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

07/07/1833

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Volume Number: XIII    Issue Number: 656
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John Bull "For God, the King, and the People!"

Date of Article: 07/07/1833
Printer / Publisher:  
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Volume Number: XIII    Issue Number: 656
No Pages: 8
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JOHN BULL « FOR GOD, THE KING, AND THE PEOPLE ! M VOL. XIII.— No. 656 SUNDAY, JULY 7, 1833. Price Id. ROYAL GARDENS, VAUXHALL.— TO- MORROYV, JUIYSTH, there will be superb GAL A and CONCERT, under the immediate patronage of his Royal Highness the Duke of Sussex, for the benefit of the DISTRESSED POLES. The Committee are gratified in statin? they have succeeded in obta'ningtlie gratuitous services of .. Madame PASTA, Madame GRANDOLFI, Signor DE BEGNIS, and other'eminent talent for this occasion. Signor PAGANINI has also consented to perform a favourite Sonata. The ILLUMINATIONS will be on the mo* t splendid scale, particularly one covering one side of the Quadrangle with the Arms of Poland, consisting ot above 7,000 lamps in variegated colours. The FIRE- WORKS will conclude the enter- tainments. in which will be introduced a brilliant Motto," England the Stranger's Home ;" after which the WATER SCENE of Fountains, Cascade, & c. Immediately preceding the Fire- Works a Gas Balloon will be sent off, and will discharge Fire- Works in the air. Doors open at Eight.— Admittance, Four Shillings, ftjr The Free List will be suspended. The DARMSTADT BAND will perform several favourite Overrtuies, Waltzes. & c. and the celebrated Waterloo Battle Piece. THEATRE ROYAL, COVENI- GARDEN.— Last NIGHT out One of the performance of Madame MALIBRAN, who will appear in lier.' celebrated character of LA SONNANBULA on Tuesday next, July 9th ; in consequence of which arrangement the heavy scenery and machinery connected • with that Drama has ( by permission of Captain Polhill) been removed for the occasion from Drury- Lane Theatre. fllHEATRE ROYAL, DRURY- LANE.— The Nobility, Gentry, JT and Public are respectfully informed that arrangements have been made with Signor PAGANINI for a Series of FOUR CONCERTS, the first of which • will take place on WEDNESDAY NEXT, July 10.— In Part I. a Grand Con- certo allegro Maesto « o, composed and performed by Signor Paganini. In Part II. a Grand Sonata Militaire ( in which will be introduced Mozart's Aria, " Non Piu Andrai,") composed and to be performed on one string only ( the fourth) by Signor Paganini.— The Evening's Entertainments will conclude with the Ballet of The PAGES of the DUKE de VENDOME.— The Public is respectfully re- quested to take notice that there will he no advance of the prices of admission, MR. T. GREEN'S BENEFIT, late of the Theatre Royal Co vent- garden.- At the QUEEN'S THEATRE, on THURSDAY, July II ,1833, will be performed a Comedy, with other Entertainments. Tickets and Private Boxes to be had of Mr. T. Green, 29, Upper Charlotte- street, Fitzrov- sq. nPHEATRE ROYAL, HAYMARKET.— To- morrow Evening, JL MY WIFE'S MOTHER, with the HYPOCRITE ( Doctor Cantwell, Mr. W. Farren), and PAUL and VIRGINIA— Tuesday, My Wife's Mother, with Sweethearts and Wives, and Manoeuvring— Wednesday, My Wife's Mother, with She Would and She Would Not, and Rosina-^ Thursday, My Wife's Mother, with Much Ado About Nothing, and The Waterman— Friday, Mv Wife's Mother, with Separation and Reparation, and other Entertainments— Saturday, My Wife's Mother, with The Marriage of Figaro, and The Children in the Wood KOYAL VICTORIA THEATRE.— To- morrow Evening, will be performed, for that night only, Rowe's Tragedy of JANE SHORE. " Duke of Gloucester, Mr. Egerton ; Lord Hastings, Mr. Abbott; Dumont, Mr. Warde ; Jane Shore, Miss Jarman ; Alicia, Mrs. Egerton. After which ( com- pressed into two acts) the Romantic Musical Drama of the FOREST of ARDENNES. To conclude with an entirely new Farce, to be called the SPARE BED ; the principal characters by Mr. Abbott, Mr. Keeley, Miss Sid- ney, and Mrs. Garrick. Doors open « it six, commence at half- past six; half- price, half- past eight.— Boxes, 4s. Pit, 2s. Gallery, Is.— Tickets to any part of ' the Theatre purchased at Mr. Griffith's, bookseller, 13, Wellington- street, Strand, will pass Waterloo- bridge toll- free. On Tuesday, Miss J. Hyland, from the Theatre Royal Drury- lane, will make her first appearance here as Doctor O'Toole, in the Trish Tutor. FTLHK SEASON.— MILES and EDWARDS'S extensive Ware- JL rooms are now repwt » with the most perfect Collection of economical as well as Ornamental CABINET ana urnoLSiBKy FURNITURE that has « ver been submitted to the approbation of the Nobility and Gentry.— No. 134, Oxford- street, between Holle3- street and Old Cavendish- street. CIDER, ALE, STOUT, & c.— W. G. FIELD begs to acquaint his Friends and the Public, that his genuine CIDER and PERRY, BURTON and EDINBURGH ALES, DORCHESTER BEER, LONDON and DUBLIN BROWN STOUT, & c., are in tine order for use, and, as well as his FOREIGN WINES and SPIRITS, of a very superior class. 22, Henrietta- street, Covent- garden. CANDLES 5id. per lb.— Wax wick Moulds 6* d.— Sperm and Composition Candles Is. 5d. to Is. 7d.— Wax Candles Is. 4d. to 2s. 4d.— Pa- lace Wax Lights 2s. Id— Inferior Ditto Is. 9d.— Yellow Soap 50s. to 58s. per 112 lbs.— Mottled, 54< to 62s.- Fine Curd, 72s.— Windsor and Palm ls. 4d. per packet— Old Brown Windsor Is. 9d.— Rose 2s.— Camphor 2s.— Superior Almond • 2s. 6d.— Sealing Wax 4s. 6d. per lb— Sperm Oil 5s 6d. to 6s. per gallon— Lamp • Oil 3s., for Cash, at DAVIES'S Old Established Warehouse, 63, St. Martin's- lane, opposite New Slaughter's Coffee- house.- Delivered in Town, or packed with care for Country. CAF£ DE L'EUROPE, 9, HAYMARKET, two doors above the Theatre.— Under a new system of Management, the Proprietor first attempts to place the business of this Tavern on the same scale of charges ( and many of the articles at a lower price) as the CLUBS— for Breakfast, Luncheons, Dinners, Suppers, Wines, and other Refreshments. It will be found, on refer- ence to the Carte and Wine List, by those Gentlemen who honour the Cafe with • a visit, that in this Establishment the economy and superior quality of all the • varieties prepared in those private Taverns ( THE CLUBS) can be combined with equal eomfort and splendid accommodation. THE TRANSPARENT PINE APPLE PUNCH Is now selling1 wholesale at 48s. per dozen ; delivered in any part of town free of expense. TURTLE at 13s. per quart, packed in jars. Orders, either for that or the Punch, from the Country, with a Remittance, immediately attended to. DUGGiN's PATENT DOUBLE- BRIMMED VENTILATING BEAVER HATS, are by far the best kind of Hats ever yet produced, weighing less than four ounces; will never injure by wet, « r lose their colour ; the brims being double, they cannot break, or go out of shape; they will not prevent the egress of perspiration, which has been so much the complaint of water- proof hats, often producing the head- ache and loss of hair. Price 21 s. and 26s. Drab and Brown Hats at the same price. To be had of the Patentees, Duggin and Co. 80. Newgate- street, near the New Post office. FAILURE. The Failure of Crawford and Smith, Regent House, 240, Regent- street, which has caused so much stir in the com- mercial departments of this Country and the Continent, is nothing in com- parison to the wonder excited in the Fashionable Circles of the Metropolis by the great sacrifice made on the STOCK, consisting of Rich Silks, Foreign and British Shawls. Muslins, Ribbons, & c., now'SELLING OFF by ALLISON and EDWARDS, Regent House, 240, Regent street.— N. B. This opportunity offers decided advantages to Ladies desirous of making purchases previous to leaving town.— 240, REGENT- STREET^ CARPETS— ORIENTAL CARPETS.— A very choice collection, including some Bengal Carpets, adapted for Entrance Halls and Galleries. LAPWORTH and RILEY, Manufacturers to the King. Also a splendid as- sortment of the Royal Velvet Carpet of beautiful designs, and every other de- scription of Carpets of the first qualities. India Matting, & c. Warehouse— 19, OLD BOND STREET. PRO BONO PUBLICO.— Messrs. W. M. VENABLESand Co. respectfully inform their Friends and the Pnblic at large that, although an advance has taken place on all Woollen Goods of nearly 30 per cent., they will continue, for the next week, to charge the OLD PRICES for their splendid Stock of CARPETS, DAMASKS, MOREENS, & c. & c. An early application is strongly recommended.— Navarino House, 75 and 76, Lamb's Conduit- street, Red Lion square, July 3,1833. TWELFTH OF AUGUST. TO SPORTSMEN. BINNIE and RICHARDSON, 31, Old Bond street, respectfully beg leave to remind Noblemen and Gentlemen, that their Establishment is the only place in London where the REAL SOFT LAMB'S- WOOL PLAIDS are to be had ; an article so much approved of for Shooting and Fishing Dresses, being light, elastic, and durable in wear. 33. and R. have likewise an Assortment of other Materials for the same purpose. A well- made Plaid Jacket, Waistcoat, and Trowsers .. £ 3 10s. ULLER'S FREEZING MACHINE^ by which different ices, from one to ten quarts, and of the smoothest quality, can be made in a few minutes. The Freezing Apparatus, by which Cream and Water Ices can be made without ice. Also, the ICE PRESERVER, in which ice can be kept for three weeks, in the warmest season, to prevent the necessity of opening the ice- house, except occasionally. ICE- PAILS, for icing Wine, Water, Fruit and Butter ; and FREEZING POWDER of matchless qua'ity. FULLER'S SPARE BED- AIRER: this vessel will retain its heat, with once filling, for sixty hours. CARRIAGE and BED FEET- WARMERS upon the same prin- ciple. The above articles of scientific discovery may be seen at the Manufac- tory, Jermyn street, six doors from St. James's- street, London.— N. B, Families supplied with ice upon reasonable terms. T EFT OFF MILITARY and PLAIN CLOTH 1NG.— Oiiicera JLd of the Army and Navv, and Gentlemen having any quantity of LEFT OFF WEARING APPAREL, Coronation Dresses, Court Suits, Epauletts, Swords, Sashes, Shubracks, Sabretasches, and Costumes of all Nations. A liberal price will be given for the same in CASH, or, if required, New Clothes will be made in exchange, of the best quality, and in strict accordance with the Fashions of the day.— Apply, personally or by letter, to Stephen Pearson, No. 2, Lambs Conduit- street. Appointments attended to ten miles from London. Books taken on the same terms. OPERA BOXES for the last Week of the united Talent of PASTA and TAGLIONI. Boxes in every part of the House for TUES- DAY, THURSDAY, and SATURDAY in i. ext week, at a moderate charge, ean be secured at ANDREWS'S Library, 167, New Bond Street, where also are let the best Private Boxes for Madame MALI BRAN'S Performances at Covent Garden Theatre. HODGSONS' BRITISH AND FOREIGN LIBRARY, 9, Great Marvlebone- street. TERMS: i5 5 3 .. .. The Year. 3 3 0 .. .. The Half. vear. 1 16 0 .. .. The Quarter. Books sent to Subscribers in all parts of the Kingdom, and in any quantity, by paying a proportionate Subscription. KING'S THEATRE. — TAGLIONI ( positively for the last time) in a New Ballet, for the BENEFIT of the Miles. ELSLERS, on Thursday, 11th of July. Parties desirous of Boxes and Tickets are re- quested to apply early to Mr. SAMS, Bookseller to the King, St. James's street. The best Private 3oxes at Covent- garden, for Madame Malibran's perform- ance in La Sonnambula ; and for Paganini's Concert, next Wednesday, at Drury- lane Theatre, are to be had at Sams's, where may be engaged Opera Boxes, Stalls, and Pit Tickets 8s. 6d., by the night. TERMS TO SAMS'S LIBRARY:— The Year £ 5 5 0 Half. Year 3 3 0 Quarter 1 16 0 BRITISH INSTITUTION, Pall Mall.— The GALLERY, with a Selection of PICTURES from the Works of Sir JOSHUA REYNOLDS, Mr. WEST, and Sir THOMAS LAWRENCE, the three last Presidents of the Royal Academy, IS OPEN DAILY from 10 in the morning tiil 0 in the evening. Admittance } s. Catalogue Is. WILLIAM BARNARD, Keeper. A EMISSION ONE SHILLING. MISS LINWOOD'S EXHIBITION is NOW OPEN in Leices- ter- square. Several NEW WORKS have been recently added to the Collection, and an additional Gallery fitted up for their reception. " tfTALUABLE PICTURES by the BEST MASTERS.— To be V SOLD PRIVATELY, a Small Collection of PICTURES, by the best Masters. Apply for every particular to Mr. Goodhugh, House Agent, 22, South Audley- street. COMPANION lo a LADY, or as GOVERNESS.— A respectable Young LADY would be glad to engage herself as COMPANION : she would not object to reside in the country, or to travel, having spent some years on the Continent. Or she would undertake the Education of two or three Children under the age of 12 years, including the French language, music, drawing, & c.— Emolument not so much an object of consideration as comfort and kind treatment. Most respectable references will be given.— Letters ( post paid) addressed to J. H., 40, Fleet- street, will recei ve immediate attention. GOVERNESS or COMPANION.— The Friends of a Young m. lt' r. i » dx ( 24 vears of age) are desirous of procuring for her & SITUATION as GOVERNESS. She has been accustomed to Tuition, and has just con- eluded an Engagement. She possesses a knowledge of French, Music, & c. & c.; is of industrious habits, and attentive to her avocation. Her friends wish to ob- tain the above situation where her abilities can be useful; or with a Lady re- quiring an industrious, attentive, and affectionate Companion. A moderate salary will be accepted. Address A. B., 21, Tonbridge- place, New Road, St. Pancras. N. B. No objection to go abroad. i TO THE NOBILITY AND GENTRY. GOVERNESS and LADIES' SCHOOL AGENCY. MRS. VBT SMITH ( successor to Mrs. BURNE), begs to announce to the Nobility and Gentry, that she can recommend to them Ladies perfectly qualified to fill the above Situations ; and for those families residing at distance she will make en- gagements upon having the particulars intrusted to her care. Families will find that this establishment is the most secure, as well as the most facile medium for all business connected with scholastic duties. Schools disposed of and Teachers supplied. Letters refused unless post paid. 30, Alfred- place, Bedford- square. ALIBERAL EDUCATION is offered to the Son of any Lady or Gentleman who will advance TWO HUNDRED POUNDS upon good security The School is of the first class, and the number of Pupils is limited. The Situation is in the immediate vicinity of London, very healthy, and in every way adapted to the reception of the higher order of youth. The Principal is a Tutor of long experience, and the/ Parent, who may be anxious for the sound Education of his Son, combined with every possible attention to good morals, genteel manners, and correct habits, will, from the unremitting application of the Advertiser, be certain of these resuUs.