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The Salopian Journal

04/08/1830

Printer / Publisher: W. & J. Eddowes 
Volume Number:     Issue Number: 1905
No Pages: 4
 
 
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The Salopian Journal

Date of Article: 04/08/1830
Printer / Publisher: W. & J. Eddowes 
Address: Corn-Market, Shrewsbury
Volume Number:     Issue Number: 1905
No Pages: 4
Sourced from Dealer? No
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PI1WTIEP BY W » & J<, EDPOWES, Mnf COKNHMARIOETV ^ IMIEW^ MJLRY. This Paper is circulated in the most expeditions Manner through the adjoining Counties of ENGLAND and WALKS. Advertisements not exceeding Ten Lines, inserted at Six Shillinqs each. VOL. XXXVII.— N°- 1905.] WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1830. [ PRICE SEVENPENUK. Shropshire, V T. ROWLAND HUNT, ( to wit). J Esquire, Sheriff of the Comity of Salop, having received His Ma- jesty's Writ, tinder the Great Seal of Great . Britain, for the Election of two Knights to serve for this County in the Parliament to be. holden at the City of Westminster on the Fourteenth Day of September next, do, in Obedience to the said Writ and of tiie several Statutes in that Case made, hereby proclaim and give Public Notice, that at a Special County Court, which will be holden at the Shirehall, in the Town of Shrewsbury, in and for the said County, 011 FRIDAY, the Sixth Day of August next, at Ten o'Clock in the Forenoon, pursuant to the Statute in that Case made and provided, I shall proceed to such ELECTION; when and where all Persons interested there- in will be heard, and are to give Attendance accordingly. Dated this Tweutv- sixth Day of Julv, 1830. ROWLAND HUNT, Esquire, Sheriff. SHROPSHIRE. A MOST DESIRABLE TO BE SOLD BY AUCTION, BY CHURTON & SONS, At the Corbet Arms Inn, Market Drayton, in the County of Salop, on Wednesday, the 4th Day of August, 1830, ut Four o'Cloek in the Afternoon, in oue Lot, subject to Conditions then to be produced, unless disposed of in the mean Time, of which the earliest Notice will be given j AVery valuable and improvable FREE- HOLD PROPERTY, situate in the several Townships of LONGFORD and MORETON SEA, iu ihe County of Salop: consisting of a good FARM HOUSE and Outbuildings, and sundry small MESSU AGES, with various Pieces of rich Arable, Meadow, ond Pasture LAND, containing in the whole 196A. 2R. 19P. more or less, a good Part well adapted to the Turnip and Barley Culture, and presenting to the Capitalist an excellent Opportunity of secure Invest, inent. The Premises nre in the respective Holdings of Mr. John Cartwrigiit, John Harper, William Gosnel, Richard Howie, Will iam Ball, Susannah Dean, Tho- mas Simon, and the Overseers of Moreton Sea, or their Uilderfeiiants5 lie within one Mile of the Town of Market Drayton, an easy Distance from Lime and Coal, not more than a Mile and a Half from the Bir- mingham and Liverpool Canal, and the Estate con- tains many excellent Situations for building on. The Parochial Payments are remarkably easy, nnd there is a good Vein of Marl under Part of the Laud. The Property abounds with Game, adjoins the Stych Estate, and is near the Property of John Tay- leur, Esq. There is a Modus payable in Lien of Tithe Hav, and the Timber must be taken toby the Purchaser at the Sum stated in the Particular. An excellent Pew iu Front of the Gallery in More ton Sea Church, and several other Pews and Sittings in the same Church, are attached to these Premises. Mr. STEPHEN CARTWRIGIIT, of Longford, will, Application, shew the Estate. Maps, together with printed Particulars, will be left with Mr. WALTER MINOR, llopley, and Mr. NICKSON, Solicitor, Wem ; and printed Particulars may be had of JAMBS STANLEY, Esq. and Messrs. WARRKN, Soli- citors, Drayton, and FRANCIS ALLEN, Esq. Solicitor, Welsh Pool; at the Place of Sale ; the AUCTIONEERS, and White Lion Inn, Whitchurch ; the Roe Buck lnn# Newcastle- under- Lyme ; Swan Inn, Stafford ; llawk- stone Inn, Ilawkstone; Castle Inn, Teruhill ; Lion Inn, Shrewsbury ; and the Bull's Head lun, Welli ton ; nnd any further Information may be obtained on Application to the said Walter Minor; Mr. SAMUEL MINOR, Drayton; or at the Offices of Mr. Nickson Mr. Stanley, Messrs. Warren, or Mr. Allen. JlONTGOMEIl YSHlliE. TO BE SOLD " BY AUCTION, BY ROBERT OWEN, At the Koyal Oak Inn, in the Town of Welsh Pool, in the County of Montgomery, on Monday, the 16th Day of August, 1830, between the Hours of Three and Six in the Afternoon, subject to Conditions ; tMIE following FREEHOLD PRO- PERTY, and in the following or snr- h other Lot or Lots as shall he then declared by the Vendors : LOT I. A Messiinge or COTTAGE, with Part of a Garden thereto attached, and now marked out, situate n Pool aforesaid, and in the Occupation of William Griffiths or his Undertenants. LOT II. Another COTTAGE, with the Remainder f the Garden, n6 marked out, adjoining Lot 1, and in the Occupation of the said William Griffiths or his nder tenants These Lots adjoin the Turnpike Road leading from Pool to Shrewsbury, are well situated for the Purposes of building, and from their Con- tiguity to the Montgomeryshire Canal tnay be rendered useful for Commercial Purposes. LOT III. A DWELLING HOUSE and Part of a Garden, situate in HIGH STREET, in Pool aforesaid, in he Occupation of John Corbett. LOT IV. Another HOUSE and Part of a Garden, djoining Lot 3, in the Occupation of Sarah Oliver. LOT V. Another HOUSE and Part of a Garden, ad- oiniug Lot 4, in the Occupation of Edward Owen. LOT VI. A OOAL- HOITSE and Part of a Garden, adjoining Lot 5, a* marked out, in the Occupation of Thomas Farmer and Edward Owen. LOT VII. Another HOUSE or Cottage, behind Lot 3. with the Garden adjoining, and in the Occupation of Margaret Davies. LOT VIII. All that Piece or Parcel of LAND or Garden Ground, as marked out, situate behind Lots 3 and 4, in the Occupations of the said John Corbett and Sarah Oliver. LOT IX. Another Piece of LAND, adjoining the last- mentioned Lot, and in the occupations of the said Sarah Oliver and Edward Owen. All these Lots, from three to nine inclusive, have a good Frontage, and are well suited for building upon. LOTX. A PEW in the Organ Gallery of Welsh Pool Church ; and Three Seats or Sitting Places in the Seat or Pew ( No. 14) in the Middle Aisle of the said Church. LOT XI. All those Two Messuages or DWELLING HOUSES, with the BLACKSMITH'S SHOP, Garden, d Appurtenances thereto belonging, situate in tbe Village of CASTLE CAEREINION, in the said County, and in the several Occupations of I'homas Davies and John Newell. LOT XII. A Piece or Parcel of LAND or Building Ground, as marked out, near the said Village of Castle Caereinion, and adjoining the Turnpike Road leadin from thenCe to Berriew. LOT XIII. Another Pieceof BUILDING GROUND, near the said Village, and adjoining the Turnpike Road leading from thence to Coed- Cwm. For further Particulars apply to Mr. FIELD EVANS, of the Henfnes, near Pool ; or at the Office of Messrs. GRIFFITHES & EYTON, in Pool aforesaid. GREEK DELECTUS. THIS DAY IS PUBLISHED, A New Edition, augmented and improved, 12mo. 3s. 6d. bound, GRiECjESENTENTJ ® ; a Delectu of Maxims, Sentiments and Precepts, selected from the Greek Profane Writers, aud the New Testa ment. To which are added the Criisa Epe of Py. thagro8, and Bion's Epitaph on Adonis. With short Notes, a Vocabulary, and other helps, calculated to facilitate the early study of Greek. London: printed for Rivingtons; Longman and Co.; Baldwin aud Co.; J. Richardson; Hamilton find Co.; Whittaker aud Co.; and Simpkin and Co TURNPIKE TOLLS. Popular School Books• THIS DAY IS PUBLISHED, In a clear bold type on fine paper, and handsomely printed, a New Edition, 12ino. price 4s. 6d. bound in green, nnd lettered, NIJY'S GENERAL SCHOOL. J QUESTION BOOK, in which each question, in a regular series, is followed by its appropriate answer, not only in Ancient and Modern History, in which the is arranged in chronological order, but also in TO BE SOLD RY PRIVATE CONTRACT DORR1NGTON GROVE, adjoining llie Ludlow Road, fi Miles from Shrewsbury, wilb an excellent House & Building's in good Repair, and 90 Acres of LAND, greatest Part of the best Quality, all in a Ring- Fence, except 4 Acres; the Hereford and Chester Mails run hy daily ; a good Neighbourhood; and Poor's Rate low. Good Judges nre confident there is Plenly of Coal lhat may be raised. A regular Stream of Water runs through tbe Estate, where a Wheel l( i Feel high may he erected for the Purpose of working the Coat, or a Corn Mill, or any olher Works that may be thought Proper, Apply to JOHN LANGFOBI), Pool Quay. About. 30 Tons of Old HAY, good Quality, and well harvested, lo go ofl" the Premises. NEW EPITI0M8 OE STANDARD SCI TRINTED FOR Longman, Rees, Ormc, Brown, Green. DR. BUTLER'S GEOGRAPHY & ATLASES. THIS DAY IS PUBLISHED, Ninth Edition, I Vol.' Octavo, 9s. Boards, ASKETCH of MODERN and ANCIENT GEOGRAPHY, for Ihe Use of Schools. By SAMUEL BUTLER, D. D. F. R. S. & e. Archdeacon of Derby, & c. In the present Edition Ihe Author has made some very important additions, chiefly iu the modern part of it. By the same Author, ATLAS of MODERN GEOGRAPHY, consisting of 22 coloured Maps, corrected to 1S' 29. 12s. half- bound. ATLAS of ANCIENT GEOGRAPHY, consisting of 21 coloured Maps, wilb a complete ACCENTUATE]! Index. 12s. GENERAL ATLAS of ANCIENT and MODERN GEOGRAPHY. 43 coloured Maps, and two Indexes. £ 1 4s. half- hniind. The Indexes contain the Latitude hud Lon^, hide of all the Places ; and in that of the Ancient Atlas, the quantities are marked. OUTLINE GEOGRAPHICAL COPY- BOOKS, in 4lo.; intended as practical Exercises on Dr. Boiler's Atlases 4s. each, sewed, or7s. 0d. togelb OUTLINE MAPS of ANCIENT GEOGRAPHY, selected hy Dr. Buller from D'Anville's Ancient Alius. Folio. IDs. 6d. MONTGOMEllYSHI UK AND MERIONETHSHIRE, FREEHOLD ESTATES, TO BE SOLD, AS UNDER. ® o lie £ olH i) i> Sluctton, BY MR. JOEL MORGAN, k T the Eagles Inn, in the Town of Machynlleth, in the County of Montgomery, on » Friday, the Twentieth Day of August, 1830, between the Hours of Five and Seven in ihe Afternoon ( unless previously Disposed of by Private Contract of which due Notice will he given), subject to such Conditions as shall be then and ihere produced, in the following or such other Lots as shall be agreed on at tbe 1' t me ul Sale : IN THE PARISH OF DAROWEN. TENEMENTS. TENANTS. ACREAGE, ( more or less.) Harry Parry David Evans Itiehard Tybbot | William Roberts - William Evntis 1. Felin Newydd. Bryttllwyn Cegyr 2. Naat y- Gassrg Rhosiiia 3. Rbosowir issa Ilhosowir ilefta Bw Ichglynmynydd 4. Bryneini .'...". > • „ , lleudir ;'.........'..'.'". 5 Peler H" Slies- IN THE PARISH OF CEMMES. 5. Gwern- y. bwlcb Thomas Jerviee * fi. Glyntwyuiyn Rowland Robert 7. Brynmoel Dllvill i{ 0|) erU 8. Ceulwyn H) iirv Jones, Widow Cattalhatarn James Jervice I. lyaslwen | a„ e Griffiths, Widow Gwallie. Rowland Jones MERIONETHSHIRE. TO BE SOLD BY PRIVATE CONTRACT. A. 04 p. : it » will be unexpired on 37 0 37 whole NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the TOLLS arising at ihe Toll Gales upon the Turnpik « Road leading from Shrewsbury, through Ell'esinere, in the County of Salop, lo Wrexhnm, i Ihe County of Denbigh, called or known hy Ihe Names of Overton and Haunter Gales, wilh the Cock Bank Gate, and the Muslev, Maesgwajlod, and Red Hall Bars, mid Wynnsiay Gale, will be LET by AUCTION, to ihe best Bidder, al tbe Bowling Green, in Overton, on Thursday, the 5ih Day of August next, ut Eleven o'Clock in lite Forenoon; and thai the Tolls arising nt Ihe Sloekett Gate upon the same Turnpike Road, will be LET by AUCTION, lo the besl Bidder, nl the Briilgewaler Arms, in Ellesmere, on Saturday, ihe 2l « t Day of August next, at Eleven o'Clock in the Forenoon, in tlje Manner directed by the Act passed in the Third Year of Ihe Reign of His Majesty King George the Fourth," For regulating Turnpike Roads," which Tolls produced the last Year the undermen- tioned Snius, above ihe Expenses of collecting the same, aud will be put up nt those Sums respectively : I., s. D. Overton and llanmer Gates, with Cock Bank Gale, and Ihe Muslcy, Maesgwav- lod, and Red Hall Bars !.. C50 0 0 Wyniislav Gate 134 0 0 Slockelt Gate 221 0 0 Whoever happens to be Ihe best Bidder, must al the same Time pay one Month in advance ( if required) of Ihe Rent nt which such Tolls may he let, nail give Security wilb sufiicielit Sureties to the Satisfaction of ihe Truslees of Ihe laid Turnpike Road, for Payment of Ihe Reut agreed for at such Times as Ihey shall appoint. R. MORRALL, Clerk to the Trustees. Et. i. rsMsiiE, 30- rii JUNE, 1830. Biography, Geography, Astronomy, Heathen Mytho- logy, Classical Phraseology, and agreal and interesting variety of miscellaneous subjects ; Ihe whole Lending lo enlarge the boundaries ot Juvenile Knowledge, by iucreasiag its stores ; and thus, by blending such a course of general information with sound classical or liberal lenrning, to raise a better superstructure of School Education. By JOSEPH GUY, Formerly of the Royal Military College. *#* To supply youth with a compendium of General History has been Ihe first object of this Manual ; as such it exhibits not a confused and unprofitable assem- blage of ill arranged questions, but a well digested abstract of both Ancient and Modern History anil Biography from the Creation to Ihe present lime, in a regular series, wilh Ihe dates affixed, embracing Ihe most promineol features of TKN ANCIENT & EIGHTEEN MODERN KINGDOMS AND STATES, with the principal revoliilions of the most illustrious nations; and perhaps such it body of historical mailer has seldom been com- pressed in so moderate a volume. THE MISCEI I. ANR- ous portion includes ihe 11 it man Struct ore ex plained— The Mental Powers — Prirdlietions for Food — Wines, Spirits, & « .— Gums, Spices, Sic.— Mineralogy, Earths, Gems — Woods, Vegetables— Titles anil Distinctions— Great Offices, Government, La w, ^ e. — Tillies — Corpor- ations— Trade and Commerce— Poetical and Literary Terms— Tbe Di lie rem Denominations of Christians, & c " By the same. GUY's SCHOOL GEOGRAPHY. Eleventh Edi. Iinn, with seven Maps. Price 3s. bound.— A Key to Ditto, Is. fid. GUY's ELEMENTS of ASTRONOMY. Third Edition, with 18 line Copper Plates, price 5s. bound. GUY's POCKET CYCLOPAEDIA. The Ninth Edition, enlarged and extensively improved, with the addition of numerous appropriate Cuts, in a handsome thick volume, 12mo. price 10s. fid. canvas hoards. GUY's CHART of GENERAL HISTORY, on large sheet, coloured. Fifth Edition, price 7s.; on rollers, 10s. fill. GUY's SCHOOL CYPHERING BOOK, on fine post writing paper, and new script types. 4to. Fifth Edition, price 3s. fid. half- hound.— Key to Ditto, fid. GUY's TUTOR'S ASSISTANT; or Complete SCHOLAR'S ARITHMETIC. Fifth Edition, price only 2s. bound. A KEY to llie Arithmetic, with Solutions of tbe Questions given at length, with numerous Examining Questions added. Price 4s. fid. bound in blue and let- " GUY's NEW RRITISII PRIMER. New Edition, in a neat half binding, price only fid. GUY's BRITISH SPELLING BOOK The 31st Edition, wilh line Frontispiece, and numerous Cuts. Price Is. fid. bound. GUY's NEW RRITISII EXPOSITOR; containing an Alphabetical Collection of the must useful, usual, and proper words in the English Language; the whole divided, and properly accented, nnd the meaning given according In the purest definitions. A new Edition, price Is. fid. bound. GUY's NEW BRITISH READER, with 17 Wood Cuts. Sixth Edition, price 3s. Gil. hound. NEWPORT AND TERN HILL uwHiPimiE umiL& o NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the TOLLS arising at Ihe several Toll Gates upon Ibe Newport Division of the Turnpike Road leading from Whitchurch ( through Tern Bill) lo New- port, in the County of Salop, will be LET BY AUCTION to tbe best Bidder, at the House of Mr. WILLIAM I. IDDLR, called the Union Hotel, in Newport aforesaid, on Monday, the 16th Day of August next, between tbe Hours of Eleven iu ihe Forenoon and One in Ihe Afternoon, il) Ihe Manner directed by the General Turnpike Acts; which Tolls produced the last Year Ihe Sum of £ 585 above the Expenses of collecting them, and will he put up at liiat Sum. Whoever happens lo be Ihe highest Bidder miistul Ihe snme Tune pay one Mouth in advance ( if required) of Ihe Reut at which such Tells may be Let, and give Security, with sufficient Sureties lo the Satisfaction of Ihe Trustees of Ihe said Turnpike Road, for Payment of the Remainder at such Times and in such Manner as they shall direct. R. FISHER, Clerk lo the Trustees. NKWPORT, 12th July, 1830. Esteemed Works, hy Jos. Guy, Jun. Member of the University of Oxford. ENGLISH SCHOOL GRAMMAR ; in which prac- tical Illustration is, in every step, blended wilh Theory, by Rules, Examples, and Exercises. The 7th Edition, demv l8mo. Is. fill, bound iu red. EXERCISES iu ENGLISH SYNTAX; intended to succeed those usually found in English Grammars, and furnish the Senior Scholars in Ladies' and Gentle, mens' Schools wilh additional Rules and Examples, to complete llieir Knowledge of Syntax, la 18mo. Is. fid. bound in green. NF. W EXERCISES in ORTHOGRAPHY. Fifth Edition, with an Expositor, correcting the Orthography in the work. 18inn. price Is. hound. A KEY to GUY's ENGLISH SCHOOL GRAM. MAR and NF. W EXERCISES in ORTHOGRAPHY. In one volume, price 3s. bound and lettered. NEW LATIN PRIMER; or a Companion In Latin Grammars. In 3 Purls. 18inn. Price 2s. bound. NEW ARITHMETICAL PLAN; or on Improved Method of Teaching Ihe Four First Rules of Arith- metic, Simple nnd Compound. Price Is. sewed. A KEY. Price Is. OUTLINES lo WALKER'S THEMES & ESSAYS. Price Is. SCHOOL EPITOMEof BRITISH GEOGRAPHY. Price Is. London : printed for Baldwin and Cradock. NEIV SCHOOL BOOKS, GREEK AND LATIN. A PRAXIS on the LATIN PREPOSITIONS; be ing an Attempt lo illustrate their Origin, Signification and Government. By SAMUEL BUTLER, D. I). F. R. S. and Henri Muster of Shrewsbury School. 3d Edition, in 8VH fis. fid. DELECTUS SENTENTIARUM GRtSC. AUUM ad USUM TIRONUM ACCOM MOD A'l US ; com Nolulis et Lexieo; on the Plan of Dr. Valpy's Latin Delectus. 8th Edition, 4s. hound. GREEK EXERCISES, in Syntax, Ellipses, Dia- lects, Prosody, anil Metaphrases, adapted lo lb Grammars of F. loo, Wetienhall, Moore, Bell, nnd Holmes. To which is prefixed a concise but compre. hensive Syntax. By Ihe Rev. W. NEII. SON, D. D. M. R. I. A. 8vo. 5s. in litis, and wilh a Key, 8s. ; orthe Kev separate, 3s. hoards LATIN PROSODY' MADE EASY. Tbe 3d edi- tion enlarged. By JOHN CAREY, I. L. D. ) u I2mo. 7s. hoards. SELECT LATIN PHRASES, Inken from the hest Authors. By NATHANIEL HOWARD. In 12mo. Is, fid. bound. By the same Author, A SERIES of LATIN EXERCISES, adapted to the Rules of Syntax, particularly in the Eton Gram- mar. 3s. fid. A KEY toiho SAME. In 12mo 2s. tid. bound. INTRODUCTORY LATIN EXERCISES lo those of Clarke, Ellis, and Turner. New Edit. 18tno. 2s. fid. bound. A VOCABULARY, ENGLISH and GREEK, ar- ranged systematically, to advance the Learner in Scientific as well as Verbal Knowledge. New Edit. 18nio. 3s fid. INTRODUCTORY GREEK EXERCISES lo those of Neilson. Dunbar, and oilier*. 2d Edit, ill 12ino. 5s. fid. hound. The LONDON VOCABULARY, Latin and Eng- lish, Is. fid. TERM1NATIONES et EXF. M PL A DECL1NA- TIONUM ei CON JUG ATI ON UM ITEMQUE PRO PltlA CUA! M A It I BUS, QIIjE GENUS, et AS IN PRAJSENTI, Englished and explained, for Ihe Use of Young Grammarians. By CHARLES HOOLE, M. A. Revised throughout, wilb very considerable improvements, by Tnos. SANOON, Second Master of the Grammar School ut Lincoln. In 18mo. Is. fid. bound. EXERCISES to the ACCIDENCE nud GRAM- MAR; or an Exemplification of tbe several Mood aud Tenses, and of the principal Rules of Construc- tion. By VV. TURNER, M. A. late Master of the Free School at Colchester. New Edit. 3s. bound, A NEW SCHOOL DICTIONARY, kc. THE NEW PANTHEON ; oran Introduction tothe Mythology of the Ancients, in Question and Answer. Compiled for llie Use of Young Persons. By W. JILLARD HORT. New Edition, with Plates, 5s. Od. bound and lettered. AN ENGLISH SCHOOL DICTIONARY OF SELECT WORDS, with their Meanings affixed, in tended to be committed lo Memory, as well as for reference in Reading aud Writing. By VV. J. HORT. In 18mo. price 2s. fid half bound. An INTRODUCTION lo ihe STUDY of CHRONO- LOGY & ANCIENT HISTORY. By W. J. HORT. I81110. 2d Edition, 4s. bound. An INTRODUCTION to MODERN HISTORY, from the Birth of Christ to ihe present time, in con- tinuation of an Introduction lo Chronology & Ancient History. By W. J. HORT. In 2 vols. ISiuo. 10s. fid. bound. CONVERSATIONS 011 MYTHOLOGY. 12mo. 5 « . boards. A SHORT ENGLISH SPELLING BOOK ; for ihe Use of Children io general. By W. BEA RCROFT, late Master of the Academy, Kirby Mom- side. Price Is. bound. PRACTICAL ORTHOGRAPHY; or the Art of teaching Spelling bv Writing; conlaiuing an Im- proved Method of Dictating. By W. BEAItCROFT. 2d Edition, I2mo. 3s. Od. in red. The POETICAL MONITOR ; consisting of Pieces, select nnd original, for the 1 iiiprovemeut of the young; intended lo succeed Dr. Wans' Divine aud Moral Songs. 10th Edition, 3s. hound. A SEQUEL lo ihe SAME; consisting of Pieces select and original, adapted lo Improve the Minds and Manners of Young Persons. 3d Edition, 3s. Od. bd. ARCHBISHOP SECKER'S LECTURES on the CATECHISM, arranged ill Questions and Answers, f ir the Use of Schools and Families. In 12uio, 4s. fid. bound. IN THE PARISH OF TOWYN. LOTS. TENEMENTS. TENANTS 1. Tynllwyn- heo Hugh Owen ! This Lot IS subject lo a Lease for the Term of 21 Years, of which 10 Year Ihe 25th Day of March, 1831, hi llie Annual reserved" Rent of £ 57. lOs. Od. 2. Yscnhorwen Humphrey Evan The whole Property is well worth ihe Attention of Gentlemen and of Capitalists who niav be desirous of eligible Investments. The Woodlands in Montgomeryshire are extensive, and ihe Growth of Oak most luxuriant. The Merionethshire Property is within 1 Miles ofTowyn nnd 6 Miles of tbe Port of Aberdovey, and is near the I itrupike Road leading through the former to the latter Place, where Lime may be bad on the most moderate 1 erins. I he Sheepwnlks and Rights of Common not included in Ibe above Acreage are extensive and convenient. I lie respective Tenants w ill shew the Farms ; aud for further Particulars apply ( if by Letter, Post- paid) to Mr. HRNVARU OWKN, Solicitor, Dolgelley; or lo Messrs LOWNDES and GATTV, Solicitors, I, Red Lion Squ ire, Loudon. THIS DAY IS PUBLISHED, In 121110. a New Edition, revised, to which is added a Chapter on Ihe Modern History of Greece, price 3s. fid. hound, rpHE HISTORY of GREECE. By FL. OLIVER GOLDSMITH. Abridged for Ihe Use of Schools. Loudon: Printed for Rivingtons; Messrs. Long- man mid Co. ; J. Nilnn ; Messrs. Baldwin and Co.; T. Cadell ; J. Richardson; J. M. Richardson; J. Booker ; E Williams; llarvev and Co ; Hamilton and Co. ; Whitlaker and Co.; W. Joy ; Simpkin and Co.; G. Wilson; F.. Hodgson ; Pooie und Co.; aud lloulstou and Son. Also, The ABRIDGEMENT of GOLDSMITH'S HISTORY of ENGLAND. New Edition, with full length Portrait of George IV. 12oio. 3s. ( id. And The ABRIDGEMENT of GOLDSMITH'S I11S- TOItV of ROME. l2nio. 3s. Od. THIS DAY IS PUBLISHED, In One large Vol nine 12mo. Price 10s. fid. in Boards, rpHE CHRISTIAN EXPOSITOR, or fi. a Practical Guide to the Reading of the New Testament; intended for the Use of General Readers. By the Rev. GEORGE HOLDEN, M. A. u Though many Expositions of Ihe Bible of great and deserved Celebrity exist in our Language, Commentary sufficiently short to be read by those who have not Leisure to consult learned Works, yet snffici ently comprehensive to serve as a Guide to the Study of the Sacred Scriptures, appears to be still wanting* To supply this Deficiency is the Design of the present Work, in which it has been the Aim and Study of th Author to embrace, in a condensed Form, such Inform- ation as " ill enable the General Reader to ascertain the real Meaning of the Inspired Writers. 