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The Salopian Journal

25/02/1829

Printer / Publisher: W. & J. Eddowes 
Volume Number:     Issue Number: 1830
No Pages: 4
 
 
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The Salopian Journal

Date of Article: 25/02/1829
Printer / Publisher: W. & J. Eddowes 
Address: Corn-Market, Shrewsbury
Volume Number:     Issue Number: 1830
No Pages: 4
Sourced from Dealer? No
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PRWTIEP BY W. & J. E » © OWE § , COra « MAIRKET, SHREW& BIJRY. This 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. XXXVI.— N° 1830.] To Parents and Guardians. WANTED, by a Surgeon in extensive Practice, a well- educated Youth, as an AP- PRENTICE. lie will have superior Advantage in, the Study of his Profession, and be treated in every Kespect as one of the Family .— Premium 200 Guineas. I Apply ( Post paid) lo . MANDBR, WEAVBR, and MANDF. it, Wholesale Chemists, Wolverhampton. THE UNICORN PUBLIC- HOUSE, AT DAWLEY BANK. TO BE SOLD, OR LET, At. Lady rl) ay next, or sooner if required. rSIHE HOUSE lias every Convenience JsL for carrying" on the Public Business, having I Regard to tlie Responsibility of the Parlies, two good Kitchens, a Parlour, a Bar, four good Cel- lars, four Sleeping Rooms, two good Pantries, Brew- house, Grainery, Pigsties, ard a good Garden. N. B. The coining- on Tenant is required to take to the Brewing Vessels, at a fair Valuation. For further Particulars enquire on the Premises, or of Mr. THOMAS HEWLETT, Dawley Bank. TO ROJJD COjYTRACTORS. ® " o fcc < g, et, At a Meeting of the Committee to be held at the Cross Keys Inn, at Llanjmynech, on Saturday, the 28lh Day of February, 1829, at Twelve o'clock at Noon ; IE Forming, Fencing, and Completing an Alteration of the Line of Road between the Cross Guns and the Bridge over the Rail Road between Oswestry and Llanymynech. A Survey, Section, and Particular may be seen at the Cross, Keys Inn, at Llanyniynech ; or at Mr. PENSON'S Office, in Oswestry, after Ihe 16th of February. The Commissioners will not consider themselves bound to accept the lowest Offer, without having due TO ROAD CONTRACTORS. Shrewsbury District of the Walling Street Road. THE CELEBRATED COLLECTION Of the highly- esteemed fVorhs of Benjamin West, Esq. the late President of the Royal Academy ; together with the splendid Exhibition Room's, erected by Mr. Nash at an Expense exceeding £ 3000, and the Residence of the venerable I Day next. ' HE Trustees of the Shrewsbury District of the Watling- Street Road will meet at the Guildhall, in Shrewsbury,- on Monday, the 2d Day of March next, to receive Tenders from Persons willing' to Contract for Ihe ttepnirs of the suit! District of ( loads, for a Term of three or five Years from Lady- JJeceased, in Newman- Street. MR. GEORGE ROBINS HAS the Gratification to announce to the Public, nnif more especially those who tencouroffe the FINE ARTS, that it has been his good Fortune In he honoured by lite Executors of the revered and higl^ ly- g- ifled Artist, BENJAMIN WEST, Late President of the Royal Academy, To offer for unreserved Competition, on FRI DAY and SATURDAY, the 22d aud 23d Days of May, at Twelve o'clock, THE UNEQUALLED COLLECTION OF HISTORICAL PICTURES, Including 170 of the sublime Efforts of his vast and comprehensive Mind. A Specification of the several Works to he per- formed may be seen npon Application to Mr. JoNKS, I Ihe Clerk to the Trustees, at Shrewsbury ; or at Mr. PKNSON'S Office in Oswestry, from whom any further Particulars may be known. The Contractor must enter into Bond Security, with | sufficient Sureties, for ihe due Execution of his Contract. FEBRUARY 2r>, 1829. T03L3LS TO BE LET- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the TOLLS arising: at the under- mentioned Toll Gates upon Ihe Turnpike Road leading front Shan- bury to Drayton and from Shnwbury to Hig-. ll 1 • , , „ • .. • . J I El- call, in the County of Salop, called or known by Ihe grea Renown acquired by this dist. ing .. shed ° Na nes of Ternhill Gate, Kdgebnt. hr.., Gales, anil Ornament o his An will necesrmly circumscribe the . , |, ET |> v AUCTION, to the best Necessity ;, f go, a* into a very long Detail ; this » £ a, „ Hu; () f Mrs garrison, of fortunate, inasmuch as theappa lltlg Difficulty of doln£ F>|, hnnt and Castle Inn, in SI, anbury aforesaid, stnet Justice would weaken ^ humble Effort and MONDAY, Ihe 2,1 Day o March next, punctually thus render more imperfect a Sketch that pretends no £ V Hours „ f Twelve and Two o'clock of the J? "." I a "- rv l'," e,". f ' JiR l, rl11'""! same Day, in Ihe Manner directed by Acts passed in Pictnre, to which a much more talented Man would : , y of f R , '„ of „ u feel Inn. self incompetent to do adequate Justice. In [ vinjesiy King George the Fourth, " For regulating viewing this Turnpike Roads;" which Toils were let the last Splendid Exhibition of the Founder and Father of\ Yel, r) and produced the following Sums : viz British Historical Painting, Ternhill Gate £ 200 0 0 The Nation at large will lament that in Times like I F. dg- eboulton Gate 109 0 0 these, when the March of Intellect and Improvement Walton Gates 101 0 0 has made such rapid Strides, so great a 1 reasure as ., .,,, . . . , o „. „„„ i, , TT)' mrCT cVjnrnV Alul w i,,! P" 1 " P 10 Auction at such Sum, or sncl, Mil. vvt- si » tjALUMtl I other Sums as the Commissioners may think fit, and should be left to the Hazard and Uncertainty of the I su|> ject to such Conditions as shall be then produced Hammer ; it was surely not appreciating too highly I or declared. And no Person's Bidding for any of the the English Tasle and Liberality to contemplate Isa;, j Tolls will be accepted until bis Surety or Sureties THE BRITISH INSTITUTION AND are named and approved of by the Trustees for the NATIONAL GALLERY said Roads and Tolls ; and whoever happens to be the becoming the Depository of this entire Collection, and best Bidder or Bidders, must at the same Time give bus to transmit to Posterity a proud Record of ' what Security, with sufficient Sureties to the Salisfac on con d be accomplished by an Englishman, and in that <> » '<-' said Trustees, for Payment of the re. pec ive peculiar Art which had so hTng remained in lls Rents- at whteh the sa. ue shall be let, and enter ... to a Infancy. It was by the ge„ ero,? s Devo. ion of his Agreement for Payment thereof at such Times Pencil to the noblest" Aim of his Profession iliat first | 115 " iay be agreed on brought British Painting into direct Association with the Throne, and raised it into an Object of national Importance in the Mind of bis Sovereign. It will almost partake of the Work of Supererogation to state, that until the Year 1768, Historical Painting was in nowise encouraged in England, and the immortal West encountered the Trial in Fear and Trembling ; how well he succeeded future Generations will acknow- ledge, and the present will, it is believed, add their concurring Testimony. For this proud Testimonial of having raised the Character of English Historical Art, the Public are mainly indebted to the kind and foster- ing Encouragement of his LATE MAJESTY, GEORGE THE THIRD, Who, ill the singleness of bis Mind, aud unbounded Liberality, commanded the late President to Paint Twenty- two Pictures to adorn THE ROYAL CHAPEL IN WINDSOR. Our present Monarch was graciously pleased to restore to Mr. West's Family these precious Gems; they include the sublime Composition, MOSES RECEIVING THE LAWS, The Universal Deluge, aud the Crucifixion of our EDWARD HANMER, Clerk lo the Trustees of the said Turnpike Roads. STANTON, Jan. 24th, 1829. A COLLECTION OF JEWELS, Of the most fashionable Description, Service of very handsome Chased Plate, 7000 oz. and Plated Table Servic « covered with Silver, together with a Variety of valuable Property of an ornamental Character, including Bronzes, Buhl, and Or Molu Commodes, Clochs. tyc, the Property of a Gentleman of Consideration, and must be sold unreservedly. MR. GEORGE ROBINS TT> EGS very respectfully to announce that 83 he has been directed by • Gentleman of Rank to offer for unreserved SALE, at his Great Rooms in Corent Garden, on Thursday, the 5ih Day of March INN &, POSTING HOUSE- STo i) c Set, rlpH AT old- accustomed Inn and Posting B House, the CASTLE INN, in BISHOP'S CASTLE, Shropshire, will, Stables, Goach. houses, and Buildings, and a Quantity of excellent Land close to the Town. Possession to be had at Lady. Day next, or before if required. Further Parlieuiars may he known hy Application to Mr. NawEi. L, Lydbury North, near Bishop's Cast le. 9th FEBRUARY, 1829. TURNPIKE TOLLS. ] VTOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that ' JL^ I the TOLLS arising at the several Toll Gates upon the Turnpike Bond leading from Shrewsbury to Much Wenlock, called or known by Ihe Names of Weeping Cross, Cressage, and llarley Gates, will be LET by AUCTION, In the best Bidders, at the House of Robert Thomas, called by the Name of Cound Lane Inn, on THURSDAY, the Twelfth Day of March next, between the Hours of Eleven and One o'Clock, pursuant to and, in Manner directed by the Statutes in that Case made and provided; which Tolls produced last Year the respective Sums set opposite their Names, above the Expenses of collecting them: viz. Weeping Cross Gate £ 184 0 0 Cressage Gate Ill 0 0 llarley Gate 108 0 0 N. B. These Tolls will be put up and Let iti Parcels or Lots, and each Parcel or Lot will be put up at such Sum as the Trustees of the said Road shall think lit. Whoever happens to be the best Bidder, must be provided with his Sureties, and sign an Agreement for Payment of Ihe Rent in such Proportions and at st, ch Times as the Trustees shall direct. W. COOPER, Clerk to the Trustees. SHREWSBURY, 9th Feb. 1829. EXETER CHANGE, STRAND. The valuable Exhibition of every Descrip- tion of Miscellaneous Pioperly, FOR ABSOLUTE SALE. EXCHANGE OF LANDS. Saviour. The remaining ones nre all appropriate for I "<*<> "' id following Days, at Twelve o'Clock, an Altar Pieces. It would far exceed the limit of an I extensive Collection of Advertisement to mention separately all the Pictures ; n verv few would demonstrate the Treat which is in • tore for those who have not been so fortunate as to see them. CHRIST REJECTED BY THE JEWS, ( And for which £ 10,000 was refused), was exhibited in Pall Mall, and 240,000 Persons were gratified by u Sight of it. DEATH ON THE PALE HORSE, JEWELS AND JEWELLERY, embracing much of Beauty and Splendour. It has been purchased from the Magazine of one of the first Goldsmiths and Jewellers in London, and the follow- ing will be found conspicious for their Splendour and intrinsic Worth : — MAGNIFICENT DIAMOND AND EMERALD NECKLACES, & BUTTERFLY, of great Value, Diamond Ear- Rings, Bracelets, Representing the opening of the first live Seals; the Combs, Diamond and Ruby Bracelets, and Diamond Effect proposed to be excited hy this Pictnre is the and Sapphire Ear- Rings, Cross, Ruhv, and Diamond terribly Sublime, and its various' Modifications, until Suite, and many very beautiful Ornaments and corn- lost in the opposite extremes of Pity and Horror— a p'ete for Fashion and Design ; 100 Carats of Emeralds Sentiment which Painting hail not, till then, success- and Rubies; valuable Gold Snuff Boxes ; Gold fully attempted lo awaken. This is indeed a Chef- d'eeuvrp; and the same Panegyric might be safely pronounced on the remaining 150 Pictures. The Spuce allolled for this Purpose is, however, insufficient, and this imperfect Description will end by entreating especial Attention to the following : — Expulsion of Adam and Eve The Deluge Ahiahatn and Isaac The Resurrection Peter and John The Three Marys The Brazen Serpent Saul Prophesying St. Paul shaking Ihe Viper t hrist healing the Infirm The Overthrow of the Old Beast and False Prophet Telemnchus and Mentor on the Island of Calypso 1 T^ ble and Sideboard Guard Chains, and a Profusion of other Articles ; also A SERVICE OF CHASED PLATE, 7000 OUNCES, including King's Pattern Table Spoons, Forks and Knives, large Salvers, splendid Soup and Sauce Tureens en suite. TIIE NOBLE WARWICK VASE. The Arts and Sciences voted their Medal for the Classical Execution of this Vase. Superb Candela- bra*, exquisitely chased Tripods and Epergnes, ele- gant Plateau Dishes with Covers, Ragout Ditto, a noble Cup on Pedestal, Ice Puils, Cups und Covers, Candlesticks and Branches. A SPLENDID SILVER- GILT TEA AND COFFEE EQUIPAGE, Waiters, Inkstands, and an Infinity of Articles for the Cicero discovering the Tomb of Archimedes Death of Wolfe Battle at l. a Hague Marc Antony showing the Robe aud Will of Casar. I Thus has Mr. West left for Ihe Admiration of the present and succeeding Generations A SUBLIME SERIES OF PICTURES, From Sacred and Profane History, Poelry, and A MAGNIFICENT DRESSING CASE, filled will, massive Silver Gilt, Chased, and elegnntly turned Silver and Gold Ornaments, and finished man Expense exceeding 1000 Guineas, late the Property of JOSEPH HAYNE, ESQ. Also a complete Service of excellent Plated Articles, original Fancy, including the greater Portion of the cove,. ej wi| h silver, comprising Venison Dishes and Labour of his long and meritorious Life, as THE ONLY LEGACY FOR HIS CHILDREN. In America, the Exhibition of one of Mr. West's Pictures, The Healing of ihe Infirm in the Temple ( which be presented to the Hospital of Philadelphia gratuitously), produced a Sum sufficient to perpetuate the Maintenance of 30 Pensioners, besides 1800 Gui- Covers, Tea Waiters, Wine Coolers, an antique Cfiini- ney Clock, superior Gold Watches; likewise several Magnificent Buhl Commodes and Armoires, Can- delabras and Ancient Bronzes. A remarkably fine Collection of the OLD ENAMELLED INDIA CHINA, neas to build a Room to receive it. It may he re including many very beautiful Specimens of this sill- marked that none of the Pictures in this Colleclion 1 gularly fine and rare old China ; amongst the most have been exhibited out of I lie Metropolis of England ; and judging from the great Success of a single Picture in America, ii is not unreasonable lo contem- plate an immense Fortune by the Exhibition of the larger ones in the principal Cities in Europe and America. To conclude, Sir Thomas Lawrence, at the Distribution of Prizes lo the Students of the Iloyal Academy, eulogized the late venerable President thus: — His Works were not only superior to any former Productions of English Art, but far surpassing coutmuporary Merit on the Continent— were un- equalled at any Period below the School of the Carracci— and be gained Celebrity at the close of his Life, far greater than he had ever before enjoyed, ( because almost to forgetfulness or deceased great- ness) the only popular Painter of bis Country. Descriptive Catalogues, at 2s. 6d. each, will be ready Two Months antecedent to the Sale ; the Cataiogues may ihen he bad in the principal Cilies in America, at Berlin, Vienna, Amsterdam, and Paris; in Edinburgh, Glasgow, Liverpool, Oxford, and Cam- bridge ; of T. R. Smith, Esq. Solicitor, No. 7. Furnmil's Inn ; aud at Mr. George Rolling's Offices, London* worthy of Notice will he found upwards of 40 large Jars of various Forms, some 3 and 4 Feet high ; noble large Bowls, Salvers, Ewers, Plateaus, & c.; also a Variety of ti e m ist valuable ANCIENNE SEVRE CHINA of the Time of Louis XIV. comprising many Specimens of the much- esteemed Blue and Green. Also THE MULBERRY- TRHE BOX, made of the Wood of the renowned Tree planted by OCR IMMORTAL BARD at Stratford on Avon. The Authenticity of this Box is placed beyond a Doubt : a most respectable Man ( a Tenant of the late Duke of Dorset) made an Affidavit that it was from the genuine Tree, before a highly- esteemed Clergy, man, who is now living to corroborate this interesting Fact. French Clocks with Pedestals, and iiuiuerous Ornaments of great Rarity There are especial Reasons that the Sale of the Whole should be peremptory. The Colleclion will be on View Ihe Monday, Tues- day, and Wednesday pievious, when descriptive Catalogues tnay be had at the Office . of Mr. GEORGE ROBINS, Coveut Garden, at Is. each. MR. GEORGE ROBINS EGS to intimate to the Public, that in Consequence of this ancient and respectable Repository being- doomed ( by Means of the Provisions of an Act of Parliament for improving* the Strand) to be immediately " rased to the Ground," Mr. Clarke, the Proprietor " of Exeter Change, lias directed him to SELL BY AUCTION, and without the least Reserve, on Tuesday, the 17th of March, and Five following Days, at Twelve o'Clock. the unusually extensive and valuable Stock, which for so many Years has been the Subject of Admiration and Astonishment to the multitudinous Persons who have so frequently con- gregated at THE ANCIENT AND RESPECTABLE ESTAB^ LISHMENT OF EXETER CHANGE. It has been proverbial for a lengthened Period, and the Pride of the late respected and present Propri- etor, that the Variety in this Exhibition, infinitely surpassing any other in this Metropolis, was so great, that it were hardly possible to inquire for any Thing, either useful or ornamental, that could not on the Instant be provided there. The immense Wealth which was the necessary Consequence of such an extensive Trade, was mainly to be attributed to the Proprietor's adopting from the Commencement the good ( but old- fashioned) Notion of having every Thing of the very best Description. The following is necessarily a brief Outline of the great Variety aud Excellence which will be found conspicuous in this Collection. The Harness and Saddlery Departments include 16 Sets of Carriage, Stanhope, Pony, and Phaeton Harness, handsomely mounted ; 50 Military, Hunting, &, Side Saddles ; 3* Dozen Bridles, Field Of- ceiV Bridles, and Bits ; about 30 Suits of Horse Cloath- ing ofevery Description ; a oreat Variety of Bits, Stir- rups, and Brake Tackle ; 4 Dozen Mexican Bits and Spurs; Plated Stand suitable for that Country ; Re- gulation Bits for the different Services ; 2 Curricle Cars and Saddles, elegantly mounted ; Stable Head Collars and Stable Articles; 100 Riding, Hunting, Carriage, and Chaise Whips, Gambadoes ; 300 Pair of Jockey and Heel Spurs. In the Travelling and Camp Equipages, of great Ingenuity, and novel in their Application, will be found 24 Iron Bedsteads and Bedding; Sea Cots; Camel and Bullock Trunks; Portable Chests of Drawers, Wash Stands, and Chairs, on the most improved Principles ; Canteens and Camp Equipages, fitted up complete; Cases with'Glass Shades for India ; Travelling Bags ; Mahogany and Rosewood Portable Desks, Dressing Cases, Tea Chests, Caddies, and Work Boxes; Leather Writing and Dressing Cases; Leather Trunks and Portmanteaus; Dressing Glasses, Sea Chests, and Cabin Couches. In the Military and Sporting Goods, are 80 Regulation Swords for the Army, Navy, and East India Company ; Military and Naval Belts, Epaulets, Grand Knots, Officers' Sashes, Gorgets, Breast Plates, Mexican Mounts, Dress anil Undress Military Caps; a Single Gun, by Joseph Man ton ; Syke's Patent Powder Flasks, Shot Belts, Game Bags, and every Description of Sporting Articles. THE CUTLERY includes 100 Sets of best Town- made Ivory, Bone, Horn, and Wood- handled Table Knives and Forks ; 250 Sets of Country- made Ditto; an immense Assort- ment of Pen, Pocket, and Sporting Knives, Razors, Scissors, Corkscrews, Cases of Razors, Button and Boot Hooks, Hones, Razor Strops, Brushes of every Description ; Ivory, Tortoiseshell, and Horn Combs ; Brush Cases, Soap Cups and Glasses, Boot Jacks, & c. Gentlemen's Tool Chests, and a Variety of Tools THE ELEGANT JEWELLERY comprises much of Variety and Value in Rings set with various Stones, Brooches, Ear Rings, Lockets, Neck Chains, Pins, Coral Necklaces ; 90 Gold and Silver Watches, Chains, Seals and Keys ; ftilv.- r and other Snuff Boxes ; Vinegaretts & c Tooth- pi. ck Cases; hnndsome Gilt Bracelets, Waist Buckles, Combs, and Variety of Gilt Jewellery and Trinkets ; Black Brooches, Ear- Rings, and Clasps; Purse and Reti- cule Snaps. In the Plated and Plated Articles will be found Silver Spoons and Forks, Butter Knives Tea Pots, Muffineers, Fish Slices, Soup and Sauce Ladles, Tankards, Wine Strainers, Decanter Labels, Thimbles, Dessert and Fruit Knives, Shoe and Knee Buckles; 10 Pair of plated Vegetable Dishes and Covers; Tureens; an elegant Epergne ; Bread and Cake Baskets; Tea Sets; 50 Pair of Table Candle- sticks and Branches; Chamber Ditto; Pair of superb Ice Pails; Coffee Pots; Milk Bowls; 30 Liqueur, Cruet, and Soy Frames ; Snuffers and Trays ; Decan- ter Stands; Grape Scissars ; Wine Strainers; Egg Stands ; Tea Caddies, Inkstands, Knife- rests, Table and Dessert Spoons and Forks and Ladles, mounted Stone Jugs and Cups, Plated and Gilt Shoe aud Knee Buckles. The Miscellaneous Collection, consisting of elegant French Table Lamps, Bronze Tea and Coffee Urns, Metal Teapots, Sets of Canteen Dishes and Soup Tureens, Steel Snuffers, Patent Knife Sharpeners, elegant Papier and Japanned Tea Trays and Waiters, Bread and Spoon Trays, Reading Lamps, Chamber Candlesticks, Snuffer Trays, Tea Caddies. Inkstands of various Descriulious. Diessintr NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, PM- stiant loan Act of Parliaifient made and passed in the 55th Year of the Reign of his late Majesty King George the Third, intituled, " An Act for enabling spiritual Persons to exchange the Parsonage or Glebe Houses, or Glebe Lands, belonging to their Benefices, for others of greater Value, or more conveniently situ- ated for their Residence and Occupation, and for an- nexing stich Houses and Lands so taken in Exchange to such Benefices, as Parsonage or Glebe Houses, or Glebe Lands; and for purchasing and annexing Lands to become Glebe, in certain Cases, and for other Pur poses;"— And to another Act of Parliament made and passed in the sixth Year of the Reign of his present Majesty, intituled, An Act to amend and render more effectual the last recited Act — That the Reve- rend William Clive, Vicar of the Palish and Parish Chur. elr of Welshpool, in the County of Montgomery, and Diocese of Saint Asaph, and ihe Very Reverend the Dean and Chapter of Christ Church, Oxford, intend to make an Exchange as follows, ( that is to say,)— The said William Clive intends to convey to the said Very Reverend the Dean and Chapter, all that Piece or Parcel of Land, belonging to the said Vicarage of Welshpool, called or known by the Name of Church Croft," containing by Admeasurement, three Acres, one Rood, and two Perches, or thereabouts, bounded on the North Side thereof by Land belonging to the Vis- Count Clive, on the East Lide thereof by the Road leading from Guilsfield to Welshpool, arid by Land belonging to the said Viscount Clive, on the* South Side thereof by the Church Yard belonging to the Parish Church of Welshpool aforesaid, and at the South Westerly Corner thereof by a small Plot of Garden Ground belonging to the aforesaid Vicarage of Welsh- pool, and hy Lands belonging to the said College of Christ Church, Oxford, and Westerly by other Lands the Property of Mr. William Jones and Mr. Edward Tipton ; and also all that the said Plot, Piece, or Par- cel of Land, belonging to the said Vicarage, called or known hy the Name of 14 Church Croft Garden,' r con- taining by Admeasurement six Perches, or thereabouts, and situate at the South Westerly Corner of the said first described Piece of Land ; and also all that other Piece or Parcel of Land, belonging to the said Vicar- age, called or known by the Name of " Croft at the Top of the Town," containing by Admeasurement, two Acres, two Roods, and four Perches, or thereabouts, bounded on the North Westerly Sides thereof by Lands belonging to the late Mr. Henry Palmer and the said Viscount Clive, Easterly by the old Road, and Westerly by Land belonging to the late Reverend Wi( liam Thornes ; and also all that small Piece or Parcel of Land, belonging- to the said Vicarage, called or known by the Name of " The Garden adjoining Lledon Brook," containing in the Whole, by Admeasurement, thirty three Perches, or thereabouts, situate near to the said last mentioned and described Parcel of Land, and ad. joining Lands belonging to Mr. John Pugh : IN EX- CHANGE for all that Piece or Parcel of Land, belonging to the said Very Reverend the Dean and Chapte'r aforesaid, called or known. by the Name of'* Close y Person," ( including a Piece or Parcel of Land which is now or late hath been a Garden, and known by the Name of " The Oak Inn Garden," and situate at the Northerly Side of Close y Person aforesaid,) containing by Admeasurement, three Acres, one Rood, and one Perch, or thereabouts, bounded on the North West by the Road from Shrewsbury to Welshpool^ and abutting* on the North East and South East Sides of the Vicarage Mouse and Grounds, and Southerly on the Railway.