~ Letters, bearing the signature and address of the Party, directed to L. L. D. C„ at Messrs Porquets and Co., Booksellers, 11, Tavistock- street, C? vent garden, will forthwith be answered. WANTED, in a long established FINISHING SCHOOL of the first respectrbility, a YOUNG LADY whose prospects in life re- quire her education to be completed for the purpose of filling a situation as a private Governess. She will have the benefit of the eminent London Masters attending the Establishment, and be in every respect treated as one of the regular Pupils. The first references can be offered, and the premium will de- pend on the time required, at the expiration of which she can either remain to assist in the Establishment, or a situation will be provided for her. Address ( post paid) C. V., Souter's Library, St. Paul's Church Yard. FANCY FAIR and RURAL FETE at the SURREY ZOOLO- GICAL GARDENS. SECOND ANNIVERSARY— A Grand Fete to commemorate the Second Anniversary of the opening of these Gardens, will take place on MONDAY the 29th and TUESDAY the 3 ith of July, 1833. Full par- ticulars will be duly announced. Should the weather prove unfavourable on those days, the celebration will be held on Wednesday and Thursday following. DIRECT for CALCUTTA, the fine new River- built Ship HIN- DOSTAN. 550 tons register, GABRIEL J. REDMAN, Commander, lying in the West India Export Dock. Has superior accommodations for Passengers. For Freight or Passage apply to the Commander, at the Jerusalem Coffee- house, or George C. Redman, 42. Lime- street. , V ITERATURE and the ARTS.— A Literary Man, of established B 4 reputation, wishes to meet with an Individual enjoying a taste for Arts and Letters, and disposed to employ, either for profit, or for patronage and plea- sure, the sum of One Thousand Pounds ( more or le « s, as may be agreed upon), in the Printing and Illustrative Engravings of an Original Work of peculiar in- terest and splendour.— Address ( post- paid) C. F. D. careof Mr. George Boyle, House and Estate Apent. 290, Recent- street. ADULT ORPHAN INSTITUTION. Patron, His Most Gracious Majest* the King. Patronesses, Her Most Gracious Xajesty, the Queen, Her Royal Highness the Princess Augusta. THE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING of SUBSCRIBERS to the above INSTITUTION, will be held on TUESDAY, the 9th day of Julv, at Two o'Clock precisely, at the house of the Institution, St. Andrew's- place, Regent's Park. ' R. S. B. SANDILANDS, A. M. Hon. Sec. EUROPEAN LIFE INSURANCE AND ANNUITY COMPANY'S OFFICE, No. 10, Chatham- place, BlackfrTars, London, July 1833. NOTICE is hereby given, That the Dividends to Proprietors of the above Company, for the Half- year ending the 30th of June, at the rate of per cent, per annum, are now payable at the Company's pilice, every day from ten till three o'clock. The Company continues to effect Life Insurances at reduced premiums, which may be paid Quarterly, Half- yearly, or Annual!^ at the option of the Insured ; to grant Annuities on single or joint Lives; and to advance money on Annuity secured on freehold, copyhold, or long leasehold'property, or on money in the Funds. The Assured with this Company participate periodically in the profits. The Bonos declared on the 3d of July, 1831, attaches to all Policies effected on or before the 31st of December, 182S. PAVID FOGGO, Secretary. g^ MAIN- D iVlUKNiiMi iVJUalCAL, iViEE 1 lJNu, ill niu Oi cue \ Jl Funds of the ROYAL METROPOLITAN INFIRMARY for CHILD- REN, under the immediate Patronage of THEIR MAJESTIES, in the splendid Pitcure Galleries of H. T. HOPE, Esq. M. P. ( Duchess- street, Portland- place), « - ho has most liberally granted the use of them, for FRIDAY, the 12th of July, 1833, expressly for this occasion ; under the Patronage of Her Royal Highness the Duchess of GLOUCESTER. The Duchess of NORTHUMBERLAND. The Duchess de DINO. Marchioness of Salisbury Marchioness of Stafford Marchioness of Wellesley March, of Westmeatb March, of Londonderry Countess of Denbigh The following eminent P Countess of Belfast Viscountess Beresford Lady Burghersh Lady Sarah Ingestrie Lady Elizabeth Reynell Lady Ouseley Counters of Jersey Countess Manvers Countess of Yerulam Countess Brownlow Countess Carlisle Countes9 of Morton erformer* have most liberally promised their gratui-* tous assistance'on this charitable occasion ( with the kind permission of M. Lapoite):— Vocal Performers— Madame Pasta, Madame de Meric, Miss Shirreff, Miss Bruce, and Madame Malibran; Mr. Braham, Herr Haitzinger, Signori Donzelli, Tamburini, Zuchelli, Giubilei, Begrez, e de Begnis. Instrumental Performers:— Violin, Signor Paganini; Piano- forte, Mr. Mocheles, Mr. Herz. Mr. Horn; Flute, Mr. Nicholson; Corno, Signor Puzzi; Harp, Mr. Bochsa^ Violoncello, Mr. Lindley, Mr. Bannister: Contra Basso, Siguor Dragonettu Leader of the Band, Mr. Mori; Conductor, Sir George Smart. Full particulars of the Concert ( which will commence at Two o'clock) will bet duly announced.— Tickets, One Guinea each, may be had at the Music-? hops of Messrs. Lonsdale and Co., Chappels. and Mori, Bond street; Willis, St. James's- street; Clements and Co., Cheaps de ; Mr. Baxter, 12, Albany- street, Regent's Park; Mr. Stock, 137, Regent- street; and of the Treasurers, Mr. Joseph Wilks, 186. Regent- street ; and of Mr. George Boyle, 292 Regent street. ROYAL HOTEL, GEORGE SQUARE, GLASGOW.— TO the Nobilitv and Gentry visiting Scotland. GEORGE COMRIE would respectfully express his gratitude for the pa* tronage he has received in THE ROYAL HOTEL, GEORGE- SQUARE, GLASGOW ; And he begs to announce, that he has still farther added to its superior accom- modation tor Families. It is in the most airy and retired, yet central, situatioa in town ; and its visitors have the use of a beautiful Garden Promenade. It is proper, too, to remark, that it is the only Hotel in Glagow not a Commercial House, and that has exclusive accommodation for large Family Parties. G. ('. has, however, offered a handsome saloon as a publie room for single travellers and. tourists. Lock- up Coach- houses and excellent Stables are on the piemiaes.— Hot Cold, and Shower Baths. AiYlktajJ. NO ol PROPRIETORS, MORTGAGEES, AN- NUITANTS, and others holding Property in JAMAICA, is requested at the THATCHED HOUSE, on TUESDAY NEXT, the 9th instant, at 2 o'clock, to take into consideration the Bill for the Abolition of Slavery now before Parliament, as it affects that Island. WILLIAM BURGE. Julv 6th. TO THE PROPRIETORS OF EAST INDIA STOCK. Ladies and Gentlemen, ITake the earliest opportunity of announcing to you that 3 VACANCY has occurred in the East India Direction by the retirement o£ Mr. George Smith. The grounds of my pretensions to the favour of your support have been so re* cently and so fully submitted to your notice, that on this occasion I have only to express my acknowledgments for the very favourable reception I have met with in the course of my canvass, by which I am encouraged to look forward with confidence to the result of the approaching Election. As soon as the day is fixed for the Ballot, I shall have the honour of making? it known to every Proprietor, and in the meanwhile I shall use my best endea- vours to solicit personally the fiivourof y « ur attendance at the East India House* on my behalf. I have the honour to remain, Ladies and Gentlemen, Your obedient and faithful humble servant, WILLIAM BUTTERWORTH BAYLEY. 39, Upper Harley- street, 6th July, 1833. Mr. Bayley's Committee will meet daily at the City of London Tavern, where all communications will be thankfully received. TO THE PROPRIETORS OF iiASi INDIA STOCK. Ladies and Gentlemen, HAVING been recommended by many of my Friends to> postpone my intention of proceeding to the Ballot on the Vacancy* occasioned by the resignation of your worthy Director, George Smith, Esq., it is equally my duty and my inclination to consult their wishes and the convenience ol the Proprietary at large ; in doing so, I have also an opportunity of evincing the high respect which I entertain for the character and pretensions of Mr. Bayley. I trust, therefore, that those Proprietors who have done me the honour to pro- mise me their support, but whose approval of ray present determination I have not had time to obtain, will concur in the propriety of it. On the next vacancy that may occur, I shall certainly proceed to the ballot, when the acquisition of many powerful friends, then released from their engage* ments, will., I hope, ensure a successful result. Repeating my grateful acknowledgments for the snpport I have hitherto re « ceived, and earnestly entreating a continuance of it, I have the honour to be, very respectfully, Ladies and Gentlemen, your faithful and obliged Servant, JOHN SHEPHERD. 37, Dorset square, Saturday Evening, 6th July, 1833. WATCHES. A neat assortment of good ones at the real Maker's ( in Gold and Silver, plain and superior), No. 9, Great May's- buildings, St. Martiu's- lane, Charing- cross.— J. GLOVER, in addressing himself to the Friends having favoured him with their preference, or intending to do so, respectfully solicits its continuance, from the advantage of his being the really practical workman, and, as a mechanic, avoiding the certain deficiencies attend- ing unreasonably low prices on the one hand, or extravagant charges on the other. Terms, 5 per Cent, allowed for cash, or Credit 3 months. Watches taken, in exchange. Musical and plain Clock orders attended to. Great May's buildings, 5 7 mo., 33. PA T E JN T LEVER WATCHES, With Silver Glass over Dial, double bottom Cases .. 6 guineas. With Silver Hunting double bottom Cases .. .. guineas. Watches on this celebrated construction, ( the most accurate on which a watch can be made) are MOW offered at the above prices, with the latest improvements, i. e. the detachfd escapement, jewelled in four holes, capped, hand to mark the seconds, hard enamel dial, and maintaining power to continue going while wind* ing up. THOMAS SAVORY, Watch- manufacturer, 54, Cornhill ( 3 doors from Gracechurch street). London. OHOUSE SHOOTING— Accounts from the North state, that the weather has been extremely propitious during the breeding time for the rearing of Grouse. The birds, though strong on the wing and shy, are plen- tiful, and will afford excellent sport to our friends of the South who intend to enjoy that mar. ly sport. We would recomme » d those fitting out for the cam- paign to be provided with a suit of the ELASTIC LAMB'S WOOL PLAID^ There is no material so light, elastic, and comfortable ; it will in a great degree resist rain, and even if the wearer gets wet he is not liable to take cold, the article being entirely of soft lamb's wool.— The Plaids, with a variety of other materials for the same purpose, are to be had of Binnie and Richardson, 31, Old Bond- street. OPTIONAL TO GENTLEMEN. £ 5HOOLBRED and RENWICK, Tailors, and Patentees of the Elastic Belt, 34, Jermyn- street, St. James's, beg to announce to Gentlemen, they have reduced their prices 20 per cent, ( to those who pay cash), and re- spectfully submit their scale of charges as under, for the best and most fashion- able articles of Dress. The many losses that arise from giving long credit, has induced Shoolbred and Renwick to adopt the following plan, leaving it at a Gen- tleman's option to pay cash or take credit; they presume the known reputation of the house, as it regards style and quality, renders further comment unnecessary. Cash on delivery. £- yearly Acc « Blue or Black Dress Coats „ ^ 3 16 0 £ 4 4 0 All other colours .. .. .. 3100 3 18 O Blue, Black, or other Trousers .. 1 16 0 2 0 0 Blue or Black Frock Coats, with Silk Skirts 4 15 0 5 5 0 All other colours .. ,, ## 4100 500 Cass me e or Valentia Waistcoats .. o 1S 0 10 0 BLAIR'S GOUT and RHEUMATIC PILLS continue toaflord the most astonishing proof of their efficacy in all Gouty and Rheumatic Affections, Pains in the Head or Face, Lumbago,& c. They never fail to give immediate relief from the most violent paroxysms of Rheumatic Gout or Rheu- matism, and one box, price 2s. 9d will convince the hitherto unhappy patient of returning ease and comfort. The proprietor, anxious to alleviate the sufferings?, of those afflicted with this tormenting malady, respectfully invites them to par- take of the benefits of this discoverv, assuring the timid that in no case can itar use be attended with the least inconvenience.— Sold wholesale, retail, and far exportation, by Thomas Prout, 229, Strand, London, seven doors from Temple- bar, and by most mpdicine venders in town or country. Country venders can ofe^ tain them through their London agents. 210 JOHN BULL. 5 July 7. rt'ESPAY'S GAZETTE. DECLARATIONS 01' INSOLVENCY. T. S. FLUDE, Mincing- lane, wine and spirit broker— J. R. CASE, Hunter. Itreet, Brnns ® kS squan , ( rn eer. BANKRUPTCY ENLARGED. J. KABERRY, Leeds, leather- cutter, from July 9 to Aug. 6. BANKRUPTS. J. STRAM5MAN. j an." Queen- si reef, Clieapside. Hour- factor. Atts. Young « Wd Vailing", St. Mi'dred's- court. Poultiy— T. R0VFD1N0, Manchester- street, JHarehestei-- square, music publisher. Alt. Watfliew, Norfolk- street, Strand— H. JHOLT, Somerset. street, Poltman- sqnare, bookseller. Atts. Dover and Law- J- ence, South. square, Gray's Inn— J. A. TAYLOR, George- stieet, Hanover- iqnare, lodging- house keeper. Atts. Baxeudale and Co.. King's Arms yard— W. Z) BLAMAINE, Wells- street, Marylebone, wine merchant. Atts. Druee and Bons. Billiter- square— R. - STEVENS, Newgate- street, victualler. Att. Fi cii, Ijothhurv— T. CHRISTMAS New Cliurcb- « treet, Lisson. grove, flour- dealer. Att. Young, Mark- lane— J. . MOORE, Manchester. glas=- me) chant. Atts Holden, Liverpool; Walinsh y and Co., Chancery. lane— S. PEEL. Leeds, plaid manufac- turer. Atts. Battve and Co., Chaneeivy- lance ; Hargreaves, Leeds— J. KOBERTS, Llandilo, Carmarthenshire, linendraper. Atts. Clarke and Sons, Bristol; Jenkins and Abbett. New Inn. ' FRIDAY'S GAZETTE. The King has been pleased to appoint Major Ueneral Sir Benjamin D'Urban, t< C B to he Governor and Commander- in- Chief in the settlement of the Cape of Qood Hope. BANKRUPTCIES SUPERSEDED. W. KNOWISON and W. SKIN, Ashton- under Lyme, grocers— WM. VTROB, Bradford, woolcomber. BANKRUPTS. G. GRAY, Great Portland. street. Marjlebone, corn- dealer. Att. J. Nokes, Charlotte- street, Bloomsbmy— J. TURNER, Lynn, jeweller. Att. Taylor, Great James- stieet, - Bedford row— J. GREENWOOD, Liverpool, stone mer- chant. Atts. Green. Southampton buildings, Chancery- lane; R. Whitehead, lilverpool— E. & M. WILSON, Shipston upon. Stour. Worsce- tershire, bu'chers. Atts Findon Shipston uponStour ; Dynely& Co., Gray's Inn— E. GARNETT, Lancaster, coal dealer. Atts. R. B. Armstrong. Staple Inn ; Hall, Lancaster. J. and W. TUCKER. Exwick, Devonshire, millers. Att. Ford, Exeter— B. COOK, sen. Birmingham, hrassfnunder. Atts. Woodrote and Lewin, New. Bquare, Lincoln's Inn : Mole, Birmingham— J. LOWN, Eaton, Nottingham- shire, miller. Atts. Mee and Bigsbv ; Hawkins, Bloxham andStocker, New Boswell- court, Carey- street— It. H. TRICKEY, Bristol, builder. Atts, Stevens, Clay's Inn- square ; I'erkins, Bristol— E. GRAY, Harborne, Staffordshire, nail- factor. Atts. Austen and Hobson, Ravmond's- buildings, Gray's Inn ; liuer, Birmingham. W. SHIRLEY, Moretolt in- tbe Marsb, Gloucestershire, tuilder. Att.. Wilkins and Kendall Boarton- on. tlie- Water, Gloucestershire ; Sharpe and Field, Old Jewry— R. HINXMAN, Kitnocks, Hants, dealer. Atts. Jones ami Ward, John street, Bedford- row ; Bryant and Deacon, Southampton, i ' PARLIAMENTARY ANALYSIS. HOUSE OF LORDS. MONDAY.