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John Bull "For God, the King, and the People!"

29/01/1832

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Volume Number: XII    Issue Number: 581
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John Bull "For God, the King, and the People!"

Date of Article: 29/01/1832
Printer / Publisher:  
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Volume Number: XII    Issue Number: 581
No Pages: 8
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f JOHN BULL. " FOR GOD, THE KING, AND THE PEOPLE f" VOL. XII.— NO. 581. SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 1832. Price Id. igitihATKE KOVAL, COVENT GARDEN. On Tuesday i Evening, the new Tragic Drama of CATHERINE OF CLEVES. Henry the Third, Mr. John Mason; Henry of Lorraine, Mr. Ward e; Paul Caussade, Mr. C. Kemble ; Anne D'Arquez, Mr. Abbott; Catherine of Cleres, Miss Fanny Xemble. With TEDDY the TILER. After which ( and every Evening until further notice) the new grand Comic, Melo- dramatic and Romantic Pantomime, called HOP O* MY THUMB AND HIS BROTHERS, or Harlequin and the Ogre. Little Jack, Miss Poole.— On Wednesday, the Opera of Artaxerxes, and The Waterman— Thursday, Catherine of CIeves, with Country Quarters— Friday, will be revived the Opera of The Haunted Tower— Saturday, Catherine of Cleves, with The Wedding Day. THEATRE ROYAL, ADELPHI.— The cheering demonstra- tions of delight evinced at the representations of Robert the Devil, have never been equalled. The novel beauty of the living Tableaux at the end of the first and third Acts, and the impression created by the resuscitation of the Nuns, with the splendour of the Appointments, empower the Management to announce it for Everv Evening.— Oh Tuesday next, and during the Week, will be pre- sented ROBERT LE DIABLE, the DEVIL'S SON. Principal Characters by Messrs. Yates, J. Reeve, Hemmings, Mrs. Ya'es, Mrs. Fitzwilliam, and Miss Daly. With the Burlesque Burletta of HYDER ALI, or the Lyons of Mysore.— After which, with new scenes, dresses, & c., the new grand Pantomime called HARLE- QUIN and LITTLE BO- PEEP, or the Old Woman that lived in a Shoe. Private Boxes may be had nightly at the Theatre, and of Mr. Sams, Royal library, 1, St. James's- street. MADAME VESTRIS' ROYAL OLYMPIC / THEATRE.— On Tuesday Evening, will be presented, MY GREAT AUNT. Lionel Glossover, Esq., Mr. Jas. Vining; Mrs. Headly, Mrs. Glover. After which, THE GRENADIER. Fanny Bolton, Madame Vestris. To which will be added, HE'S NOT A MISS. Price Prettyman, Mr. Liston : Mrs. Prettyman Wis. Glover. To conclude with the Burlesque Burletta of OLYMPIC DEVILS or Orpheus and Eurydice. Orpheus, Madame Vestris; Eurydice, Miss Forde.— On Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, The Love- Spell, with He's Not A- Miss, I'll be your Second, and Olympic Devils. Box Office open from 10 till 4 o'clock. Private Boxes to be taken of Mr. Andrews, Bookseller, 167, New Bond- street. First Appearance of Mr. Fraser— Revival of the Fiend of the Watch. ADLER'S WELLS.— To- morrow Evening and during the Week, to commence with the highlv popular Musical Drama called THE FIEND OF THE WATCH, or the Fatal Purchase ; in which Mr. Fraser will make his first appearance as Carl, in which he will introduce several popular Airs ; Crook- enbacli, Mr. W. H. Williams ; Juan, Mr. Johnson , Bertha, Miss Helme. In the course of the piece, a Grand Ballet by Miss C. Griffiths, M. Edgar, and the Corps de Ballet. After which, an entirely new petite Drama, called THE SCAPE GRACE. Aubrey, Mr. Johnson; Charles Darlington, Mrs. Wilkinson; Bustle Mr. W. H. Williams ; Perroquet, Mr. Campbell; Tucker, Miss Helme. To con- clude with the splendid Comic Pantomime of The OCEAN QUEEN, or HARLE. QUIN and the ENCHANTED ALOE. Harlequin, Mons. Edgar; Columbine Miss C. Griffiths ; Clown, Mr. T. Matthews. MRS. WILLIS and DAUGHTERS' MUSICAL ACADEMY, commences on TUESDAY, the 7th of February, and will remain open every TUESDAY and FRIDAY, from Ten until Four.— Particulars may be had at their residence, No. 55, Saint James's- street. 2 0 T% TEW MUSIC.— WILLIS and Co., 55, St. James's- atreet, JL^ I London, and 7, Westmorland- street, Dublin, ( whose Rooms are always supplied with a splendid variety of PIANOFORTES, HARPS, GUITARS, FLUTES, & c. by all the most eminent makers, at the lowest Manufacturers' prices,) have just published the following— NEW PIANOFORTE MUSIC. jRIOSCHELES'arrangement of Poznanski's' Polonaise and Mazurka,' as a familiar Rondo IIIES' Divertimento on a popular' Styrian Melody,' ' The Melting Snow,' Ditto COSTA'S Airs in the Grand Ballet of Konil worth, as Quadrilles, Pas de Deux, Marches,& c. in Five Numbers, irom 2s. to 4s. each. FISCH ER'S Thirteen Styrian Melodies, sung by the. Singers of the Alps MOSCHELKS' Pastoral Fantasia on a Styrian Melody, the Spring DO. Variations on a Styrian Air, the Whistler EIRCHNER'S THIRD SET OF QUADRILLES, from the " Bride of Lammermoor ;" the Music bv Caraffa NEW VOCAL MUSIC. VERNAL THOUGHTS, a Song; the Woods by R. J. Housman, Esq; the Music by Chevalier Sigismond Neukomm THE MARINER'S FAREWELL ( two Voices), the words by G. J. D. Butler Danvers, Esq., the music by J. Ditchfield, Esq, THE MOTHER, a Song; the Words by H. Hutton, Esq.; the Music by the Chevalier Sigismond Neukomm TO THE ORANGE BOWER, a Duet, sung by Mrs. Fitzwilliam and Miss Alleyn, arranged by Sola SHALL THIS PALE CHEEK, a Song; the words by the Right Hon. Lady Dacre, the music by the Hon. Mary Ann Jervis THREE ITALIAN AR1ETTES, composed by Signor Lablache THE TROUBADOUR SONG; the Words by Mrs. Hemans, the Music by her Sister .. .. .. .. In the Press, SONGS OF CAPTIVITY, written by Mrs. Hemans, composed by her Sister, and dedicated to their friend Lady Erskine. GOSS'S SACRED HARMONY ( Vocal), a companion to his Parochial Psalmody LA CACCIA, Coro a 3 Voci. con Accompagnamento di Corno; composto e dedicato a Sir Geo. Warrender, Bart., del Sig. M. Vaccaj. WILLIS and Co. have just received a great variety of ORGAN EOLIANS, or the Accordion, with the late improvements, price from 3 to 10 Guineas each. 3 0 1 6 2 0 2 0 2 0 6 0 a| HE WINTER COURSE of LECTURES on MIDWIFERY and the DISEASES of WOMEN and CHILDREN, at the Medical Theatre, ST. GEORGE'S HOSPITAL, will commence on Monday, January 30. at Nine o'clock in the Morning. The Lectures on the Theory and Practice of Midwifery will be delivered by Mr. STONE ; the Anatomical part of the Course, including the Lectures on the Diseases of Women and Children, by Dr. HENRY DA VIES.— For particulars enquire at St. George's Hospital; or of Mr. Stone, 7 , Clifford- street: or of Dr. Henry Da\ ies, 13, Saville row. ATRAVELLER'S COMFORT. ASHTON'S Single and Double POLISH CLOAKS, for warmth and protection against wet in open carriages, driving, or on horseback, are unequalled, and particularly so in wet and cold weather, for the protection they afford to the chest; and, while using the reins, for keeping the hands constantly warm— a comfort which is so much wanted and desired bv all who drive ; and, if worn In coach- travelling, with his PATENT CHAUFFERETTE ( that keeps the feet warm), the person is secure against the severest weather. A CHOICE STOCK is kept of GENTLEMEN'S DRESS and WALKING CLOAKS, which are likewise made to keep the hands warm. ASHTON, TAILOR, No. 17, PALL- MALL, Ij^ URS . P O L A N D and Co. 351, STRAND, g* Directly opposite Waterloo Bridge, FURRIERS to the ROYAL FAMlLY. beg respectfully to invite the Nobility and Gentry to an Inspection of their splendid and general STOCK of FURS.— Poland and Co. make it an invariable rule, on no account to take old Furs in ex change. Ladies may therefore confidently rely upon having a new and perfect article. The many removals that have taken place in consequence of the Strand improvements, render it necessary to announce, that they continue in the same Premises, occupied by them for upwards of half a century, and that the above is their only address, not being connected with any other House, TURKEY COFFEE, very fine. 2*. per lb.— JOHN MARSHALL and Company beg leave to inform the Public, that in consequence of the very reduced prices at which fine Turkey Coffee has been sold at the East India Company's last sale, they are enabled to offer that article at the moderate price © f 2s. per lb. Also may be purchased— Cocoa Nuts, nibs or ground ( finest) .. .. Is. 6d. per lb. Chocolate .. ... ( ditto) .. .. 2s. 6d. At John Marshall and Company's Tea and Coffee Warehouse, No. 12, South- ampton- street, Strand. raiEA and COFFEE URNS, Papier Mache TEA TRAYS and 1_ WAITERS, Patent Table and other LAMPS, KNIVES and FORKS, Patent DISH COVERS, Plated CRUET and LIQUOR FRAMES, Metal VENJSON DISHES, WATER PLATES, & c. J. EVANS, MANUFACTURER, FISH- STREET- HILL, respectfully ae- quaints the Nobility and Gentry, that he has just completed an extensive Stock of the above useful Articles, of New and Elegant Designs, and of superior Work- manship, which are offered on Terms from 30 to 50 per Cent, under the usual Retail Shop Prices. The largest assortment of STOVE GRATES, KITCHEN RANGES, FEN- DERS, FIRE IRONS, HOT AIR STOVES, CULINARY UTENSILS, & c. to be seen in any House in the Kingdom. LONDON STOVE GRATE BAZAAR, 44 and 45, Fish- street- hill, and 5, Finsbury- place, South. %* Shipping Orders executed with despatcht f a THEATRICAL BUREAU.— ANDREWS' LIBRARY, No. 167, JL NEW BOND STREET. At this Establishment mav be obtained the best PRIVATE BOXES bv the Night or Season, for the OPERA, CO VENT- GARDEN, DRURY- LANE, and MADAME VESTRIS'S THEATRES ; also OPERA PIT TICKETS at 8s. 6d. each, and every information connected with the Public Amusements. Subscribers to this Library derive the advantage of a most extensive Collection of English and Foreign Literature, with an unlimited supply of all New Works. OPERA BOXES and PIT TICKETS: Also, PRIVATE BOXES at COVENT GARDEN, DRURY LANF., OLYMPIC, and ADELPHI THEATRES to be LE C by the Night or Season at Messrs. EBEllS'S Library, 27, Old Bond- street. Terms of Subscription to the Library. Year £ 5 5 0 Half Year 3 3 0 Quarter 1 16 0 Entitling Subscribers to 12 volumes in Town, or 24 in the Country. All Works of interest, English or Foreign, added to the Library on the day of publication. ROYAL SOCIETY of MUSICIANS.— The 94th ANNIVER- SARY FESTIVAL of this Institution, which was founded in 1738, for the support of Aged and Infirm Musicians, their Widows and Orphans, will be held at the Freemasons' Tavern, OH MONDAY, March the 5th, 1832. Particulars will be duly announced. M. SIMCOCK, Secretary. CANDIDATES for the HON. EAST INDIA COMPANY'S SERVICE.— Those preparing for Haileybury and Addiscombe, as well as Gentlemen about to embark for India in a Military, Medical, Commercial, or other capacity, are hereby informed, that the branches of Education essentially necessary to their future success, are now taught at the LONDON ORIENTAL INSTITUTION, 2, South Crescent, Bedford- square ; the Conductors of which acquired the Oriental Languages in India, and have already prepared some hun- dreds for that Service with distinguished success. Pupils may study either privately or in classes as daily students ; a select number being also received as Boarders MESSRS. LONGMAN and CO. have a VACANCY for a well- educated YOUTH as an APPRENTICE, to be bound for seven years, and to be boarded and lodged in the houses during that period. A Pre- mium will be required.— No. 39, Paternoster- row. INCREASE of INCOME.— Any Perso i of small Capital, desirous of improving their Income, may command a Share in an important Institu- tion, established in one of the first Maritime Towns in England, from whence its Benefits may be extended to ail parts of the Kingdom, and a very considerable Return secured to the Parties on the Capital advanced. To a Medical Student of ability, as a Surgeon- Oculist, this offers a certainty of rising into public no- tice and independence. Letters ( post- paid) addressed to Mr. Marshall, Secretary to the West of England Ophthalmic Institution, Athenaeum- street, Plymouth, will meet with immediate attention. LOBE INSURANCE. LONDON.— Notice is hereby given, that a GENERAL MEETING of PROPRIETORS of the Globe Insurance Company will be held at the Company's Office, in Cornhill, on THURSDAY, the 9th day of February next, at Oneo'Clock, for the ELECTION of a DIRECTOR, in the room of Thomas Barrow, Esq. deceased. The Ballot to commence at One, and close at Three o'Clock precisely. By order of the Board, London, 26th January, 1832. JOHN CHARLES DENHAM, Sec. ACARD. Mr. WARREN, Surgeon- Dentist, removed to 27, Bruton- street.— Mr. W. invites the attention of the Nobility and Gentry to his peculiar and successful treatment of Decayed and Tender Teeth ; also to his invaluable mode of affixing Artificial Substitutes in Mineral or Gold, infalli- bly answering all the purposes of the original Teeth. 10 CAPITALISTS a~ nd SPORTSMEN. To be SOLD by PRIVATE BARGAIN, the ESTATE of DUNOTTAR, in the countv of Kincardine, containing nearly Eight Thousand Acres, of which about Five Thousand are Arable, Six Hundred and Forty yhuerwood. and the remainder Pasture and Moor Ground. The Farms have all been let on improving leases, so that as they fall in a great rise of rent takes place. The game on the estate has been preserved with great care for many years, and it may confidently be stated that the shooting is superior to any in Scotland, consisting of pheasants, par- tridges, wild duck, snipes, roes, hares and rabbits; the sea fowl shooting is nowhere to be surpassed, and there are two good trouting streams, which run through the estate. The mansion house and office houses are substantial and commodious, fit to accommodate a large family. The estate will be sold at such a price as to yield a clear return of three per cent., without putting any value on the mansion house, gardens, woods, & c., which are worth upwards of 30,0001. For further particulars apply to Messrs. Hunter, Campbell and Cathcart, W. S. Edinburgh; Mr. Alexander Jopp, Advocate, Aberdeen ; and Mr. A. M. M'Crae, 21, Manchester- buildings, Westminster. 1HE NEW YEAR. To the NOBILITY and GENTRY. . It is unfortunately too well known, that, during the latter part of the year 1831, the distress amongst the Working People in this country has been more severely felt than at almost any former period. In the full hope of better times we have, during the last few months, bad the gratification of employing several hundred persons upon the different branches of our Manufactures in Lancashire, Yorkshire, Norwich, Kidderminster, Mitcham and Spitalfields, as well as the Cabinet- makers and Upholsterers in our London Workshops. ALL FOREIGN MANUFACTURES HAVE BEEN EXCLUDED from our Premises, and we shall have the honour of submitting to inspection such specimens of BRITISH SKILL and INDUSTRY, as will convince the most fastidious how unnecessary it will be to have recourse to the Continent for that which can be so much better and cheaper supplied at home. Our only Establishment for Furnishing Houses is at No. 134, Oxford- street, near Bond- street. MILES and EDWARDS. HE Publisher of ERASER'S MAGAZINE has the pleasure to inform those Gentlemen who feel desirous of subscribing monthly for his Journal, that an excellent opportunity occurs on the first of next Month, the work then commencing the FIFTH VOLUME.— Fraser's Magazine has now for upwards of two years been before the Public, and the Proprietor would be want- ing in gratitude did he not embrace this occasion of returning his best thanks for that support which he has received. This has rendered his Magazine one of the most prominent of the British periodicals of the present time. The talent, sterling zeal, independence, and keenness of criticism, which have hitherto been the characteristics of this Publication, shall continue active in every page of the forthcoming numbers.— Orders are received at all Booksellers, Stationers, News- men, and Post. offices, in England, Ireland, and Scotland. Tf Xio NOBLEMEN and GENTLEMEN.— PRICES of the BEST CLOTH ES that can be produced :— Extra Saxony Dress Coat ( colours) £ i 3 0 Ditto, Black or Blue 3 13 6 Extra Saxony Frock Coat, Skirts faced with Silk.... 3 18 0 Extra Saxony TrouserB I 10 O Ditto, Black or Blue 114 0 Waistcoats 0 15 0 A Footman's Suit of Livery, complete 4 4 0 None but the best materials used, therefore l ut one price. The articles sup- plied at these prices by W. Tayler, warranted ta be equal to any that can be pro- duced, let the maker he who he may. DEPUTY LIEUTENANT'S UNIFORM and APPOINTMENTS, complete, of the best quality, lower than any other house in London.— WM, TAYLER., 75, Wimpole- street, Cavendish- square, Tailor. VALUABLE CHURCH PREFERMENT in DEVONSHIRE. Mr. MUSGROVE is instructed to SELL by PUBLIC AUCTION, at the Auction Mart, London, on WEDNESDAY, February 15, 1832, at 12 o'clock, the PERPEEUAL ADVOWSON, RIGHT of PATRONAGE, and NEXT PRE- SENTATION to the RECTORY of INWAR » ) LEIGH, in the county of Devon, comprehending the great and small Tithes extending over 4000 acres, together with a comfortable Farm House, suitable Agricultural Buildings, 1/ 0 acres of Glebe and 45 acres of Coppice ; the whole moderately estimated to produce to a resident Incumbent .£ 400 a year. Inwardleigli is only 4 miles from the market town of Okehampton, and near the turnpike- road to Plymouth, Torrington, and Barnstaple. A new Rectory House has been lately built, and the present Incum- bent will be 55 years of age in June next.— Descriptive particulars maybe ob- tained of Mr. H. M. Ford, Solicitor, Exeter; Richard Bremridge, Esq., Barnsta- pie; of Messrs, Brutton and Clipperton, Solicitors, 37, New Broad- street; at the Auction Mart; and at Mr. Musgrove's Offices, 5, Austin. friars, Old Broad- reet. r ~ ——— CHARING- CROSS HOSPITAL ( Sow in progress of erection), Agar- street, Strand, near Charing- cross,— The Committee, in th u. ktuliy acknowledging the following additional subscriptions, beg to state that, since the laying the first stone by his Royal Highness the Ddke of Sussex in September, the building has been uninterruptedly pioceed^ d with, and is now in a state of great forwardness. They beg to add " that, although the amount of the fund appli- cable to the purpose enables them to proceed with the building, much additional aid is yet necessary, and they earnestly hope that the Benevolent will provid ® tional) .. .. .. . « Marquis of Stafford ( 2d benefaction) Earl Spencer ( 2d benefaction) S. Boddington, Esq. . « » . Mrs. Booth, Spring- gardens Earl Grey L. Holbeck, Esq. ( 2d donation) W. Gray, Esq. ( 3d donation) Master A. Golding Albion and Star Evening Paper D. N. Lister, Esq. ( 2d donation) Right Hon. Sir John Nicholl Mr. W. Newman, Cockspur- street .. J. Thompson, Esq. Duke- street Mr. Justice Patteson Admiral Sir R. VV. Otway, Bart. R. Williams, Esq. Pall- mall East Mr. Huson General Sir R. Donkin ( 2d Donation) Hon. Admiral Curzon ( additional) .. Mrs. Wright ( additional) J. Stulz, Esq. Burlington- street John Squire, Esq. ( additional) The Dean of Westminster M r. Tyler ( additional) Wadham Wyndham, Esq. Gaorge Gregory, Esq. .. Lawrence Peel, Esq. Harry Goring, Esq. ( 2d donation) W. Richardson, Esq. ( 3d donation) .. John Martin, Esq. .. Hon. Major De Roos Sir A. Murray, Bart. ( 2d donation) .. Produce of the sale of a hoise, per a noble benefactor .. •• G. Wiiglitson, Esq. Lincoln's Inn- fields — Shapter, Esq. 3, New- square, ditto Donations of 40 guineas and upwards the qualification of a Life Governor; op of 20 or more guineas of a Life Supporter; or annual subscriptions of 2 or more guineas, are received by Mr. Robertson ( the Secretary), Committee Room, 27, Villiers- street, where the Charity is at present conducted : by the Rev. Dr » Richards ( the Treasurer), St. Martin's, Chating- cross ; by Messrs. Drummonds, Messrs. Coutts, Messrs. Hoare, Messrs. Herries, Messrs. Hammersley, Messrs. Cox and Biddulph, Messrs. Duckett and Morland, and Messrs. Call and Marten- JOHN ROBERTSON, Hon. Sec. Building General Annual Fund. Support. Subs. £ s. £ s. £ s. ^ .. 10 10 50 O ... » 100 0 .. . M ... 21 o- ... » ... ... „ 5 5 ... .. 21 0 . . . . M 10 10 ... . r 17 0 ... » ... ' hi 0 ,,,, ... ... 2 2 ... 21 ' o ... • 10 10 ... » ... ... 2 2 ... 2 2 21 0 ... 2 2 ... 10 " o ... » 5 5 .... 2 2 .... .... 1 I 5 0 .... ... » 5 0 .... ... » 2 2 .... .... .... 105 0 ... » 5 Q .... ... ... » 21 0 ... » 1 1 .. » 21 0 .... 42 0 .... .... « ... 3 3 .... .. 21 * 6 ... » 5 5 ... » .... 10 10 ... » .... .. .... 1 I .... 10 ' o ... » 10 0 21 0 .... .... 21 0 ... » M IAWAiN and Co. a PATEN, T TRUSSES without Steel Springs, 200, Fleet- street.— Gia'wan and Co. bav'ng so repeatedly pointed out the great advantages of their Trusses, merely beg io state, that His Majesty's Sur geon, Sir A. Cooper, Bart, and Mr. Brodie, haVe for years strongly recommended Ladies and Gentlemen, as well as Children, to use them, as being the most easy and secure, and that many in the medical profession have been wearing them in preference to steel springs.— N. B, To remote every mercenary motive, one month's trial allowed. * HI LONDON AND LIVERPOOL. URRICANE. BARBADOS, ST. VINCENT, and ST. LUCIA.— Subscriptions for the Relief of the Poorer Classes of Sufferers, to be apportioned by the Legislatures of these Colonies. Public attention is again most earnestly solicited to the destitute condition of the sufferers from the late hurricane, as the amount subscribed up to the present time for the poorer classes alone will alleviate in a very small degree their ex- treme distress. The losses sustained by all classes ( calculated in one island only at nearly ^ 2,000,000 sterling) having been so severe as to pvevent the hitherto opulent from reinstating themselves, they are of course entirely precluded from rendering any assistance to their poorer brethren, whose wants, therefore, cannot be supplied< but by the humane and liberal contributions of the people of this country. Subscriptions will con'inue to be received at ttie undermentioned Bankers * and any further particulars will be given on application to J. P. Mayers, Esq., Colonial Agent for Barbados, 60, St. James's- street J or to J. Colquhoun, Esq.* Colonial Agent for St. Vincent, 12, St. James's- place. Amount of London Subscriptions up to 2cl January, 1832, already advertised .. .. .. .. .. .£ 1,207 2 J? Ditto of Liverpool Subscriptions up to 20th December, 1831, already advertised .. .. .. .. .. 985 13 ff .£ 2,192 15 ft ..£ 2 CO At Messrs. Herries and Co.' s, Lord Radstock, by J. P. Mayers, Esq. .£ 5 0 0 Mrs. Rouse .. .. .. 1 O 0 The Misses Gaskell .. .. 200 MissM. E. Wilson .. .. 100 Edmund Clowes, Esq. .. 1 10 The Albion and Star Newspaper I 0 0 At Messrs. Smith, Payne, and Co.' s. - " 5 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 SINCE RECEIVED: Henry Treacher and Co. .. 5 P. L. 1 Coxe & Chambers, for Barbados 5 W. A. N, ditto .. .. 5 John Ayton, Esq., Scole, Nor folk, per Lees and Co. .. 10 E. W. 10 Rev. Ed. Rice, Clirist'sHospital 1 Wm. Ellis Gosling, Esq. .. 5 Hon. Col. Sir E. Cust, per Gosling and Co. Sir H. W. Martin, Bart., per Childs, for Barbados .. 15 At the Record Newspaper Office. A Widow's Mite .. .. 1 0 0 D. J. V. 10 0 0 18th January, 1832. 5 0 0 0 0 F. W. S. Small sums collected hyC. E. G. 1 18 ft At Messrs. Hankey and Co.' s. Mrs. Sowerby, by J. P. Mayers, Esq. 10 Off J. Crease and Son, perditto .. 10 0 ft At Messrs. Grote, Prescott, & Co.' s. J. Worrell, Esq. for Barbados 5 0 ft-- Peregrine Fernandez, Esq. per ditto .. .. .. 50ft N. Connop. jun. Esq. Whitehall 5 0 ft- At Messrs. Hoares. Hugh Leycester, Esq. .. 