— Dated this sixteenth Day of February, one thousand eight hundred and twehty « . nine. EDWIN WYATT, and } On Behalf of CHARLES WALTER WYATT C the exchanging Solicitors-, 3 Parlies. E Commissioners in a Commission of » Bankrupt awarded and issued nn- ainst ANN BAGE, of Shrewsbury, in Ihe. County of Salop, Uiien Manufacturer, Dealer and Chapvroinnn, intend to MEET 0,1 Wednesday, the 4th Day of March next, at Eleven o'Cloek in the Forenoon, at the Tallin! Hotel in Shrewsbury aforesaid, in Order to reeeite ll, e Proof of any Debts due and nwiny front Ihe said Bankrupt at the Time of Ihe issuing of the said Commission, and not already proved. At which same place, immediately after the Con- clusion of the Meeting; above Advertised, all the Creditors of the said Bankrupt whose Oehts have already been or shall then he proved under Ihe said Commission, arc hereby requested to MEET the Assignees of the said Bankrupt, for llie Purpose of considering- and determiningf whether it be not Expedient, in Order to avoid three several Suits in Equity of which they have received Notice, that they should authorise and empower the said Assignees lo pay out of the Monies received by then, or, Account of 1 lie said Eslate, lo the Executors of the lale Sir John Hill, Bart, deceased, Mrs. Edith fiage, and Mr John Wicksteed, ( Trustee for Mrs Sutton), who hold Bonds entered into by Charles M'ullej Bage, deceased, the late Husband of the said Bankrupt, uutl vi bo constituted her bis sole Executrix, Devisee and Legatee, a Dividend 0,1 Ihe Sums secured hv their said Bonds, eq. ual in Amount to the Dividend which they would have respectively received if tliey had been entitled lo prove the same Debts under the said Commission. J. BICKEItTON WILLIAMS, Solicitor to the Assignees. Swan Hill, Shrpvvsburv, FEB. 12,1829. ^ B^ rlE Commissioners in a Commission of S Bankrupt awarded aud issued against ANN RAGE, of Shrewsbury, in ihe County of Salop, Linen Manufacturer, Dealer and Chapwoman, intend lo MEET on Thursday, the 511, Day of March next, at Eleven o'Clock in liie Forenoon, at the Talbot Hotel in Shrewsbury aforesaid, in Order lo make a DIVIDEND of the Eslate aud Eli'ects of the said Bankrupt; when and where the Creditors who have not already proved their Debts are to come prepared lo prove the same, or they w ill he excluded ihe Benefit of the said Dividend ; and all Claims not then substantiated will be dis- allowed. J. BICKERTON WILLIAMS, Solicitor to the Assignees, - Swan Hill, Shrewsbury, FEB. 12, 1829. 11EREAS MCRIAKD WILLIAMS, of Shrewsbury, in the County of Salop, Hatter, did by an Indenture, dated Ihe 12th Day of July, 1828, assign his personal Estate and Effects, as therein mentioned, unto Mr. Thomas Jones, of Shrewsbury, aforesaid, Hatter, and Mr. John Birch, the younger, of the same place, Cabinet- maker and Auctioneer, in Trust for such of his Creditors as should execute the same Indenture, on or before the 12ih Day of Septem- ber then next, and now last past. Now this is to give Notice, that the above- mentioned Trustees will attend at the Raven Inn, in Shrewsbury aforesaid, on Tuesday the .10th Day of March next, at Eleven o'Clock in the Forenoon, in Order to make a DIVIDEND of the Monies arising from the Estate and Effects of the said Richard Williams, pursuant to the Provisions of the said Deed, at which Time a Statement of the Debts and Credits of the said Richard Williams will be laid before his Creditors. J. BICKERTON WILLIAMS, Solicitor to the Assignees. Swan Hill, Shrewsbury, Feb. 12, 1829. hv Auction. CARDIGANSHIRE. At the Gogerddan Arms Inn, in the Town of Aher- ystwilh, in Ihe County of Cardigan, on Monday, the 2d Day of March, 1829, between Hie Hours of Six and Seven in the Evening, subject to such Conditions as shall be then and there produced : rg^ HAT desirable FREEHOLD FAUM, a called RHOSGF. LLAN- FACII, situate near the Sea, in the fertile Vale of Clarach, and within three Miles of the much- frequented and Fashionable Water ing Place of Aberystwilh: containing nbout 130 Acres of Arable, Meadow, and Pasture Land, with Dwelling House and Outbuildings, in good Repair. Immediate Possession of the Premises may be bad.— One. Third of the Purchase Money may remain on Mortgage of the Premises. Further Particulars may be had on Application to Mr. J. IICOHES, Solicitor", Aberystwilh. Caddies, Inkstands of various Descriptions, Dressing aud Cash'Boxes; Backgammon, Chess, Draft, and Cribbage Boards; three Eagalette Dillo; a Variety of Brass Locks for Trunks, Tills, and Chests; Pad locks, Portable Medicine aud Liquor Chests, Copying Machines, PaperCases, Lanthorus and Lamps, 3U best Silk Umbrellas, 70 Gingham Ditto, 40 Silk Parasols very beautiful Canes, several Dozen Walking Sticks French Clogs and Hogskin Slippers, Sponge, Per fumery, Bibles aud Prayer Books, Hindustan and Military Books, and other Articles loo numerous lo particularise. Also, the capital massy Show Cases, Jewellery Ditto, Counters, and Fittings. The whole may be viewed six Days antecedent to Ihe Sale ; and Catalogues had, at Is. each, at Exeltr Change and in Covent Garden, TIMIBIEM. At Ihe Wynnstay Arms Inn, in the Town of Lla fyllin, in the County of Montgomery ( mile pn * iolisly disposed of bv Private Contract, ol which tine Nolit- e will be given), oa Thursday, Ihe 12th Day of March, 1829, at the Hour of Five ill Ihe Afternoon, subject to the Conditions then to be produced ; GMIE following LOTS of TIMBER, fl growing on PF. NYBONT HALL FARM, in the Parishes of LLAHSAINTFFRAID and LI. ASSILIN : viz. I. OT 1.— 277 Oak Trees, numbered 1 to 277 inclusive. 2.— 1 15 Oak Poles, Dillo 1 to 115 Ditto. 3.— 512 Ash Trees, Dilto 1 to512 Ditto. 4 — 3,6 Ash Poles, Dilto I to 316 Ditto. 5.- 476 Alder Trees, Ditto 1 to 476 Ditlo. fi.— 671 Alder Poles, Dilto 1 to 671 Ditto. 7.— 68 Sycamore Trees, Dilto 1 lo 68 Ditto. 8.— 17 Birch Trees, Ditto 1 to 17 Ditto. 9.— 25 Birch Poles, Dillo I to 25 Dilto. 10.— 25 Elm Trees, Dillo 1 to 25 Ditto. II.— 8 Mountain Ash Trees, Dilto I to 8 Dillo. The above Timber is near a good Turnpike Road, and only 4 Miles from the Montgomeryshire Canal. N. B. Mr. IILGHRS, the Tenant, will shew the Timber ; to whom, or to Mr. W. Wn. UAMS, Wynnstay Arms, Llanfyllin, apply for further Particulars. r| pHE Commissioners in a renewed Com- iil mission of Bankrupt, bearing Date the 24th Day of December, 1828, awarded and issued forth against JOSEPH WILSON and JOHN WILSON, of Shrews- bury, in the County of Salop, Drapers, Dealers and Chapmen, aud Co. Partners in Trade, intend lo M EET on Thursday the 5lh Day of March next, at Eleven in the Forenoon, at the Talbot Hotel, in Shrewsbury afore- said, in Order lo make a FINAL DIVIDEND of Ihe Estateand Effects of the said Bankrupts; when und where ihe Creditors who have not a'readv proved their Debts are to eome prepared lo prove the Same, or thev will he excluded the Benefit of the said Dividend, and all Claims not then substantiated will be disallowed. J. BICKERTON WILLIAMS, Solicitor to the Assignee. Swan Hill, Shrewsbury, Feb. 12, 1829. PUICE SEVENPENCE. Shropshire Gaol and House of Correction. TASK- MASTER. 1T5EKSONS desirous of being Appointed IJ. to the Ofiice of Task Master at the Salop Gaol and House of Correction, now meant by the Deail, of Mr. WHITABFR, are requested to send Iheir Testi- monials ( sealed up) to the Clerk of the Peace i, i Shrewsbury, on or before the SUth Dav of Anril I § 20. 1 * The Duties of the Office may lie known hy applying to the Gaoler. The Salary is'i' 56 per Annum, will, a House unfurnished. Coals, and £ 10 per Cent, on the net Earnings arising from the Sale of Manufactured Articles in the Prison, after deducting the Cost of the Raw Materials.— He is not directly or indirectly to be "" gaged in any Trade or Business. I. OX DALE, C. P. MORVILLE HALL, SHROPSHIRE. TO BE IjET, And entered vpon immediately, or at Lady- day next$ ALL THE ABOVE MENTIONED CAPITAL MANSION, WITH THE Gardenj Pleasure Grounds, Double Coach- Houses Stables, and other attached and detached Offices of every Description. THIS very SUPERIOR" RESIDENCE is situate near to the pleasant Village of MOR- VI LLE, at a convenient Distance from the Parish' Church and the great Road from Holyhead to Chel- tenham, Bath, and Bristol, on which Coaches pass daily, having regular Communication with all Parts of the United Kingdom; distant 3 Miles from Bridg- north and 5 Miles from WenJock, both very excellent Markets, regularly supplied with all Kinds of Pro-* visions in great Plenty and nt reasonable Prices. The House ( on the Ground Floor) consists of1 Entrance Hall, Breakfast, Dining, and Drawing Rooms, Library, Steward's and Housekeeper's Hooms, Servants' Hall, Kitchen, Butler's aud other Pantries^ with capital Cellaring underneath. The first and second Stories contain sixteen excellent Lodging Rooms, Light Closets, Water Closets, & c. and every other necessary Accommodation. The Pleasure Grounds, with a good Walled Kitcbent Garden, and Gardener' 9 House, well planted with choice Fruit Trees in full Bearing, ore contiguous ta the Mansion 5 and there is an abundant Supply of1 hard and soft Water, with a capital Trout Stream meandering through the Demesne. The Situation is charming — in its Appearance truly comfortable; the Soil is dry ; and the Whole well sheltered from all the cold Winds. A Tenant may be accommodated with n Quantity- of Meadow Land, and Permission ( if required) to sport over a considerable Range of the Proprietor's Manors contiguous thereto. Packs of Fox Hounds and Harriers regularly bunt the adjoining Country. The Butler at Aldenbam Park will shew the House; and further Particulars may be known on Application to Mr. TUDOR, Upholsterer, Shrewsbury ; or Messrs. COLLINS, HINTON, Sc J EFFREYS, Solicitors, Wenlock. TURNPIKE TOLLS TO LET. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, TINT a MEETING of the Trustees of the Shrewsbury District of the Watling Street Road, Stretton unit Longden, and of Ihe Minsterley, Weslburv, Shelton, Pool, and Baschilrcl, Districts of Turnpike Roads, will be held at the Guildhall, ill Shrewsbury, on Monday, the 2d Day of March next, at Eleven o'Clock in the Forenoon. At the said Meeting the TOLLS arising at the Cotton Hill and Present Gates, on the Itoad from Shrewsbury to Baschurch, will be LET by Private Tender or otherwise, for one Year, commencing nt Lady- Day next. The present Kent is £ 338 per Auuuin. JOHN JONES, Clerk to the said Trustees. SHRBWSBDRY, FEB. 16,1829. tip auction. COTSEHOOIS. FREEHOLD FARMS, In the Parishes of Llanfair and Manafon, Montgomeryshire. I? Y MRTPRYCE, At the Goat Inn, Llanfair, in the said Comity of Montgomery, on Saturday, the 14th Day of March next, between the Hours of Two and Six in the Afternoon, in the following or such oth^ r Lo* s as may be theu agreed upon, and subject to Conditions: LOT I. LL that MESSUAGE, FARM, or Tenement, with the Outbuildings, Lauds, and Appurtenances thereto belonging ( except Lot 2), called YSTRAD, situate in the Parishes of Llanfair and Mnuafon aforesaid, containing 44 Acres or there- abouts ( more OJ* less), and now in the Occupation of Mi*. John Stephens or his Undertenants. Lor II. All that Piece of excellent MEADOW LAND ( I'art of the above- mentioned Farm), called THE GLYNN MEA DOW, situate in the Parish of Llanfair aforesaid, containing 15 Acres or thereabouts ( more or less), aud now in the Occupation of the said John Stephens or his Undertenants. LOT III. All that MESSUAGE, FARM, or Tene- ment, with the Outbuildings, Lands, and Appurte- nances thereto belonging, called BRYN, situate in ihe Parish of Llanfair aforesaid, containing ' 27 Acres or thereabouts ( more or less), and now in the Occupation of Mr. Evan Jones or his Undertenants. LOT IV. All that FARM or Tenement, with the Lauds and Appurtenances thereto belonging, called CEFN- DWYRIW, situate in the Parish of Manafon aforesaid, containing 2') Acres or thereabouts ( more or less), and now in the Occupation of Messrs, Jacob and Isaac Davies, or their Undertenants. The above is a very desirable Property, and capa- ble of great Improvement. Lot 1 is situate about 2 Miles, Lot 2 about 1 Mile, Lot 3 about 2 Miles, and Lot 4 about 3 Miles, from the Town of Llanfair, and adjoin good Turnpike Roads. Mills and Manufac tories] may be advantageously erected on Lot 1, the River Rliiw running through Part of it. The Timber to be taken at a Valuation. For further Particulars apply to Mr. OWEV, Land Agent, and to Mr. PRYCE, Auctioneer, both of Lian- fair; or to Mr. WOODCOCK, Attorney, Llanfyllin, or at his Ofiice ia Llaufair, BY MR. SAMUEL SMITH, Upon the Premises, on Monday, Tuesday, and Wed- nesday, the. 2d, 3d, and 4th Days of March, 1829; ALi, the VALUABLE HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, in Dining, Drawing Room, and Bed Room Suits, prime Feather Beds and Bedding, with an extensive Assortment of appropriate Furni- niture for all the other Apartments; a neat Town- built CHARIOT with a Barouche Box before; a good STANHOPE GIG with Patent Axletree ; Four- wheeled PONY CARRIAGE, upon Springs; two Barren COWS ; and other Effects, the Property of the Mrs. WHITMORES, of Cotsbrook, in the Parish of Stockton, in the County of Salop. The Sale to commence each Morning at Eleven o'Clock. Catalogues will be circulated in the Neighbour- hood, and may be had of THE AUCTIONEER, at Madeley, or at the House at Cotsbrook, nine Days prior to the Sale. FREEHOLD PROPERTY, In and near the Town of Shiffual. BY MR. JACKSON, At the Star Hotel, in ShifFnal, on Tuesday, the 3d Day of March, 1829, at Four o'Clock in the Afternoon, in 27 Lots, the whole the. Property , of the Family of the late Mr. PETER HARDING, deceased : CONSISTING OF \ LL that substantia! and EXCELLENT f\ DWELLING HOUSE, containing Dining Room ( 22 Feet by Feet), Parlour ( 17 Feet by 14 Feet), Entrance Hall, spac; ous Kitchen, Back Kitchen, Brewhouse, Dairy, numerous Bed Rooms, and exten- sive Cellaring, together with Coach house, Stabling*, Pleasure Ground, and other Premises, delightfully situated, and suitable for the Residence of a respect- able Family. Also, all that verv desirable Messuage or DWELL- ING HOUSE, together with SHOP ( 33 Feet by 19 Feet), Counting House, Warehouses, & c. attached, where the. Businesses of a Grocer, ( handler, Iron- monger, Druggist, &. c. have been most extensively carried on for upwards of 40 Years, with the GOOD- WILL of those several Businesses. Also, an excellent Lot of BUILDING, occupied as Stabling for 14 Coach Horses. Also, a capital MALTHOUSE. Also, all that commodious DWELLING HOUSE, with the Buildings and Appurtenances to the same belonging, now in the Occupation of Mr. Hassall, fronting the new Line of Road, and well adapted for an Inn. Also, all those several Pieces of capital PASTURE LAND, lying near the said several Dwelling Houses, and extending from the same to the I image Road, containing together by Admeasurement I0A. 2R. 19P. or thereabouts, and now in the several Occupations of Mr. Peter Harding and Mr. John Hassull. The Pieces of Land above described, having a very extensive Frontage to the new Line of Road leading out of the Town of Shi final towards Shrewsbury, are admirably adapted for building upon, and ( after setting apart a convenient Portion to be sold with the principal Dwelling House above mentioned), will be allotted. in Parcels convenient for that Purpose. Printed Particulars, with Maps descriptive of the several Lots, will be ready a Fortnight before the Sale, and may be had on Application to Mr. JELLTCOE, Beighterton ; Mr. EYKE, Stanton ; Mr. PETER HARDING, Shift'nal$ or Messrs. PRITCHARD, Soli- citors, Biuseley. Shijjaal District of Roads. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the Trustees of the Turnpike Roads, under ati Act passed in the 6tl> Year of ll, e Keign of his presfut Majesty, intituled, " An Act for maintaining and im- proving the Uoads leading through the Town of Miiff'ua!, and the lioad leading from Oaken Gales lo Weston, in the Counties of Salop nnd S, afford;" will MEET at the House of Isaac Taylor, known by llitt Sign of the Jerniiigham Arms Inn. ai Shifl'nal, in the County of Salop, on Tuesday, the third Day of March next, at the Hour of Eleven in the Forenoon, in Order to consult nbout erecting a Toll Gate near the Manor Gale, across ihe public Road leading from the Town and Parish of Shitfnal to the Confines of the Township or Parish of Kemberton, it, the County of Salop, Dated this 11th Day of February, 1829. R. FISHER, Clerk lo the Trustees. Jil ontgorneryshire. TURHPIKE TOjLIiS. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the TOU. S arising at the Toll Gates upon the Turnpike Roads nt Llanfyllin, I. lamlrinio, Alber- bury. Trap, Llangynog, Ca'slellmoch, Pislill Ithaiadr, Potltllogel, l. lanfair, and My fod, called or known by the several Names of l. lanfylliii Upper Gate, l. lan- drinio and I. landrinio Bridge Gates, Alherbury Gate, Trap Gale, Llarigynog Gate, Caslellmocli Gale, Pislill Ithaiadr Gale, Poutllogel Gate, l. lanfair Bridge ( Jute, and Myfod Gale, will lie I. ET by AUCTION, to the best Bidder, at the Town Hall, i, i Llanfvllin. in the said County of Montgomery, on TUESDAY, Ihe 10th of March next, between thr Hours of Twelve and Two o'Clock in the Afternoon of Ihe same Day, in llie Manner directed by the Act passed in the Third Year of the Reign of his present Majesty King George the Fourth, For regulating Turnpike Roads*," which Tolls produced the lust Year the following Sums : viz. Llanfyllin Upper Gate Llandrinio, and Llandrinio Bridge Gates., Alberbury Gate ... Trap Gate Llangynog Gate..,, Castellmoch Gate Pistil! Rhaiadr Gate..., Pontllogel Gate L'anfair Bridge Gate, and ... Myfod Gate Above the Expenses of collecting the same, and will be put up respectively nt those Sums. Whoever happens to be the best Bidder, must at th « same Time pay One Month in Advance ( if required) of the Rent at which such respective Tolls mav be Let, and yive Security, with sufficient Sureties to the Satisfaction of the Trustees of the said Turnpike Roads, for Payment of the Rent agreed for, and at such Times as they shall direct, MAURICE BIBBY, Clerk to the Trustees of the said Turnpike Roads. LLANFYI LIN. lath FEB. 1829. TOOTH- ACHE AND EAR- ACHE. £ 197 221 85 15 8fi 53 20 33( 5 PERRY'S ESSENCE has received the sanction and support of the most distinguished personages in the Kingdom, together with the united testimony of ihe first Physicians in Europe, aud numer- ous favourable comments in highly respectable Medical Journals, where it has lu- en declared lo be the " BEST THING F. VKR DISCOVERED FOR TUB TOOTH- ACHE AND FAR Act! F." It instantaneously relieves the most excruciating p* aiurpreserves ihe Teeth sqund and firm, pr vents further decay,' effectually cures the Scurvy in the Gums, fastens loose Teeth, and renders them firm and serviceable to the latest period, and effectually pievents the Tooth- Ache. Sold in Bottles at Is. l| d. & 9tl. by the principal Medirire Venders in the Kingdom. Of whom may be had, MORRIS'S BRUNSWICK. CORN PLAISTER, an excellent Remedy for Eradicating Corns, Bunions, N. B. A, k for PERRY'S ESSENCS for the Tooth- Ache, BALOF3AM JOLTOAL AM © COURIER OF WAILED OXFORD UNIVERSITY ELECTION. 3TPHE COMMITTEE for conducting the 1 Election of Sir KOBEllT HAUKY INGUS, part, request those friends io whom, from liie lnac- c jracy of Lists or Ignorance of their Addresses, they hare heeii unable 1b send the usual Circular Letter, to considt r this Notice as an Invitation for their Support ami Interest at the ensuing' Election. N. ft. The Election will take Place on THURSDAY, he 26th Instant. The Protestant Address and Petitions. The Protestant Candidate Jar the University bfOxjord. npHE Character and Claims of S1H J1 ROBERT INGLIS are thu justly appreciated : i\ t. ondon, at Oxford, and illro. ug'hout the Country at large, to need any public Testimony on his Behalf A Friend, however, who has known him intimately for many Years, thinks it may not be amiss to state a few Particulars, for those wlio live in comparative Retirement. Sir Robert Inglis was educated at Win eh ester, under the immediate Care of the venerable Bit- hop of Here- ford, and at Christ Church, tinder the Auspices of the iiever- to- bc- fofg- otten Cyril Jackson.— At an ea;! y Period he entered on his Political Career, with Ad- Vantages such as rarely fall to the Lot of Young- Men, which he employed to the best Purpose, both in the Acquisition of the most varied Knowledge, and in laying-, deep aud strong, the Foundation of those just Principles from which he has never lor a single Instant swerved.— In the Year 1812 he became Sue. censor to an eiiiiuent Statesman ( afterwards a Cabinet Mfufst& rJ as a Commissioner for the A flairs of the Camatic.— lie has already sih in two Parliaments, and has there distinguished himself us a most able Speaker, especially as the Advocate of those ( we trust) imperishable Principles which placed the pre- sent Royal Family on ihe Throne.— In his own County ,0f Bedford, he was called on, at the Last Election, by ^ large Portion of the Protestant Interest, to' oiler himself as a Candidate, with every Prospect of Suc- cess,- had not an unforeseen Collision of Interests arisen.— The Rank which he holds as a Country ( jcntleman, may perhaps be best judged of from the simple Fact, that lie has been for some Years Vice- . Lieuteiiani, and Chairman of the Quarter Sessions, for the Cbuiity of Bedford.