— Lord BELHAVEN presented a petition from the county ttf Lanark against the system of Church patronage in Scotland — The Noble Lord alsn. presented a petition from the General Assembly of the Church of- Scotland against the Government plan of education in Ireland. He assured their Lordships that this petition was not got Up in any spirit of hostility to the Government, but from a sincere conviction that no plan of education could be a good one which had llot the sacred scriptures for its basis.— After a conversation of some length, in which the Duke of WELLINGTON and tin- Bishop ot EXETER defended the conduct and motives of the General Assembly, the petition was ordered to lie on the table.— Adjourned. TUESDAY.—: Lord SUFFIELD presented a petition from Kingston- Xlpon - 11 u! l, praying that Parliament would use their endeavours to prevail upon his Majesty's present Government to unite in negotia- tion with France and the other great European Powers, for the_ purpose of inducing the Emperor of Russia to restore the people of Poland to their former state of freedom and independence. He trusted that from motives of policy as well as of humanity, the prayer el the petitioners would meet with due attention.— Ordered to lie on the table. On the motion of the Duke of WEI MKGTON Returns were ordered Relative to the financial and territorial seV'- nues of India,— Adjourned. WEDNESDAY.— The House went into Committee on the Agricul- tural Labourers' Bill.— Lord WYNFORD, on the second clause, which defines who are to pay, and bow the rate is to be levied, moved an amendment to the effect that the owners of tithes, shopkeepers, and all persons who did not employ agricultural labourers, should be exempted from the operation of this Bill; but it was negatived on a division o' 25 against 12. The Woollen Trade Bill was referred to n Select Committee. THURSDAY.— The third reading of the Agricultural Labourers' jBitl was postfKtned to Monday. The Report on the Lord Chancellor's Local Courts' Bill was brought up, agreed to, and ordered to be read a third time on Tues- day next. Lord LYNOHURST called the attention of their Lordships to the cruelty and folly of Mr. Thellnsson's disposition of his property, and presented a Bill for affording relief to the distressed members of the family of the testator. The object of this will was to accumulate an enormous sum for some future descendants of the testator, leaving the heads of the family, in the meanwhile, nearly destitute. This vain and preposterous object had failed ; the whole annual accumu- lation, up to the present time, being 11,00# 1., while the expense incurred by the- management, ef the estates in Chancery was 14,0001. His Lordship's proposal was, that instead of this useless waste of property, the lease of the estates should be consigned to the manage- ment of the heads of the family, for their benefit, under the controul Of Chancery.— The LORD CHANCELLOR seconded the motion ; but Lord SHAFTESBURY having objected that being a private Bill it could rot be introduced without notice, Lord LYNDHU$: ST gave notice that he should to- morrow move the suspension of the order in question. -•— Adjourned. FRIDAY.— Lord LYNDHURST moved the suspension of certain standing orders relative to private Bills, to enable him to propose the first reading of a Bill " Empowering and directing the Trustees • Under the will of PETER THELLUSSON, Esq. deceased, to grant certain leases of the estates subject to the trusts of the will, and for other purposes.''— The Earl of ELDON strongly opposed the proposition, ami reminded their Lordships that tire Bill was neither more nor less than an attempt to set aside a will that had been declared to be a valid one.— The Lord CHANCELLOR denied that the object was to set aside the will; it was to make that will more substantially effective. — The Duke of WELLI- NGTON supported the rnotfon;— to allow another year to elapse without afforditig relief to suffering families was what his Grace thought their Lordships would not consent to sanction.— Earl GRET thought that if the standing orders were to be suspended, it ought to be on the petition of- all parties.— Lord LYND- BURST feared that he could not get such a petition. His Lordship however, moved an adjournment til! Thursday next, to procure, if possible, the requisite petition.— Agreed to. The Marquis of LANBSBOWXE tlien brought forward the Resolu- tions on the East India Charter, which had previously been sanc- tioned by the Commons. He proceeded to point out the advantages that would accrue to this court try from the relaxed system, and par- ticularly on the necessity of opening the trade and the country to the enterprise and skill of all his Majesty's subjects.— The debate occupied the remainder of the night.— Lord ELLENDSROUGH protested against this plan, and called upon the Noble Earl ( Grey), in accordance with his recorded sentiments twenty years since, to join him in asking for moreftime He ( Lord ELLENBOEOUGH) asked lor no more, but he asked foretime in order that the whole plan might he properly considered ; that they might have the advantages of examining men who were well acquainted with India. Let them not recklessly risk all that they had gained, and thus lose at once the greatest and most glorious empire in the universe, and with it. at the safi- i£ time, the character of tiie British Legislature.— The Duke of WEL- LINGTON begged to ask, could there be any doubt that the death- blow was gives to the independence of the East India Company as a Government, when this Government had wrested from the Directors a concession, refused to that great man, Mr. Pitt, viz. that the Directors . should implicitly sign any despatch sent down to them by the Board of Controul, and thence to he forwarded to the Governor- General in India. His Grace strongly objected to the treatment which the Cojiipany was in future to experience at the hands of his Majesty's Government, as regarded the future nomination of the Council of the Governor- General by the Governor himself. He believed that part of the scheme would be impracticable which assumed that the judicial cffices in the provinces could be tilled indifferently by Europeans and by natives. There was as little chance of capital going out from this country to be embarked in indigo plantations, where the investment was so precarious and the hazard of life so great. He trusted their Lordships would pause before they adopted the present plan, and thereby allow the Government to mature some plan with reference to the Government of India in future, as should he found more conducive to the true tnterests of India, and consistent with her moral and political f> iUi* tion.— The Resolutions of the Commons were ultimately agreed to, aiifl a message sunt down to acquaint them thereof. HOUSE OF COMMONS. MONDAY.— Several petitions were presented, and much animad- version offered, upon the conduct of the Post Office, in attempting, by means of espionage and breaking of seals, to augment the income arising from that department of the revenue. Mr. UOBBETT was exceedingly anxious, before the House resolved itself into a Committee on the Bank Charter Act, to have the Noble Lord's ( Althorp) consent to the appointment of a Select Committee on the subject of which he had given notice relative to the matter of a Petition which had been presented from the members of the Poli- tical Union at Walworth and Camberwell, complaining that police- men had been sent about as spies, and that they were taxed for the purpose of maintaining those spies.— Lord ALTHORP said he had no desire to prevent the Hon. Member from bringing the subject for- ward ; on the contrary, he was desirous that the earliest opportunity should be given for " the Hon. Member to mention it. When the police force was first established in the metropolis particular instruc- tions were given by the Right Hon. Baronet who proposed their employment that they should not be employed in the capacity' of spies, properly so speaking; and when his Noble Friend came into office the same instructions were expressly given. The gentlemen at the head of the police force were equally anxious that the men under theircommand should not be so employed. He did not con- sider that the sending of men to public meetings— to such meetings as were open to all persons— could be construed into employingthem as spies, in the acceptation of the term, as used by the Hon. Member, even though they attended those meetings in plain clothes. Know- ing the inflammatory language that was used at some of those meet- ings, the Government. would not have performed its duty if it had not sent persons there to take notice of what was going on. If this man, however, had used violent language, and had endeavoured to excite the people, he had committed the most odious office of a spy. and must not only have exceeded his duty, but have disobeyed his orders. But this the man most positively denied. With regard to the appointment of a Committee to inquire into the circumstances of the case he ( Lord Althorp) could have no objection, provided it were a fairly- selected Committee.— The Committee was subsequently appointed. The House then went into a Committee of the whole House upon the Bank Charter.— Lord ALTHORP said that in rising to move the second Resolution upon the Bank Charter he intended to propose an alteration, which he was given to understand would meet with the satisfaction of many persons interested in the discussion of this great question. He proposed, therefore, to alter the reading of this Resolution, excluding payment in the country for all sums " above five poundsso that a five- pound note being presented for payment in the country would entitle the party presenting it to five sovereigns. Mr. BARING said he had long been entirely convinced that no paper currency that might be adopted in the country could be safe unless the Bank of England notes were made a legal tender, and that being the object of the Resolution, it should have his support.— Sir R. PEEI, was of a different opinion, and argued at some length against it.— Mr. COBBETT would not offer any opinion upon what was called the complicated measure, for the simple reason that as yet be, and he was somewhat inclined to think the Noble Lord ( Althorp) was in a like predicament, was utterly ignorant of what that measure was likely to be.— The Resolution was, after some further discussion, affirmed by a majority of 214 to 156. The third Resolution was agreed to without a division. The fourth Resolution ( which would ratify the whole bargain with the Bank) was postponed, several Members having expressed them- selves in teiris of severe censure upon the bargain.— The Chairman then reported progress, and obtained leave to sit again on Wednesday. The Report of the Jews' Bill was agreed to, and the Bill ordered to be read a third time on Wednesday se'nnight. On the motion of Sir A. AGNEW, the Observance of the Sabbath Bill was read a first time, and ordered to be read a second time this day fortnight. TUESDAY.— Mr. BUCKINGHAM brought forward his motion for a Select Committee to consider the practicability of progressively reducing the national debt, by its conversion into terminable annui- ties. at gradually diminishing rates of interest, so as to lessen its burden every year; and to determine the best mode of assessing the property and income ol the nation to meet the expense of such con- version, and to form at the same time a surplus revenue fund, which shall enable the Parliament progressively to repeal those imports which bear most heavily oti the agricultural, manufacturing, and shipping interests of the country. The motion called forth but little discussion, and was negatived without a division. Mr. BARRON then brought forward his resolutions declaring that the tithe system in Ireland had been the fruitful source of misery and crime, and that a land tax ought to be substituted, for the pay- ment of the present incumbents, and other purposes of general utility.— Mi. LITTLETON moved the pre_ vious question ; but after a somewhat animated discussion the original motion was withdrawn. Mr. HUME, after some preliminary observations, moved a Resolu- tion to the effect that a sum not exceeding 35,0001. be placed at the dis- posal of his Majesty the King for the purpose of building a new House of Commons. But if a Resolution that a new building was necessary were agreed to, he would not resist a diminution of the sum to be granted from 35,0001. to 25,0001.—' lHear,' and laughter.—' Col. DAVIES seconded the motion.— A short discussion ensued, and the motion was rejected, upon a division, by a majority of 84.— Adjourned. WEDNESDAY.— The Future Entails ( Scotland) Bill, the Heirs of Entail ( Scotland) Bill, the Bankrupt ( Scotland) Bill, and the Edinburgh Annuity- tax Bill, were postponed until next Session. The Imprisonment for Debt Bill was read a second time, and ordered to be committed on this day week. The House having resolved itself into Committee on the Bank Cearter Acts.— Lord ALTHORP proposed an alteration regarding Country Banks, which will be found in another part of the paper. Mr. CLAY- complained of the amount of remuneration proposed to be awarded to the Bank; and maintained that the items of the charge, on the assumed truth of which the Chancellor of the Exchequer had acquiesced in the bargain, were altogether delusive. He wished the matter to be referred to a Select Committee.— This course was sup ported by Mr. ATTWOOD and several other Members, and resisted by Lord AurHORPand Lord J. RUSSELL as unprecedented. It was eventually moved, as an amendment, that the Chairman do quit the Chair, and that, the House resume, in order that the subject be referred to a Select Committee. The House divided on this question, when the numbers were— for a Committee, 88 ; against it 176 ; majo- rity, 88. The Resolution, together with the 5th and 7th, were then agreed to, and the report was ordered to be received to morrow. THURSDAY.— On the suggestion of Mr. WYNN, and with the con- currence of Lord ALTHORP, it was arranged, that, lor the future, that part of the business of the House which consists of the " Orders of the Day" ( that is, all Bills in progress) should be proceeded with " during the early sitting on three days in the week, and that the other two days should lie devoted to petitions.