany Parlour Chairs with Hair Bottoms ; Ma- hogany Dining, Pembroke, and Half- circular'fables, 3 Chests of Drawers, Oak Chest for Linen, Kitchen aud Painted Chairs, 2 aimed Chairs, Oak Dressing Table, Pain- ted Desk and Bookcase, Wardrobe, Wea- ther Glass, Pier aud Swing Glasses, Print of Lord Hill ( framed und glazed), Oak Cabinet, Pair of Open. Work Mahogany Brackets, Mahogany Dressing Box, Glass Decanters and Slides, Ale, Wine, and Jelly Glasses, Table Castor, Dumb Waiter, Table Bell an'd Doileys, 2 Hydrometers ( one by Clarke, the other by Dicas), White Table with one Leaf, Pewter Measures, Plated Tankard, Brass and Iron Candlesticks, Tin Hastener and Dripping Pan, Cleaver and Saw, a 2- Gallon Copper Can, Brass Tunning Dish, round Oak Table, Blunderbuss with Spring Bayonet attached, Mahogany Cheese Board, Quantity of Glass and Stone Bottles, Garden Glass, small Churn, Brewing Tubs and Ale Barrels, Cleansing Sieve and Mash Rule oval and round Coolers ; Quantity of Books, Baugh1; Map of Shropshire ; Mahogany Dinner Tray, Cloth Press, large ? Senle Beam and Marking Iron, Shop Counter, Ditto Desk, Flour Scales, Glass Lantern, Chimney. Ornaments, small Nest of Drawers, 2 Fish Nets, Pair of Eel Baskets, Eel Spear, Pair of Bowls, Quantity of Corks, Green Table Clolh; two Sets'of Parlour Fire Irons, Tin Fender, Copper Slevvpan, Brass Keltic, Bucket, Watering Can, Half Measure, Bowl Dish, Washing Tub, Gaun, Coal Urn, Clothts Maid, Wheelbarrow, 2 Shovels, Pikel and Rake, Quantity of Earthenware, & c.; and a few Articles of PLATE. The Earl of Bradford Thomas Kenyon T. J. Tyrwhitt Jones Andrew Corbet Thomas Whitmore William Charlton William Ormshy Gore William Boifield Thomas Boycott George Auslin Moultrie Francis Bliihe Harries Edward Pryce Owen, Clerk But keley Hatchett Henry Scott, Beslow Joseph Sutton William Smith John Lawrence Thomas Lawrence John Davies Geo. Burd, Clerk, Middle E. H. Owen, Clerk, Cound Thomas- Groves Charles Lloyd Thomas Lloyd Thomas Dawson Edward M nek les ton ) Bicton Henry Gray C. Kynaston Maiuwaring Thomas Harries, Cruckton T SJ1LE of XV USE RY STOCK at WELSH I'OOL POSTPONED From Monday, November 17, to MONDAY, the 15th December, 1828. Co fee gjoUJ i) j? & « rticn, On the Premises, commencing at Ten o'Clock in the Morning ; ALL the NURSERY STOCK, be longing to EVANS and EDWARDS, iu such Lots as shall then be agreed upon. PARTICULARS AS FOLLOW: Alders, 3 to 10 Feet 4,000 Ash, 3 to 8 Feet 12,000 Beech, 1 to 3 Feel 4,000 Chcsnuts, 4 to 8 Feet.,,, 4,000 Spanish Ditto, 1 to 3 Feet Elm ( Wychj, 3 lo 10 Feet 10,000 Fir ( Scotch), to 3 Feet 50,000 Spruce, I to 3 Feet 20,000 America Spruce, 1 to3 Feet 3,000 Larch, 2 to 5 Feet 40,000 Oak, 1 to 3 Feet 40,000 Sycamore, 3 lo 10 Feet 4,000 Oak ( 3 Years) Seedlings 100,000 Quick ( 2 Years), fine 100,000 Quick ( Transplanted), 1 and 2 Years 60,000 Crab, Cherry, and Plum Stalks, 4 to 10 Feet ( strong); 1,000 Standard Cherry Trees, 8 to 10 Feel; also, Apple and Plum Trees; Common Laurels, 4 to 500 ( very fine); a small Variety of Shrubs, Sweet Briars, Hollies, Acacias, & c. N. B. Purchasers may leave their Purchases iu the Nursery for their own Conyenienpe, and ( at their own Hazard) as late as Lady flay next. Thomas Hunt, Clerk Thomas Bui keley Owen St. John C. Charlton William Cludde Edward Cludde Philip Charlton Chas. Richard Cameron, Clerk Joseph Dale, Clerk Edward Gat acre W. Y. Davenport E. S. Davenport', Clerk T. Wylde Browne J. G. S my the Joseph Reynolds Richard Mount ford J. Nunn, Clerk Richard Molineux John Clarke John Jasper Henry Crump George Bishtun Thomas Bishton John Meeson W. J Jellicorse Geo. F. Molineux, Clerk Wm. F. Moiiueux, Clerk William Smith, Clerk George Causer George Austin John Percival Andrew Vincent Corbet Richard Corbet James E. Compson, Clei Richard Phayre. Robert L. Burton, Clerk John Howell John Peplow G. B Peplow W. C. Peplow II. B. Breary James Watkins J. C. Nightingale William Griftiihs G. F. D Evans John Shaw William Bayley John Baker Thomas Baker John N. Bilker William S. Baker Nathaniel Be turn Samuel Harley William Tompkins J. Filz- Williams, Oldbury House J.- A. Cotton, Clerk, Elles- mere Thomas Evans, Prescott James Clayton Edward Lawrence Dana, Rev. Canon Newling, Ford VV. John Jebb, Whixall O. Owen, R. N Abraham Phillips, Park- street , Wellington David Bird&, Clerk, Ellcs. mere George Salt, Clerk, Wem William Shiston, Giindie Sh[ ffnal John Crane, Pulley Richard Cross, Hanwood William Cross, Cruckton Joseph Cross, Betton William Harries, Most on William Bate, Shotton Henry Liiiell, Emstrey Edward Homfray, Clerk F'erdiuand Wheeler Wright Willell, Clerk, H aters Upton William Brayne William Jeffreys William Thomas John Wing field, Onslow Win. Baker, silversmith Daniel Hanley Robert Webster Benjamin Bowdler J. Embrev Wood William l. eake Richard Bralton John Bromley John Hazledine Joseph Morris Thomas Stringer, M. D. Roger Clayton, Clerk, Wroxeter George Thornton, jun. Henrv Williams, Ketley Hilt Joseph Weston Robert Maddocks, Clerk, Leighton Henry Hiles James Harding Joseph Turner William Turner John Wilde, Clerk Sir Edward Kvnaston, k Bart. Clerk John Russel, Clerk William Hopkins, Clerk Wm. Wycherlev Brookes, Whitchurch William Wardell, Wel- lington T. B. Dotsett, ditto Nicholas Harries, ditto James Evett, ditto George Collier, ditto William Picken, ditto B. Downing-, ditto V. Lunn, ditto George Priehard, ditto Robert Morris, Shrewsbury John Driver M. Davies, Clerk, // in- stock Rectory Richard Corfield, Clerk Sir Henry Edwardes, Bart. Edward Edwards, Iron- bridge Nathaniel Price, Bertcick John Hoggins, Smeihcott Richard Boycott Ferdinand Faulkner William Thomas A. P. Mainwaring, Chilton Henry Liuell, jun. Emstrey John Dryden Pigott, John Higley, Salop Clerk, Edgmond Thomas Gregory, Preston G Hinp, Salop William Johnstone, Clerk, William Simms, Dawley Siefton Jan. ies Macknight, ditto William Jellicorse, Cal- Tboma, s Glover, ditto vington Joseph Banks, ditto James Mitchell, Shiffnal Thomas Onions, dittn Colelougb Wogan ' John Hotchkiss, ditto Thonms Lnngiev, Upton George Brazier, ditto Herbert H. Wright, Hat- John Forrester, ditto ton William Millingron, ditto Henrv Vickers, solicitor, Thomas Blakemore, ditto B'idgnorth William Currier, ditto II. m; Phillips, Clerk, Richard Finch, ditto Robert Poole, jun. ditto George Bishton, ditto Jj) hn Baugh, ditto John Surnall, ditto' Thomas Hooper, ditto Thomas Hyde, ditto Wiiliam Summers, ditto Stiichley Jan res ( iiivf Dawley Thomas Hewlett, ditto Wit+ jiifp'Fenn, ditto Johff Sm'uh, ditto Willi am James, ditto Mark Tipton, ditto Richard Summers, ditto [ A Book for the Reception of the Signatures of such Gentlemen as wish to become Members of this Club, is left at the Office of the Salopian Journal.] [ FROM FELACK^ YOOD's MAGAZINE.] The time, it is supposed by many* is approaching — is close at hand— when something will be d » . ie to satisfy the Catholics. Reports are abroad, precisely of the proper pitch of absurdity, for the greedy swallowing of the great grey- goggle- eyed public, who may be seen standing with her mouth wide open like a crocodile, with her. hands in her pockets, at the crosses of citics on a market- day^ gluttonously devouring whatever rumour flings into her maw— nor in the least aware that she is all the time eating wind. People of smallish abilities begin to look wiser and wiser every day -— their nods 8 : em more significant — in t'. ie shak- ing of their heads there is more of Burleigh — and in short sentences — that sound like apoph- theg- ms-^- lhey ate apt to impose themselves on their own credulous selves as so many Solomons The Duke— they have reason to know — sees the necessity of the thing now — Mr. Peel has at last given in— and a bill— they have seen some of its heads— is forthwith to be brought into Parliament — for the immediate relief of our seven million Catholic brethren, now all groaning—( under what, pray?)— and they might add, apparently getting incomparable fun — rollocking and roaring— all over Ireland. So delighted are these gentry with the prospect of Catholic E Mancipation — two words, by the by, of the meaning' of which they have not the most distant suspicion— that they occasionally get ra- ther impertinent on your hands— wax witty against the wisdom of our ancestors— and, unaware of the ludicrousuess of the exhibition, show you how the awkward squad take up their ground, in the March of Intellect. They accuse you to your face of being behind the Age, and go oil in a mumble about Toryism. Without meaning to be rude to one single soul, we hope that we shall be pardoned for intimating our belief, that your Pro- Popery men are, for the most party very considerable blockheads. Nay, do not start} gentlemen, nor frown, for it is a melancholy truth. The nonsense you speak is so far beyond your own present conception of the case, that it mig" ht indeed prove dangerous to have your eyes opened all at once — all on a sudden— to the full extent of your igno- rance and stupidity— the shock might prove fatal. But, unfortunately, you do not confine yourselves to mere nonsense,— which is necessarily harmless; — you allow designing people to mix up with your innocent nonsense, the poison of their own wicked- ness; and will you credit us when we tell you, that you are doing all the little that lies in your power to pollute and ruin the Christian religion? And here it behoves us to be serious. — Niiiety- nine in a hundred of your Pro- Popery men are not Christians. They dare not say that they are not. Cowardice— that is, worldly prudence— makes them cloak their infidelity under liberalism. But try them by the tone and temper of their senti- ments and opinions, on all occasions where the subject is the Protestant C. hurch, and you see that the dunces are Deists. As to