— The Writer of these jLines can say with Truth, that he knows not tlie Individual who has brought to the Examination of every Great Question a better informed Judgment, yir win), on every Occasion, has adhertd to his Convic- tions with more immoveable Integrity, than SIR ROBERT 1NG LIS. The Address and Petitions, which originated at the recent Meeting of the Shropshire Brunswick . Club, have received the signatures of between 7000 and 8000 of the Gentry, Clergy, Freeholders, and Other PrOtestant residents of this county ; and if it should be necessary to appeal more decidedly to the opinions of the inhabitants, such is their feelirig against the proposed measure of conceding political power to the Roman Catholics, that we have no hesitation in asserting that 40,000 signatures against, such con- cession would be obtained in Shropshire alone. — In a hasty perusal of the signatures already attached to the Address and Petitions, we met with the following names of resident Gentlemen and Clergymen Thomas VVh tmore, Esq. Rev. John Scott THS PROTESTANT CAUSE. WHITCHURCH. fjPiiE Inhabitants of the Town and Neigh- £ honrhood of WHITCHURCH are earueslly recommended to MEET in ilie TOWN I1AI. L, on Fit] DAY, tlie 27th l) ny of February instant, al Eleven o'Clock in the Forenoon, to take into Consi- deration" the Propriety of preventing PETITIONS lo His Majesty and both Houses of Parliament, praying that the PROTESTANT CONSTITUTION of the United Kingdom be preserved inviolate, aud ilint no further Concessions he made to the Roman Catholics. GF. OltGK COKSER, J W. Don, JOHN MURRAY, Clerk, B Don, WII. MAM KENT, Clerk W. W, BROOKES, JOSBPH Lett, ( it- onoE HARPER, StlTH FEBRUARY, 1829. HENRY MOKKAI- I., Clerk JOHN MORRALI., Clei k JOHN I. EIS, RICHARD C'ORSBR, GEORGE CORSKR, Jun. Jostru LEE, Jun. \- OTH E IS HEREBY (; JFEI\, that a GENERA!. QUARTER SESSIONS of the Peace for the County of MONTGOMERY mitt be held, by Adjournment, at the Dragon Inn, in Montgomery, on the bik Day of March next, at the Hour of Eleven ill the Forenoon. JOSEPH JOlVES, Clerk of the Peace. FEBRUARY 23o. 1R29. ~ TO UK LET, ~ ,4 Comfortable & commodious Dwelling ./ H HOUSE, pleasantly situated about a Mile Irnrti Shrewsbury, vvilh a walled Garden, Coadh. house, Stiibles, aiid olhfr Outbuildings, and with or without ji iMv Acres of LAND.— For Particulars apply to Mr. JOHN I. oxnjtl. R, Solicitor, Shrewsbury. rosTsmiPT. LUM) ONs Monday Night, Feb. 23, 1829. Hon. " i homas Kenyon SirTyrwhilt Jones, Bart. Thomas Boycoit, Escj Sir John Citetwode, Bart. W. Oi u.> by Gore, Esq. St. John C. Charlton W. Charlton, Esq. W. Law lev, Esq. \ V. P. Dana. Esq. Thomas Bishton, Esq. Rev. J. Dale Win. Botlield, Esq. Rev;. Roger Clayton Rev. ! 1. C. Cotton F. K. Leighton, Es- q. V. Viekeis, Esq. W. Brayne, 1' MJ. Thomas Evans, Esq. Charles Guest, Esq. VV. Pinches, Esq. Thomas ( J it ton, F> q. J. C. Whalejey, Esq. Rev. E. S. Davenport Rev. R. L. Bitrton Rev. W. Hopkins F. B. Harries, Esq. T. N. , Parker, Esq. Rev. E. Nevile J. W. Dod, Esq. Sir W. H. Clarke, Bart. John Whitehurst, Issq. Sir 11. Edwardes, Bart. T. B. Owen, Esq. Rev. J. E. Compson Rev. E. 11. Owen R. Phayre, Esq. W. Bay ley, Esq. S. Harley, Esq. W. H. Cope, Esq. Richard Mouutford, Esq. Matthew Webb, Esq. Rev. W. Johnstone John Wingtield, Esq. Sit- And few Corbet, Bart Richard Corbet, Esq. Vincent Ro Es> q. Rev. C. R. Cameron Edward Gatacre, Esq. Richard Jenkins, Esq. Edvi&. d Cludde, Esq. Richard Emery, Esq. Philip Charlton, Esq. Rev. Edward Meredith Win. Jellicorse, Esq. T. F. Dukes, Esq. Henry Bloxam, Esq. Rev. W. S Marvin Rev. John Murray Joshua Lewis Esq. Rev. Thotiias Turner Rev. Rohec t Williams Rev. William Jones Wright John Jebb, Esq. William Pickin, Esq. James Farmer, Esq. Thomas Roden, Esq. John Butcher, Esq. Robert M or rail, Esq. Rev. W J. HngbSs David Crawford, Esq. Rev Benjamin Howell Rev. William Bate James Filzwilliams, Esq. Rev. Thomas Dethick Joseph Suiion, Esq. Rev. E P. Owen G. A. Moultrie, Esq. J. T. Fenton, Esq. J. T. S. Edwardes, Esq. Rev. Geoige Bnrd T. J. Bather, Esq. Rev. George Morgan TRICES or FUNUS A. T TH. R CLOSE. ltank Stock — I. on g Ann. 20 India Bonds 55 India Stock 230 Exclieq. Bills ( 13 ! Cons, for Acc. 87jj Red . J per Cts. 8 « 3 pei Ct. Cons. 87] 3\ pei Cents. 97 3i pei Cts. Red. 97 § 4 per Cls. 1826, I0o| 4 per Cents. 102 IMPORTANT & CHEERING DECLARATION. We hasten to communieatc what will glad the heart, and stimulate tlie exertions, of every Protest- ant Briton.— The King, our true Protestant King, lias declared, within forty- eight hours, that he still entertains the sentiments which he avowed to Mr. Canning in the month of June, 1827; and that if Wis faithful PEOPLE WILL RALLY ROUND HIS TIIRCS'NR, the slightest inroad shall not he permitted upon the Protestant Constitution of 1688.— Standard. Robert Burton, Esq./. o » « i tier Robert Burton, jun. Esq. Rev. Edward llomfray Rev. Thomas Hunt Edward Dymnck, Esq. Rev. David Biids Rev Joseph Fish Rev. James Donne, D D. Stephen Donne, E* q. 11; P. T. Aubrev, Esq. Rev. J G. Lloj'd Rev. Tinner Edwards Edward Edwards, E. q. John Jones, Esq. Lewis Jones, Esq, Juiif! Deipurd, Esq. Balkelev II, ill'!. ell, Esq. Rev, Wiiglil Willett Rev. Thomas Evaus Rev. T. Riddell W Esq. J . G . Siny the, Esq. Rev, G. S. Swintiy Rev. Matthew Pilkingtou .1 C Smith, Esq. Rev. W. Vickers Wiu Purton, E* q. John Hiuckesman, Esq. William Nock, Esq. Rev. John Nuun J J. Siniih, Esq. T. P. Purton, Esq. John Marshall, Esq. Rev. 11. Pountiiey Rev. C. Oukes A. F. Sparkes, Esq. T. W. W Browne, Esq, Rev. R. Herbert Rev. John But'er Samuel Nicholls, Esq. John Marshall, Esq. Rev, Thomas Rowley J. IB. Coley, Esq. James Marshall, Esq. Corbet, Rev. Henry Cowdell Rev. Win Booty Rev. Tl. S. Corbet Rev. J. Rogers, Bedstone I'. B Adams, Esq. J. Molyneux, Esq. J. J West, Esq. Rev. Cape 1 Molyneux David Lewis, M. D, Rev. J, Harding Rev. C. H. Hartshorne Rev. Win Smith G. W. Molineitx, Esq. W. Y. Davenport, Esq. Menlore, R. M. N. meley, Esq. Rev J Brooke R. Molineux, Esq. H. M. Phillips, Esq. Rev John Scoil W. S. Davenport, Esq. J I,. Warren, juli. Esq. Rev. G. Ravenseioft George Bishton, Esq. S. Bennett, Esq. J. Morton, Esq. Rev. J. P. Stnbbs Rev. Oswald Feiiden Rev. G. F. Molineux William Jellkoe, Esq. William Shislon, Esq. J. L. Warren, Esq, Rev. M. Davies Creswell Pigot, Esq. J Wood, Esq. P. B Strey, Esq. J. D. Griosell, Esq, J. Offley Crewe, Esq. James Arden, Esq. Thomas Borough, Esq. ReV. G. Cbesnutt eol'g Rev. Henry Morgan E. W. Sniytbe Owen, Esq. Ralph I. eeke, Esq. Edward Miieklestou, Esq. Rev. John Williams Rev . Henry Burton Rev. W Kent W B. fVie. e, Esq. Rev. Peter Edwards Thomas Nicliolls, Esq. John Lee, Esq. Rev. Richaid Corfield W. W. Brookes, Esq. Hon. and Rev. Richard G. Harper, Esq. Noel Hill B. Dod, Esq Richard Bralton, Esq. Rev. II. Morrall Benjamin Edwariles, Esq lley. John IVlorrnll Rev. George Evans The Bombay Courier of the 25th October, announces the death of Or. James, fhe Lord Bishop of Calcutta, which took place on board the ship Marquis of Huntly, at sea, on his way from Penang to Calcutta, on the 22d of August. Many petitions were presented this evening to liftth Houses of Parliament on the subject of Catholic Emancipation.— In the House of Lords, the Duke of CLARENCE; having always supported Catholic Eman- cipation, expressed his intention of supporting Mi- nisters, though he knew not the nature of the measure to be proposed.— The Duke of CUMRERLAND again expressed his intention of opposing all further con- cessions of political power to the Roman Catholics. Cl) t Salopian journal. WED& ESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, I85&. Henry Scott, Esq. Thomas Parr, Esq. Rev. Thomas Parr Thomas Sutton, Esq. Thomas Harries, Esq. Sir Francis Knt. G. F. I). Evans, Esq. John Hazledine, Esq. Rev. Robert Maddocka Burgh Leigh ton, Esq. Rev. Richaf'd Williams John Baker, Esq. Rev. C. Grrgory Wade Win. JeflYeys, Esq. A. Main war iny, Esq. F. K. Leighton, jun. Esq. John Niccolls, Esq. Rev. Philip Smyth Rev. C. Cholmondeley Rev. Charles Bury John Minor, Esq. Rev R. W. G lea ( low John Deiyhton, Esq. Hon. 11. W Feilding- Hon. and Rev. E. R. B tending" Francis Harries, tv- q. W. S. Baker, Esq. Rev. John Evans J . Trevor, Esq. Thomas Lre$ Esq. R. Corser, Esq. S. Hassall, Esq< Rev. F. Salt Brian Hill, C. A. Beetensou, Esq. J. Nicksou, Esq. Rev J . Ky na » ion Rev. W. Dixon Kev. G. Salt R. Chauibre Vaughan, Esq. Rev. hi. Pm kes Be v. E. J Dickenson M M. Silvester, E » q. Rev. Towuseud Forester, I). J). R< v John Geary B. Flounders, Esq. Rev. iVfnseie D. Taylor II. J. LLoyd, Esq. Leal07t Knot Is John Webst r, M D. John Hope Johnson, Esq. Rev.' John Jones NatUiniel Betton, Esq. Rev. William Vttiiglian Ambrose Brookes, E q. Christopher Scott, Esq. Rev. John Rjchards g^ 3 Wt* acknowledge \ Vitli jiride and satisfaction tlie re- ceipt of various Communications, ' from several talented writers, on the all engrossing subject now befor6 tlifi public ; but we inust pleat! the already crowded slatd of olir colfntViis fr » r'their omission. DIE!?. Oi; the 17th inst. at Blithflrld, Staffordshire, after an illness of only two days, the llou. I. ouisa Frances Bagol, eldest daughter ot Ihe Right lion. I. oril Bligol. Yesterday, at tin advanced age, after a severe and protracted tttness, Mr*, l. awreirce; of iVIarilol, in this tow n. the 3il hut. at Ellesntere, in the 78th year of llis Sli' RiiTmrd Ralphs, hrieklaier. On Montlav,' Mr. Caller, ol'Swun liill, in this town. On Saturday last, Mr. Haueorue, iiouinonger, ot IVIardol Head, in this town. On Thursday last, IWr. Andrew Jones, mercer, of this town, in his 47th year. At Much VVenlock, in his 83d year, Mr John Rev- liolds ; who had been in the service of Sir \ V. W, Wyilli, Bart. 52 years, ns Bailiff of that Manor. Ou the 12th iiist, Samuel Elsniete, in fun L son of Mr, Waluisley, surgeon, llodnet. On the l& tli inst. William Abraham, infant son of Mr. Bowyer, surgeon, Much Wenlock. Ou the 8lh inst in his t> 3d jear, at Oshaston, Mr. Mulliiis ; a truly honest man. On the 2fiih nit. at Spring Hill, npar Wellington, niter a short illness, Mrs. Parson*. Lately, al Withingtnn, Thomas, son of Mr. Thomas Tophnm. On Ihe I2th insf. at Oldhitry, the lUv. David I. ewis, M A, having been Minister uf that place upwards of thirty years. The Collection at St. Julian's Chtirch, on Sunilay last, for defraying the expenses of fitting up the Church for the Free Evening Service, amounted to £ 41. 0s. 4tl. leaving a deficiency of about fSO, exclusive of the sum of £ 30 advanced by the parish. The Bristol Pelition against further concessions fo the Roman Catholics has received about 3fi, 000 signa- tures. The Great Meeting of the Brunswick Club of Ireland ook place at the Rotunda, Llublm, on Thurs- day last. It was attended by about 3000 of the princii 1 Nobleman and Gentlemen, Members of ( be several c runswick Clubs established in Ireland. The Earl if nniskilleu was called to the chair ; and several - solutions and an Address to His Majesty, suited: r';* t e present crisis, were unanimously carried, as wastli > an Address to the Protestants of Great Britain ich shall appear in our next Journal. In the House of Commons, on Monday, the 16th fust. Sir ROWLAND HILL, Bart, presented several Petitions from places in the county of Salop, against, further concessions of political power to the Roman Catholics. On presenting these Petitions, the worthy Baronet said, he would, by every means in his poicer, endeavour to oppose the measure of tote- < 7ed con- cession.— We congratulate the Comity and the worthy Baronet on this manly declaration.— The County of Salop has just reason to he proud of the conduct of both its Representatives in this crisis. V? e have beard with great satisfaction that the Bishops of Ireland mean to come over in a body to this country to address the King in person, deprecating the mortal blow that impends over that part of the united church, of which they are the appointed guardians. We trust that the reverend bench of England will reinforce them, and that the address will indeed be read to the King,— not handed to the Home Secretary.— St. James's Chronicle. In the House of Commons, on Friday, Mr. Maberly and Sir H. Parnell warmly advocated the re- appoint- ment of the Finance Committee; but the Chancellor of the Exchequer stated that it was impossible for the Committee to resume its labours until the important question of'Emancipation had beeri disposed of. The Right Hon. Gentleman added, tliaf the attention of government was at present so much occupied, that they Could not do otherwise tliiin def6r the consider- ation of the subject until a late period of the session ; but tllHt. during the whole of the time which had elapset? since the prorogation last year, Ministers had been occupied in paying every attention fo the re- commendations of the Committee, and hail been most diligently employed in the wofk of investigation and reduction. On this ground Mr. Baring stated that he couliLnot object fo tfie postponement, of the Com- mittee, more particularly as the circumstances of the country were much altered, and that we had now a clear surplus of revenue of three millions and a half. — Sir H. Hardinge brought forward the Army Esti- mates, the whole of which were voted with little or no objection. The charge, compared with that of last year, shewed a diminution of i' 4' 22,298. By the corn averages for the week ending fhe 13th inst. it will be seen that the aggregate of the six weeks, by which the duty is regulated, is, for wheat 74s. 7d. harley 35s. 84. oats 23s. 9d. rye 42s. beans 3fis. 5d. peas 37s. Sd. The duty therefore is now Is. per quarter for wheat, 9s. 4d. for barley, 12s. 3( 1. for oats, Hs. 6d. for rye, 15s. fid. for beans, and 14s. for peas. The duty on barley, compared with last week's re- port, has advanced Is. 6d. per quarter, and that of rye the same. AU the others remain is before. " Is this country, for the future, to be a Protest, ant or a Popish country t" This is the question nobly put by the Brother of otir Sovereign, in the House of Peers, on Thursday last. And assuredly,, if the Legislature of this country is not to hp_ wholIy Protestant, we are no longer a Protestant cpi^ ntry, nor has the House of Brunswick any longer a 0ai! title, to the Throne of these Realms, if, however, THE PEOPLE— the PfeoTESTANT PEOPLE— are to have any voice in this matter, we boldly aver that uo change whatever in the way of further concession to the Roman Catholics will take place. The voice of England will appeal to the Throne on this subject; and we trust that when the hour of necessity shall arrive— and it will come very shortly— the several Parishes in our own County, anil throughout the Kingdom generally, » ; 11 address their Sovereign to dismiss the present Ministry, to dissolve the present Parliament, and to maintain our Protestant Consti- tution and his own title to the Throne inviolate. The opinion of our own County we know to be decidedly against, any concession : the Address and Resolutions of the Protestants of Dublin will be found in our 4th page : and the Petition of the Scotch National Church in London shall be given in our Journal next week t this latter Petition will soon be followed tip by similar Petitions from the principal cities aud towns of Scotland and if further incitement to Protestant exertion were wanting in this crisis, we w ould request public attention to the follow ing Speech of His Royal Highness the Duke of Cumberland delivered in the House of Peers on Thursday last The Duke of CUMBERLAND—" My Lords, I ran, with the most perfect sincerity, assure your lordships that never, upon any occasion, did I rise in this house with more painful feelings thai! on the present, and I certainly should have avoided the pain which I now experience by remaining silent could 1 do so consist- ently with a sense of duty— with a sense of the duty which I owe to your lordships, to the country, and to myself— that 1 should make known, decidedly and at. Once, the sentiments which I entertain upon this most momentous occasion. Feeling as strongly as I do, and ever shall continue to feel, I am bound by an obligation of the highest kind to make known what I am. Many rumours have been circulated respecting my opinions; and the time lias arrived at which, however distressing the avowal may be, I must, once and for all, declare what 1 am, Amongst the many sources of that pain which I feel at the present moment is the cirCumstaike of being compelled to differ from my noble friend at the head of his Majesty's government; but, though differing from him as I do upon this point, 1 cannot but hope that such a difference will not interfere with private friendship ; fbr I can truly assure him that my respect for his personal character is as high as I can possibly entertain for that of any man, aud th^ t my approbation of his political conduct is not less. It is, therefore, my lords, as 1 have already said, with emotions of great pain that I feel myself um| er the necessity of differing from him j f> ut, s* ait'Jinne^ man, I cannot conceal my sense of the nature Qf this, measure — I cannot refrain from doing w: haf, in my soul, 1 believe to be right. My lords, the question upon which we shall soon he called on to vote is neither more nor less than this— Is this country, for the future, to be a Protestant or a Popish country ? CCheers.) I say, my lords, that is the question. My conscientious and deliberate opinion is, that the moment a Roman Catholic sits in this house as a peer — the moment a Roman Catholic is admitted into the other house of parliament— that moment the consti tution of England is changed, and this will be no longer a Protestant country. In expressing my sentiments thus decidedly, let it not be supposed that I am an enemy to religious freedom. Though I am for toleration in its widest sense, yet I will never give my consent that Roman Catholic peers shall sit in your lordships' house— that Roman Catholic repre- sentatives shall ever sit in the other house of parlia- ment— and still less would I consent that Roman Catholics should fill the offices of lords lieutenant, or ministers, or judges. These, my lords, are my opinions— they ever have been my opinions; and, once more, I distinctly declare my sentiments to have undergone no change on this great question. (" Cheers. J So far for the measure of the concession of political power to the Roman Catholics—^ so far do I deem it necessary to spe-., k and no more. I bear po hostility to his Majesty's government. I hold in the highest respect the noble duke at the head of that government. No man respects him more than I do. No man can appreciate more fully than I do how painful it must have been to the members of administration to bring themselves to propose to parliament to enter, in the manner in which ihey are about to enter, upon the question of Roman Catholic claims. 1 am sure, my lords, 1 shall receive perfect credit with your lordships when I repeat, that I should most gladly have avoided coming to this statement so opposed to the sentiments of those whom I value and respect, on a question involving the integrity of the constitution of England. My lords, I could not have avoided coming to it, standing- ill the situation which 1 do, anil, especially as a member of the family to which 1 have the honour to belong, it is impossible that I could have remained silent— entertaining the sentiments which I do I could not but give them utterance."—( Cheers. J The proceedings in Parliament during the past week have been strongly marked by Ihe progress of public feeling on the Roman Catholic Question. Petitions, numerously signed, against further con- cession, have been pouring in from all quarters of the kingdom; meanwhile, the Bill, professedly for putting down the Popish Association, but which appears more likely to he intended to Suppress Protestant feeling in Ireland, is passing through its stages : this Bill is stated to have been drawn op with great legal circumspection ; but. fhe Earl of Eldon, who is a very good authority in such matters, has said he could drive a coach and nix, with all the horses abreast, through it!— In the House of Lords, the Dukes of Richmond and Newcastle, the Earls of Eldon, Winchilsea, Guilford, and Limerick, Lord Kedesdale, and other Peers, have stood forward nobly in support of the Protestant Constitution : and shall it be said, that such men, in such a Cause, lacked support? We trow not. As the Earl of Guilford emphatically said, in his place in Parliament, oil Thursday, the proposed measures of the Ministers ought not to have been brought forward without the people being previously acquainted with them, nor without a Dissolution of Parliament; and that if these measures were carried in the way that fin Ministry proposed to carry them, there was an end of the Protestant Church of England and of Ireland, and of the rights and liberties of his fellow- country- men. If, however, we know any thing of a genuine Englishman's regard for those rights and liberties which are his Protestant birthright, we say he will not surrender them without a struggle. Is it to be supposed, that the great body of Gentlemen, Free- holders, Yeomen, Tradesmen, and other Protestant residents of the kingdom, have so little of the spirit of their ancestors left in them, so little regard for their own fame, so little regard for their posterity, and so little regard for their Religion, that they will submit quietly to be robbed of their privileges, to have their Religion polluted and degraded, and to be treated by a recreant Ministry as if they were a mere herd of cattle without mind and without natural feeling. And this too, at the behest of a Faction, whose object — openly declared, and clear as the noon- day— is to effect a Revolution of every Establishment that has hitherto been tlie glory of our country!— We say, they will not. There can be no doubt that every effort of the Ministry will be directed to suppress; Protestant feeling,— to cajole those who seek for unholy bread at the hands of men who are betraying the Protestant Church and Protestant Constitution of their country,— and to intimidate all who would interpose obstacles to their avowed intentions. The effect, however, of these efforts will only be to excite public disgust against such individuals as forget their duty to their God anil to their country at this crisis. The spirit of Englishmen will not be sup- pressed. Let the example already set by the Town of Whitchurch, in this county, be universally followed ; and if any parish or place . shoubl want a copy of an Address to the Throne suited to the occasion, we would recommend the following :— ADDRESS. May it pleat? your Majesty, It is with the truest attachment to your Majesty's sacred persmi, and the firmest determination to defend to the last the rights, honours, ami succession of your Majesty's liue; that we now upproaCh the foot of your throne. A minister has dared to declare, that TtlB CONSTITUTIONAL SETTLEMKNT OF I68H MOST It8 BROKEN IN UPON. We have heard this declaratioo with inexpressible astonishment and disgust, but not with dismay, while we see your Majesty still upon the throne; while we hear the voice of the bri loyal millions of your Majesty's people that the just and merciful God will never desert a nation until it has first deserted him. In the admission of papists into tile British parliament, we see a measure totally unnecessary, aud totally evil. We see in it the admission of. a new, slavish, and unprincipled influ ence into the state—. the admission of the direst agency of foreign popish governments into the national councils— the diking of Protestant laws by popish lawgivers— the giving an h resistible pott er la ministerial ambition — llie utter slavery of parliament; and, the last and deepest evil of all, the crime " of a deliberate national insult lo that Almigll'. v Oml who has given to this people Protestantism, to be a light to them and lo. the world, aud has made it, lor a long course of glorious years, the pledge of uuriviilled freedom, unexampled pro- sperity, aud empire extending round the globe. We therefore humbly pray your Majesty, that your Ma- jesty will immediately remove all false and pernicious ad. visers from yonr councils; dissolve the parliament; and, by an appeal to your people, suffer them lo siiew that they are still, Heart and hand, loyal to your Majesty, faithful to the constitution, and determined to preserve inviolate the holy religion oi their free and virtuous forefathers. WALTER OXFORD UNIVERSITY ELECTION.