1'— Preface. Printed for C. J. G. & F. Rivington, St. Paul's Church- yard, and Waterloo. Place, Pall- Mali. MONTGOM EUVS I]! RE. DESIRABLE freehold property* A COOKE'S NORTH & SOUTH WALES. THIS DAY IS PUBLISHED, Illustrated wilh Plaies and Coloured Maps, Price 2s. fid. each sewed, or 5s. Cd. bound together, of COOKE'S TRAVELLER'S GUIDE through NORTH and SOUTH WALES, forming Part of llie TOPOGRAPHICAL LIBRARY of GREAT BRN TAIN ; or British Traveller's Packet County Directory : being an accurate and comprehensive Topographical and Statistical Description of all Ihe Counties in England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland. Each County sold separately al Ihe Price affixed: — Bedfordshire Berkshire Buckinghamshire... Cambridgeshire.... Cheshire. Cornwall Cumberland & the Lakes Derbyshire Devonshire.. Dorsetshire Durham Essex Gloucestershire..... Hampshire Herefordshire Hertfordshire Huntingdonshire & Rutlandshire Kent ( 2 parts) Lancashire ( ditto).. Leicestershire Lincolnshire s. n. 2 0 s. D. Middlesex ( o parts) 4 0 London ( sepmaleiy) 4 0 Monmouthshire... j. 2 0 Norfolk... 2 0 Northamptonshire'.". 2 0 North Wales 2 0 Northumberland.... 2 0 Nottinghamshire... 2 0 Oxfordshire 2 0 Shropshire 2 0 Somersetshire 2 fi South Wales 2 0 Scotland, 3 vols.... 12 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 4 0 2 ( I NORTH WALES. DENBIGHSHIRE & MERIONETHSHIRE. Cubehs, with Sarsaparil/ a, most safe, certain, and speedy a Remedy ever discovered for tbe Cure of Gonor- rhoea, tileels. Strictures, Seminal Weakness, Whites, Pains of Ihe Loins, Kidneys, Gravel, Irritation of the Bladder, aud other Disorders of the Urinary Passages, frequently performing a perfect Cure iu the sliort Space of three or four Days. The Cubebs are com- bined with the Essential Salt nf Sarsaparilla, and other choice Alteratives, which render it invalua- ble forllie Removal of Cutaneous Eruptions, Pains of Ihe Banes, and all those Disorders for which Ihe Decoction of Sarsaparilla has been so much recom- mended. luCasesof Debility it has been taken with the most decided Benefit.— Prepared only by J. W. STIRLING, Chemist, 86, High. street, Whiiechnpel, from whom it can fie sent lo any Part of the World ( upon enclosing ihe Amount), in Buttles, nt 4s. fid. Ills, and 20s.— Caution. As there is a spurious imita- tion, be sure " J. W. Stirling" is written on ihe Stamp. Wholesale Agents, Barclay and Sons, Fleet Market; nod can be had of all the principal Mediciu Venders in ihe Kingdom, Siaftordshir Suffolk • Surrey Sussex Warwickshire 2 0 Westmoreland 4 0 Wiltshire 4 II Worcestershire 2 0 Yorkshire ( 2 parts) 2 0 Isles of Wight, & c. To each County are prefixed a List of Ibe Markets and Fairs: nil Index, shewing I lie Distance of every Town from London, and of Towns from each other": also a copious TRAVELLING GUIDE, describing all the Roads, Ions, Distances of Stages, Noblemen's anil Gentlemen's Seats, & c. forming a complete COUNTY TIN ERA R Y . Each County is divided into Easy Journeys; by which Means Persons, eillier Riding or on Foot, have Ihe Opportunity of viewing many Beauties which might not otherwise be noticed. The whole is illus- trated willi a complete Series of Coloured Maps, and embellished with upwards of 400 Picturesque Views. The Division of the TOPOCRAPHICAL LIBRARY into separate Counties nlfords great Accommodation to Persons milking a Tour, eilher for Pleasure or Busi- ness, by their being enabled to select such Counties us Ihey wish lo pass through without purchasing the whole Work; thus the Western Circuit of England comprehends CORNWALL, DEVON, DORSET, SOMER- WILTS, and HANTS, and forms Four interesting Volumes. The other Five Circuits of llie Judges may be Selected and bound up iu the like Manner, at the Option of the Purchasers. London : Printed for Sherwood, Gilbert, nnd Piper, Paternoster Row. BY THE KING'S PATENT. , DR. SIBI. Y's RE- ANIMATING SO- LAR TINCTURE is unive rsally allowed fo be the most pleasant, safe, and efficacious Remedy ever offered lo Ihe Public, lis warm anil renovating Quali- ties render il Ihe hest Medicine for Debility, Con sumptions. Nervous and Rheumatic Coniplninls, Spasms, Indigestion, Lowness of Spirits, ond all those distressing Affections which harass ihe Weak, Seden- tary, and Delicate. It requires no Argnmeut to con- vince more than a Trial, after which those who value Henllli will never choose to be without it. Prepared and sold by Mr. J. R. SaH'ell, No. 35, Gloucester- street, Queen's. square, Blooinsbnry, in Bollles nt fis. 7s. Od. and lis. each, nnd iu Family Bottles ( bv which there is a Saving of 7s.) at 22s. each. Also, Dr. Siblv's LUNAR TINCTURE, for Complaints incident to the Female Sex, in Bottles at 4s. Oil. and 10s. Od. each. Observe— none can he genuine unless signed by ( lie Proprietor, J. It. Saffell, in his own Hand- writing, on Ihe Wrapper of each Bottle. Sole Wholesale Agents, Messrs. Barclay and Sous, 95, Fleet. market, London; and sold Retail by all Medicine Venders throughout the Kingdom, walUZlJjZI& JiW TO BE SOLD, ( Under an Order of the High Court of Chancery, J BY MR. THOS. OVERTON, OF RUTHIN* THE PERSON APPOINTED BY THE MASTER, VERY EXTENSIVE FREEHOLD ESTATES, situate in ihe several Parishes of Yspytty, Cerrig- y- Druidion, Llanfihangel, Bettws, Llangvvm, Llanfawr, and Llanye. il, in the Counties of Denbigh and Merioneth, being Part of the Property late of ROBERT WATKIN WYNNE, of Plasnewydd, in the County of Denbigh, Esq. deceased, at the House of Mr. Weaver, the King's Arms Inn, Cernioge Mawr, on Monday, the 16th of August, 1830, and two follow- ing Days, at Three p'Clock in the Afternoon each Day. The Estates consist of several valuable Farms, with the Sheep Walks and other Rights on the adjoining Mountains thereto belonging, containing upwards of 4,300 Acres ( exclusive of the Sheep Walks), w ith most extensive Grousing Hills, abounding with Game, through which run several valuable Rivers and Streams of Water, well supplied with capital Trout and other Fish, thereby affording the Angler much excellent Amusement, the Agriculturist great Powers of Irriga- tion, and the Manufacturer an abundant Supply of Water for working Mills, & c. The great Road from London to Holyhead passes through great Part of the Estates, which renders ihe utmost Facility and Convenience for the Conveyance of Lime aud Coajjo all Parts thereof. The whole is capable of much Improvement by planting, draining., and irrigating; and a considerable Portion of the Uplands now lying- in a State of Nature, might, with skilful and proper Management, be brought to such a Degree of Culti- vation as would amply remunerate the Purchasers The respective Tenants will shew tbe Premises; and Primed Particulars may, one Month prior to tl Sale, be had at the Office of Sir GIFFIN WILSON, the Master, in Southampton Buildings, Chancery Lane, London; of Mr. COLE., Solicitor, 15, Furnivai's Inn, London ; of Mr. BUTLER, Solicitor, Temple Cham- bers, Fleet Street, London ; of Mr. FROWD, Solicitor, 33, Essex Street, Strand, London; of Messrs. RICH- ARDS, CLARKE, and NARES, Solicitors, Chapel Street, Bedford Row, London ; of Mr. YATMAN, Solicitor, 77, Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury, L « ndon; of Messrs. OLDFIRLD, Solicitors, Farm, near Abergele; of Messrs Oi. DFLF. LD, Solicitors, Holywell ; of Mr. HUGH ROBERTS, Solicitor, Mold ; of Mr. JONES HUGHES, of Pias Oun, near Mold, Surveyor; of Mr, ROBERT ROBBRTS, of Bottiger, near Corwen, Sur. veyor ; also at the White Lion, Cerrig- y- Drnidion the Hand, at Bettws; the King's Arms Inn, Cernioge Mawr; Ihe White Lion lun, at Bala; and at ihe principal Inns at Capel Cerrig-, Llanrwst, Conway Bangor, Beaumaris, Holyhead, Carnarvon, Dolgelly Welsh Pool, Oswestry, Shrewsbury, Wrexham, Ches ter, Manchester, Liverpool, Holywell, Mold, Sain Asaph, Abergele, Denbigh, Ruthin, Llangollen and Corwen; and of Mr. THOMAS OVERTON, Ruthin Further Particulars may be had of Mr. WILLIAM LLOYD, of Mend re, near Cerrig- y- Druidion ; and of Mr. JONES HUGHES, of Plas Oun; and also of Mr. ROBERT ROBERTS, of Bottiger. TO BE SOLD BY AUCTION, BY ROWEN: & PEATK, At the Wyiinstny Arms Inn, in Oswestry, in the County of Salop, ou Wednesday, the - till Day of August, 1830, III Three o'Clock in the Afternoon precisely, subject lo Conditions lo lie then pro. duced, mid iu Hie following, or such other Lois an Shall he then agreed upon : LOT I. MOST desirable ESTATE, called PLAS- GWYNN. consififMjg of a newly- erected and substantially brick- built Duelling House and Outbuildings, together with sundry Pieces or Parcels of excellent Arable, Meadow, pasture, and Wood Lauds, containing together by Admeasurement 204A. lit. 1' 2P. be the smiic more or less, in a complete Ring Fence, well shaded and watered, situate iu tbff Parish of LlansaintttVaid; iu the Countv of Mont- gomery, and now in the Possession of Mr. John Lewis, the- 1 Proprietor. The House, which is newly. erected, consists of an Entrance, 2 Parlours, Kitchen, Dairy, Milk- house, and all other necessary Office's on the Ground Floor, with excellent Cellars under- neath, 8 good Lodging Rooms, with Servants' Rooms in the Attics; to which are added an excellent Kitchen Garden, with a South Waff upwards of 80 Yards lon< r and 12 Fret high, laid in with some of the choicest Apricot, Peach, Nectarine, Vine, Fig, and other Fruit Trees, all in full Bearing, and a verv large Orchard well planted with all Kinds of Fruit Trees, in ; i luxuriant State. The Outbuildings ( which are also newly erected) consist of Threshing Floor, with two largo Bays, Cow. ties for 30 Catsle, 12 Feeding Staffs, with Straw Bins and other necessary Offices, covered over with commodious Hav nnd Straw Lofts. A Stable for 10 Waggon Horses, Hack Stables, Cart House, Granaries, Pijrgeries, and all other attached and detached. Offices adapted for all Ag'icnltnral Purposes; the whole forming a most complete Farm Yard, the Proprietor not having spared Expense in rendering it'so. This most desirable Property adjoins ihe New Road leading from Llansaintffraid to Pen- y- Bout. The House stands upon an Eminence, surrounded by some of the finest, most picturesque, and diver- sified Scenery in the Principality ; it has the extensive Plain of Shropshire, the" Wrekin, Bre'r- dden, Moel- y- golva, and Ne> sclift" Hills immedi- ately in its Front; a bold aud lofty Hill at it* Back ( which affords a complete Protection from the cold Winds): to the Right the beautiful fer- tile Vale and Village of Llahfeelien ; to the Left the much. admired Vule of I. laugedwin ( through which the beautiful Windings of the River Tannatt, so generally and deservedly esteemed for lis delicious Trout and the Amusement it. affords to the Angler, are seen to a considerable Extent); Llangedwiu House, ihe Seat of the Right Hon. C. W. W. Wynn ; Brynygwalie, the Seat of John Bonnor, Esq.; and various other Gentlemen's Seats ; and at a Distance the grand Water- fall called Pistill Rhaiadr. Also, FOUR DWELLING HOUSES, in good Re- pair, with the Gardens and Orchards thereunto re- spectively belonging, now in the several Holdings of John Howell, David Davids, James Edwards, and David Parry. LOT II. A most desirable nnd compact FARM, called WAEN- FEDW, consisting of a substantial House ( now divided into two Dwellings) in good Repair, with suitable Outbuildings, hardens, fmrt Orchards thereto belonging, and'sundry Pieces or Parcels of rich Arable, Meadow, and Pasture LAND ' in a Ring Fence), divided into convenient Parcels, ontaining together 2.1. A. 311 34P. more or less, now n the several Holdings of the said Mr. Lewis, Johu Moody, and Jojui Jones. This Lot stands upon an Eminence, within a Quarter of a Mile of the rural Village of Llausainlffraid aforesaid, adjoining the New Road from thence to Pen- y bout. It commands a South Aspect, and forms a most delightful Spot for the Erection of a Villa. LOT III. A Piece or Parcel of rich Meadow LAND, ituate on the East Side of the aforesaid New Road, containing about 2R. 15P. now in the Holding of the id John Moody. LOT IV. Two Pieces or Parcels of rich Pasture LAN D, containing 4A 2R. 4P. he the same more OK ess, close adjoining the Village of LlausaiutfiVaid iforesaid, formerly in one Piece and divided by rbe foresaid New Road, and now iu the Holding of Mr. Richaid Edwards. The whole of the above Property is distant 8 Miles from Oswestry, 12 from Welshpool, 5 from Llanfyllin, and 25 from Shrewsbury, all excellent Market Towns, and within 4 Miles of Lime aud (> of Coal. The Roads are in good Repair, the Poor Rates end other Lewns moderate. Plas Gwynn Estate is free of Tythe- Hay, being covered by a Modus of 7s 8d. per Annum The Shrubberies surrounding Plas Gwynn House are in high Perfection, and there are several Planta- tions of Oak and other Trees in a verv thriving State upon the Property, all of which tbe Purchaser will be required to take to at a fair Valuation. The Montgomeryshire Fox Hounds and two Packs of Harriers regularly Hunt the Neighbourhood, and the Property and Country surrounding it abounds will* all Kinds of Game, being close adjoining the strict Preserves of Sir VV. W. Wynn, Bart, and Lord Osborne. The Mail from Oswestry to LlanfyUrn passes close to Plns- Gwynn and Waen Fedw Houses twice a Day, by which Letters and Parcels can be forwarded to all Parts of the Kingdom. Possession of Ihe whole Estate may he had at Ladv- Day next, and one Half of the Purchase Money may remain on Mortgage of the Estate, at the Option. of the Purchasers. The several Occupiers will shew the Premises in their respective Holdings, and printed Particulars, descriptive of the several Lots, may be had at the Wynnsiay Arms and Cross Keys 1 mis, in Oswestry ; the Oak and Bull Inns, in Pool ; tiie Lion and Talbot Inns, iu Shrewsbury ; the Wynustay Arms ami Red Lion Inns, in Wrexham; the Hand and King* s Head Inns, in Llangollen, and all the principal Inns in Ihe Neighbourhood. And any further Information may be obtained upon Application to Mr. JOHN LEWIS, O* I » the Premises ; of THE AUCTIONEERS, in Oswestry and Wrexham ; and at the Offices of Mr. GRIFFITHES, Solicitor, in the Towns of Oswestry aud Welshpool WORCESTER SAUCE, For Stewed Lampreys, LcimpronSi § Eds. f EP^ HE Superiority of the above Fish Stewed i after the Worcester Fashion has been long pro. verbial, and it is now in the Power of any Individual to make it of equal Excellence at any Distance, by the Use of this Sauce. By attending to the Directions with each Bottle, a Dish of exquisite Flavour and Richness, combined with Cheapness, will be produced, one Trial will ever after give it a decided Preference, and will evidently prove that il possesses the most unrivalled Qualities that can recommend any Sauce. Prepared by TVVINBERROW and EVANS, Chemists, Broad Street, Worcester; and Sold by Beeston, Drug- gist, Wellington; Nicholls, Druggist, Bridgnorth ; E. Forster, Druggist, Ludlow ; Davies, Confectioner, Shrewsbury ; and by the most respectable Druggists iu every Market Town. Dr. Boerhaave's Red Pill IS now considered a specific Cure for everv Stage aud Symptom of VENEREAL COM- PLAINTS, as it eradicates them without Confinement and Inconvenience, and is found equally safe, speedy, and effectual. The many Thousands who have been enabled by it to cure themselves with Secrecy and Despatch, bear Testimony to its Efficacy. 03s With each Box ( Price 4s. fid.) is given a copious Bill of Directions, supplying all necessaiy Information for the advanlageous Use of the Red Pill. Sold by W. & J. EDDOWES, Shrewsbury, and all Medicine Venders. ESSELS'JESUIT'S OKOHS have been long known and esteemed a safe, effectual, nnd often an immediate cure for Strangury, Gleets, Weakness of the Kidneys or Bladder; and when taken on the first attack of a certain complaint, they will infallibly accomplish the desired effect. Should the disease be far advanced, it will be necessary to take the SPECIFIC REMEDY with the Jesuit's Drops. CAUTION.— The great object to be attended to is, that Patients and Purchasers should be careful iu having the true and genuine Preparation, as the un- safe, unsanctioned, and dangerous counterfeits at- tempted to be fuisted oil the public by absolute false- hoods, are so numerous that Puichasers are particularly requested to ask for JOSEPH WRSSKI/ S Jesuit's Drops, as a preparation under the name of Dr. il'a'feet ( which article is made by nearly all who sell them,) is often substituted in the place of the Genuine,' which is distinguished from nil others, by having on the Go- vernment Stamp, " JOSEPH WESSBLS, St. Paul's." These Drops are in Bottles of 2s. 9d — The Specific 2s. yd. per Pol. Sold by Messrs. W. and J. EDDOWK*, Shrewsbury, ajid hy all Booksellers and Druggists, / n port ant News from France. Tho Vonitnir anil other French papers of Mon- day, cnmhinnifated ( he unexpected intelligence that the French Government had proceeded to the hold length of suspending the Li he fly of ( lie Press, dis- solving the Chambers, and reducing the number of the Deputies to V' returned to the Lower Chamber whenever it shall be rie- assembled. The decrees are professedly grounded upou n long Report from the Ministry to the King, in wliiih the former declare that these measures are necessary for the safety ot the throne and the welfare of Ihe country. The Kcport, which bears the signatures of Prince Polrgnac, fcaron iJ'Haussez, Counts de Giiernotv Ran- ville, Monlbel,/ Chantelauze, the Count de Peyronct, and Baron Capelhf,- thus concludes— " We iliMsl nol deceive ourselves— We in the Ordinary condition of a representative government. The principles on which it has been established could lint remain entire amidst the political vicissitudes, A turbulent democracy, which has penetrated even into our laws, tends lo put itself in Ihe place of tbe legitimate power. It disposes of the majority of the elections by means of the journals, and the assistance of numerous affiliations. It has paralysed, as fur as has depended on it, I IK* regular exercise of the most essential prerogative of the crown— that of dissolving the Elective Chamber, liv this very thing the con- stitution of the state is shaken. Your Majesty alone retains the power to replace and consolidate it upon' its foundation. " The right, as well as the duty of assuring its maintenance, is the inseparable attribute of the sovereignty. No government on earth would remain standing, if it had not the right to provide for its own securifv. This power existed before the laws, because it is in tbe nature of things. These, Sire, are maxims which have in their favour Ihe sanction <> f time, and the assent of all Ihe publicists of Europe. l? ut these maxims have another sanction, still more positive— that of the Charter itself. The fourteenth article has invested your Majesty with a sufficient power— not, undoubtedly, to change our institutions — but to consolidate them, and render them more slahle. " Circumstances of imperious necessity do not permit the exercise of this supreme power to be any longer deferred. The moment is come to have recourse to measures which are in the spirit of the charter, but which are beyond the limits of legal order, or Ihe resources of which had been exhausted in vain. These resources, Sire, your Ministers, who arc to secure the success of them, do not hesitate to propose to yon, convinced as they are that justice will remain the strongest" The Ordinance suspending the Liberty of the Press, distinctly states that file determination is founded on the Report of the Council of Ministers; and the Dissolution of the Chamber, On the ground of " Ihe manoeuvres . practised in several parts of the kingdom to deceive and mislead the electors dining the last operations of the electoral Colleges," no small portion of which is attributed to the instrumentality of the press. The Moniteur of Wednesday did not conlain any- thing relative to the late measures or lo the state of Paris, only that the King, hy an Ordinance of tire 25th July, has given to the Marshal Duke of Ragusa the command of all the troops forming the lirst military division. The National, the Temps, aud the Journal du Commerce French papers of Tues- day, having published statements of excitement in the capital, arising from the Ordinance of the King, without authorisation, the printing presses and types of these journals were seized and destroyed. The two most extensively circulated and popular journals -— the Journal ties Debuts and tbe Conslitutionnel — behaved with greater prudence, and did not pub- lish at all. The managers and editors of the papers, as the persons first attacked, appear determined to s and upon the law, and to resist Ihe ordinances. A declaration has been published hy them, iu which they state that " the government has this day lost the character of legality which commands obedience. We re « is- t it in what concerns ourselves. It is for France to determine how far her resistance ought to extend." Ihe same declaration calls upon the Deputies who have been legally elected to meet, as if tbe ordinance of dissolution had not issued; and it " is contended, that as the Chamber has never been assembled and the elections verified, it was not in a stale to be dissolved. A letter received by express on Thursday says— " Paris in in complete insurrection— the Exchange is shut. The Deputies now present at Paris, to the number of about fifty, have assembled, and have decided—" That they protested against the Ordinance of the 251 h of July, as illegal and criminal ; that they still consider themselves as the true Deputies of France ; that a Deputation should immediately go to the Commandant of the place and to the Prefect of Paris, to ask them to re- inrganise the National Guard ; that, if lliry decline, the Guard itself was invited to meet, permanently to watch over the siifety of the city of Paris. The Deputies themselves have declared their meeting permanent." The immense population of Paris will not obey the Ordinances. It protests by all the means in ils power. The workshops are every where closed, fhe rich magazines of the streets Richelieu, St. llonore, and St. Denis, are only half open. The Palais Royal— so brilliant in times of peace so famous in the commencement of the Revolution — is now but a gloomy prison The gates arc shut, and the garden and the passages cleared. The Tuilleries arc also shut livery spot w here a number of persons might collect is occupied hy the gensd'annes, the royal guard, and tbe troops of the line. Alarm increases every hour." The accounts this afternoon report that Paris is in the hands of the people, and that the Duke of Raguna was at the gates with a large military force, resolving to s'arve nut the inhabitants The King, it was added, was at Vincennes, attfnded by some of the Foreign Ambassadors. The Morning papers contain a Proclamation declaring tbe Throne vacant. There is reason, however, to think lliat it is not authentic, or, at least, that it is not to he taken as tbe