— It appears also to have been understood that the sittings of Committees should be suspended on these three days, and also that one measure should be carried completely through the House before another is proceeded with. In consequence of the preceding arrangement the Irish Church Temporalities Bill was recommitted, instead of the further considera- tion of the Report beinsr taken in the House— a course which was adopted for the relief of the Speaker, who thus was enabled to leave the Chair, his presence not being necessary when the House resolves itself into Committee. The Bill was then proceeded with, clause by clause, and the Committee got as far as the 50th out of 161 clauses. Many verbal and other amendments were made.— Sir R. PEEL took occasion to remark on the conspicuously cumbrous verbosity of many of the clauses throughout the Bill, and of the masterly control over synonymes evinced by whoever had drawn it up, and to state that he had hoped that, with a Reformed Parliament, they might ( have seen some effort to reform this very great defect in the wording ofour Acts ol Parliament— sentiments that were loudly cheered by the House, and to which the Chancellor of the Exchequer frequently nodded assent,— At three o'clock the CHAIRMAN reported progress, and ob- tained leave to sit again. Jn the Evening Sitting, Colonel EVANS presented a petition, which he described as most important for ascertaining, and, if need be, punishing the responsible authors of the late police outrage in Cal- thorpe- street.— The petition was referred to the Committee. Mr. TOOKE, moved that an Address be presented to his Majesty, praying that his Majesty would be pleased to grant a Royal Charter of Incorporation to the University of London.— Lord ALTHORP said that the subject was under the anxious consideration of the Govern- ment, and the only difficulty was the adjusting of the terms and con- ditions of the Charter. He suggested it would be better for the Hon. Member to withdraw the motion, which the Hon. Gentleman did. On the motion of Colonel WILLIAMS, it was ordered that the Vice- Chancellors of the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge be directed to communicate to the House copies of the religious tests required of persons on admission into the Universities, or at the time of taking any degree: as also the dates of the original imposition of those tests, and at whose suggestion, and by whose authority, they were then imposed, and what alterations they have undergone since their original imposition, with the dates of those alterations. Mr, VERNON SMITH moved " that an address be presented to his Majesty for the appointment of a Commission to inquire into the state of the Municipal Corporations in England, Wales, and Ireland which was agreed to. The same Hon. Member brought up the report on Lord Althorp's Bank resolutions, which was agreed to, and a Bill pursuant thereto ordered to be brought in.— Adjourned. FRIDAY.— The remaining clauses, with some amendments, of the Church Temporalities ( Ireland) Bill were agreed to ; and the report was presented and adopted. Mr. ROEBUCK rose to give notice that he would on Monday night move for the production of certain papers connected with the late meeting in Coldbath- fields, and also lor the appointment of a Select Committee to inquire into the conduct of the police of that occasion., — Lord ALTHORP said that aa it was his intention to move for a Select Committee to inquire into the conduct of the police on the occasion referred to on Tuesday next, he hoped the Hon. Gentleman would withdraw his motion.— Mr. ROEBUCK complied with this request. Mr. S. RICE brought in the Bank Charter Bill, which was read a first time. Lord ASHLEY then brought forward his motion, " that the House resolve itself into Committee on the Factories' Regulation Bill."— The motion was met by an amendment on the part of Lord ALTHORP, who proposed that the Bill should be referred to a Committee above stairs. This proposition was resisted by several Members as being an attempt to defeat the Bill for another Session. After much dis- cussion, the House divided, when the numbers were, for Lord Ashley's motion, 164; for the Committee above stairs, 141 ; being a majority of 2.3 against Lord Althorp's pr'opostion. Mr. STANLEY brought in the Bill for the Abolition of Slavery in the West Indies, which was read a first time, and ordered to be read a second time on Wednesday next. PARISIAN CORRESPONDENCE. MY DEAR BULL, Paris, 3dJuly, 1833. In my last letter I communicated the latest intelligence from Oporto and Lisbon which had been received in Paris, and I endea- voured to shew you, from the most undoubted sources of information,, that there was no possible chance for Don PEDRO or his co- pillagers in any part of Portugal. I spoke to you in that letter of a sub- expe- dition by steam boat, which these marauders had resolved on making, with three or four thousand of their number, and I pro- mised to supply you with all the intelligence which should arrive of this Quixotic and burlesque proceeding. Well then, my dear BULL, this expedition has sailed for Faro, which is a port of Portugal in Algarva, and a Bishop's see, with a castle. The plan ol Don PEDRO and his faction is to make Lagos the head- quarters. By- occupying this place, where the English fleets to the Meditterraneaii usually take in fresh water, they hope to obtain the protection of the British flag; and as Lagos is 120 miles south- south- east of Lisbon, they calculate on remaining there for a considerable time before a Portuguese army can reach them. There was a time when the British flag was distinguished and honoured off the the Cape of St. Vincent; and where, in 1759, the brave BOSCAWEN defeated the French fleet, and made the shores of Algarva ring with the sound of British thunder and British cannon. But those days have gone by, and the British vessels sailing to the Mediterranean, and putting in for water at Lagos, are to protect Don PEDRO'S steam boat expe- dition. and cover the enormities of these revolutionizing brigands. At Albufeiia the standard of the revolution is also to be raised, and the frontiers of Spain are thus to be threatened with the propa- gandism of the European revolutionists. Don PEDRO has, however, ordered that at Lagos the great stand be made. This is the plan adopted by Don PEDRO, after much discussion, wrangling, quar- relling, and finally, the separation of SOLIGNAC from the Pedro Company. There were two other plans proposed to the Ex- Brazilian Monarch, which were much more spirited, difficult, and arduous. The first was to proceed coute qui coute out of Oporto, fight every inch of the ground with the army of Don MIGUEL, and either be shot, or advance to Lisbon. But Don PEDRO knew too well , M> th himself and his ragged regiments 1 He dareil not tiuoi them in the open field, ana lie was well convinced that if they should leave Oporto, the first charge of the Miguelite army with the bayonet would have put to flight at least five- sixths of his men. This pro- ject was consequently soon given up, although SALDANHA, to the last, desired that it might be selected. SALDANHA belongs to tiie neck- or- nothing party. If he succeeded he would cut off the head of Donna MARIA as soon as that of Don MIGUEL. He his a hater of all Kings, and hopes to see the day when not a King shall be found in Spain, Portugal, or France. Another plan, and which was also a long time under discussion, was that of sending an expedition to Lisbon, partly by sea, and the rest of the way by land. This project also, like the last, was a bold one; but Don PEDRO could not confide- in his men, and was personally too great a coward to risk his own life. He knew that his army was composed of the refuse of human society, that his soldiers were in many cases felons, in others pardoned convicts, and in others beggars or thieves, who had no means of existence but those of robbery or begging. They would make excellent pillagers of a town when an army had disarmed the inhabi- tants, and had set fire to the public buildings; but they would never fire a cannon or hold a musket, and were destitute of the smallest portion of animal courage. For these reasons Don PEDRO rejected both the plans I have already mentioned, and selected the one of skulking off'to the Algarves. For this selection Don PEDRO is now upbraided and rated by the liberal journals of this country. One calls him " incompetent," another " a fool," another " an obstinate member of the stupid House ofBraganza;" and another tells him, " that as every one knows he is incompetent to direct, he should at least take the advice of those who must understand the matter a vast deal better than he could possiDly do." To all this Don PEDRO mightreply that their reproaches are pure gasconade— that they wish to put on the best face— that they want to pretend that the Falstaff regiments of Oporto would have consented to march out of that city and face the Royalist troops, when they know that such was not the case; and that they want to have it believed that the soldiers of Donna MARIA are willing to sacrifice their lives in her service, when, on the contrary, they are above and before all things anxious not to risk them. Don PEDRO has the rightto tell these swaggering boasters, that he cut his coat according to his cloth ; that he ehose the expedition they could undertake, and not one they would never have accomplished ; and that whilst a Salamander will bear fire, cotton and muslin will be consumed. Don PEDRO knew his men, and he sent them therefore to Lagos, or to the coast of the Algarves, where nothing was prepared to oppose their landing; where, as long as provisions could be procured, they might remain till the army of Don MIGUEL should arrive, and where they would incur no danger of any serious attack for at least some weeks. The Ex- Emperor was not then so great a fool as he is represented to he. He saw that his cause was hopeless at Oporto. He found out that if the troops all remained there much longer, they would be destroyed, or made prisoners ; that the British and French Governments required some- thing more to be done than merely to fix themselves down at Oporto, and therefore he determined on sending oft this expedition to Al- garves. These freebooters may land, and doubtless will do so— but what reception will they meet with ? Will their number be augmented h*;; the inhabitants? Will the Portuguese flock round the standard of rebellion ? Will nobles, peasants, clergy, landed proprietors, and public officers, the militia, and the regular troops in Algarves, join the cause of Donna MARIA, or run away from it ? This we shall see; but I will not wait for the result in order to predict it. As Lagos is 130 miles from Lisbon, and 270 from Oporto, it is quite clear that for fifteen days— or even longer, say three weeks— these marauders- might land, pillage, massacre, burn, violate, and commit sacrilege with impunity. But what are fifteen days, or three weeks, in the history of a revolution, and much more of a country. ? The end of, these fifteen days or three weeks must arrive. The inhabitants of the surrounding country will rise at the bidding of the clergy, the Government and the proprietors. The Government will send for- ward the necessary number of troops— but without taking from the besieging army at Oporto— and, in a few days afterwards, either the rebels must take to flight, or they will be shot on the field of battle, or taken prisoners. If taken prisoners on such an expedition as. this, they must expect no mercy. The skulking, marauding coward,, who descends far from the capital, far from the seat of Government, far from troops, and who hopes to pillage, and to gratify his lusts and appetites, his avarice and his crimes, in the midst of a quiet and retired population, lighting the fires of civil war, and sowing the July 14: JOHN b u l l : 81 seeds of civil discontent amidst a happy and tranquil people, who have the wherewithal to live upon, but none to give to the robber, either in the shape of a soldier or assassin : such a fellow as this Skulking coward must not expect mercy, if taken prisoner on such an expedition. All, then, that I desire of the readers of the John Bull, is a little patience. If they will be satisfied with a satisfactory result, and will not be too anxious about the time which is consumed, I promise them a rich treat in Portugal; for Don PEDRO and all his partisans will be defeated and driven away, one after one, expedi- tion after expedition; attempt after attempt will fail; and the British Government will be compelled to acknowledge Don MIGUEL King of that country, and to send to Lisbon a British Ambassador. Do not, however, be surprised on hearing that this Algarves expedi- tion has landed ; that they proceeded directly to lortify themselves ; that they found wine, figs, and sprats ; and that they established what they will call another PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT. Let not the readers of the John Bull be surprised or discouraged at anything like this ; on the contrary, the Government of Don MIGUEL has no desire that this experiment should not be made. The Liberals in France, and the Whigs in England, said that the Portuguese were all crying aloud for A CONSTITUTION; and that when Don PEDRO should appear, his cause would be that of the nation, from one end to the other. The expedition to Oporto has satisfied almost all Europe, and the world, that these statements of the Whigs and Liberals were false ; but some men are to be found who are still fools enough to believe that the Portuguese, if left to themselves, would cry Vive Donna Maria!" Let, then, this expedition to Algarves convince them ; and, as I know beforehad that the result will be death and confusion, or flight, to the Pedroites, let, at least, this trial suffice ; and let the British Government hasten, 011 the failure of this enterprize, to acknowledge the Government, de facto and de jure, which now reigns in Portugal. But what will Spain say to this expedition to the Algarves ? This is another and a very serious question. For my part, I shall be re- joiced to learn that Spain does not oppose it. I hope that M. ZEA BEHMUDEZ vvill not feel it to be his duty to send Spanish troops to drive them from the Spanish frontiers. I hope that King FERDI- NAND VII. will let these marauders do their worst. Leave them to themselves, I would say, and let the Portuguese population attest, as I know it will, to its horror of revolutionists and Don PEDRO, by its arming against this Algarves expedition. I do not wish that the Liberals should have the opportunity, in France, of saying that, if Spain had not interfered, Portugal would have declared herself in favour of Donna MARIA. Let Portugal be left to herself. She will find i » herself the energy and the force necessary to drive away or to exterminatethese marauders, and she will not require the direct or indirect assistance even of her natural ally. But will M. ZEA BER- MUDEZsoact? I doubt it much ; on the contrary, I am disposed to believe that the Government of Madrid will not suffer the longer continuance of this state of things in Portugal; that it will not expose the Peninsula to all the horrors of this propagandism; that it will interfere in the affairs of Portugal, as France has interfered in those of Belgium, and as Russia has likewise interferedin those of Turkey. Don PEDRO, in sending his cowardly and skulking expedition to the Algarves, has endangered the peace of Spain. The revolutionary and bloody standard of SALDAXHA and PEDRO raised in the South of Portugal, " at Faro, Lagos, Loul6, Tavera, and Albufeira, would endanger the peace, not only of the subjects of Don MIGUEL, but of those of King FERDINAND, and it is thought that the Spanish Go- vernment will send an army to the Algarves, to drive out the rebels and restore order. Whether it does so or not, however, one thing is sure— the cause of Donna MARIA is hopeless. By Spanish or by Portuguese troops, but I hope by the latter, all these travelling re- volutionists will be defeated, and the throne of the Algarves will remain occupied by the Monarch, not only of right, but of Portuguese choice and affection. Do not then be under any apprehension ; this new and last trick will fail like the rest; Oporto and the Al- garves will alike witness the defeat of propagandism and of revolu- tionists. My miscellaneous budget is not a very large one, and may be con- densed as follows:— Louis PHILIPPE and his wife have gone to Eu and to Dieppe. At the latter place a discussion has arisen in the Communal Council, which is most amusing. It was a debate on the question of whether 1201. or 2401. should be expended in giving to the Citizen King a " suitable reception." The majority decided for 1- 201., and the mayor has enough to do to make both ends meet.