— This election will take place to- morrow. The candidates are Sir Robert Harry log- lis, Bart- and the Right Honourable Robert Peel: We have heard strange rumours as to an active canvass made throughout this part of the the country for Mr. Peel. We have heard it said, that men expressing the most zealous attachment to the Protestant Establishments are actively engaged on behalf of this same Mr. Peel! Heaven only knows what we are to hear next! Perhaps we shall be told that, under the new march of intellect, twice two is become nine, or that six times six is to be eleven. In the name of common sense, however, if men do sacri- fice their convictions to the yearnings of former friendships or to the hope of ministerial favour, let them openly avow it \ for they may rest assured, that if they can silence or blind their own feelings, they can neither darken the understandings nor clo. se the mouths of their less accommodating neighbours. We have heard some singular anecdotes relative to voters in this county and in the adjoining county of Montgomery; and we are happy to say, we know seme of the right sort in both counties that are going up to support Sir Robert Harry Inglis. The new writ for a Member to serve for the Uni versity, was moved for by Mr. Estcourt, on Friday j on which occasion, General GASCOYNE said he most highly approved of the step taken by Mr. Peel in thus vacating his seat. Having departed from the principles on which he was elected a fit person to represent the University of Oxford in Parliament, the Right, Hon. Gentleman very properly gave his constituents an opportunity either of affirming their former choice, or of retract- ing their approbation, and rejecting him. What the conduct of that body would be, it was of course impossible for him to say ; but this he would say, that the Right Hon. Gentleman, in thus giving his constituents an opportunity of exercising their judg- ment, had set a very laudable example to other Members of the House of Commons, whose minds had been changed by the new lights which had broken in upon them with respect to the Roman Catholic Question, and that example, he hoped, they would follow. He trusted that those who had seen that light, and who, for reasons known only to them- selves, reasons which they had not divulged to the House, had Changed their opinions on this vital question, would also feel it necessary, consistently with the example of the Right Hon. Gentleman whom it was their wish and intention to follow, immediately to vacate their seats. He was very well aware that any thing which he could say on the subject would make but little impression on such an occasion; but he was of opinion, that when the day came— and in all human probability it was not so far distant as Honourable Members might suppose— when they would be called on to account for the manner in which they had discharged their trust, that day would be found to be a day of retribution for poli- tical apostacy, and those who had retrograded from their principles would be visited with the disappro- bation, if not with the honest anger, of those by whom they had been sent into Parliament. BIRTHS. On the lat inst. at Dolguog, Montgomeryshire, the Ladf of the Rev. R. M . Ron nor, of a daughter. , On the 14th iust. at Lime Grove, Carnarvonshire, the Lady of James Wvatt, Esq. of a son. On the 15th inst. at Erbistock Hall, the Lady of Lieut.- Colonel Philips, of a son. MARRIED. On the 17th iust. at Wrexham, Mr. James Edisburv, of Holywell, to Miss Elizabeth Walker Ratcliffe, eldest daughter of the late Henry RatclitFe, Esq of Wrexham. On Tuesday se* nriight, at Llansaint, hy the Rev. ftdward Pieton, Augustus Learh, Esq. of Underdovvn, in the county of Pembroke, to Mary, eldest daughter of J. H. Bevan, Esq of Pengay, Carmarthenshire. On the I3ih inst. at Llanbadaro- fawr, hy the RPV. J, Morris, Alfred, son of Hugh Stephens, of Cascob, in th'e county of Rarfndr, Esq. to Jane Elizabeth, only daughter of Captain Davies, of Crygie, in tiie county of Cardigan. On, the 13th inst. at LJanbadarn . fawr, near Aber- ystwith, Mr. Harry Morgan, fourtfi son of Mr. H. Morgan, of Morvafechan, Cardiganshire, to Margaret, eldes' daughter of Mr. Owen Evafcs, of Benhrees, in the same county. DIED. On the 4th inst. the Rev. John Parry, Vicar 6f Llangenoyd, Glamorganshire. Lately, aged. 50, Mrs. Jones, wife of Mr. D. Jones, of Vaynog- isuf, Llanerchayron, and only sister of T. Davies, Esq. of Nsmigwilan, near Cardigan. Lutel), at a, n advanced age, Mr. John Morgan, of Ffy nnonvair, Lampeter- Pont- Stephen, Cardiganshire. On the 1 ! th insl. at his seat at Pentref, in the county of Pembroke, David L) avi « > s, Esq M. D. aged 73. He was one of the Magistrates and Deputy Lieutenants fo the. counties of Carmarthen, Cardigan, and Pem- broke. On the 6th inst. a I. ihe tesidence of her brother, Birt Davies, M. D Birmingham, of a rapid decline, aged ' 28, Martha Maria, eldest daughter of the late Rev. Thomas Davies, and niece to Albali Thomas Jones Gwyuue, Esq. of Monachty, Cardiganshire, sincerely regretted by a numerous circle of relatives and friends. On Wednesday se'nnight, at Rhydybriw, in the county of Brecon, aged 73, sincerely respected, Mrs. Evans, the widow of the late Rev James Evans, Vicar of LIy well, Breconshire. On the 5th inst. at the Brook, in the parish of Knighton; in the county of Radnor, much regretted aud lamented, Michael jones, Esq. aged 75 years. At a numerous meeting, held at Llangollen, in the county of Denbigh, on Saturday last, the Hon. Frederick West in the chair, the following Address and Petitions were proposed by W. Ormsby Gore, Esq. seconded by John Jones, Esq. of Dinbryn, and carried unanimously. They were signed by nearly 200 names in about an hour and a half. ADDRESS TO THE KING. May it please your Majestyj We, the undersigned Gentlemen, Clergy, and Inhabitants of the Town and Ncighboui h > od of Llangollen, in the county of Denbigh, humbly approach yo « r Majesty, to express our loyal and dutiful attachment to your Majesty's Person and Govern- ment. We duly prize the privileges we enjoy under a Protestant King and a Protestant Constitution, and we assure vour Majesty of our readiness to support them at the expense of our properties and our lives. look with alarm at the declared intention of your SHROVE TUESDAY Annual Dinner al the Lion Inn, SHREWSBURY. TOMPKINS will be obliged to his Friends who intend Dining at the Lion, onf Tuesday next, 3d of March, to send or leave their Names at the Bar. Mr. WILLIAM BAKER, President. Dinner at Half past Two. WEBS Card and Dancing Assembly. rrpilE SECOND ASSEMBLY will be M ou MONDAY, March 2d, 1829, at ihe NEW ASSEMBLY UOOM, While liaise Inn, Wem. PATUOH F. SSBS. MRS. DICKLS. | MRS. WALFOIID. MANAGERS. THOMAS DICKIfl, ESQ. HENRY JOHN BARKER, ESQ. IN D EST LI UCTIB L ft T E iiT H, MR. I. EVA SON, SURGEON DENTIST, 22, White Friars, Chester, ITS KSPECTFCM. Y announces that he will | L4 he at Mr. PAP. SOKS'S, Grocer, Stc. ( opposite the Talbot Hotel), Market Street, Shrembury, oil Monday Morning next, Ihe 2il of March, and may he consulted ns usual ou all Cases of Dental Surgery and Mechaiii. ni tilt Saturday Evening, the ? th. Mr LEVASON attends in Shrewsbury the first Monday in every Month, and remains till the Saturday Evening following. In Compliance with the Wishes of his numerous Friends aud Patrons of Shropshire, Mr. I. EVASON intends removing, in April next, to more private Apartments ( Situation will be given in future Papers), *.* Incorruptible Mineral, Natural, or Artificial Teeth fixed on unerring Principles. SALOPIAN BREWERY, COLEHAM, SALOP. The career of the " loyal Address, 1' correctly noticed in our last Journal, has terminated in its transmission to, and presentation by, Mr. Peel, by whom it has been acknowledged as the Address of " the inhabitants of the town and neighbourhood of Shrewsbury."!!! THE DUKE or WELLINGTON AND THE EARL OF ELDON.— We are assured that the following is the substance of what passed at the recent interview between the Premier and the Earl of Eldon :— His Grace stated that, in obedience to the express com- mands of the King-, he waited upon the noble Earl to communicate to his " old and faithful servant" ( as his Majesty was graciously and most justly pleased to designate that venerable nobleman) the change which was contemplated in the policy of the Govern- ment, and to consult with the noble Earl thereon. The reply of Lord Eldon to this communication was, in substance, as follows :— After acknowledging the gracious condescension of the Monarch, his lordship proceeded—" My lord duke, you are a great man — a very great man ; you have fought many battles, and have gained many noble victories; BUT, my lord duke, leirare lest, by one act of your life, you out- weigh all the fame you have hitherto acquired. You are said to have fought the French inch by inch on the plains of Waterloo > be assured, my lord duke, that I shall fight the great Protestant battle with yott inch by inch on the floor of the House of Lords." With this salutary warning his Grace was suffered to depart : so that, borrowing the phraseology of a dis- tinguished member of the lower house, the noble duke did not take much by his motion.— Brighton Gazette. Visiting Clergyman this week at the Infirmary, the Rev. W. J. James:— House- Visitors, Mr. Blunt and Mr. Ward. We are sorry that press of matter prevented our noticing last week the gratification we received on hearing Mr. Pemberton's delineations of Passion and Character : the happy facility he enjoys of identifying himself with the character he is holding up the mirror of, must soon place him in a most conspicuous situation on the list of Dramatic Stars. DARING OFFENDER..— The escape of the notorious Evans alias Smaltman from Hereford Gaol was noticed in our last Journal.— It will be seen by an advertisement in another column, that, to his former offenccs, he has probably added murder, another burglary, and horse- stealing. Being recognised at Bi? hop's Castle, on Friday last, a young man named Edward Richards, a mason, was about to secure him, when Evans shot him through the left breast, and, notwithstanding every surgical aid, he remains in a very precarious state.— Evans escaped, and on the next night broke into the house of Mrs. Hotchkiss, at Churchstoke, and also stole a horse from that place, which was subsequently found near Bucknell. It is known that Evans has been since traversing the borders of Montgomeryshire, Radnorshire, and Here- fordshire ; and the neighbouring Magistrates, Dr. Oakeley, Rev. J. B. Bright, Philip Morris, Esq. and W. Pugh, Esq. haye. heen using every exertion of themselves and neighbours to ensure his appre- hension, for which a reward of £ 100 is offered. fjpHE Proprietors of this Brewery have on M. Safe a Quantity of excellent Brawn StouE PORTER, which they offer to the Public at very Reduced Prices, and in any Quantity not less than Five Gallons.— Also, 011 Sale, a Quantity of Puu- cheons, Barrels, Kilderkins, Firkins, & c. & c'c. Apply lo Mr. I'ITZJOHN, on the Premises. NOTICE. All Persons having Casks. in their Possession he- longing to the late Firm of JOHN HEATHCOTE & Co. that do not deliver the same within Ten Dnvs from the Date hereof, will he proceeded against for the Value thereof. SHREWSBURY, FEB. 25, 1829. e and and while we kuow The Shropshire Hounds icill meet Wednesclov, Feb. 25th Prees Village Friday, Feb. 27th Kee Bridge Monday, March 2d Eaton Maseott YVrdiiesduj/, March 4' ih ^ ratloe Friday, March 6th Shawbury White Gates Mr. Boycott's Hounds meet Thursday, Feb. 26th Norton Saturday, Feb. 28th.. Birnall Green Tuesday, ( VIareh 3d Woodeote Green Friday," March tith Park Hull At half past ten. Sir Richard Pule a ton's Hounds meet Thursday, Feb. 26th IWillbrook Saturday, Feb. 28th Cardeu At eleven. BANKRUPTS, FEB. 20.--- Robert TVlutrfe, of Manchester* chemist. Manoel Antonio de Freitas and Antonio de Costa, o? Tokfnhouse yard, nierchant. i. John Atkiu, of Greenwich draper. John Horden, John-' Wood, and John Crosse, of Lad- Jane, warehousemen. George Frederick Pal in, of Goswell- street, rope- manufacturer. William Carey, of Leamington- Priors, Warwickshire, hair dreSser. John Hodgson, of Stain- drop, Durham, draper. John SaK, of Stafford, ironmonger. Thomas Shirea, of Sheffield, grocer. Geof'ge Turner, of Bogoor, Sussex, innkeeper. John Wood, of Horncastle, tailor. Kelix Jones, jun. of Bristol, mason and builder. John Paul, of Harp- Jane, Tower street, flour dealer. Matthew Milton, of Piccadilly,^ horse dealer. George Barehead, of New Mutton, Yorkshire, corn- merchant. Richard Webb, of Ledbury, Herefordshire, coal merchant. Jane Eliza Greeuwood, of Bath, milliner. Jaimes Robert Appleby, of Bath, soap maker. INSOLVENTS.— Joseph Myall, of Castle Hedingham, Essex, hop merchant. Jeremiah " James, of Cortybella Colliery, Monmouthshire, coal- merchant. John William Young, of Albany- street, Regei^ t's- park^ merchant. • ropei We y< Majesty's Ministers to remove the civil and political disabilities wnich at present control our Roman Catholic fellow- subjects. We feel that such measures will be pregnant with the most imminent danger to our Institutions in Church aud State, aud we therefore humbly implore your Majesty to pause before you give your Royal sanction. We entreat your Majesty to consider the cause that forced our ancestors to depart from the lineal succession to the throne, and has enabled us to flourish under the beneficent and paternal government of the House of Brunswick. We implore your Majesty to consider the conscientious manner in which your much- beioved and adored Royal Father felt himself bound by his Coronation Oath to resist all attempts to abrogate the legal restraints imposed by the principles of the Constitution on his Roman Catholic subjects. We entreat our beloved Monarch, for whom we are ready to shed the last drop of our blood, to consider what he will have to anssver for ( should he sanction these pei nicious measures of his Ministers) to his own conscience, to this Country, and to his God, We beseech your Majesty to hand down to posterity the Protestant Constitution unimpaired aud inviolate, and we, as in duty bound, will ever pray for your Majesty's health and prosperity. To the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, Sfc. The Humble Petition, fyc. sheu eth, That your Petitioners approach your Right Honourable House with the most devoted attachment to every branch of the Legislature, and with confident hopes that the united wisdom of Parliament will be exerted to stem the danger which threatens to overwhelm the safeguards of the Constitu- tion, which cost this country so much blood and treasure to establish, under which we have- so long flourished, and which bus raised us to the proud pre eminence which we at present hold among nations. That your Petitioners implore your Right Honourabl < t House to avoid the experimental measure of again admitting Roman Catholics into civil and political power in these Realms, a power which the spirit of their religiou ever has compelled and evdr must compel its adherents to exercise, not to the maintenance of Equality, but to the attainment of Ascendancy. That your Petitioners entreat you to consider that you are now legislating for future generations, and that temporary expedients are not to be balanced with the contingency of future miseries, they therefore feel the utmost alarm at the prospec. t of " the removal of those barriers which the Law " oppose-; to the attainment of political power by the Roman " Catholics, which ( as truly said by one of His Majesty's " Ministers) is inconsistent with the maintenance of the " Constitution, and the welfare and safety of the Church " That your Petitioners humbly but strenuously implore your Right Honourable House not to accede to the demands of the Roman Catholics, but, as the hereditary guardians of the Constitution, to hand it down to posterity 111 the same form as bequeathed to you by your ancestors. The petition to the Commons was similarly worded to that to the House of Lords. A meeting was held at the Town Hall, Brecon, on the 16th inst. when Petitions to both Houses of Parliament, against further concessions to the Roman Catholics, were unanimously agreed to. In presenting a petition to the House of Commons from the County of Anglesey, on the 16th inst. against further Concessions of political power to the Roman Catholics, the Earl of Uxbridge took the opportunity of stating that he should oppose any further con- cessions by every means in bis power. COURT OF CHANCERY— FRIDAY. MOP. a IS V. DAVIES. Mr. Home Wished to know if his ^ ordshfp could conve nienily appoint Tuesday next for the hearing of the argu- ments in this case. It was desirable that they should be heard on as early a day as possible, in order that the Court might, have the advantage of hearing the arguments of the Common Law Lawyers before they went on the Oxford Circuit, from which this case originally came.— The Lord Chancellor said that, he could not appoint Tuesday, as Mitchell's case was coming on on that day, and Saturday week would be too late, as the Common Law Counsel would be ou Circuit by that time. The case should therefore stand over for argument until tlie return of the Common Law Counsel from Circuit. The Cambrian says—" We are informed from an unquestionable source, that Chief Justice Clarke, of the Carmarthen Circuit, has resigned, and that Judge Goulburn alone will bold the ensuing Great Sessions for that Circuit. It is not the intention of his Ma- jesty V Government. to appoint a successor to Chtef Justice Clarke until the report of the Commissioners for enquiring into the Welsh Judicature shall have been considered. The time of holding the Great Sessions for the above Circuit has been fixed as follows; Carmarthen, Saturday, April 11. llaverfordwegt, Saturday, April 18. Cardigan, Friday, April 24. The Pontifical See is again vacant. Pope Leo XII. died at his palace in Rome on the morning of the 10th inst. in the 69th year of his age. utjiibailiBO SHREWSBURY. Ill otir Markel, tin Suturriny last, the price fit Hidea was - lil. per lb,— Calf Skins 5il.— Tallow aid. s. d. s. ft. Wheat, 38quarts j. 11 0 to 12 0 Barlev, 38 quarts 5 2 to 5 8 Uats.' o? quarts 5 6 to GO COitN EXCHANGE, FEB. - 23. We were licit scantily supplied, with Wheat from Essex, Kent, and Suttol k, this moriiing—' still, having- large arrivals of Flour and Foreign Wheat, our mar- ket was extreme 1 y heavy for ihe sale of all deserip. lions of Grain, and what few sales were made in Wheat were from 3s. lo 4s. per quarter under the prices of this day se'unight. Barley was also dull sale, tlie best malting samples selling for 34s. per quarter, willi very litlle doing in this article. Beans and Peas of both descriptions w ere uncommonly heavy at the under- mentioned prices. Oats were from Is. lo 2s. per quarter lower, the supply from our own coast, as well as from Ireland, being large. Ill other articles there is uo alteration. Current Price of Gram per Quarter, as under: IF ROBERT JONES, late of NANT- GI. YN, Denbighshire, ( and who was in the Month of June, 1819, a Servant with ihe late Humphrey Rowlands Jones, of Garthmill Hall, in the County of Montgomery, Esquire,) will apply, either peismiaMy or hy Letter ( Post- paid}, at ilie Office of Messrs. OWES and JO:; ES, Machynlleth, Montgomeryshire, lie may hear of soinetliiiig to his Advantage. N. B. This Advertisement will not be continued. METTOM MOWEi, NEAR SHREWSBURY. tTO ILC ACT, For a Term of Years, Unfurnished, and may bi entered upon at Lady- Day next; rtpH AT commodious Family Residence, fi- BETTON HOUSE, situate Three Miles from llie Town of Shrewsbury, well calculated for the Reception of u Gentleman's Family : , coniprisin^ Entrance Hall, Dining ( loom. Morning Room, aud Library, five best Bed Rooms, Bachelor's Rooms, Water Closet, and spaeious Accommodation foi Serv- ants, Kilchen, Housekeeper's Room, Butler's Pantry, Servnnfs' Hall, Sculleries, Cellars, fcc. w ith detached Dairy, Brewhouse, aud Laundry ; also a capital Ice- house; Ivvo Kitchen and Fruit Gardens, Ihe one entirely walled round; Stabling for twelve Horses; Dilto for four Waggon Horses; Double Coach- house' Saddle Room, Granaries, Barns, Cow Sheds, See.; an excellent Dove. house; and with or without any Quantity of Arable and Pasture LAND, not exceeding Fifty Acrcs. To a desirable Tenant the Right of Sporting over several adjacent Manors will also be Let. For Particulars apply ( if by Letter, Post paid} la Mr. BCRD, Cardiston, near Shrewsbury. GRASS SjAND. To he LET, from Lady- Day next, \ PIECE of excellent Meadow LAND, i.\ vtilhin Half- a- Mili of Shrewsbury, on the Roocf leading lo Meole; also two valuable Fields of G K ASS LAND, near the Old Factory, Castle Foregate, Shrewsbury. For Particulars apply to Mr. BCBD, Land Agent, Cardiston, near Shrewsbury. TO BE SOLD BY PRIVATE CONTRACT, GJ[~\ / OAK TREES, standing in Brovrn Cop. 0\ J- 4 l, iue> near II ABBEIILEY, Scribe- mai feed from No.- l to No. 304, and great Part thereof excellent Cleft. Fur Particulars apply to Mr. JACKSON, Nobold ; or Mr. H. OAKI. KY, Timber Vainer, Shrewsbury. If not disposed of by Private Contract, Ihe above Timber will he SOLD ( in' Lots) BY AUCTION, in the Month of March next. ( Cf* This Advertisement will not be repealed. NOSOLD, FEB. 25,1829. TXMSSBR. To be Sold by Private Contract, X7 » OUR ELM TREES, one OAK, two . SYCAMORE, one WITHY, and one ASH, now growing upoif Lands adjoining KINGsLAND, numbered 1 to 9 inclusive. For Particulars apply to Mr. OAKI. BT, Timber Valuer, Shrewsbury. TO BE LET, And entered upon ut Lady- Day next, ACOMMODIOUS HOUSE and SHOP, situated iu Princess Street, Shrewsbury. — For Particulars a( iply lo Messrs. PISITCUAKD aud LLOYD, on the Premises. STo Oe act, And may be entered upon at Lady- Day next, ADW ELLING HOUSE, with Ware- house, Benm house, six Lime Pits, Wool Room, Drying Kiln, & c. advantageously situated for Busi- ness near the River Tern. For Particulars enquire of Mr. JOSEPH SILLITOBJ Fordall, near Market Drayton. CTo toe act, And entered upon at Lady- Day next, Modern- built Brick HOUSE, consist- ing of au Entrance, two Parlours, a Kitchen, Pantry, Browhouse, Cellar, and four good Lodging Rooms, Willi an excellent Garden, containing ( with the House) three Roods of Laud, situated in the plea- sant Village of OLDBURY, and near the Church;, within Haifa Mile of Bridgnorth, and commands a flue View of the Town of Bridgnorth and the River Severn. For Particulars apply to Mr. CORSBR, St. Mary's, stieet, Bridgnorth; if by Letter, Post- paid. Wheat Barley. Malt.... 00s to 75s 20s to 34s 50s to 60s White Peas Beans Oats 38s lo 41s 34s lo 3tis 28s to 32s Fine Flour 65s to 70 » persack ; Seconds60s lo 65s SMITH FI ELD f per tt . ot Mb . sinking offal.) Beef 4s 4d 10 4s Sd I Veal 5s 81! to 6s 6d Mutton... 