declaration of the leading men of the party in whose hands the destinies of France may have lieen placed- It is remarkable that such a document if genuine, should be signed by initials only — Some of the accounts from Paris stale that General La Fayette, and not Lahorde, as men- tioned ' in the letters which arrived yesterday, has taken tbe command of the National Guard. This is not however very probable, 011 account of the great age of Ihe former. Diborde is a good officer, and it is believed, also a highly respectable man. Hither of thrse persons at the head of the National Guard would be a guarantee for the safety of persons and property in the capital. The Globe says—" No Frenchman," according to the words'of an Englishman who left Paris on Wed- nesday, " bad tbe least doubt of the issue." Still, without admitting a doubt whieh the combatants do not feel, the duration and violence Of the struggle must depeud on the question whether the military join with or oppose the people. Chi this ptiint the assurances of the persons who have arrived from Paris, though not distinct, are satisfactory ; all tbe regiments of the line are stated to be on the side of the people. In a number of the Temps of Wednesday which has reached town, it is- slated that so long ago as Tuesday, the 5th Regiment of the Line refused to fire 011 the populace. Any direct junction of the military with the people wilt be rendered more decisive hy its affording time for the re- organization of the National Guard of Paris. This important body is said to have already assembled in great force. Vast numbers of English families having failed in procuring passports, are stated to have left, the capital without any, and were hurrying to the 101st. The lady of the British Ambassador, Lady Stuart de Roth say, is said to have left, tbe French capital and to have arrived at Calais Reports were current on Wednesday evening that Lyons was in a state of revolt, and that the Insurrection was spreading through the departments. The Dover letters state, that it was reported there that government had sent over two steam vessels to take 011 board the English at Calais and Boulogne,- and it was expected several ships of war would he sent to cruize iu the channel. The excitement in London respecting the news from France continues to increase. In addition to the collection of newsmongers and money- jobbers, we have a great number of persons who have relations in France, eagerly inquiring after the excesses at. Paris, and not a few who have children at school in the pro- vinces. Tbe Royal Exchange is unusally crowded, , ami as there have been 1: 0 arrivals from the other cii'. e up to a late hour, the anxiety was very gnat. A few minutes ago two expresses arrived, but as thev , jjnie ' o persons iheply interested in stock jobbing, it w jll be « ;| tue time before the news transpires. The latest news from Paris states that the Arsenal had lieen taken by the populace, who were afterwards driven out by the military with dreadful slaughter, the artillery bearing upon the mob ; thai above three thousand are killed. Some accounts bring the num- bers- up to five thousand. It is reported that Mar- motit the Duke of Ragusa lias been driven out of Paris, that he has taken possession of the barriers, and will allow no intercourse with the provinces One rumour is that the King has fled to Brussels. The Provisional Government are reported to have acted with great vigour, but the details arc not given, and there is, of course, much obscurity respecting the persons acting in the great drama. Tlie following account is from a gentleman of Ihe first respectability, who left Paris oa Wednesday evening, and was an eye- witness to all that was passing: — " The ti'i. coloured tlag vvas hoisted— black, white, and red— and paraded about the streets, mounted on pikes, swords, and pistols. The red flag was also hoisted on Notre Dame, and the while flag taken down and destroyed. The greatest slaughter during the firing of Ihe cannon and musketry took place in tbe quarters of St. Martin, St. Dennis, and the Boule- vards of NouiHvs, where the trees were cut down, and placed by the populace aero- s the streets as a barrfadoe against the troops of Ihe line. All the manufacturers at Paris have discharged their work- mer. The arsenal of Paris was taken at two o'clock on Wednesday morning, ami tlire arms distributed to the people'; but it was again re taken, with Ihe loss of 5( 10 men. All the theatres were broken open, and fire- a uis and swords taken from their. Tbe firing continued by platoons and cannon from eleven o'clock 011 Wednesday morning till three o'clock in the after- noon. A placard was posted up at Paris that lire King had been overtaken at Orleans, but the fact is, 110 one knows where he is gone. The Peeis went and demanded an iuterview with him, but he re/ used to see them. " The Duchess'de Berri also signified tn his Ma- jesty that if he persisted to take away the liberty of his people, it would be the overthrow of his govern- ment. The King ordered her immediately to travel, and it is said she is at Boulogne under an assumed name. When the above gentleman left Paris, seve- ral parts of fh'e capital were still lined with troops, aud a cavalry regiment of the King's Body Gi'rard was marching in'. It was the general opinion ( hat the people would never remain quiet until the King gave up the throne. Shrewsbury Election. Mil BANKRUPTS, JUI. Y 30. — Robert Anderson, of Cock, spur. sheet, guii- uiaker.— Richard AHen Spiigg, of High llolborn, leallier- seller.— Joseph While, of llut- cliffe highway, bookseller.— lleury J11I111 Wharton, of Private road, Slouk well, n itie- agent — William Thoro guild, jun. of Hngnigge Wells Tavern, Spu fields, victualler.— James Edward Maddux, of Brnuforl. ha I dings, Strand, coal. merchant.— Thomas Atkinson, llolheach, Lincolnshire, wheelwright.— Samuel llnii. sun and William llultsull, of Laiigiield', Yorkshire, timber merchants. MADAME TUSSAU1) & SONS '%/ lT OST respectfully announce to the i ¥ M Ladies aud Gentlemen and Ihe Public of 08WRKTRY, that their spin, did EXHIBITION xmII be OPENED for llieir Inspection iu a few Da> s, o! which due Noiice will be given. iPOSTOCiRJPT* LONDON, Monday Night, August 2, 1830. PRICIS OF FUNDS AT THE CLOSE. Red. 3 per Cents. 91^ 3 per Cent. Cons. 90.£ New 31 per Cent. 100 3* per Cents. Red. 90f 4 per Cents. ( 1826) 104, i 4 per Cents. — Bank Stock * 19| New Ann. — India Bonds 81 India Stock 237 Excheq. Bills 75 Consols for Account: 905 STATE OF PARIS. Wednesday exhibited a formidable improvement in the means and prospects of the insurgents. The National Guard appeared perfectly re- organised, and in great strength. Many of the Royal Guard, and a still greater proportion of soldiers of the numbered regiments, passed over during the night to the people, and the war now spread over the whole city. The Arsenal, the Hotel de ViHe, became the principal objects of contest, and were each frequently taken and retaken ; but the arms, which they had originally contained, all remained with the people. The cavalry, so many as adhered to the King, now charged upon the insurgents at every opportunity, without reserve, and the discharges of artillery were incessant. In the course of the day a regiment, of cavalry, two numbered regiments of infantry, and a battallion of Guards passed over to the people. During the heat of. the conflict on Wednesday a body of citizens at- tempted lo negociate a reconciliation on the terms of simply abolishing the obnoxious ordinances of Sun day. Marmont seemed to accede ; but his good dis- position was controlled by Polignac and the King, who refused all terms. Wednesday night certainly left the advantage on the popular side. On Thursday morning the struggle was renewed but very faintly, on the side of the King's party : the Tuileries fell early into the hands of the populace, who disarmed and dismissed, uninjured, the Swiss Guard; and by two o'clock, the last of the trooji that continued faithful to the King had retired from the city. It was plain that they were withdrawn rather from a doubt of the steadiness of their loyalty than from necessity. A* soon as the tumult of arms had ceased, the heads of the popular party proceed" to the organization of the civil government. A com mission of administration was elected, and Genera Lafayette placed at the head of the National Guard or rather the insurgent army, for all seemed included in that title. The Peers and Deputies held a conference, and the usual number of manifestoes, and protests, and pro- clamations having been issued, an invitation was ad dressed to the Duke of Orleans, to take upon him the exercise of the functions of government as Regent. On Friday the Duke signified his acceptance of this invitation, and certain fundamental principles of government, were agreed to as those by which he should act. Paris, meantime, is blockaded by Mar mont's army, the King is either at. Chartres or Fon tainhleau, forty miles from Paris, with no more than 2000 soldiers. Express froui Paris.— Saturday Night. The provisional uovernment was installed Saturday, under the Presidency of the Duke Orleans Paris is perfectly tranquil j scarcely an traces visible in the day- time attest the events o the past. week. At night the substitution of illu initiated windows for lamp light reminds the pas- sengers of what has happened. Banks, warehouses, shops, and the places of public amusement, are all re- opened, and the people seem for the time to forget that Charles the Tenth reigned or has ceased to reign. Cfye Salopian journal. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1830. MARRIED. On the 22d inst. at Sl John's, Manchester, by the Rev. H. Slowed, M. A. Edmund, son of Mr. Coxlon of Steventon, in this connty, to Julia A'nue, daughte of Mr. Baj ley, of The Woodlands, Broughtoii. DIED. On Sunday, the 25th iiist. in her 71st year, at h seat of Rmltiall, near Ross, Mary, relict of Tboi Brereton West fa lino-, Esq ami sole descendant of ancient family, who ale believed to have been settled there before the Noruiau Conquest ; a lady whose generous friendship, publie spirit, liberal hospitality and charily, and kindness to her numerous depend- ents, render her death a loss to that neighbourhood Bot easily repaired. On tbe 30th instant, after a short and severe illness, Elizalethr youngest daughter of the late Mr. Edward Griffiths, of Harnnge Grange, in ibis county . On the 3fst ult. in Abbey- square, Chester, aged 63, Mrs. Elizabeth Price, wife of Mr. Robert Price, and formerly of the White Horse, Overton ; universally respected. On the 26th ult. at Nawlioran, Richard Edwards, Esq. Colonel of the Carnarvonshire Militia, and up- wards of4,0 years a Magistrate, and latterly Chairman of the Quarter Sessions, On Fridayy the 30th nit..- at Sutton, Montgomeryshire, Mr. Humphrey Jones, in the 44th \ ear of his age. Additional Subscription to the Sulop Infirmary. Rev. Edward- Whitehurst, Vi'rniew Bunk, Llanymynech •• « . « ••>•...... £ I 1 0 Mr, ^ orhett having declined acceding to an arrange ment for each Candidate to bring up his voters to the Poll by tallies, the basement floor of our ancient Market House was fitted up, on "" Thursday last, as the place for taking the Poll ; a polling booth being, formed at each end thereof, while the centre was ap- propriated to the accommodation of spectators. At an early hour 011 Friday morning, the partisans of each candidate commenced tlieir muster : the friends of Mr. Jenkins and Mr. Slaney had each their band of music, & c.; but Mr. Corbett, in the same spirit that had induced him to decline bringing his voters by tallies to the poll, abstained from this usual ( we had almost said useful) mode of excitement, and relied on the spontaneous aid of his supporters. At nine o'clock, the hour appointed for the commence- ment of the election, the crowd round the Tow n Hall was tremendous; and as soon as the doors were opened the Crown Court was filled almost to suffoca- tion ; and the shouts of the contending parties gave ample evidence of their zeal, and of the interest they took in fhe day's proceedings. The Mayor ( Robert Gray, Esq ) having taken his place, and the customary forms having been gone through— EDWARD CLUDDE, Esq. offered himself to the notice of the assembly, which he addressed as fol- lows :— Mr. Mayor, and Brother Burgesses, I am sorry that it has not fallen into better Ivands than mine lo propose the nomination of Mr. Pant'on t'orbett as one ofthe Representati ves of this Borough the ensuing Parliament. His Cause, however, I ust, needs not an advocate: I feel confident that worthy friend possesses, 011 the present occasion, fhe hearty good wishes of a great proportion of the urgesses ol this towu. We have experienced, for 1V0 less a period than ten years, his unwearied at ten- ion to the duties of Parliament, and his ability in the isehargeof them, and 1 firmly believe that a more up- ght and Conscientious member never sat in Parlia- ment. With thisconviction, Gentlemen, I beg leave to propose that Pautou Corbett, Esq. be now put into ~* oinr'iiation as a fit and proper Person to represent fhe Borough of Shrewsbury in the next Parliament. JOHN EA^ TON, junior, Esq. then said—" Mr. " ayor, and brother Burgesses,— I rise with much pleasure to second the nomination of our late Re- presentative, MT. Panton Corbett, to whom we are much indebted for the great zeal and attention lie has uniformly shewn to the trne interests of this town; and am sure the majority of the Burgesses are of opinion that he has discharged his parliamentary duties faithfully and Conscientiously. I trust, there- fore, they tfiff cordially join with me with heart and hand to return him again as our Representative." PANTON CORBETT, Esq. said—" Mr. Mayor, and Gentlemen,— In offering myself for a few minutes to four attention, I beg to exoress nry thanks to those kind friends who have this day put me in nomination. stand here not as one known- to you for a few years only : mv public conduct for a series of years is be- fore you; arid therefore 1 need not make any pro- fession of my principles. Should you again return me as one of your Representatives to Parliament— of hich, from the numerous promises of support ! have received, 1 have not the least doubt— I trust I shall Continue to deserve that great assurance of yotst5 re- gard. Gentlemen, when I first came among you, I did so at the request of a numerous and respectable body of Electors. At that time I solicited your free and un- biassed votes: and I stand here this day to solicit the free and unbiassed votes of the Electors of Shrews bury; for on no other terms will 1 consent to be your Representative. When 1 look back to the year 1826; when I consider that then, out of Q7 § votes polled, " had 62S— that I was then, as if were, unanimously elected— I trust 1 may not be presuming too much W hen I say that I do not consider myself as contesting for the representation of this Borough : but rather as standing here to give every Burgess the opportunity of recording his suffrages; and so long as a Burgess will come up to poll for me, I will stand here to re- ceive his vote. On these terms alone, I repeat, will I consent to he your Representative. Gentlemen, 1 know that you may find men more eloquent than l am-— more capable of addressing you in tine language; but one more anxious to serve you and your interests to the utmost of his power, more ndependent. in his opinions, or more anxious to pre- serve. the British Constitution than myself, does not exist. ^ Gentlemen,' yoii are all aware of what took place yesterday 011 the subject of polling by tallies—- I had written1 my handbill before I saw that of my late honourable Colleague; and 1 must, say that I think he, ftt any rate, has been father hard upon me; for HE must well recollect the proceedings of the lafst, elec- tion : I trust, however, that the peace and good humour which have hitherto characterised the proceedings of this election in a remarkable degree, will continue undiminished. For myself, 1 can conscientiously avow that I feel no hostility to- wards either of my honourable opponents; the friendship that has hitherto existed betw- een us will, T doubt not, continue undiminished; nor do 1 quarrel with those who, honestly differing from me in opinion, have thought it their duty to oppose me : 1 feel no hostility or animosity towards them for acting upon those principles which they support— for main- taining those opinions which they have a right to hold. I freely acknowledge that it is the Birthright of Englishmen— the birthright of the Burgesses of Shrewsbury— to select whom they choose as the repre- sentatives of their \ VisheS and interests. With those who oppose me I have no* fight to find fault, nor shall I do so ; to those who have promised me their votes I feel most grateful; and that gratitude wilt be douhiv increased, if, by their kindness, I should again be placed in a high situation on the Poll. As to any votes that I may have given in Parliament, I am here eady to answer such questions as may he- demanded of me; and I shall not now further trespass oil your time, except to thank my very numerous friends for their kind promises of support, and to express my conviction that 1 can now sit down tn perfect confi- dence as to the result of this election. The Rev. Sir EDWARD KYNASTON, Bart, said he had the honour to propose Mr. Slaney, as one of their Representatives in Parliament— a gentleman eminently qualified to protect the interests of his con- stituents and the country at large. " Mr. Slaney is a man of good family ; a neighbour, I may say a towns- man, born and bred amongst, you,— he is a compile man of business— a firm friend to the labouring- classes— a watchful guardian of our public and na- tional interests — an unwearied advocate of every man's rights and liberties 1 feel it quite unnecessary more particularly to recite his qualifications; his Par liamentary conduct is before you ; and 1 have no doubt, if you return him, he will prove, himself a most a^ le, upright, and independent Member of Parlia- ment." HENRY BENYON, E? q. begged to second the no- mination made by Sir Edward Kynaston. Mr. Slaney, by his liberal opinions on all subjects brought before Parliament — by his sedulous attention to his Parlia- mentary duties— by his anxiety for the welfare of the working classes— by his watchfulness over the general i. terests of the nation, had shown himself in every way worthy of the high trust, that, had been repoapd in him, and of being again placed in the situation of their Representative. R. A. SLANEY, Esq. then- said**- " Free and independent Burgesses of Shrewsbury ! I betr that you would hear every gentleman fully and fuirly, and judge of their qualifications as your Representatives by their past conduct. Of my late colleague, Mr. Corbett, I would sav that a more honourable man does not exist; Mr. Jenkins's name I uever heard but with the voice of praise. The same testimony I have borne to their private cha- racters I ask with all humility for my own. My con- test is with no particular candidate. I stand forward on public grounds alone, and claim at your hands the trust of representing your interests in Parliament, and am bound to state my humble efforts to redeem the pledges 1 gave you at my last election, and shew that I have endeavoured to deserve a renewal of your confidence.—- It is painful to me to speak of myself, but I owe it to those who have honoured me with their support. " In 1827, having observed the evil effects from abuses of the Poor Laws in the South, which de- press the working classes, lower their rate of wages, and make industrious men paupers in their native land, 1 brought the subject, in a laborious sta- emeut, before Parliament, and had the pleasure of receiving ( though a stranger) the strongest pro- mises of support from many of the most able and benevolent men in the House of Commons. Having thoroughly examined all the returns and veco-< l in the summer of 1S28 f again brought it forward,, adducing numerous facts and cases which have never been attacked; I then obtained a Parlia- mentary Committee to investigate the question, myself acting as Chairman; we examined much evidence, and on the recommendation of that nu- merous and respectable Committee, I drew up a tvport ( sincecirculated through thecountry), point- ing out a mode of checking these abuses. " This was followed by a Bill for that purpose, recommended by the Committee in 1828. I brought forward the Malt and Beer question in a statement since printed, shewing in laborious detail, resting on returns, the injustice of the regulations on mak- ing malt, and the hardship of the beer tax on the working classes. The ministers, finding the voice of the House against them, pledged themselves to consider and remedy the eVil,' and in consequence, this year, the regulations on malting were much improved, and the beer tax taken off, by which our natural and healthy beverage was released from au unjust and heavy impost. In the last Session I brought fofward a consideration ofthe evils arising from the fluctuations of manufacturing employment, with a view to lessen the sufferings by which indus- trious workmen were depressed. A Committee vvas granted me, and much investigation took place, how to improve the conditio^ of the industrious, by enabling them to secure themselves against reverses A Report from this ColnmVttee has been printed and is now before the country, suggesting means to remedy or lessen this great evil. I may have been mistaken in my efforts,^ but l! have not been a negli- gent or idle representative, and my utin st efforts have been directed assiduously and continually to improve the condition Of the humbler classes. Something, perhaps, has been gained by my humble endeavours. Those endeavours, if returned, I shall continue; fir my honest wish is to prove useful, even in the slightest degree, to my fellow- men:, and when, through illness or other causes, it is put beyond my power to serve my country, I shall resign the trust I now ask of you back into your hands, and retire into the privacy of domestic hap- piness, w ith, I hope, a conscientiousness of having $ erved you honestly and faithfully. " 1 now turn to great pubfic questions. It appears to me that the distresses of the country, d. stresses which unfortunately bear most severely on all classes, require the most scrupulous'- and exact economy consistent with the dignity of the Crown. Who can deny the depression of all our important interests, and the necessity of reducing taxation ? " Another great public question is, Reform— and I fairly declare myself an advocate for rational, practi- cal, moderate Reform, not that violent, and hasty Re- form which would break down the ancient, edifice of the Constitution, that from its crumbling ruins a new one may be erected according to the idle imagination of some wild enthusiast; but that gradual reform, rather to be called reformation— that gathering wis- dom from experience, and taking counsel from past times, would strengthen the real bulwarks of the Constitution. 1 ask if it is not right that those opulent and crowded cities which have sprnng up into greatness among us; the landmarks of national prosperity should be directly represented in parlia- ment?