5 Oft MissJohnes .. .. 10 0 0 Lord Sondes .. .. 50 0 ft C. T. L. .. .. .. 50ft F. W. Brereton, Esq. .. 3 0ft A. F. .. .. .. 20ft Eades Summers, Esq. .. 5 Oft At Messrs. Coutts. I G. T. Goodenough Esq. .. 5 Rev. Edward Coleridge .. 5 Dowager Lady Williams Wynn 5 Miss E. S 5 Miss F. E. S 5 0 ft 0 O 0 ft 0 ft 0 ft SPLENDID and Fashionable PRINTED CHINTZ FURNIa ^ TURES, suitable for Drawing- rooms, Cottages, Beds, & e„ SELLINO OFF VERY CHEAP.— JOHN WATSON and Co., 56, Holbern- liill ( opposite Hatton- garden), respectfully announce to the Public, that having purchased, from Messrs. Clayton and Co. late of Old Bond- street, all their remaining Stock, they are determined to offer it for Sale at less than HALF the original PRICE. The Goods are ot a superier kind both with respect to patterns and qualities.-— Upholsterers and others who may have heretofore bought of Messrs. Clayton and. Co. will be able to obtain their patterns in future only from J. Watson and Co. N. B. Hotel and Lodging- House Keepers have now an opportunity of selecting some extraordinary Bargains. HFLETCHER begs leave, in returning his grateful thanks • to the many Noblemen and Gentlemen who have honoured him with, their support since his commencement in business, to assure them that the same assiduity and exertion, which ha3 gained him so many Patrons ( whilst under an engagement to a very eminent West- end House) will be persevered in, thereby maintaining his established reputation as the only First- rate Tailor who has boldly stepped forward to destroy the monopoly by which Gentlemen who do pay have for so long a period been taxed for those who do not. The following Scala of Prices is respectfully submitted, for prompt payment:— £ s d Dress Coats, Blue or Black .. 3 16 6 Ditto .. any other colour .. 360 Frock ditto, Blue or Black, Skirts lined with Silk .. O Trowsers, Blue or Black .. Ditto, any other colour •• .. . .. .. Ditto, White Drill Waistcoats .. .... . Regimentals, & c. upon equally reasonable terms. VERY BEST LIVERIES. A Footman's Suit complete, with sleeves to waistcoat, and velveteen breeches •• A Suit, with kerseymere Breeches 4 10 A ditto, with hair plush ditto .. •• •• •• 4 15 A Stable or Working Dress 14 A Footman's extra double- milled drab Great Coat with large Cape .. .. i. •• 3 13 6 Gold or Silver Lace, and Crested Buttons, charged the wholesale price." Deputy Lord Lieutenant's Uniform, complete, 30 Guineas. Officers' Coatees, & c. & e. lower than at any other House in London* H. FLETCHER, Army Clothier#& c. 33, New Bond- sUeet » £ 3 6 4 18 1 14 1 10 0 8 0 15 4 S 6 6 1 - Z' 34 TUESDAY'S GAZETTE. The Lord Chamberlain of his Majesty's Household has appointed Edward Moore, of Cleveland- row, Esq., one ol the Gentlemen of his Majesty's Most Honourable Pi ivy Chamber in Ordinary. To be substituted for the notification in error which appeared in the Gazette of last FridayThe Lord Chamberlain of his Majesty's Household has ap- pointed Doctor Hewett Ph\ sician Extraordinary to the Sing. DECLARATIONS OF INSOLVENCY. J. S. LINDSAY, Great Cambridge- street, Hacknev- road, merchant— S. S, FORSAITH, Whitechapel road, haberdasher— R. GASCOYNE, Richmond, tailor— J. PURSGLOVE, Garden- stivet, Hurstmonceux, Sussex, brewer. BANKRUPTS. G. CASTLE, jun. Rotherhithe, ship- builder. Atts. Evitt and Co. Haydon- square, Minories— C. PYNE, Earl's- court, Old firompton, dyer. Att. Tanner, Brabant- court, Philpot- lane— P. J. COVERDALE, Barking, Essex, surgeon. Att. Jordan, Warnford- court, Throgmorton- st.— G. BOSTOCK. Old Cavendish- street, tailor. Ati. Richardson, Ironmonger- lane, Cheapside— E. TANNER, Ramsirate, tavern keeper. Atts. Young and Ware, Blackman- street, Southwark — T. GERVES, Hendon, Middlesex, hay salesman. Atts. Martineau and Malton, Carey street, Lincoln's Inn— T. TAYLOR, Rose- street, Newgate- street, meat salesman. Atts. Makinson and Senders, Elm court, Temple— J. WATSON, Wood- street, Cheapside, ribbon manufacturer. Att. Bull, Ely- place, Holborn— E. G. BLACK SAND, Macclesfield, grocer. Atts. Parrott, Macclesfield; Lucas and Parkinson, Argyll- street, Regent- street— J. BUCKLEY, Liverpool, cheese factor. Atts. Frodsham Liverpool; Adiington and Co. Bedford- row, London— J. SWIFT, Liverpool, victualler. Atts. Leigh, George- street, Mansion house, London; Leather, Liverpool— E., E., and H. HUGHES, Manchester, cotton- spinners. Atts. Johnson and Vt eatherall, Temple, London ; Hijjson and Co. Manchester— T. UNDERWOOD, Bristol, skin dresser. Atts. King, Bristol, Adiington and Co. Bedford- row— W. GADESBY, Hopwas, Staffordshire, vic- tualler. Atts. Hammond, Furnival's Inn, London ; Dyott, Lichfield— W. JOHN- SON, Manchester^ firrkeeper. Atts. Appieby and Charnock, Gray's Inn, Lon- don ; Oliver. Manchester— W. CBOSTON, jun. Toxteth- park,' Lancashire, cotton spinner. Atts. Robinson, Liverpool; Blackstock & Bunce, King's Bench- waik^ Temple— J. LAW, Lloyd, Staffordshire, farmer. Atts. Byrne, Cook's- ^ jourt, Lincoln's Inn; Homer, Sedgley. FRIDAY'S GAZETTE. Tlie Lord Chamberlain has appointed Henry Edmund Austen, Esq. one of the Gentlemen of His Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Chamber in ordinary ; and also Dr. Henry Grattan Douglass, M. D., Physician Extraordinary to the King. WAR OFFICE, Jan. 27.— 1st Regt. Dragoons ; Cornet F. Moore to be Lieut, " by pur. vice Trafford, retires ; T. J. Barke, Gent, to be Cornet, by purchase, vice Moore ; Cornet and Adjutant J. Kelly to have rank of Lieutenant,.— 12th Light Dragoons : Capt. W. F. H. Stuart, from half- pay 96th Regt. to be Captain, vice Hamilton, exch.— Coldstream Regt. Foot Guards : Lieut, and Capt. R. Bowen to he Captain and Lieutenant- Colonel, by purchase, vice Montague, retires ; Ensign and Lieut. C. W. Horton to be Lieutenant and Captain, by pur. vice Bowen; S. R. Conroy, Gent, to be Ensign and Lieutenant, by pur. vice Horton.— 22d Foot: Sraff- As^ istant- Surgeon M. Fogartyto be Suigeon. vice Owen, deceased. — 49th Foot: Lieut. E. Hawkins to be Captain, by pur. vice Bagot, retires; Ensign F. Deacon, from 19th Regt. to be Lieutenant, by pur. vice Hawkins.— 60th Foot: J. J. O'Neil Power, Cient. to be Second Lieutenant, by pur. vice Corbett, retires.— 62d Foot: Staff Assistant- Surgeon J. Johnston to be Assistant- Surgeon, vice Carline, whose appointment has been cancelled.— 89th Foot: Lieut. J. Graham, from half- pay, to be Lieutenant, without pur. rice Forbes, commuted. Hospital Staff.— Assistant- Surgeon H. M Ciintock, from the half pay of the 89th Regiment, to be Staff- Assissant- Surgeon to the Forces, vice Crawford, deceased. The half pay of the under- mentioned Officers has been cancelled from the 27th inst. inclusive, upon their receiving a commuted allowance for their Com- missions : — Assistant- Surgeon T. Walker, 40th Foot; Ensign E. Holland, 1st Foot ; Lieut. P. N. Frizell, 76th Foot ; Lieut. R. S. Sitwell, 29th Foot ; Ensign H. P. Broomfield, 1st Garrison Battalion ; Lieut. W. Metge, 13th Foot ; Lieut. J. L. Molony, 12th Foot; Lieut. W.- Gray, 90th Foot: Ensign C. Making, 5th Foot ; Lieut. J. Lindsay,- 63d Foot. The half' pay of the under- mentioned Officer has been cancelled from the 1st October, 1831, inclusive; he having re- ceived a commuted allowance for his Commission : — Lieut. L. C. Russell, 20th Light Dragoons. CROWN OFFICE, Jan. 27.— Member returned to serve in this present Parlia- ment.— Borough of Tewkesbury:— Charles Hen bury Tracy, of Toddington Abbey, in the county of Gloucester, Esq. in the room of John Martin, Esq. dec. DECLARATIONS OF INSOLVENCY. G. B. POYNTON, Oxford- street, woollen- draper— T. LONG, Brick- lane, Spi- talfields, carpenter— J. ARMITAGE and J. GREENWOOD, Clayton, Yorkshire, worsted stuff- manufacturers— J. NEWMAN, South- street, Chelsea, victualler. BANKRUPTCY ENLARGED. R. T. GLYN, Glamorganshire, cattle- dealer, from Jan. 31 to April 16— J. E. ROSE, Bath, linen- draper, from Jan. 31 to March 13. BANKRUPTCY SUPERSEDED. S. CROCKWELL, Torquay, Devonshire, builder— E. P. WILLS, Chichester, Sussex, tailor- rJ. HARTNEY, Tronmonger- lane, merchant. BANKRUPTS. W. TAYLOR, Coppull, Lancashire, timber- dealer. Atts. Clarice and Co. Lincoln's Inn- fields; Latham, Chorley, Lancashire— T. WILKINSON, Finsbury- square, upholsterer. Atts. R. Wilks and Milnthorpe, Finbury- place, Finsbury- square— S. HODGES, Bunhill- row, tailor. Atts. W. Nokes, Woolwich ; J. Nokes, Charlotte- street, Bloomsburv— E. BAUCKHAM, Providence- row. Kent- road, builder. Att. A. T. Tanner, Brabant- court, Philpot- lane— W. IVORY, St. Mary- at- Hill, licensed- victualler. Atts. Messrs. Treachern and White, 72, Cornhill— H. W. SMITH, Greenwich, carpenter. Att. Rush, Crown- court, Threadneedle- etreet— T. LEWIS, Whitecliapel road, victualler. Atts. Argill and Jennings, Whitechapel road— J. R. BEECROFT, St. Alban's, innkeeper. Atts. Grover and Stuart, Bedford- row— G. DRAPER, Whitechapel High street, victualler. Atts. Carter and Gregory, Lord Mayor's Court Office, Royal Exchange— J. MABERLY, Bread- street, Cheapside, banker. Atts. Walford and Sons, South- ampton- street, Covent- garden— W. ATHEARN, Ivnight's- hill, Streatham, Sur- rey, brickmaker. Official Assignee, Cannon, Lothbury— J. CASTLE, Green- street, Leicester- square, chemist. Att. Blacklow, Frith- street, Soho- square— T. GEEVES, Hendon, Middlesex, hay salesman. Atts. Martineau and Malton, Carey- street, Lincoln's Inn— J. BURKE, Mitre Tavern, Greenwich, licensed victualler. Atts. Nokes, Woolwich ; Nokes, Charlotte- street, Bloomsbury— J. HUNTER, Church- passage, Guildhal!- yard, undertaker. Att. Taylor, King- st., Cheapside— H. STUART, Worcester, wine merchant. Atts. Beck, Devonshire- street, Queen- square; France and Hill, Worcester— R. GRAY, Cottingham, Yorkshire, wharfi- Kger. Atts. Lever, Gray's Inn- square ; Foster and Miller, Hull — W. HEWITT and T. HEWITT, jun. Kingston- upon- Hull, merchants Atts. Lightfoet and Earnshaw, Hull; Knowles, New Inn, London. THE PEERS AND THEIR ANCESTORS.— It has been well observed, that of all the improvements hitherto adopted, that which Mr. Lodge has introduced in his New Peerage, is undoubtedly the most important. By separating the changing from the permanent records of noble families, in other words, the living from the dead, he has ac- complished what by any other means appeared impassible, the giving in a single volume, and at one- half the usual cost, a complete account of the present nobility and their families. It will now no longer be necessary to purchase and re- purchase the Genealogical history, when a corrected Peerage is required. Mr. Lodge, by his admirable plan, having entirely relieved the purchaser from a tax, at once so. unnecessary and perpetual. CANTERBURY TALES.— The numerous admirers of this beautiful series of fictions, by Sophia and Harriet Lee, which have for a long time been so scarce, will be highly gratified to find that they are now reprinted in the Standard Novels., and that Mrs. Harriet Lee, with whom the design originated, and who wrote the greater number of the stories, has revised, the volumes expressly for the present edition, and prefixed to it a new introduction, embracing, with other inte- resting details, a brief memoir of her sister and coadjutor in the: work. THE LAST NEW NOVELS.— Sir Ralph Esher, by Mr. Leigh Hunt, is a story of the Court of Charles the Second— a period well adapted to the purposes of the Novelist, owing to the numerous plots and intrigues continually in agitation, in which the High Personages, who figured at his Court, were frequently the prime movers. The Hero, though born of a Puritan family, contrives to get introduced at Court, where he, of course, comes in contact with all the wits and beauties, who surrounded the Throne of the merry Monarch. T- he new story of The Opera affords a memorable lesson to such of our Nobility as are addicted to introducing Foreign Performers into the interior of their families, originating in a very melancholy . cir- cumstance connected with the Marriage of a Leading M- ember of the Aristocracy. The work is from the pen of the Author of Motheysand Daughters, which has been admitted to be one of the " truest pictures of high life ever disclosed to the world." Drawing- room and dining- room mahogany, rosewood, cottage and bed- room chairs, of all colours, 30- eozen always ready for inspection, sofas, couches and easy chairs to match ; sets of card, sofa, loo tables and cabinets; mahogany dining tables of all sizes, and sideboards ; winged and other wardrobes, drawers, French and other bedsteads, glasses, & c.; all manufactured on the premises, finished in the best manner, and warranted for years* at a sav. ipg of nearly one half, by applying at H. YVALKINGTON'S, 214, High Holborn, opposite South- ampton- street, Bloomsburysquare. A fine head of hair, displayed in exuberant tresses, and in those silken ringlets that luxuriate on the brow of beauty, is justly appre- ciated as the most invaluable endowment of nature ; and the art by which such feature is realized is consequently held in estimation. Rowland's Macassar Oil elicits redundancy of hair, even on parts of the head that were previously bald, proved by testimonials received from the most distinguished personagss in all parts of the globe, and in preventing the hair falling off or turning grey to the most advanced periods of life— generates with infancy ample growth of beauti- ful hair, and will sustain it in perfection through all the stages of existence. Sub- duing all relaxingtendencies. it firmly keeps the hair in curl and other decorative formation during many hours, unimpaired by damp weather, crowded assemblies, the dance, & c.& c. jJOHN BULL. IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT. HO USE OF LORDS. MONDAY. Lord ELLENBOROUGH moved for a series of papers, respecting our differences with the authorities at Canton, which were ordered. TUESDAY. The Earl of WICKLOW complained of the heavy fees incurred by those Magistrates in Ireland who renewed their commissions ; in doing so. the Noble Earl said lie could not hut direct the special and anxious attention of the Government to the deplorablestate of Ireland, many parts of it being under the complete dominion of demagogues ; and the calamities were increased, by the fact that, owing to such expence, and the non- renewal of commissions, many counties might be said to'be virtually without any Magistracy. Earl GREY and Lord MELBOURNE assured the Noble Earl that the subject should have the immediate attention of Government. THURSDAY. The Earl of ABERDEEN' brought forward his promised motion on the subject of Belgium, and entered into very extensive details re- specting the relative position of Holland and the Netherlands— the proceedings of the Allies in 1814— the circumstances and treaties attendant upon the annexation of Holland and Belgium— the con- ferences arising out of the Belgic revolution, & c. In doing so, his Lordship particularly regretted the prominent station that had been taken by Russia, which ought to have been occupied by England, as the natural and old ally of Holland. His Lordship also con- tended that Holland had not sought the union with Belgium, but that it had grown out of the views of the Allies in 1814; and that Holland having acceeded to that arrangement, it was not very just in the Allies to sanction the separation where they before had urged the union. He also particularly complained of the guarantees that had been entered into by this country— namely, to guarantee the payment annually by Belgium of 700.0001. ( a Noble Friend said it was 840,0001.) by a country that had just emerged from one revolution and that might be on the eve of another. His Lordship concluded with moving an Address to the King, expressive of regret at the system of foreign policy adopted by His Majesty's Ministers ; of the conviction that it was fraught with evil consequences, & c. Earl GREY defended the conduct of Ministers, and maintained that the course they had pursued was the only one it war were to be averted. The Duke of WELLINGTON elaborately supported the motion. Upon a division the numbers were— for the motion, 95 ; against it, 132; majority, 37.— Their Lordships then adjourned. FRIDAY. Lord ELLENBOROUGH wished to put a question upon asubjectwhich had been recommended to the attention of the House in his Majesty's Speech, and as he saw the Noble Secretary of State for the Home Department in his place, he would take the present opportunity of doing so. He alluded to the disgraceful scenes which had taken place at Bristol and Nottingham. He wished to ask the Noble Lord whether his Majesty's Government had any measures in contempla- tion for the prevention and suppression of such outrages ? Viscount MELBOURNE replied that there were measures in pre- paration, which, as soon as they were matured, should be laid before the House. Lord ELLENBOROUGH apprehended, then, that in this instance, as in several others, his Majesty's Ministers had departed from the usual course. This was the first instance within his recollection in which a recommendation had proceeded from the Throne that Par- liament should take a subject into its consideration,' when his Ma- jesty's Government had not determined upon the measures to be proposed. HO USE OF COMMONS. MONDAY. The House then went intoCommitteeon the English Reform Bill, and proceeded with that part of the first clause which says that the " thirty" places enumerated in schedule B shall, after the passing of this Bill, return " one" member each. Mr. GOULBURN moved that the word " thirty" be omitted, which was discussed at some length, when the Committee divided, and the numbers were— for the original motion, 210; against it, 112; majority, 88.— The subsequent clauses, down to the 7th, were then adopted. All the schedules were postponed. Aftersome furtherdiscussion, the Chairman reported progress, and obtained leave to sit again. TUESDAY. The chief business of this evening was the further consideration, in Committee, of the English; Reform Bill, in which the House pro- ceeded from the 7th to the* 11th clause without much decided oppo- sition, with the exception of that clause respecting the appointment of the returning officer in places not now sending Members, and where the population may not have a corporation ; the clause, how- , ever, eventually passed. On the motion that the clause which proposed the division of Lin- colnshire do pass, Colonel SIBTHOUP moved as an amendment, that all the words alter the word '' Lincoln," in line threeof the clause, be omitted. Upon which the House divided, when there appeared— For the original motion, 195; for Col. SIBTHORP's amendment, 64; majority for the original motion, 131. The clause was then agreed to, when the Chairman reported progress, and obtained leave to sit again. The Anatomy Bill went through a Committee.— Adjourned. WEDNESDAY. At 4 o'clock, there not being forty Members present, the SPEAKER declared the House adjourned. THURSDAY. On the motion of Mr. HOLMES a new writ was ordered to be issued forthe election of a burgess to serve in the present Parliament for the borough of Dunwich, in the room of the Ear) of Brecknock. I'he SPEAKER having called upon Mr. Perceval, [ The following stood against the name of the Hon. Member in the notices of motions :— Mr. PERCEVAL— To move an Address to his Majesty that he will appoint an early day for General Fasting and Humiliation.] Mr. PERCEVAL rose and said—" Sir, I see strangers in the House." The SPEAKER immediately ordered strangers to withdraw. Mr. HUME said he presumed he might move the suspension of the Standing Order. The SPEAKER said " Strangers must withdraw." The gallery was immediately cleared, and the House debated with closed doors. The gallery was not opened until about seven o'clock. We under- stood the Hon. Member had withdrawn his motion. FRIDAY. Mr. O'CONNELL gave notice of a motion for Wednesday next, for leave to introduce a Bill to alter and amend the 37th and 38th Geo. III., respecting the Irish Currency ; also of a motion for leave to bring in a Bill for the regulation of the services of Writs of Capias and Respondendum issued on the Equity side of the Court of Exchequer in Ireland. Mr. COURTENAY gave notice of a motion respecting the relation of Great Britain in respect to Portugal. Owing to the low tone in which the Right Hon. Gentleman spoke, we were unable to ascertain for what day. Mr. BARING gave notice, that, on the 14th of February next, lie would move for leave to bring in a Bill to limit the privileges of Members of Parliament, with a view to doing away their exemption from arrests after judgment. The House then went into Committee on the Reform Bill, and proceeded to the consideration of the 14th clause, namely, that which regards the division of counties. Sir R. PEEL recommended a comparison on the subject of this clause, which should supersede the necessity of dividing the counties; he proposed to effect this by enacting that where the free- hold or copyhold was situated in a city or borough returning Mem- bers of Parliament, the elector should vote for such city or borough, and not for the county ; where the property was s ituated in towns, not sending Members, the votes, ol course, to be given to County Members. Lord JOHN RUSSELL doubted not the sincerity with which this Amendment was suggested, and added, that the subject was one which had occupied the consideration of the Government; but was not adopted, because it was deemed to be calculated to divide too much the electors of towns aid counties. The freeholders in towns had now just pride in having votes for counties; and the county Members, in whose elections they took a part, did not consider themselves the exclusive representatives of a single interest. Al- though inconveniences might sometimes occur, he thought them nothing in the balance, compared with the disadvantages that would result from creating the divisions of interests that would flow from the plan now proposed, Mr. GORE LANGTON then brought forward his proposed amendment, January 29. namely, that the counties proposed to be divided, do, instead thereof, send four Members each. This amendment was eventually negatived, as were also proposi- tions to amend that and other clauses regarding the giving three Members to particular counties. The clause for the division of counties was carried. The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER acquiesced in a suggestion to have a separate schedule, & c. as regarded the counties to send three Members. The clause for giving an additional Member to certain Welch counties was carried, alter some opposition, as being unjust towards Scotland, and the further proceedings in Committee were postponed till Tuesday. The Corporate Funds Bill was read a third time and passed. A motion for the appointment of a Select Committee on East India affairs, as regards the renewal of the Company's Charter, was agreed to, and the Committee appointed. Adjourned till Tuesday. COURT MARTIAL. WEDNESDAY. The Court met this day pursuant to adjournment, and resumed its proceedings. The room at Merchants' Hall was exceedingly crowded with individuals of the first respectability, the principal part of whom were ladies. The members, in their full regimentals, decorated with various stars and orders, took their seats at the table shortly after ten o'clock. The room at this moment presented one ol the most splendid scenes ever perhaps witnessed in this country on any similar occasion. The members of theCourthavinganswered to their names, the President ( Sir Henry Fane) desired that the prisoner should be called in. Captain Warrington, accompanied by several military friends, shortly afterwards entered the room, and took their places at a table prepared for them on the left hand of the President. The President enquired of the prisoner if he was prepared to go on, and Captain Warrington having answered in the affirmative, the Deputy Judge Advocate read the charges, to each of which Captain Warrington emphatically pleaded Not Guilty. The charges were neglect of duty on the Sunday night and Monday morning, in not attempting to quell the rioters, in obedience to the call of the Magistrates; and in not making known the requisition of the Mayor to Col. Brereton, and taking the Colonel's orders con- cerning it. There was a third charge against the Captain, for devolv- ing the command of his men upon Cornet Kelson, a young officer who had beenfonly a few months in the service; for being absent on the evening of Sunday from his duty ; and for going to bed on the same night. The names of the witnesses for the prosecution and for the defence were then handed in, and read by the Deputy Judge Advocate. For the prosecution 26 witnesses were summoned, and for the defence 20. General Sir Charles Dalbiac then addressed to the Court the cir- cumstances which had brought the prisoner before them, as also a brief recapitulation of the evidence to be adduced in support of the charges.