4s ( id 10 5s 2.1 | Pork 5 « 2d lo 6s 2d Lamb .... 0s Od to 0s Od Average Prices of Corn per Quarter, in England and Wales, for the week ending Feb. 13, 1829.' Wheat, 73s, lid.; Barley, 34 « . 3d.; Oat » , 23s. 3d. / HEKEAS on Monday Night, the 23d of February, 18* 29, or on Tuesday Morninu the 24th, the STABLES belonging to Mr". RAVEN! SHAW, of UCK1NGTON, weie ENTERED by some Person or Persons, and two Corn Coffers broke open, also a Housing and Leather cut from a Cart Saddle and several Articles of Wearing Appaiel taken from llie said Stables:— Whoever will give Information of the Ort'ender or Offenders, so that he or they may b<- brought lo Justice, shall receive TWO GUINEAS REWARD ( over and above what is allowed by Ihe Wroxeter Association) by applying to the said Mr. RAVEKSUAW. rssss* ;;.- ^'• iwwww m- rt SALOPIAN JOURNAL ® AM © COURIER OP WAL1S « ie , V It te pt'f be « y » y " ff lus ON ule • « ). tin! on Dllt pry inn uu- hp. to. 0) 11 the IT- II ih re* [ of » My > 18. ; lie hi ice, rom the iing » ud Mils, erv- itry; : lied Ice- one ' ses; use, ; nil uny ling orer [) la iD, Ron it ASS gate, Kent* Top. ii k- ed Part ( l) OTC S, ill two ASM, I NO, i in tier [ OP, — For t- Oto, Sire- Untini, ' bun. insist- ilclien, W( iii| f 1 ( » illl e | ilrn. hurcli ilimtil u > Hirer Hnry'i, t, the Inrnins, KiEK. lorn 5 by some open, Snddfc, J> from ation of iittv be I NBAS >)) Ihe ^ alegs by Auction. OAK, ASH, AND ELM TIMBER} Of extraordinary Dimehsiops and Soundness, throwing in Boreatton Park, Shropshire, and on Grounds adjoining, only two Miles from Weston Wharf on the Ellesmere Canal, about six Miles from the Severn, and excellent Roads in every Direction. BY MR. PERRY, At the Britannia Inn, in the Town of Shrewsbury, on Friday, the 27th Day of February instant, at Four o'Clock in the Afternoon, subject to Conditions then lo be produced : rjpHE following Lots of TIMBER. The IL Oak in the Park being more valuable in point of Dimension uud sound Quality than any offered for Sale for very many Years iu this Country. LOT I. 1 Oak, 5 Ash, and 12 F. lm Trees, growing on Lands at Boreatton, fresh numbered with White Paint from 1 to 18. LOT II. 20 Oak and 2 Ash Trees, fresh numbered IN White 1 to 22, growing in a Coppice near Boreutlon. LOT III. 18 F. LM Trees and 1 . Oak Ditto, numbered ill White 1 to 19, growing ill Boreatton Park. LOT IV. 6 Oak Trees, numbered 1 lo 6, growing in Boreattou Park. . LOT V. 7 Oak Trees, numbered 7 lo 13, growing in the said Park. LOT VI. 7 Oak Trees, numbered 14 to 20, growing in the said Park. LOT VII ( I Oak Trees, numbered 21 to 26, growing in the said Park. ' LOT VIII. 7 Oak Trees, numbered 27 to 33, grow- ing ' IH the said Park. Mr. BROOMHAI. I., at Boreatton Hall, will appoint a Person to ilifcw the Timber ; aud further Particulars may he had of Messrs. Lt. ovn and How, Solicitors, or Mr. OARLEr, Timber- Valuer, Shrewsbury. HIGHLY DESIRABLE VALUABLE PROPERTY, In Whit chut ch, Shropshire. BY MUTPERRY, ( By Direction of the Executors of the lole W. II. WATSON, Esq.) at the Red Lion Inn, Whitchurch, iu the County of Salop, on Friday, the 6th Day of March, 1829, al Four o'Clock in the Afternoon; ALL that Freehold, extensive, and genteel DWELLING HOUSE, with Coach- house, 4- stalled Stable, Saddle Room, Work Room, Granary, and other Offices, Garden, Yard, & c. ( Ihe late Resi- dence of W. II. Watson, Esq. deceased), situate in St. Mary's Street, Whitchurch, and ill every Respect situtihle for a genteel Family. Also a commodious Freehold DWELLING HOUSE ( latterly used as Offices of Business), with Yard and Offices attached, and a DWELLING HOUSE adjoin- ing;, in the Occupation of Mr. Thomas Lee, with Yard and Appurtenances. Also, all tliat spacious and capital Inn, called THE RED LION, with appropriate Stables, Lock- up Coach- houses,, extensive Garden, $ tc. situate iu High Street, Whitchurch, long established as a respectable Ian, but recently enlarged aud improved so as gives it an undoubted Preference in every Department to anv other Inn in the Town. Also, THREE PIECES of Freehold rich MEA- DOW LAND, situate at BRADLEY GREEN, about two Miles from Whitchurch, adjoining the Ellesinere Canal, containing 9A. I R. OP. Also, a Freehold BARN and GARDEN, situate in St. John's Lane, Wliitchurch. Aud also the BENEFICI AL INTEREST of and in about Eight Acres of LAND, close to Whitchurch, for und during the Lives of two healthy Persons about 40 Years of Age, or the Survivor of them. Printed Particulars describing the several Lots may he had, fourteen Days previous lo the Sale, at the Offices of Mr. WACE, Solicitor, Shrewsbury; Mr. B LAKIN or Mr. C. CLAY, Whitchurch; and* of Mr. PERKY, Shrewsbury. Very desirable Residences for genteel Families, with Gardens, § c. IN THR PLEASANT VILLAGE OF BRACE ME3LE, Within a Mile and Half of Shrewsbury. BY MR. PERRY, At the Lion Inn, Shrewsbury, on Saturday, the 7th of March, 1829 ( instead of Ihe 28th of February, as advertised last Week), at Four u'Clock in the Afternoon; LOT I. ALL that substantiallv- built DWELL- ING HOUSE, with tivo- stalled Stable, Gig- house, Shed, and other Erections, together with the Garden occupied therewith, in the Tenure of Thomas Jones, Esq.; also a Portion of a large Garden adjoin- ing, us slaked out. The House is of modern Erection with South- east Aspect, aud contains on the Ground Floor Entrance Hall, Dining Parlour ( about 15 Feet by 14 Feet), Breakfast Room ( fitted up with Cupboards particu- larly calculated for Domestic Comfort), Kitchen, two Pqutries, Brewliouse, and appropriate Cellaring. — Chamber Fluor: 4 comfortable Bed Chambers and 2 Closets. The Premises are well supplied with Water from a Pump thereon ; anil the extra Garden forms a delight- ful Site for further Buildings, with Aspect due South. LOT II. All that DWELLING HOUSE, with Cottage, Stable, Gighouse, Conlboitse, and other Buildings, with lite Yard and Garden attached, as lately occupied by Mr. Morgan and the late Mrs. Minton ; ulso, a Portion of a Farge Garden adjoining, as staked out. The House and Cottage are firmly built ( Aspect due Soulh), nnd contain on the Ground Floor Entrance Hall, with Approach from a Stone Terrace; Parlour, 14 Feet by 14 Feet; two Kitchens ; two Brevvhnuses ; two Pantries ; nnd excellent Vaulted Cellars under.— On the first Floor; Ten Room, four Bed Chambers, Dressing Room, mid Closet.— On the second Floor, three Bed Rooms. This Lot is supplied with Water from a Pump in the Yard, and is very desirable as a Residence for n genteel Family. LOT III. A PEW ill the Parish Church of Meole Brace. The above Property is equally eligible to purchuse for Investment us for Occupation. May he viewed till the Sale any Day of Business from Ten till Two o'Clock, by Ticket, to be had of Mr. I'HII. IP HUGHES, Market Place, Shrewsbury ; or of Mr. PERRY, of whom further Particulars may be hud, and al the Office of Messrs. BURLBY & SCARTH, Solicitors, Shrewsbury. N. B. This Advertisement will appear again in ' next Week's Journal only. ^ FREE HOI A) PROPERTY, OLD HEATH. ^ alegs Dp siucttum THIS DAY. BROOK- HOUSE Excellent Live Stock, Implements, Hay, Straw, BY MiT" sivnTn, At the Brook- House, near the Coydway, in the County of Montgomery, on Wednesday, the 25th Day of February, 1829; LL the LIVE STOCK, IMPLE- MENTS, STRAW, HAY, & c. belonging to Mr. JOHN HARRIS, who has set his Farm : comprising 3 good Cows and Calves, 4 Ditto in- calf, 1 Calving Heifer, 2 two- year old Ditto, 1 two- year old Bullock, 2 Yearlings, three- year old Bull; 3 useful Draught Mares ( one of which is in- foal), capital Bay three- year old Draught Coll, two- year old Ditto,. two. year old Brown Fillv by Fvldener, yearling Dilto by the same Horse, Draught Yearling, Brood Mare ( in- foal to a Draught Horse), capital four- year old Black Gelding ( a guod Roadster), useful four- year old Blown Mare by Hit or Miss ; and 9 fresh Store Pigs. Also, a large Bay of Barley Slraw, Ditto of Pea Homes, 2 Stacks of Com Straw, and a Stack of good Hay ( about 10 Tons), the whole lo go oft' the Premises. The IMPLEMENTS comprise 2 good Waggons and Ripples, six- inch Wheel Tumbrel, Wheel Plough, 2 Pair of Harrows, 2 good Laud Rollers, Winnowing Machine, Ladder, 5 Sets of Gears, Riddle and Sieve, Half- strike, Quantity of new Bags, Pikels and Rakes, Cranks nnd Chains, Waggon Ropes, Mattocks, Spade, Hay Knife, Straw Engine, with numerous small Implements, together witli a Quantity of capital Implement Wood ( in Lots). Also, various Fixtures, and Articles of Furniture, Bird Net.& c. Sale at Eleven o'Clock to a Minute. by auction. FREEHOL D PR OPE li T Y, COLEHAHI. A: BY MR. SMITH, At the Dun Cow, Abbey Foregate, Shrewsbury, on Friday, the 27th Day of February, 1829, at'Five o'Clock ill the Afternoon ; LOT I. CAPITAL STACK of HAY, of the Growth of 1827, about Eleven Tons. LOT II. Excellent. STACK of HAY, of the Growth of i828, about Fourteen Tons. The above are standing ill a Field near the Cherry Orchard, Abbey Foregale, and were well harvested. For a View of the same apply to Mr. WEEKS, High Street, or THE AUCTIONEER. YSTYMCOLWYN. Valuable Dairy Cows of I he pure long- horned Breed, Fat Bui locks, Young Cattle, capital Draught Horses, Colts, Sheep, Pigs, Im- plements, and Furniture. BY MESSRS. I1ULBERT & SON, At the Crown Inn, Shrewsbury, on Tuesday, the 101fl of March, precisely at Five o'Clock in the Afief,- nooo, iu Ouc Lot; LL those FIFTEEN substantially- built DWELLING- HOUSES with convenient Yards, Garden, Land, Bakehouse, and numerous Out- Offices belonging thereto, culled TERRACE BUILDINGS, siluate in Coleham, Shrewsbury, subject to Conditions . to be produced at the Time of Sale, and loan Annuity of £- 20 payable loan elderly Lady, whose Age will be previously ascertained. The Land- Tax is redeemed; and if desirable to a Purchaser, £ 550 may remain on Mortgage of llie Property. Apply for a View to Mr. Cufeton, on the Premises; and for further Particulars lo Mr. RICHARD HILDITCH, Solicitor, Shrewsbury. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. LL Persons indebted to the late Mrs. ATKINSON are requested immediately to pay the Amount of their Accounts to Mrs. MARTHA JONES, of Condover, or to Mr. NATHANIEL HUGHES, Pride Hill, Shrewsbury, who are duly authorised to receive the same; and all Persons to whom Mrs. ATKINSON stood indebted at the Time of her Decease, . are requested to send in their Accounts to the said Mrs, Jotfes or to Mr. Hughes without Delay. Saint John's Hill, Shrewsbury. Messrs. I1ULBERT & SON OST respectfully acquaint the Public, WtOTlCE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the. PARTNERS HI I' latelv subsisting between RICHARD HARPER nud GEORGE HUtPER, of Coleham, ( Shrewsbury, Pump. makers & Well sinkers, was DISSOLVED, by mutual Consent, on Monday, December 29, 1828. RICHo HARPER. GEORGE HARPER. Witness— P. KEAN. ft. B. All Persons who stand indebted to the late Partnership . are requested lo pay their respective Debts to It. HARPER or G HARPER; anil all Persons to whom ihe late Partnership'stood indebted will please lo send iu their Accounts that they may be settled. FEE. 24, 1829. ^ alegi Dp Stttcttoi that they have received Instructions from Ihe Executors of the late THOMAS LLOYD, Esq. of GHin. gwnna Hull, Carnarvonshire, and Saint John's Hill, Shrewsbury, to bring- to AUCTION all the truly genteel ami valuable HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, Books, Linen, rich China, Glass, elegant Engravings, Foreign Wines, 8tc. & c. on ihe Premises, ST. JOHN'S 111 LL, Shrewsbury, on the 16th, 17th, and lSlh Days of March next ensuing. Further Particulars will appear next Week, aud Catalogues will be published and circulated in due Time. BY MR. BROOME, On the Premises, on Monday, the 9lh Day of March, 1829; ALL THE LIVE STOCK, IMPLE- MENTS IN HUSBANDRY, HOUSEHOLD GOODS a ltd FURNITURE, Brewing and Dairy Utensils aud Casks, belonging to the late Mrs. ATKINSON, of CON DO V ER, iu the Couuly of Salop. — Particulars iu our next. 11ARLEY, SHROPSHIRE. JS'olice to Creditors and Debtors. HF. REAS WILLIAM GRIFFITHS, of I he' Tow II of MACHYNLLETH, in the County of Montgomery, Victualler, hath, by Indenture, ( duly executed) bearing Date the nineteenth Day of Febru- ary instant, assigned over his personal Estate und Effects to DAVID JONES, ofTowyn. in the Coifnty of Merioneth, Maltster, and RICHARD EDWARDS, of Machynlleth aforesaid. Shopkeeper, IN TRUST, for the eijual Benefit of his Creditors: NOTICE is hereby given, that the said Indenture of Assignment ubw/ lies at our Office, in Machynlleth, for the Inspection and Execution of the Creditors of the said William Griffiths. And all those who shall not have executed the same, or assented thereto in Writing, on or before the nineteenth Day of April next, will be excluded the Benefit arising therefrom. All Persons indebted to the .- aid William Griffiths are requested forthw ith to pay the Amount of their respective Debts to the said David Jones or Richard Edwards, other- wise legal Proceedings will be instituted against theni forllie Recovery thereof. OWEN and JONES. 20TH FEB, 1829. BY MR. SMITH, On the Premises at YSTYMCOLWYN, near Myfod, in the County of Montgomery, on Tuesday and Wednesday, ihe 17th aud 18th Days of March, 1829 ; npHE entire valuable LIVE STOCK, JB- the Property of Mr. STEPHEN DENSTON, of Stanwurdiue, who is giving up the Montgomeryshire Farm. Particulars in a future Paper. ir ® ammiiiiipiiiBSo UFFINGTON. Genteel Household Furniture, Brewing Uten- sils, Casks, Dairy Cows, and EJf'ects. BY MR. SMITH, On the Premises at UFFINGTON, near Shrewsbury, on Thursday und Friday, the 19th and 20th Days of March, 1829 ; ALL the HOUSEHOLD FURTSII- . TURE, Brewing Utensils, Casks, and Effects, the Property of Mrs. PUGH, who is leaving the lull. Particulars in a future Puper. BY MR. BROOME, At the Raven lull, in Much Wenlock, in the County of Salop, on Tuesday, the I7tli Day of March, 1829, nt five o'Clock in the Afternoon, in one or more Lots ( unless previously disposed of by Private Con- tract, of which Notice will he given,) and subject to such Conditions as will be then produced ; ALL those very desirable FREEHOLD PREMISES, called HARLEY TOWER, consisting of an excellent Dwelling House, Windmill, lawe Malthouse, suitable Outbuildings, and several Cot tages, together with Fifteen Acrts of most excellent LAND adjoining thereto. Part whereof is Tithe- free. IIARLEY TOWER lie* near the Turnpike Road lead- ing from Shrewsbury to Much Wenlock anil Bridg- north, being ten Miles distant from the former, two Miles from Wenlock, and ten Miles from Bridgnorth. It is also tin easy Distance from Broseley, Coalbrook- dnle, Iroubridge, Wellington, & c. and within two Miles of ihe Itiver Severn. The Whole of the Pre. inises are in the most complete and suhstautial Repair. Possession will be given at Lady- Day next, and a reasonable Time allowed for the Payment of the Purchase Money, a Moiety of which may remain secured on the Premises, if required by the Purchaser. Iu Case Ihe above Premises are not Sold, tbe same II be Let, with immediate Possession.— Every En- couragement will he given lo a substantial Tenant, and a Lease granted if required. Any further Particulars may he known on Appli- cation to the Proprietor, on the Premises ; Mr. J. W. WATSON, Solicitor, Shrewsbury ; or to THE AUCTION- EER, Church. Slretton, Shropshire. DATED 17TH FEB. 1829. PLEALEY. Valuable Live Stock, Fat. Cattle, and Sheep, Implements, Furniture, AND EFFECTS. BY MR. SMITH, On the Premises at PLEALEY, in the County of Salop, on Monday and Tuesday, the 23d and 24th Days of March, 1829 ; rEMJE entire valuable LIVE STOCK a IMPLEMENTS, FURNITURE, kc. the Pro- perty of G. ClllLDE, Esq. who has let llic Farm. Particulars in a future Paper. LITTLE WOOLASCOTT. TO BE DISPOSED OF, FLOURISHING BUSINESS fn the PROVISION LINE. The Premises in which the Business is carried on are situated in a populous Part of the Town of Shrewsbury.— The Sum required to purchase Fixtures and Stock- in- Trade, about £ 50. Apply at the Office of Messrs. HCI. BERT and SON, Auctioneers, High- street, Shrewsbury. Kjp'This Advertisement will not be continued. HnHE MANOR or Lordship of WFJIX- M ALL, and several valuable MESSUAGES, COTTAGES, FARMS, and LANDS, in the Town. iUips% f WHIXALL and EDSTASTON, in the Parishes of jPrees- and Wem, in the County of Salop, containing . Mp » wards of One Thousand Acres, will be offered for SALE BY AUCTION, tog- ether or in Lots, in the Month of April next, under the Direction of ihe Assigness of Messrs. CORSER, NAYLOU, and HASSALL, of WhitchuTch, Salop, Bankrupts. Particulars will appear in a future Paper. ts? auction. NOBOjLD. BY MR. SMITH, On the Premises at LITTLE WOOLASCOTT, in the County of Salop, on Wednesday, the ' 25th Day of March, 1829, precisely at Twelve o'Clock ; ABOUT Ninety Tons of well- harvested II AY, of the Growth of 1827 and 1828, in Lots agreeable to Purchasers ; three Stacks of CORN, aud one Ditto of OATS, to go off in the Straw. © AIK IBAIBIKo BY MR. SMITH, On the same Day, Wednesday, the 25th Day of March, 1829, at the Coach and Ilorses Inn, Raven Street, Shrewsbury, at four o'Clock in the After- noon ; LOT I. STACK of BARK, about 20 Tons, standing at the Shaw Wells. LOT II. STACK of DITTO, about 10Tons, standing at Woolstone, near West Felton.— Mr. PHILIP OARE, on the Premises, will shew this Lot. BY MR. REYNOLDS, At the Castle Inn, Castle Foregate, Shrewsbury, on • the 2d Day of March, 1829, at six o'Clock in the Evening, " subject to such Conditions as shall be then produced, unless previously disposed of by Private Contract, of which due Notice will be given ; ALL those FOUR MESSUAGES or new well- erected Dwelling Houses, with Gar- dens, situated at the OLD HEATH, about 100 Yards from the Turnpike Road, in the Parish of St. Mary, one Mile from Shrewsbury, The Houses are plea- santly situated ; each House contains two Lodging Rooms, Kitchen, Pantry, and Coal- Place, with an excellent new Lead Pump, and Out- Offices. The Tenants will shew the Premises.— Further Particulars may he had of Mr. BURLEY, Solicitor, or Mr. REYNOLDS, Auctioneer. Valuable Freehold Properly, IN SHREWSBURY. BY MR. REYNOLDS, At the Fox lun, Shrewsbury, on Tuesday, the 3d Day of March, 1829, at Five o'Clock iu the Evening, subject to such Conditions as shall then be pro- duced ( unless previously disposed of by Private Contract, of which due Notice will be given); ALL that Messuage or DWELLING HOUSE and PLUMBER'S SHOP, together with a huge nnd commodious SCHOOL ROOM over the same, situate in the Steelyard Shut, HIGH STREET, Shrewsbury, now in the Occupation of Mr. Jones, Schoolmaster, and his Undertenants. Mr. CRUMPTON, Mardol Head, will shew the Pre- mises; and for further Particulars, or to treat for the Sale, apply to Mr. EVANS, Builder, St. Austin's Friars, or lo Mr. TBBCE, Solicitor, Shrewsbury. To be Sold by Private Contract, A Quantity of OAK POSTS nnd RAILS.— Apply to Mr. WILLIAM THOMPSON, at Preston Gubballs, who will also shew Lot 1, ^ ONE CONCERN.) BY MR. SMITH, Al the Raven Inn, in Shrewsbury, on Thursday, the twenty- sixth Day of March, 1829, at Four o'clock in the Evening, subject to Conditions then to be produced ; ALL those several GARDENS, situate in the Parish of St. Chad, in Shrewsbury, ad- joining the late Town Walls, and near the Crescent, in Ten Lots, as the same are now marked or staked out, now or late in the Holdings of Ihe Rev. Mr. Wakefield, Mr. Crawford, Mrs. Simpson, Miss Hay- ward, Mr. Birch, Mr. Thornton, Mrs. Rawlins, Mr. Howell, Shoemaker, Mr. Turner, Mr. Acton, Mr. Howell, Printer, Mr. Shuker, and Mr. Jones, as Tenants to the late Robert Hill, Esq. The Situation of this Property is delightful, being at once in Town and Country, and presents such an Opportunity for Building Sites or retired and pro- ductive Gardens ( highly desirable to those who are folid of Horticultural Pursuits) as cannot be obtained in any other Part of the Town ; and tlie Premises are free from Land- Tax. A Plan of the Lots may be seen at the Offices of Mr. WACB or Mr. COOPER, Solicitors, Shrewsbury \ and for further Particulars apply to them or to THE AUC- TIONEER, who will appoint a Person to shew the Premises. BY MR. BROOME, On Wednesday and Thursday, the 18th and 19th Days of March, 1829; rIM1E superior bred STOCK, & c. of 0 Mr. JOHN HICKMAN, of LADY HALTON, in the Parish of Brouifield, in the County of Salop, within two Miles of l. odluw, who is quitting his Farm and retiring from Business.— Particulars will appear in our next Week's Paper. Public House, Tenements, & c. IN jjUDIiOW. BY MR. BACH, On the Premises, on Tuesday, the 10th Day of March, 1829, between the Honrs of four and six o'Clock in the Afternoon, subject to such Conditions as shall be then produced, unless disposed of in the mean Time by Private Contract ; r | M1E WHITE HART INN, & FIVE i- 1. TENEMENTS adjoining the same, situate in the Pig- Market, Old- street, LUDLOW. The Inn is now in excellent Business, in the very respectable Occupation of Mr. Evan James, aitd comprises two good Parlours, Kitchen, Brewhou* © , Scullery, with six good Bed Rooms over that same* and capital Cellars underneath. There is a Ptftnp 0/ excellent Water in the Yard, and two good StoWes^ » Pigsties, and behind is a large Garden, the Whole occupying a Depth of near 200 Feet. Part of the Purchase Money may remain ou the Premises. Also will be Sold by Auction> AT THE SAME TIME AND PLACE, All those SEVEN TENEMENTS, situate iu Upper Gaol ford, in Ludlow, now in the Occupations of Wil- liam Stunton and others. The Premises, with a small Exception ( which is Freehold), are held by Lease under the Corporation of Ludlow, at nominal Rents, and renewable upon a small Fine certain. For further Particulars apply to Mr. SAMUEL DAVIF. S, Mill- street, Ludlow, or the Auctioneer. BY MR. D. BRIGHT, On the Premises at NOBOLD, hear Shrewsbury, on Wednesday and ' Thursday, the 4th and 5 th Days of March, 1829; rilHE valuable LIVE STOCK, 1M a PLEMENTS in HUSBAN DRY, HOUSEHOLD GOODS, BREWING and DAIRY UTENSl LS, & c & C. late the Property of Mr. HARRISON, deceased : consisting of 14 Cows calved and in- calf, i Barren, (> two- year old Heifers iii- calf, 3 yearling Heifers, 5 Heifer Calves, 1 three- year old Boll ; 6 capiial Black Waggon Mares and Geldings and Gearing for Ditto, two year old Bay Draught Gelding, 1 yearling Ditto, I ditto Filly ; 10 yearling Wethers, 15 Ewes lalnhed and in- lamb ; 23 Store Pigs, 3 Sows in pig, Capital young Brawn ; 2 excellent narrow- wheeled . Wuggoiis with Ripples, 2 broad- wheeled Tombs- els., 2 narrow- wheeled Ditto, double and single Ploughs, Harrows, and a general Assortment of Implements ; Dairy and Brewing Utensils, & c. Further Particulars will be in Catalogues, to be had from THE AUCTIONBRR and 011 the Premises. Sale to commence each Morning at Ten o'Clock. N. B. THE AUCTIONEER can with Confidence re. commend the above Dairy to the Notice of the Public the Cons being of the prime Durham Breed, good Milkers and quick Feeders: the Young Stock are also of the same Breed. Valuable OAK, JlSfT, and other TIMBER* At the Cross Keys Inn, Oswestry, in the County of Salop, on Monday, the 2d Day of March next, at Four o'Clock in the Afternoon, subject lo such Conditions as will be then and there produced : r| pM E under- mentioned OA K, ASH, and a other TIMBER TREES, growing « i( Lands at PLASKYN ASTON, in the Parish of It nation, in the County of Denbigh, in one or more Lots, as shall he determined upon at the Time ol Sale: 307 Oak Timber Trees, numbered fronf 1 to 367 inclusive. 