their love of knowledge, it is false and affected— a lie. Were it true, and sincere, how could they endure that Church which places Bible- reading under her ban, and execrates the poor man who would fain study the Word of God? The Roman Catholic superstition hangs, at its clearest, like a day of dense fogs— at its darkest, like a night of black clouds— over the reason and the conscience. He who denies or doubts that, must regard the Reformation as a mockery and a dream. Such doubt, or such denial, is incompatible with any attachment to Protestantism; and if you are a Papist — pardon us— but on this question you must not open your lips. We are Protestants; and you must become one of Us before you can enjoy the blessings bought by Protestant blood. It may be said, that it is not polite thus to abuse the Papists. We are not aiming at being polite. It is not a question of courtesy,— if it were, we should be the most courteous of the courteous. But it is a question of religion and of politics, involving the temporal and eternal interests of the human race, At least we think so; and thinking so we must not hear one word said about Catholic Emancipation- Popery, we say, is a fatal super- stition; and a Protestant State must not trust its vital interests, its existence— to Papists. Call this bigotry, if you please — if you please to be a fool. We love light rather than darkness — knowledge rather than ignorance— freedom rather thau slavery— therefore, no Catholic Emancipa- tion. We desire to see all our Christian brethren — the very lowest— sitting in Heaven's sunshine — in other words, reading the Bible — therefore, no Catholic Emancipation. We desire to see all the people priest- taught, but not priest ridden, with their consciences in their own keeping, within the sanctuary of the inner spirits, into which no fellow- creature is privileged at all times to intrude— and, therefore, no Catholic Emancipa- tion. We desire that Christianity shall be. the stability of the State— aud, therefore, that Christi- anity may not change its divine character, from celestial sinking iuto terrene— no Catholic Eman- cipation. Thisis our bigotry. The Catholic Q / Ps- tion— Statesmen and A git a torn, [ FROM TIIE MORNING JOURNAL] Some statesmen, whose fame and whose folly w; U be forgotten even before they are dead, tell us ta. « t we cannot pacify Ireland unless we concede the Catholic claims. They assure us, further, that wo cannot suppress the Catholic Association—- that we carmot counteract, the influence of the priests and the conspirators- that, we cannot assuage the war of strife that is carried on between families, between tradesmen, between the seller and the buyer, between the grower and the consumer, by any coercive measure; an 1 that emancipation rn'isi be conceded as a matter of necessity. We conceive this to be founded in . the grossest delusion and error; but we admit it for the sake of the proposition. Suppose the u claims'" granted ; O'Connell, the king's serjeant, in Parlia- ment; Sheil, member for Connaught; Eneas Mac- donnell, the representative of DrogheJd; : Mr. O' Shaughnessy, and his uncle the priest's nephew, the members f . r Dublin; ' Lawless, the sovereign an I representative" of Belfast; and about seventy furious and victorious Irish Papists in Parliament. Suppose that the Duke of Norfolk returns three of his hungry lawyers to the House of Commons, and that the other Catholic nobility send twenty more of their creatures to the house. What then ? Why it must follow, as naturally as effect, follow cause, that the Catholic religion must become the established religion of Ire- land. The man who can doubt this is a driveller not worth wasting a word upon. It. would not, under such ' Circumstances, be a question of policy or expedi- it would be a question of right and justice. If' Francis Knyvelt Leighton William Lewis Thomas Harley Kough William Barnes Robert Lethhridge Thomas Boyce William Jones, Clerk John Butcher John Jones C. T. Jones Wiiliam Deane Richard Lawrence John Lawrence Henry Newton William All tree Thomas Jobson Robert Oakley II A Floyd Richard Lloyd John Edgerley Richard Ta v lor William Wilkes Samuel Asterley Mortis Morris George Morris It. Wilkes J. T. SmithemanEdwardes Griffith Williams John Rees John Jones John Legh Robert Gray Thomas Thomas John Whitehurst David Crawford William Wilding- Robert Parry Nathaniel Hughes William Bates, Clerk Thomas Chester Richard Lewis William Barrett Thomas Weaver George Grant John Lee, solicitor, Whit* church Laurence Gardner, Clerk, . So nsa w Edward Neyile, Clerk, Prees ] LOST, On Sunday Night lest, \ WHITE GREYHOUND BITCH, spotted with Black, answers to the Name of BLOSSOM, and had, when lost, a Collar on, engraved H. BURTON, Atchain :" whoever w ill return her to tfye Owner shall be handsomely Rewarded. HOUSE! IN CLUN, Cc bt let, . AND ENTERED UPON AT LADY- DAT NEXT, A DARTED lor a small genteel Family; L a. consisting of three- Parlours, Kitchen, Offices, Cellars, & c. four lied iluallts and Attics, two good Gul dens, aiiil Stable. For PiiTticulurs enquire of WILLIAM MORRIS, Esq. PeulreuauK Co be Eel, With immediate Possession, f COMFORTA BLE and commodious COUNTRY RESIDENCE, comprising Break- f}) St,. Dining, and Drawing Rooms, four good Bed- rooms, and large Attics, wilh Stables, Coach- house, extensive Garden, Orchard, and about 8 Acres of Grass Laud if required. The above is situated in the Village of FORD, about 4 Miles from Shrewsbury, near lo the Welsh Pool Turnpike Road, where Mail and other Coaches pass daily, aud is now in the Occupation of R. G. Temple, Esq. Particulars may he had on Application ( if by Letter to be Post- paid) to Messrs. BURI. EY and SCARTH, Solicitors, Shrewsbury. Mr. Peel never in all his life said or did one single thing to justify the slightest suspicion of apostacy from that great cause, of which he has ever been— is — aud will be— the changeless champion. If his character is not sufficient secu- rity to us of his Protestantism, then no Minister in England can hope for the confidence of the people. Therefore silence, at this season, becomes the Man. Wheuever it was necessary, for the sake of the Constitution, to speak, he has spoken — and when that necessity returns, which it will soon do, he will be beard to speak again — and his voice in many ears will be as thunder. But he will not confine himself to speaking— he will act. So will VVellington. The two together will move forwards at the head of the whole army — and in that March of Intellect," traitors and rebels will be overthrown, William Roberts, Edgbold Thomas Bowdler, Wyle Richard Pritohard Charles B. Teeee Thomas Farmer Dukes William Hams John Linton Jonathan Scott William Griffiths Williun) Davies Cop John Strange John Cartei- Thomas Parr, Li/ thwood Thomas Parr, Clerk, [ ji/ thwood John Clements Whateley, Clet k, Vallicott LLEDROD IN CLOSURE. I THE underfilled, sinner appointed and hein< j the Commis- auth" liaed for carrying iuto^ Effect " The Isiclosiue and Division of the Coni- mojfs. and Waste Lands in the Township of Lledrod, in the Parish of LlanSilin, iu the County of Denbigh," DO HEREBY VIVE NOTICE, That I have made aud set out the Allotments nnd ISlnires of ihe said Couimous and Waste Lauds be- longing to the Pri'prielors rcsjieciively that arc enliluled thereto, according to their Uiglits and Iuteresls therein. 1 have also caused Mans of Ihe ssid Allotments to be left ut the Otlice of Messrs. I. ONGUhvn. LE and SON, Solicitors, Oswestry, and nt my Hesidence, for the Inspection uf all Person or Persons interested therein. THOMAS ROBERTS, Wern Lodge, near Oswestry, 35, A Nov. 1828. Tlse Marquis of Salisbury and Viscount Sidmouth had a long interview on Wednesday, with the Duke of Wellington and Mr. Peel, at bis Grace's residence in Downing- street. We believe it is more than probable, that both these highly respected noblemen are about to accept office in his Grace's administration. We mentioned some days since that Lord Sidmoqti: would probably succeed to the Privy Seal. There is indeed no doubt that liis lordship will become member of the Cabinet. Lord Lovvther too is likely to become a member of the Cabinet, though whethe wilh ur without a change of his present office we' cannot venture to surmise. Tiie arrangements will ail be completed before the meeting of Parliament.— St. James's Chronicle. The Queen Dowager of Saxony, sister to the late King of Bavaria, died on the 15tit instant, in the 7? th year of her age. Major Haddock, of the B7th regiment, was killed during an elephant hunt at Ceylon, on the 27th of June ; the wounded animal seized him round the body with his trunk, threw him 011 the ground, and trampled him tu death. BANKRUPTS, NOV. 28.— Augtrstiii C'larkson, of Arbor- terrace, Commerciul- ruiid, ship- owner.— Win. Norton, of Clayton, Yorkshire, fancy oucdleti- tiiauii- fitcturer.— John l- iiown Brown, of Hurley, Gloucester, shire, dealt r.— John Wainwriglit, of Sheffield, huitou- inoiild- itiuniifacturer.— George Mason, of Cheadle, Staffordshire, horse- dealer. — Ilenry Hirst, jnn. of Northallerton, Yorkshire, d uler. — William. Audslev of Hell. Hole. Gill, Otley, Yorkshire, vrorsl, d spinner — William Low ink, of Molllt 01, Soullniuiptou, butcher, —. lames Henry Arthur, of . <; i< lick- hill, Queeuhitiie, stationer — Ilenry Dudsun, o:' High- sireel, Suuiliwurk, hop. factor.— Kichard Kowe, ot Wliiitlebnry- street Fusion- square, builder.— A idrew Colie.,, of Lloyd's Coffee- house, merchant.— J >: m Adair tiee, of Doctors' Commons, money scriven r.— Thomas Christian, of Crown. street, Finsbury- squ re, woollen- draper. ISSOI. VENTS.— Mary Elliot, of Bawtry, Yorkshire, liopksellef.