— Witnesses were then examined on the first charge, who underwent a rigid cross- examination by Capt. Warrington, when a question arose which the Court felt it necessary to deliberate upon with closed doors. The Court was accordingly cleared, and after a lengthened consultation strangers were again admitted, when the President decided that the question was an objectionable one, aa tending to lsegative the first charge, which alleged that Capt. War- rington's troop of the 3d Dragoon Guards was the only disposable military force in the city on the nightin question, when such could not be the case on the arrival of the Doddington Yeomanry Cavalry. The examination of witnesses was then resumed till four o'clock, when the Court adjourned. THURSDAY. The Court met at ten o'clock in the morning, and the examination of witnesses in support of the first and second charges was proceeded with, who all underwent a rigid cross- examination by Capt. War rington, when, at the usual hour, the Court adjourned. FRIDAY. At ten o'clock, the President and Members of the Court entered, and took their seats, The Court was but thinly attended, which was attributable to the melancholy proceedings of the day elsewhere, in the carrying the sentence of death against the four prisoners into effect. The examination of witnesses on the second charge was then re- aumed, hut at an early hour the President informed the Court that the whole of the evidence on that chai- ge was gone through, and asked the prisoner if lie was prepared to go on with the third charge. Capt, Warrington replied in the affirmative. The President then said, that although the third charge contained four counts, it was not his intention to offer evidence in support of each count separately, but to take the whole of the charge together. The examination of witnesses then proceeded. They were few in number, and this day's proceedings closed the case on the part of the prosecution. The President then asked Capt. Warrington when he should be ready to enter on his defence; to which he answered that he should be prepared by Monday; to which day the Court adjourned. THE INVASION, by the Author of ' l'he Collegians.— Neither the motto nor the preface prepares us for the poetic dignity every where visible in the story and characters of this work. It is a tale of former times, and abounds in vivid images of other days— heroic acts, heroic songs, and fine pictures of ancient manners— the work is evidently the fruit of great research, and the reader will rise from its perusal with a bet- ter idea of the interesting period it describes, than he could obtain from many folios. The hero and heroine are fine personifications of a Sovereign and his consort ardently devoted to their country's wel- fare. The following are, we understand, some of the articles to be given in the February number of the New Monthly MagazineRemarks on the Quarterly Reviewers— Comments on the Society for the Dif- fusion of Useful Knowledge— How to live with Credit— The present State of the Drama— John Hampden— Memoirs of Ugo Foscolo— The Poetical and Literary Character of the late John Philip Kemble— Asmodeus at large. BY ORDER or THE SHERIFFS OF LONDON. — To Noblemen, Gen- tlemen, and Others.— To be Sold by Auction, by Mr. CROOK, at the Auction Mart, opposite the Bank of England, on Tuesday next, January 31, at Twelve, by Order of the Sheriffs of London, a Superfine Blue Surtout, lined and trimmed with Canada and Russia Sable, in the highest preservation ; also, a Rich Nine- Skin Russia Sable Muff; and an Excellent Russia Sable Mantilla Tippet, con- sisting of Sixteen Skins, in Three Lots, the Property of the Hon. Mr. Long Wellesley, M. P. Galignani, the celebrated Bookseller of Paris, has just forwarded to England a very large order for The Geographical Annual, which the publisher, we understand, will not be able fully to execute, on account of his engagements for supplying the English market; and even this supply cannot be accomplished at a greater rate than from three to four hundred per week, on account of the number of engrav- ings, and the great care required in colouring and binding up this elegant and valuable work of art. REMARKABLE PLOT.—" The whole mass of broad historical painting, in the new novel of The Jew, is harmonized and mellowed by a thousand minute touches, descriptive of domestic habits and super- stitions, and minor accidental customs and ceremonies, which would almost lead us to suppose that the author was himself a translation from the times with which he deals so familiarly. The characters are multiplied beyond all precedent; and the plot conducted by fifty con- current streams, tending to and finally mingling in one."'— Athenaeum. CHANTILLY.— This new work of fact and fiction, dedicated to the Princesse Louise d'Orleana, we are requested to state, will be pub- lished next week, and delivered to the principal Booksellers and Librarians ; of whom, also, may now be obtained, any of the follow- ing works just published :— 1. The Robber, by the celebrated author of Chartley. the Fatalist-, 2. The Affianced One, by the author of Gertrude, 3 vols.; 3. Cameron, 3 vols. ; 4. The King's Secret, by the author of the Lost Heir, 3 vols.; and 5. The False Step, 3 vols. COMPANION TO THE WAVERLEY NOVELS.— We are requested to announce, that on the 1st of February a complete edition, uniform with the Waverley Novels, will be produced of the Four Series of The Romance of History; viz., England, France, Italy, and Spain, at only Six Shillings per volume, neatly bound. The principal Book- sellers in England, Messrs. Bell and Bradfute, agents for Scotland, and Mr. Cumming, agent for Ireland, have instructions for receiving all orders; which, to prevent disappointment, should be given as early as possible before the day of publication. The Pantheon, in Oxford- street, once a place of very fashionable resort, was purchased on Tuesday for 16,0001. by a Mr. Robinson. It is rumoured that the purchaser intends to convert it into a Catholic Chapel. February 12. JOHN BULL. 35- ALETTER from MONTAGU BURGOYNE, Esq., one of the Verderors of the Forest of Waltham, to the LORD DUNCANNON and His Majesty's Commissioners of Woods and Forests, shewing the Expediency of INCLOSING PART of the FOREST of WALTHAM, and removing the Deer, in order to improve the Reveuue of the Crown, preserve the young Timber, and find Employment and Provision for the Poor, who are starving for want of work, as stated in the Petition presented by the Owners and Occupiers of Land in the vicinity of the Forest, whose crops are materially injured by the ravenous half- starved Deer.— In this Letter is shewn the great benefit derived by the Poor from small allotments of Land provided for them. N. B. The present state of Mortlake, Putney, and Fulham, in regard to these Allotments, which was promised to be given in the " Labourer's Friend's ' Pub- lication for February, is unavoidably deferred to the 1st of. March. Printed for Rivington, St. Paul's Church- vard and Waterloo- place. Just published, in pocket size, price 9s. in clotti boards, THE BOOK of COMMON PRAYER and ADMINISTRA- TION of the SACRAMENTS, according to the Use of the United Church of Scotland and Ireland; together with the Psalter or Psalms of David, pointed as they are to be said in Churches. Sold by G. and W. Nicol, Pall- mall: Rivingtons, Waterloo- place and St. Paul's Church- yard ; Harding and Lepard, Pall Mall East; and Major, Fleet- street. In this Edition of the Book of'Common Prayer, some particulars of the for- mation of the Liturgy, with explanations of manyparts of the Services, are given in Notes accompanying the Text, and compressed into a small compass, that they may be of easy reference, and that the size of the book may not be unsuitable to general use. The substance of the Notes is to be found in the writings of others, and has been gathered from the well known commentaries of Lowth, Patrick. Home, Comber, & c. & c. On the 1st of February will pe published, Part II. price 5s. of the CYCLOPEDIA OF PRACTICAL MEDICINE; COMPRISING Treatises on the Nature and Treatment of Diseases, Materia Medica and Therapeutics, Medical Jurisprudence, & c. Edited by JOHN FORBES, ft!. P. F. R S. Phvsicianto the Chichester Infirmary,& c. A L EX AN D ER TWEE DIE, M. D. Physician to the London Fever Hospital,& c. JOHN CONOLLY, M. D. late Professor of Medicine in the London Uni- versity, & c. " Such a work as this has long been wanting in this country, and will be very desirable to medical students. British Medicine ought to have set itself forth in this way much sooner. We have often wondered that the medical profession and the enterprising publishers of Great Britain did not, long ere this, enter upon such an undertaking as a Cyclopaedia of Practical Medicine."— Medical Ga- zette, Jan. 14. London : Sherwood, Gilbeit, and Pi per, and Baldwin and Cradock, Paternoster- row : Wbittaker, Treacher, and Co. Ave- Maria- lane. On the 1st ot February wilt be published. Part i. and continued Monthly, by Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper, Paternoster- row; and Carpenter and ; Son, Old JBond- street, price 1 5s. each Part, AGENEALOGICAL PEERAGE of ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, and IRELAND,( illustrated with very superior Copper- plate Engravings) l) y W. BERRY and SON, the former fifteen years Registrar's Clerk in the College of Arms, London, Author of the Encyclopaedia Heraldica, County Gene- alogies, & c. & c. Each Part will be printed on 4to. imperial paper, hot- pressed, and contaiu the Genealogical Tables of Twelve Peers, alphabetically arranged, with highly- finished Engravings of the Arms, Crests, and Supporters of each Peer. Three Parts in One may be had Quarterly, if required. Subscribers' Names received by Mr. Berry, Doddington- place, Kennington, Surrey, and by the Publishers. In small 8vo. 7 « - 6d. HUGHES' DIVINES of the CHURCH, No. 21, containing the DISCOURSES of W. S. POWELL, D. D. ( Archdeacon of Colchester, and Master of St. John's College, Cambridge, and of JAMES FAWCETT, I5. D. Lady Margaret's Preacher. With a Life of each Author, Summary to each Ser- mon, Notes, & c. Together in 1 vol, complete. Printed and published by A. J. Valpy, M. A. Red Lion- court, Fleet- street, and sold by all booksellers. The following Authors are already published in this series:— SHE It LOCKS WORKS, complete, Nos. l to 5. HARROW'S WORKS, complete, Nos. 6 to 12. JEllE. M V TAYLOR'S SELECT WORKS, Nos. 13 to 17. BISHOP HALL'S CONTEMPLATIONS, Nos. 13 to 20. Any Author may be had separate at 7s. 6d. each Number. " Each discourse is preceded by a neat summary, which, whilst it presents a specimen of a skeleton sermon, eminently calculated to assist the young divine in composition, enables the reader to perceive at a glance, as it were, the scope and design of the discourse, and to understand the subject treated of in the sermon much better than if he read it without having previously perused the analysis. We strongly recommend it to the religious world."— Liverpool Albion. In small 8vo, neatly bound in cloth, 4s. 6d. each number, VALPY'S CLASSICAL LIBRARY ; or, English Translations of the most valuable Greek and Latin Classics. No. 26, containing the 4th Vol. of PLUTARCH'S LIVES, illustrated with portraits. " If all the books in the world were in the fire, there is not one T would so eagerly snatch from the flames as Plutarch. That author never tires me ; I read him often, and always find new beauties."— Menage. The following Authors, any of which may be purchased separately, are already published: — DEMOSTHENES and SALLUST, Nos. 1 and 2. XENOPHON'S ANABASIS and CYROPEDIA, Nos. 3 and4. JJELOE'S HERODOTUS, Nos. 5,6, and 7- VIRGI L, by Wrangham, Sotheby and Dryden, Nos. 8 and 9. PINDAR and ANACREON, No. 10. MURPHY'S TACITUS, No. 11 to 15. THEOPHRASTUS, with 50 engravings, No. 16. HORACE and PHJEDRUS, Nos. 17 and 18. JUVENAL a » d PERSIUS, No. 19. THUC YDIDES, Nos. 20,21, and 22. " If you desire your son, though no great scholar, to read and reflect, it i3 your duty to place into his hands the best translations of the best Classical Authors." — Dr. Parr. To those who are desirous of a knowledge of the Authors of Greece and Rome, but possess not the means or leisure for a regular course of study, the present undertaking must prove a valuable acquisition. Indeed, so diversified are the objects to which general education is at present directed, that sufficient time cannot be allowed for an adequate acquaintance with the Greek and Latin Authors. As the learned languages do not form part of the education of Females, the only access which they have to the stores of antiquity is through Translation. " We must again urgently recommend this very valuable publication to the attention and support of the heads of families and instructors of youth. It ought to find a place in every school library in the kingdom."— Stamford Bee. London : edited, printed and published by A. J. Valpy, M. A., Red Lion- court, Fleet- street; and delivered regularly by every Bookseller, in town or country, with the monthly publications. CHARLES LAMB'S TALES OF SHAKSPEARE. Just published, a New and Elegant Edition, with 22 superb Cuts, from Designs by Harvey, and finely printed by Whittingham, in 1 volume, 12mo. price 7 s. 6d. handsomely bound, THE TALES OF SHAKSPEARE, Designed for the Use of Young Persons. The Fifth Edition. By CHARLES LAMB. " Lamb's Tales from Shakspeare are well known as forming one of the most charming children's books in the language. They are conceived in a spirit of simplicity, and yet with so shrewd a feeling of the power and beauty of the ori- ginal, as was perhaps possible to no other mind than that of Elia. They have arrived at a Fifth Edition, which is very prettily got up, and is adorned with wood- cuts from designs by Harvey."— Spectator, August. " One of the very best works that ever issued from the press for the delight and instruction of young people. 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The Index comprises up- wards of 14,000 Names, which in teaching ( besides other obvious uses) must answer almost every purpose of a Gazetteer. London: printed for Baldwin arid Cradock. N. B. The same work on imperial drawing paper, full coloured, and hand- somely half bound for libraries, price 11. 7s. DR. OLINTHUS GREGORYS LETTERS ON CHRISTIANITY. Just published, anew and greatlv improved Edition, in 2 vols, small 8vo. 14s. bds. Jf ETTERSto a FRIEND, on the EVIDENCES, DOCTRINES, . SL4 and DUTIES of the CHRISTIAN RBLIGION.— By OLINTHUS GREGORY, LL. D. The Fifth Edition. Lond Ccpies Price 17s. London: printed for Baldwi n and Cradock, Paternoster- row. r- pies done up for presents in a rich- grained silk bindinc and iri Hugh Hammersley, Esq. J> hn Hawes, Esq." vt iiliam Hevgate, Bart, and Alderman J. Petty Muspratt, Esq. William Sauiler, Esq. George Shurn Storey, Esq. Matthew Whiting, Esq. rORS. " ^ " In 8vo. price iUs. 6d. 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Rigge'a Aromatic Shaving Soap will also be found an invaluable addition. Manufactory, 65, Clieapside, London. A NEW SCHOOL BOOK FOR READING CLASSES. Just published, in a handsome 12mo. volume, price 5s. bound in purple and lettered, THE SCHOOL ANTHOLOGY; or Selections for Reading and Recitation in Prose and Verse. By J. H . BRANS BY. " See, I have culled the flowers that promised best."— Byron. Being a Second Edition of " Selections for Reading and Recitation," consi- derably augmented, and with many new Pieces added. Dedicated to Dr. Butler of Shrewsbury. Printed for Baldwin and Cradock, Paternoster- row. Tl A COMPLETE LAW LIBRARY. Lately published, in 15 vols, royal 8vo. price J1 - lis 6d. each vol. APRACTICAL and ELEMENTARY ABRIDGMENT of the CASES argued and determined in the Couita of King's Bench, Common Pleas, Exchequer, and at Nisi Prius, and of tin' Rules of Court from the Restor- ation in 1660, & c. & c. By CHARLES PETBRSDORFF, Esq. of the Inner Temple, Barrister- at- Law. 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Lately published in 12mo. price 4s. 6d. handsomely bound in green and lettered, ^ lUY'S GENERAL SCHOOL QUESTION BOOK; in which ^ JF each question, in a regular series, is followed by its appropriate answer, not only in Ancient and Modern History, in which the whole is arrangpa in chronological order, but also in B'ographv, Astronomy, Heathen Mythology, Classical Phraseology, and a great and interesting variety of miscellaneous sub- jects ; the whole tending to enlarge the boundaries of Juvenile Knowledge, by increasing its stores ; and thus, by blending such a course of general information with sound classical or liberal learning, to raise a better superstructure of School Education. By JOSEPH GUY, formerly of the Royal Military College. London: printed for Baldwin and Cradock, Paternoster- row. Where may be had, New Editions of the following Popular School Books by the same Author:— The SCHOOL GEOGRAPHY, with 7 MAPS; price 3s. bound. A KEY to the PROBLEMS. Price Is. 6d. 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Lately t- ublisbed, in 12mo. price/ s. neatlv bound and lettered, APRACTICAL GERMAN GRAMMAR, with Exercises under each Rule; being a New and Easy Method of acquiring a thorough Knowledge of the German Language. For the Use of Schools and Private Stu- dents By JOHN ROWBOTHAM, F. R. A. S. London : printed for Baldwin and Cradock, Paternoster- row ; and T. and T. JBoosev Broad street. Of whom may be had. by thr- same Author, A PRACTICAL GRAMMAR of the FRENCH LANGUAGE, illustrated by copious Examples and Exercises, selected from the most approved French Writers; designed for the Use of Schools and Private Students. In 12ino. price 5s. boards. PETER NICHOLSON'S ALGEBRA FOR SCHOOLS. Just published, in 12mo, price 5s. bound. HE SECOND EDITION of a PRACTICAL SYSTEM of ALGEBRA, for the use of Schools and Private Students. By P. NICHOLSON and J. ROW BOTH AM, F. R. A S. In this Edition the Author has made many material improvements, not < 7nly in the Demonstrations of some of the most important Rules, but also in the Illustrations of the Axioms, and of the Principles upon which Simple Equa- tions may be solved without transposition. Under the higherOrder of Equations, which have been materially improved, is a New Rule for extracting the Cube Root. From the perspicuity with which this work is written, and the copious and well- selected examp'es it contains, it may be regarded as a valuable acquisition to scholastic literature."— Monthly Magazine. " The examples are very numerous and well chosen. We consider that this Treatise deserves commendation for its gradual and successive development of the difficulties of this subject."— Westminster Review. A KEY to the above Work, containing the Solutions of more than 900 Pro- blems : by means of which, and the Algebra, a person may acquire a knowledge of this valuable Science without the Assistance of a Master. 12mo. 33. bound. London: printed for Baldwin and Cradock: Whittaker and Co.; J. Duncan; and J. Rowbotham. DR. LINGARD'S ENGLAND COMPLETE. Just published, the Third Edition, in Fourteen Volumes, 8vo., price 12s. each volume, boards, AHISTORY of ENGLAND, from the FIRST INVASION of the ROMANS. By JOHN LINGARD, D. D. The same Work, in 8 vols. 4to., price 11.15s. each volume. " The merits of Dr. Litigavd are of a high class. He generally discusses controverted facts with candour, acuteness, and perspicuity. He selects, in general, judiciously arranges naturally, relates without prolixity or confusion. Few modern works of the kind have obtained a more general notoriety, which has by no means been confined to our own country. " We shall presently give some extracts which display Dr. Lingard's powers of historical narration in a very favourable light. " The following extract will do full justice to Dr. Lingard's manner. It is longer than usual, but of an interesting nature, as it relates to events among the most remarkable that occurred in that period, the obstinate battle between the English and Dutch Fleets, in the summer of 1665, and the great Plague of London, which was nearly contemporaneous with it. The latter has never been noticed by any historian in more than a very few lines. Dr. Lingard has made good use of his materials, and may fairly challenge comparison with the well- known Account of the Plague at Athens, by Thucydides."— Edinburgh Review, March, 1831. London : Baldwin and Cradock, Paternoster- row ; and J. Booker, Bond- street. T WORKS OF ESTABLISHED REPUTATION, Published by Baldwin and Cradock, Lr- ndon, HE HISTORY of BRITISH INDIA. By JAMES MILL. Esq. In6v » ls. 8vo. 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SL TEETH without Heat or Pressure, and Incorrodible ARTIFICIAL TEETH without Wire or other ligatures — Monsieur MALLAN and SON" Surgical Dentists, No. 32, GREAT RUSSELL- STREET, Bloomsbury, grate- ful for the high and extensive patronage which has so eminently distinguished their professional exertions since their arrival in the British Metropolis, respect- fully announce to their Friends and the Public in general, that thev still con- tinue to restore Decayed Teeth with their MINERAL SUCCEDANEUM, SO universally recommended by the Faculty of London and Paris. The operation of filling Teeth is performed in a few seconds, without the slightest pain, heat, or pressure: also fasten Loose Teeth in a manner singularly efficacious, and supply whole or partial Sets of Teeth of the above Incorrodible Mineral, or Natural substances, without wire or other ligatures, and guaranteed to answer every purpose of articulating and mastication. The Faculty are respectfully invited to witness the successful result of the Mineral Succedaneum.— Charges as in Paris. DEFICIENCIES of TEETH.