138 Ash Timber Trees, numbered from 1 to 138 inclusive. . 9 Elm Timber Trees, numbered from 1 to 9 inclusive. 4 Scotch Fir Timber Trees, numbered from 1 to 4 inclusive, 19 Sycamore and Chesnut Timber Trees, numbered from 1 to 19 inclusive. The above Timber is of good Quality : it is situate within a M ile of ihe Canal at Pontycvsy lite Aqueduct, and in the immediate Neighbourhood of extensive Collieries and Iron- Works, where Timber is disposed of lo great Advantage. Abo, at the same Time and Place, will be SOLD-, in the following Lots:— The under- mentioned OAK, ASH, ELM, aud other TIMBER TREES, growing on ihe Demesne at WOOD1H ) l! SE, and 011 Farms in REDNAL, in the Parish of West Fellon, and on SUELVOCK FARM, in the Parish of Ruyton, in the County of Salop: — On Woodhousc Demesne. LOT 1. 41 Oak Timber Trees, numbered from 1 to 41 inclusive. LOT II. 10 Ash Timber Trees, numbered from 1 to 10 inclusive. LOT III. 9 Ash Timber Trees, numbered from ll to 19 inclusive. LOT IV. 10 Elm Timber Trees, numbered from 1 tc 10 inclusive. LOT V. 13 Elrn Timber Trees, numbered from 11 to 23 inclusive; 7 Beech, 2 Spanish Chesnut, and 5 Alder Timber Trees. Lor VI. 10 Elm Timber Trees, from 24 to 33 inclusive. . LOT VII. 10 Elm Timber Trees, from 34 to 43 inclusive, 7 Beech, 2 Spanish Chesnut, and 5 Alder. On the Buildings Farm. LOT VIII. 12 Oak Timber Trees, numbered from 1 to 12 inclusive ; 24 Ash Timber Trees, numbered from to 24 inclusive. Lor IX. 12 Oak Timber Trees, numbered from 13 to 24 inclusive ; 24 Ash Timber Trees, numbered from 25 to 48 inclusive; 27 Alder, 2 Birch, and 12 Elm Timber Trees. On Mr. Wi Cough's Farm, in Rednal. LOT X. 9 Oak, 14 Ash, 5 Elm, and 2 Alder Timber Trees. On The Lees Farm. LOT XI. 23 Ash, 1 Elm, 2 Birch, and 2 Alder Timber Trees. On Mr. J. Guest's Farm. LOT XII. 1 Oak, 17 Ash, 1 Elm, aud 3 Alder Timber Trees. On John Bates\ s Tenement and Land adjoining. LOT XIII. 1 Oak, 13 Ash, and 15 Alder Timber Trees. On Shelvock Farm. LOT XIV. 36 Oak, 27 Ash, 23 Alder, 3 Lime, and 1 Sycamore Trees. LOT XV. 36 Oak, 7 Ash, 8 Alder, and 2 Birch Trees. LOT XVI. 49 Oak, 45 Ash, 24 Elm, 24 Alder, 1 Sycamore, and 1 Beech Trees. Also, several Lots of Fir and other Timber Trees that are fallen, and about 1500 good Rails, lying near Wood house. The whole of the above Timber is sound and of the very best Quality ; the Elm is chiefly VVych, of large Dimensions ; that on the Demesne at Woodhouse and on the Farms at Rednal is within Half a Mile of the Ellesniere Canal, and that at Shelvock not more than two Miles distant. THOMAS FRANCIS, of Rhosymedre, near Plaskynas- tou, will shew the Timber at that Place; J. JONES, the Bailiff at Woodhouse, and J. MORRIS, the Tenant at Shelvock, will shew the several other Lots. For further Particulars apply to Mr. TIMOTHEUS BURO, Lund- Agent, Cardislon, near Shrewsbury. TO BE SOLD B Y P1UVA TE ( ON PR A C T, ( OR LET,) rjpnE LEASE ot: a valuable HOUSE ® and PREMISES, called SPRING HIM,, late 1.1 the Occupation of Mrs. Parsons, pleasantly situated near the Town of Wellington, and u. boui a Mile from' the celebrated Admaston Spa The House consists ( on the Grourd Floor) of three Parlours, Kitchen, Brewh. bilse, SVHlkbouse, and oilier Offices, inclosed in good Yard, with Coach- house, S at le, Cow- House, Piggeries, Stc. ; an excellent Garden, Sh » irt. bery, & e. standing on about an Acre of Ground, inclosed by a Brick Wa't and goodTence. together with a Cottage which. lets for Five Pounds a-> ear. For Particulars apply to F. HOUSTON and SON, Market Place, Wellington ; if by Letter, Post- paid HODNET mmm^ mm For the Prosecution of Felons, 4' c. Hp HE ANNUAT" MEETh\ G of litis 0- Society will he held at the Bear lun, lloduel, on Tuesday, the 3d Day of March, 1H2II. P. PACE, Treasurer, ( d* Dinner at Two o'Clock. Ho'DNEt, FEB. 18,1S28. BY MR. D. BRIGHT, Oil the Premises at CASTLE PlJI. VF. tiBATCH, ou Mulldav, the 9th Day of March, 182a ; 4 LL the LIVE STOCK, HOUSE- I\ HOLD GOODS and FURNITURE, belonging lo Mr. SAMUEL HARROI. L. — Particulars in Catalogues to be hud from THE ArcTioNBKR. Sale to begin at Three o'Clock. VERY EXTENSIVE SALE, At the Red Lion Inn, Newport, Shropshire. W. JACKSON EGS Leave respectfully to inform tlie Public, that he shall submit for SALE bv AUCTION, without Reserve, on THURSDAY, the 19th Day of March, 1829, and following Davs, ihe whole of ihe truly. valuable HOUSEHOLD FURNI- TURE, STOCK of HORSES, POST- CHAISES, aifrf other Effects necessary for carrying on the Innkeep. ing Business, & tc. & c. belonging lo Mr. WILLIAM LinriBLi., of the Red Lion Inn, Newport. Particulars will appear ill a future Paper, and Catalogues iu due Time. Round House, near Long den. BY MR. D. BRIGHT. On'the Premises at the Round House, near Longden ( ill Tuesday, ihe 24ib of March, 1829 ; A LLTHE' LIVE STOCK, 1MPLE t\ MENTS, valuable HOUSEHOLD GOODS Olid FURNITURE, belonging to the late Mr. JOHN OAKLEY, formerly of Berwick.— Particulars will appear in a future Paper. FREEHOLD PROPERTY. ONE HUNDRED POUNDS REWARD. ^ MfHEREAS, en Friday Evening, the V 9 21HI1 Instant, a Person came to the Boa ' s. Head lun, Bishop's Castle, supposed to he the Man ( EVANS alias SM A LI. M A N) who Intel, escaped from Hereford Gaol, where he was conttned 011 a Charge of Robbery ; he called for Ale, aud sat drink- ing in the Kitchen, when Suspicion arose thatJie was the same Person, he immediately left his Seat and went towards the Door leading into the Yard, when 11 young Man in Company followed him and look hold of his Skirts; Evans then put his Hand under his Smock- frock, drew out a Pistol, and iustaiillv shot hill] through the Breast aud escaped. And whereas the said Evans alias Smallman also stands charged with burglariously breaking anil entering the Dwelling House of ANN IIOTCHKISS, iit the Village of Churchstoke, in the Couiilv of Mont- gomery, 011 Saturday Night, the 21st Instant, or early on Sunday Morning. He also stands charged with feloniously stealing a Grey Horse, the Property of BENJAMIN UOTCMKISS, also of the said Village of ChurcliStoke, on Saturday Night, the 21st Instant, or eatly on Sunday Morning; The said Evans is about 6 Feet high, Light- Brown Hair, long Nose, nearly 30 Years of Age, stout nude, and very upright ; had on a thin Pair of Shots, without Nnils, Pale- Blue Lamb's Wool Stockings, it Pair of Leather Leggings ( nearly new), Drab Plu'sli Breeches ( worn hard on Ihe Inside the Knees), old Light- coloured Jacket ( supposed to he Fustian or Mole. Skin), a Blue Smock- frock ( nearly new, with much White- Work on it), a fine Shirt ( not high in the Collar), and a Yellow Silk Handkerchief, and a gooa fresh Hat with Crape llatbaud round if. A Reward of Twenty Pounds is offered in tbe Here- ford Newspaper for his Apprehension, and Ten Pounds for the Robbery he is supposed to have com mitted 011 the Night of his Escape from Hereford Gaol. IU Addition to the above Rewards, Twenty Pounds will he given by the Corporation of Bishop's Castle, Ten Pounds by the said Benjamin Hotckkiss, Ten Pounds by Ihe said Ann Hotchkiss, and Thirty Pounds by the Treasurer of the County of Montgo- mery, milking in Ihe Whole the Sum of One Hundred Pounds, upon the said Evans being lodged iu any of his Majesty's Gaols, FEBBUAKV 22D, 1829. MONTGOMER YSHIRE TIMBER. BY MR. G. WILLIAMS, At the House of Mrs. Kvnaston, in the Village of Guilsfield, on Tuesday, the 3d of March, 1829, at Four o'Clock ; rfipHb: following LOTS of OAK and It ASH, Scribe- numbered: LOT I. 100 prime Oak Trees, standing on Llidiard rhedynen Farm and Lands, adjoiuiug the Parish of Guilsfield. LOT II. 300 Oak Poles, standing ou Tybreeth Farm and Coppices. LOT 111. 100 Ash Trees, in Cefndu Coppice, ad- joining the Road from Llanfair to Guilsfield. LOT IV. 40 Ash Trees, in Hedgerows, adjoining the same Road. LOT V. 70 Ash Trees, on Llidiardrhedynen Far LOT VI. 40 Ash Trees ( 20 felled), on the Graig Farm, in the parish of Castle Caereinion. The above is sound and lengthy ; and the Asll well calculated for Wheelwrights or Cooperage. For Particulars apply to Mr. JONES, Pen'bryn ; or at Maesmawr, where a Person is appointed lo shew the Lots. JUST PUBLISHED, By Ebenezer Thomson and So- is, MANCHESTER, ACATALOGUE of a very extensive COLLECTION of BOOKS, in Ancient ami Modern Languages and various Classes of Literature : containing. many valuable Works on Divinity, History. Biography, Topography, & i\ — Catalogues may he seen at Messrs. EODOWES'S and Mr. Hur. BERT's, Shrewsbury, and at Mr. SMITH'S, Ironbridge. BY MR. JOHN BIRCH, At the George Inn, Shrewsbury, on Monday, the 9th Day of March, 1829, at five o'Clock in the After- noon, subject to Conditions to he then produced : fTWVE DESIRABLE TENEMENTS, or EL DWELLING HOUSES, situate on Ctsoss HILL, Shrewsbury, with a Yard, Brewhouse, and Diuiiuery adjoining, iu the several Occupations of F'dwnrd Owen, Robert Davies, John Hughes, Joseph Griee, und Margaret Weilings, who will shew- the Premises, For further Particulars apply at the Office of Mr. COOPER, Solicitor, St. John's Hiil, Shrewsbury, or to THE AUCTIONEER. Genteel Furniture, § - c. at wilder Ion. DAY- HOUSE. Capital Dairy Stock, Horses, Colts, Sheep, Pigs, Implements, Furniture, Dairy and Brewing Utensils, neat Gig, Corn Stacks, ^• c. Sfc. BY MR. SMITH, On the Premises at THE DAY- HOUSE, near Shrews- bury, on Monday and Tuesday, the 3Ulh and 31st Davs of March, IS29 ; r| MIE entire valuable LIVE STOCK, M IMPLEMENTS, Corn Stacks, FURNITURE, and Effects, the Property of the late Mr. SAMUEL SUTTON. Particulars will appear. VALUABLE TIMBER, Montgomertjahi re. At the Lion Inn, in Myfod, on Friday, the 6th Day t> f March, 18" 29, at five o'Clock in the Afternoon, sub- ject to Conditions then to be produced ; LOT I. ASH TREES, growing on the Main, Ystym- colwyn, Tynewydd, and Tyddynvsais Farms, in the Parish of Myfod, Scribe- marked and numbered from 1 to 62 inclusive. LOT II. 84 ASH TREES, growing on Pcnygodor, Broncynfelyn, and Part of Coedoerle Farms, Scribe- marked and numbered from 1 to 84 inclusive. LOT III. 93 ASH TREES, growing on Coedoerle Farm, Scribe- marked and numbered 85 to 176 in- clusive* LOT IV. 13 ASH TREES, growing on Prenrhwnin Farm, in the Parish of Llansaintffraid, Scribe- marked from No. 1 to 13inclusive. LOT V. 210 OAK TREES, growing on Thu'i'- godor, T. y Benbow, Ystymeolwyn, Tyddyny'sWis1, and- Tynewydd Farms, in the Parish of Myfod, Scribe^ marked from No. 1 to 210 inclusive. The above Timber is well worth the Attention of Carpenters, Wheelwriohts, Coopers, & e. and are about five Miles from the Montgomeryshire Canal, and adjoining the Turnpike Road leading from My fod to Oswestry. The respective Tenants will shew the Timber ; and 1further Particulars may be had by applying to Mr. WALTER POWELL JONES, Cefn Rug, near Corweo. BY MR. ASHLEY, On the Premises at Alderton, in Ihe Parish of Middle, in the County of Sulop, on Monday & Tuesday, the 9th and IO1I1 Days of March, 1829; \ LL Ilie valuable HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, Brewing and Dairy Ulensils, & e. late the Property of Mr. WILLIAM SHINGLKH, deceased. Catalogues may he had from THE AUCTIONEER, in Wein. MONTG OME R YSHI RE TIMBER. Valuable Freehold Properly, IN THE TQWW OF QSWE3THY. BY MR. BO WEN, At the Cross Keys Inn, in Oswestry, in the County of Salop, on Wednesday, the lltli of March, 1829, precisely nt Five o'Clock in the Afternoon, iu tbe following or such oilier Lois ns may he agreed upon at the Time of Sale, aud subject to Conditions to he then produced : LOT I. ALL that Messuage or DWELLING HOUSE and SHOP, with excellent Cellaring, large Warehouse, convenient Yard, and Stable, silunte in Cross Street, Oswestry, and now iu the Occupation of Mr. B. Davies. Also, those THREE Messuages or DWELLING HOUSES, at the Buck of the above, iu the several Holdings of Mr. D. Price, Mr. W. Davies, aud Mr. John Jones. Lor II. All that Messuage or DWELLING HOUSE and SHOP, adjoin ing Lot 1, occupied bv Miss A mold ; and TWO other lloOsES, occupied" by Mr. John Jones and Mr. S. Sides,— There is aitached to nud adjoining this Lot an excellent Moll. Kiln, a large Stable, and convenient Brewliouse. The above Property is most desirably situated ! n Cross Stseet, Oswestiv, and the Premises being very extensive is an excellent Opportunity for the Invest- ment of Capital. For further Particulars apply to THE AUCTIONEER, Wrexham. rEMI E Creditors who have proved their a Debts under the Commission of Bankrupt issued against GEORGE CORSER, GEORGE NAYLOIi. and JOSEPH 11 ASS ALL, of WHITCHURCH, in the County of Salop, Bankers, Co- partners, Dealers and Chapmen, are desired lo MEET the Assignees of the said Bankrupts' Estate and Effects, on Wednesday the Eighteenth Day of March, One Thousand Eigiit Hundred and Twenty- nine, nt the White Lion IniiTilt Whitchurch aforesaid, nl Eleven o'Clock iu the Forenoon, to assent to or dissent from the said As- signees selling and disposing of any Part or Parts' of1 Ihe said Bankrupts' Real and Personal Estate by - Private Contract; also to nssent to or dissent froi'n the said Assignees reserving or buying in and retain- ing any Part or Parts of the Real Estate of the said Bankrupts which they in their Discretion shall think proper, until such Time or Times as the same cair in their Judgment he sold or disposed of to better Ad- vantage; and lastly to assent to or dissent from Un- said Assignees proseculiug or defending any Suit or Suits at Law or in Equity for Recovery of any Part of the said Bankrupts1 Estate and Effects, or to the compounding, submitting to Arbitration, or otherwise agreeing any Matter or Thing relating thereto. BROOKES & LEE, Solicitors. nPHE Creditors of the Estate and Effects 1 of the late WILLIAM FURBER, of Drayton- in- Hales, in the of Salop, Gentleman, de- ceased, are requested to Meet the Surviving Executor named in ihe Will of Ihe said Deceased, ui~ tlie OHice of Messrs. BUTTHRTON ond M'opt, in Drayton. in. Hale, aforesaid, on Wednesday, the 4th Day of March next, when and where a Statement of the Executorship Accounts will be laid before them, and such Arrange- ment made for the Settlement thereof as may be thought proper. DRAYTON, FEB. 20, 1829. run NP1KE TO L LS. Al ihe Oak Inn, in Welsh Pool, on Friday, the 20th of March next; UPWARDS of 2000 OAK TIMBER TREES, in 14 Lots. LOTS 1 to 8 inclusive — Are iu Crowther's Coppice and on several Farms adjoining, close to the River Severn and the Montgomeryshire Canal at Pool Quay. LOTS 9 and 10 — Are on Lands near Welsh Pool, within one Mile from ihe said Canal. LOTS 12 and 13 — Are in and near to Moelachles Wood, in the Parish of Llangadfan. LOT 14— Is on Park yr Ewig Farm, near Pont Dolanog. The chief Part of the above Timber is of fine Quality, fit for the most valuable Purposes of the Navy ; other Parts are excellent Building Timber and Cleft. The Proximity of the principal Lots to the Canal and River Severn will afford the Purchaser the great Advantage of sending the Timber and Produce to Market in a short Time and at little Expense. Particulars and any Information required may be had of Mr. WILDING, at the Dairy J or Mr. GOULD, of The Golfa, near Welsh Pool. For Investment of Capital. At the Wynnstay Arms, in Oswestry, in the Course of . the ensuing Month of April, either together or in Lots to be specified in a future Advertisement, subject to Conditions to be declared at the Time of Sale : \ MOST valuable and desirable FREE- r\ HOLD ESTATE; comprising sundry fine FARMS and LANDS, held by respectable Tenants at low Rents, and containing in the whole by Admea- surement 909A. 3R. 24P. be the same more or less, situate in the several Parishes of OSWESTRY ami WHITTINGTON, in the County of Salop, nearly adjoining the latter Village, and at a short Distance from the Town of Oswestry, in the immediate Neigh- bourhood of Coal and Lime, with the Ad vantages of excellent Turnpike Roads, and the additional Facili, ties of Water Carriage by Means of the Eilesmere Canal, which is within two Miles of the greatest Pari of ihe Property . There are some fine Coppices of thriving young Timber upon Parts of the Estate. Pheasants and other Game are in the greatest Abundance, having been strictly preserved. Printed Particulars, descriptive of the several Lots, will shortly be prepared, and may afterwards be had ( with any further Information which may he re- quired) by applying to Messrs. LONGUEVII. LR, Soli- citors, Oswestry, who will appoint a Person to shew , he Estate. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the TOLLS arising at tbe Toll Gates between Worlhen and Westbnrv, and between Brockton nud Minsterley, known by the Names of Westhury anil Minsterley Gates, wilh the Side Gates belonging- thereto, will be LET by AUCTION, to the " best Bidder, at the White Horse Inn, iu Wortlien on MONDAY, the I61I1 Day of March next, at Eleven o'clock in the Forenoon, for one Y" 11 r from Luilv- Day, 1829, in the Manner directed by the Act passed in the Third Year of ihe Reign of His Majesty King George the Fourth, " For regulaliiig Turnpike Itonils;" which Tolls arc now Let for the Sum of £ 464. The best Bidder must nt the same Time give Se- curity, with sufficient Sureties lo the Satisfaction of tile Trustees, for Payment of the Money monthly. FRANCIS ALLEN, Clerk. MEN AI A VD CONWAY BRIDGES. THE TOLLS TO BE LET. Commissioners for enrryino> into H Execution the Act 4th Geo. IV. cap. ? 4, inti- tuled " An Act for vesting in Commissioners ihe " Bridges now building •> V{'!' the Me ii a i Straits and % i ihe River Oinvuy, mid the Harbours ofllowth and " Holy head, and the Road from Dublin to Howth. aud " for the further Improvement of the Road from " Loudon to Holyhead," do hereby give NOTICE that on Tuesday, tbe 24th Day of March next, at Twelve o'Cloek at Noon, at the Penrhyn Aruiw Inn, at Bangor, in the Co. intv of Carnarvon, will he LET BY AUCTION, the TOLLS to he taken at erreb „ f ihe above- mentioned Bridges, which Tolls produced the last Year the following Sums, above the Expense ofcollecting them : viz. Monai Bridge £ 700 Conway Bridge 355 And will be Let separately to the highest Bidder or Bidders, for the Term of One Year from ihe 1st Dav of May next. Whoever happens to be the highest Bidder or Rid- ders must immediately give ( iu Writing) the Names of two sufficient Sureties, and p iy One Month's Rent iu Advance ; and also al ihe same Time sign nu Agreement for executing a Lease with the said Sure- ties for the due Payment of the Rent bv Monthly Instalments, and for the Performance, of such Cove- mints aud Conditions as shall be declared at the Time of the Auction. Copies of the Conditions upon which the snid Tolls will be Let, and further Particulars respecting the same, may be had on Application al either nf ihe Bridges; to M r. JOHN PROVIS, at Holyhead, Engineer to the Commissioners ; or at No. 2, Whitehall Place. By Order of the Commissioners, A. MILNE. 2, WHITEHALL PLACP, LONDON, FEB. 16, 18i9. SALOPIAN JOUKNAL, AM © COURSER < 0F WAJLM FOR THE SALOPIAN JOURNAL. LINES, Written after reading the King's Speech and the Parliamentary Proceedings of the 0th of February, 1829. ENGLAND! n. v eoiinlry ! ah, for iliee I mourn i Initial, III* IIIIII'I, ilif sliock of ages home ; Slorinn often ihrenlen'ti lliv iiiirivullM glair. Yet thy fit in lull Marks slnotl, and miiil'll al fate. Bui tlinu art fallen — deeply fallen, tuu ; False friends liuvc done wind foes could never do. 1 read with wonder the disgraceful page Thai tells llie achievements of lliis LIBERAL aj; e. When 1 observe llie smiles anil sinipeis bland, And smooth elusions of the fuilhless baud, Willi basely have their country's hopps humy'd, And in I lie dust our C'liusiiliiiioit laid,— I tisk— Citn these he llrilons ? Surf ly no! in flioir base veins no British hlotftl can flow, (' nil Ihese he scions* of ifiP ancient stock. Who stood unhendinjr as their native oak, Nor shrunk from persecution's scorrliini; flume? ( All, were ilieir precious forms cousiiin'd in vuin ?) 0 yes — the "• « » .< of our enlightened dot/ Can wonders bright before ollr eyes display ; 1 he Cliincb which liereiics in flame devours They shew Hi be as mild aud pure its ours. Vile Cant of Liberalism— onr llulioll's tmfie, If, slianie— olir Father's at lies answer Shame .' O Thou ! whose will and word in us I lie fulfill'd, ' TisTliy decree— to 1 by dpcree I yield ; Tire voice of prophesy lellsnol in lain That for a settson Antichrist must reign :— Already litis begun the evil hour. Already he assumes lite long- wish'd power, Ami soon the flume, us in the days of old. May separate llie dross from genuine gold. Our sapient Senators, perchance, may prove That fire is srill lh£ sifth of Popish tore ; Bill, be it io— they need feel no dismay. For surely they can turn, like him of BKAY ! Ah, lei me iliink. Could I that day abide? tJiiwav'ring stand, nor falsely turn aside? O Thou w ho know est my deceitful heart, l. et me not act llie base Apostate's pai l; Support me in that day, or lake me home to iltee, my Father,— ere that day shall cortie. DUBLIN PROTESTANT MEETING. FOR THE SALOPIAN JOURNAL. The Subscription Ball for the benefit of the Spanish ^ Refugees, at Oswestry, on Wednesday, the 11th inst. was attended by the first families in the town and neighbourhood The Ball was opened with a Country dance about half past ten o'clock; quadrilles, waltzes, and country dances alternately, were kept up to a late hour. The room was tastefully decorated, and and Mrs Knight, every attention was paid by Mr. which gave entire satisfaction. T he band was under the direction of Mr. Cunnah, of Wynnstay, whose accompaniments on the harp to the quadrilles were delightfully and scientifically performed ; and it is but justice to say, his taste and execution on that instrument are unrivalled. AMATEUR. Osuestry, Feb. 13,1829. MORFE COURSING MEETING. Thursday and Friday, Fob 12 and 13, 1820. t Wurspite. l) ogs drau n for the aged pup and Goblet. 1. Mr I.> sier's Lionel Ipi Mr. 1'. I'. irlon's Pictot nuo"' 2. ' Mr. Davenport's Dart Mr. WiJIiunis's Warspile.... 3. Mr. Dicken's Draco > Draco Mr. Hint kesillan's Venus $ 4. Mr II Campbell's Helen ^ GrntfeM Col. G: i! acres Graceful j 6. Mr, G. Molineux's Moorcock > Ben no Mr. Burgess's Beppo.... 