— Henry Howell, of Wulaiu^ haui- jilace, Lambeth, merchant. the constitution be once levelled to the desires of the Catholics, on what principle can we resist the voice of numbers, the voice of power, which savs, in all coun- tries— the established church shall be that of tho majority? If, after having demolished our constitu- tional harriers, and recognised the principle, that thu church of England in the two countries, is ttnf part and parcel of our political system, on what grounds can we refuse to Popish Ireland the ascendancy of a creed professed hy' four- liftlis of its inhabitants? Absurd would be the principle— ur. just the denial— impolitic the demurrer. Concede Catholic einanci, pation, and Catholic ascendancy must follow to a moral certainty before the lapse of a few years. Now let any unprejudiced Protestant reflect upon this unpleasant dilemma :— Emancipation, with al! iu evils- the destruction of the constitution— tiie ex- tinction of the Protestant church in Ireland— and the re- establishment of all the solemn mummery, all the tinsel show, all the glory, all the debasement, all Ihe accursed idolatry of the Popish religion in Ireland. Is not this enough, even in Contemplation, and in the prospective, to make the blood boil in every Pro- testant's veins? Rome triumphant'.— poor Protest- antism, fhe heretic, the outcast, the d rained, giving place to the sacerdotal villainy and imposition of tiie monks and jesuits of Rome '. God help us ! We are come to a poor pass! England, the proudest of the nations of Europe, truckling to a few impious and incendiary priests !!! SECONDARIES' OFFICE, COLEMAN- STREET. THE KING f. FRYS AMD CHAPMAN. Oil Wednesday a \£ rit of enquiry was executed before Potter, Esq. and a respectable jury, under an extent in aid, directing them to enquire what lands and tenements, what real and personal property, negotiable securities, or other valuable effects, were held by Messrs. Fry and Chapman, at St. Mildred's- court, on the 24th instant. The first writ on which an inquiry was directed was one under an extent in aid for the sum of £ 14,358. I3s. for moneys due to his Majesty's excise. Mr. C- irr, the solicitor for the excise, stated to the jury the nature of extents; and Mr. John Edward Whittol, Serjeant of the Mace to the Sheriffs of London, stated that on the 24th inst. he received a warrant to levy luider the extent, and that he forthwith went to put it into execution. When he went to the house of Messrs. Fry's antl Ch aptnan he found a messenger in possession, ' under a commission of bankruptcy. The witness found the sum of £ 13.113. 6s. cash, tied up in a bag ; and he also found other cash to the amounts of £ 522, and £ 468. There were also two parcels of bills ; the contents of one parcel of bills amounted to £ 13,475, 18s. 5d.; another contained bills to the amount of upwards of £ 5,000. One of the firm stated that there were also two promissory notes to the amount of £ 1,000 each, which were sent out for acceptance, and would be returned 011 that day ( the day of inquiry). The total amount of the property found— cash, bank notes, bills of exchange, & c.— was £ 36,298. A solicitor here said, that he attended as solicitor under the commission of bankruptcy, and that he should offer no opposition. He was quite willing to let the case go to the jury as it was, without any further evidence being oflercd. Mr. Carr, however, thought it expedient, to call Samuel Heath, a clerk of Messrs. Frys and Chapman, who identified the property produced as having been taken from their house. Mr. Wallhank, one of the principal officers of the sheriff, corroborated the testimony of the first witness. Mr. Carr observed, before the case went to the jury, that all the property found upon the premis ' s was by law presumed to belong to the defendants, until the contrary was proved. This was found requisite for the public revenue. When possession of the property was given, under this inquiry, to his Majesty's comm.-.- doners, any person who proved that at the time of the seizure it belonged to them, would be entitled to recover it back, and might do so with facility. Mr. Potter charged the jury, who found a verdict, declaring that the proper: y in the possession of M' ssrs. Frys and Chapman, at the time of tlie execution of the warrant, amounted to £ 34,000. 12s. lOd. The jury stated that the two bills for £ 1,00!\ which were presented for acceptance, were not in the possession of the bankrupts. A writ of inquiry was next executed under another extent, for the sum of £ 022. 8s 10d. for money due to his Majesty's customs. The solicitor to the customs was about to recall the witnesses who were examined in the last case, when the solicitor who acted under the commission said he would consent, to the learned secondary reading his notes of evidence taken in that case. The secondary read his notes, and the jury returned a verdict for the same amount as tiiat given in the previous case. A third writ of inquiry was next executed under an extent for the sum of £ 20,696, due tor taxes. The solicitor for the ta* es obtained a verdict for the amount as given in the two preceding cases, all upon the same money found, the same officers having executed each of the writs. The solicitor said, he should adjourn over this inquiry, in the hopes of being able to find more property to satisfy this extent. The inquiry was accordingly adiounie. l over until yesterday after- noon, v hen the jury resulted their sitting. Mr J. E. Whittol, the Serjeant at . Mace, pro luce, I some more property which lie had found, consisting of cash to the amount of £ 354 ; two parcels of Spanish bonds to the amount of £^; 000 ; three parcels of Phoenix gas shares, one containing 50 shares of £ 50, belonging to Mr. Jos qih Pry ; anotlvr, containing 50 shares of £ 50, belonging to IVJr. Jonathan Chapman; and a third, containing twenty shares of the same nominal value, belonging to Mr. William Fry. There were also foreign bills of exchange to the amount of £ 2,000. The jury returned the value of the whole of this property at £ 2,494. They valued the gas shires at £ 1 each, and the whole of the Spanish bonds at £ 20. The solicitor for the taxes said the value they set upon them was not very material. The solicitor for the commission expressed an opinion that, on the part of the creditors, no oftcr was hk ' lv to hn made respecting it; and the solicitor for the taxes stated, that for the present no steps would he taken to dispose of the securities, which would remain in the hands of the sheriff. The sum of £ 20,695, for which the last extent was issued, had, we were informed, been dep isited in the hands of Messrs. Fry and Co. by the receiver- general of taxes for the county of Wilts. One of the female servants of Mr, Warrington, of Monlsey, has been taken into custody, on suspicion of being concerned in the late daring robbery of that gentleman's house. Mr. Cooke, who was injured by the late explosion of gas at Covent Garden Theatre, died yesterday, a. id it is feared that Kinver, one of the other persons hurt, will not survive many days, The other nun 4 doing tolerably well. SALOPIAN JOURNAL, AND COURIER OF WALES, THE THIEF DETECTED. ( FROM " THE KEEPSAKE.'*) A? lovely Nature once explored llereave of treasures, rich and rare, SI e missed ol female ciinruis a hoard, Enough to form a thousand fair. To l. ove the Goddess quickly flew, And plainly fold hint her belief, Indeed, conviction, that he knew The person who had heen the thief?.. Scarce ended vast her tale of woe. Ere roguish l ove the goddess, lcft% And speeding; sti ai. g l. it to one 1 know ^ Abruptly charged her with the theft.. Tire trembling* inaid denied with grief,; Hut C'upid has a judgmi u: sound : 44 ' Tis plain," he cried, that you're the thief,. For on you o( l flic ponds are found.'" ST. CHAD'S CHURCH. To the Editor of the Salopian Journal. SIR,— While I shonl. d be sorry to oppose necessary improvements " propagated" in this or any other age, I must confess myseif somewhat jealous of the " sug- gestions" of nicse speculators. Your correspondent N. H. Y. may possibly be an inhabitant of St. Chad's Parish, but I venture to say he is not a Ratepayer, or he would be perfectly satisfied with the " Church Clock" and Ihe sound produced " on the New Tenor Bell." He says that the " announcement of the hour" on the said bell, " although considerably im- proved in comparison to the former one, is not ade- quate to the expectations formed." Mercy cn us ! to " what a sun's perpendicular height" were the ex- pectations of sonic people raised. Surely thai clock strikes quite loud enough which may be beard at a distance of live miles! Indeed, I haV- been informed that to bear it at six miles distance is n^ t very un- common. If this is not loud enough for any one who can say he is the owner of a conscience, I know not • what is likely to be. I hope and trust we are not bound to supply our friends ten or twelve miles off, or even your correspondent when he forgets his watch, with an. account of the time by " Shrewsbury Clock." Such a noise would, I fear, disturb the slumbers of the Patron Saint, wU" may, perchance, avenge the nuisance by annihilating the immortal works of your Parish Clock and Correspondent. « Considerably improved in comparison lo the forme one!" says N. H. Y. What kind of reasoning is this? 1 affirm that it is absolutely and positively improved. With due respect lo the talents of Mr- D. Wynne, of Soho, and Mr. N. H. Y\,— I conjecture that a force « twenty times greater" than that possessed by the hammer in rpiestion, would at ti » e first blow shatter even a much stronger bell than St. ChadY New Tenor. Your Correspondent's allusion to a letter published in 1826 may be very well, to be sure ; but allow me to ask, if the windows be thus altered, will not the length bear a very