— Mr. A. JONES, Surgeon- Dentist J& Jr to their Royal Highnesses the Princess Augusta. and Duchess of Glou- cester, his Majesty Louis Philip I. and the Royal Family of France, and her Serene Highness Princess Esterhazv, having in numerous cases been highly successful in rectifying DEFECTIVE ARTICULATION, by the substitution of his improved TERRO- M ETALLIC TEETH for those which had decayed, or been subjected to removal, respectfully invites the attention of Ladies and Gen- tlemen, whose pronunciation is affected from those causes, to the importance and utility of the above- named unrivalled remedy. The TERRO- METALLIC TEETH ( which may be had from one to a complete set) will be guaranteed to restore to the wearer all the advantages of the genuine ones in mastication, as well as articulation, and cannot in any way be distinguished from the originals. Carious and tender teeth wholly preserved from the progress of decay, and rendered useful by Mr. A. Jones's unrivalled ANODYNE CEMENT. Every operation pertaining to Dental Surgery. References can be given to the most eminent medical men. At home from ten till five.— 64, Lower Grosvenor- street* Bond- street. FOR COUGHS, SHORTNESS of BREATH, ASTHMAS, & C. — POWELL'S BALSAM of ANISEED, under the immediate patronage of several of the most distinguished Nobility and Gentry in the kingdom, in bot- tles, at Is, l£ d. and 2s. 3d. each.— Tli is invaluable medicine is universally ac- knowledged to be one of the most efficacious remedies ever discovered for alle- viating the miseries incidental to the above distressing maladies. As a proof of its efficacy, the following extraordinary case is submitted to the public: Mr. Wright, of Mile End- road, was many years afflicted with Cough, short- ness of Breath, and 3ense of Suffocation, whenever he attempted to lie down in bed, owing to the great accumulation of viscid phlegm which he was unable to expec- torate. He had tried every means to obtain relief, but without effect; he could get no sleep but in his arm chair. In this state he continued to linger, without any hope of recovery, his friends expecting that every fit of coughing would ter- minate his existence. At length he was prevailed upon to try a bottle of the Balsam, and ( very extraordinary!) half an hour after the first dose, he was able to lie down in his bed ; and, before he had taken three bottles, was perfectly cured.— Prepared and sold by Thomas Powell, Blackfriars- road, London, 20 doors from the Magdalen, on the same side of the way ; and 28, Newington- place, Ken- nington.— Sold also by J. Sanger, 150, Oxford- street; Johnson, 68, Cornhill; Prout, 226, Strand; and most of the respectable chemists and wholesale and retail medicine venders in the United Kingdom. IMPORTANT CAUTION.— Observe, in future, that the words Thomas Powell, Blackfriars- r ® ad, London," are ( by permission of his Majesty's Honourable Commissioners of Stamps) engraved in white letters upon a red ground, in the Government Stamp, pasted over the top of each bottle, without which, it cannot be genuine A NEW LIGHT. JONES'S PATENT PROMETHEANS, for producing instant Light, without the aid of a bottle or any apparatus, and, unlike any other fire box, of whatever description, there is no possibility of their getting out of repair in any climate. This is the most simple and best mode of producing Light ever invented. 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The expence of burning is not one penny per hour. S. JONES'S ETNAS, for boiling half a pint of water in three minutes. BACHELOR'S DISPATCH, for boiling a quart of water, and cooking a steak, chop, or eggs, in nine minutes. PERI PURIST CONJURORS, and every description of PORTABLE KITCHENS, for ships, boats, gipsy and water parties, from 10s. 6d. to 14 guineas, to cook from one to 20 dishes. Merchants and CaDtains will find it to their interest to visit the LIGHT HOUSE, 201, STRAND.— N. B. The New Kitchen s kept going on Tuesdays and Fridays, from one to thr** o'clock. CBALL'S AJNTi BILIOUS PILLS.— By far the greater number K" of disorders to which mankind are subject, and in particular CHOLERA, TYPHUS FEVER, all Nervous Affections, and other complaints, arise from a disordered state of the stomach and bowels ; in fact the health of the body and mind are dependent upon those organs, and if theyf ail to perform their office the whole system becomes deranged and impaired, and predisposed to be acted upon by a variety of exeiting causes, which may produce some one of the above com- plaints. or others of equally alarming tendency. The Proprietors of the above Medicine ( which has stood the test of public approval Forty Years) confidently recommend the frequent use of it, where required, as a certain and effectual pre- ventive, and as the mildest and safest Bilious Aperient now extant. The constant and increasing demand fully prove this assertion. Sold in boxes at Is. 1 Jd. and 2s. 9d. each; and in family boxes, which are recommended to the afluent for charitable purposes, and where medical assistance is not always at hand, at 20s. each, which can only be had of the Proprietors, at Woodhridge. CHILBLAINS, Rheumatisms, Sprains, & c.— BUTLER'S CAJE- PUT OPODELDOC.- Cajeput Oil, which is the basis of this Opodeldoc, has been long esteemed on the Continent as a remedy for Chronic Rheumatism, spasmodic affections, chilblains, palsy, stiffness, aud enlargement of the joints, sprains, bruises and Deafness; combined in the form of Opodeldoc, it is rendered more penetrating, and consequently more efficacious as an external application. Rubbed upon the skin, by means of flannel, or the warm hand, it allays morbid irritation of the nerves, invigorates the absorbents, and accelerates the circula- tion. Sold in bottles, at Is. l| d. and 2s. 9d. by Messers. Butler, Chemists. Cheap- side, corner of St. Paul's, and the most respectable dealers in patent Medicines ; of whom may be had, MARSHALL'S UNIVERSAL CERATE, an excellent remedy for chilblains when broken ; scalds, burns, sores, ulcers, & c. In boxes, at Is. l£ d. and 2s. 9d. Observe, " Butler, Cheapside," on the Government Stamp. THE SPLENDID ANNUAL. Boast of your ' Keepsake' and ' Forget Me Not/ And other splendid Anii\ ials— the lot With Warren's glossy Blacking can't compare; A splendid Annual every day and year! A few buy picture- books, I understand ; I But millions purchase Warren's, 3u, Strand. THIS Easy- shining and Brilliant BLACKING, prepared by ROBERT WARREN, 30, STRAND, London; and sold in every town in the Kingdom. Liquid in bottles, and Paste Blacking in pots, at 6d.,! 2d., and ISd. each. Be particular to enquire for Warren's, 80, Strand. All others ar* counterfeit. 36 jJOHN BULL. January 29. TO CORRESPONDENTS. If the " Old- fashioned Church and Slate Man" will take the trouble to look at the Number of Bull for the 15M inst. he will find what he has sent us. with a few gentle observations of our own thereupon. The parallel diseases of A. B. C. have been already treated in the same manner in the paper some months back. 03" A MONDAY EDITION ( tor the Country) i » published at Three o'Clock in the afternoon, containing the Markets and Latest News. The TITLE and INDEX for the last Year will be ready for delivery to the Newsmen on Friday next. " JOHN B ULL. LONDON, JANUARY 29. THEIR MAJESTIES continue at Brighton. The KING did not come to London on Monday. The parties at the Pavilion are more than usually circum- scribed. We may not at present enter at any length upon a subject of the highest importance as regards the succession to the crown of these realms; but we may venture to state, that there is every probability to believe, that the country will yet be blessed with an heir apparent to the throne. THE Reform Bill is proceeding through the House of Commons, and the" division of counties" clause was carried on Friday by a large majority. No new Peers have been yet Gazetted— nor do we know when they will be— indeed the Bill itself seems to be getting as much out of fashion in the House as it decidedly is out of doors. We have the best authority for stating that the late indifference of the people of the metropolis as to its fate has grown into disinclination from its success, and that the termination of the question, by the removal of the present declared incompetent Minis- try would be the most satisfactory possible result. We last week ventured a hint to Lord WHARNCLIFFE as to any condition connected with permitting the Bill to go into Committee in the Lords— should it pass the Commons. WE warn him once more, before his Lordship concludes any arrangements— not upon that point but upon another. HE must not concede, even the first reading of the English Bill, until the Irish and Scotch Bills are ready— and that all three of them are simultaneously before the House. The Lords cannot legislate piece- meal— they must consider the • whole question as it affects the empire and the House of Commons generally. On Thursday, while the Earl of ABERDEEN and the Duke of WELLINGTON were in the House of Lords exposing in the ablest and clearest manner the woeful incapacity— to say the least of it— which has been displayed by His MAJESTY'S Ministers, in their management of Foreign Affairs, Mr. HERRIES was in the House of Commons, holding them up to the contempt and scorn of the whole country. They escaped from the ordeal with a majority of 24 votes out of 45S Members present. That they so escaped everybody knows was the successful result of the efforts of ELLICE, Sir JAMES GRAHAM. and Lord DUNCANNON, to whom their " miraculous preservation" is as entirely attributable as is the victory of Waterloo to the Duke of WELLINGTON. Deep and loud were the curses which the unwilling victims— con scripts of the Revolutionists— heaped upon the heads of their relentless masters. One, a Baronet of well esta blished Whig principles, was heard to say, " I have been voting black is white ; hard is it, indeed, to be dragged through the mud with such men ; but I hope everybody will understand, that, in voting to- night, I voted for Reform And a glorious encouragement to such Reformers the division was, and a splendid illustration of their politics and principles. Upon their own declared system of economy and non- intervention they first drive the country into a difficulty, and then squander five millions of money to get out of the scrape— in the teeth of the law, and in defiance of the House of Commons. Do not let our Readers imagine that we speak unad- visedly ; we will give them our grounds for what we say— they are facts. The agreement to pay the interest of this Loan to the Emperor of RUSSIA was hurried over, copied, signed and sealed, with the greatest possible expedition, in order that it might be despatched at the same hour, and by the same Courier, who carried the EMPEROR the Belgian Treaty of November 15, for His Imperial MAJESTY'S ratification. But see how this little cunning has overreached itself. By the vote of Thursday— the Majority of 24— England Is pledged to the payment of the £ 5,000,000 and its interest, and the Treaty of the 15th November is not yet signed; thus, in the scuffle, the knavery fails, and the folly is triumphant. Where are the usual Lists of the Majority and Minority upon this division, such as are ordinarily published in the - Times Newspaper ? We promise them to our Readers next Sunday, and they will then be able to distinguish who of the Patriots, the opposers of jobs, extravagance, and wantonness, have supported this most flagrant job. Lord ALTHORP, in the House, threw out signals of distress ; and, in reply to Mr. PAGET, made the expected miseri- cordiam appeal to his friends ; and ably, indeed, were his Lordship's efforts seconded by his " staff" in the Lobby— promises to the English doubters— threats to the Irish ones were all most earnestly employed ; and, although O'CON- MELL himself voted in the Minority, he permitted his Irish Members to support the Ministers. How unlike juggling and trickery, and expediency, all this looks. But the country is fast awakening— the people are not such fools as Lord GREY and Lord DURHAM take them to be, and, moreover, call them. What will any rational man say when he reads tl is exposure, and finds, by a majority of 24, out of nearly 500 members, such a wasteful, un- constitutional, and all but illegal, proceeding as this, forced upon him for the sake of a Reform, planned by the same hands?— What value will the Nation place upon the reduc- tion of two or three poor meritorious clerks and dock- men, with large families, when they see that to gild a pill for the Emperor of RUSSIA, which he has no inclination to swallow, and which, when he does swallow it, is only to save their reputation, Ministers assume an authority which they have no right to, and unsanctioned by Parliament squander at a blow, MILLION UPON MILLION. Let the Reformers look to this division— we conclude the lists must be published before Sunday; if they are not, we shall have the pleasure of submitting them for inspection aud consideration. We cannot conclude this article without just observing upon Mr. STANLEY'S flippant attack upon Mr. CUTLAR FERGUSSON on Thursday. If Mr. STANLEY'S temper and disposition are composed of such inflammable materials, and he is in the habit of using such language and such a manner as he exposed to view on Thursday, we think his five thou- sand five hundred pounds a- year is well laid out in keeping him in an office in which he is not permitted to act. WE last week noticed the appointment of Mr. ZACHARY MACAULAY to one of the stipendiary Commissionerships of Charities ; and the appointment also of Mr. DANIEL WHIT- TLE HARVEY to the Secretaryship of the same Commission We have now to announce the appointment of Mr. MACAU- LAY— whether the same individual ZACK, or a brother, we are not quite certain— to one of the African Commissioner- ships. The trade of selling home- made " sweltering venom" seems to thrive with this family: Mr. BABINGTON MACAU LAY himself might in all probability have been Secretary to the Charity Commission, had not the superior claims of Mr, DANIEL WHITTLE HARVEY put aside his pretensions for the present. He talks of Privy Councillor's office for him- self, and of succeeding Sir HENRY PARNELL the moment Lord GREY can get " rid of that Right Hon. Gentleman but we think Mr. BABY MACAULAY reckons withouthis host THE Lord Bishop of EXETER has been unanimously elected President of the Exeter Dispensary, in the room of the late Lord CLIFFORD. THE affection which the ci- devant subjects of that liberal and enlightened personage Don PEDRO always felt for him during the existence of his Constitutional Government in Brazil, seems not entirely to have subsided in his absence— his little boy, whom he left EMPEROR in his stead, and who is, to do hiin justice, quite as competent to the government of a people as his amiable and affectionate father, was shot at by an insurgent, as he was walking upon a terrace. We do not, like the Times, laud to the skies the bloody- minded assassin, neither do we regret the escape of his Lilli- putian Majesty, but we mention the fact to shew how won- derfully popular Don PEDRO and all his race are, and what a desirable thing it must be for Portugal to have him on her Throne, after the probation which both his MAJESTY and his Constitution have undergone amongst the Brazilians. It seems that all parties are sick of the enterprize against Lisbon— in the Western Islands differences and dissensions are breaking out; in France it has been determined, although the thing may go on. to do to it what Lord GREY promised Lord WHARNCLIFFE to do with the £ 10 franchise clause— " weight it so, that it could not run ;" in fact, Don PEDRO, the more he is known the more he is disliked; and the cir- cumstance of his last little Brazilian having been patronized by Citizen PHILIPPE, who is growing as unpopular in France as his worst enemy could wish him to be, has pro- duced asortof nausea amongst the French co- citizens— andwe very much doubt whether we shall ever have the gratification of announcing the defeat of the rebel force at the Tagus. THE Times, on Tuesday, criticising the debate on the Reform Bill on Monday, aud advising its readers to peruse and study ( its own report of) his Lordship's speech, writes, " The speech of Lord SANDON, the Member for Liverpool, •' deserves attention, as it states the question clearly, and " without hesitation." Here is all the Times'' report of it— " Lord SANDON was understood! to contend in favour of " the retention of franchise in the rural boroughs." His Lordship's title and style, and exactly eight monosyl- lables included, comprises entirely all 16 words, and with the exception of space for about two words more, completely occupies the whole of " lines two.'" Still it is particularly " clear," and very worthy of " attention" indeed— and so the Times says. WE intended to- day to have exhibited a curious compari- son between Lord ALTHORP'S practice of finance and Sir HENRY' PARNELL'S published theory— we shall do so next week, and it will be found that his Lordship's great success in his official measures is mainly attributable to his close adaptations of Sir HENRY'S suggestions. However, things have not quite answered the expectations of Lord GREY,— who moreover cannot endure poor Sir HENRY PARNELL— and, at last, there has happened a slight difference of opinion upon the subject of the book— a sort of quarrel between theory and practice ; and while Sir HENRY PARNELL, the theorist, is insisting on regulating the Army Estimates according to his book, Sir WILLOUGHBY GORDON is urging Lord GREY to try his practical experience, and have nothing to do with it. > Lord GREY is more unpopular with the army than Minis- ter ever was, and we think lie is quite justified in listening to the suggestions of an Officer, whose high qualifications his Lordship has shewn the country he knows how to appreciate by selecting him in the first instance to be Master- General of the Ordnance. We will just tell Lord GREY a thing or two which may serve to put him upon his guard against Mr. O'CONNELL'S friend, the system- monger. In the first place, Sir HENRY PARNELL has it in contem- plation to take away from the medical officers of the army certain advantages which they received under a former war- rant, which gave an increase of pay to medical officers of long service, while employed— thus inducing them to remain in the service, and throwing a kind of difficulty in the way of their retiring upon superannuation allowances even while in the prime of life. This information we have receivedjrom a Medico- Military Correspondent, who, at great length, details the hardships and grievances with which he and his branch of the service are threatened. It is clear that these Officers are necessarily expensively educated, and highly qualified, to serve long, and with slow promotion ; for, although the malicious might say, they killed as many men as their fighting comrades, they get no step by that— and ( his unprotected class Sir HENRY intends to cut up and dissect for the sake of some paltry miserable saving, which, as our Correspondent says, will be no saving at all, as the expence has been incurred, and cannot be withdrawn from those who are receiving the increased pay. Then there is another subject which has created a more general excitement than this— naturally— because the influ- ence of the proposed alteration extends over a larger circle. A member of the United Service Club tells us that a change is proposed by Sir HENRY PAESELL, ( or, as the sentries mounted over his office call him, Sir HENRY PARE- NAIL.) to mulct of their pay all officers on leave of absence, and alC poor soldiers on furlough. This is an imitation of some scheme which the Right Hon. Baronet picked up in France,, when he and his friend Dr. BOWRING went out system- hunting; but, as our respected Correspondent justly enquires,, do French Regiments serve ten years abroad in unhealthy Colonies, and only five years at Home ? He asks, too, some- what pertinently, whether, when Sir HENRY visits the- Pare- nail property in Ireland, he will be served so him- self? orwhether the Right Hon. Mr. STANLEY drew his full £ 5500 a year while he was shooting at the poor Duke of RICHMOND'S pheasants at Goodwood? But there is another attack in preparation indirectly. It is suggested that in the first instance the clothing of the army is to be taken away from the colonels of regiments, and to be supplied by contract. The proposed commuted allow- ance in lieu, will be merely a preliminary step to knocking off the colonels altogether. And then he asks, is it extraordinary, that with these facts staring them in the face, Lord GREY should be sus- pected of a leaning unfavourable to the army ? We honestly confess, from what we have heard, we areinclined to believe that Lord GREY himself, the son of an old military officer, is NOT prejudiced against the army. He knows the value of keeping it in high state of moral feeling, and the times that are fast approaching, render it extremely unwise that it should be harassed by the incessant attacks of the Secre- tary at War upon its comforts, its interests, and its privi- leges. Yet when the army finds these reports confirmed by abusive Articles in the Ministerial Papers, when it reads all the cant about Colonel BRERETON, and the alleged ea- gerness of British officers to dip their swords in the blood of their countrymen— is it surprising that Lord GREY and the Ministry should be unpopular with the Army ? The writer of a book upon political economy— the maker of a system, must be a partizan— and when such an econo- mist gravely asserts in that book, that public servants are efficient in proportion to the lowness of their pay, we think the Army have cause to be on the alert, and to resist by their protests these financial nostrums imported from France.. Their good sense will readily submit to the correction of real abuses, but at any rate it may be just as well for Lord GREY to pause before lie enlists the military against his Govern- ment, or allow such innovations in the discipline or finance in the Army as that filthy order to the Navy, to which public exhibition of bestiality we have already referred. WE have often said that we were just now under mob rule, perhaps we were fully justified in saying so, when we found Lord GREY, with all his veneration, for his " order," receiving at twelve o'clock at night Mr. PLACE, the Tailor, and a deputation of the PEOPLE ; if so, our notion receives new support, from the fact that Lord MELBOURNE last week received at his office Mr. WATSON, and a deputation, from some Political Union, ( which Lord GREY, three months since, received the KING'S commands to suppress), and having received them because they insisted upon being" received— suffered this person at their head without " let, hindrance," or interruption, to read throughout, an Address, containing personal insults to the KING, and a proposition to hang Sir CHARLES WETHERELLand the twelve Judges; and that so far from appearing desirous either to check this- insolence, or controul this licentiousness ; his Lordship, the Secretary of State for the Home Department, was pleased not only to be familiar, but even jocose with his visitors, who were, ONE AND ALL, DECORATED WITH THE TRI- COLOUR RIBBAND of REVOLUTION. THE Standard of Tuesday says— " The postponement of His MAJESTY'S visit to London has Riven rise to a variety of rumours ; among the most prominent of which is, that it was occasioned by the present unsettled state of the Cabinet. Bets to a large amount have been offered, that Earl GREY will not be First Lord of the Treasury, on the 1st day of April next." We are sorry for this. The 1st of April is the only day in the whole year, in which, we think, his Lordship would answer public expectation in the functions of his high office. OF Lord BLAYNEY'S judicious and discreet speech in Dublin, we last week gave our readers t} ie advantage— per- haps our readers, however, were not quite aware of their man. His Lordship, as an