— Shall a noble Duke or a courtly Marquis Carry the votes of ten members in his pocket, whilst Manchester, Birmingham, and jLeeds ( fertile in wealth, population, and intelligence) have no representative at all ? Which is the real friend to the country, the timid and trembling creature with spectacles on nose, spelling at some musty record of antiquity, and wait- ing till the edifice falls with decay; or the firm and determined man who gradually removes the rotten timbers to replace them with heart of British Oak? These, gentlemen, are my principles: I shall not deviate or change them; with these as my guide, 1 flatter myself I may, if returned by you to parlia- ment, be of some use to my country t for I tell you fairly, had I notastimulant ambition to do something for my fell^ v- men, I would retire instantly to my doimestic circle, my rural pursuits, and studious avoca- tions, confident that there I should meet that hap- piness which the bustle of public life seldom affords. " If a stranger were to compare this with other countries, with what astonishment and admiration would his mind be filled ! He would survey its rich vales from Tay to Trent ami Thames, its cultivated plains teeming with flocks and herds ; its villages and farms and mansions, the homes of industrious dwellers nestled amid orc hards, plantations, and forests. Then would he view our splendid metropolis girt round with suburb towns, studded about with ornamented villas, divided by a silver line of light.— the noble stream of Britain, covered with the ships of every nation. As the sojourner turned toward the north, he wouhl see our vast and populous manufacturing cities, the crowded hives of intelligent, industrious myriads; he would behold the land covered with steam engines, warehouses and factories, he would see it divided and subdivided by canals and roads and railways! Of such mighty effects, he would revolve the cause. One united, indivisible, and corporate voice, springing spontaneously from the lips of mil- lions, responds the cause !— the cause— the cause is Freedom— constitutional, defined, established Free- dom— that cause, that sacred cause, never forget, never neglect, never abandon! It may be obscured by a passing cloud, it may be shrouded for a while by the mists of ignorance, but, the free winds of Heaven shall visit it. It shall shine forth again, conquering, and to conquer! Colonel WINGFIELD ( of Onslow) then rose, and in proposing Mr. Jenkins expressed himself as follows :—• Mr Mayor, and Gentlemen,— Although I have the highest respect for each ofthe gentlemen who have already been honoured with your confidence, and who are again proposed for the representation of this antient and most respectable borough, I beg leave to nominate another gentleman, whose inde- pendence, high character, and abilities point him out as a person eminently qualified to dis- charge the important duties of one of your repre- sentatives in Parliament. An absence of many years* employment iu the service of his country, greatly to its advantage, as well as hi ; hly creditable to himself, has hitherto deprived Mr. Jenkins of the opportunity he has long lo > ked forward to, and of which he now avails him- self, of ottering himself lo the Burgesses of his native town as their Representative in Parliament; and I trust, Gentlemen, that your votes this day may prove your approbation of him, aud place him in th. » t honourable situation to which he so deservedly aspires. Well know ing the soundness of his principles, the correctness, of his judgment, and the deep solicitude he feels for the general and individual interests of this most respectable borough, 1 venture with full confidence to recommend my friend aud relation, Mr. Jenkins, to your choice for this day's election. KOBI RT BURTON, junior, Esq. spoke as follows: — " Mr, Mayor, Brother Burgesses, and Gentlemen,— To enter into any flowery recapitulation of the past services, or to make a string of time- serving promises as may regard the future conduct of the respective Candidates, are both alike equally in opposition to the purposes for which we are assembled this day. I shall," therefore, in as few words as possible, beg to second Colonel Wingfield's nomination of Mr. Jenkins as a proper and discreet person to represent this Borough in the ensuing Parliament. In so doing I have the satisfaction of knowing that 1 am furthering wishes of the most respectable inhabitants of this town." RICHARD JENKINS, Esq. then said — Mr. Mayor, and Gentlemen,— 1 must offer my sincere tribute of respect and esteem to my honour- able friends, your late Members, who have just t d lressed you \ Vith Such kind reference to myself; and in presenting myself before you this day, for your final decision on my pretensions to be one of your Representatives in Parliament, I beg to be permitted to say a few words as to the motives and principles on which I aspire to that distinction. In the first place, Gentlemen, 1 have that ambition to serve my Country in Parliament which no man need be ashamed to avow ; and to what quarter could I look for obtaining my object with so much honour and satisfaction to myself, if successful, as to you, my friends and fellow- towUsmen 1 believe I am not altogether unfitted for the employment, by my past career in public life abroad. You have sanctioned my claim by the warm and generous man- ner in which you have received and encouraged me, and I feel a strong, but I hope not an unbecoming confidence as to the result. My principles. Gentlemen, are those of a free and loyal attachment to our glorious Constitution in Church and State, principles which have ever been the boast of the people of Salrp, and which a long absence from my native land, in Countries not yet so ortunate as ourselves in the blessings of Liberty and , True Religion, has only rendered more dear to my heart. Gentlemen, in my general views on less vital ques tions of our national polic3vy although I have a rational preference for established institutions, I am no enemy to those alterations and improvements which the advancing state of Society and public opinion point out as necessary to obtain the objects of those institu- tions themselves. 1 am, at the same time, a friend. to the diffusion of education through all classes' of the community, and I am satisfied that every progress in solid acquirements of knowledge in the people at large, must be beneficial to themselves and to the Government, as well as to the best interests of Virtue and Religion. In our internal concerns, Gentlemen, I afm adverse to all regulations and restrictions on industry, cal- culated to impede production and circulation, or to shackle that liberty which is every man's birthright, to do the be< t for himself without injuring his neigli hour. In legislating on such subjects the wisest maxim in my judgment is non- interference ; but, at any rate, all branches of our National Industry ought to he equally and impartially dealt with. Neither in our domestic nor external Trade am I a friend to Monopolies', or to keeping closed any available Markets for the Produce of our Agriculture and Manufactures. India and China are looked to as affording such Markets, and a field for British Capital and Enterprize to a much greater degree than is at present allowed by the provisions of the Legislature: and, Gentlemen, should I be returned to Parliament, no vote of mine shall go to oppose or limit the just claims of the public when the time arrives for reviewing those provisions. But, Gentle- men, iu deliberating on this important question, we mast view it as connected with others, involving the destinies of many millions of our Eastern subjects, and not as one of mere commercial regulation, and we shall then do justice to the Nation, to the East India Company, and to our Indian Empire. Here, Gentlemen, 1 beg most indignantly to dis- avow what has been circulated with considerable industry, that I am employed as an Agent of the East India Company. I assert positively and dis- tinctly that I have presented myself on this occasion not o ily without their direct or indirect instigation, bat without their privity; and I will add equally unfettered and unpledged to any other party or individual what e ver. Having assured you, Gentlemen, of my independ- ence, and of my liberal sentiments on the question of the Eastern Trade, I will just say, as 1 have been interrogated on the subject, that I am behind 110 one iu a sincere desire to promote the extinction of slavery iu the west, and to contribute lo the diflii- s 011 of liberty, civilization, and true religion, by all moderate and judicious means, throughout the world. A main spring of onr prosperity, Gentlemen, I may almost say of ouv existence, as a nation, I conceive to be public credit. 1 shall always be at my post to support retrenchment in our public expenditure, aud reduction iu taxation to every prudent extent; to enforce, in short, a system of judicious economy in every department of the slate, equally indispensable, to enable us to preserve good faitli towards the national creditor, and to relieve Ihe productive industry of the country from every unnecessary burthen in its actual state of depression. Connected with this subject, there is no question ot' deeper interest than the situation and prosperity of the working classes; audi yield to 110 one iu an earnest desire to see them comfort- able and happy, and to contribute to this end by every exertion in my power, whelher iu or out of Parliament. With reference to such views, Gentlemen, I pro pose to give a liberal support lo the government as long as its measures may appear to me to be con- ducive to the good of the country and the honour of the crown. lint, Gentlemen, as I have already declared, I am a free and independent man iu all respects; as such 1 offer my services to you, and the exertion of my best abilities and energies to watch over your local aud political rights and interests, to attend to your business, and, in short, to perform all the duties of an honest agent towards you and my country, should you think proper to confide to me the responsible and honourable trust to which 1 aspire. The addresses of the several Candidates, and of those gentlemen by whom they were proposed and seconded, were received with loud acclamations by their respective partisans. A show of hands was then called for; and the same being in favour of Mr. Slaney and Mr. Jenkins, a poll was demanded by John Eaton, junior, Esq. on behalf of Mr. Corbett. A warm discussion then took place as to the ap- pointment of an assessor, on whom was to devolve, the duty of deciding npon the votes as to which objections might be taken in the course of the poll; but this was finally determined by the Mayor declaring that he intended himself to sit as assessor, calling in the aid of some of the gentlemen who fill the situation of Aldermen ill the Corporation. It was then agreed to adjourn for an hour, previ- ous to taking the Poll, which commenced at half- past twelve o'clock ; and at the close of that day's poll, at six o'clock, the numbers stood thus :— For Richard Jenkins, Esq 230 Panton Corbett, Esq 100 It. A. SIancy, Esq ." 157 On Saturday morning the Polling was resumed at nine o'clock, and continued with the utmost energy until live o'clock in the afternoon ; when the numbers were declared as follows :— For Richard Jenkins, Esq 637 R. A. Slaney, Esq 1 495 Panton Corbett, Esq 352 On Monday morning, the respective parties again appeared in the field ; the poll commenced at ten o'clock ; and after lingering on for some hours, was finally closed at four in the afternoon, when the numbers were— For Richard Jenkins, Esq 754 R. A. Slaney, Esq 563 Panton Corbett, Esq 445 The usual forms having been gone through, and the Mayor having deciared the numbers, and that the Election bad fallen upon Richard Jenkins, Esq. and Robert Aglionby Slaney, Esq. RICIIAHI) JENKINS, Esq rose, and addressed the multitude by which the Hall was crowded— He said he bad now the proud satisfaction of addressing them as one of their Representatives, freely, honourably, and almost unanimously elected that day. He was fully aware that in seeking the honour he had at tained, be had been seeking a post equally laborious, anxious, and responsible. Henceforward it would be his study to endeavour to fit himself for it by actions and not by professions. His principles were known io those to whom he addressed himself; and their decision that day would always make him look to those principles as the landmarks by which he should guide his conduct. Henceforward he should study the interests of his constituents by every means in his power. His first duty would be to legislate for the general interests of the empire ; his next would be to attend to the rights and interests of those by whom lie was returned to Parliament: to this he freely pledged himself; for what interest could they have in which he was not a participator? Those friends in particular to whose zealous support he owed his present proud situation, he was sure would feel them- selves amply repaid by the result of tlieir exertions; and those who bad honestly voted against him, he sincerely hoped would in future consider him as their friend and servant. The Gentlemen w ho had lately been the candidates opposed to him, had honoured him willi their friendship, and he still hoped that the same feeling towards him would actuate them. After complimenting the Mayor, his assistants, and all parlies conccrncd in conducting the election for their impartial conduct and excellent arrangements, Mr. Jenkins concluded by giving his assurance that the wishes of the humblest Burgess of the Borough should at all times have his best attention and con sideration. R. A SLANF. Y, Esq. said his own efforts in the contest, that had just terminated would have been of little avail, if he had not been supported by a large body of friends, who had made that cause their own, a id be should always feel it his duty to presene that moderate and independent course which had secured to him their good opinion. He should proceed steadily in his endeavours to remove those burdens which pressed so heavily on the humbler classes, and he should always recollect that he held the trust reposed in him as a guardian of the privileges of the people. He had previously expressed his regret that any circumstance should have arisen to place him- self and his late honourable colleague in collision : but he trusted nothing had occurred to disturb the friendship that had always existed between them. He rejoiced, however, in the able and highly- gifted man that had been choseu as his new colleague : he rejoiced to find, from the liberal sentiments which he had Expressed, that he was to have such a colleague. He wished those who looked with jealousy upon thi privileges of the people could see the mode in which this contest had been carried on : for his own part, he thought there were none so capable of judging of the best mode of protecting those privileges, as the persons who, placed neither in the highest walks of life, nor in a state of poverty, have on all occasions proved themselves the best guardians of the rights of the people ; and he trusted they would 011 all occasions show themselves qualified to hand down those rights to their children's children.— Mr. Slancy then contrasted the present distracted and distressing state of France w ith the condition of this country ; and said he trusted Englishmen would avoid ex- travagancies of every kind, neither forgetting their own rights and privileges, nor that respect which was due to their Sovereign— neither breaking out into' turbulence on: the one hand, nor bowing down in abject submission on tbe other. — Mr. SlaneV in conclusion, complimented' the Mayor on his impartial and handsome conduct during the election, as also the professional and other gentlemen by whom he had been assisted. Mr. CORBETT then addressed the assembly, and said that though the result of thut day's poll had not plac id him in the high situation he liad anticipated, lie felt that he was justified in having protracted' the contest, inasmuch as many respectable voters had that day triveu him their suffrages. It was not his wish to alloy the gratification that would arise to many persons from the result uf the poll; but he felt that he had been justified in its extension by the promises of support and Ihe expressions of kindness made to him prior to its commencement. Tlie promises that had been made to him were about 600, and if all the Burgesses who had made them had kept them, they would have placed him in tbe proud situation to which lie had aspired; but he was soi ry to say that about 160 » had broken their sacred word a id polled against hiin, for what rea- sons or under what influence they best knew, and he did not slop to enquire. For eleven years he had attended lo the interests of the Burgesses of Shrewsbury, and on looking back he conld not lay his finger upon a single vote which be could wish to recall; aud although 011 some occasions, and more particularly 011 one great question, lie had been unfortunate in differing in opinion from some of his constituents, yet even on that question he ventured to prophesy that the time would come, and he thought sboitly, when those who had differed with hill) 011 that question would think he had done right.— Mr. Corbett then returned thanks to the 445 voters who had polled for him, and said they could bear testimony that he had not used any " undue influence to obtain their votes, or asked for more than a single vote from them. He would not deny that he had, 011 former occasions, felt greatly the honour that had been done to him in being elected their Representative in Parliament; and if be were to say that he did not regret not having succeeded 011 the present occasion, he could not expect to be believed. It had, however, been heart- cheering lo him to receive kind expressions of regret at tbe result of the coutest from numerous friends; and he should now retire agaiu to that private life, which, if not so honourable, wan at. least more comfortable than the turmoil and bustle of public life to which he had been fur several years subjected, tbe trouble and anxiety of which must now be borne by the two gentlemen whom they had just elected. After again returning his thanks to those friends by whom he had been supported, Mr. Corbett concluded by proposing a vote of tlktuks to the Mayor for his impartial and upright conduct during the election, and for the arrangements so ablv made under his direction. Mr. SLANKY seconded the vote of lhankff to- Ihe Mayor, who returned thanks; and the writ having been signed in the usual form, the assembly dispersed the newly- elected Members being chaired to- their respective Inns amid the acclamations of their friends. The chairing of Mr. Jenkins will taile place this day at one o'clock. We hove since learnt on good authority that the Humbert stooil thus Promises to Mr. Corbett . ... 607 Votes polled for IlinVby person* who had not pro mised 11 i 111 6fl8 Polled f,, r Mr. Cnrbctt PoltMtaicainst him, having promised to support him Tendered for liim and (- ejected - Did not conic up tu poll', having promised Mr. Cor- bett - t67 3 FOR THE SALOPIAN JOtJRN^ L. Said Jenkins to Salop, tl I'm otf iu a gftllop,— " I vvoii by a head at Navpore." Said Slaney, " Don't banter,— 14 illy pace is a canter,— 14 lu that who could ever do more ?" Said Corbetl to Salop, " Pray why should / uallop ? " Ml/ nag shall ' walk over' the course !" Said Salop " they're won il ! — " And you might have dime it " By clapping gold spurs lo yonr horse." To the Editor of the Salopian Journal. Sir, I heartily congratulate my brother burgesses on the successful return of Mr. Jenkins, as one of their Members, convinced that a gentleman of his ability will be au acquisition at a period when important questions are likely to come before Parliament very speedily. Tiie transcendent merits of Mr. Jenkins as a statesman, and even cs a soldier, are well known and duly appreciated iu India The battle of Seetabuldie, where with only TWO native cavalry aud Sepoys, upwards of 30,0U0 Arab soldiers were resisted and defeated, may be compared in its results to that of Waterloo, as on that event the fate of India materially binned. Mr. Jenkins's second, Mr. Southbey, was killed by his side; a few rounds of ammunition only were left, and had the enemy renewed the attack Ihe uext day, before reinforcements arrived, as was tbe case iu the evening, it is probable every 111.111 would have been slain by euci'eased opponents, ft is not saying too much to arid, that had the high merits of Mr. Jen- kins and also of Mr. Elphinstone, at this particular juncture, been acquired by king's servants, there can be no doubt high rank and honours would have been their reward. In proof of Mr. Jenkins's ser- vices, he was recently nominated Governor of Bombay; but, lo answer ministerial views, rather than appoint a man with the required local know, ledge, my Lord Clare has been actually appointed successor to Sir John Malcolm, at a period when a person conversant with the various lauiruaecH manner, and prejudices of the Mahratta Stales is peculiarly desirable. Were it necessary, I conld furnish you with the documents of the facts 1 have stated ; but for the present 1 remain, Sir, Your obedient Servant, U. S. A BURGESS OF SHREWSBURY. BntDRNoltTH ELECTION commenced on Monday morning; when Mr. Thomas Whitmore, Mr. W> d- ryclie Whitinore, and Mr. Arkwrigbt were put seve. rally into nomination for the representation of the Borough. A show of hands was called for, which was decidedly in favour of the Messrs. Whitinore; when a Poll was demanded for Mr. Arkwrigbt, which immediately began, and continued briskly till six o'clock that afternoon, when the numbers were de- clared as follows : Thomas Whitmore, Esq........ 115 W. W. Whitinore, Esq 113 Richard Arkwriglit, Esq 70 At three o'clock yesterday the numbers polled, n addition lo the above, were— for Mr. T. Whitinore 105 Mr. W. W. Whitmore 103 Mr. Arkwrigbt -------- 97 Visiting Clergyman this week at the Infirmary, t e Rev. John Harding :— House- Visitors, Mr. Rt'. Pritchard and Mr. John Peplow. We cannot recommend a higher trrat to our read- ers in Oswestry than an inspection of Madame Tug- saud's Exhibition, which will be opened for their inspection in a few days. As it has given the highest satisfaction to thousands iu Shrewsbury, we have no doubt but that its fame has already reached Oswestry, where we hope it will meet with success. The Commission of Assize for this County will be uPened on Saturday next.