disproportionate appearance to the Width ? And, if this important hint met with such distinguished approbation nearly three years ago, why has it not, ere this, been adopted? Perhaps your Correspondent will, in future, favour the public with something like an estimate of the probable expense of his kind " suggestions." Shreusbnrv, Nov. 24th, 1828. | all such persons in the exercise of their religious worship: and were we assured that the Roman j Catholics, our fellow- subjects, could give the same \ security with the Protestants, of ' heirallegiance . to. the sovereign of these realms, we should be al^ fre desirous for them equally to participate in the sa^ e rights and privileges, with ourselves.; but it is, our firm belief, grounded upon past experience, that without such security they cannot, be admitted into places of trust and power without endangering- the constitution both iu Church and State. We entertain serious apprehensions that the Roman Catholics, in their demand for what- is called " eman- cipation," are aiming, under the pretence of political power, only at the exaltat on of their church, and the suppression of our own. And when we contemplate the bold and illegal means resorted to for c- mpassing this end— when we see the th;; a. ldom exercised over the Roman Catholics by their priests— and how religion lias been made instrument of a factious and treasonable tendency ; we feel called upon to declare it the duty which we owe to our country, to the sacred cause of our religion, and to the spiritual welfare of those confided to o. ur charge, to main- tain and uphold, by our best endeavours, the Protestant ascendancy. [ Here follow the names.] rage to the house where the imprudent diplomatist and his family were concealed behind thick Venetian window- blinds. They broke open the door; . and though they did not venture to lay hands on the person of the minister, who represented the Emperor Joseph II. their brutality did not, resnect rank,, age, nor sex. They cruelly mal- treated the wife and daughters of the Internuncio, M. de Broghart, and they massacred in the streets a great number of Christians entirely ignorant of this act of indiscretion. The Divan endeavoured, by rich presents, to repair this aggression, and the cabinet of Vienna re- called its plenipotentiary. Nothing of this has recently taken place. No Frank showed himself in the streets on the departure of the Sultanb. ut malevolence might have surprised more than oi? e profane eye intrenched behind the Persian window curtains of certain houses. Upon the whole, times, are greatly changed. IftttoceU& neoug Eatdligence* FREE TRADE. The effects of Free Trade, as it regards the present atate of the Manufactories, & c. in England, are thus slated by the Morning Journal:— « Ever since the introduction of the improved system by Mr. Huskisson, the newspapers of the metropolis have too generally and too often treated with indifference the distress of the labouring classes. Previous to that period, whenever the weavers of Spitalfields and Manchester became, no matter for how short a time, unenrployed, their embarrassments were uniformly traced to the measures. of Ministers— to the enormous taxes, to the high price of provisions, and to the cruel and unjust wars they continued to wage wilh Napoleon, Emperor of France. The opposition journals of that day ascribed every slight derangement in trade, every bankruptcy, every stag- nation, to the war and the warlike policy of the Government. " Peace, however, came at last— a liberal policy was adopted— the political economists began their rule— mechanics' institutes were formed— commercial reform became the or^ er of the day— and the old system, that by which we had reached a state of unexampled prosperity, was sacrificed by men edu- cated in the revolutionary schools of France, and who had the address to persuade Parliament that they alone could amend our laws and improve our resources. Their patriotic proposals were received with enthusiasm. They commenced their labours, and the representatives of the people cheered them ou. They demolished one landmark after another— repealed this law to- day and that to morrow- destroyed the safe- guards of trade and commerce one by one— opened our ports to the foreigner, and gave to him what they took from us - and all this they did iimid the loud cheers of Parliament! They told us that these innovations would prove beneficial— that { hey would encourage our home and extend our foreign trade— that they would yield us low prices, high wages, and increased profits and thus render us the most powerful ami flourishing people in the world. They told us lhat our liberality would have a moral influence on the restrictive commercial system of Europe— tbvt our example would destroy monopoly every where— that a system of'reciprocity iu com- merce would become general — and that by concilia- tion we should soon reach the pinnacle of glory, and be the envy of surrounding nations. " Never was. delusion carried to such an extent in this world before— never were such acts of folly tom- n. iitted in the face of the sun !; Five years have passed away, ami what has. resulted from these experiments? Nothing but panic, embarrassment, and misery. Every man, with a very few and favoured exceptions, finds himself in a worse, con- dition than he was in ten years ago. Our manu- facturing labourers, for the last four years, have been struggling with pauperism. Our foreign shipping has decreased to an alarming extent— the glove trade has been completely ruined— the fancy shoe trade has been given almost entirely to France— the trinket and jewellery business has suffered severely— the wool- growers have lost the half of their incomes, and the woollen manufacturers have, by their grasping policy, lo- » t more in the home trade than they have gained in the foreigp- and last, not least, our silk weavers, who form an item in our population of con- siderably upwards of half a million, are to the extent of thousands reduced to beggary, while the remainder are earning very inadequate wages. These are noto- rious facts, which may be accounted for, may be excused, may be ascribed to conflicting causes ; but which cannot be denied. That this lamentable state of things has resulted from the measures of Mr. Huskisson, Mr. Grant, a, nd Lord £ oderich, is. indis- putable." WORCESTER BRUNSWICK CLUB. The Committee met on the 13th nit. when the following resolutions vrere proposed, and unanimously adopted " 1. It appears to this committee the indispensable duty of every loyal subject and friend to the present happy constitution in church and state, to stand forward in its defence against, the danger to which, as the committee conceive, its existence is exposed; and, in the present state of affairs, to use every legi- timate means, to secure to ourselves and to our pos- terity, the blessings which we now enjoy. " 2. That under the Protestant constitution of the state, as completed an, d established by the Revolution of 1688, the most unlimited toleration has been extended to all religious sects and persuasions ; that civil and religious, liberty, in the highest degree pos- sible, is possessed and enjoyed by all classes of his Majesty's subjects; and all- the objects and purposes for which civil governments are instituted, adequately fulfilled and accomplished. " 3. That no change whatever, as far as this com- mittee can discover, has taken, place in the political and religious principles of their Roman Catholic fellow subjects, which can justify a departure from the sound policy and provident wisdom of our ances- tors, who conducted fhe great constitutional settlement of the Revolution of 1688, in vesting the political power of t- b. e state in Protestants exclusively, as the best safeguard of the Protestant religion, of the Pro- testant establishments of these realms, of the Protest- ant succession to th$ throne, and of the civil and religious liberties of these united kingdoms.. " 4. That, this committee are not influenced by any hostile or uncharitable spirit towards theii Roman Catholic brethren in this county and city, whom indi- vidually they cordially respect and esteem, and towards whom they are sincerely desirous of uni- formly evincing the warmest feelings of Christian charity and social kindness ; while, at the same time, they express their disapprobation and even abhor- rence of those intolerant principles avowed by the leaders of a body of r\ ien in Ireland, calling them- selves the Catholic Association ; principles which this committee cannot but regard as subversive of all order, peace, and mutual confidence between the Catholic and Protestant subjects of these realms^ " 5. That a humble and dutiful petition be forth- with drawn up and presented to both Houses of Parliament, earnestly deprecating any further con- cessions to the Roman Catholics, as the most efficient means of protecting and maintaining the Protestant constitution, and that such petition be open to the signatures of ail persons who may be disposed to affix their names thereunto." THE HISTORY OF THE SACKED STANDARD. DECLARATION OF THE NOTTINGHAMSHIRE CLERGY. We, the undersigned clergy of the county of Not- tingham, sensible of the blessings we enjoy under the good and glorious constitution of our country in church and state, and firmly attached to the Protestant religion, of which that constitution is the safeguard, resolve and pledge ourselves to uphold the same by all the means which ye can legally exeft. Feeling impressed with the conviction that it is the design of the Roman Catholic* to subvert the established church, and finally to substitute their own, we deem it. expedient to publish a declaration of our senti- ments. Anx'ous as we have been to ascertain