author, delighted the public by a book of travels through Spain and France, which he face- tiously called " A FORCED March TO VERDUN," at which place his Lordship employed himself in cutting corks for wine- bottles; and during the occupation of France by the Allies, the Noble Lord, then a Major- General in the army, might frequently be seen at the head of a string of horses tied by the tails, handing printed pedigrees of the said horses to the" Russians, Prussians, and Austrians, in their different cantonments. This is the most eccentric part of the Noble Lord's cha- racter ; but his foibles are greatly overbalanced by the solid virtues of being a resident, and a good resident, Irish landlord. Had he lived in HORACE WALPOLE'S time he would, of course, have been handed down amongst his " noble authors." Prince TALLEYRAND might now do him a similar good office, and pronounce him a concentration of the qualifications by which his Excellency describes Lord GREY and Lord JOHN RUSSELL- LORD GREY— Grand Orateur. LORD JOHN RUSSELL— Petit Litterateur. There is, however, one point, upon which we beg to offer a word of advice to our Noble Lord:— When he makes speeches after dinner, let him abstain for the future from quoting sayings and doings between the KING, the PRE- MIER, and the COMMANDER IN CHIEF— proceeding from a Lieutenant- General in the Army, he may be called upon to make a forced explanation; and be requested to place it in any second edition of his forced journey. Lord GREY is of too amiable and good- natured a tempera* ment to be irritated by the bottle- speech of a nobleman licensed to say and do odd things; but if his Lordship should be angry, LordBLAYNEY may find it an easier thing to get himself into a mess than into a Club; in which case we should advise Lord BLAYNE Y to make it up, by consenting to be one of Lord GREY'S new batch of Peers. Lord CLONCURRY, his countryman, since he openly boasted of being a United Irishman, has been made not only an English Peer, but a Privy Councillor— BURDETT has also accepted the offer, and Old CoKE. of Norfolk, is to be Earl of LEICESTERSHIRE, having, when thp Whigs were in opposition, earned tbe honour by pronouncing, at a large public dinner, one of the January 29.' JOHN BULL? 37 most disgusting and atrocious libels on His MAJESTY'S gra- cious father, KING GEORGE THE THIRD, that ever was uttered by radical, drunk or sober. We confess, however, we should regret to see poor Lord BLAYNEY placed in the necessity of submitting to such an infliction— elevation we cannot call it— because when the dirty work to be done, in return, is taken into the scale the promotion cannot fail to become a lasting mark of disgrace. IF we are happy to congratulate our readers on the com plete defeat of Ministers in the House of Lords on Thursday, — if we are delighted to call public attention to the admirable speech of Lord ABERDEEN; still more happy and more delighted are we to find the star of our destiny shining in all its brilliancy and lustre. The Duke of WELLINGTON, whose splendid and comprehensive speech we have given at length bore his distinguished part in the debate with his usual energy and power;— let our readers peruse the clear narrative contained in that speech, and they will see that we still possess, in all its freshness and vigour, the master mind of him, yet destined to preserve the country which his arm has saved. The Duke of WELLINGTON trusted that he owed no apology to their Lordships for claiming to state the reasons which had induced him to vote in favour of the Address which had been moved by his Noble Friend. He agreed in the statements of the treaties and do- cuments which had been made to their Lordships by his Noble Friend, and also in all the opinions which his Noble Friend had de- livered upon them. But he confessed that the particular considera- tion which induced him to consent to support the motion that night, was his deep sense of the injustice done to Holland, in departing from the principle of the Treaty of Aix- la- Chapelle in the course of these negotiations, in forcing Holland to consent to measures with- out previous consultation with her, which so deeply affected her in- terests and her independence, and in finally attempting to force those measures upon her in opposition to her wishes and remon- strances. Upon these grounds he intended to rest his justification of a vote, demanding of the King's Government that this Treaty should be reconsidered; and he did truly wish that he could persuade the members of the Government to reconsider it themselves. He fully believed that the Noble Earl at the head of the Government found his time so occupied by a nrcessary attention to so many other important and pressing duties, that this particular fact had escaped his knowledge; a fact which, he believed, had nevei occurred before in the negotiations of any other independent States, with the single exception of the mediation of the Allies between the Greeks and the Turks. But the Noble Earl did not attempt to justify such a course as on the part of mediators; he said there was no mediation. The interference certainly commenced in mediation, but it terminated in the assumption, on the part of the Powers of the Conference, of an arbitration. He need not point out to their Lordships the difference between a mediation and an arbitration ; and particularly an arbi- tration of that most tyrannical nature, in which the parties interested were not called upon to say a word until they heard their sentence. —( Hear, hear, hear.)— The No'ole Earl had said that he carried with him all the Powers of Europe in changing this mediation into an arbitration. He knew not whether the French Government had now changed its mind upon that subject, but, if he were not greatly mistaken, the French Government had declared more than once that it would not hear of the change from mediation to arbitration. When he saw this stated publicly [ by the French Government, he did not conclude that they meant to speak only of Belgium. He attributed to it the spirit of natural justice which ought to guide the acts of every Government, as he was bound to do, and he supposed that it would apply to Holland as well as Belgium. In the early stages of these proceedings, the Conference of London said in express terms that the interference should be by mediation. The Noble Earl said that they had been forced to arbitrate. Butthen came the question, who was it that made them arbitrators '.—( Hear. hear.)— France had declared over and over again that there should be no arbitration, and if it was true that the Great Northern Powers now refused to ratify the Treaty, because it was the result of arbitration, and not of mediation, then who was it that had forced the Con- ference to arbitrate?—( Cheers.)— And this was what the Noble Karl called carrying the Powers of Europe with him in going to arbitration. — ( Cheers and laughter.) — He knew well that if England were to be induced to give up Holland, there were other countries in Europe ready to peck at Holland. But he trusted that the important interests ot this country, so intimately connected with the welfare and the independence of Holland, were not doomed to be destroyed by such means. The Noble Earl had been pleased to charge them ( the Opposition) with having pro- Tided the embarrassments under which the Government now laboured. He had very often challenged Noble Lords who made that assertion to come forward and shew any one single embar- rassment which now oppressed the Noble Earl that could be attributed to the late Government. " I say," said the Noble Duke, " that with the French Revolution, which I look upon as a visitation upon all Europe, we had as little to do, and could as little have pre- vented, as any men in this House. And as I have said before, there is no man in England who had so little to say or so little to do with Prince Polignac or with any part of the French Government upon the matter. But, as I also said before, if we had nothing to do with causing the French Revolution, we have this satisfaction in our own minds, thatwe have never pronounced an eulogium upon it."— ( Cheers.)— The Noble Lord had expatiated largely upon the settle- ment of Europe in 1814. He would say that that settlement of Europe had now maintained the peace of Europe for nearly sixteen years, with, he was sorry to say, the one exception as to the affairs of Greece, and in which the principles of that settlement were de- parted from. He would say that the Noble Earl was carrying on this very negotiation under that settlement, and that his boasted influence over the Powers of Europe was exercised through many of the identical Ministers by whom the Conferences for the settlement of Europe were carried on.—( Hear, hear, hear.)— The Noble Earl said that they ( the late Government) left them the difficulties of this negotiation. True, they did leave them the settlement of the Belgian question. But they had commenced the settlement of it, and he believed that the Five Powers, when they signed the last Protocol, previous to the resignation, were actuated by a desire of bringing it to a speedy and a satisfactory settlement. But they did no more than obtain a suspension of hostilities, for which they took the engagement of the parties that they would not break it without notice. In carrying this engagement into effect they took a line beyond which neither Power was to pass; and that line was the boundary of the old Dutch territories. This Treaty left the suspen- sion of hostilities indeed, but all the other questions were left out of consideration. The Noble Earl had alluded to the Protocol of the 3d of February, but in that Protocol the late Government avoided the very error which the Noble Earl fell into only fourteen days after. They never guaranteed the suspension of hostilities; they refused to do it; but the Noble Earl did it.—( Cheers.)— Why he did not know, for the Noble Lord had never executed his guarantee at all. The late Government refused to do it because they knew that a guarantee of a suspension of hostilities was a serious thing, and very likely to involve a Government in those embarrassments of which the Noble Earl complained. They knew the difficulty there was in ascertaining at what time and upon what Power it should be executed. But the Noble Earl cut that short; he never executed it upon the Belgians at all, but always against the King of the Nether- lands.—(" Hear," and a laugh.)— With regard to the blockade of the ports of Belgium, the Noble Lord who signed that Treaty must have known when he signed it, for he could not be ignorant of that, that a neutral Power had no right to enforce any blockade, or to make any prize whatever. This, then, was all that was done to Belgium, and which amounted to nothing, while notice was given to Holland that if she did not take offher blockade, it would be forced by an English fleet. And this was what the Noble Earl called impartiality and respect for the rights of independent States. Then as to the Belgian declaration of independence. The Noble Earl himself would have considered it a better arrangement if the Prince of Orange had been at the head of the separated States. Well, what the Belgians wanted from the first was a recognition of their independence from the Five Powers, and this was the ver. y first step taken by the Noble Karl. It was rather curious, however, to see how the grace of the act had been snatched from the Noble Earl^ ja fame by more parties than pne. The Noble Duke then. referred tp. p . letter of JVf. Sebas- tiani to the Belgian Minister in farfe) and to a & k? ument s'& ned by one of the Belgian negociators, claiming for each of their the merit of causing the recognition. Thus, what with th countries the claims of France on the one hand, and those of the Belgian Congress on the other, the Noble Earl was deprived of the honour of giving inde- pendence to the new State, which, however, he had ten days before guaranteed to the whole world. This was the state of that part of the Noble Earl's negociations. But the Noble Earl had said that Holland had accepted the Protocol No. 12. It was true that Holland did agree to that as a basis of negociation. But by that arrangement Holland was to have^ retained possession of Luxemburg, and had reason to expect territory on the Upper Meuse, which would keep that frontier in contiguous line, by other cessions. It was also stipulated that the settlement of the debt should be provided for ill a manner satisfactory to Holland; and the free navigation of the Scheldt was limited to the river as it divided the two countries. To this basis Holland did agree, and it was three times sanctioned by the Plenipotentiaries of the Five Powers. On the 1st of March another Protocol was signed, confirming the whole, and declaring again the determination of the Powers to adhere to mediation, and that there should be no armed interference. Why, then, in his mind, nothing remained for them after that but a firm and an honourable adherence to that course.—( Loud cheers.)— Then commenced the proceedings for procuring the election of Prince Leopold to be King of Belgium. The Noble Earl had said that this Government had nothing to do with procuring the election of Prince Leopold. But the Noble Earl must excuse him if in reply to that he referred to a letter written by another Noble Lord, who was employed by the Government in Belgium, and from which it appeared that that was one of the objects of his residence in Brussels, and that letter even recommended certain measures with a view to secure the offer of the Crown to Prince Leopold. Here, then, was evidence to shew that this Government took the lead in securing the main objects of one of the parties between whom she was a mediator, and so soon to become an arbiter. This transaction was soon followed by the pro- position of the new Articles. The old one was abandoned, and another substituted in its place, and, as no man could doubt, solely with a view to the position of Prince Leopold. He had a great respect for Prince Leopold, and sincerely hoped that he would take upon himself the real character ot an independent Monarch. If he did, his talents and character would make him an eminent Sovereign of the country over which he reigned.—( Cheers.)— But it was necessary that he should not only be independent of this country and of Germany, but he must be essentially independent of France.—( Cheers.)— The next thing which appeared in the transactions was, that Lord Ponsonby, in the month of May, was ordered to return home on the lat of June, if the basis of the new Treaty was not accepted before that time. Lord Ponsonby, however, in the meantime, came over and made a repre- sentation to the Conference, when, without acquainting the Dutch Minister with any p. rt of the transaction, the Conference declared itself willing, provided the basis were first accepted by Belgium, to enter into negociations with the King of the Netherlands for the giv- ing up Luxemburg upon receiving a valuable consideration, or, in other words, a cession of other territory. In common justice and fair- ness the Envoys of the King of the Netherlands ought to have been at the time informed and consulted upon this matter. But no such thing. They first heard it upon the publication of Lord Ponsonby's letter, and then they remonstrated against it. With regard to the war that ensued, he thought the King of the Netherlands had great provoca- tion to go to war. He ( the Noble Duke) differed entirely at the time from those who charged that Sovereign with a breach of faith. He never believed it a case in which there was any thing like treachery. He believed the notice given was a sufficient notice, and ought not to have been construed or understood as it was professed to have been understood in this country. But he would go further, and say that he did not allow that the King of the Netherlands had not very sufficient grounds of war without giving the notice at all. Notwith- standing the Noble Earl's guarantee of hostilities, hostilities in Bel- gium on the side of Maestricht never had been suspended at all. He could shew this from the repeated remonstrances of the Dutch Minister to the Conference. In the same way hostilities were still continually going on at Antwerp. But above all what did King Leopold do f Before he left this country he accepted the Eighteen Articles which had been made the new basis of a Treaty by the Noble Earl, although Holland had then never heard of them. Then, upon his arrival at Brussels, King Leopold swore to the Constitution, which Constitution stated that he should take possession of territories which had always belonged to Holland. He could not avoid saying there was something in this which, in [ ordinary language, would be called a breach of faith. He thought, therelore, that upon all these grounds Holland had a full and complete ground of war in the protection of her own interests and honour. He now came to the consideration of the Articles forming the basis of the guarantee. And what the Noble Earl had said upon thedetailsof those Articles seemed to convince him that the Noble Earl had not time to make himself acquainted with them. The Noble Earl said with respect to the question of the debt that 8,400.000 florins of Rentes were to be removed from the debt of Hol- land to the Great Book of Belgium. If that were the case it would be just as bad as any other arrangement, for the creditors would have to accept Belgium as their debtor, instead of the Dutch Govern- ment. But the Noble Earl was mistaken ; it was not the fact.— ( Hear, hear.)— The Noble Earl's argument proved no such thing.— ( Cheers.)— The arrangement was to have that portion of the debt paid at Brussels and at Antwerp in money, but the debt was still Dutch debt. There was no such transfer as that of which the Noble Earl bad spoken. This and other parts of the Noble Earl's state- ment convinced him that the Noble Earl was not acquainted with the details of the question, and he was convinced that if he had been their Lordships would have had much less reason to complain—( Hear, hear.)— The debt was still to be Dutch debt, and what was the gua- rantee for the payment by Belgium ? This country was not to be bound for the payment of one- fifth, its proportion with the other Powers ; no, but for the whole.—( Cheers.)— And they should not have here an Act of Parliament upon which to call for an Attorney- General's opinion.—( Hear, hear.)— No; it would not be that; but the honour of the country would be pledged, and his Majesty would be going down to the House of Commons, and saying, " I have been made to guarantee the payment of this debt; I require that you will find me the money to enable me to keep tny word." He thought it right that the people of England should know this.—( Cheers.)— The Noble Earl had thought proper to state that the basis of the 24 Articles was in strict conformity with the basis agreed to by the King of the Netherlands. He wanted to know from the Noble Earl where he would find in the former Articles one word giving the right to the King of Belgium to pass from the Scheldt to the Rhine ? If any faith was to be put in the letter of a Secretary of State, that which appeared in the documents as to the third Article of that basis went directly to state the contrary. It said, " The third Article of the basis of separation between Belgium and Hol- land is applicable to such navigable rivers as cross the two territories and divide them." It was impossible that such words as these should apply to canals, the free navigation of which was given by the new basis. The Noble Duke then made reference to the Treaty of the Rhine to prove that no such rights were given by that Treaty. None of the other Powers of the Rhine had demanded such a con- cession for themselves, and it was from the Government of this country alone that it was demanded for the favoured State of Bel- gium. Another point was the right of fishel- y. No such right ever existed before— no demand had been made even by the parties them- selves, and yet the right was granted by this Treaty. The Noble Duke then pointed out the importance to Holland of not allowing the free passage through the fortress of Maestricht, which he said was unparalleled in the State of any other independent countries of equal power. But if the King of the Netherlands must be required to make all these concessions, why was he not to have the advantage of settling them by a Treaty of Commerce wfth his neighbour ? And why was he to have them forced upon him by these self- ap- pointed arbitrators ?—( Hear, hear, hear.)— He now came to the last point, that ot the cession of Luxemburg. It formed one of the bases of the Treaty that Luxemburg should be given up for a valuable consideration— that was in territory. Here it was impossible to avoid looking at the financial part of the ques- tion, and seeing what it bad cost Holland in territory at the union of the States in 1814. At that time, under the Treaty of Paris, Holland paid in the cession of Colonies, and in money, five millions for this Belgian territory. Holland paid for these fortresses in all seven million pounds sterling, and Hol- land paid also for part of the German territories twenty- two millions of francs. Altogether that country paid for the territo- ries in question these very large sums. But it was said that Holland had accepted the basis of separation as agreed upon by the first Treaty, snd why did she accept this? Because it gave her a , c « npact and well- protected country. All that Holland got in conjpeinwtian of the great payments and sacrifices she had made was GOyOOOL . a year, and she was told that she ought to consider her- self exceedingly well off. But Holland said no, I am a joiut Power with Belgium, and will only submit to the separation proposed upoa equitable terms. Then the Noble Lord said, " Was it wise for these comparatively trifling considerations to go to war?" But in hisfthe Noble Duke's) opinion, the entire question was one of justice. He denied the war. They heard of foreign war upon one account, and of civil war upon another account. He denied both the foreign war and the civil war. The present system, he contended, with respect to foreign affairs, was more likely than any other to produce war abroad, as the present system with regard to domestic affairs wasi most likely to produce war at home.—( Lmul cheers.)— The three Northern Powers were at this moment hesitating whether they should ratify the Treaty; he followed the words of the Noble Eart, but he would rather say that they had already determined not to ratify the Treaty. They, indeed, could not ratify it without the consent of Holland. No man would do more to avoid war than him- self; but let them not involve themselves in perpetual difficulties and mediations and guarantees for the sake of avoiding war, but let them do justice and fear not.