5 6. Mr. llardingjs Nelson Z NekflH. Mr. Bali s s Bertha ... > i. Mr. VV. M'olineiix's Marcia ..... ) Mr. Vickera's Volunteer S 8. Mr. Barhe's Phoebe > |>| lcebc. Mr. Harries s llunihiig ^ Second (' lass. Pictim iio- ainsl Reppo Nrlson ngniiisl Graceful Wat spite against Pltrehe Dinco against Volunteer ' J its for the Cup and Goblet. Volunteer against Nelsort Volunteer Phoebe against ftt- ppo Plicche. Phcebe boat Volnnfeer, and won the Cup ; Volunteer won the Goblet. Plitebe by Mr. Bacln ' s Topper, daiu Mr. Co| lriis's Oltl Pitcebe. — Volunteer by the Apley Remus, out of Mr. Hurries'* Patch. The Davenport Stakes— aged Dogs. 1. Mr. Burgess's Brutus J ,, ,. tI Mr. Bales'* Berlliu Sls'*""' 1- 2. Mr. II. Burton's Blucklnck Mr. W. Moliiteiix's Martin 3. Mr. Btiche's Spanker Volunteer. Beppo. Nelson. Plirebe. Volunteer. £ Martin. The following are fhe Resolutions agreed to at the great Protestant Meeting iu Dublin 011 the 5th inst.:— 1.— Resolved, That we have heard with feelings of alarm, astonishment, and indignation, that it is the intention of his Majesty's Government to submit a measure to Parliament for admitting into the Cabinet, the Privy Council, the Legislature, and principal exe- cutive and judicial Offices of the State, persons pro- fessing the Roman Catholic religion. 2.— That we conceive such concession to be highly dangerous, as being subversive of the principles upon which the Act of Settlement is founded, and detri- mental to the tenure by which the reigning family occupy the throne of England. 3— That agreeing folly in opinion with the Right Hon. Secretary of State for the Home Department, " That, the removal of ( hose barriers which the law opposes to fhe attainment of political power by the Roman Catholics, is inconsistent with the maintenance of the Constitution, and the welfare and safety of the Churchanil knowing that the Sovereign of these realms is bound, by his Coronation Oath, not to assent to any measure endangering fhe safety of the Consti- tution or of the Church ; we arc of opinion, that such advisers of the Crown as may tender to his Majesty, for his assent, any Bill for the concession of further political power to the Roman Catholics of this realm, are traitors to their Sovereign, and enemies of their country. 4.— That the admission to further political power of the Roman Catholics of this realm would be ( as was declared in Parliament by the late Mr. Perceval) a violation of a solemn stipulation between Ireland and Great Britain, and in direct contravention of the fifth article of the Legislative Union between the two countries. 5.— That such a measure, beside Being a violatiiifi of a solemn national compact, is entirely uncalled for in the present state of Ireland. That there exists in this country a body of Protestant strength amply suf- ficient to controul the efforts of the factious ; and that, should treason or rebellion rear its armed head, the naked energies of the King's subjects, ( as has been lately declared by one of his Majesty's Ministers,) un- supported by a single soldier, would defeat and crush the attempt. 6.— That, while it is the solemn determination of this meeting to continue in their cheerful and devoted obedience to the principles of the Constitution, it is equally their determination in life and death to abide by them. To them it is a matter of no importance w ho may depart from those principles, or who may endeavour to overtnm them— they reject with the pittfoundest indignation all idea of submission to Pop- ish rulers in Church or State. While the sufferings of their forefathers remain on the pages of history, those sufferings, emiiahned in their memories, will be suffi- cient to support them under every trial— to arm them against every threat— and to leave thain no alternative but that of following their glorious example. 7 - That an humble Address be presented to his Majesty, praying him to dismiss from his councils such of his Ministers as would suggest for his adoption a measure for conceding further power to the Roman Catholics— a measure subversive of the Act of Settle- ment— violating fhe Act of Union— infringing the ob- ligations of the Coronation Oath, and destructive of the Constitution of the Empire.— That he will call to his councils men who will unite in sustaining tlie Re- ligion, the Liberties, and who shall possess the confi- dence of the nation.— That while we, the citizens of Dublin, confidently trust that he will be animated by the same spirit by w hich our late beloved Sovereign was inspired; who dcclUfeil himself ready to'step from his throne to a cottage, and from that cottage to a scaffold, rather than violate his Coronation Oath, wc humbly intreat that he w ill follow the example afford- ed by that illustrious King in a crisis of similar danger, by forthwith dissolving the Parliament, appealing to the sense of his dutiful anil loyal people, whether those principles, to which his Majesty's royal House is in- debted for the English Throne, and which for a cen- tury and a half have maintained individual happiness and national glory, are still to be preserved, or, for the temporary convenience of an ephemeral adminis- tration, to be abandoned for ever. 8.— That an Address to the loyal Protestants of England be immediately prepared and submitted to this Meeting, laying before the people of Great Bri- tain fhe real state of this country ; imploring their sympathies on behalf of their suffering aud threatened brethren of Ireland ; and praying them to afford them their countenance arid support, in defence of those rights for which their forefathers bled, and for which, they, their children, are prepared to follow their illus- trious example. An Address to his Majesty, in unison with these resolutions, was unanimously agreed to; as was also the subjoined ADDRESS TO THE PROTESTANTS OF ENGLAND nation— we claim them O11 behalf of the whole Protestant world; aud we claim them as the guardians of the rights of Unborn generations. " Betrayed by, the men in whom we reposed un- suspecting confidence, and alarmed at the interpreta- tion put- by numbers on the expressions contained in the King's Speech, we now declare that our only dependence is placed upon a just and righteous God — upon the wisdom and justice of our Sovereign—• upon the unsubdued spirit of our ancestors, which yet breathes in their children, and upon our dear Protestant brethren of the British empire. We im- plore you to unite your energies with ours, to drive from their seats, or to compel to retrace their steps, the Ministers who have dared to pollute the royal ear by the recommendation of Roman Catholic emanci- pation. Wc call upon you to accompany 11s to the foot of the throne; to bring with you fhe record of past ages, and in the ears of a beloved Sovereign read the crimes of a religion, unscriptnral in it", nature, and insatiable in its litst for power. We ask you to unveil in the royal presence the urn that contains the ashes and the hearts of your forefathers : fo point to the inscription upon the pedestal, and bid the King's apostate Ministers there read fhe Act of Settlement, the Bill of Rights, and the Coronation Oath We call upon you to unite with us in declaring the price of these our country's brightest and richest jewels, and how they were purchased with the groans and blood of the very men who, driving the bijfot JAMES from the throne, raised to it the illustrious WILLIAM ; and who, when dying, called, like the patriarch of old, their Children around them, and, in blessing them, left them three bequests :— The Protestant religion unimpaired; the British Constitution invio- late ; and a charge to maintain both in their purity, until England and Ireland should cease to be ranked amongst the nations of the earth. We call upon you thus to unite ill the discharge of an imperative duty towards a beloved but ill- advised Sovereign. We intreat you to roll into the Houses of Parliament such a tide of petitions and remonstrances as shall compel the Ministers to rise from their seats, that they may- escape from the overwhelmings of Protestant feeling. We intreat you to call meetings in every town, city, village, anil hamlet throughout the Empire ; and in the most dutiful and constitutional, but in the strong- est [ language, to call the attention of his Majesty to the state of the Protestant Religion, as now threat- ened by his Majesty's Ministers. " To you, Protestants of England, we offer our solemn pledge, that, even to the sacrifice of all that is dear to us, we will oppose the hateful measure by every lawful and constitutional means, until it shall either be carried or abandoned ; and that in the event of the former, we will continue to employ the same means, until the birthright of the Constitution be restored to us unsullied and unimpaired." dated the 17th of September; and in the same speech Mr. Peel informs us that his inind was made up at the close of the last session of parliament; corroboration of which the Duke of Wellington said in the House of Lords, that the determination of making concession to the papists was the final result of deliberations which concluded in July! — Oh! shade of Ferdinand Mendez de Pinto!— Mr. Peel's resolution is thus proved to have been taken three months before the existence of the rubbish 011 which he now charges it.— Age. fHt0cel! flncot! 0 EntflUgcncc. Mil. PEEL. Mr. Vickers's'Villager '^ Spanker. 4- P' I Duncan. Mr. Davenport s Duncan $ Second Class. Mr. Bates's Bertha ran a bye dog, Mr. Davenport's Duncan being- drawn in consequence of a fall. Mr. Bache's Spanker ) ^ " olineux's Martin $ nker. 1. Mr. W. Moliueux's This Stake remains for Berlhaand Spanker to run for Stake for four Dogs. Mr. Dick en's Damn*.. ) D Mr. Hurries s Harlequin ) 2. Mr. Lvster't Loftv ) , f. Mr. W. Molineux's Medea S Lofty bearDamiis, ami won it. Lofty by Mr. Best's Turk, bred iu Yorkshire. Stake for four Puppies. 1. Mr. I. vster's Lara ....... ) f< - i Mr. Clarke's Crib 5crl°- 2- Mr- « RSR?' 8 B, IP MINR, [ Bepp„ ri « « . Mr. W. Molitii- ux s Mulberry ) 11 Bepporiua ( by Mr. Burgess's Beppo) beat Crib, and Won the Slake. At a meeting of fhe Louth Brunswick Club, held 011 Thursday, it was resolved, that the Protestant petitions, transmitted from that county for pre- sentation, should be transferred from the bands of Mr. Leslie Foster, to whom they had been forward- ed, and placed in the hands of the ardent, eloquent, honest, faithful, and consistent member for the city of Dublin, Mr. George Moore. SINGULAR ELECTION.- The election of a member for ( lie city of Bath ( Lord Brecknock having vacated his seat, by accepting the office as one of the Lords ( ommissioners of the Admiralty), being appointed to take place on Friday morning, at fhe Guildhall, his lordship was proposed by Alderman Auderdon, and the nomination was seconded by Alderman Wiltshire. General palmer was next proposed by Alderman Crook, and was seconded by Sir G. S. Gibbes. On casting up the votes, the numbers being found equal, a double return was the conseqnence, a circumstance quite new in the annals of election. In other cases, when a double return has taken place, a scrutiny has i. ivariably awarded the seat to one of the members; but in this case such a proceeding is rendered unnecessary, as the validity of every vote is unques- tionable. OBIKNTAL ILLUSTRATION OF PSALM xxiii. 5.- " I confess," said Captain Wilson, " that, since my return from India, I have been forcibly struck with several things, which prove the scriptures to be an eastern book. For instance, the language of one of the psalms, where David says, ' Thou anointest my head with oil, my cup runneth over,' most likely alludes to a custom which continues to this day. once had this ceremony performed on myself, in the house of a rich Indian, in the presence of a large company. The gentleman of the house poured upon my hands and arms a delightfully odoriferous perfume, put a golden cup into my hand, and poured wine into it till it ran over, assuring me, at the same time, that it was a great pleasure to him to receive me, and that 1 should find a rich supply in his house. 1 think the inspired poet expresed his sense of the Diviue goodness by this allusion."— THEOUNI*— in Chri tiun Observer. The Bath Journal states it as a fact, that the workmen of a respectable firm in Wilts, have been offered £ 1000, to be paid weekly from the " Union," if they would strike, but the men informed their em- ployers, expressed their satisfaction, and would not comply with the request. It appears that the society above alluded to, extends throughout Yorkshire, and to manv parts of the kingdom, containing more than £ 00,000 members. " ADDRESS OFT1IE LOYAL CITIZENS AND PRO- TESTANT INHABITANTS Or DURLIN. " Englishmen and Fellow Protestants,— In perfect, but misplaced, reliance upon the interest taken by the Parent Government in our welfare, we for a consider- able number of years remained silent under the slan- der, and endured the taunts and threats, of the Catho- lic Association and its directors. « Represented as the enemies of social order, and as oppressors of the Roman Catholics, we have been de- signated by the foulest terms— have witnessed the destruction of the property, and the deliberate anil cold- blooded murders, of our fellow Protestants, whose only crimes were, unalterable attachment to our Christian profession— unqualified obedience to the Taws— and uncompromising opposition to the encroach- mcnts of Popery. " Our venerable Protestant establishments in Church and State have been threatened; and with those threats we have witnessed the fearful array of thou- sands of the deluded vassals of the Association — armed, disciplined, and prepared for the execution of any measure recommended by their leaders. However menacing these threats, and appalling these appear- ances, we have been accustomed to regard them but as the indications of a war of extirpation, whenever that war with safety to the agitators could be pro- claimed ; and hence, by many of the Romish Priest- hood we have been, and still are, represented as here- tics and usurpers, whose breath has contaminated the atmosphere, and whose feet have polluted the soil of Ireland. In the Catholic Association we have been threatened with the murderer's band, first uplifting the midnight latch, and then plunging the steel of Popish extirpation into the hearts of the inhabitants who were sleeping under its fancied security. " We have there hi en represented as treading upon a surface beneath which rages the volcanic matter of rebellion, bloodshed, and treason, and yet we have been left in uncertainty as to when the apprehended explosion should be heard and felt. " This is but a feebly marked outline of our situa- tion, and these are the apprehensions under which we live;— apprehensions, for the reality of which we refer to our public journals, wherein a dark catalogue of atrocities are daily looked for, and daily found, as one result of the wretched and disorganized state of the country ; and this state we distinctly and solemnly charge upon the agitators, to the account of the in fluence of the priesthood, and the cowardly and vac- cillating conduct of those of his Majesty's Ministers, who have been favourable to what is falsely callctl R man Catholic Emancipation. " It was not until our existence as a people was threatened, that we felt called upon to unite in our own defence — it was not until we saw the present Government regard us with apathy, that the remotest colony of his Majesty's dominions would resent, that we found ourselves cast upon our own resources— it was not until the Ministers of that Government nn- blushingly and loudly proclaimed to the world their own apostacy, that we felt called upon thus to address you— thus to claim your sympathies and your co- operation. " We call upon you to make our cause your own. We plead with you on the behalf of that cause for which the Son of God died, and of that cause which was purchased by his groans and sufferings, and which was cemented with the blood of our forefathers. " We calmly and solemnly assure you that the danger is real— that the enemy is already at the gates of the Constitution— that the cry of 1 Surrender' lias been heard from their keepers, and that unless, in the loud and unequivocal expression of Protestant feeling, that cry be drowned, the enemy will possess them, and, if in their power, for ever bar you and your children from the privileges and the glories of a free Constitution. " We claim your sympathies on the ground of our common faith— wc claim them as the children of martyrs, who bled under the same accursed domi- Mr. Peel has condescended to inform us what are the ostensible reasons for his scandalous dereliction of all principle iu the debate of Tuesday, and they are, in sum aud substance, no more than that the dis- turbed state of Ireland imperatively demanded that he should sacrifice his former opinions. The state of that country was so dreadful, that it was abso- lutely requisite that a measure of peace, in the shape of Roman Catholic emancipation, should be carried. Well! what are the proofs of the peculi- arly disturbed state of Ireland at this moment ? We shall giV6 ( hem, seriatim, as Mr. Pe6l himself gave fhenV. lst. On the 17th of September, an officer writes, that 3000 or 4000 cavalry or infantry, with 10,000 people carrying green branches, appeared at Tem- plcmore, 17 miles from his post— that 1500 had appeared at a spot 10 miles off, and us many more in another direction. " No disturbances," conti- nues the writer, " attended the meetings." And he adds, that " the usual appearance of these assemblages is ridiculous." 2d. Major- General Thornton, 011 the 30th of September, writes to say, that 20,000 Protestants had marched into Armagh, " the great body of whom," says the General, " have returned home ( at four o'clock), and no doubt is entertained that the day will pass over without uny serious outrage being committed."—[ lu point of fact there was none.] 3d. I. ord Anglesey's proclamation, which having in fact emanated from the Home- office, may count for nothing as evidence, so far as Peel is concerned. 4th. General Thornton's letter of the 28th of September, in which he expresses his alarm lest some collision should take place between the parties in Aimagh. Two days after wards, our readers will have seen, that the General writes to say, that no outrage of any kind Occurred-, of course that his fears were groundless. The j- esuifical juggle by which Peel read this document after that of the 30th of September, without explaining that that of the latter date absolutely nullified the former, will be duly appreciated by our readers. 5th. A letter from some anonymous gentleman, lias a most awful list of reasons for overthrowing the constitution of 1688. " The enclosed detail and summary of occur- rences exhibit several instances of cattle houghed, three burnings, six cases of arms taken, six threat- ening notices, one dwelling levelled, fourteen houses attacked, five persons assaulted, two of cattle stolen, one barony only in the county being free from crime. Two cases of decided resistance to the ordinary process of the law in civil matters of property, obliged the sheriff to call out tllO military, in conjunction with the police." To these decisive proofs that Roman Catholics should legislate for us, the writer adds, that in an anonymous district, a rabble of 500 fellows pre- vented a gentleman's labourer from digging up his potatoes, because he w as a Brunsw icker !! " What force," asks Mr. Peel triumphantly, " can be ap- plied here, what rigour of the law can remedy such a state of things?" 6. Another anonymous gentleman states, that 500 papists came into the town of Augher, shouting Through for ever," some of whom were wounded by the inhabitants, but none of the wounded or their friends have made any statement concerning the matter. 7. A threatening notice was posted up on the house of , in the townlands of , The principal movers in the newly proposed measures of government are assigning not merely different but adverse and irreconcilcable motives for their conduct. Let the reader look { o Monday's debates in the two houses, lie need go no further back :— On that day, the Duke of Wellington said — " But whether his Majesty's ministers vi'ere respon sible or not for the measures, he would positively reject the charge, that those measures had been suggested to bis Majesty's ministers, or that their minds had been at all influenced by fears of any thing that could occur in this or any other country. He totally denied the truth of such an assertion. There never was a period during the last 20 years in which, looking to the circumstances and relations of this country, there was a more total absence of all cause for fear than the present; and whatever might be the consequence of this measure, he would maintain, that the period at which it was introduced, showed sufficiently that its introduction did not spring from fear, and that such was the fact he ( the Duke of Wellington) was ready to prove to any man upon the clearest possible evidence." Nuw for Mr. Peel ( on the same day)— " He would ask his lion, friend to look to the state of Ireland, and say whether the state of political excitement into which it was cast from one end to the other is a state in which it ought to be allowed to remain. It was because he ( Mr. Peel) saw that a spirit of religion had mingled with a spirit of faction, and that from this mixture he foresaw consequences upon which no man could think without just appre- hension, that he had come to the conclusion that it would be better for the security of Protestant interests and the safety of Protestant establishments, to come to an amicable settlement of the question rather than allow it to remain in its unbalanced state. It was because he feared the consequences of leaving it unsettled that he had taken the course which bis hon. friend had blamed as inconsistent." Here is at least a choice of motives— reasons to suit all tempers. It is not, however, so much in their several modes of reasoning, as in their views, or rather accounts, of existing facts; — facts, be it observed, w hich they carefully guard from the people, who are called upon to acquiesce in the deduction from them,— that the ministers w hose words we quote are opposed to each other. The Duke of Wellington sees no danger— Mr. Peel sees a danger which it is necessary to evade by " BREAKING IN UPON THE CONSTITUTION OF 1688." No man, we say, can hesitate in preferring the testimony of the Duke of Wellington before that of Mr. Peel, and in believing what all experience, and what ail external circumstances demonstrate, that as the laws stand nothing is to be feared. But, if nothing is to be feared, how will Mr. Peel justify himself fo his' late constituents at Oxford, for the most ffagrant breach of trust to be found in the history' of political ap'osta'cy ? How will he justify himself to his royal master for forcing him " TO BREAK IN UPON THE CONSTITUTION OF 1688," which is the title- deed whereby the house of Hanover holds the crown of England ? How will he justify himself to the people of England, for " breaking in upon the constitution of 1688," which is the real charter of their civil and religious liberties— the ratifying instrument without which Magna Charta, the Habeas Corpus Act, and all the other guards of freedom erected by our ancestors, were void and of no effect ? How, if there be no danger, w ill he justify himself before God and man, for attempting, in the manner which he has attempted it, that which, were it as beneficial and just as it is ruinous and iniquitous, could not be justifiably attempfed' by the means which he has employed— concealment, fraud, and surprise ? WARRINGTON.