f e truth of what is asserted by the Roman Catholics, that a change has now taken place in their sentiments and feelings towards us in those points which ju- tly excited apprehensions in the breasts of our fore- fathers, we lament to find th t neither in civil no] r religious matters has any effectual change been manifested. Bui, on the contrary, that the same disposition on the part of tiie fcomi^ h church fo impede the distribution of the Bible, jixid the dif- fusion of the gospel light, exists at the present moment with all the determination pf former times. We are desirous that the Sia^ G continue to tolerate to the greatest extent compatible with its security every description of dissenter from our national church, and to give its utmost protection to CFrom a Continental Paper.) The sacred standard ( Sandschaki- sherif), which is never unfolded but in times when imminent danger threatens the empire of fhe Crescent, has been carried by the Sultan to the camp of Ramis- Tchifflick, under the walls of Constantinople, where he at present resides, ft has not yet been drawn from the case which envelopes it, for before the standard is raised the invading army of the Russians must pass Adrianople. We have thought it would be gratifying to our readers to collect a few historical anecdotes respecting this palladium of the Mussulmans. It is an article of faith with the Turks, to believe that the Sandschaki- sherif ivas borne by the victor'ous hands of Muhamed ( Mahomet) himself, by the caliphs, his first successors, who transmitted it to the dynasty of the Ommjades, at llamas, in the 661st year of the Hegira, and afterwards to the Abbasides at Bagdad and Cairo, iip the 750th year of the same era, When Seiim I. conquered Egypt in 1517, and over- turned the Calipbat, this standard went into the possession of the line of fhe Osmanlis, since which time it has been considered an ark of safety to the state. At first the Sandschaki was placed under the care of the Pashaw of Damas, as being chief con- ductor of the caravan of pilgrims who went, every year to Mecca. In 1595, it was carried to Europe under the responsibility of the Grand Vizier, Sinan Pasha, and displayed in the War of Hungary, as the talisman destined to revive the courage of the Mussulmans, and restore to their ranks the discipline which had been entirely destroyed. Mahomet. III. confided his holy banner] to the custody of three hundred emirs, and it remained under their care from 1505 to 1603, under the superintendence of their chief Naki bol- Escrof; and at the present 40 ensign- bearers are chosen from the porters of the Seraglio, w hose duty it is lo bear it by turns, w hile its safety is confided to the care of all the Mussulmans armed. The four divisions of cavalry, distinguished by the name of Buluki Erbaa ( as we might call tl, em,* the Royal Body Guard), are especially appointed for the defence of this sacred banner. The wprd Sandschaki- sherif signifies " standard of green silk, v such as the governors of provinces usually bea r. The sacred standard of the prophet is enveloped in 40 coverings of green taffeta, and is inclosed in a case of green cloth, which also contains a small Koran ( the book of the law), written by the hand of the Caliph Omar himself, and the silver keys of the Kaaha, which Selim I. reeeived from fhe Sherif of Mecca, The standard is 12 feet high, and the golden ornament ( a closed hand) which surmounts it contains another copy of the Koran, w ritten by the Caliph Osman III. the successor of Mahomet. In time of peace this precious standard is guarded iy the hail of the " Noble. Vest- ment;" thus is styled the dyes* worn by tjie prophet. In the same lialj in which fhis tunic hangs arc also preserved the other venerated relics of the empire; the sacrcd teeth, the holy beard, the sacred stirrup, the sabre and the bow of Mahomet, and the arms and armour of the first caliphs. In war a magnificent tent is erected for receiving the sacred standard, w hich is attached by silver rings to a lance of ebony. This custom brings fo recollec- tion the little temple, in which was deposited the eagle of t} ie Roman legions, as related by Dionysius Cassips. At the end of every campaign, the sacred piepc of green silk which forms this standard is replaced with great solemnity in a richly ornamented chest. Down to the present epoch, this standard has always been a real talisman to | he Turks, and has served to rally the defenders of lslamism, and to ipr flame their courage in battle against the Christians. In 1£ J8, at the accession of Mahomet IV. to the throne, the Grand Vizier had only to plant the Sands- chaki fo attract to his interest the corps of Janissaries. Recently, in 1826, the present Sultan Mahmoud had displayed it to destroy that formidable corps. This sacred banner is, however, never displayed except iii time of war as a last extremity. It is the signal for instantly exerting every effort to save the empire. Every Christian is prohil j ed from stopping before, or even casting a profane look on, this sacred phdge of safety. On the 27th of March, 17- 09, when AchmetlU declared war against Russia, and dispj - yed the Sandschaki- sherif, the Austrian Inter- nuncio at Constantinople hired an apartment, from a Mollah at a high rate, in order to view the ceremony ; but finding another apartment that suited him better, he removed to it. To be avenged of this, the Mollah informed the Emirs and the Janissaries of the ambas- sador's curiosity. The latter hastened with fanatic An Extraordinary Supplement to the St., Peters- burgh Journal, contains a bulletin of t- lte army of the Caucasus, announcing the occupation of the whole of Bajazet by the Russians, who, after some fighting, made themselves masters off hat fortress and of Topak Kale, as well as of the intrenchments of Driadne. In these operations the Russians were assisted by the Armenians. The Russian papers communicate the death of the Empress Mother on the 5th inst. in the 70th year of her age. She was widow of the eccentric and unfor-.- tunate Emperor Paul, and sister to the late King ' of Wirtembergh, husband to the late Princess Royal of England. It appears by the Paris papers of Wednesday and Thursday, that the castle of the Morea surrendered on the 30th ult. after a cannonade of four hours ; and thus the military occupation of the Morea by the French is complete. According to Berlin papers, the Russians never contemplated the possibility of closing the Turkish war in one season. A winter campaign is pronounced impossible, though the siege of Silistria is to be pressed with all the vigour the weather will allow. The Russian tr<. y,>- S during the cessation of active hostilities, are to be quartered in the two princi- palities. The Brighton Gazette, in a paragraph that has been eagerly copied by the liberal papers, has asserted that the Duke of Wellington is favourable to the formation of Brunswick Clubs in Ireland, but not so as to their formation in England.— The Berkshire Chronicle, on the contrary, asserts that the Duke of Wellington is decidedly in favour of their formation throughout the united kingdom.— Now, we really think that the opinion of the Duke has in reality nothing to do with the matter. It may, indeed it would, be very gratifying to have a direct assurance from His Grace of his approbation of these insti- tutions : but, this would not of itself form a re'^ on for their formation, nor would an opinion of a different description be a sufficient reason for not forming them.— The question of Protestant Ascendancy is one of those matters which every Protestant has a right to support by any legal means that he may think expedient; and just in proportion as he may think the Ministry or the Legislatnre wanting in their efforts to preserve that Ascendancy, so much the more has he a right to exert himself.— If the Pro- testant Constitution not maintained as it was established in 1683, the title of His Majesty to. the Throne of these Realms is at once cancelled - and aH our boast of Brifain being the citadel? of the Reformed Religion becomes idle trash. Those who look at the question as one of mere politics grossly deceive them- selves : the question involves other considerations of' the highest and most awful nature ; and whatever may be tlie intentions of the Administration, nothing but a firm, and we trust well- founded, reliance on the Protestant principles of its Head, prevents a? far more universal, and irresistible appeal to the Protestant feeling of the nation than any that has yet been made, and that from quarters that at present appear to take little interest in the business— We hope the steps now taking by the Brunswickers and others, will obviate the necessity for this appeal. FRANCE.—" At the grand levee on St. Charles's day, it was observed," says the Courier Francois, " that his Majesty ( Charles X.) wore the insignia or order of the Garter, and received the English ambassador iu the most gracious manner. It is even reported that he addressed Lord Stuart in the following terms tW All Europe has cause to con^ ratulate herself that, uuder the existence of circumstances of so serious a nature as it regards her, the government of such a kingdom as Great Britain should be in the hands at so upright a man as the Duke of Wellington." Gloves are now manufactured by felting, in the same manner as hats. The materials used are chiefly rabbit fur and wool .—^ Glasgow Chronicle. MARCH OF INTELLECT.— The poachers in Nor- folk travel in barouches; and as a farther proof of the march of intellect, some persons returning from the Theatre on Wednesday night, offered money to a link- boy, who had lighted them across a puddle-—' the link- boy, in holding- out his hand to receive the sixpence, begged the donor to " excuse his glove"' — this is a plain positive fact. BURGLARIES.