—( The Noble Duke then sat down amidst loud and general acclamations.) FRESH proofs are every day exhibiting themselves of that enlightenment of the public mind of which we have for some time been speaking. We rejoice to find that in Gloucester- shire an anti- reform Address to the KING, has already re- ceived the signatures of eight Peers, six Members of the House of Commons, two Baronets, the Dean, the Arch- deacons, nine- tenths of the Clergy, and almost all the Ma- gistrates and respectability of the county, entirely covering twenty three skins of parchment. We trust that this most important declaration of popular feeling will be presented to the KING by the Duke of BEAU- FORT, and that his Grace, following the noble examples of the Duke of BUCCLEUGH and the " Marquess of CAMDKS, will, rightfully exercising his inherent privilege as an here- ditary councillor of the Crown, impress upon His MAJESTY'S mind the peril and danger in which the Monarchy of ttie country must inevitably be placed by the inundation of new Peers, merely for the sake of gratifying Lord GREY'S vanity and supporting his consistency. The Anti- Reform Address of the Nobility, Gentry, and Freeholders of thecounty of Warwick to the KING is already- most numerously signed. This Address is declaratory of their devoted attachment to his Royal person ; of their alarm at the measures of Reform recently introduced into Parliament by his Ministers"—" measures which, in their opinion, threaten to destroy the Constitution, endanger the very existence of the British Throne, and tend to substitute for a limited Monarchy the most odiotis and insupportable of all despotism— the despotism of a democracy." The Address then goes on to state their desire to support a safe, temperate, and effectual correction of abuses ; and, after adverting to the " personal insults and violence to which the Peers, both Lay and Spiritual, had been subjected, in consequence of their votes in Parliament on the subject of the Reform Bill," earnestly entreats His MAJESTY to suppress the Political Unions, and not to comply with the recommendation of those who demand the creation of new Peers. Upon the subject of the county of Cambridge Anti- Re- form Address the Cambridge Chronicle says— " We have great pleasure in stating, that the Address to the KIXG, and the Petitions to both Houses of Parliament, to which we alluded in our last, bear the signatures of a large portion of the Nobility, Gentry, and Landed Proprietors in the County, as well as of a highly respectable body of the Occupiers of Land and Yeomanry. They are daily receiving considerable additions both in the town, county, and isle, and it is earnestly hoped that all the Freeholders, Occupiers of Land, and Householders, who wish for a more safe and temperate measure of Reform, instead of the present Bill, will hasten to add their names." We are happy to say, that Cumberland has come forward, to join in the expression of that conservative feeling whicli is now spreading throughout the Kingdom. An Anti- Reform Address to the KING has received the signatures of nine Noblemen, forty Magistrates, and about five thousand of the Clergy, Freeholders, and Householders of Devonshire. The Memorialists state, that they are " firmly and loyally attached to His MAJESTY'S Person, his Crown, and Dignity ; and, though they viewed the extent and provisions of the late Bill with great anxiety and alarm, are not opposed to such Reform of Abuses as mag he consistent with the safety and preservation of all the Rights and Privileges of both Houses of Parliament, and of our Glorious Monarchical Constitution." The Hertford Anti- Reform Address to the KING appears in the County Press. The signatures already amount to upwards of 1,000, comprising the principal Nobility, Gentry, Clergy, Freeholders, Yeomanry, and Inhabitants of the county.* The sentiments of this Address are throughout loyal, patriotic, and constitutional— such as do honour to the county. We cannot deny ourselves the pleasure of extract- ing the concluding passage, which is as follows :— " We beg leave further to express our humble thanks to your MA- JESTY that your MAJESTY has firmly withstood the pressing'instances with which you have been assailed to create new Peers, for the un- constitutional purpose of forcibly carrying the measure of Reform through the House of Lords, thereby annihilating that House as an independent branch of the Legislature, and utterly destroying, by att unusual exercise of the Royal Prerogative, that happy balance of power in the Constitution under which we have so l » ng flourished, and endangering the safety of that throne which it is our earnest prayer that your MAJESTY may long continue to occupy, for the glory of your name and for the happiness of your people." * It is a circumstance highly honourable| to the patriotism and good sense of the Marquis of ABERCORN, that the signing this constitu- tional Address should be the first act of his political life. His Lord- ship, on the very first day ( we believe) of his coming of age, gave this gratifying and promising testimonial of the rectitude and sound- ness of his principles. The Marquis of SALISBURY, the Earl of VERU- LAM, and Lord GRIMSTON, were the noble companions of the young Marquis on this occasion. AN elopement has taken place, which will cause an eight- and- forty hours' sensation. A Lady of the highest rant of the Peerage is the heroine. We have no disposition to turn such an occurrence to political account against Uer Grace's Noble Husband. " u. t k,> > : (\ THE subjoined extract, from Mr. GUTHRIE'S Pamphlet on the Anatomy Bill, is copied from the Times of Tuesday: " The late Sir WILLIAM MYERS was mortally wounded whilst on horseback at the head of the Fusileer brigade at the battle ofAlbuer?, by a musket ball, which broke his thigh and passed upwards into the body. I had him carried to the village of Valverde, and soon urn that he was dying from mortification of the bowels. At one o'clock in the morning he asked me to tell him the truth as to his situation without reserve; and on my doing so, his reply was, ' How many- envied me the command of the Fusileers a few hours ago— how few will envy me now 1' He then said he had one favour to ask of me, which, if I would promise to grant, he should die contented. I pledged my word, and he then said, ' You know I have al ways insisted upon the surgeons of my regiment and of the brigade having the right of examining the bodies of all the men who died in quarters, and that E frequently attended myself to countenance the proceeding. You say my wound is as extraordinary as it is unfortunate. I have, I confes* it, a prejudice against being opened, of which I am ashamed, but which I cannot get the better of: promise me it shall not be done?'— I promised. He shook my hand, ana said his other affaire were a& t- t 38 jJOHN BULL. January 29. tied. At three o'clock I_ laid down to rest until daylight, when idund he had just expired." Sir WILLIAM MYERS was one of the ablest, bravest, and best of mankind. In bis 27th year, at the head ( Lieut.- Colonel) of the Fusileer regiment, and at the bead of a bri- gade— of Fusileers,— he fell on the 16th of May, 1811, at " Albuera lavish of the dead," fighting gloriously for his conntry, which has since erected to his memory a monument ( in St. Paul's), with an inscrip- tion by the Duke of WELLINGTON— being part of a letter, dated Elvas, 20th May, 1811, from his Grace to Lady MYERS, Sir WILLIAM'S mother. A national monument to a soldier, inscribed by WELLINGTON ! What can there be more? But this was not the object of our notice— We wished to observe, that this prejudice, with which Mr. GUTHRIE has charged his deceased patient, was perhaps the only one he ever had; and that having been, nearly at the moment of the extinction of life— almost in articulo mortis,— communi- cated to Mr. GUTHRIE, confidentially, he might, if he must have told the story, quite as well not have published the name. Neither cau we see how, exactly, the fact of the prejudice having been entertained by so " brave a man, can promote the facility of the study of anatomy, in the way of which, we cannot suppose Mr. GUTHRIE can wish to place any more difficulties than there are already. THE following appears in the Cambridge Chronicle of last week — " THE TIMES.— All respectable people, of all parties, have been disgusted at the Radical polities, and still more at the misrepresentation and falsehood with which the Times has abounded, of late, more than ever. Many have still continued to take the Paper, from the natural disinclin- ation to change, which often makes men tolerate nuisances so long ; and from an idea that the Times had the best in formation, which is, however, not the fact. The Foreign Intelligence of the Standard is now far better than that of the Times. The Resident Fellows of Trinity College, de- servedly celebrated for their general liberality of feeling, and many of them not opposed to the present Administra- tion, have discontinued taking the Times, substituting the Morning Herald. This is as it should be." WE beg very sincerely to congratulate the Government on the success which has attended their wise and liberal Game Bili, and the consequent disappearance of poachers, and the concomitant decrease of crime and punishment. An under gamekeeper of Earl FORTESCUE, named Rice, fell in with a party of seven poachers in a field adjoining Bray Wood, near Chit- tlehampton, on the night of Tuesday last, two of whom shot at and severely wounded hiin. The keeper was unarmed, and the villains made their escape. A reward of 1001. has been offered by Earl For- tescuefor their detection. On the night of January 12, a gang of poachers entered the preserve of the Earl of Cork, but the timely appearance of the keeper and Mr. Strong, the bailiff; with three others, prevented the destruction of much game. The keeper succeeded in taking one of the party, when seven of the gang ( which consisted of eleven) presented fire- arms at him, threatening death unless he gave up his prisoner, which he very prudently did. On the following day information was given to Mr. Bebby, the constable of Frome, who with the assistance of his son, succeeded in taking three of the party, named Andrew Mills, John Markay, and Wm. Brihison, all of Kilmington, who are committed to Ilchester gaol to take their trial at the next assizes, for threatening to murder, & c. Committed to Bury Gaol— John Bass ( by J. D. Merest, Esq.), charged with having by night, with two other persons, entered a plantation at Ickvvortb, being armed for the purpose of killing • game.— Dennis Loffts ( by the Rev. C. Borton), and Isaac Ashen ( by H. S. Waddington and G. Gataker, Esqrs.), severally convicted of offences against the Game Laws, to be imprisoned two months. — and so on in every county in England ; while all that is gained by it is the sale of pheasants and hares by retail poulterers, purchased of Whig Lords, who openly sell their game to ruin the market for the poacher. This is a mere Whig trick ; and we sincerely state that we do not believe that their Lordships sell pheasants for less than they can get, and that they are extremely well pleased with putting what they do get into their pockets. The following is extracted from Thursday's Morning Post: THE LIONS OF PARIS." A respected correspondent has sent us the following anecdote, which was related to him by a gentleman lately arrived from Paris;— we give it in his own words :— Wandering near the Palace I was saluted with ' Would Monsieur like to see the King? I will show him for a franc.' Though surprised how one so mean in appearance could realise his promise, J accepted the offer, and paid my franc. My ' friend' immediately commenced shouting at the top of his lungs, ** Louis Philippe, Louis Philippe,' keeping up a rattling accompaniment with his stick against the iron railings. The crowd collected, and joining in the cry, the welkin echoed with ' Louis Philippe, Louis Philippe;' when the obedient Monarch, thus summoned, made his appearance at a window, bowing repeatedly to the crowd. More mortified at my conspicuous appear- ance in such a dirty crowd than gratified at the attainment of my object, I was endeavouring to effect my escape, when my friend the ' showman' arrested my progress with many thanks for past favours, and tendering his services for a fresh exhibition— i Would Monsieur like to see Madame ? I will show her for another franc.' Politely declining the offer. I retreated to ponder on the fallen state of Ma- jesty, and the respectable footing subsisting between the Sovereign People and its Citizen King!" Now this sounds very absurd— but it cannot be forgotten that the very same prank was played here. When Lord MELBOURNE sent the TRADES OP LONDON to St. James's Palace, on the 8th of December, 1830, did they not plant themselves in the street and call for the KING to shew himself— and did they stir till they thought tbey had seen him ? To be sure the Ministers did not prevail upon His MAJESTY to extricate them from the pledge that he should shew himself, andSirHENHY BLACKWOOD, in his Admiral's uniform, was brought to the window and passed upon the mob as the KING, and thus deceived, the mob having re- ceived Sir HENRY with shouts of loyalty and devotion, went quietly home. There appears this only difference in the two affairs— in the one we have the sincerity of CITIZEN PHILIPPE, in the other, the duplicity of King WILLIAM'S Ministers and Councillors. THE following paragraph appears in Thursday's Brighton Gazette:— • " SINGULAR OCCURRENCE.— Some months ago a soldier of the Guards stationed in this town, had by accident some horse's spittle thrown into his eye, which so affected it as to produce total blindness, and such a diseased and enlarged state that great protrusion fol- lowed, and he went to London for the advice of an oculist. Since his return the enlargement has gradually increased, and last week an operation was performed by Mr. SLADE, oculist, at the Barracks Hospital, by which the eye has been made to assume almost its na- tural sight. The man is going on favourably. Query— Does the ealiva of a hor6e naturally possess any poisonous quality ?" This occurrence is nothing to laugh at, neither is the query of the editor at all absurd— yet the eminent Banker, whose punning propensities not even cockneyisms can Stop, could not read it without falling into his prevailing rice. " Gad," said he, " I don't know about the poisonous quality of the saliva, but I always thought curing was more characteristic of the horse- spittle than killing." WE know not what measures are under the consideration of Ministers, with a view to the permanent security of our West India possessions, and the conciliation of the resident proprietors,— or indeed if they trouble themselves at all about matters of such trifling importance; having already effected so brilliant a reduction in the revenue, they possibly think an additional sacrifice of three or four millions can be as easily spared. We are induced to make these remarks, as we happen to know that the Right Honourable Mr. TOMPSON has declared " we do not want West India, we can obtain plenty of foreign sugar ;" an expiession worthy of an enlightened statesman, whose abilities would not enable him to ap- preciate the immense value of our Canadian timber trade : we can, however, tell this young gentleman, that we shall not only continue to expose his fallacious and ruinous theories, but also make a determined stand, and give our uncompro- mising opposition to his consistent support of the FOREIGN SLAVE TRADE! While our reforming Government have been reposing in fancied security as to the success of their " Bill," and doing nothing for the relief of the supplicating West Indians, the hired partizans of the deluded Aldermanbury faction have been actively pursuing their unprincipled avocation in the colonies— where, for anything we know, at the moment we are writing these remarks, riot and tumult, insurrection, bloodshed, and fire, are raging under all their varied and horrid deformities ! Read this, BUXTON, GODERICH, and Co.,— reflect, and recall your absurd, inconsistent, impracti- cable " Orders in Council" before it be too late; meanwhile, inform yourselves of the state of the Colonies, and despise not our admonition. Letters from the West Indies, dated 17tli Dec., state :— " Their hirpd delegates are vilifying the authorities of the Island, and, in the midst of all our troubles, a delusion prevails among the negroes that freedom is to commence on the 1st January, 1832. Some negroes are now in confinement for sundry acts committed, arising from this impression." Another correspondent states:— The numerous failures of the merchants in England have placed us in a very bad situation ; the market is full of protested bills, all confidence is at an end, and I fear a difficulty will arise in supplying the negroes. Where will this end ? We are on the verge of ruin, and the Foreign Refinery Bill will finish us !" Hear this, my Lords ALTHORP and HO" WICK, and if one spark of sympathy remains in your anti- colonial bosoms, no longer threaten to enforce your " fiscal regulations." The hitherto apathetic conduct of our colonial brethren is aroused, the dormant spirit of our common nature is excited, though heretofore apparently enervated by the scorching rays of a tropical sun; they are all against you,, from Anguilla to Demerara, from Barbados to Jamaica; and as with one voice exclaim, We will not be a party to our own SACRI- FICE. THE following is extracted from the Montreal Herald of the 17th ult.:— " LAND COMPANY.— In the last Herald we noticed the formation of a new Land Company, and gave an extract from a letter written as long ago as the month of September, setting forth some of its details. Finding that Mr. GALT ( who so successfully carried into effect the plans of the Upper Canada Land Company) fills, according to that ex- tract, one of the most active posts in the concern, we may expect that things have not been sleeping; and that their intended measures are by this time matured, and that Mr. GALT will be here with the first blush of spring, to carry them into instant operation. We view the establishment of this Company as a matter of " primary importance." What has actually been done in this matter we cannot precisely say; but with a knowledge of Mr. GALT'S ability and activity, we should think his anxious expectants on tbe other side of the Atlantic may repose a perfect confidence in his exertioHS. THE following statement has been often before the public, but it never can be too frequently repeated, as an antidote to the " sweltering venom''' of the Revolutionists and Atheists, which they so copiously " exhibit," as the doctors say, at every possible opportunity:— INCOME OF THE CLERGY.— The following parliamentary Returns are calculated to correct the popular notion that the Church of England, as a whole, wallows in wealth. There are undoubtedly some large livings, but they are very few, and the average is small enough, in conscience, for men who are expected to be learned, diligent, cha- ritable, & c. Attend to facts:— TABLE 1 .— There were, in 1815, under ,£ 10, 12; above ,£ 10, Lnder ;£ 20, 45 ; above ,£ 20, under.£ 30, 119; above,£ 30, undergo, 246; above.£ 40, under .£ 53, 314 ; above .£ 50, under £ 60, 314 ; above 60, under .£ 70, 301 ; above .£ 70, under .£ 80, 278. TABLE 2.— There were, in 1815, above .£ 80, under ;£ 90, 251 ; above ,£ 9£>, under .£ 100, 394; above .£ 100, under,£ U0, 250 ; above £ 110, under ;£ 120, 289 ; above .£ 1 20, under .£ 130, 254 ; above .£ 130, under £ 140, 217; and above .£ 140, under .£ 150, 219. TABLE 3. 1806— Tithe- free land £ 6,872,305 0 0 1 812—£ 8,805,530 5 7| Tithable 17,8411,6/ 3 5 5 22,518,874 3 3 § Free in Part 656,258 0 5 862,260 18 8 Free on payment of modus 508,757 11 10J 539,242 1 0 1 0 .£ 25,878 054 17 9j .£ 32.736,608 15 4} There are also 4809 livings vvith no house in which a clergyman can live. GENERAL RESULT. Income of Parochial Clergy .£ 1,694 991 Bishops'Income 165.000 Cathedral Property 300,000 .£ 2,159,991 Giving, if divided, barely ,£ 200 a year to each clergyman. Much has been said about the enormous incomes of the Bishops. The income of the Bishop of Durham, it is known, certainly does not exceed 16,0001. a year, with which he has to support a Princely rank. The Bishopric of London is worth, perhaps, 14.0001. a year ; that of Winchester, 11,0001. The Archbishopric of York produces about 10,0001. a year. The Archbishopric of Canterbury does not exceed 27,0001. a year. And as for the other English Bishoprics, they do not produce, on an average, 30001. a year. The expences of such men, their visitations, the money necessarily bestowed in cha- rity, render them comparatively poor, when contrasted with others possessing the same income and the same means. The present Bishop of Durham has repeatedly stated, that the yearly sum, be- stowed by him in charity does not full shnrt of 50001. TO JOHN SMITH, M. P. FRIEND JOHN— I have known thee many years, and no act of thy life was so gracious in my eyes as when thou wast heard in the Senate, like a full- blown Roman, denouncing the fraud and cheatery of representation. Albeit, unused to polities, I have often dwelt with delight upon a speech reported to be thine, which stated that when it was known to thee that the wicked boroughmongers were doomed to perish, such was thy excessive joy that it " took away thy breath ; ' and furthermore, that with regard to the borough of Midhurst, thou wast reported to say that thou " felt ashamed that accident had placed it in thy power to return two Members to Parliament, and thou wouldst cheerfully relinquish that power." These are noble sentiments, friend JOHN ; but thou hadst sat in the Senate thirty years— thou art fond of public speak- ing— thou knewest well the ways of the wicked— and with excitable feelings like thine, why didst thou so long remain. silent while our enemies were covering us with ridicule ? But my wife tells me that Midhurst— the low, venal, de- graded borough of Midhurst— is to be restored. Sorely does it afflict me, after what has been said and published of this borough; after the joy and gratitude which thou hast ex- pressed at the prospect of being for ever separated from such sinful electors; it vexes my soul to find that thy enemies have triumphed over thee, and that, in spite of thy prayers, Midhurst and friend JOHN SMITH are to be tied tail to tail. And now to the purport of this letter. It is the custom of my wife and myself, at the beginning of every year, to find out such as are afflicted in mind, body, or estate, and to relieve them according to our means. Yesterday, RACHAEL distributed blankets, bread, and meat to fourteen indigent families. " Is there any new case, my love, this morning?" I said. " Yes, my dear— a very- strong one— a patriot in distress."''' She then, with tears ia her eyes, mentioned JOHN SMITH ; how hard thou had struggled to separate thyself from the wicked men of Mid- hurst— but that Lord GREY and BROUGHAM, to the sur- prise of the whole House of Commons, had insisted upon the connexion being kept up ; and that, in consequence, thou wert plunged in the most profound grief, and required conso- lation. Therefore, friend JOHN, it is to comfort thee— to cheer thee up— to bid thee gird up thy loins, and be of good faith, that I address thee these few lines. Although thine enemies have triumphed over thee, yet their days are numbered ; let us hope thatvirtue will triumph, and that Midhurst may yet cease to soil and disgrace the representation of our beloved country. OBADIAH GURNEY. Bishopsgate- street, Jan. 25,1832. TO JOHN BULL. SIR,— Allow me once more, through the medium of your columns, to appeal to the British nation, in behalf of the sufferers from the effects of the late hurricane in Barbados and the other West India Islands; and allow me, Sir, to ask, if it is not a disgrace to this great nation, that, excepting in Liverpool and London, no effort has been made for their relief?