— There are at present 32 prisoners for trial. His Majesty has ordered a snperb dinner Service from the manufactory of Messrs. Hose and Co. of Coalportand this town. The inhabitants of the village of Stanton Lacy were not deficient in shewing their respect and expressing their good wishes at the coming- of- age of their landlord, the Right Hon. William Earl of Craven, on Sunday, the 18th ult. The morning was ushered iu by a merry peal ou the bells, which continued with little intermission for two days, and four fat sheep were given to the poor. Oil the fol- lowing day the tenantry and their friends sat down to an excellent dinner at the inn in the village, and after the cloth was withdrawn many appropriate and national toasts were drank in fine brown stout and good panch. l. i the evening the good matrons of the respective tenantry gave tea and plum cake to the wives and children of the peasantry, in a tooth - erected for the purpose, decorated with vari- ous banners nnd flowers, and accompanied with a lively band of music. The meii were regaled w ith a quantity of cider to drink his Lordship's health ; the evening concluded with a merry dance upon the green, in which upwards of a hundred and fifty couples joined, and was continued until a late hour. The Gazette of Friday afternoon announces that a fchange in the Court Mourning will take place on Sunday, August 8 ; a further change on the 29th ; and that on the 19th of September, the Court will go out of mourning. It is also notified that " it is not desired or expected that the public should appear in mourning after the 11th of August." The Rev. Sir Edward Kynaston, at his late rent- day, generously allowed his tenants 10 per cent. It is worthy of remark, that the Rev. Sir Edward Kvnaston luis for some years expended a consider- able portion of the receipts from his various farms, in Improving the buildings, & c. upon them. BISHOP'S CASTLE RACES, 1830, Took place ou the 29th and 3 > th or July , over the hew Course, which, save Ludlow, was allowed lo he the best in the County. The company was numerous and respectable, and the sporls, particnluily the Woodcote and the Castle Slakes and Handicap, were Of the first order. The Ordinaries were well attended, and ihe attention of the Steward gave universal satisfaction. These Races w ill iu future take place the first week In August, und Edwaid Rogeis, Esq. M. P. has kindly accepted the office ol Steward. THURSDAY, 29th JULY. The Borough Members' Plate of 50 Sovereigns, for maiden horses. Mr. Griffith.-!! gr. m. Miracle, 0 yrs Dir. Thome's ii. f. hy Master Henry, 3 yrs Mr, Cooper's eh c. by Boliadil, 3 yrs Air. Stubbs's ell. in by Treasurer, 4 yrs The Woodeote Stakes of 3 Sovereigns each, witl added, for horses not thorough- bred. Mr. B. Hickman's b. g. Jerry, 6 yrs Mr. W. Patrick's b. in. Cholstrey Lass, aged Mr. Griffiths'* gr. m. Miracle, ti yrs . Mr. It. Hewitt's b. g. Associate, li yrs Mr. Stubhs names ' I he Bishop, 5 yrs Mr. Thome's b g. Churchwarden, aged A g'ood lace. SHROPSHIRE CRICKET CLUB. ^ RIE next MEETING w W ED instead of Tuesday T M on WEDNESDAY NEXT, the take plate 11ih instant, ANTED immediately, in a Seminary \ V for Young Ladies, a French Governess, either a Native. of Palis or a Lady who litis resided there for some Years. The Ladv w'ill bave lo give Lessons in French, tint! to make herself generally useful — Letters ( Posl- pnid) addresseii to X. Y. lit the Publisher's, will be replied In if Ihey contain a real Name. TO THE GENTLEMEN, CLERGY, &. FREEHOLDERS OF THE COUNTY OF SALOP. M DINING together at t lie T A L B OT INN, after the Chairing, THIS DAY ( Wednesday), at Five o'Clock. PRESIDENT. Col. KNYVETT LEIGHTON. VICE- PRESIDENTS. E. W. SMYTHE OW EN, Esq. ROBERT BURTON, jun. Esq. TO THIL WORTHY AND INDEPENDENT BURGESSES OF THE BOROUGH OF SHREWSBURY. GF. NTI. EMEN, I BEG lo offer you my best Thanks for * the very flattering manner in which you have this day, at a numerous and most respectable assem- blyr, declared me worthy of being again put in nomination as a Candidate for the high honour of representing you in Parliament. The hind recep- tion you have given me induces me to believe that my parliamentary conduct hitherto has met your approval. To the same principles I propose in future to adhere, should you again place me in that enviable fuisl which I have had the honour to fill for the last nine years. The Eiection ' is fixed for Friday next, at Ten o'clock, when I beg the favour of your attendance, and of a continuance of your kind support. I have the honour to remain, Gentlemen, Your faithful and obliged Servant, ROWLAND I! I LL. Shrewsbury, August 3d, 1830. .. II .. 4 2 .. 3 3 .. 2 b. 25 sovs. .. I 1 .. 6 2 .. 2 dr .. 3 dr 4 dr 5 dr GENTLEMEN, T7" 0( 7 hare this day conferred upon me the proudest distinction which an Englishman can receive at the hands of his Fellow- subjects— that of representing you in the great Council of the Nation. Most sincerely do / thank you for this gratifying proof of your confidence in me. Let me assure you that it shall be my earnest endeavour fo prove myself in some degree worthy of it, by faithfully, diligently, and conscientiously discharging the important duties attached lo the Situation in Which yon hate placed me. With feelings of much respect and gratitude, I beg fo subscribe myself. Gentlemen, Your faithful and obliged Friend and Servant, RICHARD JENKINS. Shrewsbury, Aug 2d, 1830. WANTED, as an ASSISTANT in the TEA and GROCERY TRADE, a. respectable Youth of good Address, and who has had soiiie Utile Experience behind a Counter; also tin active t. iiif well- educated Youth as an APPRENTICE, W III) whom a Premium will he expected, as he will he t. reated- in every Respect as one of the Family.— Apply ( if by Letter, Post paid) to PBAKE and Co. Tea- Dealers, Salop. 3d AUGUST, 1830. with 1 I 2 2 3 dr Ou Friday, July 30th, the Castle Stakes of 5 sovs. each, 2f> sovs. added by the Right Hon. Viscount Clive. Mr. Thome's b. h. Worcester, 4 yrs. - Mr. Pce's b. m. Flora, 4 yrs old - - - Mr Stubbs's ch. m. by Treasurer - . .. The Tally ho Stakes of 5 sovs. each, in a Silver Clip, value 30 sovereigns Mr. Stubbs names b. m by My las, 6 yrs. old - - It Capt. Oakeley's oh. m. Bridesmaid, 6 yrs. -- 22 Two drawn- Forced Handicap was won by Mr. Thorne's b. h. Wor cester, beating'Bishop, Little Harry, and Treasurer Mare, at 3 heats. COUNTY NOMINATION. TO THE WORTHY & INDEPENDENT OF BISHOP'S- CASTLE. GENTLEMEN, f j/ E Return yoa our very sincere Thanks for the honour you have done us this day in Electing us your Representatives in Parlia- ment. The cordiality and unanimity which accom- panied your choice, has rendered it doubly gratify- ing, and it shall be our earnest Endeavour to prove that we are not unworthy of it, by zealously and steadily devoting ourselves to the public Duties of our Station, as well as to the particular Interests of this ancient and respecial) e Borough.. We are, Gentlcmeb, With, great Truth, Your obliqed and faithful Servants, EDWARD ROGERS, F. H. CORNEWA LL. Bishop's Castle, 31st July, 1830. TO THE 1NDEPENDLIST ELECTORS OF T 1* 1 E BOROUGH Of SHREWSBURY. The High Sheriff ( Rowland Hunt, Esq.) having appointed yesterday, at 12 o'clock, as tbe time of meeting for the nomination of two fit and proper persons to represent this County in Parliament, a numerous anil most respectable body of freeholders assembled in the County Hall for that purpose ; and the High Sheriff opened the business of the day in the usual form. Sir ANDREW CORKF. T, Bart, then rose and said— " Mr. High Sheriff and Brother Freeholders,— I consider myself fortunate iu having for a second time to propose to your notice as a Candidate for the high honour of representing this important County in Parliament, a gentleman whom in my very conscience 1 believe to be worthy of it.. On the first occasion of our committing to bis hands the sacred trust, we relied upon the character of the gallant family to which lie belongs, we required a continuation of the public spirit for which the family has so long been distinguished. Gentlemen, have we been disap pointed ? May I not now appeal to the individual merits of the Candidate in question ? Does not the experience of nine years'service justify our reliance on his attention to our claims, on his zeal for our interests, and on his unremitting constancy at Ihe post to which his duty shall call him ? Gentlemen, in the confident anticipation of a favourable reply, I beg to propose as one of our Representatives in Parliament, Sir Rowland Hill ."—( Great cheering. J E. W. SMYTHE OWEN, Esq. iu seconding the nomination made hy Sir Andrew Corbet, said, the manly, honest, and independent manner in which Sir Rowland Hill had already fulfilled the trust reposed in him, showed how much he regarded the best interests and Ihe genera] welfare and independence of his country ; and was their best assurance that he would use his continued endeavours to maintain un- diminished their dearest privileges and the Constitu- tion of the Empire. Sir ROWLAND HILL, Bart, then said— ' " Mr. High Sheriff and Gentlemen,— The avowal of my intention of again offering myself as one of your representatives lias been received with such a degrpe of kindness, that 1 cannot sufficiently express my gratitude, antl has given me the full assurance that my Parliamentary conduct has justly been attributed to upright motives. To the principles I have hitherto acted upon I shall strictly adhere, and should I be reinstated in that high situation to which your good- will has raised me on two former occasions, 1 shall earnestly endeavour to prove myself worthy of your confidence by conscientiously discharging the duties of the trust reposed in mc ; and however inferior I may be in point of ability to many others, I have not yielded to any member of the British Senate in anxiety to promote the interests aud prosperity of our country. 1 most sincerely thank you for your attendance on this occasion ; and relying, as 1 trust I may, on a continuance of your favours, I respectfully solicit the honour of your support on the day of election." The Hon. and Rev. RICHARD NOEL HILL, in a brief address, nominated John Cresseft Pelham, Esq ; which nomination was seconded by the Rev. HENRY BURTON, senior. Mr. I'M, HAM said, the independent manner in tvhieh it had been permitted to him to follow tbe dictates of his own mind as to the measures )> rought forward in Parliament, made it unnecessary for him to explain what had been his conductin Parliament or the motives by which he had been actuated, and more particularly so as lie was addressing those who were so well able to appreciate that conduct and those motives ; and he trusted that lie had not proved unworthy of the confidence reposed in him. He wished not to refer to the past, but as a lesson for the future; and in adverting to those disastrous tunes when our blood and treasure were poured out, to preserve our dearest rights and privileges, anil which had brought npon us a debt which in honour we were bound to pay, he felt proud that he should go to Parliament from a county able and willing to bear their part of the burden. He was at all times anxious to promote prudence in public expenses, and not only prudence as regarded public money, but also to promote those measures which enforced prudence, and induced trust anil confidence in public men. These were, indeed, duties which could be performed individually, and had been so performed by many in the county which lie had the honour to represent. He should have another opportunity of addressing tbe Freeholders, when it would be their pleasure either to consummate the work which they had now commenced, or to send him back lo the situation of an humble freeholder; and he should therefore now conclude by expressing bis thanks for the kind and honourable manner in which his humble efforts had been received generally by the inhabitants of this county. The several addresses were received with accla- mation ; and the show of hands was unanimous in favour of Sir Rowland Hill and Mr. Pelham. Thanks were then voted to the High Sheriff, and Ihe meeting adjourned.— The Election will take place ou Friday next. EVAN RICHARDS, Nephew &. Successor to the late Mr. Henry Richards), VETERINARY" SURGEON, fN returning his sincere Acknowledgments for the many Favours bestowed upon his late Uncle during" a Practice of upwards of' Tbiify- five Years, begs to assure his numerous Friends and the Public, that, in soliciting the Continuance of iheir Support* he will spare no Exertion to deserve their Patronage ; aud as, in his own Practice of Thirteen Years, dining the greater Part of which Time the principal Management of his late Uncle's extensive Business has devolved upon himself, he can, he trusts, appeal to those by whom lie has been consulted in the various Departments of his Profession for Testimonials of his Competency, he the more confidently relies upon the renewed Encouragement of their Patronage, which he now respectfully solicits, and which it shall ever he his most auxiot.* s Endeavour to deserve* DOG POLK, SHREWSBURY, JULY 27, 1830. E. HICKMAN, Member of the London Veterinary College, AND VETERINARY SURGEON m/ TOST respectfully 1. T JL Thanks to his numero TO TUB SOUTH SALOPIAN RBOIMGNT OF YEOMANRY CAVALRY, begs Leave to return roiis Friends for the liberal Support he has experienced since his Commencement iu Business, and tuists, by a diligent Attention to the Duties of his Profession, he shall merit a Continuance of those Favours which it. will at all Times hie his Study to deserve. N B— E. II. having received his Qualifications from the College, with olher Testimonials, flutters him. velf he is equally capable of practising the Vete- rinary Art with those Students who have not been so fortunate astoohiain their Diplomas. SWAN HILL, JULY 29,1830. JOSEPH CLAY, JUN. VE 7 ' Ell IN Jill Y SURGEON, micnx, Member of Ihe Royal Veterinary College, London, and Fellow of the London Veterinary Medical Society, EGS Leave to inform the Nobility and O Gentry of SHREWSBURY & its Vicinity, that, iu Consequence of the Solicitation of many respectable Families, lie is induced tosettleiu SHREWSBURY, and has made his Arrangements accordingly. He has for ihe last Thirteen Years past had the Management of his Father's very extensive Practice, and hopes, by unremitting Attention, to give that Satisfaction lo his Friends which he trusts will ensure hiui a Share of their Patronage and Support, lo which his utmost Endeavour will be entirely devoted. N. B. For ihe present Letters'addressed to h'rm at the Raven Hotel, Shrewsbury, will meet with imme- diate Attention. WBM, 27TH JULY, 1830. GENTLEMEN, A crept my grateful 1 hanks for the high honour you hare done me in again electing me to represent you in Parliament. I shall endeavour to deserve your confidence by a firm adherence to those independent but moderate Principles which / have always professed ; by promoting, well- con- sidered and useful Reforms—— urging necessary Retrenchment—- and endeavour in g, sedulously, to improve the Condition aitd add to the Happiness of the Working Classes. It will give me pleasure io co- operate with the Gentleman whom you have ela ted as my Colleague, in every effort to advance your public or local Interests ; and from the high Personal Character which he has obtained, / have no doubt of receiving his cordial assistance. To those invaluable independent. Men who volun- teered their active unpaid Services in conducting our Cause, I return my honest acknowledgments. The struggle being over) it is my hope that all animosity, or undue warmth on account of difference of opinion, will cease; and that neighbours will again become friends— so will those around us admire our firmness in the Contest, and oxiv modera- tion in Success. It shall be my Endeavour so to conduct myself a? to shew that I never forget a Supporter or remember an Opponent. I remain, Gentlemen, Your faithful and grateful friend, ROBT. A. SLANEY. Shrewsbury, August 3d, 1830. ' PHE Lord Bishop of St. Asaph intends a holding an ORDINATION in the Cathedral Church of Saint ASAPH, on Sunday, the 3d Day of October next. The Candidates are required to transmit all their Papers complete l< » the Bishop on or before Sunday, the 4th Day of September next. » ST. ASAPH, 2d August, 1830. TO THE WORTHY AND INDEPENDENT BURGESSES OF THE Town & Liberties of XVenloclc. GENTLEMEN, ri % HE Honour which you have this Day so unanimously conferred upon me has deeply impressed my mind with the sense of your uniform, kindness toirards ihe and my Family, and demands my most grateful thanks. Being now elected for a third time one of the Representatives in Parliament of your important Franchise, I beg to assure you that my endeavours shall not be wanting to discharge diligently and faithfully the trust you have committed to nic, nor shall any opportunity be lost sight of by embracing which 1 may be enabled to promote your prosperity and happiness. J remain, Gentlemen, Your obliged and faith fid Servant, GEORGE CECIL WELD FORESTER. Willey Park, 30th July, 1830. BOROUGH OF BRIDGNORTH. 4 T a Meeting of the Committee for eon- OL ducting the Election of THOMAS WHITMORB, Esquire, held at the Committee Room in Biidgnorth, on Wednesday, ihe - 28th Day of July, 1830, in Refer- ence to the .. Resolutions made by the Committee of Ricbprd Arkw right, Esq on the 27th Instant. ft reus Resolved, Thai this Committee denies the Existence of any Coalition between Thomas Whitmore and William Wolryche VVh< iuiore, Esqu res. That this Committee admits that in one or two Instances the same . Agen.) has been retained by Thomas Whitinore and by Win Wolryche Whit more ; but it is also a Fact, that in other Instances the same Agent is retained hy Thomas Whitinore aud hy Richard Arkwright, Esquires, and that a Coalition may from that Circumstance be charged to exist between ' Thomas- Whitmore and Richard Arkwright with as much Reason as between Thomas Whitmore and William Wolr. vche Whit more. That they also fully admit that many Members of this Committee are friendly also to the Return of Mr. Wolryche Whitmore, but they deny that Coalition can be assumed from that Circumstance, as they consider their second Votes at full Liberty; and they, in com- mon with a great Majority of their Fellow- Tovinsmen, prefer the Return of two neighbouring Gentlemen, from Whom and whose Families this Tovvu and Neigh- bourhood have for a Series of Years received the greatest Benefits to that of any Gentleman residing in a distant County, and entirely unconnected* with this Neighbourhood. : That the Supposition that the Borough of Bridg- Morth can by Possibility become a Family Borough lie eels no Refutation, when it is considered that there arennany Hundred Burgesses distributed through every Part of the Kiigdom entitled to vote, and that the-. Corporation admit into their Body every Person who applies for his Freedom, on Pay ment of a small Fine. That although it happens that the two Mr. Whit- mores are related, yet they arc the Representatives of two distinct Families, and enjoy two distinct and unconnected Estates; Thomas Whit more being the Representative of the old and respected Family of that Name, and William Wolryche Whitmofe of the Wolryche Family. THIS DAY IS PUBLISHED, PRICE 2s. ASERMON preached at the Visitation held in the Parish Church of Saini Chad, Shrewsbury, on the 29th June, 1830, before the Venerable Edward Bather, M. A. Archdeacon, ahd the Reverend the Clergy of the Deanerv of Salop, bv the Rev. RICHARD COR FIELD, M A Redo, of Pitchford and Upton Parva, iu the County of Salop, and Chaplain to the Right Hon. the Eai; l of . Liverpool. Shrewsbury: Printed and Sold hy \ V, and J. EoDOvvfes, Corn Market. SIR. llEIiVE, Proprietor of the Automaton Artist, fT^ AKES the Liberty of informing the Nobility and Gentry of-. Shrewsbury, that he has received from London an autheiHie Likeness of His Most Gracious Majesty WILLIAM THE FOURTH, taken from Life two Years ago ; ^ JapiHjif vvjiieb bti had; at the Exhibition Room, at Mr. Criimp. k Mal dol Head, between the Hours of T ing and Eight in the Evening. Terms, in Black, from One Shilling ( Frame in cluded); in Colours, fidiii 10s. ( Jd. to 20 Guineas ( Frames, &<;.) rttipplvon. s, in ( lie Morn- MEDICAL MP PRENTICE. .^ MEDICAL Gentleman, in extensive L m. Practice iu the Country, wishes to take an APPRENTICE. A moderate Premium will be ex- pected. Apply lo THE PRINTFRS ; if by Letter, Post- paid. TO LAND SURVEYORS. VV ANTED, an experienced Person * • ( conversant in the Welsh Language) who is able and competent to value and equalize ihe Poor Rates of that Part of the Parish of Llanrhaiadr yn Vlochnant which is in the County of Montgomery. A Vestry will be held oil the ltiih of Auonxi next, when the Candidates are requested to deliver their Proposals. DATED THE 2fifn OF JULY, 1830. J. P. CARE. SWELL BEG^ respect fully to inform his Friend; and the Public, thiit he has commenced litis! ness at the I RON BR 1 l)( iE, ns GROCER & TEA DEALER; nnd hopes, by Punctuality und keeping g. itul Articles, to huve a Share of their Favours, a I st July, IK30. n sell TO BE SOLD, stNGLF.- ACTTONF. N PEDAL HARP Price 20 Guineas — Apply to R. OVVBN, tluok Welch Pt. nl. Pitttio Fortes for Stile or Hire, Miisicnl 1 tistrittttruts of every Description supplied at the Manufacturer's Prices. NOTICE- rg^ IIE MEETING held at the Cross JL ICeys, in Oswestry, on the 14th lift, respecting tlie TITHE HAY of'the Parish of St. Martins, having bee'n adjourned to the 18th Instant, it is particularly requested that every Landowner or his Aoent. will attend there on that Day, at FJeven o'Clock in ihe Forenoon; since the said Meeting other Documents of ihe greatest Consequence have been found, and it is proposed that au Agreement be entered into by the Landowners to contribute iheir Propoilious, according to their Property in the Parish, towards the Expenses of investigating them, aud for other Purposes. AUGUST 2d, 1830. ROBERT WILDING, GROCER. TEA DEAJL32B., 8cc, COR N - M A R K Et, SH REWSBV R Y, Agent to Messrs.