— The frequency of daring bur- glaries is become most alarming in some parts of the kingdom.— In Survey they have been almost nightly for some time past, and committed by persons of dress aud appearance above the common cast of thieves.— The house of a. gentleman named War rington was thus robbed last- week at West ! Y? ouiseyv by four villains, who bound all the family with cords, and took every thing of value that was portable.— On Sunday night, the house of Mr. Pearn, of Deptford, was entered by means of skeleton keys, aud robbed in a similar manner. A society of druggists, oilmen, & c. has been formed in London, for the purpose of adopting measures to check the numerous robberies that have been committed upon them by their servants. A meeting of the members was hefd at the London Coffee- house, on Friday week, when it was resolved, that more efficient measures should be adopted for the apprehension of a class of persons called " travelling receivers," who sett the stolen articles to shopkeepers at half- price. Large rewards are to be ottered for the apprehension of such persons,, and a committee was appoiuted to carry those measures into effect. Some extensive Irish freehold estates were offered for sale on Thursday week. The estates, which comprised numerous mansions, villages, farm- houses, agricultural buildings, and large enclosures of meadow, pasture, and arable land, I were situate iu Balliucarrageen, Ballycabire, ! Nevili's Court, Ballyonghvey, Clonevan, Kellisk, Killmuekeridge, and Samptom, in the county of Wexford, and contained 10,581 customary Irish acres, or upwards of 17,000 statute acres, with extensive fisheri s, & c. ; the principal part of the property let on beneficial leases for lives, and a small part at will, at an annual rental of upwards of £ 9053. They were subject to a jpi. iture of £ 1600 a- year, payable during the life of an aged person ; and also subject to a sum not exceeding £ 30,000, payable to three or more younger children of the Earl of Mount- norris, as their portions. The estates were bought in for £ 179,350. A FLOATING FAMILY .-^ To- day we passed two large rafts lashed together, by which simple con veyance several families from New England were transporting themselves and their property to the land of promise in the western woods. Each raft was eighty or ninety feet long, with a small house erected on it ; and on each was a stack of hay, round which several horses and cows wese- feeding1, whilt*. the paraphernalia of a farm- yard, the ploughs, wag? gons> pigs, children, and poultry, carelessly distributed, gave to the whole more the appearance of a permanent residence, than a caravan of adventurers seeking a home. To MAKE THE TEETH WHITE— A mixture of I honey with the purest charcoal will make the teeth I as white as snow. ELECTION FOR A CORONER.— Ireland may be truly called the country of agitation— even the office of Coroner, ( small as are its emoluments, troublesome its duties, and humble its dignity,} becomes a source of most violent contention, and party zeal. We learn from the Cork papers, that the County Corouership having become recently vacant, the succession to the vacant office is most keenly contested by two candidates* ueither of whom seemed disposed to give in ou the 20M day of ihe contest ! The numbers polled up to that day were not less than 7000, and the numbers were nearly equal, the majority only amounting to eight!' The High Sheriff is the returning officer, aud com- plains bitterly of the length of the contest, which appears likely to continue for several months, as the period is not limited by law,, and the whole number of freeholders ( including the celebrated forty shillingers) is very considerable, Cork being the largest county in Ireland— besides many of the voters have voted two or three times under different names and disguises, and the s. ceoes which occur every day, ( which are faithfully reported in the Cork papers,) present a curious specimen of Irish election morals, which are so much extolled by Mr. O'Connell and the demagogues. On this occasion, both the candidates are Roman Catholics, and each complains loudly of the interference of the Priests. Oil one occasion, the High Sheriff felt himself called upon to offer a word or two in defence of the Rev. Agitators, although he remarked that he believed that h- e and the Sub- Sheriff were the only Protestants in the Court House at the time? Two noble specimens of the black pear of Wor- cester, grown by Mr. Parsons, of Beckley, Sussex,, were exhibited in this city on Wednesday. One weighs 2lbs. 2^ oz. and measures 15 inches in cir- cumference; the other weighs 2lbs. loz.— Worces- ter Herald. An investigation into the bankruptcy of Daniel Patrick, mercer, of Hereford, has disclosed a most atrocious scheme of fraud, conspiracy, and perjury It appears that large quantities of tl> e bankrupt's goods have been clandestinely removed or eon- ccaled; and legal proceedings are forthwith to be taken against several individuals implicated in the nefarious proceeding. DEANERY OF Nonyvicn.— After an interregnum of nearly four months, the Deanery of Nor wich has- j been conferred on the HOJV and Rev. George Pellew, A. M. Prebendary of Canterbury, and also of York Cathedral. This gentleman is the third son of Lord Viscount Exmouth, G C. B.; and married in 1820 the Hon Frances Addingtou, third daughter of Lord Sidmouth. EDUCATION SIXTY YEARS AGO.— The Worcester Journal, in a recent number, alluded to an adver- tisement which appeared in that paper about sixty years ago from Mrs. Arthur, who kept a school at Chaddesley Corbett, in which that lady promised to accomplish her pupils not only in writing, reading, spelling, and sewing, but in the gastronomic artsof pickling, preserving, pastry, & c. The notice has met the eye of one of the good lady's pupils, who writes, " 1 am one of those ancient gentlewomen, who ought, in justice to the memory of Mrs. Arthur, to assert that her statement is perfectly correct; for, under that lady I learnt to read, write, spell, and sew; which I can do at this day, to the astonishment of all my friends and relatives, although 1 am in my seventy- fourth year. 1 believe I am not deficient in the art of pickling and pre- serving, and 1 well remember being taught to iron my own linen— and in allusion to accomplishments, I have danced with my grandchildren, and still can hum some old songs, which I learnt of my dancing master." The clergy of the county met on Friday at Derby,, and adopted petitions to parliament against the Catholic Claims— A meeting of the inhabitants of Exeter, convened by the Mayor, took place on Saturday, when a petition against their claims was carried by a great majority. A writer in the Stafford Paper states his belief, that the two present Members of Parliament for that County will lose their seats at the next General Election, in consequence of their supporting the views, of the Roman Catholics. BANKRUPTS Nov. 21.— Kichard Ford, jtin. of Com- mercial- road, carman and livery- stable keeper.— Tlios. Pyrke, of Henley- upon- Thames, draper.— Win. Burton, of Breightmet, near Bolton le- Moors, Lancashire, whii- ster— William Eales, of Crawford- street, Mary- le- hone, linen- diaper.— Frederick Greenfield, of While- cross- street, Cripplegate, surgeon.— Bejamin Laverock Love, of Great Yarmouth, merchant. — James Morganv of Bromyard, Herefordshire, butcher.— Thomas Clark and G. Bryson, of Bridge- road, Lambeth, and Chatham, drapers. James Loader, of Watford, Herts, iron- monger.— John Lomas, of Westminster Bridge. road, tavern and coffee- house keeper.—- Thomas George M a rtiu. Thread needle- street, broker.— John Burrell, of Love Lane, Roiherhithe, victualler.— Thomas Havard, of Bromyard, Herefordshire, victualler.— John Walker, of Ormskirk, Lancashire, draper and tea- dealer.— Thos. Toinsoii, of Cambridge, stone mason.- Joseph Bartram, of Alfreton, Derbyshire, mercer. INSOLVENT.— Thomas Christian, of Crown- street, Finsbury, wollen- draper. BANKRUPTS, NOV. 25.— Robert Hudson, of Norwich, wholesale- stationer.— John Smith, of Briohtelmstone. maker of sweets.— Robert Paten, of Pnddington Cnnalfc Paddington, slate- merchant. — Win. Fry, Joseph Fry* and Jonathan Chapman, St. IVtildred's Court, Poultry, l> ankers — James Dunnett, of Cheapside, toyman.— Thomas Bateman Manning, of Lamb's Conduit- street, money- scrivener and bill- broker.— George Norton, of Ratcliffe Highway and Cam- herwell, cheesemonger.—- Richard Guodhugh, of Glasshouse- street, St. JamesV, fishmonger.— John Beaumont and Abraham Beaumont-, of Lepton, Kiikeaton, Yorkshire, manufacturers of fancy goods.— Evan Williams, of Liverpool, builder.— William Norton, of Clayton West, High tloyland, Yorkshire, fancy waistcoat- manufacturer, and Francis Jackson, of Cateatoii-> lreet, Loudon, warehousemen.— Samuel llargreaves, of Liveipool, tailor and draper.— John Willis, of Nev\ castle- ou- Tyne, builder.— Henry Nightingale, of Queen's Row, Pimlico, bookseller.-— William Barber, of Gray's Inn Lane, aud Hackney, grocer — David Andrews, of Ciaubourne- street, straw, hat- manufacturer.— Henry Alfred Horneman, Thread, needle. street, tobacconist.— Henry Shade Peake, of Rosemarv- la- ne, victualler. — William Guiding, of Lvn- cotnbe and Widcombe, Somersetshire, dealer and chap- man.— John Wauklin and Benjamin Wauklin, of ClieU tenham, plasterers.— Thomas Morris, of Manchester^ cotton manufacturer.— John Lavers, of Buckfastleigh^ Devon, worsted and yarn- spinner.