— The French Government has suspended the fortifications in the environs of Paris.— The Portuguese have been horribly massacred at Para by the Brazilians.— The Spanish Cortes have sworn fidelity to the Princess CHRISTINA, daughter of the King of SPAIN, instead of Don CARLOS.— The King of BELGIUM has a majority of ten for him in the Chamber of Representatives at Brussels.-— The King of HOL- LAND has decided on not yielding one point to the King of BELGIUM, and 011 not signing a treaty with him.— There has been a horrible massacre and pillage in Greece.— The Russians are still at Constan- tinople.— Germany becomes increasingly agitated every week.— Switzerland is in a political ferment not known for half a century;— and the French Government has just remonstrated against the exe- cution of traitors in Piedmont.— Thus ends my budget, and to it I annex my assurance of affection and fidelity. P. H. Till' ARMY. PROMOTIONS AND EXCHANGES. WAR OFFICE, JULY 5. 2< 1 Regt. Liglit Dragoons — R. A. Smith, Gent, to be Cornet, by purchase, vice Yerbury, promoted in thp 9th Light Dragoons. 9th Light Dragoons— Cornet J. W. Yerimy, from the 3d Regiment of Light Dragoons, to be Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Broadhead, promoted. I st Foot— Assist. Surg. S. Dickson iias been permitted to resign his commission. 6th Koot— Gent. Cadet R. W. M. L. Fraser, from the Royal Military College, to be Ensign, without purchase, vice Young deceased. 12th Foot— Staff- Assistant- Surgeon Alexander M'Grigor to be Assistant- ' Surgeon, vice Giilice, appointed to the Staff. 13th Foot— Lieut. E. Inge, from the half pay of the 18th Regt. of Foot, to be lieutenant, vice Miliar, whose appointment has not taken place. 15th Foot— Ensign J. A- Cole to be Lieutenant, without purch. vieeBlair, dec.; Oeirt. Cadet H. It. F. Dickinson, from the R. Milit. Col. to be Ensign, vice Cole. 31st Foot— Ensign P. ' 1'. R. White to be Lieut1, without purch. vice Grueber, <! ec.; Gent. Cadet [•'. i. Thomas, from R. Milit. Col. to be Ensign, vice White. 39th Foot— Ensign B. C. Layald to he Lieut, without, purch. vice Cox, dec. ; Ensign J. Sutherland, from half pay of the 26th Foot, to be Ensign, vice Layard. 40TH Foot— To be Captains by purchase : Lieut. F. Co- Jdington, vice Serjeant, son, who retires ; Lieut. H. R. Connor, vice Coddington, whose promotion, vice Butler, lias been canci- lled — To be Lieutenant, by purchase: Ensign J. Todd, vice Connor.— To be Ensign, by purchase: W. W. Baker, Gent, vice Todd. 44th Foot— Lient. G. J. Bur^ lem to be Captain, by purchase, vice R. Smith, whoretiies; Ensign J. Dunne to be Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Burslem ; J>. T. Grant, Gent, to be Ensign, hy purchase, vice Dunne. 49th Foot— Ensign J. M. Montgomery to he Lieut, without purchase, vice Marshall, deceased: Ensign and Adjutant A. M'Ewen to have the rank of Xieut.: ISnsign R. Ransome, from the half- pay of the 11th Regt. of Foot, to be Btisign, vice , Montgomery. STth Foot— Lieut, A. Cumming, from the half- pay of the 26th Regt. of Foot, to be Lieut'., vice T. Porter, whose appointment has not taken place. 6dth Foot— Capt. H. Sevmour, from I lie half- pay of the 25tli Light Dragoons, tfio be Captain, vice J. W. Cross, who exchanges. 61st Foot— Major P. Taylor, from the half pay Unattached, to be Major, vice 3FF. Annesley, who exchanges receiving the difference. 78th Foot- Ensign W. Fisher to be Lieut., by purchase, vice W. H, Pickthorn, who retires; R. Shields, gent, to be Ensign by purchase, vice Fisher.. 821 Foot— Major T. Hogarth to be Lieut.- Colonel, by purchase, vice Phillips, who retires; Capt. J. M'Kay be Major, by purchase, vice Hogarth; Capt. J. Doran, from the half- pay Unattached, to be Capt., vice M'Kay. 94th Foot— Capt. H. R. Milner to be Major, by purchase, vice Snodyrass, pro. moted ; CapLR. M. Lockwood, from the half- pay Portuguese service, to be Captain, viceililner. 99th Foot— Lieut. J Nicholson to be Captain, by purchase, vice W. Barton, who retiresj Ensign Robert Holland Walker to be Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Nicholson ; E. D. Collinson, Gent, to be Ensign, by purchase, vice Walker. Ride Brigade— Second Lieut. Alexander Manro to be First Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Shirley, promoted; Archibald Earl of Cassilis to be Second . Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Munro. UNATTACHEU— To be Captains by purchase— Lieut. B. Broadbead, from the 9th Light Dragoons ; Lieut. H. Shirley, from the Rifle Brigade. HOSPITAL STAFF.— Arthur Stuart, M. D. from the half- pay, to be Assistant- Inspector of Hospitals ; James Stuart, Gent, to he Staff. Assistant- Surgeon, vice M'Grigor, appointed to the 12th Regiment of Foot. THE CAMBRIDGE MEETING OF THE BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE PROMOTION OF SCIENCE.— Of this interesting Meeting a copious account appears in the LITERARY GAZEITE of Saturday, July 6, de- scriptive of the scene, and detailing the scientific proceedings, with remarks on both. It is intended to be a picture of the place, with its influx of 1200 visitors, its entertainments, & c. as well as a digest of the progress and state of science in every branch at the present hour. ' FICTION. W WORKS OF Just published, in 3 vols, post Svo. rrice 31s. 6d. THE ABBESS; A Romance. By Mrs. TROLLOPE, Author of " The Domestic Manners of the Americans." " Unquestionably some of the chapters of ' The Abbess* equal anything in the language for liveliness and truth: she ( Mrs. Trollope) excels, whenever she sets loose the tongues of her nuns on breeding canaries, tending flowers, walking by moonlight, or surveying handsome pages and interesting travellers through the jealous gratings of the convent."— Athenaeum, June 1. 2. In 3 vols, post 8vo. 31s. 6d. WALTZBURG: A TALE of the TIMES of LUTHER. " An historical fiction of much novelty and interest."— Literary Gazette. " We feel borne out in saying that ' Waltzburg' is about the b^ st concocted story of all the various novels that have lately come before us."— Spectator. " An historical romance by an unknown author, but. one who gives much pro- mise. The ground which it takes is completely unbeaten, and yet ground of much interest and variety. The time is that when the reformers began the struggle against religious abuses, which led to 9uch unexpected and sweeping changes. We can recommend ' Waltzburg' as a very attractive and well- written fiction."— Town. Whittaker, Treacher, and Co.. Ave Maria lane. RAMSAY'S HUT 1' ON'S MATHEMATICS. In one large volume, 8vo. of 830 pages, illustrated by numerous diagrams, price 15s. in boards. ACOURSE of MATHEMATICS, composed for the Use of the . Royal Military Academy. By CHARLES HUTTON. LL. D., F. R. S., late Professor of Ma hematics in that Institution. A New Edition, entirely re- modelled and very considerably enlarged, by WILLIAM RAMSAY, R. A. Tri- nity College, Cambridge, Professor of Humanity in the University of Glasgow. Contents:— Arithmetic— Algebra—( ieometry— Conic Sections— Plane Trigo- nometry— Surveying.— Measuring— Solid Geometry— Mechanics— Hydrostatics— Hydraulics— Pneumatics— Analytical Geometry— Differential and Integral Cal- culus. London: printed for T. T. and J. Tegg, Cheapside ; R. Griffin and Co,, Glas* gow ; and John Cumming, Dublin. In 12mo. 5s. SERMONS intended for Popular Instruction. By the Rev. HENRY HUGHES, B. A., of Trinity College, Oxford, and Curate of Great Linford. Bucks. Rivingtons. St. Paul's Church- yard, and Waterloo- place, Pall- mall; and J. H. Parker, Oxford. MIDDLE AND WORKING CLASSES. Just published, in 1 thick vol. roval 18mo. price 8?. HISTORY of the MIDDLE and WORKING CLASSES, with a Popular Exposition of the Economical aud Political Principles, which have influenced thePast and Present Condition of the Agricultural, Commercial, and Manufacturing Classes ; together with an Appendix oi Prices, Rates of Wages, Population, Poor Rates, Mortality, Marriages, Crimes, Schools, Educa- tion, Occupations, and other Statistical Information, illustrative of the former and present State of Society, and the Industrious Orders. " To the middle and working classes this history presents great and permanent attractions ; it should have a place in every counting- house, and in the libraries of every literary and mechanic's society in the kingdom."-— Bell's New Messenger. " This is one of the most interesting works that has lately issued from the press, and supplies a desideratum which has been long felt; the author is in every way qualified for his task."— True Sun. London: Effingham Wilson, 88. Royal Exchange. NEW FRENCH BOOK, By Professor MERLET, of the University of London. Just published, in a large 12mo. volume, neatly bound, price 7s. 6d. PETIT TABLEAU LITTERAIRE de la FRANCE; contenant un Essai sur la Litterature Franguse depuis son Oriirine jusqu'en 1832, et de nombreux Extraits des milleurs Auteurs; suivis de Notes sur quelques Difficultes, servant de suite au " Traducteur." " The selections have been made with good taste and sound judgment; there are explanatory notes at the end, by which the student is materially assisted in comprehending not only difficulties, but the beauties of French phraseology."— Monthly Review. " This is decidedly the best French compilation we have seen ; throughout there is not an objectionable extract; we recommend this varied and truly entertain- ing production."— Atla3. London : Effingham Wilson, 88, Royal Exchange ; and John Taylor, 30, Upper Gower- street. Of wkom may be had, by the same Author, 1. LE TRADUCTEUR; or, Historical and Miscellaneous Selections from the best French writers, on a plan calculated to render reading and translation peculiarly serviceable in acquiring the Speaking and Writing of the French Lan- guage ; designed for junior students. Second Edition, neatly bound, price 5s. 6d. In this edition the author has made every improvement in the selection of pieces, as well as the Explanatory notes,( both of which have been considerably increased) which constant practice in teaching could suggest. 2. A FRENCH GRAMMAR, divided into Four Parts— the Pronunciation. the Accidence, the Syntax, and the Appendix. Each of which are sold separate, or in one thick volume, 12mo. New Edition, neatly bound, price 10s. 6d. 3. SYNOPSIS of FRENCH GRAMMAR. l2mo. price 2s. 6d. bound in cloth. Presenting at one view, as it were, all the Rules of the Author's Gram- mar, to which ther* are References. Just published, in a pocket volume, price 5s. TAXATION of the BRITISH EMPIRE, its unequal Pressure on the Middle Ranks of Society; arid the Necessity for a Revision of the Fiscal and Commeicial Policy of the Country. By R. MONTGOMERY MARTIN. " Industry is the mother of virtue ; Poverty and ignorance the parents of crime." London: Effingham Wilson, 88, Roval Exchange. Just published, is. 6d. bound, a New Edition, improved, of the CJCHOLAR'S SPELLING ASSISTANT; wherein the words are arrange'! on an improved plan ; calculated to familiarize the Art of Spel. ling and Pronunciation, to remove difficulties, and to facilitate general improve- ment. For Schools and Private Tuition, lly THOS. CARPENTER, Master of tlie Academv, Ilford, Essex. By the same Author, ENGLISH VOCABULARY, in which the words are arranged indiscrimi. nately : designed as a Sequel to the above. New Edition, corrected. 2s. bound. NEW ORTHOGRAPHICAL ASSISTANT, or English Exercise Book: on on improved plan ; for The more speedy Instruction of Young Persons in Spelling and Pronunciation. Third Edition, 2s. bound. London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman; and Whitta- ker, Treacher, and A mot. POPULAR SCHOOL BOOKS, Printed for Lcngman, Rees, Orme, and Co , London. MEW PANTHEON; or, an Introduction to the Mythology of the Ancients. By W. Jillard Hort. I8mo. Plates, New Edition, enlarged, fis. fid, hound. ENGLISH SCHOOL DICTIONARY of SELECT WORDS, with their Meanings affixed. ByW. J. Hort. 2s. 6d. bound. INTRODUCTION to the STUDY of CHRONOLOGY and ANCIENT HISTORY. ByW. J Hort. 4s. bound. INTRODUCTION to MODERN HISTORY. By W. J. Hort. 2 vols. 10s. 6d. bound. ARITHMETICIAN'S GUIDE j or, a Complete Exercise Book for the Use of Public Schools and Private Teachers. By William Taylor, 12mo. New Edit. 2s. 6d. hound. KEY to the Same. By W. H. White, 48. bound. MORAL BIOGRAPHY ; or Lives of Exemplary Men ; forthe Instruction of Youth. Bv Dr. Aikin, 3s. 6d. half bound ENGLISH LESSON BOOK, forthe Junior Classes. By Lucy Aikin, 18mo. 2s. 6d. half bound, GEOGRAPHY for YOUTH, adapted to the different Classes of Learners.— By the late Rev. John Hartley. 12mo. Seventh KditioD, revised by bis Son. 4s 6< l bound. OUTLINES of GEOGRAPHY; the First Course for Children. BytheRev. J. Hartley. Tenth Edition, 9d. CONVERSATIONS on MYTHOLOGY. I2mo. 5s. boards. CONCISE SYSTEM of COMMERCIAL ARITHMETIC. By Jas. Mor- rlson. 12mo. - 4s. 6< l. bound.— KEY, 6s. Archbishop SECKER'S LECTURES on the CATECHISM, in Questions and Answers. 12ino. 4s. 6d. bound. NEW SCHOOL BOOKS, GREEK AND LATIN. PRAXIS on the LATIN PREPOSITIONS; being an Attempt to illustrate their Origin, Signification, & c. By Samuel Butler, D. D. Head Master of Shrewsbury School. 