- Fribourg S>- Trcyer, Tobacconists to His Majesty, RESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCES THAT HE ha « received from that celebrated House a fresh Supply of the following Genuine Articles: — His Majesty's Mixture Duke of Cambridge's Lord flill's Lord Petersham's Colonel Norcop's Old Paris Fa con de Paris Bolongaro Bureau Bureau Gros Etreune MR. C. JONES, SURGEON- DENTIST, 2- 2, WHITE FRIARS, CHESTER, ( Late Levason and Jones, J FSPBCTFUI. I. Y announces to Itis Patrons, ihnt he is uoiv iu Shrewsbury, at M r. WUITR'S, Upholsterer, Wyle Cup, and will remain till Saturday next, the 7th of August; during which Time he nitty be consulted ( as usual) on till Cases of Denial Surgery and Mechanism. Kj Natural, Artificial, and Incorruptible Teeth, & c. as usual. *** Mr. LEVASON. having disposed of the above Establishment to Mr. Jones, and now practising ut his Residence, ti' 2, Gower Street, Bedford Square, Lon- don, respect full v requests that nil Accounts tine lo hint or the lute Finn tutiy be paid to Mr. JONKS, who will continue to attend in Salop every Aloulh for a Week, coiuUtenciiig the ( irst Monthly in eticli Calendar Moti lb. N. B. Mr. J. will revisit Ludlow on Monday, the 9il> of August, and may l. e consulted as usual on thul iiml following Days, till Friday, the 13th, in all Cases relative to his Profession," AUGUST ' 2, 1830, SHROPSHIRE ASSIES. • ' . • iui. V 27' Tll, Istni. JYOTRCE ts HEREHY GIVEN, that Ihe ASSIZES for the tCUNTY of SALOP will be held at SHREWSBURY, in and for life said (' aunty, on. SA TI I' IK! YJ the fth Day of/ ftigujit, IH30, ROWLAND HUNT, E^, Sh. rff. . N. B. The Business will commence at Ten o < lock- on Monday Morning, the 9th of AugiM, in h. ith Courts;, at . which Hour the Gentlemen of the Grantj Jury are requested, to attend. Tbe fiehtli- men of the ( omnioji Juries must be . in Attendance at Niir o'Clock. • brB'- tctton. (•' enleel Fnrnilure, I'icuio Fortes, Bai--- rel Orr/ an, Eineti, Cliinci, Cila'ss, and olher Household Efj'e'cisl BY MiTTERRY, On Ihe Premises, on Monthly t) lid Tuesday,' the lfili and I7.1. I1 i. f. Auuiisl, 183( 1; rg^ HF entire and yalinilile HOUSEHOLD H FURNITlHlE of i. lle lute Mr III :< « y ICicHARtt « , in DOGPOLE, Shrewsbury, which prise Fourpnst and other Bedstnids., iyiih Murine mill Chintz l. l- H'K- injjs, Go. ise feather beds, Multrnsses, int. I Bed Cloihee, Miihogany Secretary, Wardrobe, I liesls of . Drapers, finsin Stands, Sets of Cliuinb. r IVnre, KIH'III Table., Swing Classes, Linen Chests; iti. nl otlti r Chuuiher Arlictes, Mali.. gaily Sitjehnard; Dining, Pembroke, Pillar, and Card Tables, Parl- ur Chairs, Sofu and Couch, Pier Glasses, Barrel Cil'ifUii, . Pimm Porte bv Clemenli, Prints of (. old 11) 11 anil Unities uf. Waterloo, Vittnl'. ia, itt'td Pyrenees, coloured Print , iif Mr. Corbel I Fox hounds, Brussels tilid other Flhof and Bed Carpels, transparent Painted Blinds ttnil folding Shinies, and other Articles appropriate to Drawing Room, Parlour, nnd OHice, a Itirjje Kitchen Cupboard w ith Drawers and an Eitrbi- Duv Cluck in the Centre, another wit haul Clock,. Oak and. F. lt'i. T. nbl es and Chair*, Capital laryp Tin Ifasteuer, Copper am! Tijt Stew Ptitis, and other Culinary Vessels, Linen, Press, See. Glass Decanters, two Sets of Liquor Bullies, Castors, Wine nail Reer Glasses, Cliihn Tea. Break', fast, and Dessert Sets, Dinner and comiiiou Stafford Ware, Plilied Goods, a. few Boo'is, IF Pair of Sheets, und other Linen, Sic. & c. Catalogues v. ill lie dispersed in Ihe Tow n, and niav be had at Mr. PFKRV'S Office, Pride Hill. wmm win* MR. C. CRAWCOUR, • SU RG EON- DENTIST, Of the Old Establishment of Messrs, Crawcour and Brothers, No. 8, BRUNSWICK HOUSE, COMMERCIAL ROAD EAST, LONDON, AS the Honour to announce to tlie Mobility, Clergy, and Gentry of Shrewsbury and ils Vicinity, that he is arrived in this Town"; where be will remain for a short Time, mil) may be consulted as usual in all Cases| of Deficiencies of the Teeth, & c. kc. See. from Ten lill Fotir o'clock each Day, at Mr. EDGEHI. EV'S, Stationer, Raven Slreet. DA SIT COACH. Cheap, safe, and expeditions Travelling Jrom Shrewsbury to London. ' SPUR Proprietors of the OA UT lie^ to S return their most grateful Thanks lo the Public for the very liberal Support they have experienced since the Commencement of their Coach to Ludlow ; and beg to inform them, that it will continue running every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday Mornings, at Half- past Five o'Clock, Iroin the Elephant and Castle, Mardol, Shrewsbury, by Way of Church Stretion, Craven Arms, Anjjel Inn, Ludlow r Leominster, Brom- yard, Worcester, Tewkesbury, Cheltenham, Whitney, Oxford, High Wycombe, Green Man aud - Still. Oxford Street, and to the Blossom Inn, Lawrence Lane, London. Early next Morning the D A RT " ill return ( by the same Route), ami arrive at Shrews- bury early on Tuesday, Thursday, srud Saturday Evenings, iu Time to meet the Holyhead, Chester, Manchester, Liverpool, and Stafford Coaches, and likewise Coaches lo all Parts of the Kingdom. N. B. Passengers and Parcels booked throughout to any of the above Places. The Proprietors pledge themselves to conduct this Establishment with that Spirit and Respectability thai eanuol fail meeting ihe Approbation and Support o the Public, the Traveller, and the Gentleman through whose Domain the Coach runs. Performed hv the Public's most obedient Servant, ISAAC SPROSTON. 2d Auousr, 1830. Corderoy French Carotte Strashurg a la Violette Dieppe Cuba Black & fcrown Rappees St. Domingo Martinique. Hardam s No 27 Spanish Sabilla Macouba Lnndyfoot and Co.' s, & e Real Havannah Cigars, made by Woodville and, Cabana ; Fine- flavoured Plain and Straw Cigars of all Sorts ; Turkish, Do ch, aud all other Fancy Tobaccos. Also, High- dried Welsh or I. lancrc. hymedd Snuff. Au Apprentice wanted who will be treated as one of the Family. MARKET HSXtALD. SHREWSBURY, lit our Market, on Saturday last, the price of Hides was 4d. per lb.— Calf Skins 5d.— Tallow 3d. Wheal, ( 38qts.) I2s. 4il. to ISs. fid. Barley (: t8qts.) 0s. Od. to 0s. Oil. Oats( 57qts.) Gs. Od. to 7s. 4d. Average Price of Corn in the Week ending July 23, 1S30. Wheat .7is. 8d. I Oats 29s. 2.1. I'tarley ......:> is. Id. | Beans ,.-.. 32S. Id. I . UN I It IN CORN EXCHANGE, AUGUST 2. Iu consequence of the rain this morning the decline in Ihe price of wheat has been checked, and lite prices are nominally friveu ns on Monday last, as there is scarcely any business doing. The letters from York- shire state that a great deal of rain had fallen there, and that the hat vest would be very backward, probably three weeks. Tire supply of English wheat has been, as usual, very short, but the Foreign continues abundant, and we have a fair supply of Foreign oats. There is some inclination to purchase bonded wheat, but no alteration in price. Oats are raiher advancing, very nearly Is. per quarter. Barley, beatis, and peas are without alteration. Current Price of Grain per Qr. us under :— Wheat 709. Od. to Sis. Od. Barley 2< js. M. to .' 10s. Od. Malt. Ms. Od. to Ms. Oil. White Peas 40s. Od. to 44s. Od. Deans 40s. Oil. to 44s. Od. ' Juts .' S2s. Od. to : itis. Od. Fine Flour ( per sack) 00s. Oil. to 05s. lid. Seconds o5s. Od. to 00s. Od. SMITHF1EI. D. Ill Ihe beef trade tine Scots fetch 3s. Gd. to 4s. per stone, und large meat 3s. to 3s. 6d. Mutton, for the piiuie young Downs, are 4s. to 4s. Gd. aud the coarse meal is 3s to 3s. llhl. Veal, for prime young calves, reaches 5s. and dairy- fed porkers are 4s. to 4s, 42d. Lamb is tit 5s. to 5s. Id. for the Hnefct meat. A T a MEETING of Gentlemen con- /~ JSL nected with the Manufacturing aud Commercial Interests of the Tow ns of Birmingham, Kidderminster, Wolverhampton, Stourbridge, and ihe Iron Trade of Staffordshire and Shropshire, held at Stourbridge, the 14th July, 1830, It was Resolved, That it is of the greatest Importance to the Coin mercial and Manufacturing Interests of the Kingdom, at this particular Period, that Gentlemen should be rertiriled as Members of the House of Commons who are well acquainted with the Interests of those Classes. That the able, assiduous, and unwearied Eftorts of WILLIAM WOLUYCHE WHITMORE, Esq. to open the Trade to • the East Indies and to China, to induce Economy in the Public Expenditure, to lessen Taxa- tion, and to promote the Welfare of the Commercial and Manufacturing Interests of these Kingdoms, and thereby to increase the general Prosperity and Hap- piness of the Empire, entitle him to the utmost Ex- ertions that this Meeting can use on his Behalf! That the Services of this Gentleman to those im- portant and unrepresented Parts of the Community are disinterested antl patriotic, and call upon them to enter into a Subscription to contend with the Opposi- tion offered to his Heturn to Parliament. That the follow ing Gentle- men be appointed a general Committee to carry these Resolutions into Effect, with Power to add to their Number, aud that live be com- petent to act : —. l\? r James Foster, Stourbridge, Mr. Geor « e Jones, . Wolverhampton, Mr. Pearson, Wolverhampton, Mr. Grazebrook, Belle Vue, Hales Oweii, Mr. John II. Bate, Oldswinford, Mr. W. H Sparrow, Wolverhamplon Mr. F. Finch, West Broinwich, IVli\ G. R. Bird, Biimiugham, Mr. John Broom, Kidderminster., Mr. Henry Briuton, Kidderminster, Mr. Watson, Kidderminster, , Mr. Wheeley, Stourbridge, . Mr. Barker, Wolverhampton, Mr. Horlon, Prior's Lee Hall, •/"' jr. Mount ford, Shitfnal, ' ! 7. M r. Darby, Coalbrookdale, Mr. J. F. Ledsam, Birmingham, Mr. p. Ledsam, Birmingham, Mr. Turner, Birmingham, Mr. Chance, Birmingham, Mr. Thoinason, Birmingham, Mr. Orine, Stourbridge, Mr. VV. Foster, Stourbridge, Mr. II. Hunt, West Bromwich, IHiat these Gentlemen do form District Committees to attain the Object of this Meeting— the Re- election of Mr. W. VV. WHITMORB. That Mr. FRANCIS FINCH, of WestbronVwich, be appointed Honorary Secretary to the General Com- mittee; and that all Communications upon the Sub- ject « Vf the Election he addressed to him. That Copies of these Resolutions be sent to the East India Associations of Liverpool, Bristol, Manchester, Glasgow, Leeds, Coventry, Sheffield, and all other Miinufacturino and Commercial Towns in these King- doms, with a Request for their Co- operation, Aid, uud Support to the Object of this Meeting. ; That these Resolutions he Printed and Advertised in the Times and Globe London Newspapers, the Birmi. nghanl, Liverpool, Manchester, Shrewsbury, Worcester, and Wol verhainplou Provincial News- papers. That this Meeting he adjourned to the Hotel, in Dudley, on Wednesday next, at . Four o'Clock pre- cisely, when the Attendance of any Friend to the Re- election of Mr. VV. VV. WHITMTORB is requested. ANODYNE CEMENT. Messrs. CRAWCOUR aud BROTHERS ( lite original Proprietors) assure their Friends and lite Public nt lifge that their unrivalled TER RO. M ET A LI. 1C ANODYNE CEMENT, for slopping ( minus and Tender Teeth, will become iu oue Minnie as hard as tire Tooth itself, so us to make it as serviceable as any olher. Patronized by the Nobility of Great Britain,- Ireland, aud France. Ruyton Lodge and Broom Hill; GROWSN&' CORN* PiY MR. SMITH, ( By Order of the Assignees of Mr. Wir. nat. oor>), nt the New Inn, Nesscliff, in the County of Salop, on Tuesday, the Kith Day of August, 1830, tit Four o'Clock in the Afternoon., iy one or ffiore Lots u^ may be agreed upon at the Tittle of Sale, and sub- ject to Cum) itmiu then to be produced • rjpH E Off- going Tenant's SHARE of a COItV, growing upon RfJYTON LODGE and BROOM Kill, far a is Mr. OiVt'N, of Nesscliff, will appoint a Person to shew the same. OLD HEATH COTTAGE. TO SPECTACLE WEARERS JOHN " DAVIS, OPTICIAN, ( FROM LEEDSJ, Opposite Messrs. Beck and Co.' s Bank, HIGH STREET, ETURNS his most grateful Thanks to the I. tidies and Gentlemen of Shrewsbury and its Vicinity, for the great Palrotiage he has again received, atiil l; egs lo apprise litem, that in Conse- quence of his periodical Eugagetneuts elsew here, he can only stay a shurt Time longer, he therefore earnestly solicits an etirly Inspection of his extensive Collection of Spectacles and Iiistrumenis, consisting of Microscopes of every Description mid Siste, from • 2s. Gtl. to £ 10 ; Magic and Microscope Lanterns, ( this beautiful Itislru. ite. il is capable of affording' a high Degree of I and Instruction, ihe smallest Objects can be tuag- iiified to 2 or 3 Feel high, nnd any Number of Iiiilivitlititls can see tbe Effect trl tbe same Time); Slides in Natural History, Asfruhotny, itc. ; superior Pocket und Aslrouoiiliciil Telescopes of all Sizes; Electrical Machines Mud Apparatus,; Cases of Mathematical Instrument^.; Latching Dials ; Ther- mometers nf all Kinds; beautifully finished Barome- ters, w ith a Variety of other liisttuiiiei'ils. SPKCTACI. BS and Gold and Silver Eye Glasses in great Variety, from Is. Gtl. to £ 5, earefiillv adjusted, I suited lo every Description of Sight ; Instruments repaired and exchanged. Licensed Hawker, 557 B. A Co be ? iet, And entered upon immediately, in mosi coriiplefe Repair, V E RY commodious H OUS E and SHOP, replete , w iih every Fixture, extensive Yard, Cellaring, & c. situated in HIGH STREET, Shrewsbury, lately occupied iu the Woollen Drapery Business. Also, in a short Titffe, the adjoining House, contain- ing a Shop a'nd back Shop ( 45 Feel long)", with Mahogany Counters, & c. & e. lately usfid in the Silk Mercery, Linen, and Carpet Trade. Apply to Mr. VAUGHAN. BY MR. WHITE, On Monday next, August 9lli, 1830, on the Premises, Old Heath Collage, near Shrewsburv, rB^ HE whole of the LIVE STOCK, * Dairy and Brewing Uleusils^ Stack of llav genteel HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, and othVr Effects, of Mr. JOHN CSDTCHI. OE, who has taken tn and removed to Ihe George Inn, Shrewsbury: coin; prising 3 cnpilnl new Milch Cows, 1 Cow and Calf, ' 3 capital yearling lleifets, 2 strung Slor( i I'itfs, sundry small Implements, a Stack of wc. ll. harvested new lltiy , about 21) Tons, it Qinmlily of Manure, various Posts tinti Rails, a Lot of Hurdles, together with the whole of the genteel and nearly new Household Goads itnil Furniture, Dairy anil Brewing lliensiltf ; Particulars of which will be distributed in Catalogues. Stile to contnicuce at Eleven o'clock. ACTON BUR NELL, Ott the BY MR WHITE, Premises, at Acton Bunnell', in the . Ctfjfjvtt of Salop, on Friday,' August 13, 1830; E. whole of the I . IV E STOCK, LV^ rITH1 H PLPiMF. NTS t, r Husbandry, with Part ol the Household FURNITURE,; Brewing, and. Dairy jlti- it. sils, ol the I RITE Mr. CIIAHI. KS t.'.' OVN.' i, deeetVsf. l : consisting. of Four Capital Dairy Cows ro ealf,' f ti'to. yen'r old lleifer,- ' 1 yearling Ditto ( cj- irsiserf from The short- horn Breed), a strong Hack Horse fste'n'if* in Harness), useful Coir Gelding, rising 4 Yeai'tftfrfd, tractable to ride or draw a Gig, Hack Mare, Capital Pon v ; 3 strong St, ore Pigs, Carl, with Ripples, I, Vital. " heel Tumbrel, Plough, Harrows, 3 Sets of llofs'es* Gearing;, See. &. C, Catalogues wilf be prepared anil ilistiihutcd f( Vi- diately. Sale to coininencc positively nt Eleven iii the Morn- ing. ILL r1 RICH AH DS, List of Subscriptions. Persons to whom Mr. HENRY late of SHREWSBURY, ; in the County of Salop, Veterinary Surgeon, deceased stood indebted, are desired to deliver an Account of their respective Derhands at the Office of Mr. J. Bt6rvKRTON WILLIAMS, Solicitor, The Crescent, Shrewsbury ; and those Persons who aie indebted to Mr. Richards's Estate are requested to pay such Debts at the said OIKce immediate! v. j. BICKERTON WILLIAMS, Solicitor to Mr. Richards's Executors. THE CRESCENT, SHREWSBURY, JULY 29, 1S30. WHEREAS been HOUSE AND LAND, BY G. FRANKLIN, At the Brown Heath, in' the Parish of Loppiiigton,- nti Thursday, the 5th Day of August, 1830; at lli$' Buck's Head, in Wem, at Four o'Cloek iu th< i' • Afternoon, subject to Conditions then lo be i> r6- ducked; ' 4 LL that MESSUAGE or Dwelling* L'\ House and Garden, together wtoh t wo: Pieced or Pareels of excellent LAND, containing by Esfimatiofi about ' 2A. 0R. 0P. ( be the same more or less,) situate at the Brown Heath aforesaid, aud now in the Occu- pation 6f Mr. James Price. For further Particulars apply at the Office of Mr. THOMAS DICKIN BROWNE, Solicitor, Wem; oil of THE AUCTIONEER. i. s. fl. James Fosfer ,..,',....; .... 200 0 0 Francis Finch' .... 50 0 0 John Broome .... 51) 0 0 tieiirge Jones .... 50 0 0 Joseph Pearson .... 50 0 0 Richard Watson .... 50 0 0 John Barker .... 20 0 0 Henry Brinton. .... 20 0 0 W. S". Wheeley ...-. 50 0 0 E. Isaac .... 100 0 0 C. Bahhage .... 100 0 0 jiisiiiia Scliolefreld .... 25 0 0 Dawes and Son .... 20 0 0 Thomas Blois Price— .... 25 0 0 W, 11. Sparrow .... 20 0 0 William Chtittee. . v. .... 20 0 0 Birmingham Association for opposing the Rust India Charter...... .... 100 0 0 Thomas Pardoe 10 10 0 Thomas Battcks. ..... 20 0 0 William Poster aiid Ottae 50 0 0 Henry Brudley 20 0 0 Joiltda Sitirge .... 50 0 0 CuHlbrookdalc Co 100 0 0 It. Mopntfurd for Self and Ketley Co. 51) 0 0 Williams, llomhersley, and Poyner... Thomas Jukes Collier and Co 25 0 0 50 0 0 John llurton 10 10 0 D. Ledstitn ..... 20 0 0 .1. F. Ledsam 20 0 0 Parkes and Otlwav. 20 0 11 William Mtirslialf(/., eer/ » ) 50 0 0 B. Golt ( UUlo} 50 0 0 £ 1196 I) 0 various Complaints have made of want of Accommodation to Traders iu the Wharf of the Shrewsbury Canal Navigation, and of the Obstructions given to the landing of Coal there, NOTICE is' hereby given, that a SPECIAL GENERAL ASSEMBLY of tt. e Company of Proprietors of the sard Shrewsbury Canal Navigation, will be held at the Raven Inn, HI Shrews- bury, on THURSDAY, ihe Nineteenth Day of August, at Twelve of the Clock iu the Forenoon, for the Pur- pose of considering the above Subject, aud for framing such Bye- Laws, for the more convenient Occupation of the said Wharf and Basin and the Regulations of the Traders using the said Wharfs and Basins of the said Canal, as- to the Meeting shall seem expedient. PHILIP CHARLTON* JOHN BATHER, WILLIAM BAY LEY, JOSEPH SUTTON, THOMAS DU GARD. Shrewsbury, August 3d, 1830. ^ g^ HE Creditors who have proved their JL Debts under a Commission of Bankrupt, bearing Date at Westminster the 18lh Dav of December, 1829, against THOMAS PACKWOOD, of WELSH- POOL, in the County of Montgomery, 1 nukeeper, may receive ihe first DIVIDEND of Three Shillings and Four Pence in the Pound on the Amount of their respective Debts, on Application to Messrs. HAUOHTON and ROBERTS, Bull Street, Birmingham, any Day between the Hours of 10 nnd 3. II. M. GRIFFITHS, Solicitor to' the Assignees, 3, Waterloo Street, Birmingham. ALBRIGHTON HALL. BY DANtEL BRIGHT, Oil Monday nnd Tuesday, the ltilli ami t/ tli toys of August, 1830 ( under Distiess for Renf); » LL the LIVESTOCK, Implements, l\ Household GOODS & FURNITURE, Brewing and Dairy Vessels, Casks, Linen, Ch'in'n, Glass, Ate. belonging to Ihe Representatives of the late Mr. EI. SMBRS.— Pariiynbirs i'oou'r next, YQCKLETON PARK,' About Forty Acres of excellent Grous- ing Wheat, to go off the Premises. BY MRTBROOME, Oil Tuesday, the 101 Ii Day of August, 1830, at the Rrilanuia Inn, Shrewsbury ; Ft V E F1E LDS of excellent W H EAT, growing tin Yocktei. oii Park Farm, six Miles from Shrewsbury upon the Road lending for West, bury, in Five Lois, or in suCli Lots as shall be agreed upon at Ibe Time of Sale. Tlie Sale'lo take place precisely al Eleven o'Cloek in the Morning. Mr THOMAS Nicor. i. s, of Yockleton, will appoint a Person to shew the Wheat. Rmrion Estate and Corn Tithes, WITH THE MANOR OP ROWTON, SITUATE NEAR THE CRAVEN ARMS, On the Road from Shrewsbury to Ludlow, - 21 Miles from Ihe former aud 8 fioni the littler. OTlCE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the GENERAL ANNUAL MEETING of the Trustees of the Wenlock Turnpike Roads, in ihe County of Salop, will be held at the Red Lion hin, iu Broseley, on Wednesday, the First Day of September next, at Eleven o'Cloek in the Forenoon1, lo audit the Accounts, See. HIRAM IIARTSIIO ItN F,, Clerk to the Trudees. BnosEi. EY, AUG.. 2, 1830. BY MR. BROOME, At the Craven Arms, on Tuesday, llie 24th Day of August, 1830, precisely ut ( t'oiir o'clock iu the Afternoon, subject to such Cutiduions us situ! I iu< then produced ; ' g> HE MANOR of ROWTON, with tvH £ t> at very valuable FREEHOLD PROPERTY, consisting ot a good Farm House and Oothllililini•. with an excellent Garde t, . Orchard, itnd iibnni i7"> Acres of rich Arable, Meadow, and I'aslllre Laiul, free of Corn Tithes ; also the CORN Ti l II ES nl. the adjoining Farm, consisting of I'io' Acres; likewise it good Collage mid three Gardens; with ti Quantity of very thriving young Timber growing thereon. For timber Particular apply to Mr. ONIONS, upon Ihe Premises ; Mr. Wn, MAMS. Solicitor, Ludlow ; ' or THE AOCTIONEBR, Church Siretioa. t SALOPIAN JO. UBKAL* AND CQUlilEE OF WALES. BEPLY O/ IIis Majesty King William the Fourth to fhe Address ofthe Dean and Canons of Windsor, presn. t d io him in Windsor Castle, July 16, 1830. TNIr. Dean and Canons of my free Chapel of Si. George^ J thank yon t'of this dutiful and loyal Address; and 1 participate most cordially and sincerely with you, iu the deep regret which yon have so pro- perly aud feelingly expressed for the loss of col- late most excellent and lamented Sovereign my dearly heloved aud never to- be. forgotten brother. Amongst the many proofs of regard and affection conferred upon me by my Iule revered Father George the Third, for which 1 feel the deepest litatitOde; there is not one to which I am bound to attach a higher value than the education he bestowed upon nic, which has enubled me to obtain a p ' culiar knowledee of tbe British charac- ter, to appreciate justly the advantages of our Constitution, nnd to acquire habits strictly con lormable to those principles w hich constitute the strength and glory of these realms, and upon which Ihe prosperity of its valuable institutions mainly rests. 1 rejoice in being the son of that revered Mo liarch, in having bad the opportunity of benefitting liy llie example of my excellent father and deeply regretted brother. 1 establish myself in this Castle, which has been the residence of the Sovereigns of this country from the earliest periods of its glorious annals; and I do so with the proud feelings that 4 am an Englishman, and that 1 OccUpy a palace which the munificence and liberal ity of my people have rendered fit for Ihe monarch ofthe greatest country in the world, and where I feel proud of being at the head of the most Honourable and most Noble Order of fhe Garter. Gentlemen, 1 assure you, collectively aud indi- vidually, and I pledge myself to you, from the bottom of my heart, that 1 am prepared and deter- mined to support and uphold the reformed religion as by law established in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and to maintain unim- paired these blessings inherent in the Constitution of this country, of which I am become the guardian. I feel that il is to the principles ofthe Reforma- tion that this country is indebted, under the blessing of God, for its present elevated station ol happiness, splendour, and glory; and 1 look back with satisfaction, and prior to that period which preceded tbe immediate conneexion of the House of Hanover with the sovereignty of these realms, when my ancestors boldly and manfully stood up for the same principles. I have now only to add my satisfaction that the care of maintaining these valuable objects, as more Immediately connected with this Royal residence, is intrusted to the respectable body whose Ad- dress 1 have this day received. REVIEW IN HYDE PARK. From the publicity given announcing liis Majesty's intention of reviewing the household and other troops, villi a brigade of artillery, in Ilyde Park, on Monday, morning, crowds of people began to collect as early as ten o'clock. The day was particularly propitious For the sight, the strn lending a splendour to the polished cuirasses of the Life Guards, and the glit- tering bayonets of the infantry*, and the multitude . assembled were immense. We doubt whether ever tournament, in the days of chivalry, when Knight met Knight in the tented field, attracted so many spectators. For full two hours ere the review com- menced, Piccadilly, Grosvenor- street, and Oxford- street presented a bustling mass of human beings anxiously pressing forward to the spot. The Borough and Lambeth poured forth a stream of people over " Westminster- bridge, the City and the northern parts of the metropolis lent their portion to swell tbe tide which flowed onward towards the attracting point. The western outskirts were not wanting in their tri- butary ctirfenfs. Numbers of the gentle sex, ill- fitted to undergo the fatigues even of a review day, with a burning sun over head, almost as scorching as is experienced within the tropics, left their homes to witness the dazzling splendours; and, from their joy- lit counte- nances,- as the troops marched by in cadence to the martial music, it was obvious that they considered the sight, with all its concomitant troubles, cheaply earned. The ground was kept hy the 9th Lancers. We overheard an old infantry serjeant telling his comrade that this duty would have been better executed had it been intrusted to troops more accustomed to London duties. Certain it is that several persons, among whom were women, felt the inconvenience of a horse's hoof. One female was carried away, severely injured in the foot, in a fainting condition. It ought, however, to be stated that the crowd forced their way beyond the boundary lines, although repeatedly cau- tioned hy the soldiers and police. There were, it is said, 500 policemen on duty in the patk, under their conductors and inspectors; among