— Alexander Gordon and James Johnston, ofSalford, Lancashire, brewers. ' jpHE TOLLS of the Ironbridge and 0 Side Road will he LET, on FRIDAY,' the 5tli Day of December next, at Three o'Clock in the Afternoon. — Whoever shall be the Renter, must give such Security as the Proprietors shall approve for the Payment of the Rent, au, d at such Times as they shall direct. Any further Particulars may be known on Applica, tion to Mr. THOMAS RODEN, of Posnall; if by Letter, Post- paid. The Standard, has the following apposite observa- tion upon Mr. Shiel's projected triumphant reception in Dublin ::—" The following resolution was actually passed at a late meeting of the Roman Catholic Association in Dublin:: ' That we have read, with 4 sentiments of the liveliest admiration, the two late 1 splendid ef& r. ts of our eloquent countryman, Richard < Shiel, Esq. at Penenden Heath and the London ' Tavern ; and to demonstrate our sense of the hi ' value we place on those exertions, we hereby agree * to invite our triumphant advocate to a public dinner i on such a day as, will be most convenient to him.' If being in the most imminent danger of being ducked in a horse- pond be a triumph— if being a butt and a byword be a triumph - if being convicted of an attempt to palm off an unspoken speech be a triumph, then is Mr. Shiel most triumphant- It is, however, po more than we expected. Had Mr. Shiel been tarred and feathered, his honourable associates would have called him a Bird of Paradise, and congratulated him. on his plumification The state of the Silk trade, not in Spitalfields only, but at Taunton, Macclesfield, & c. is so depressed, and the wages of the mechanics are reduced so low that it is really wonderful how the suftef. ers, exist At Glasgow, however, distress has Overtaken the masters as well as t& e men, and failures to an immense amount have there taken place. The origin of these failures, as well as that of the misery now ex tending through the silk manufactories, glove trade, $ cc. kc. is ascribed by a Glasgow Paper, and the Political Economist of the London Courier, to the over- issue of cne- pound notes!! In our opinion they are de ducible from a much more apparent cause than this; the simple truth is, as the Morning Journal clearly explains, we have been manufacturing loo much. As the Editor of this paper truly asserts, " when the wages of the operative fall, the profits of the employe? must decline in proportion. To gain a living the artisan is compelled to work more hours a- day, to be more industrious, and to produce in a shorter- period of time an increased quantity of cloth. For Ihe last two years the manufacturers have been in this, situ- ation. Each man has been running a desperate race with another. It has not been the consideration whether fhe demand was Or was not equal to the 1 supply ; but whether the one could rival the other in i cheapness. It Mas not a question of quality, but entirely one of price; and he w ho could produce the greatest quantity, at the least cost, deemed himself the most successful competitor. The Glasgow manu- facturers were merely the practical disciples of Mr. Huskisson. They were the favourite illustrators of the new doctrines— the adherents and the victims of our improved policy. They pever considered fop a momerjt that they might manufacture too many cheap goods. They imagined that consumption would increase in proportion to cheapness ; and they accordingly bought freely and exported largely to India and to the happy republics of Sputh America. We inconsiderately deemed our home trade of no value— we encouraged foreign trade at the expense of it— we left the consumers at home to eat their taxes— we robbed the farmertr- we beggared the silk weaver— we ruined the shipowner— we embarrassed the woolgrower— we sent the glover to the workhouse — we pinched all classes at home, to seek on foreign shores the profits and the sources of prosperity we once possessed in England— and this is the bankrupt and humiliating result!"— Bristol Journal. On Thursday last, the 20th inslant, about three o'clock in the afternoon, the Eye Pit at Washington exploded with tremendous violence. The heavy frame- work erected at the pit's mouth,- with the large pulley wheels attached to it, were thrown down ; in fact, the whole of fhe machinery was destroyed ; corves and other missiles were pro- jected from the bottom of the pit, and scattered in the surrounding fields. An immense : cloud of smoke issued from the shaft, aceomp^ uied with a report surpassing that of the largest piece of artillery, which was heard through al] the sur. rounding villages. The immediate assemblage of persons interested in the safety of the workmen was great— wives anxiously looking for their husbands^ parents for their children, and sisters for their brothers, formed a heart- rending spectacle. By ihis catastrophe eleven boys and three men have been deprived of life. There were fifteen persons in the seam when the explosion took place, and only one man, Michael Hall, the onsettcr, escaped ! He is severely burnt. A Coroner's inquest was held on the body of John Hall, on Saturday, by Michael Hall, Esq. aud a verdict of " accidental death," was returned.— Tyne Mercury, speetable looking old lady, with spectacles on nose, was seated on a chair at the door of one of the cabins employed- in knitting ; another female was the wash- tub ;• the men were chewing their tobacco, with as much complaccncy as if they had been in " the land of steady habits," and the various family avocations seemed to go on like clock- work. In this manner these people travel at ight expense. They, bring their own provisions; their raft floats wit< h the current;; and honest Jonathan, surrounded with his scolding, grunting, squalling, and neighing dependants,, floats to the point proposed without leaving his. own fiYe* side; aud on his arrival there, may step on shore with his house, and commence business, like a certain grave personage, who, on his marriage with a rich widow, said he had " nothing to do but to walk iu aud hang up his hat."— Judge HalVs Letters f- om the West. CURIOUS ANCIENT MANUSCRIPT— M. Cham- pollion, jun who is about to embark at Marseilles for Egypt, having inspected a valuable collection of ancient MSS. in the possession of M. Sallier, an inhabitant of Aix, has discovered two rolls of Papyrus relating ^ the history and wars of the reign of Sesostris the Great." These manuscripts are dated the ninth year of that monarch's reign. Sesostris Thames, or the Great, according to the calculations of the German chronologies, lived in the time of Moses, and was the son, as it is supposed, of the Pharoah who perished in the Red Sea, while pursuing the Israelites. These remarkable docu- ments which, after an elapse of more than 3,000 years, M- C. has discovered as by a miracle, may contain details, the interest of which will be readily imagined, on some of the grandest incidents of sacred history. On the 2d instant the Academical Society of Aix, received the report of M. Sallier relative to the discovery. A third roll has also been found, treating either on astronomy or astrology, but more probably of both these sciences combined ; it has not yet been opened, but it is hoped that it will throw some additional light on the conceptions of the heavenly system entertained by the Egyptians and Chaldeans, the first people who devoted themselves to that study. NAVY OFFICE EMBARRASSMENT.— A very ex- tensive defalcation has been discovered iu the Navy Pay Office. The defaulter occupied a situation of considerable trust in the Chief Cashier's Office, and had for many years conducted himself in a manner that appeared to warrant unbounded confidence being placed in his fidelity. It appears, however, that he has at last abused that confidence in a manner that evinces considerable cunning as well as dishonesty Some weeks since, the usual period having ariiyed when he had his annual leave of absence for six \ y^ eks, he obtained leave to spend that period in the country. The day before he was to start, he contrived to obtain possession of checks to the amount of more than £ 20,000, drawn by Mr. Creswell, the chief cashier, on account of the Navy Commissioners, for \ yhich he immediately obtained cash, aud with which he started at once for a sea- port, and embarked for America. His having obtained leave of absence lulled any suspicion that might otherwise haye led to earlier detection of the fraud ; aud it vv$ s not fill a late hour on Saturday night that the fraud was discovered. Information of the circumstance was immediately given to the Right Hon. Vesey Fitzgerald, the Paymaster of the Navy, who early on Sunday morning called upon the . Secretjjry of Staje for ihe Home Department, and a messenger was dispatched for the Chancellor of the Exchequer, who was at the time at his country seat. Mf. Peel also despatched a mes- senger for the immediate attendance of Sir R. Birnie, but that magistrate being out of tflwn, Mr. Halls., of Bp- street, vyas fetched from his house at Brompton, and instructions were given to him to employ the police in endeavouring, if possible, to trace the delinquent. It was, however, soon dis- covered that he had effectually baffled all pursuit, and all expectation of capture was abandoned hopeless. TOOTH- ACHE.- rrA correspondent in the Farmer's Journal recommends lime water as a cure for this excruciating pain. He says, " Put a piece of lime about thesije of a walnut into a quart bottle; with this riuce the mouth twp or three times a day and clean the teeth, using this water every morning ; if it tciste strong dilute it, for it should be just strong enough to taste the lime, no stronger. I was tormented with tooth- ache for weeks, till j used this mixture, but have never had it s| nce. A friend to whom I recommended it, and who was a great sufferer, has been equally fortunate; she attributed her'sto rheumatism; after a few weeks 1 asked her how the lime water succeeded?