— and that, even in London, after so many weeks and months, so trifling a sum as ;£ 1,207 only, should have been subscribed. Where are now the Wilberforces, the Buxtons, the Macaulays, the Stevens', and the rest, not forgetting the Saints of Peckham ? Why do they not show now, by generous deeds, that sympathy for the negro which they have so long shown by generous words ? I shall be told that some of these people have subscribed for the re- building of the churches and schools ; this may be true— but, in the mean time, the objects of their spiritual care are perishing through exposure and want, from inability to repair their dwellings and to renew their crops, which it has pleased the Almighty to destroy. This is no question of slavery or anti- slavery,— it is an appeal to our sympathy and charity, from thousands of our fellow- citizens and their dependents,— an appeal for aid and succour,— an appeal for assistance, to enable them once more to provide for themselves. Let no one withhold his mite, in the supposition that Government will pass a grant in their favour; Government cannot, and perhaps would not, if it could. I remain, Sir, yours, & c., Jan. 26th, 1832. G. A. L. PARlSIAfTcORRESPONDENC E. Paris, 25th January, 1832. DEAR BULL— The French are amusing themselves at the expence of John Bull— I do not mean at your expence my worthy and excel- lent friend— but I mean at the expence of the genus of animals called " John Bulls." They see us insulted by the Russian Government in the Moscozv Gazette— laughed at by their own journals for having yielded to the French Government on tbe question of the Belgian for- tresses— and justly reproached by the Dutch journals for having abandoned a real ally for the sake of courting the favour of the Citizen King— and when they read and observe all this, they raise their eyes to Heaven and exclaim, " poor John Bull, we shall beat him yet!" To Whigs and Whig Governors we are indebted for all this. We have lost Portugal, lost Holland, lost our real influence in Belgium, and are now about to be thrown on the mercy and compas- sion of Louis PHILIPPE— asking for an alliance which he refuses to grant, unless we yield to him all he demands, and concede to him all his wishes. There was a time when tbe voice of England was not heard in feeble whispers, and from the lips of a dandy stay Minister of Foreign Affairs, but when PITT, NORTH, NELSON, and later WEL- LINGTON, CASTLEREAGH, and LIVERPOOL, thundered in the ears of these now grinning Frenchmen, that England was arbitress of the world. Whyisshe arbitressnolonger? Why does the Moscow Gazette threaten us with a Russian attack on Calcutta ? Why does the French Government colonize Algiers to ruin us in the Mediterranean ? Why is our trade with Portugal passing into the hands of America and France? Why does Holland curse the day that she confided in our professed friendship, and why is she now seeking to make other alli- ances? The answers to these questions are one and the same— " Because the Whigs are Ministers." And yet you may be disposed to say the French have enough to do at home— enough to laugh and groan over— enough to teaze and tor- ment them without looking abroad for occupation. This is very true— but they derive some consolation in their sufferings from the knowledge of the fact that England suffers too. It is not true that the French are less hostile to England in consequence of their con- nexion with us. No nation is so cordially hated as the English— none so heartily cursed. A war with England would be the most popular war in France. The very children of a span long are taught to hate England; and its recent policy towards Holland, and its policy, though not quite so recent, towards Turkey, justify the charge now brought against us, that we are not faithful to our allies. Turkey was sacrificed for a false sensibility for some rascally Greek rebels— and Holland has been sacrificed for the sake of flattering and pleas- ing Louis PHILIPPE, who is resolved at some distant day to unite Belgium to his other dominions. For the loss of the Turkish alli- ance we have received nothing but Russian reproaches; and for the loss of Dutch friendship we have gained nothing but a closer alliance between Belgium and France. This is the just and natural conse- quence of infidelity in our national engagements. We were bound to protect Turkey— we were hound to defend Don Miguel— we were bound to maintain the rights of the King of Holland— we were bound to reprobate the spirit of democracy in France, and in Belgium. We did none of this; we allowed England to be dragged along to the verge of an abyss, and now she is there, the French sport at our mis- fortunes, delight at our embarrassments, and sneeringly ask— where are the allies of John Bull ?— Who has he for friends now ? To the Whigs, and to liberal principles as to free trade and democracy, we are indebted for this state of meekness and degradation, from which we can never hope to arise, until the principles of the men who have brought us to this condition shall no longer preside over our national affairs, and until the good old Tory and Constitutional doctrines of former days shall be brought into operation. But to turn from England to France. The lessons of the past week are alone sufficient to shew us the insufficiency of French jacobinism and democracy to render France either respected or happy. Take the following facts, which I select almost at random from a multitude of those which have acsuniulated during the laat February 12. JOHN BULL. 39- few days. They all merit your notice, and are entitled to considera- tion. . FACT 1.— The Chamber of Peers, as at present constituted, does not contain more than twenty family r. ames of Peers who are known to French history, or are connected with the wealth and the charac- ter of the country. 2.— The Chamber of Peers has resolved on scrutinizing most minutely every law brought to it from the Chamber of Deputies and on not passing any measure which shall bear upon it a democra- tical character. 3.— The Chamber ' of Deputies has determined on rejecting all laws which contain any amendments in them of the Chamber of Peers, affecting the principle of democracy. Thus the two Cham- bers are in opposition the one to the other, and collision must be frequent. 4.— The Chamber of Peers has wisely resolved on not abolishing the anniversary of the death of Louis XVI. as a day of national mourning. 5.— The Chamber of Peers has likewise resolved on not calling CHARLES X. Ex- King, but insist on his retaining the title of King. The Chamber of Deputies have come to another decision, and here there must be a collision. 6.— The French Ministers have refused to make any reduction in the Budget— insist on the necessity of maintaining an army of five hundred thousand men, even in a time of peace— and have refused to diminish the amount of taxes, which press much more heavily than ever on the labouring classes. 7.— The Government has been compelled to take hostile measures against the St. Simonists, in consequence of the success of their exer tions to establish in France a new state of society. The St. Simonists have profited by the present state of dissolution of society and Government in France to propagate their errors and make pro selytes. France is without a real Government, and the St. Simonists, feeling this to be the case, have endeavoured to govern instead of obeying, and express their hopes that this country will be once more compelled to begin a social existence. The Government of Louis PHILIPPE have seen their danger, and M. PEIUER has dared to arrest the evil— but he is unable to do so. He forgets that he is himself a revolutionist— that he laboured for 14 years to overthrow the Go- vernment under which he gained his fortune, and lived so happily and securely— and he will not remember that France cannot think of confiding her interests and honour to mon whom she knows to have been conspirators. I admit that M. PERIER'S party is the most respectable and influential— but both him and his party were all revolutionists— all conspirators— and have none of them the confi- dence or respect of France. 8.— The public expenditure is daily increasing— the public revenue diminishing— manufactoiies are hourly closing— hundreds of shops in Paris are shut up to- day which were not this day month— all con- fidence is gone— no one will discount bills of a second or third- rate quality— and first- rate paper is only demanded at one, or at most two months— the taxes are not paid— there are continued revolts against the excise duties— and finally, a new loan of 250 millions must shortly be made. 9.— In the departments the cause of HENRY V. is openly advocated, and the BOURBONS are called for from one end of France to the other. The Journals of the departments are decided in their language and politics, and in scarcely one province have the Royalists failed in establishing a large circulation for their favourite newspaper. It is not a little singular, that at the moment we are told that France is liberal, that the inhabitants of the departments are proving the reverse by subscribing for papers of a directly opposite tendency. It is also worthy of remark, that whilst the Constitutionnel, the National, the Temps, the Tribune, and the Revolution, all being liberal papers, published at Paris, have all lost so many subscribers that they are obliged to diminish their expences; that at the very same moment the Gazette de France, the Quoiidienne, and the Courrier de I'Europe, are all in a thriving condition, and even the Journal des Debats, and the France Nouvelle, which are less liberal than their other liberal coadjutors, have also increased their receipts, whilst their cot'eTSiporaries of the same, but of a more violent school, have all been losing money. 10.— During the past week the prosecutions against the press have become niijre numerous. The Opinion has been seized because it is a Royalist paper. The Revolution has beenstopped at the post- office, and seized at the office of the paper. Le Francais has also been visited by the police. A Journal called Mayence has been indicted for a libel on the Citizen King. Three printsellers have been tried for selling a lithographic engraving entitled the Exiles, and which represents the Duke of BOURDEAUX and his sister, with the following couplet of a poem by M. de CHATEAUBRIAND :— " Combien j'ai douce Souvenance, Du beau Pays de ma Naissance." But I am happy to say that the accused were acquitted, and the prints seized ordered to be restored. A dilierent late awaited the Editors of the Veridique, who were found guilty, and sentenced to three months' imprisonment and a fine of 300 francs, for attacking the order of the succession to the throne, as settled by the declaration of the Chamber of Deputies in August, 1830. The Government has been resorting to a custom never yet adopted, of arresting the Editors and Printers of the Journals accused of containing libels. The National exhorts its brethren of the press to repel force by force, and promises that if the Minister of Justice shall attempt to arrest any one for libel, at the Bureau of its Office, that arms shall be resorted to, even though murder may be the consequence. Another Editor of the Tribune has been also arrested and sent to prison. MALLIER, a bar- rister, has been tried and sentenced to two years' imprisonment for a political letter, and in his defence having made use of expressions which oftended the ears of the Procureur General, he has been since subjected to another prosecution. The Tribune has been seized lor inserting, verbatim, an article from the Augsburg Gazette. This is the thirty- third seizure of the Journal. The Courrier de I'Europe has been sentenced to fine and imprisonment for having repeated an article published in the Tribune. M. LA POJIMERAYE, author of the ' Cours de 1' Histoire de France,' has been arrested, and the 6th number of his work seized by a Commissary of Police. The Alsacien, an opposition Journal published at Strasburg, has been twice seized within the last three weeks. Another Editor of the Tribune has been sentenced to five years' imprisonment for an alleged libel on Louis PHILIPPE. Fifteen printsellers have been arrested and brought before the Court of Assize simply for exposing to sale portraits of the Duchess of BERRY and her children ; but I am happy to add that they were all acquitted, and the prints ordered to berestored. Thus, my dear BULL, you have striking evidence of the nature of liberal toleration, and of the sort of freedom of the press which these Jaco- bins would allow. They claim the right of insulting the Royalists, the Carlists, the Priests, and all that is respectable and honourable in society; but they will not give to their political opponents the same privileges which they exercise themselves. 11.— The Royalists have been illegally deprived, during the past week, of their right to keep, as a day of national mourning, the anni- versary of the murder of Louis XVI. This day of national repentance was established by an express law— that law has never yet been re- pealed— and yet these boasted lovers of legality, who affect to be indig- nant with CHARLES X. merely because the ordonnances of July, 1830, were not legal, have sanctioned the violation of a positive law by pro- hibiting the celebration of the 21st of January. The Bank of France wisely determined on acting up to the letter as well as the spirit of the law, and treated the 21st of January as a dies non ; several of the tribunals did the same thing; but the Chambers met as usual, the Bourse was open as on other days, and the Liberals gloried in the fact that they had, by threats and illegality, prevented the execution of a positive law. This is one of the fruits of a glorious revolution. 12.— The Chouans have re- commenced their attacks in ths west, have assembled in various parts, and have uniformly succeeded in carrying off all they could lay hands on. The Government papers are perpetually endeavouring to make it believed that the last of the Chouans has been taken, or that the last has been killed; but no sooner do we hear of the last than another arises; and they declare that they will never lay down arms until they have re- established the Throne of the BOURBONS. We eannot too deeply deplore that the Chouans should resort to violence and robbery in a good cause, when its triumph is already assured without such measures; but at the same time we must render justice to the courage of men who sacrifice iheir lives and property for the maintenance of principles which they hold to be necessary lor the happiness and security of France. The Chouans do not rob for personal aggrandizement, and for the sake of wealth, but they attack and destroy all whom they consider enemies to France, because they are friends of the reigning dynasty. The Foreign politics of the past week may soon be related. The Emperor of RUSSIA is about to visit Berlin, in order to concert mea- sures with the Prussian Court for re- establishing order in Europe. The King of the BELGIANS is becoming very unpopular. Greece is in a state of civil war. Don PEDRO leaves to- day for Belleisle, but his expedition is not to sail against Portugal, but only against Madeira. Large military preparations are making in Prussia, Poland, and Rus- sia; and it is generally believed that war is certain for the spring. The King of HOLLAND remains firm, and the Conference of London is about to be dissolved.— Adieu, my dear BULL, believe me to be yours, very affectionately, P. H E R ; By Leigh EC CLE SI AS T1CAL 1NTELL1GENCE. PREFERMENTS. The Rev. W. L. WEDDALL, B. A., of Catharine Hall, to the Rectory of Chillisford, Suffolk, on the presentation of Mrs. Catharine Susanna Smear, of Orford. The Rev. F. OAKELEY to the Prebend of Dasser- Parva, in Lichfield Cathedral, vacant by the resignation of the Rev. T. Broomfield. Patron, the Lord Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry. The Rev. T. STANIFORTH to the Rectory of Bolton in Bowland, on the presentation of John Bolton, Esq. of Storrs, Windermere. The Rev. W. CLEJIINSON, B. A., of Queen's Coll., Oxford, has been licensed by the Lord Bishop of Chester to the New Church in Upper Tranmere. Patron, the Rev. R. M. Fielden. The Rev. T. R. BROMFIELD, M. A. to the Prebend of Gaia Minor, in Lichfield Cathedral, instead of Sir H. OAKLEY, Bart, resigned. Patron, Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry. The Rev. SAMUEL RICKARDS to the Rectory of Stowlangtoft, in Suffolk, on the presentation of Joseph Wilson, Esq. of Highbury Hill, Middlesex. The Rev. Dr. WILSON, who has been presented to the Stall in Winchester Cathedra], vacant by the death of the Rev. E. Poulter, resigns the living of Church Oakely, which is in the gift of the Pro- vost and Fellows of Queen's College, Oxford. It is understood that the Rev. W. HARRISON, Prebendary of Win- chester Cathedral, will succeed the Rev. E. Poulter to the Vicarage of Alton. The Rev. WM. FRASER, Perpetual Curate of Pirbright, Surrey, has been presented to the Rectory of North Waltham, vacant by the removal of the Rev. J. A. G. Colpoys to the Rectory of Droxford, in the room of the Rev. W. Gamier, resigned. OBITUARY. The Rev. TSAAC KING, L. L. B., Vicar of West Wycombe, Bucks. The Rev. WILLIAM EASTON, Vicar of Barton upon Soar, Leicestershire, The Rev. JAMES PLUMPTBB, Vicar of Great Gransden, Hunts. ( Patrons, Clare Hall, Cambridge.) The Rev. BUTLER BEERY, Vicar of Creshall, Essex, and of Thriplow, Camb. The Rev. RICHARD ATKINSON, Rector of Musgrave, Westmorland. ( Patron Bishop of Carlisle.) The Rev. BERNARD WARD, Vicar of Peterchurch, Hereford. Patrons, Guy's Hospital, London. The Rev. THOMAS FLESHER, Rector of Tiffield, Northamptonshire. Patron, Thomas Flesher, Esq. UNIVERSITY INTELLIGENCE. OXFORD.— On Thursday the following degrees were conferred : Masters of Arts: A. T. Corfe, All Souls'; T. C. Whitmore, Christ Church; J. Wood, Merton ; Rev. T. F. Laurence, Rev. G. Adams, Fellows of St. John's; Rev. T. Evans, Oriel.— Bachelors of Art. J. S. Broad, St. Edmund Hall: R. Pliillimore, G. L. Parsons, H. A. Jeffreys, W. E. Gladstone, ana T. Chamberlain, Students of Christ Chuich ; R. Farquharson and M. F. Tupper, Christ Church ; Joseph Bailey, Brazenose; E. J. Wilcocks, Scholar of Lincoln. CAMBRIDGE.— On Saturday last the Marquis of Granby, son of the Duke ol Rutland, was admitted of Trinity College. Charles Lesingham Smith. Esq. B. A. Fellow of Christ College, on the foundation of Sir John Finch and Sir Thomas Baines, was on Tuesday last elected a Fellow of the same Society, on the foundation of King Edward the Sixth. William Wigan Harvey and John Hibbert, Scholars of King's College, were lately elected Fellows of that Society. At a congregation on Monday last the following degrees were con- ferred -.— Master of Arts : J. Hammill, Trinity College.— Bachelors of Arts : F. Tennyson, C. Tennyson, Trinity College; J. H. Buxton, J. Grant, J. Hough, Queen's College. ORDINATIONS. The following gentlemen were ordained by the Lord Bishop of BRISTOL, at Almondsbury, on Sunday the 17th inst.:— Deacons: J. Howell, B. A. St. John's coll. Camb.; R. S. Eaton, B. A. Trin. coll. Dublin; R. Dixon, M. A. Cath. hall, Camb; — Jebb, B. A. Petpr House, Camb.— Priests: N. Bond, B. A. Oriel coll. Oxford; G. F. Cooper, M. A. Wadham coll. Oxford; R. Mosley, B. A. Trinity coll. Camb.; J. J. Matthews. B. A. Christ coll. Camb.; W. H, Ross, B. A. Trinity coll. Camb.; C. Fryer, M. A. St. John's coll. Camb.; H. Michel], B. A. Trinity hall, Camb.; S. J. Gambier, B. A. Trin. coll. Camb.; W. F. Radclyff'e, B. A. Queen's coll. Camb.; H. C. Smith, B. A. Baliol coll. Ox!'.; D. T. K. Drummond, B. A. Worcester coll. Oxf. ; R Briscoe, B. A. Jesus coll. Oxford, by letters dimissory from Bishop of St. Asaph ; Mr. Lewis and Mr. Bmvcott, of St. David's coll. Lain peter, by letters dimissory from the Bishop of St. David's ; Mr. Hawkins, by letters dimissory from Bishop of Exeter. MISCELLANEOUS. ST. SAVIOUR'S, SOUTHIVARK.— An adjourned meeting was held at St. Saviour's Church, Southwark, on Tuesday last, to take into consideration the propriety of destroying " Our Lady's Chapel." It was moved by a Mr. Weston, that the said chapel be pulled down, and after a very stormy discussion, it was found that there was a sufficient number of barbarians present to carry the motion. We are glad, however, to learn that the concurrence of another vestry meeting of the parish, as well as the sanction of the Bishop of WIN- CHESTER, must be obtained before the resolution of these tasteless Goths can be carried into execution. We trust that the Bishop of WINCHESTER, at all events, will withhold his consent to the demoli- tion of this beautiful edifice. 8, New Burlington- street. Messrs. COLBURN and BENTLEY have just published the follewing NEW" WORKS:— SI I R RALPH ESH Or, Adventures of a Gentleman of the Court of Charles II. Hunt. In 3 vols, post 8vo. II. CAPTAIN FRANKLAND'S NARRATIVE of his Visits to the Courts of Russia and Sweden in the Years 1830— 31. In 2 vols. 8vo. with plates. III. THE OPERA. A Story of the Beau- Monde. 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The Moniteur announces officially that the question of the Belgian fortresses has been definitively concluded ; on what terms, or in what manner, is not stated. ,„,,,, The result of the debates in the French Chamber has been the preservation of the Sinking Fund. All the amendments were re- jected ; the closing division' was— For the Sinking Fund 203, against 170; majority 33. This is a matter of much importance to France The French Funds have risen; the closing prices on Thursday were. Five per Cents. 96f 40c for Imoney; 96f 30c for account. Three per Cents. 66f 20c for money ; 66f 25c for account. EXECUTION OF THE BRISTOL RIOTERS.— Four of these misguided men expiated their crimes on the scaffold on Friday, a respite having arrived ior the fifth, named Vines. The names of the four who suffered - were— Wm. Clarke, Christopher Davis, Thos. Gregory, and Joseph Kayes. At the appointed hour, 11 o'clock in the forenoon, the preparations being all completed, the melancholy procession pro- ceeded to the top of the lodge of the gaol, on which the scaffold was erected. Davis was the first who ascended, followed by Gregory. The former took no notice of those beneath, and but once cast up his - eyes to the fatal beam. Clarke next ascended, followed by Kayes. when the ropes being adjusted, and the Rev. Divines having prayed with them a short time, the caps were pulled over their eyes, and the fatal bolt was drawn. Kayes apparently suffered much; the others died instantly. The crowd did not express a word during the exe- cution ; all were quiet, and apparently were not much affected by this awful exhibition. A great number of women were present.— Christopher Davis was a man ranking superior in life to the other culprits, having an independent property of 3001. a year; thereat • were of the lowest grades in society. The conduct of the wretched men since their condemnation, and on the scaffold, was becoming their awful situation, displaying neither the hardihood of the ruffian, Jior more weakness than might have been expected. Every pre- caution was taken to preserve the public peace. A lire broke out between one and two o'clock on Friday afternoon, in the house of Mr. John Maberly, in John- street, Berkeley- square. It commenced in the library, and communicated to the drawing- room, when its progress was stopped, after having consumed a valuable collection of books and the furniture of the rooms. DAILY REPORT OF CHOLERA. Central Board of Health, Council Office, Whitehall, Jan. 28. SUNDERLAND, JAN. 26.