— A public meeting of the inhabit- ants of Warrington and the neighbourhood was held on Monday in the Sessions room, George Bover, Esq. in the chair, when it was unanimously agreed to petition Parliament against any further concessions to the Catholics. A petition of the Irish Protestants against further concessions to the Catholics has reached London, containing, it is said, upwards of 641,000 signatures. The Marquis of Chandos, after presenting nearly one hundred petitions from Buckingham and places in Buckinghamshire, against further concessions to the Roman Catholic claims, gave notice that on Thursday, March 5, he should move « the call of the House," a notice that was received with cheering. The Order for the Call of the House, on Thursday, March 5, is thus entered on the votes ; having named the day :—" Members not attending to be sent for in custody of the Serjeant." At the last Sessions held at Newark, one of the counsel was examining an old Yorkshireman, of the age of 81, and who was clerk of the parish where he resided, respecting the marriages of parents and the christenings of their children, when it appeared that he could remember the marriages much better than the christenings. " Now, sir," said the counsel, " tell me the reason why you can remember the marriages more distinctly ?" " Why," said the old man, drily, " because there is only a good Do at christenings ; but there is a FEE when a marriage takes place." The Court was convulsed with laughter, and the counsel feeling the force of the rub very wisely sat down. A SCHOOL ANECDOTE.— In a celebrated gram- mar- school in this country it was the' custom when any boy was convicted of a fault for the master to give the word " tollito" ( up with him), when a few of the stoutest boys seized the culprit, and hoisted him ou the back of the under usher, where he received his allowance on the bare breech. One day an overgrow n baby of a fellow, who had frequently undergone this ceremony, and who was again in the hands of the Fhilistiues, by a desperate effort escaped from their clutches, and sheered off home. His father, finding him averse from returning to school, and, perhaps, thinking that to give such a refractory youth — — " A ripht education The army's the only pood school in the nation"— purchased a pair of colours for him. As soon as he had joined the regiment, and got himself fitted out in military attire, he obtained leave to return home to take farewell of his friends, and to show off his " tine clothes." lu the first dawning of heroic ardour he sent a challenge to his quondam preceptor ; but, as Mr. Wigsby took no notice of his paper, he proceeded to the school to give hini such a chastisement as is meet for a soldier and a man of houour to inflict on a white- livered plebeian. On entering the school the master appeared not to recognize him; but on the officer's raising his horsewhip in rather a menacing manner, the old man thought proper to acknowledge that he remembered him. " O!" says he, " 1 now recol- lect who you are; you are the young man who lately was guilfy of so flagrant a breach of dis- cipline iu this school as forcibly to escape from due correction." " Tollito," vociferated the insulted pedagogue, with a voice like Stentor, and, in an instant, five or six sturdy boys seized the young ensign, " backed him," unbuttoned his " regi- mental small clothes," when old VYigsby cleared scores with him in grand style.— Letters by a Scotch Schoolmaster. F the HEIK- AT- LAW of THOMAS MORRIS, who about the Year 1767 resided at I. lansaintifraid, in the County of Montgomery, will apply at the Office of Messrs. URIFFITHKS CORRIR, in Oswestry, or to Messrs, ROSSBR aud SON, 6, Gray'? Inn Place," London, lie will hear of something to iiis Advantage.— Any Person who can give Informalioii respecting the said Thomas Morris and his Family, or • whether he died without Issue, is particularly re- quested to communicate the same as above. FOR COUGHS. PECTORAL ESSENCE OF COLTSFOOT. fg^ HE herb Coltsfoot, has long lieeu ( lis- M. liiiiriiished for its excellent properties in the cure of Coughs and other Pulmonary Complaints; aud this essence lias, in the course of a long; practice, been found llie most safe and effectual remedy for Coughs, and aljl Disorders of the Luuo; s. It genily opens the Breast,- and immediately tjives liberty of breathing, without anv danger of taking cold, and thus il affords great re- lief in Asthmatic Complaints. It allays Ihe tickling which provokes frequent cotlgliinir, . cleanses the small glands, relaxes the fibres, and thereby enlarges llie cavities of the vessels — Thus it w ill prevent Consump- tions, if taken before the Lungs are ulcerated. It softens husky and dry Coughs, and heals rawness and soreness of the Chest. This Pectoral FSsencc is prepared by JAMBS RYAN, Surgeon, in Bristol; and sold iu bottles at 3s. fid. each, by F. NBWBBKY SONS, 45, St. Paul's Church Yard ; and, by their appointment, in most Country Tow ns. DOCTOR SOLOMON'S CORDIAL BALM OF GILEAD. IT is unquestionable that Affections of the. Stomach aud Bowels comprise the greater Part of the painful Maladies of adull nail declining Life, and by Flatulent and Spasmodic Pains, Indigestion, Sick- ness, and irregular Appeli'te, lay the Inundation of Dropsy, Liver Disease, Consumption, and Habitual, Low ness of Spirits. From whatever Cause this Class of Complaints arises, it is best combated by an early Recourse to Dr. Solomon's Cordial Balm of Gilead, A Remedy of such approved Efficacy in Stomachic and Nervous Disorders, that the most obsiiuate Cases are continually yielding to its'Use. CAUTION.— As many Imitations of this excellent Remedy are on Sale, the Public will be sure to ask for il as ' DOCTOR SOLOMON'S,' snd look at the Slamjy affixed In each Bottle, which Inn " SAML. SOI. OMOX, LIVERPOOL," engraved upon it. None oilier is ge- nuine. Sold by Messrs. W. and J. EODOWF. S, Booksellers, Shrewsbury, and all Medicine Venders, in Bottles at lis. and 33s. each. Of whom may be had, Price 3s. Dr. SOLOMON'S GUIDF. TO HEALTH, which may be consulted with greBt Advantage by such as are affected with Loss of Appetite and Strength, Nervous and Spasmodic Com- plaints, the painful Consequences of Dissipation, undue Indulgence ol the Passions, & c. COLDS, COUGHS, ASTHMAS, & cv denouncing all who work for the accursed . 8. Certain " Catholic" labourers refuse to work for Mr. . Mr. , ou this, determines to have Protestant labourers, and the correspondent who writes on this matter, says, " 1 reasoned with him on this subject, and told him I thought it would be a very imprudent measure!" 9. T he state of public feeling at is very much inflamed. These then, positively, not oue document more, these nine trumpery documents are all, all that Mr. Peel alleges as bis motive for breaking in upon the act of settlement! for violating the constitution established in 1688. Some exaggerated reports of rabble meetings in Tipperary, the proceedings of Jack Lawless's wretched hordes, three burnings, six cases of arms ( i. e. pairs of pistols), two cattle stolen, a couple of bailiffs beaten, a row in a village, a Captain Rock notice, and all in . Ex- cept Lawless's progress, which was effectually checked by the small baud of Protestants gathered at Ballibay by Sam Gray, and put down, as Peel admits, totally by a single proclamation, and the mobs gathered at simultaneous meetings, things 1 which could be suppressed ill five hours— there is nothing here to disturb the quiet of any body above a police magistVate. When the state of Ireland required people to be shut up in their houses from sun- set to sun- rise, under pain of transportation— when, as in 1821, special commissions were sent to the south of Ireland, and martial law almost pro- claimed— when a servile war, as Mr. O'Conuell called it, raged ill the provinces— when every post loaded the table of the minister ( the table of Mr. Peel himself) with ten times the number of reports and dispatches of a nature fifty times more alarming — then Mr. Peel was staunch ; then he thundered, ore rotundo, about the Protestantism of the consti- tution, perfectly regardless of any insurrectiop which dared to show itself ill Ireland. Oh ! the device is paltry and pitiful! There has not been a year of bis twenty years' public life, in which he had not as much reason for sacrificing " the settle- ment at the revolution;" aud, . iu many years, more. It is paltry, therefore, to say that these trumpery documents swayed him— it is also FALSE. We convict him from his own mouth. He says that he trembled at the state of the country disclosed iu them; and in consequence of them, altered his opinion. Now the curliest of these documents is STOCKPORT WELLINGTON CI. UR.— The Man- chester Mercury of Tuesday contains the following announcement:—" It is stated to us, on authority which we are assured is unquestionable, that on Saturday last Mr. J. E. Turner, the Secretary of the Stockport Wellington Club, received a letter from Mr. Hulton, of Hulton, containing his resignation as a member of that association. Tlie avowed motive of this resignation, we are further told, is the present conduct of the Duke of Wellington, as head of the administration, in respect to the Catholic question. It is added, that the resignations of Sir Harry Main- waring and Mr. Trafford also were momentarily looked for."— Taking it for granted that the above statement is correct in all its parts, there can be no surprise at the steps taken, or about to be taken, by the respectable members whose names are introduced. The Stockport Club was instituted to do honour to the illustrious individual whose name it bears ; but when that nobleman lakes a course directly opposed to that which had procured for him the admiration and applause of his countrymen, nothing is more proper and reasonable than that his honours should wither, at least in the estimation of bis former friends. We do not tliiuk, however, that the disgusting tergi- versation of the Duke ought to lead to a dissolution of the association ; in its present, state of organization it is an efficient body, and as such, under the present peculiar and pressing circumstances of the country, its energies might be most advantageously directed. There are yet some remaining patriots, sound in political principles as our native oak, to w hom its cognomen might be transferred, without detracting from its high respectability. " A rose by any other name would smell as sweet."— Would it not be desir- able, at least, that a special general meeting of the Club should be instantly summoned, and the subject submitted to discussion ? Extract from the Duke of Wellington's speech on the 17th of May, 1819 : -" No doubt could be entertained, from their present feelings, that if Roman Catholics were admitted to the enjoyment of political power, their first exertion would be to restore their religiou to its origiual supremacy, and to recover their possessions and property, of which they had been stripped at the reformation." DEATH OF THE EARL OP BRIDGF. WATER.— Paris, February 14.— Francis Henry Egerton, Earl of Bridgewater, Peer of England, has just sunk under his long infirmities. He died yesterday at bis hotel, Rue St. Houore. His commentary on the " Hippo- lytus of Euripides," and on the little that was left us of " Sapplio;" his valuable Notes on the literature of the Eist; bis important works upon history, and on England's navigation— the chief title of glory to the family of Bridgewater, have acquired him a reputation throughout Europe. The good which he has constantly done during his life has probably- served as the foundation of the premature calculations which have been ventured upon in public respecting his will; now that it is known, it may be affirmed that, his fortune has been strangely exaggerated, and that the testimonies of affection which he has left have been likewise exaggerated in the same pro- portion. IMPORTANT TO BILL- STICKERS & PORTERS. — March of Refinement.— A few days since a respectable Auctioneer of Cheltenham, had oc- casion to send his porter to call on a gentleman at Evesham, and it being a frosty day, the said porter took a servant with him and his gun, but proving unsuccessful in his sport, he sent his man back to Cheltenham with the gun, and a coach passing at the time, he mounted it and proceeded to Evesham. Ou his arrival, he found the gentleman in question returning to his house with a gun and brace of fine pointers, and he opened his business in the following manner.—" Cold day, Sir,— have you had auy sport?" " Very little," replied the gentleman " Then we are both iu the same scrape," said the porter—" birds arc scarce— 1 have also been shooting all the morning, but having had bad luck, I sent my man back with the gun, and came on by the coach." " And, who the devil are you, then ?" exclaimed the gentleman. " Who, I, Sir? 1 ain only Joe Thornton, the auctioneer's porter and bill- sticker ; aud I have taken the liberty to call on you about some cata- logues and bills for my master," STRUCTURE OF THE SPONGE. If a common sponge be carefully examined in a microscope, it will appear to be furnished with galleries and compart- ments, which rival, in intricacy and number, those of the celebrated labyrinths of Crete ; the ramified entrances of a marine pavilion, gradually extending upwards, and sending forth branches in different directions, till tliey at length unite, and form a compound reticulation throughout the sponge. The extremities of the upper shoots are furnished with small openings at the ends of their fibres; and as we . trace these fibres downwards from the openings, a soft whitish substance may be discovered filling the internal hollow part of the ramifications throughout the whole sponge, which ramifications resemble catgut, are of an amber colour, and are undoubtedly the habitations of a particular kind of zoophytes; for, although we cannot distinguish either vesicles or cells, nor discover any other kind of organization than that of a variety of hollow tubes inflected and wrought together into a multitude of agreeable forms, some branching like corals, or expanding like a fungus, many rising like a column, others resembling a hollow inverted pyramid with irregular cavities, entrances, or apertures, yet, from many obvious resemblances to different other kinds of marine productions, as well as from the chemical analysis of sponges in general, we are amply justified ill referring them to the class of animal productions. A whimsical circumstance occurred in the Vice Chancellor's Court on Monday. Mr. Home and Air. Peuiberton had been arguing a legal point Mr. Sugilen concurred with the learned gentleman and said the law was quite clear. " Then, Mr Sugden, is with you, Mr. Home," said the Vice. Chancellor. Mr. Home said, that the argument of his learned friend was certainly, to his surprise, on his side, but that his learned friend happened to be on the other side.—( Great laughter.)— Mr Sugden, who, after consulting with his junior Mr Jacob, appeared not a little disconcerted, said that he found he had mistaken his side. What he had said, however, was said in all sincerity, and be never would, for any client, be lie who he might, come into court and argue against whathe thought to be a settled rule of law. UTLER'S PECTORAL ELIXfR. Experience during a Tery., lon£ period lias in- coutestibly proved the superior emeaey of this Medi- cine, in all eases of COLDS, COUGHS, and ASTHMATIC AFFECTIONS. By promoting; gentle expectoration, it very shortly reliefea the patient of a slight or recent Cold, and a few doses are generally sufficient to remove those which neglect has r'eudered more eonftrmed and obstinate, and which are accompanied vrith Cough, Spitting of Blood, aud other serious symptoms. Its peculiar balsamic powers tend to heal soreness, and allay the irritation of the lungs, in eases of Cough ; and in Asthmatic Affections it assists and gives freedom to the Breath. Sold in Bottles at ls. Hd. & 2s. by the principal Medicine Vendors iu the Kingdom. Of whom mav he had, BUTLEU's BALSAMIC LOZKNGES, used in recent COOGHS, MOARSBNBSS, & C. and for rendering the Voice . Clear and Flexible, and protecting ijs organs from the effects of exertion. In Boxes at is. l* d. and 9d. N. B. Ask for BUTLER'S PECTORAL ELIXIR. TO SPORTSMEN AND OTHERS. WAINIVIUGHT'S ST A F FOR DSI11 RE CORDIA L, And Royal English Medicine for Horses. At the recent adjourned Quarter Sessions for Buth, Edward Baker, Edward Luscombe, and Daniel Lake, three of the proprietors of the " Bristol Oil Gas Company," were indicted for a public nuisance. It was contended that in the neighbourhood of Colleg- e- street, Queen's- parade, & c. & c. over the whole of which the smoke and noxious effluvia, were diffused, the inhabitants were subjected to a long- train of inconveniences, such for instance as head- aches, nausea, & c. & c.; and that the refuse of the works, consisting- of a variety of oily substances, were thrown ou the ground in the vicinity of the premises, which, sinking into the earth, completely saturated it, and extended again into the wells and spring's, thus deteriorating the water. Witnesses were called to establish these facts j whilst for the defendants it was asserted, that the statements regarding the nuisance were greatly exaggerated, and that the refuse from the gas works did not subject the neighbourhood to greater inconvenieuce than what the inhabitants of large towns must prepare to submit to. Witnesses were called who resided near the gas works, and stated that they had not been annoyed by the smell, and two children with rosy- cheeks were produced, who had lived iu the neighbourhood, as a proof of its not being un- healthy. The jury found for the defendants. ROM the various acute diseases to which Horses are liable, and by which numbers are annually lost before assistance can be procured, it ijj particularly recommended to sportsmen, coach- proprietors, carriers, farmers, innkeepers, dealers in horses, & LC. always to keep by them a bottle or two of WAINWRIGHT'S STAFFORDSHIRE CORDIAL, which has' been given wiTh unprecedented success in the most dangerous stages of the sleeping or raging staggers, yripss, colds, coughs, fevers, and all disorders originating in cold, or from grazing in marshy wel meadows, or after severe exercise in racing, hunting, posting, running in coaches, drawing waggons, & c. and is universally acknowledged to be the greatest restorative to exhausted nature, and the mo » 4 valuable horse medicine ever known.— During the hunting season no sportsman ought to be unprovided with it, a single bottie'haviug saved the life of many a valuable hunter, after a severe day's chase. By Appointment of the Proprietor it is sold at the Original Warehouse, No. 10, Bow Church Yard, London ; by the Printers of this Paper; and by all the principal Country Booksellers and Medicine Venders, Price 2s. 6d. per Bottle. BANKRUPTS, FEB. 13.-. William Robert Turner, of Great Dover- road, Surrey, looking- glass manufacturer. Hugh Itow- laud, of- Chit worth*, Surrey, paper- manufacturer,, James Brock, of St. James's- street, silk- mercer. Valentine Blincow, of Hoh. born- bridge, grocer. Sarah Clarke and Isaac Clarke, of Fen- church- street, bricklayers. George Ilenvy White, ot Ipswich, linen- draper. John Thompson, of Fox. Ordinary- court, Nicho- 1 ax- lane, tailor. George Lodge, of Tower- street, wine and spirit- broker. Samuel Brig^ s, of Grantham, Lincolnshire, tailor. Samuel Braddock, ot- Leek, Staffordshire, innholder. Joseph Parsons, of Leamington Priors, Warwickshire, victual- ler. Roger Banks and Andrew Richardson, of Boston, Lincoln- shire, shipwrights. John Jerard, of Halesworth, Suffolk, chemist. William Powell, of Cheltenham, coach- builder. William Chapman and Thomas Fairclough, of Harrington and Liverpool, timber- merchants. Richard Stanfield and John Gleave Itigby, of Ashton nnder- Lyne, Lancashire, cotton- spinners Patrick Augustine Traynor, Salisbury- court., Fletjt- street, feather- merchant. Joseph Tongue, of Granpenhall, Cheshire, dealer. Thomas Edwards, of Liverpool, spirit- dealer. James Bennett and Robert Bennett, of. Cerne- Abbas, Dorsetshire, grocers. Thomas Hurst, of Louth, Lincolnshire, victualler. William George Mores, of Old Bond- street, auctioneer. Thomas Drew, of Exeter, linen- draper. Thomas Allen, of Mile End- road, tailor. BANKRUPTS, FBB. 17.— Henry William Parkes, of Commercial road, Pimlico, spirit- merchant.— Robert Stabler, of Leeds, chemist.— Thomas Boulton, of Painter's- court, Bury street, tailor. — John Appleton of Mansell- street, GoodmanVfields, wine. merchant.— Wiliiam Hall, of Ollerton, Nottinghamshire, grocer.— William Green, of Sheffield, Yorkshire, grocer.— John Greenwood, of Marsden, Lancashire, calico- manufac. tuter,— Dauiel Pawlett, of Nouingltaui, grocer. Scrofulous and Scorbutic Complaints. HULL, AucrsT26,1826. GBNTLEMEN, 1 R ESPECTABLE Innkeeper of this X. BL Place, who has been afflicted with a Scorbutic Complaint for about three Years ( which he thinks was brought on by keeping on his wet Stockings), after being under the Care of the most respectable Medical Men for some time, applied at the Shop of Messrs. M. TURNER and Co. , for a 4s. 6d. Bottle of Mr. LIGNUM'S ANTISCORBUTIC DROPS, aud after taking , hrre Bottles was perlVcjIv cured — Any Person wishing it maybe referred to the Gentleman himself for further Information, on Application to M. TURNER & CO. f> 3, Market Place, Half. To Messrs. John Lignum & Son, Surgeons, Manchester. These Drops are sold in moulded square Bottles at 2s. 9d. 4s. 6d. and lis. each, by John Lignum St Son, Surgeons, Sic.( 33, Bridge- street, Manehe& ter; W. J. Eddowes, Shiewsbury ; Smith, Ironhridge ; G. Gitton, Bridgnorth; Pennel, Kidderminster ; Coltman, Stour- bridge ; Hintou, Turner, Dudley ; Smart and Parke, Wolverhampton ; Valentine and Throsbv, Walsall* Butterworth, T. & VV. Wood, Hudson, Beilby and Knott, Birmingham; Merridew, Rollason, Coventry; Bangh, Ellesmere; Painter, Wrexham; Poole and Harding, Monk, Chester; Butterworth, Nantwich ; Reeves, M iddlewich; Lindop, Sandbach; Da vies, Northwich ; Bell, Altriucham ; Clave, W. & A. Gee, Stockport; Wright, Macclesfield; Lowe, Keek; Hor- de. ru, Cheadle ; and all respectable Medicine Venders " ti every Market Town. Of whom also mav be had, Mr. Lignum" 1* Improved VEGETABLE LOTION, for all Scorbutic Eruptions, price 2s. 9d. Duty included. Mr. Lignum's'SCURVY OINTMENT may now be had of the above Agents, price ls. 9d. each Pot, Duty included. SHREWSBURY: PRIN'TED AND PUBLISHED BY W ILLIAM EDDOWES AND JOHN EDDOWES, CORN- MARKET. To whom Advertisements or Articles of Intelli- gence are requested to be addressed. Advertise- nlents arc also received by Messrs. NEIVTOJV and Co. Warwick- Square, Newgate- Street; Mr, BARKER, NO. 33, Fleet- Street; and Mr. REY- JVE. Ll, Gazette Advertising Office, Chancery- Lane, London ; likewise by Messrs. J. K. JOHN- STOjr and Co. No. ], Lower Sackville- Street Dublin. This Paper is regularly filed as above; also at GARRAWAV'S, PEEL'S, and the CHAPTER Cof- fee Houses, London.
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