8vo. 4th Edition 6s. 6d. boards. KEY to the same. 8vo. 6s. boards. DELECTUS SENTENTIARUM GR^ CARUM ad USUM TIRONUM ACCOMODATUS, cum Notulis et Lexico. On the Plan of Valpy's Latin Delec'us, 9th Edition 4s. GREEK EXERCISES in Syntax, Ellipsis, Dialects, Prosody, and Meta phrases, adapted to the Grammars of Eton, Wettenhall, Moore, Bell, and Holmes. With a concise but comprehensive Syntax. By the Rev. W. Neilson, D. D. & c. 8vo. 5s. boards ; with the Key. 8s.; the Key. separately, 3s. LATIN PROSODY MADE EASY. By John Carey, LL. D. 12mo. 4th Edition, enlarged. 7s. boards. TERMINATIONES et EXEMPLA DECLINATIONUM et CONJUGA- TIONUM ITEMQUE PROPRIA QUJE MARIBUS, QU. ® GENUS, et AS IN PR. ESENTI. Englished and Explained for the Use of Young Gram- marians. By Charles Hoole, M A. Revised by T. Sandon, Is. 6d. EXERCISES to the ACCIDENCE and GRAMMAR ; or, an Exemplification of the Moods and Tenses and the Principal Rules of Construction. By W. Turner, M. A. 3s. boards. STUDENT'S MANUAL ; being an Etymological and Explanatory Vocabu- lary of Words derived from the GREEK. By R. H. Black, LL. D. 4th Edition, 2s. 6d. boards. ETYMOLOGICAL and EXPLANATORY DICTIONARY of WORDS derived from the LATIN. Bv R H. Black, L. L. D. 2d Edition, 5 » . 6d. boards.. PROGRESSIVE EXERCISES, adapted to the Eton Accidence. By tb « Rev. James Wingfield. 6th Edition 2s. 6d. London; Longman, Rees, Orme, Browo, Green, and Longman, Ihc Frrst Yeair complete- i » now reatfy in ' I roll., bound, price 21s. each. The* contain Sixly beautiful Illustrations of Portraits, Lardscapes, aod Costumes. produced by the most celebrated Artists, and above 500 Original Literary Articles by the inoH distinguished writers, THE C O U R T MAGAZINE. Edited by the Hon. Mrs. NORTON. The July Number, ju* t published, begins a new year, and' affords afavourable opportunity to commence subscribing t& this richly embellished monthly pe- riodieal. Published by Edward Bull, 2S, Holies street, London; Bell and Bradfute, Edinburgh ; and Gumming, Dublin ; sold also by every Bookseller and Newsman in the Kingdom. Ml CABLE SOCIETY'S OFFfCE, Serjeants'Inn, Fleet StreetT 6th J.: lv, 1833. The DIRECTORS of the CORPORATION of the AMICABLE SOCIETY for a PERPETUAL ASSURANCE OFFICE, do herebv give Notice, that attendance will be given at the Society's House, in Serjeants' Jon, Fleet Street, on Thursday the 1 It!., and Thuisdays, the 18th and 25th day of July instant, and on Thursday the I st day of August next, from Eleven of the Clock in the Fore- noon until One in the Afternoon on each of the said davs. and on the last Wednes. day in August, and every subsequent month, from Eleven to Twelve of the Clock, to pay claims arising bv Deaths of Members of the said Society ia the year ending at Lady day, 1S33 ( Old Style), when will be paid to the respective Nominees, Executors, Administrators, or Assigns of such Members, the: Sum of ' Ihree Hundred and Fourteen Pounds for each Share, insured on their respective Lives. JOHN PENSAM. Register- jTILOBB INSURANCE COMPANY. FIRE, LI YES, and ANNUITIES.— Pall- mall and Comhill.— Established 18< 3. Capital ONE MILLION, Sterling, the whole paid up and invested, thereby affoiding to the Assured an immediate available Fund for the payment of the most extensive losses, without anv liability of partnership. THOxMAS COLES, Esq . Chairman. EDWARD GOLDSMID, E< q., Deputy Chairman. Farming Stock Insured generally on the farm. Rates and Conditions of Fire and Life Insurance, & c. may be had of the Coat* pany's Agents, a< id at the Offices in London. All Persons whose Insurances with this Company become due at Midsummer next are requested to take notice, that Receipts for the Renewal thereof are now ready lor delivery at the Company's Offices, and in the hands of their respee* tive Agents in the Country. Insurances due at Midsummer next must be pai$ on or before the 9. h of July. LIFE INSURANCE. Policies issued for the whole term of Life will be purchased on terms to be agreed on with the parties interested, should they be desirous of surrendering^ them to the Company. JOHN CHARLES DENHAM, Secretary. June 20, 1833. CUSTOM- HOUSE SEIZURE.— 15, OOOsuperior Hambro* damask table cloths of various sizes, with several f; oz-- ns of splendid rtamask napkins to match, all to be immediately sold without reserve ; together with about 16. GGO pieces of fine India nankeens, 7 yards in length, all at Is. lid. per piece, worth 7s.; Hambro'and Russia sheetings, French silks, and silk stockings, all seized, and are selling at CLARKE'S, 184, Oxford street, who has on sale also about 3,000 pairs of servants' sheets, 3 yards long, at 5s. per pair ; 14,000 dozen knife cloths, 2s, per dozen ; linen checked dusters, 3*. per dozen ; damask table linen, 2 yards wide, for kitchen and hall cloths, at Is. per yard: ironing blankets at Is. 3d.; window muslins at 4s. per p'ece of 12 yards ; 900 white counterpanes, 2s. 9d. each ; 570 dozen nursery diapers, 5s. 6d. per dozen; worth 9s. 6d. ; Indifv long cloths at 5s. 9d. per piece of 25 yards ; also a magnificent stock of superior grass bleached Irish and Scotch linens, suited for gentlemen's wear, l s. 6d. per yard, those at 2s. are worth 3s. 6d. : India silk handkerchiefs at 2s. 9d. each, the Company's best goods ; lawns at 4*. 6d. the piece, and French cambric hand- kerchiefs at 11 s. 6d. per dozen ; besides various other goods for domestic use, all at cash prices— Observe the addrress, CLARKE and Co. Grosvenor House, No. 184, Oxford street, between Duke- street, and Orchard- street. H7< XTENSJVE ALTERATIONS- HOLBOKN- HILL, next door JOJ to St. Andrew's Church.— CHARLES M EEKING, every gra> efully alive to the kind patronage of his Friends and the Public, and determined to exert his best endeavour^ to merit a continuance of their favours by increased efforts ort his part, begs respectfully to inform them that he has added the adjoining next to St. Andrew's Church, to his former Premises, and that the altera- tions are now complete, forming such spacious and convenient Warehouses, as will in future prevent that inconvenience and disappointment many of bis nume* rous friends have experienced from an over- crowded shop. C. M. also begs to say that he has greatly improved and increased his former large Stock in every department, from the useful House and Family Linen, to the most fashionable, splendid, and ornamental designs in every description of Fancy Goods that the imagination can conceive or fancy desire. The extensive range of Warehouses is now open, forming, under one roof, atV assortment at once splendid, novel, and cheap, not to be surpassed, if equalled in London, viz.:— DAMASK TABLE LINEN, & c. the Stock of a Dumfermline manufacturer* of the very best make. IRISH LINENS, all warranted of the best fabric, and greatly under their usual prices, consisting of 7- 8ths and 4- 4ths, and every width in Sheetings, Lawns, French Cambrics, & c. The HOUSE FURNISHING DEPARTMENT is much enlarged, aud quite novtl, consisting of Moreens, Damasks, Dimities, Printed Furnitures, Printed Window Blinds, Holla: ds, Quilts, Damask Covers, & c. & c. The SILK DEPARTMENT is very choice, and consists of every variety of figured and plain Ducapes, Gros de Tours, De la Reins, Chalis, Hernani Dresses, & c. & c. An unequalled assortment of PRINTED MUSLINS and CAM BRICS, plain* embroidered., and printed Crape Squares, fancy Handkerchiefs, Veils, Scarfs, Lappets, and Gauzes. Several cases of EMBROIDERY aud LACE GOODS, the Foreign and British Blonds particularly recommended for their superiority of style, and being at such extraordinary low prices. An endless variety of plain and fancy Gauze and other Ribbons. And in addition to the above magnificent! assortment, C. M. has purchased the entire Stock of Monsieur Cbaniorf ( the cele- brated manufacturer of St. Ettoine), which consists of nearly 4000 garnitures of the choicest Gauze Ribbons, in every prevailing shade. These are deserving the attention of Milliners and large consumers. A large and well assorted Stock of Hosiery, consisting of Ladies', Gentlemen's, and Children's cotton and silk hose, suitable for the present season; also Gloves, Paias<> ls, Furs,& e. at unequalled prices. ROWLAND'S KALYDOR is recommended for the Skin and Complexion.— A mild and innocent production, powerfully efficacious i » rendering the skin delightfully cool and refreshing, thoroughly exterminating eruptions, tan, pimples, freckles, redness, and all cutaneous imperfections j producing a delicate white skin, and juvenile bloom to the complexion; pre-* serving it from the heat of summer; affords soothing relief in cases of sun- burns, stings of insects, or any inflammations. It immediately allays the smarting irritability of the skin, diffusing a pleasing coolness truly comfortable and refreshing. To gentlemen after shaving, and travelling in sun and dust, it allays the irritating and smarting pain, and renders the skin smooth and pleasant, — Price 4s. 6d. and 8s. 6d; per bottle, duty included.— To prevent imposition, the name and address of the proprietors is engraved on the Government stamp affixed over the cork of each bottle. All others are spurious. ' « A. ROWLAND and SON, 20, Hatton garden." AROMATIC SPIRIT of VINEGAR.—^ Thia agreeable perfumed . liquor ( the original invention of Mr. Henry), which is of well- known effi « « cacy in relieving faintness and headache, and in counteracting the effects of over* heated, close, or infected air, continues to be prepared, in the greatest perfection* by Messrs. THOS. and WM. HENRY, Manufacturing Chemists, Manchester. It is sold in London, wholesale and retail, by Messrs. BAYLEY, BLEW and CHAPMAN, Peifumers, Cockspur- street; and retail, price 2s. 9d., by one of more agent in every principal town ; but it cannot be genuine, unless the names of the above preparers are engraved on the Government Stamp, which is fixed over the cork of each bottle. Proper Sponge Boxes are sold by Bayley, Blew and Chapman, as usual. As above, may also be had, authenticated by a similar Stamp, HENRY'S CALCINED MAGNESIA, in bottles at 2s. 9d., or with glass stoppers at 4s. 6d ADDRESSED to those who value the Use, Ornament, and Comfort of serviceable Teeth.—- It is well known that these are indis- pensable assistants to our ease, and often chief auxiliaries in exertions for fame or fortune. Impressed with this conviction, Mr. A. JONES, Dentist to their Royal Highnesses the Princess Augusta and the Duchess of Gloucester, & c. & c. after devoting much time to the practice, of Dental Surgery, both in Eng- land and on the Continent, can conscientiously pledge himself to afford relief under most cases affecting the health, use, or ease of these imperatively neces- sary appendages of the mouth. He has recently been eminently successful in, restoring defective articulation and mastication, by the substitution of his newly improved Teeth for those unavoidably removed. Mr. A. Jones solicits the per- sonal attention of members of the faculty to these really effective inventions* and particularly recommends them to Gentlemen engaged in public speaking.-^ Carious and tenderTeeth wholly preserved from the progress « f decay, and ren* dered useful by A. Jones's unequalled Anodyne Cement. Every operation per- taining to Dental Surgery. At home from ten to five, Lower Grosvenor* street. Bond street. _ BURGESS'S ESSENCE OF ANCHOVIES. Warehouse, 187, Strand, corner of the Savoy- steps, London. JOHN BURGESS and SON, being apprised of the numerous endeavours made by many persons to impose a spurious article for their make, feel it incumbent upon them to request the attention of the Public, ia purchasing what they conceive to be the Original, to observe the Name ana Address correspond with the above. The general appearance of the spurious descriptions will deceive the unguarded, and for their detection, J. B. and boa submit the following Cautions: some are in appearance at first^ ight The Ge- nuine," but without any name or address— some " Burgess's Essence oi An* chovies"— others " Burgess," and many more without address. JOHN BURGESS and SON having been many years honoured with such distinguished approbation, feel every sentiment of respect toward the Public, and earnestly solicit them to inspect the labels previous to purchasing what they conceive to be of their make, which they hope will prevent many disappointments. BURGESS' NEW SAUCE, for general purposes, having given such great satislaction, continues to be prepared by them, and is recoir. mended as a most useful and convenient Sauce— will keep good in all climates. Warehouse, No. 107, Strand, ( corner of Savoy- steps.) London. ( The Origin** Fish Sauce Warehouse.} S12 JOHN BULL July 7. 03" A MONDAY EDITION ( for the Country) is published at Three • ' Clock in the afternoon, containing the Markets and Latest News. JOHN BULL. LONDON, JULY 7. THE KING held a Levee at St. James's on Wednesday, and returned to Windsor in the afternoon. IN the House of Commons, on Friday, Lord ALTHORP, Who seems obliged to play the " actor of all work" there, endeavoured to shuffle off the Committee on Lord ASHLEY'S Factory Bill. All the fine orators of the Ministry aided his Lordship in the great effort against humanity, and in sup- port of White Slavery. The Right Hon. Mr. THOMSON spoke; Lord MORPETH ( of the Master- faction) spoke; Mr. STANLEY spoke ; every exertion was made— the whip was laid on as unsparingly as in the factories themselves ; but all in vain— humanity and decency triumphed, and MINIS- TERS WERE AGAIN BEATEN IN THE HOUSE OP COM- MONS by a majority of TWENTY- THREE! The Govern- ment, it thus appears, can neilher carry the measures which they believe to be good, nor resist those which they pro- nounce to be useless. The Times says, yesterday :— *' It is difficult even to guess at the Noble Lord's motive for such 3persevering resistance to the expeditious adoption of a measure on which the. country has so long ago decided, and on which scarcely 141 men in any other assembly than St Stephen's could be found who had not made up their minds. Of what use was the long delay to collect evidence if, after all. new evidence was still to be collected? Of what use was the ambulatory commission to the north, if a stationary committee was still to be formed above- stairs ? Surely the immense volume already presented contained evidence enough on a fact which seemed to require no evidence— that children below a certain age are able to work only a certain number of hours a- day, and that they cannot exceed that amount of exertion without the sacrifice of their health, and perhaps of their lives. When all the • world was convinced of this, w'ty should Lord ALTHORP wish to remain alone incredulous, or if incredulous, why demand such faith in his opinions from his Ministerial adherents? In dragging them through the mud, can he and his colleagues escape unbespattered ?" To such a question a decided negative is the only rational answer; but we very much doubt whether any thing like consideration for his colleagues ever enters into the calcula- tions of any one of them. It is to their own hatred, con tempt, and jealousy of each other, mingled with the general incompetency of the whole as a body, which must infallibly split them to pieces. That disunion