—' Oh,' she said, I have never had the rheumatism since.' I am in- clined to think, in both cases, it arose from scurvy ie, the gums. Lime is a powerful antiseptic, and is very likely to remove, or at any rate prevent this complain.!" It is stated in a respectable publication, that in a proclamation of the Emperor of China, called forth a few years since by the troublesome increase of appeals from the provinces, his Celestial Majesty enjoins " strict search to be made to discover all law- suit, exciting blackguards, aud when found to punish them severely." NEW SEPT.— A licence was on Wednesday applied for at the registry office, Chester, and granted, for a house in Stockport, as a place of worship, for a new sect of people there lately sprung up, who. denominate themselves Gomerian Druids LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY, CORN HILL, LONDON. MANAGERS. CHARLES POLE, Esq. Chairman. The leather trade is at present in a more brisk state than it has been for a number of years. The curriers are particularly, thronged in executing orders for the town and the country districts, and the workmen are earning handsome wages. The trade being also equally satisfactory in England, there are now few " tramps'* to subtract from, the earnings of industry. The Scottish tanners are participating in the vivacity of the business^ and in those tan- yards celebrated for making superior leather, there are heavy arrears in the making up of orders.—- Glasgow Chronicle. STOCKPORT JUNCTION RAILWAY.- T- A meeting, numerous and respectable, was held on Wednesday at the Warren- Bulkv ley Arms Inn, Stockport, for the purpose of entering into a subscription, and of concerting the necessary measures of an application to Parliament, for power to form a Railway to con- nect tlie Liverpool aud Manchester with the Crom- ford and High Peak Railway, and for other pur- poses connected with the undertaking. The neces sary surveys and estimates were submitted to the meeting. The chair was taken by Thomas Legh, Esq. M. P. Mr. Jessop, the civil engineer, ex plained the nature of the project, and also entered into a very minute detail of the plan and estimates of the intended railway. The whole outlay of forming the railway from half a mile beyond Whaley to Water- street in Manchester, 17 miles and a third, would be £ 165,325. 18s. but which would produce a revenue of £ 25,000 per annum, from calculations which he produced and read. Mr. Jessop, the Engineer, stated that the land on the line would cost £ 8000. including which and the erecting bridges, placing steam engines, fencing, laying the rails, and tunnelling, the expense would amount to £ 139,000, aud the branches would cost £ 26,000 more. A string of resolutions iu favour of the measure were read by Mr Gisbome, which were afterwards put from the Chair and carried unani- mously. £ 13* 500 were subscribed before the meeting broke up. CURIOUS LITERARY DISCOVERY-— A very in- teresting work has lately been discovered, which will excite the attention of all biblical students and divines of every denomination; it is a translation fr<- m the original manuscript at the book of JASHER, referred to as a work of credit and reputation in Holy Scripture, first in Joshua x. 13. and again iu 2 Samuel i. 18 This book was kept as a memorial of the great events which had happened from the beginning of time, especially to the family and descendants of Abraham, by the Kings of Judah. After the Babylonish captivity, it fell into the possession of the Persian Iiings, and was preserved with great pare in the city of Gazna ; from whence a translation was procured by the great Alcuin, who flourished in the 8th century, at the cost of several bars of gold, presented to those w ho had the custody of it. He brought this translation to his own country, having employed, with his com- panions, seyen years in pilgrimage, three of which were spent in Gazna, in order to lVi. s obtaining this important and interesting work. After his return to England^ he was made Al? bot of Canterbury, and hayit) g lived in the highest honour, died in the year 804, leaving this, with other manuscripts, to his friend, a clergyman in Yorkshire. It appears to have been preserved with religious care Tor many centuries, until about 100 years since it fell into the hands of a gentleman who certifies that on its cover was the following testimony of our great reformer Wiekliffe:—" I have read the book of Jasher twice oyer, and 1 much appiove of it, as a piece of great antiquity and curiosity, but I cannot consent that it should be made a part " of the Canon of Scripture." ( Signed Wickliife.)— This gentle- man, who modestly conceals his name, com- municated it to a Noble Lord, who appears to have been high in office, when a rumour prevailed of a new translation of the Bible. His Lordship's opinion of it was that it should be published, as a work of great sincerity, plainness, and truth ; and further, his Lordship added, " it is my opinion the Book of Jasher ought to have been printed in the Ho: y Bible before the book of Joshua." — From that period this valuable work has lain concealed, until by an accident it fell into the hands of the present possessor, who proposes to publish it in a way worthy its excellence for truth, antiquity, and evident originality. Frederick Booth, Esq. Charles Boulton, Esq. The Hon. P. Pleydell Bou- verie William Burnie, Esq. John Oockerell, Esq. Thomas Dorrien, Esq. Thomas Dorrien, juu. Esq. Charles Bell Ford, Esq. William Hamilton, Esq. Edward Harman, Esq. lit. Hon. W. lluskisson^ M. P. i JOSHUA MILNE, Actuary* Felix Calvert Lad- broke^ Esq. Henry Ladbroke, Esq. Charles Shaw Lefevre, Esq. The Hon. Hugh Lindsay, M. P. Charles Littledale, Esc^. Henry Littledale, Esq. John Pearse, Esq. M. P, Br ice Pearse, Esq.. James Trotter, Esq. R! PH E Managers having had PREMIUMS 5.- calculated proportional to the Values of th. ® Risks al the different Periods of Life, — which, under 45 Years of Age, when, the Assurance is for the Whole of Life., and mide? 55. far s^ m- ter, Periods, are consi- derably lower than are generally required,- Tables of the New Rates, with the Conditions of Assurance, may he had at the Sun Life Office, in CornhiU, and at the Sun Fire Office, in Craig's Court, Loudon; also of any of the Agents for the Sun Fire Office. AGENTS. Shrewsbury Ludlow,,, Oswestry Market Drayton Welshpool Carnarvon Ironbridge Cyvus Giitins. Thomas Griffiths. , S. Windsor. Samuel Silvester. J. Yearsley. W. Williams. Mr. Matthew Court.. BY THE KING'S PATENT, DR. SIBLY'S RE- ANIMATING SO- LAR TINCTURE is universally allowed to he the most pleasant, safe, and efficacious Remedy ever offered to the Public. Its warm and renovating Quali- ties render it the best Medicine for Debility, Co » s » i « p- tion, Nervous aud Rheumatic Complaints, Spasms,, Indigestion, Lowness of Spirits, and all those distress- ing affections which harass the weak, sedentary, anil delicate. It requires no argument to convince mors than a trial, after which those who value health will never choose to be without it. Prepared and sold by Mr. J R. Saffell, No. 35, Gloucester- street, QueenV square, Blonmshury, in Bottles at 6s. ? s 6d. and lis, each; and iu Family Bottles ( by which there is a sav- Ug of 7s.) at 22s, each. Also Dr. Sibly's LtfNAR TINCTLRB, for complaints incident to the Female Sex, in Bottles at 4s. 6d. and 10s. 6d. each. Observe, none can be genuine unless signed by the Proprietor, J. It. Saffell, in his own Hand- writing, on the Wrapper of each Battle. Sole Wholesale Agents, Messrs. Barclay and Sons, 95, Fleei- Market, London 5 and sold Retail by Messrs. Eddowes, Broxton, Tomp- kins, Onions, Hulhert, Shrewsbury; Houlstou, Smith, Bradbury, Wellington; Smith, Ironbridge; Edmonds, § hiffual ; Qitton, Bridgnorth ; Price, Edwards, Wea- ver, Oswestry ; Baugii, PHesmere ; Evanson, llassalls, Whitchurch; Bui ley, Ridgeway, Drayton; Butter- wortlt, Johnson, Nantwich ; Painter, Wrexham; and by all Medicine Venders throughout. the Kingdom. Chilblains, /\ h? iu} iatism9 Sprains, & c. u TLER'S C A JEl'UTO PO D E L ROC. — Cajeput Oil, which is the Basis of this Opo- deldoc, has heen long esteemed on the Continent as a Remedy for Chilblains, Chronic Rheumatism,: Spasm- odic Affections, Palsy, Stiffness and Enlargement of the Joints, Sprains, Biuises, and Deafness; and th's Expeiieuee of late Years, in England, proves that it merits the high Character given of il by the most eminent iu the Profession, in I hose obstinate Com- plaints Being combined in the Form of Opodeldoc, it is rendered" more penetrating, and consequently much more efficacious as au external Application. Rubbed upon the Skin, by Means of Flaniiel, or the warm Hand, it allays morbid Irritation of Nerves, in. yigorates Ihe Absorbents, aud acceleiates the Circula- tion . Sold in Bottles, at Is. l^. l. and 2s. 9< 1. by the princi- pal Medicine Venders in the Kingdom. Of whom may be had, MARSHALL'S UNIVERSAL CERATE, au excellent Remedy fur CHILBLAINS, when broken; usci also in Scalds, Burns, & c. N. B. Ask for BUTI. KR'S CAJFPUT OPODELDOC. SHREWSBURY : • PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY \ VILLIA> 1 ED DOW E AND JOHN'EDDOW ES, CORN- MARKET. To whom Advertisements or Articles of hitelli- g « nce are requested to f> e addi ex* ed. A drtrti. se- merits are a/. vo received by Messrs. NEWTOX ai d Co. lyarwick- Sqvare, Newgate Street ; Mr, BARKER, No. 33, Fleet Street; and Mr. HEr- J\' ELL, Gazette Adrertisiva Office, Chancery l. ane, London ; tihewi. se fry Messrs. J. K. Jons~ srojy and Co. No. 1, Lower Sackville- Sti eeti Dublin This Paper is regularly filed as above; also at GA RR aw Ay's, P E EL. a and the CHAPTER Cof- fee Houses, London
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