— Remaining at last report, 1; new cases, 0; dead, 0; recovered, 0; remaining, 1; total cases from com- mencement, 536; total deaths from commencement, 202. NEWCASTLE, JAN. 26.— Remaining at last report, 54; new cases, 9; dead, 3; recovered, 10; remaining, 50; total cases Irons com- - anencement, 855; total deaths, 270. GATESHEAD, JAN. 26.— Remaining at last report, 4; new cases, 2; dead, 0; recovered, 3; remaining, 3; total cases from com- mencement. 390; total deaths, 139. NORTH SHIELDS AND TYNEMOUTH, JAN. 26.— Remaining at last report, 20; new cases, 5; dead, 1; recovered, 1; remaining, 23; total cases from commencement, 110; total deaths, 39. HADDINGTON, N. B., AND VICINITY, JAN. 25. — Remaining at last report, 4; new cases, 1; dead, 0; recovered, 0; remaining, 5; total cases from commencement, 55; total deaths, 24. TBANENT, N. B. JAN. 25.— Remaining at last report, 21; new cases, 10; dead, 0; recovered, 0 j remaining, 31; total cases from commence- ment, 61; total deaths, 26. NEWBURN, JAN. 25.— Remaining at last report, 12; new cases, 17; dead, 1; recovered, 15; remaining, 13; total cases from commence- ment, 274; total deaths, 65. EARSDEM COLLIERY, JAN. 26.— Remaining at last report, 29; new cases, 10; dead, 0; recovered, 8; remaining, 31; total cases from commencement, 42; total deaths, 4. SCOTTSWOOD, JAN. 25.— Remaining at last report, 0; new cases, 1; dead, 0; recovered, 0; remaining, 1. ELSWICK AND BENWELL, J AN. 26.— Remaining at last report, 2; new cases, 1; dead, 0; recovered, 0; remaining, 3. SOUTH SHIELDS AND HEPBURN COLLIERY, JAN. 26. — Remaining at last report, 2 ; new cases, 0 ; dead, 0 ; recovered, 1 ; remaining, 1 ; total cases from commencement, 6 ; total deaths, 2. HETTON, & c., JAN. 26.— Remaining at last report, 53 ; new cases, 14; dead, 2; recovered, 6; remaining, 59; total cases from com- mencement, 311; total deaths, 67. PRESTON PANS, JAN. 26. — Remaining at last report, 11; new cases, 5; dead, 1; recovered, 0; remaining, 15; total cases from commencement, 18 ; total deaths, 3. NORTH BERWICK, JAN. 26. — Remaining at last report, 1 ; new cases, 0 ; dead, 1 ; recovered, 0 ; total cases from commencement, 3; total deaths from commencement, 3. MUSSELBURGH, JAN. 24. — Remaining at last report, 46; new cases, 16 ; dead, 5 ; recovered, 2 ; remaining, 55 ; total cases from commencement, 107 ; total deaths from commencement, 34. TOTALS. Cases remaining at last | Died 14 report 260 I Recovered 46 New Cases 911 Remaining 291 Cases from the commencement of disease 2,768. Deaths from the commencement of disease 877. ( Signed) W. MACLEAN, Secretary. EDINBURGH REVIEW.— just published, No. 108. Contents:— I. New Oame Laws— II. Todd's Life of Cranmer— HI. Colonial Policy— West Indian Distress— IV. Characteristics— Hope on Man; Sclilegel's Philosophical Lectures— V. Prince Puckler Muskau's Tour in Eng- land and Ireland— VI. Recent History, Present State, and External Relations of Portugal— VII. Southey's Edition of the Pilgrim's Progress— VIII. Williams's life of Sir Thomas Lawrence— IX. English Universities— Oxford— X. Lord S^ ugent's Memorials of Hampden, his Party, and his Times. Longman and Co., London ; and A. Black, Edinburgh. On the 31 st March will be published, No. I. price 2s. 6d. of TAIT'S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE, for APRIL, 1832.— To be continued Monthly. We do not offer to the Public a Journal fashioned after the manner of those • yrltb which it is at present familiar. The interests which we intend to advocate, and the objecis to the accomplishment of which all our exertion shall be de- Toted are of a kind which Magazine Writers have hitherto, for the most part, neglected or shunned. Drawing- room and holiday literature is well enough in its own place, and we are by no means disposed to quarrel with it. fiut a change has come over the spirit of the time ; mighty questions have been stirred ; deep interests have been created ; vast masses of men, formerly inert and passive, have suddenly begun to heave to and fro with the foree of a newly- jnspired animation ; old thing3 are passing away ;— and while probably on the eve of great events, it has appeared to us not only desirable, but necessary, to • provide an organ or vehicle through which the voice of a renovated people may Jje heard. With that view TAIT'S EDINBURGH MAG AZINE is offered to the Public. In its scope it will embrace Politics, Literature, Science, Economics, Legislation, and Jurisprudence ; in short, every thing connected with, or calculated to advance, the improvement of Society. Of Reform it will be the fearless and uncompro- mising advocate.— of abuse, wherever it may luik, and to whomsoever it may be profitable, the constant and merciless enemy. Some— we ought rather to say unuch— of the best intellect and learning of the country has been secured for its service; and in the list of its contributors will be fouud names of the highest distinction in letters. Utility will ever be its first and greatest object,— strict impartiality its invariable characteristic— active and st arching industry the con- stant duty of all connected with its management. Of the Literature of the month it will afford a complete and carefully digested picture. Every new book will be reviewed at greater or less length as its importance may demand. TAIT'S EDIN- BURGH MAGAZINE will thus unite the properties of a Review with those of a • Magazine, or Repository of useful information and independent discussion ; and Jt will also form a faithful record of every step in that improvement of our insti- tutions which must rapidly follow the Reform in our Parliamentary Representa- tion. Rut although we have resolved, if possible, to be useful, we have, at the same time, vowed not to be dull. There are no weeping philosophers in our ieorps. Democritus himself migbt have joined us, without compromising his cha x& cter at Abdera. We seek, above all things, to be instructive ; but we flatter ourselves we can also impart to our labours a degree of interest sufficient to con. filiate even those who read only that they may be amused. Printed for William Tait, 78, Prince's- street Edinburgh ; to whom communi. cations may be addressed, Orders received by all Booksellers throughout the jcingdan* NO LAUDANUM OR OTHER OPIATES. ITARKER'S Celebrated COLD, COUGH and ASTHMATIC JLJL REMEDY is wholly exempt from all Opiates, and affords altfiost instant relief in the most troublesome and obstinate cases. S* ld ( by appointment) by E. HARKER, 37, Fetter- lane; Where numerous respectable testimonials ( too numerous to insert in an advertisement) may be seen. Sold also by J. Sanger, 150, Oxford- street; Hannay and Co. 78, Newman- street, Oxford- street: Sabines, 59, Old Bailey; William Holwell, 269, High- str. Borough ; and by all respectable Medicine Venders in the United Kingdom. In Bottles, at 2s. 9d. and 4s. 6d. each, the larger bottles holding twice the quantity of the Medicine contained in the smaller ones. B3" None are genuine unless signed by E. Harker. UNIFORM WITH THE WAVERLEY NOVELS. Now in course of publication, in small 8vo. neatly bound and embellished, Price 6s. STANDARD NOVELS, No. XI. containing the whole of Miss A. M. Porter's HUNGARIAN BROTHERS. The Stories already published in this Series consist of " The Pilot,"" The Spy" and " The Last of the Mohicans," by Cooper, the admirable historical novelist of America; " Caleb Williams" and " St. Leon," by the English sage, Godwin; Miss Jane Porter's " Thaddeus of Warsaw" and " Scottish Chiefs;" Mrs. Shel- ley's Romance of " Frankenstein ;" Schiller's " Ghost Seer ;" and Brockden Brown's " Edgar Huntly, or the Sleep Walker." %* No. XII. to appear on the 1st of Feb. will contain THE CANTER. KURY TALES ; by Sophia and Harriet Lee, ( to be completed in 2 vols.) — Revised, corrected, and accompanied by a new Introduction by Miss Harriet Lee; written expressly for this edition, neatly bound and illustrated from designs by Stephanoff. Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley, New Burlington street. On Monday will be published, price Six Shillings, No. XVII., of THE FOREIGN QUARTERLY REVIEW. Contents :— Ait. I The Duke of St. Simon's Memoirs : the Court of Louis the Fourteenth— II. Literature and Literary Societies of Iceland— III. French Drama : De Vigny's Marechale d'Ancre, and Hugo's Marion Delorme— IV. Mexican Antiquities— V. Grimm's Teutonic Legal Antiquities— VI. French Expedition to Algiers: Colonization of Africa — VII. Poisson on Capillary Action— VIII. Political State of Switzerland— IX. Duties on Foreign Books— X. Batiushkov's Essays in Poetry and Verse, with a Translation of his " Death of Tasso" — XI. Historical Scenes of the Columbian Revolution — XII. Houwald's Dramas— XIII. Recent Italian Novels— XIV. Memoirs of Galotti— XV. Schiller's Wallenstein, translated into Latin Ver3e — Miscellaneous and Literary Intelligence from France, Germany, Italy, and Russia— List of the principal New Works published on the Continent, from October to December— Index and Title to the 8th Volume. Published by Treuttel and Wurtz, and Richter, 30, Soho square ; and Black, Young, and Young, 2, Tavistock- street ; Treuttel and Wurtz, Paris and Strasburg. 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With Original Articles, by Distinguished Writers, on the Drama, Music, and the Fine Arts,& c.; Reviews of New Publications ; and a great variety of Useful Information. Published by James Cochrane and Co. 11, Waterloo- place Pall- mall. Orders received bv all Booksellers and Newsmen. The SECOND VOLUME of the Metropolitan may now be had, handsomely bound in cloth, price 14s. fgl H E MONTHLY MAGAZINE ( New Series).— JL The Number for February contains a graphic Sketch of Anti- Radical, with an Ode to Sir Charles Wetherell. The Contents are:— I. A Project for the Diffusion of Useful Ignorance- II. Opening of Parliament— III. Lives of Cele- brated Travellers— IV. Ode to Sir Charles Wetherell: with the Portrait of Anti- Radical— V. Specimens of Latin Comedy: The Captives— Plautus— VI. Cala- mities of Carving— VII. A Modest Defence of Literary Puffing;— VIII. The Parisian Newspaper Press— IX. Rivers!— X. The Currency and the Bank of England— XI. Elliston and the Ass's Head— XII. A Legend of the Egean— XIII. Sonnet from Petrarch— XIV. Sketch of a Warrior of the 19th Century— XV. The Polish Widow to her Son— XVI. Tithes versus Rent, No. 2— XVII. Parliamentary Pastorals, No 1, by Corydon Croker; No. 2, by the Damon of Newcastle— XVIII. Dramatic Monopoly— XIX. Brevities— XX. The Lay of the Lost Minstrel— XXI. Notes of the Month on Affairs in General— XXII. Review of Books— The Drama— Fine Arts— Literary Notices— Agricultural Report, & c. & c. Whittaker and Co., London. Just published, BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE. Nos. CXC. and CXCI. For FEBRUARY, 1832. CONTENTS OF PART 1.— I. Sotheby's Homer. Critique 5. Achilles. Part 2— II. A Letter to the Lord Chancellor on the Present State of the Established Church— III. Tom Cringle's Log— IV. The Horse. By the Rev. F. W. Maltby— V. Geography of Africa— Quarterly Review. Letter from James M'Queen, Esq. — VI. The Swan and the Skylark. By Mrs. Hemans— VII. Let us Depart. By the Same— VIII. The Flower of the Desert. By the Same— IX. The Painter's Last Work; a Scene. By the Samp— X. French Memoirs. No. 2. Revelations d'une Femme de Qualite— XI. The Moonlight Churchyard. By Delta— XII. The Aga of the Janizaries— XIII. Noctes Ambrosianze. No. 60. CONTENTS OF PART II.— I. New Project of Education in Ireland— II. The Executioner. Chap. 1— III. Homer's Hymns. No. 4. The Humours of Hermes— IV. The Dance of Death. From the German— V. The Philosophy of London— VI. The House of Orange— VII. Irish Scenery; and Other Things Irish— VIII. A Creation of Peers— IX. Letter from Professor Dunbar and Mr. E. H. Barker — X. The West India Question. Introduction— XI. L'Envoy. Printed for William Blackwood, No. 45, George- street, Edinburgh; and T. Cadell, Strand, London. NEW NOVELS BY DISTINGUISHED WRITERS. THE ROBBER. By the Author of " Chartley the Fatalist." 3 vols. THE FALSE STEP. 3 Vols. " A Tale of deep interest, inculcating a useful lesson."— Metropolitan. " A very interesting story."— Literary Gazette. " An interesting, well- told story, not over- drawn."— Athenseum. THE KING'S SECRET By the Author of the " Lost Heir." 3 vols. " One of the very best of our historic fictions."— Literary Gazette. Printed for Edward Bull, New Public Subscription Library, 26, Holles- street, Cavendish- square. THE HISTORICAL PRESENTS. New Series of the ROMANCE of HISTORY is now ready, comprising ITALY'S ROMANTIC ANNALS. By Charles Macfarlane, Esq. Author of " Constantinople in 1829." " What a world of adventure and imagination !"— Lit. Gazette. " Full of interest and variety."— Court Journal. " The most accurate and comprehensive view of Italian manneis." Belle Assem. The former Series, in 3 vols, each, ENGLAND. By Henry Neele. Fourth Edition. FRANCE. By Leitch Ritchie. New Edition. SPAIN. By Trueba. " The plan of this work is excellent."— Literary Gazette. " These tales are strong and vivid pictures of the past."— Monthly Review. " These books are valuable presents."— New Monthly Mag. 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Among its Contents will be found, Conclusion of the Review of the Racing Season 1831, with Matters connected therewith, by The Young Forester— Trickery in Horse- Dealing by Advertise- ments— Brief Memoir of Somerville, Author of " The Chase," with a Sketch of his House and Kennel, by Gilbert Forester— Nominations for the Doncaster St. Leger, distinguishing those engaged in the Derby, Oaks, and York Spring St. Leger— Two Last Days of the late Black Game Season— The Kiss Platonic— Leatherhead, an extraordinary Hunter— Reminiscences of an Old Sportsman, interspersed with Anecdotes, including the Breaking- up of a Pack of Fox- hounds, Anecdotes of the Dog, Sporting in India, Spanish Gasconade, Anec- dotes of George the Fourth, and Sir John Lade ; by The Hermit in London — Aquatics of the last and Anticipations of the ensuing Season — The East Kent Hounds— Gilbert Forester's Tour in the West, continued: Net- tlesombe Park, Mr. Lucas's Seat at Barliam Down— Mr. Frowd's Harriers — Sir Arthur Chichester's Hunting Establishment— Youlstone Coverts— Mr. Braddon's Harriers— A Day with the Lyneham Hounds, by Oneofus— The late Mr. Flint, by Alfred Highflyer— The Tidworth Hounds— Bettings atTattersall's — Turf Intelligence Extra— Fight between Jones, the Sailor Boy, and Perkins, the Oxford Pet— Sporting Intelligence— Notices to Correspondents— Racing Calendar, & c. & c. 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Brocades, Silk Laces, Lymphs, & c. & c., ready for selection. No. 295, HIGH HOLBORN, Next door to GRAHAM and Company's Carpet Warehouse. BURGESS'S NEW SAUCE for general purposes having gained such great approbation, and the demand for it continuing to increase, JOHN BURGESS and SON beg most respectfully to offer thus their best ac- knowledgments to the Public for their liberal patronage of the same ; its utility and great convenience iu all climates have recommended it to the most distin- guished foreign connexions, who have all spoken highly in its recommendation,. It is prepared by them ONLY ; and for preventing disappointment to families, all possible care has been resorted to, by each bottle being sealed on the cork with their firm and address, as well as each label having their signature, without which it cannvt be genuine.— JOHN BURGESS and SON'S long- established and much- esteemed ESSENCE of ANCHOVIES continues to be prepared by them after the same manner that has given the greatest satisfaction for many years.— Warehouse, 107, Strand, corner of the Savoy steps, London.—( The Oru ginal Fish- sauce Warehouse.) LOSE OF HOLIDAYS.— Now that the season of annual fes- tivity is about to terminate, and the respective Boarding Schools be rein- stated by the busy throng of youthful aspirants, the personal attractions of whom become naturally an object of great solicitude with friends and relatives, ROW- LAND'S KALYDOR, for preserving the Skin and improving the Complexion, and MACASSAR OIL, for accelerating the Growth and Beautifying the Hair, are generally considered indispensable in the requisite accompaniments of the decorative repository. The august patronage conceded by all the Sovereigns of Europe to these creative and renovating specifics, and confirmation, by experi- ence, of their infallible efficacy, have characterized them with perfection, and given them a celebrity unparalleled. Sold by A. ROWLAND and SON, 20, HATTON- GARDEN, and most respectable Perfumers and Medicine Venders. R EDUCTION in W AX CANDLES.— Fine Wax Candles, 1*. lid. pei pound ; Finest Wax, 2s. 2d.; Carriage Candles, 2s. 2d.; finest Tran3- not! Pon^ lnn In CJ . / « J1 1 . f 1 i r — 1 ' I r —- 9 ..."" v.., wo, uu, pvi uijpri jai gallon ; fine Store Moulds, wax wicks, 7^ d. per pound; best Store Dips, 6d. per pound. Sauces assorted, 18s. per dozen \ pint bottles; fine flavoured Tongues, 3s. arid 3s. 6d. each, for side dishes. The above are all warranted of the best quality ; if on trial they are not found as specified, the money shall be returned. — J. CANE'S Italian Warehouse, 73, Oxford st., next door to the Queen's Bazaar CANDLES, 5| d. per lb.. Palace Wax- lights, 2s. Id. per lb.— M. P. DA VIES, 63, St. Martin's- lane, opposite New Slaughter's Coffee Hou* e, will meet the prices of any house in London with the same quality of articles.— For Cash on delivery as follows:— Candles, 5s. 6d. per dozen lbs.— Wax- wick Moulds, 7s. per dozen lbs.— Spermaceti, or Composition Candles, plain, or the Patent Platted Wicks, ls. 7d. per lb. by the Paper— Fine Wax Candles 2s. 4d. per lb.— Sealing Wax, 4s. 6d. per lb.— Mottled Soap, 66s. and 74s. per cwt.; Yellow, 60s. and 68s.; Fine Curd, 82s.— Windsor and Palm Soap, Is. 4d. per lb.; Brown Windsor, ls. 9d.— Fine Sperm Oil, 7s. per gallon; very superior, 7s. 6d. Lamp Oil, 3s. and 3s. 6d.— Delivered in Town, and packed with care for the Country. f » 1 HARCOURT'S SELF- ACTING CLYSMA- DUCT, for JL • administering Lavements ( approved and recommended by the signa- tures of all the leading Medical Men in London, among whom are Sir Astley Cooper, Sir W. Blizard, Sir Jas. M'Griger, and Sir Anthony Carlisle), is superior to any other, and invaluable in all diseases arising from Costiveness and Indi- gestion— important to every family, and highly advantageous to females and children. " This apparatus ought to be in the possession of every person going abroad."— 12, Carlton- street, Waterloo- place, Lower Regent. street, and 3, Sweeting's alley, Cornhill. A'HK < i « N ERA L, AVKKA( i Ji HHIOJS O* tiKITlSH OOttf* Per Imperial Quarter, of England and Wales, for the Week ending Jan. 20. Wheal 59 « 5d | Oats 21 s 4d j Beans 35* 7d Barley 35s 8d | Rye 36s 4d | Peas 37* 3d AGGREGATE AVERAGES OF THB SIX WEEKS, WHICH REGULATES DUTY. Wheat 59s 3c2 j Oats 21s lid j Beans 37* 3d Barley 35s 81 j Rye 36a 8d | Peas 3Sg 10d Duty on Foreign Corn for the present week. Wheat 27s 8d I Oats 15s 3d I Beans 14s 0d Barley 9s 4J | Rye 15s 6d I Peas 12s 6d PRICES OF THE PUBLIC FUNDS. STOCKS. Bank Stock 3 per Cent Reduced ..... 3 per CentConsols....... 3 § per Cent. 1316 3j per Cent. Red New perCent......... Bank Long Annuities. • India Bonds... Exchequer Bills Consols for Account pa Also, just published, in one volume 8vo. price 15s. j NIMROD'S LETTERS i tbe CONDITION of HUNTERS, & c. Rlomi. Tues. We4 193J 1934 824 822 8I| 82g 90* X 89} 90 S9)[ 894 16j JSi X 1 P 2 p 12 82J 11 82f BIRTHS. Thurs. Friday Sat. 193J — 19 « 8ti 82g m 824 821 62| 90J 90$ — 894 90 90i 89j 894 90 16| 164 I6if 1 P 2 p 2 f. 13 82$ 13 82J 12 82 § On the 23d inst. at the. Hon. and Rev. Dr. Marsham's, Kirkby Oberblow, the lady of Major Maclean, 81st Regt. of a daughter. On the 22d inst. in Upper Harley- street, the lady of George Simson, jun. Esq. of a son. MARR1EU. : " On the 24th inst. at Isleworth, H. Grosvenor Day, Esq. of Isleworth, surgeon, to Clara Anne, eldest daughter of John Stanborough, Esq. of the same place— On the 24th inst. Mr. Pryce Mottram, of Calthorpe- street, to Maria, second daughter of Charles Mawhood, Esq. of Park- place, Finehley— On the 17th of November last, at Bahia, Brazils, Andrew- Comber, Esq. merchant, of the former place, to Mis3 Mary Emily Freitas, eldest daughter of the late Colonel Freitas, of that city — On the 23d inst. at St. Anne's Church, Dublin, Lieutenant- Colonel Blane, of the Scots Fusileer Guards, son of Sir G. Blane, Bart, to Eliza, eldest daughter ot J. Armit, Esq. of Kildare- street— On the 26th December, at the Government Chapel, Valletta, Malta, Francis Baring AtKinson, Esq. to Miss Mary Anne Stoddart, younger daughter of the Hon. Sir John Stoddart, Chief Justice of Malta— On the 24th inst. at Christchurch, St. Marylebone, Wm. Buckley, Esq. of the Madras Army, to Emma, eldest daughter of the late Geo. Walter Smythe, Esq. of Acton Burnell, in the county of Salop— On the 25th inst. at Rickmans- Worth, by the Rev. Edward Hodgson, the Rev. J. J Cory, Vicar of Orton on the Hill, Leicestershire, to Miss Dawhiney, of the former place. DIED. On Sunday, the 22d Jan., in the 83d year of his age, Jonathan Josiah Christo- pher Bullock, Esq. of Faulkbourn Hall, Essex, and of Harley- street. On Friday, the 13th instant, after a few days' illness, Emma Anne O'Donovan, of Banlahan, in the county of Cork, relict of the late Lieut.- General O'Donovan. This sudden bereavement has occasioned the deepest sorrow both to her relatives and to her numerous friends and connexions among many eminent families in that county, by all of whom this lamented lady was deservedly held in no common degree of estimation. On the 24th inst. in Upper Harley- street, in her 5th year, Elizabeth Harriet, third daughter of George Simson, jun. Esq. On the 25th inst. after a few hours illness, Lady Sarah Tournav Staines, the wife of George Gunning, Esq. of Frindsbury and Dent de Lion, in'the County of Kent. On the 17th inst. at Bradford, Wilts, in the 42d year of his age, Mr. John Haze- land— On the 20th inst. at Falmouth, Mr. Archibald Seton Colquhoun— On the 20th inst. Emily Lucy, youngest daughter of the late Helyar. Esq. of Coker- court, Somerset— On the 22d inst. at Bagshot-, aged 36, James Bathgate, Esq. St. Germain's- place, Blackheath, late of Bathgate and Co. Calcutta— On the 23d inst. Mrs. Meggison, widow of the late Thomas Meggison, of Ashford Ford, Mid- dlesex— On the 23d inst. at Chelsea, Walter Holies, Esq. aged 54— On the 23d inst. at Hampton, Middlesex, Mary, daughter of Mr. Francis, of Hampton and Windsor Castle, aged 32— On the 23d inst. at Taunton, Somersetshire, aged 37, Jane, the wile Mr. P. D. Hayman, of Homerton— On the 25th inst. at his son's house in Berners- street, aged 81, Mr. J. Nisbet, of Kelso, North Britain— At his residence in Burv- street, St. James's, John Hale, Esq. in his 70th year— At the Priory, near Bury St. Edmund's, in the 66th year of her age, Louisa Elizabeth, daughter of the late General Gage, Commander in Chief of His Majesty's Forces in North America, aunt to the present Viscount Gage, and the wife of Sir James Henrv Blake, Bart, of Langham Hall, Suffolk— On the 22d inst. the Ladv of the Right Hon. Sir Edward Thornton, G. C. B. of Wenburv House, Devon— In Dublin, On the 20th inst. Alexander Nimmo, Esq. F. R. S. E. M. R. I. A. M. G. S. L. & c.— At Edinburgh, Captain Graham. LOMDUJS: Printed and published by EDWARD SHACKKLL, at J\ O 40, FLEET- STREET, where, only, Communications to the, Editor ( post paid) are received*
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