the latter were several who wore Waterloo medals, obtained at that memorable victory. Besides several booths which were erected in the vicinity of Cumberland- gate, crowded with spectators, who had paid liberally for the accommodation, the windows and roofs of the houses, from Hyde- park- corner to the upper end of Oxford- street, were occu- pied with company viewing the animating scene at that distance. The trees along the same line, within the park, had likewise their guests; indeed so nume- rous wer « the visitors under the shady canopy, that branches, too heavily laden, as with fruit, bent under the superincumbent weight; or, as the snow, sliding from the overburdened tree, so did several spectators gently descend from the lower branches to the ground, without, any serious inconvenience. We regret, how- ever, to add, that in another part of the park a poor man fell from a lofty branch of a tree, and was killed. Numerous were the slighter casualties; such as bruised limbs and injured feet. When the review had terminated, within a little clump of trees, near the statue of Achilles, a crowd was reposing, stretched upon the grass, shielded from the rays of the sun, and enjoying themselves by partaking of refreshment which they had prudently supplied. A gentleman, on passing these groups, jocularly said to bis friends, calling their attention to the circumstance, " Behold an oasis in the desertJ" The troops were pn the ground, ready to receive liis Majesty, at ten o'clock. The whole were under the command of Gen. Viscount Combermere, who accompanied the King, and both of whom were dis- mounted, surrounded by their numerous staff officers The King of Wurtemburg, Prince, George of Cumber- hud, Prince Frederick of Prussia ( we believe), and the Duke of Sussex, were near his Majesty during the whole of the review, which occupied about two hours. The cavalry were formed into brigades, under tbe command of General Sir Hussey Vivian, and the( , infantry into two brigades, under Major- Gen era I M'Donncll, one of the latter brigades being under Colonel Woodford ; the other under Colonel Clitheroe. — rThcre was likewise a brigade of artillery. The ground was so limited that it was impossible for so numerous a body of troops to execute any regular manoeuvre. The following are the troops which were engaged in the review:— Two troops of Horse Artillery, with three guns each ; two batteries of Foot Artillery, with three guns each; commanded by Colonel W'ebbcr Smith. The cavalry consisted of the 1st and 2d Life Guards; the Royal Horse Guards ( Blue); the 14th Light Dragoons ; and the 9th Lancers. The infantry consisted of the 1st, 2d, and 3d battalions of the Grenadier Guards; the 2d battalion of the Cold- stream ; and the 1st and 2d battalions of the 3d Guards. Tbe troops were formed in close column of quarter distance, and saluted his xMajesty on his taking up his position. They then marched round in slow and quick time, in divisions of companies & troops, opening their ranks, and saluting as they passed the King. The cavalry then passed in files of three deep, whilst the infantry in the rear formed line. As soon as the cavalry had concluded they formed into columns on the left, whilst the infantry marched up in slow time in open order. On the centre reaching within a short distance ofthe royal station, the whole line was halted, and presented arms, lowering the colours of the respective regiments. They then shouldered arms, closed ranks, and faced to the right about, and formed into solid squares of regiments, to receive the attack of cavalry. The cavalry, which had been formed into grand divisions whilst the in- fantry were retreating, now advanced, and passed through the intervals thus caused by the infantry forming into solid squares. The cavalry then de- ployed info line, and advanced, taking up the ground which the infantry had previously held, and saluted his Majesty, the colours being lowered, and the bands playing the first, part of the national anthem. The artillery now fired a salute. By this time the infantry in the rear had deployed into line from close column of grand divisions, and ordered arms. The different aides- de- camp were then directed fo inform the officers commanding the respective brigades, that his Majesty was highly satisfied with the soldier- like ap- pearance ofthe troops. An order \ ias then given for the regiments to march off the ground. As soon as it was known that the review was con- cluded, the crowd near Cumberland- gate rushed in and broke the line of constables and soldiers. In a few minutes the whole of the interior was occupied by spectators to the first rank of the cavalry, who had now dismounted. The multitude that watched afar, Rejected from the ranks were, now allowed fo take possession of that portion of the ground which had been allotted to persons who had the privilege of standing aloof during the review, unmolested by soldiers and police on the one hand, ahd tbe crowd on the other, In this part, which was a strip of gronnd extending the whole length of one side of the square, in which the evolutions were per formed, many officers in uniform, w ho had no com- mand* were seen; and the wives, and daughters, and friends of military men. The Queen was in a carriage at fhe rear of his Majesty's staff, and had a complete view of the im- posing sight. The Duke of Cumberland, the Duke of Gloucester, and the Duke of Wellington, were each at the head of their respective regiments, taking part in the military movements, as colonels only, and not in their high - characters as Field Marshals. It was expected that the infantry would have fired ; but that was not the case, and many were somewhat dis- appointed. The crowd finding the review was concluded, com- menced retreating to the different outlets from the park, which were literally choaked up with persons anxious to quit the place The supplies of porter were drawn upon to a considerable extent, at all the public- houses withinthe route of the gratified visitors, who passed homewards; wearied, probably, but satis- fied with the magnificence ofthe sight. His Majesty, accompanied by the Queen, visited Apsley House, as soon as the review was over, its noble proprietor having quitted the ground in time to receive them. A splendid collation was prepared, and a large party of nobility were invited to meet the royal visitors, among whom were the principal of his Majesty's ministers. A portion of the multitude on quitting tbe park, through the gateway, remained opposite the Duke of Wellington's, in the hope of being gratified with a sight of the King and Queen, and were not disappointed. Her Majesty presented herself on the balcony, being handed from the centre window by the Duke of Wellington, and was received with loud acclamations. She wore a mourning dress, and a white crape bonnet trimmed with black. On retiring his Majesty appeared on the balcony accom- panied by his noble host, and was likewise loudly cheered. Their Majesties quitted Apsley House shortly after two o'clock, for St. James's Palace. The noble visitors then presently separated. had taken refuge in the camp. Can it, then, be a matter of surprise that the nation is jealous of her honour; and that she wishes to see the direction of her army committed to unsullied hands? Ah ! had it been confided to one of those faithful chieftains who followed their king into exile ; or to one of those devoted warriors to remain on their native soil to repulse the invader, it were of little moment which. Both obeyed the dictates of what they considered their duty ; both trod in the path of honour: but by a fatal error, there is now placed over the heads of those, brave men, one whom France, whom Europe, whom posterity cannot but reproach." " The warrior who, on the invasion of the 20th of March, should nobly break his sword and refuse to lift his arm in the cause of usurpation, might well deserve distinction and reward ; or he who should fly to the succour of his oppressed King, and devote his life to his service might be deemed worthy of praise and admiration : but what must be thought of him who should throw himself into the arms of the Conqueror for tbe time being, and swear fidelity to him — who should accept a command, thereby ratifying a solemn engagement with his brethren in arms to lead them to victory, and to live or die with them, and afterwards violate that sacred compact— who should betray and abandon them in tbe hour of peril— who should supply to the enemy whom he was pledged to combat, the means of destroying those whom he had sworn to defend ? ##•*## " But let it not be said that Royal grace and favour, is sufficient to wipe out the stain, or absolve from these crimes. When the Constable of Bourbon, exasperated by an unjust arrest, took the inexcusable step of offering his aid to a foreigner against his own country, Charles V. asked one of liis courtiers for tbe use of his palace for the accommodation of the illustrious deserter, whose defection was so important to the Emperor. " I can refuse your Majesty nothing," said the < astilian, " but I declare that if the Due de " Bourbon enter my house 1 will burn it to the " ground the moment lie quits it, as a place tainted " with perfidy, and therefore unworthy of ever being " occupied by a man of honour." Charles V. did uot punish the man who had the courage thus to express himself; and the answer is on record among those noble sentiments which must ever be honoured by posterity." Count de Bourmont's appointment to the command of the Expedition against Algiers, and the masterly manner in which, he has conducted it to a successful termination, are sufficiently well known. The reward of this service ( in which he has to deplore the loss of a son) are a Marshal's baton, which has already been transmitted to him, and the resumption of his place in the French Cabinet as Minister at War upon his return home. ofthe French government in this coup d'etat is, no doubt, to create a belief that other governments will not look with indifference on the conflict, and that they have made sure of the armed force. We, however, are strongly inclined to believe that the neighbouring'governments will take no part iu the contest. We think— we are almost certain— that our own government will not meddle with the French ; and it is strikes us, that the neighbouring governments of Austria and Prussia will be cautious how far they provoke a high- spirited nation like the French by interference. The two objects of pos- sessing the French army, and possessing the co- operation of foreign governments, are incompatible with each other; for no French soldier will ever suffer a foreigner to pollute the sacred soil of his country. The wishes of the people of every country must be for the people of France. Whenever a government declares that it cannot stand against the press, it declares that it ought not to stand. Humanity is outraged by the bold assertion of the principle that there is no obligation from which government may not shake themselves free. The measure of the French government is not within fhe limits of law. The only law it acknowledges is the law of con- venience, We gave the freedom of the press ; we gave the law of elections; we resume them as we gave them. The people are our chattels, and our will is our law. The cause of the French nation is tlio cause of every nation. May they prove themselves worthy of the great cause,. and, in this trying conjuncture, vindicate their title to uphold the rights of the hu- man race! Hitherto the French have surpassed all expectation. They will not, surely, now fail in their duty in the twelfth hour. There are occasions when men feel elevated above the ordinary consi- derations of life. There are brave and determined men in our times as well as in the times that are o- oiie— men who will account life as nothing when the sacred name of country calls on them to hazard it in her defence. Plaintiff. No, 1 guess my pig would have fed hundred weight come Christmas. 1 calculate I had good feed for the poor thing; but that there Bill, the low fell or, shot him. I guess he would be none the worse of a good spanking with a clever stick. Justice. Peace, Jane, peace, we shall find law for thee, we shall find law for thee woman I say, but be not violent against Bill. Why did thee kill that pig of Jane's, Bill? Bill. Why, Squire, 1 expect that I was shooting at a mark on the fence, when the dar'nt pig poked bis nose too near Ihe mouth of my rifle, and 1 being slewed ( tipsy) a bit, I guess he was shot. Justice. Why then, Bill, you must pay Jane the price of the pig, and two dollars damages, besides the expense of court. Bill. No, Sammy, no, ' nation sink me if 1 do pay a cent, of damages. 1 guess I must pay for the porker, but hang me, Sammy, if ever 1 take a shoe you in my lite if you talk of damages, 1 from calculate I'll get them cheaper at all events from John • ' Justice. Now, friend Jane, since Bill had con fessed his mistake, you must let him pass this time free of damages. 1 guess Bill will treat. Bill. Why, Sammy, I vow that's clever. I'll treat, I swear 1 will ; come over to Bill S n's tavern, and I calculate we'll have some good sling ( toddy) there, and fix our matters. WELSH JUDICATURE. The Late Events in France. [ FROM TIIE MORNING HERALD.] COUNT DE BOURMONT. At a period like the present, when the Conqueror of Algiers occupies so prominent a place in the eyes of Europe, the following brief memoir may not be unacceptable to onr readers. Louis Count De Bourmont. first saw the light in the Chateau Bourmont, in the province of Anjou, wheie the family had long been settled. While yet a boy, he evinced a taste for a military life, and ac- cordingly we find him an officer in the French Guards before tbe Revolution. At that period he, in com- mon with many others of the adherents of the Bour- bon Dynasty, emigrated. He served with the army of the Prince de Conde; rose to the rank of Major General in the Royalist Vendean army, under Scepeau; and commanded in the Maine and the adjacent insurrectionary districts. He frequently went over on that service to England ; presented himself to the Count D'Artois in 1790, and, although under " the prescribed age, was rewarded with the cordon of St. Louis, for his services in the Royalist Cause. In 1799, his character began to appear in an equivocal point of view. He at first refused to accede to a treaty made with the Royalists by General Hedouville; but notwithstanding his apparent reluctance, and his shew of devotion to the Royalist cause, he is believed to have indicated where certain guns and succours furnished from England were con- cealed. He subsequently professed himself attached to the new order of things in France, and was ap- parently held in great estimation by Bonaparte. On the occasion of the explosion of " fhe Infernal Ma- chine" he was among the first to hasten to offer the Consul his congratulations upon the providential escape of the latter. He was, however, so extremely earnest in adjuring vengeance upon the Jacobin Conspirators, that he became himself an object of suspicion with Napoleon; who was an excellent judge of the human character. From this and some sub- sequent suspicions, he was imprisoned in the Temple in 1S03, and afterwards transferred successively in the citadels of Dijon and Bensancon, from which latter place he contrived to make his escape in July, 1805, with a M. D'Andigne. He had, however, sufficient interest to obtain an especial permission to retire to Portugal, and the sequestration was even taken off his property. Upon the evacuation of that country by the French troops, he was permitted to return to France, and was received into the service of the Emperor! In this service he put forth all his energies. He " covered himself with glory" in the campaign wars of Dresden, and rose from the rank of General of Brigade to that of General of Division. He com- manded in Champagne in 1814; and defended him- self, though wounded, and with only 1,200 men, in such style at Nogent, as to excite the admiration of the enemy. He commanded the 6th Military division at Bensancon at the restoration ; and obtained the honour of being made a Commander ofthe Legion of Honour. On the return of Napoleon from Elba, General Bourmont was one of those devoted Royalists who accompanied Ney in the march against him; and like his commanding officer, he consented once more to range himself under the banners ofthe Ex- Emperor Napoleon, who held Bourmont in no great estimation, ( as appears by all the Memoirs of the Emperor,) was loth to avail himself of his services, even at that critical juncture: but at the earnest solicitation of General Girard, he appointed Bourmont to fhe com- mand of a division at the head of which he marched towards Flanders. Subsequent events proved that Napoleon was not mistaken in his estimate of Bour- mont's character. He betrayed the Emperor's plans to the Duke of Wellington, and formally passed over to the enemy on the 14th June, 1815! He now bccame once more in favour with fhe Bourbons, and obtained a command in the northern departments, where he was very serviceable in re- storing tranquillity, and enforcing obedience to the new order of things. There wanted only one more touch to complete his character, and that he obtained, in being a material witness at the trials of Marshal Ney and General Bonnaire. On the accession of M. De Polignac to the head of the French Ministry, M. De Bourmont obtained the Portfolio of the Minister of War. This created great dissatisfaction among the opposition journals, and the editor of the Figaro ( among others) was prosecuted, and sentenced to six months' imprisonment, and pay a fine of 1000 francs, for having published opinions unpalatable to the Ministry. In the appeal to the Cour Royale, the celebrated advocate, Dupin, ap- peared for the accused. The following passages in his powerful address, which is translated from Le Globe, a Paris paper of the 25th of February last, relate to the conduct of General Bourmont: — " Every nation has its distinctive character, and its peculiar virtues. France has ever been distinguished for her loyalty, and fidelity in her engagements ; and the profession of arms has ever been, more than any other, scrupulously nice, and jealous of the national honour. Military honour, among us, ranks as the highest order of that national virtue ; and includes the idea of all that is loyal and generaus. When a French officer swore by his sword, he gave the strongest pledge of his fidelity that it was possible to give ; aiid in the disastrous periods of our civil discords, it was truly said, that the national honour The contents of the express which we gave yes- terday frorri Paris are of fearful importance. In a moment, and by the expression of his arbitrary will, the King has subverted the charter, and can- celled the conditions of the restoration! There have been popular and there have been regal revolutions:— this is of the latter sort. The ordi- nance of the King dissolving the Chambers almost at the moment appointed for them to re- assemble— suspending, or rather, suppressing, the liberty of the press— and altering the law of elections— is decidedly a revolutionary movement. It bus changed a limited monarchy into a pure despotism, and conferred upon Charles X. a fame similar to that which Gustavus 111. obtained by an act of revolutionary violence, which in a single day erased the name of Sweden from the list of constitutional monarchies. Kings are fond of talking of conserv- ative principles, and none more so than the Bour- bons. Why should they set an example of subver- sion, which may recoil upon themselves?. Our Paris correspondent says the news came upon the people of that city like a peal of thunder. Will the arm that has launched the bolt follow up this act of despotic intimidation ? I fit does, the consequences cannot be anticipated ; and if not, royalty in France will be weaker than ever. When Louis XVI. ar- rested and banished the refractory parliament of Paris, he only prepared the way by this violent exercise of prerogative for the organization of the more formidable assembly of the National Conven- tion. Alternate acts of severity, and indecision fanned the flame of popular discontent into a confla- gration, in which he perished, and in which the dynasty of his ancient race was all but utterly con- sumed ! What is now doing in France suggests to every rational mind the question, " When will the Bourbons turn the misfortunes of their family to good account by deriving wisdom from adversity ?'' If the liberal party entertained revolutionary iuteu- lions, a judicious sovereign would have allowed them to commit themselves by some intemperate demonstration of their designs. He would then have stood on high ' vantage- ground— he would have had the moral strength of the nation at his back iu vindicating the peace of the realm and the just dignity ofthe crown— he would not have stood in the position of provoking a conflict which might be productive ofthe most dreadful consequences to France and all Europe. Now, by destroying the charter, and dissolving with a breath the royal oaths by which it has been consecrated as an inviolate possession of the people, he has justified measures which the opponents of his government could not otherwise have had recourse to without bringing on themselves universal condemnation. The abyss into which he would precipitate the constitutional rights of the country has been opened at the very foot of the throne— still we trust that he is not yet so infatuated as not to listen to more prudent coun- sels, lest the history of the royal line of Bourbon may again afford a mournful illustration of the maxim Queni Jupiter vult perdere prius dementat ! [ FROM TIIE MORNING CHRONICLE.] The intelligence from France is of a most start- ling nature. Neck or nothing seems to be the order of the day. The French Government is, indeed, playing a bold game. Our readers will see tliqt the liberty of the press is at an end, and the constitution destroyed. This is a bold beginning. The report of the ministers to the King, explana- tory of their views, is one of the most singular documents ever published by any government. The nation is treated as a herd of cattle. The people are stripped of their privileges with an insolent audacity of which we have no previous example. The press, the constitution— all must yield to the wishes of the King ! The reasoning will deceive no one, and it deserves no answer. It amounts merely to this: the press is against us, therefore we must destroy it— the con- stitution is against us, therefore we must destroy it. The only answer the people can make is— the King is against us, and therefore we must destroy him. The King has made war on the nation. The issue must determine whether the French are for a time ( for the people can never be finally subjugated) to be slaves, or the King is to alone for his temerity by the destruction of himself and family. There is no blinking at the issue. Under all circumstances, the course which the French government has adopted is perhaps the most politic. There cannot be. two supreme powers in a state. A constitution necessarily supplies the su- premacy of the people as represented by their deputies. The King, however, had declared that he was determined his power and authority should be paramount From the moment he dissolved the Chambers, because