exists amongst them in the highest degree, we need not go back so far as the impudent intrusion of BROUGHAM to the Woolsack, or his insolent treatment of Lord GREY'S judicious offer of the Attorney- Generalship; we need not look back to the retirementof themild, amiable, and placid Earl of DURHAM ( whose recent indisposition, we are enabled to state upon medical certificates, has not been caused by any political excitement, but merely by the agitation arising from the mutiny of his yacht's crew) ; nor need we refer to the resignation of the agreeable Lord HOWICK ; still less have we occasion to notice the unfeeling degradation of Lord RIPON, or the con- temptuous throw- up of Sir JOHN CAM HOBHOUSE— we have only to look to the occurrences of Thursday evening, when Mr. EDWARD ELLICE, the successor of the said HOB- HOUSE, the Secretary at War of Lord GREY'S Government, rushed out of the House with Lord DUNCANNON and Mr. CHARLES WOOD, and, like a huge bell- wether, made the flock " fain to follow him," in order to divide in favour of the Liverpool Election Committee, inthe teeth of Lord PALMER- STON and Mr. STANLEY, two Cabinet Ministers, who voted • against it. It is not to designate this Committee, which, because the Radicals were defeated in their attempts to fasten bribery " upon the candidates at the last election, is now to rip up every past election which has taken place at Liverpool either before or since the passing of the Reform Bill, that we notice this affair ; but to let the reader understand that when Mr. ELLICE stated, in an official and authoritative tone, that he would divide the House till daybreak upon motions of adjournment, and was reminded by an Honour- able Member ( we believe, Sir HENRY HARDINGE) that he was assuming somewhat of an authoritative tone consider- ing that two Cabinet Ministers had voted in opposition to his views, he emphatically declared that " it was a matter of perfect indifference to HIM whether his votes coincided with those of his colleagues or not.'''' What Lord PALMERRSTON may think of this, we cannot surmise, but surely Mr. STANLEY, with all the spirit for which everybody gives him credit, will not endure this. At all events, as a proof of the unanimity of the Government, it is quite sufficient to answer the question of the Times. THE CHANCELLOR'S favourite, the Local Courts Bill, stands for its third reading in the House of Lords on Tues- day. The powerful criticisms which it has already undergone in Committee, and the trimmings and croppings given it by Lord LYNDHURST and other Noble Lords, have all failed, as everybody seems to think, in making it endurable. That it is Lord BROUGHAM'S measure, is enough for the Times; and it is accordingly bepraised to the skies, and called the poor man's law. The Standard praises it, and the Chronicle praises it; while those who represent the la- bouring classes— the poor men— in contradistinction from the rich— denounce it as the most absurd and incongruous of ail the absurd attempts of even this very absurd Admi- nistration. LordBROUGHAM being no lawyer, and being conscious that he is no lawyer, and conscious also that Lord GREY gave liim the moststriking proof of his Lordship's opinion upon the point when he gave him a subordinate legal office, is con- stantly in a fume and fidget whenever he has anything to decide—{ Vide the case of DRAX V. GROSVENOR, and his Lordship's peculiar caution in all cases of appeal to confirm the judgments of the Courts below)— and just, now having been beaten in the House of Commons in his RegistryBill, he fumes and fidgets more than ever, lest a second defeat should crush his second effort at amending the administration of justice, and has even gone the length of losing his temper during some of the discussions in Committee, upon which occasions his Lordship had the misfortune to look exceed- ingly small indeed. The Bill has now received every attention— it has gone ; through a patient investigationr- no party feeling has been allowed to mingle in its consideration, and, as we have I ju? f. said, it stands toy 3 third reading op Tuesday. ......... . . _ „.,.. , As far as the prefessiop are couponed it is ridiculed and abused, j and every reflecting person can show except indeed by those who happen to be either at the tail or under the wing of his Lordship :— " That monster of a fowl, Something betwixt a Heidyger and an owl 1" while the people generally, are either wholly indifferent to the subject, or very much inclined to suspect it as very strongly smelling of job. They have not forgot the new Bankruptcy Courts, with all their patronage; they do not cease to remember that the time is past, by which theCHAN- CELLOR pledged himself to abolish the " useless sinecure" which his brother still holds— in short, they have their wits about them, and taking his Lordship's own speech upon the Bill as their guide, believe the whole race of Judges, Bar- risters, Attornies, and Solicitors, to be no better than they should be. The undoubted right of precedence they very properly give to the first lay subject of the realm, and, like MAWWORM in the Hypocrite, despatching them all to OLD NICK, bow lowly to his Lordship, as the preacher bows to LADY LAMBERT in the play, and entreat him " to go first." Inthe Monthly Magazine— a periodical work not unknown to his Lordship, nor unnoticed by him— for February, 1831, when that work was so powerfully written and so ably con ducted as soon after to excite his Lordship's special admira- tion and favour, there appeared the following observations and letter on this Local Law Bill, at which the CHANCEL- LOR had been at work when plain HENRY BROUGHAM, Esq. It may be neither unamusing nor unprofitable, and we give them, because, as the feeling against the Bill appears at present to be too strong to be withstood, it may be as well to read the opinion of a sound lawyer, whom BROUGHAM had consulted. It is, however, an odd circumstance, that the schedule of fees was the one which he offered to give up altogether, if Lord LYNDHURST would consent to debate the other schedules, which were not before the House, and which the Lords had never seen:— Extract from the Monthly Magazine of February, 1831. " The Local Law Bill, on which we made some observations in our last number, continues to excite a great interest among lawyers. The Lord CHANCELLOR'S zeal and experience are on the one side, and the alarms and experience of the practising members of the pro- fession are on the other. Nun nostrum est. But we give a remark- ably striking and manly letter from one of the most intelligent indi- viduals of that profession or of any other, which to us seems to set the question in a clear point of view, and which must go a great way to decide the controversy. The letter, it will be seen, was written a short time previously to the Lord CHANCELLOR'S appointment to office. To HENRY BROUGHAM, Esq. M. P. " DEAR SIR,— I have carefully read and re- read your Local Juris- diction Bill and Abstract, with a view to draw the account of fees by way of Schedule, las desired. But I have been unable to do so on a scale of any in the least degree adequate remuneration for any prac- titioner of liberal education, and desirous of holding a decent situa- tion and honest character in society. Under this aspect, I cannot but consider your measure as calcu- lated to become the greatest civil scourge ever inflicted on this coun- try by creating an indefinite and universal appetite for litigation, which will be industriously catered for with corresponding energy by an accession to the profession in increased numbers, of that class of practitioners designated pettifoggers, whom to discountenance and extinguish, has been a primary object with all the leading Solicitors of the present day. " It appears to me utterly inconsistent with the avowed purposes of the Common Law Commission, the repeal of the Law Taxes, the appointment of additional Judges, the intended laying open of the Court of Exchequer, and the facilities afforded to practice in the superior Courts, thus at once to withdraw from them two- thirds at least of their ordinary business, subjecting it to a new and experimen- taltribunal, and superseding much of the labour engaged in the elabo- rate machinery of Westminster Hal], with no compensating reduc- tion in the expence of working it. " Although personally, after a drudgery of nearly thirty years, much withdrawn from active practice,' and meditating at no distant day entire secession from it, I feel too much sense of gratitude, and I hope a laudable esprit du corps in favour of an employment which has afforded me the means of competence and independence, to be altogether insensible to the degradation to which the profession of an Attorney will be reduced by the operation of your proposed new Bill, which I repeat, will necessarily bring into action a large class of low practitioners, who, having no fair means of adequate remune- ration, must and will resort to trick, if not to fraud, to supply the deficiency of profit, no commensurate allowance for which in keep- ing with the general purview of the Bill, will afford a return for the education, skill, and attention the conduct of the business of the Local Courts will require. " While on this subject, it is with great regret I would allude to the tenour of your 6peech, as reported in the Times, on the occasion of your giving notice of your plan ; you in it assumed a tone of unmeasured contempt for the Attorneys, imputing to them in the aggregate, and without exception, gross ignorance, and the most selfish motives, while you at the same time, in equally unmeasured terms, lauded the bar as actuated by the highest, noblest, and most liberal principles, with a possible exception of one in a hundred as not quite perfect. " Both position?, to your knowledge and mine, are equally un- founded; for while as regards the one I can name Mr. FRERE, Mr. FRESHFIELD, and Mr. SWAIN, with scores of others possessing equal claim to confidence and respect, and a fair promise of succes- sion to them from a large body of liberally educated and intelligent articled clerks, now deriving improved instruction from the law lectures at the University of London, I could, in contravention of your other position, name some scores of Barristers influenced by the most sordid motives, and seeking and promoting multiplication of fees, with the most heartless rapacity. " If I could for a moment think it possible that the Local Jurisdic- tion Bill could pass into a law, in any thing like its present shape, I shonld observe on the preposterous amount of salary to the Judge of 20001. per annum, thus constituting a valuable object of ministerial patronage and borough influence, like a Welsh Judgeship, rather than having the direct view of getting some useful plodding man for the situation, as in the Couty Palatine Court at Preston, where a very learned Gentleman, for 4001. per annum, does as much and as well as can be expected from any County Judge. " The total absence of qualification for the office of Registrar is fraught with liability to abuse; some son or nephew of the Judge will hold it in sinecure; and tl « e duties will be performed by the Clerk, who will make it pay better than is in the contemplation of the Act. " The Registrar, to give knowledge, experience, and efficiency in the conduct of the business, ought to be an Attorney of at least five years' certificated standing, and strictly debarred from practising directly or indirectly. " The summary jurisdiction of the Judge over the Attorneys ex- ceeds that of the superior jurisdiction ; and the power of mulcting them is an arbitrary novelty, fraught with the most mischievous consequences of subjection and oppression, and only of a piece with the whole apparent scheme for degrading to one uniform standard of low cunning and subserviency the great bulk of country Practi- tioners.— I remain, dear Sir, yours, & c. 23d June, 1830. The foregoing letter obviously applies to the first edition of the Bill in its original crude and imperfect state, it has since been ren- dered more intelligible by persons having some knowledge of the subject, without however at all abating the essential evils it involves, of IMMENSE AND INDEFINITE EXPENCE, ABUSE BV PATRONAGE, AND DE- GRADING THE STANDARD OF ENGLISH LAW AND LAWYERS." Here we have a legal opinion upon a legal measure, and that the measure, which, after having undergone a protracted and dispassionate consideration, is to be rejected or adopted pn Tuesday. As the Morning Post of Thursday says— " But let not Noble Lords imagine that this is a mere professional matter, of which the effects will be partially pernicious ; the practice and principles of the whole commoi) ) gw are at stake, as every Judge — And for what ia the sacrifice to be made ? For the benefit of the CHANCELLOR, tor hitemolumentr for the increase of his patronage; and, if suffered to pass, it will convince the world either that the House are under the absolute do- minion of LORD BROUGHAM, or that they are so regardless of the in- terests of the country on a matter of most vital importance that they allow it to be hurried through without attention and without exami- nation ; and either conclusion will undoubtedly go far to make the wisest and the best in the country tremble at the precedent they will thus establish against themselves to prove their apathy and inutility." PEOPLE are fond of news— the more surprising the better* We will astonish our readers— up to twelve o'clock last night Lord ALTHORP continued Chancellor of the Exche- quer. The defeat in the Lords might have been nothing— the annihilation of the Malt Tax nothing— the loss of the Registry Bill nothing— the entire emasculation and mac- adamization of the Irish Church Bill nothing— the Factory, triumph nothing; but what will be thought of a CHANCEL- LOR OP THE EXCHEQUER remaining in office after two such occurrences as those of Monday and Wednesday? It is impossible for satire or ridicule to go so far towards burlesquing and upsetting such a Minister, as the plain facts— the simple words— the thing as it occurred— and the language that was used upon the occasion. Of course the reader has seen the report of the debate— yet, n'mporte, he must take the trouble to read a short extract again— Again !' — aye, again and again, as every body in England should, in order that the nation may know how we are governed,,. The following is copied verbatim from the newspaper:— The House then went into a Committee of the whole House upon the Bank Charter. Lord ALTHOBP said, that in rising to move the second Resolution upon the Bank Charter, he intended to propose an alteration, which to his mind did not appear to be of any great importance, but still an- alteration which he was given to understand would meet with the sa- tisfaction of many persons interested in the discussion of this great question. He begged leave to premise that for the. present, and that in order to avoid any unnecessary panic throughout the country. He proposed, therefore, to alter the reading of this Resolution, ex- cluding payment in the country for all sums " above five pounds ;"* so that a five- pound note being presented for payment in the country would entitle the party presenting it to five sovereigns. ( Hear, hear.)