they represented too faithfully the wishes of the nation, lie entered on a course from which there was no retreating. It is clear that he had made up his mind to peril his all in the attempt to reduce the people to subjection. He had gone too far to recede, for he could never have hoped again to possess the public confidence. The Chambers lately elected must, in self- defence, have followed up their victory. As, therefore, the com- bat was inevitable, there would have been no use in shrinking from it. That the French will submit patiently to this revolutionary measure is not to be supposed. The question which most people will ask themselves is — what is the step which will be first taken? In all conflicts like that which is about to take place, advantage in the outset is usually with authority. The people are strong in their mass ; but organiz- ation is with their opponents. There is one advantage of being first in the field, that the wavering and timid are apt to infer from it the possession of some resources, not generally known, which causes the confidence. One object FROM THE STANDARD. We have copied from tbe principal Morning Journals, the Morning Herald and the Morning Chronicle, the observations drawn from them by the late events in France The Morning Herald, front which we should have expected more phlegm, is very angry with the King for dissolving" with a breath the royal oaths;" and the Morning Chroni- cle is even facetiously indignant, because the " liberty of the press is at an end, and the constitu- tion destroyed." We would ask our contemporaries, with all the respect which unfeignedly we feel for them, is France the only country iu which corona- tion oaths have been made light of— in which the liberty of the press has been in effect extinguished — and in which an established constitution has been broken in upon and destroyed ? If there be any country in which Such things have happened, and if that country be a little nearer to us than Fiance, the indignation of the Morning Herald and Morn- ing Chronicle would seem out of place. Twelve months ago we collected from obvious phenomena a conclusion that a Conspiracy against the general liberties of their several nations was at the time arranging among the ministers of three first- rate powers of EUfctpe. The sneerers ( and how manv are there among the public instructors who can do nothing but sneer !) of course jested as usual at the violence of the hypothesis. But we beg to ask whether the state of FYance at present does not afford a justification of our inference^ earlier and more pregnant than ought reasonably to have been expected in the case. More is to follow, if* indeed, it be notproceeding. pari pavsu. What seems to give most offence in the conduct of the French branch of the conspiracy is, we confess, a great palliation of the conduct of that branch in our eyes; we mean the bold, direct, and if we may so speak, contemptuous style of King Charles's proceedings. There can be no doubt in the world that open violence in compassing an object, though criminal, if the object be a wicked one, implies less of moral pravity in the party than secret fraud em- ployed for a like wicked purpose; while the dis- tinction in favour of violence as respects the com- munity is immeasurably more strongly marked. It is surely not difficult at this time of day to conceive a kingdom in which the liberty of the press and the Charter Constitution may be, or may have been, destroyed by corruption as effectually as it has been destroyed in France by prerogative; and what a mass of guilt does that one word corruption involve — perjury, treachery, apostacy, bribery, tyrannical exercise of influence and authority, breach of public and of private faith, ingratitude, public and private, persecution, ruin of all public confidence, b'asphemy against even the existence of truth, or sincerity, or disinterestedness, in the conduct of public affairs. All this horrid accumulation of crimes and curses, King Charles has masked, as it were, by proceeding directly to his object ; and this praise at least is due to him, that though he may have enslaved his people, he has not advisedly debauched them. If at some future period men shall claim political distinction, by professions of a readiness to temporize dishonestly, by avowedly rejecting the moral canon from their system of government, by, in one word, impudently throwin themselves on the scoundrelism of the country, they will not have the example of their rulers to plead. The King may have made his subjects slaves, but he has done nothing to make them villains also. The ruin of public liberty, or, which Js the same thing', the building up a power some- where, paramount to the will of the nation, being the assigned object, there can be no doubt that it is virtue to pursue it by force rather than by corrup- tion. When we have considered the late proceedings of the French Cabinet with relation to abstract principles of policy, we feel that we have made of it the only use for which it is available. As Englishmen we have nothing to do with the decision of a question, which has been, all must confess, put fairly in issue by the individual princi- pally concerned. If the portion of the people delighting in priests be sufficiently strong to support ' the King, the King will triumph, because he ought to triumph ; if, on the other hand, the people are really dis- satisfied,-( and the noise that we hear is something more than the grumbling of those who grieve that the court does its work without hiring their dirty services) then the King w ill be defeated because lie ought to be defeated. Iu either case we have nothing, in strict justice, to do with the matter; and t is impossible to conceive any thing more mischievous in policy than an interference on the part of the people of England, who have enough of difficulties and dangers of their own to contend against, without perplexing themselves with * hose of their neighbours. If there is any one in Eng- land who has laboured to embroil the French government, he is not the friend of liberty either in the one kingdom or the other, and the people of England ought to be very careful how they lend themselves to forward that man's views. TO THE EDITOR OF THE STANDARD. SIR, it is scarcely credible, although the fact is undoubted, that notwithstanding the bill for the Abol ition of the Welsh Jurisdiction was before Parliament for nearly the whole of the session which has just terminated, and was, during that period, amended and re- amended six or seven different times, it has yet passed into a law in so very blundering and imperfect a state, that the effect of it, when connected with a statute which was enacted about six years ago, is to prevent any action from being maintained in any court what, ever, either in England or Wales, against a person resident in Wales, for any debt or demand under the sum ot fifty pounds. That this is the lament- able result of the labours ofthe legislature upon this subject is quite clear, for by the statute to which 1 have adverted the plaintiff iu any such action must be nonsuited, if he brings it in any court out of Wales; iyid by the bill which has just received the royal assent, all courts in Wales are abolished from the 12th of next October. Such are the gross errors consequent upon legislating, without due previous consideration ofthe subject! Every person conversant with the mode of draw- ing acts of parliament knows that the only proper and correct way of proceeding is to enumerate tbe prior statutes relative to the matter, and then to expressly repeal them, and to re- enact such of the provisions as it is thought advisable to conti- nue. Such was the coursc adopted in the late consolidation of the laws relative to the customs, and also in Lord Lansdown's and Mr. Peel's alteration and improvements of the Criminal Law; and it is much to be regretted that that trouble was not taken upon the present occasiou; for it will be absolutely necessary that parliament should be convened at the earliest possible period, in order that this glaring error should be corrected, and that persons, who owe sums lessthan £ 50 in Hales, may be capable of being sued for their debts in some court of law. I am, Sir, & c. A LAWYER. July 25, 1830. THF. MARCH OF CRIME.— Whatever may be thought of " the march of intellect," concerning which we hear so much at the present day in the shape either of cant or burlesque, there can be no doubt, unhappily, that " the march of crime" has of late been fearfully accelerated amongst us. Wicked- ness has assumed new and unheard of forms ; guilt has put on a darker and more hideous aspect; while enormities unparalleled in the past history of human depravity, and which even beggar all that the genius of fiction ever imagined in its wildest mood, have been perpetrated either iu this " intellectual" city or its immediate vicinity, and in Ihe midst of a popu- lation previously supposed to be remarkable for its higli slate of moral and religious cultivation. It is little more than eighteen months since it was dis- covered that, a couple of monsters had established a den of murder in one of the most crowded and popu- lous districts of the Northern Athens, and were carry- ing on a regular traffic in the produce of their human shambles. It is not eight months since tli' cold- blooded fiend- like butcheries of I'. nioiul, perpetrated under circumstances of peculiar and unprecedented atrocity, froze the very blood iu our veins, and made every man tremble for the safely of his own home. It was only on Monday last that two incarnate de- mons were convicted, at the bar of the Justiciary Couit, of a crime still more unnatural and inhuman than any of those to which we have just alluded— a crime, the very thought of which must sicken the heart of every man who has one particle of human feeling in his nature, and which, in all its circum- stances, is universally admitted to be without ex- ample or parallel in the criminal records of this or any other country. To what cause or condition in society, then, are we to ascribe such appalling mani- festations of human depravity ? And how are we to account for the commission of such inconceivable atrocities in the bosom or immediate vicinity of a metropolis which plumes itself on account of its fancied superiority to the capitals of other " nations, fWiocellaneous EntcIUgciu*. PARLIAMENTARY REPRESENTATION.— The par- liament called at Shrewsbury iu 1283 by King Edward I. was the first lo which cities and towns were summoned to send representatives. It was also the first that granted aids towards the national defence, by the three denominations of knights, citizens, and burgesses, as well ns by the lords spi- ritual and temporal. In this parliament the repre- sentatives sat in a separate chamber from the barons and knights. The Commons consisted of two knights for each county, two representatives for the city of London, and two for each of the following 20 towns only : Winchester, Newcastle- upon- Tyne, York, Bristol, Exeter, Lincoln, Canterbury, Carlisle, Norwich, Northampton, Nottingham, Scarborough, Grimsby, Lynn, Colchester, Yarmouth, Hereford, Chester, Shrewsbury, aud Worcester. From this it appears that there were not representatives of any towns in the counties of Westmoreland, Lan- caster, Derby, Durham, Stafford, Warwick, Leices- ter, Rutland, Suffolk, Hertford, Bedford, Cambridge, Huntingdon, Buckingham, Berks, Oxford, Wilts, Somerset, Gloucester, Dorset, Sussex, and Surrey. In after times burghs that were summoned fre- quently prayed the crown to be excused from send- ing representatives, on account of their being com- pelled to pay 3s. 4d. a- day to such member for his maintenance while attending in his place. Sheriffs in their writs for elections to parliament, sometimes omitted one or more burghs in a county, and at other times sent writs to the same burghs, and this, for aught known to the contrary, without instruc- tions from the King or his council. Where burghs were poor, there we many omissions, by favour of tbe sheriffs, for a space of nearly 300 years. Upon petition of the town of Torrington to King Edward 111. in 1360, he directed a letter to the bailiff and good men of the town, excusing thein " from the burden of sending two iepresentatives to parlia- ment, as they had never been obliged so to do till the 24th year of his reign, when," says the King, " the sheriff of Devonshire maliciously summoned them to send two members to parliament." and considers itself, not unjustly perhaps, as the most civilized portion of this civilized country? Poverty ami misery are usually regarded as the main causes and chief stimulants of crime ; and, in point of fact, offences are found to multiply in proportion as the inhabitants of a country are reduced below that point in the scale at which tliey are enabled to earn a com- fortable livelihood, and as they gradually sink down to the condition of those who are content if they can procure the means of prolonging life and sustaining a mere physical existence. But the offences which arise out of such a state of things are, for the most part, offences against property merely ; and as the causes which produce them are often but temporary in Iheir operation, their deteriorating and demoralizing effects are checked and counteracted before the mind of the lower classes becomes thoroughly corrupted by familiarity with guilt, and prepared for the commis- sion of great enormities. None of the diabolical atrocities to which we have alluded, however, appear to have been the progeny of poverty and misery. Burke and Hare organised a system of murder that they might sell the bodies of their victims; not to sup. ply their physical wants, but that they might procure ample means for indulging their depraved appetites, and rioting in the most brutal debauchery. Emond beat out the brains of his sister- in- law and his niece, that lie might satiate a deep, desperate, and deter- mined revenge.— Thomson and Dobie, in the mere diabolical wantonness of wickedness, and with cir- cumstances of brutality unequalled on earth, anil altogether worthy of Pandemonium itself, destroyed the poor unhappy creature who had confided in them, and put herself under their protection, in a manner and with a brutal barbarity which astounded and even appalled even those whose profession necessarily renders them familar with examples of almost every form of iniquity. All these crimes, therefore, hare clearly been the immediate offspring of sheer wickedness and depravity alone; and they are consequently to be regarded as manifestations and evidences of the depth of that moral degradation into which a certain class of our people have fallen, and of the facility with which many of them may be induced to commit any wickedness however great, to perpetrate any crime however horrible. In fact come malignant principle appears to have been generated and become endemic among the class to which we have referred; and to have banished from their minds all fear of God and all regard for the laws and institutions of society. They have grown reckless, abandoned, and desperate; devoid of all self- re § pect or regard to character or opinion ; shamelessly and outrageously profligate; utter strangers to all re- ligion ; anil ready to obey the impulse of every corrupt and disorderly passion. This is a fearful state of things; but truth compels us to paint the picture in its true colours. Matters have gone too far to admit of palliation or extenuation. A dreadful evil has suddenly displayed itself, and the only con- sideration that ought to actuate every ingenuous and upright mind, is how to devise a suitable and ade- quate remedy. It is clear, indeed, that unless society uses means to destroy this alarming tendency to crime, it will ultimately end by destroying society. The- law has been vigourously and wisely adminis- tered, hut its terrors appear to have lost their power. Examples are multiplied in vain. Moral and re- ligious discipline alone remains to be employed ; but this powerful instrument, if properly applied, will in the end work out a cure, l. ct us then abandon all our present quixotism about ihe conversion of the heathen, and begin our religious and. moral charity at home. There is an ample field for our enterprise at our very doors. We have heathens greater than any India, Africa, or America, around us, near lis, in the very bosom of the community of which we are members. Let us then commence our labours bv trying first of all to convert the barbarians w ho cail themselves civilized.— Caledonian Mercury. SMALL DEBT COURT. A recent publication gives an amusing account of the Small Debt Courts in America. In the country towns of America, there are generally two or three justices of the peace, and an attorney or two. These justices or judges, ( in fact they are both judge and jury,) as may well be imagined, are men that have not much law at their finger ends. In almost all cases they subsist chiefly by following some mechanical trade, and not unfreqnently the dignity of village " Squire" is conjoined with the more humble but probably as useful occupation of carpenter or shoemaker. They most commonly give a verdict iu favour of the plaintiff. I recollect a circumstance which afforded ine not a little amusement. It was the case of a young man of Ihe village, who got " half seas over," one day, either through mischief or accident had shot au honest woman's pig ; she bad him instantly arrested and brought before the justice. As near as I can remember, Ihe following colloquy took place. The judge was a quaker and a mechanic. Justice. Well, Jane, what has thee to say against neighbour Bill, here? Plaintiff. Say ! why I've too much to say about Ihe waggabone; would you believe it, the good- for- nothing fellow has killed my pig, without no manner of provocation. Justice. And did thee not want thy pig slain, friend Jane ? The Qneensberry leases, after a litigation prol racted and expensive, probably beyond example in Britain, were reduced in 1821, and the decree of reduction took effect previous to Whitsunday, 1822. At that time the farms, several hundreds in number, were re- let to the old or other tenants, and something like a new era commenced on estates which nctually comprise a fourth of the superficies of a large countv. Improvement in a great variety of ways, such . is dyking, hedging, road making, farm and office building, became, in fact, Ihe order of the day; anil our readers will perhaps stare wlien wc inform them that the money already spent in wages and materials exceeds £ 100,000 sterling. Oil the different baronies 90 substantial on- steadings have been finished ; 10 arc in progress and approaching to comp'etion; some of the former were erected at an expense of upwards of £ 1,500; and the whole, to sp" ak in round num. hers, will cost on an average £ 700 each, or in all £ 70,000. The dykes built, the hedges planted, and the roads made, extend respectively to 92,000, 29,000 and 16,000 roods. The first cost 5s 6d. the second 2s. 6d. and the third 7s. Od. per rood ; and with these data before them, those who are curious enough to make the necessary calculations will find that the account stands as follow*:— Farm houses and office* £ 70,000; dyking £ > 5,300 ; hedges £ 3,625; roads £ 6,000 — total £ 10- 1,925. Dividing by 276, the dykes extend to 333, the hedges to 105, and the roads to 611 miles. Improvements conducted ou such an extensive scale ; though hitherto silent and unobtrusive, must have given bread to hundreds of industrious labourers, and cheered the hearth of many . . a lonely cottage; and we may state in addition that keeping a recumbent or even a sitting posture for there are at present upwards of 150 uneinplovcd more than a minute, but naeed bis nhnmher with n ...: „„, i „+ i i , • J Thp web of the black spider has received com. meudation from many respectable sources, as a sedative agent, capable of calming, with peculiar ease and certainty, morbid excitability of the cerebral and nervous systems. On the credit of those qualities it has been employed iu the various forms of temulence, and not without a share of reputed success, sufficient to entitle it to con sideration in that case of constitutional irritation, in the summer ofl827 we tried this article in many cases, and iu full doses. ' Fo test its qualities it was given, where the slate of the patient admitted, uncombined with opiates. When thus used, ils effects were generally partial or doubtful, and its powers inadequate to the production of tranquil- lity or sleep. In one case only have I fiund this substance to exert great or decided sedative attributes. ' I'his was the case of an intelligent young man ( in private practice), who, after con- suming, by his own report, three quarts of brandy in thirty- six hours, fell into a state of temulent excitation so excessive, that he was incapable of paced his chamber a ceaseless step for two days and nights. He was not delirious ; on the contrary, his conversation was rational, though hurried and vehement. But he was so far under the influence of spectral hallucination, that if he closed his eyes for a moment, day or night, he was instantly visited by a host of phantoms ol frightful aspect; hence chiefly his aversion to lie down, or make any voluntary effort to sleep. This patient took opium, opium with camphor, and black drop, at short intervals, and iu full doses, until the quantum of opiate approached the utmost limit of probable safe ad- ministration, without even partial relief of con- stitutional irritation, or any apparent proneness to sleep. The temulent excitement kept unabated for 24 hours, the second night passed in constant vigilance, locomotion, and mental excitement, and it seemed probable that excitation so intense, protracted, and unremitting, must soon lapse into delirium or con- vulsions. At this time, the morning of the third day ( tbe second of my attendance), he began the use of tbe fresh web in pills of five grains every hour. It effect was prompt and unequivocal. The patient spoke emphatically, both the first and second day, of the soothing influence produced by the pills. He was not at the time informed of their composition London Medical Gazette. miners and others— unemployed in consequence of some dispute— engaged in levelling, and otherwise adorning, the beautiful site of Drimilanrig Castle. Though the Queensbcrry estate may have formed the scene of the most active operations, improvement cannot have been altogether stationary in ulher parts of the vast possessions ol' the House " of Bucclcuch • and of the total outlay, including items, such as planting, which we have not even glanced at, ue confess we can form no adequate conception. Dum- fries Courier. of Fen. Dubinin, butler.' Bankrupts, Jui. y 28.— Richard Bacon, church- street, tea- broker. — Benjamin Wood of Peicy street, Ralhbone- pbice, dealer trimmings.— John Thomas, of Canterbury gliver Paul William While, Eppiug place, Mile end Old. town victualler.- George Bilbell, of Mancbe. ier. victualler.— Robert livers, of Wakefield, Yorkshire corn factor.— Chnrles I. arkin, nf Newcastle on- Tvie' innkeeper- Jesse Tankard, of Chnl.. n, Ynrk. iiiV worsted- siun. maker,-- Richard Williams, of Clw Ij Loin! Carnurvonshiie, grocer. INSOLVENT.— William Spurwav, of FiusUury, builder. Mnrket- stri et, SHREWSBURY:
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