— It was not such sums that occasioned a run. Sir R. PEEL— If I rightly understand the Noble Lord, he means that for every five- pound note a man presenting it shall receive five sovereigns. Of course, then, if he takes one hundred five- pound' notes he will receive gold for them all. Lord ALTHORP— No, no. Sir R. PEEL— If he takes them separately, then ? Lord ALTHORP— Why no, not in the same day, for that would occa- sion a serious run upon the Bank. If the effect of the alteration" would be to destroy the effect of the Resolution I shall not persevere in it. Sir R. PEEL— I am sorry if I have shaken the Noble Lord's confi- dence in his own proposition, which I most certainly cannot think he has well considered. Nothing could be so absurd as that a man. presenting a five- pound note should be able to get five sovereigns, but upon presenting two five- pound notes should not be able to get ten sovereigns.— f" Hear, hear," and laughter.) Can it be imagined that the finance minister of England,, the CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, having on his hands the charge of making the most important changes in the- most important transactions of the country, could possibly produce such a proposition as this, as part of the great scheme?— but this, even this, is not all. On Wednesday night he exceeds himself, even taking Monday into the calculation. On Wednesday, Mr. HERRIES said that before the House went into Committee he was desirous of asking the Noble Lord whether there was any truth in the report which had got into circulation, both in and out of the House, that it was his intention to postpone, at least beyond the present Session, that part of the Bank Charter Acts which related to country banking, or rather the formation and regu- lation of joint- stock tanking companies? Lord ALTHORP, in reply, said that he bad intended as soon as they had formed themselves into Committee to make a statement that would in fact have resolved the question put to him by the Right Hon. Gentleman. The resolution which he had proposed respecting- joint- stock banking companies in the country certainly formed apart of the measure as it originally stood, and to that resolution he was willing to admit he had attached very great importance. He knew that strong objections had been urged against that part of the plan which would enable joint- stock banks, not being banks of issue, but of deposit, to be established on a limited liability in every part of the country. It was, however, desirable that a sound and wholesome system of banking should be formed throughout the country; but he was at the same time aware that any measure having this object in view would be sure to meet with the strenuous opposition of a power- ful body of men; nor had his anticipations in this respect been at all disappointed, for the hostility to which he alluded had been very clearly evinced.—(" Hear" and laughter.)— From every information he could collect upon the subject he found that the body to whom he had referred were more powerful than even he had imagined them to be, and the probability therefore was that under such circumstan • ces, even were he to introduce it, he should not be able to carry it. at all events during the present Session, if at all.— (" Hear" and laughter.) — With this view he did feel — he might say His Majesty's Government felt — that it would not be desirable to press this portion of the measure during the present Session. —( Hear, hear, hear.) It was therefore his intention to postpone that part of the plan which related to country banking, ex- cepting only so much of it as required country bankers to compound for their stamp duties. The delay, however, would have one great advantage to recommend it, and that was that it would place the House in the situation next Session of knowing with accuracy what the amount of the issues ol country banks really was^ He should, he confessed, be sorry if, because he made this an- nouncement, it was supposed he had withdrawn this part of the measure from a conviction, in consequence of the arguments which had been adduced against it, that he was wrong. (" Hear, hear,'" and a laugh.) He certainly had not been up to that hour satisfied that he was not right, but he wished to place the matter upon the real and true ground, rather than resort to anything like subterfuge, and therefore the fact was, that he postponed it because he believed he- should not be able to carry it. (" Hear, hear," and loud laughter.) He meant, of course, during the present Session. He, therefore, in answer to the Right Hon. Gentlemhn who had put the question,, begged to say that he did not mean to press that part of the Bill, a& he had stated which related to country banking. This is capital. So! the Minister brings forward a most- important proposition, and one which he tells us he believes is wise and proper; and because he cannot carry it, he with- draws it— exactly as they withdrew the only important clause of the Irish Church Bill. Is this a Government?' Time was, that when Ministers could not carry their points,, they resigned. Every one of these withdrawals virtually puts the Government in a minority— whether he is beaten or runs away makes no difference^ the end. But only mark the logic in which his Lordship subsequently indulges in his humiliating petition to the House to sanction the bargain which has been made with the Bank :— Mr. M. ATTWOOD said he was satisfied that if the Government had acted with more dexterity, he would rather have said with more dis- crimination and discretion, they might have made a much better bargain with the Bank. The truth appeared to be that the Noble. Lord ( Althorp) was over- reached—( Hearx hear.)— and that he had: thus been induced to make so bad a bargain with the Bank. If the Noble Lord would consent to delay the consideration of this question he might be able to retrieve his error and confer benefit upon the country. In short he ( Mr. M. A.) would say that the House would, neglect its duty if tbey did not call for inquiry into this subject.— (•' Hear, and " Question.") Lord A{, THORP said he was quite sure that nothing of a personal or unpleasant feeling was entertained by the Hon. Member either against his Right Hon, Friend or himself, The bargain made by the. August 213. JOHN b u l l : 251 Government with the Bank might be good, or, as was alleged, it, might be bad ; but, even supposing it, [ or the sake of argument, to be bad, it was the best under all the circumstances, which he had been enabled to make. It was not made without deliberation, nor without an honest endeavour on his part to drive as hard, and he • would at the same time add as just and equitable, a bargain as he could; and the truth of this statement would be amply verified by looking at the dates of correspondence with the Bank, and the variation in their terms which thereupon ensued. He had proposed terms to the Bank which in the month of April were rejected. His propositions were then modified, the Bank acceded to them, and he thought their offers were so fair and so ju6t to the public that he felt it his duty to accept them. He had stood out as long as he could for his own terms, although in doing so he felt almost half convinced that the Bank never would assent to them. Indeed he would go the length of saying upon this subject that the House was bound to ratify the bargain which had been made with the Bank, taking all the circumstances of the case into consideration, and that it was not a matter which could be properly referred to a Select Committee. He would only further say, " Adopt the bargain, however much you may think proper to censure the man who made it." Upon earth can there be anything more ludicrous— more nonsensical than this ? If the country adopts the bargain, which it pronounces bad, what the deuce does their censure of the man who made it, signify? If they even went the length of hanging the CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, which Heaven forbid, what good would it do ? The bar- gain would remain, with all its evils and inconveniences ; and, moreover, if the bargain were not confessedly a bad one, there would be no ground for censure. It seems quite out of the nature of things that such a Ministry— at all events, as regards the CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, can go on— contempt and ridicule are the only tributes which the people can pay to the paltry ab- surdities, the infantine innocence, and the deplorable igno- rance of all the proceedings connected with the Bank Charter ; indeed, we suspect that the bubble is about to burst, and that Lord ALTHORP will return to his stalls and his styes, and again luxuriate in the cheapening of pigs and tickling the ribs of fat oxen. Not only do we suspect this consummation to be near at hand from the miserable appearance of official matters, but because the Times has taken a turn highly indicative of the downfal of the Re- formers. The Times, of Friday, alluding to the melancholy exhibitions which we have just noticed, says— " The Conservatives, some months ago, expressed an alarm— real or affected we shall not stop to inquire— that the Reform Bill had filled the House of Commons with theoretic innovators— with foes to existing establishments— with hazardous experimenters in liberal legislation— with bidders for mob popularity— with the pledged de- legates of the national volition, instead of the deliberative organs of the national judgment— and, in short, with persons who would be more inclined to pull down than to repair, to change than to modify or impiove, our institutions: but could any House of Commons, even of the rotten borough dynasty, have agreed to a more extrava- gant bargain with the West India body and the Bank Directors, granting the former 20,000,0001. of an indemnity, when 15,000,0001. was too much, and receiving Irom the latter 120,0001., when 250,0001. would have been too little ? " Under no Parliament which we remember, since the last renewal of the Bank Charter, would such an arrangement as that sanctioned by the Committee on Wednesday night have been listened to for a moment. No Ministry would have ventured to propose it to an unreformed House of Commons, though it had included the whole 24 Directors among its Members. If Manchester, Leeds, and Bir- mingham, had been silent, as having then no voice in St. Stephen's, Corfe Castle and Gatton ( unless bought with Bank money) would have spoken out in the language of indignant protest." So much for the House of Commons— now for the Minister:— " In order, without further repetition, to show, for the last time, that we are not singular or unreasonable in requiring better terms for the public from the Bank, we shall just recur to the opinion of a great authority on the subject—- an authority to which Lord ALTHORP might be expected to pay particular deference; that eminent • financier told the Bank Directors in April last, after, no doubt, mature deliberation, and after consulting with the most intelligent persons of his acquaintance, that if a half of their capital which is lent to Government were paid up, and the Bank were to divide only on such a reduced amount, they could by the monopoly of the currency, afford to manage the dividends for nothing, and, after paying ten per cent, on their stock, divide with the public their remaining profits. The following is the " equitable adjustment" suggested by this distinguished diplomatist of the Treasury:— " ' The result of this will be, the Government will pay the Bank 7,500,0001.. and the Bank will engage to continue the management of the public debt without receiving from the State any annual pay- ment for the performance of this duty. " ' It is further proposed, that after the proprietors of Bank Stock shall have received a dividend of 10 per cent, upon their nominal capital, which will then amount to 7,000,0001., at the end of each year, whatever accumulation shall have taken place in their " rest" during the preceding year shall be divided into two equal portions, one of which shall be added to the capital of the Bank, and be at the disposal of the proprietors, and the other half shall be deducted from the payments made to the Bank for interest or other charges which they may have against the public.' To every item of this scheme we heartily subscribe. The adoption of such propositions would have been gratifying to the country, and perseverance in supporting them would have been creditable to the Ministry. Lord . ALTHORP himself must have applauded the dexterous patriotism of the original negotiator, and would have heard no contrast to his disadvantage between the CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER in April last [ demanding from the Bank 248,0001., with a hair of its contingent profits, and the CHANCEL- LOR of the EXCHEQUER in July surrendering the greatest monopoly in the world for the paltry saving of 120,0001., without any stipulation for sharing in its profits at all I" These opinions, expressed where we find them, convince us either that Lord ALTHORP is BROUGHAM- doomed to be expelled from the Cabinet, or that the whole fabric js tottering, and about to fall. The defeat of the Local Courts Bill will probably be made the pretext for retreat, and if they go in time the country may yet be saved from the effects of their yet unfinished bargains. MR. GROTE presented a petition to the House of Com- mons one day last week, purporting to be from the mer- chants interested in the safety of the wines at Villa Nova. How many of the individuals in question either signed or saw this petition we do not pretend to say, but Lord PAL- MERSTON was in his place ready to speak to it, that being the purpose for which it was gotten up. It appears that Lord PALMERSTON has some idea of • using force to remove the wines, if the Government of our ally, the King of PORTUGAL, does not exactly meet his Lordship's wishes. We perceive also that expeditions, composed of foreigners of various nations, are in prepara- tion in the ports of France to further this great object, and others, connected with the overthrow of Don MIGUEL. We would caution Lord PALMERSTON not to meddle too much in this system of intervention. We would ask him, putting the question of claim aside, whether the Portuguese have not just as much right to have Don MIGUEL for " their King, as Belgium has to select Prince LEOPOLD, Greece to receive Prince OTHO, or France to nominate CHARLES PHILIPPE ? We would also ask his Lordship, as far as Mr. GROTE'S petition is concerned, whether he ever received or heard of petitions from English and Dufph merchants when his Lordship was pleased to lay his fenciful embargo on Dutch ships and Dutch property ? We can tell Lord PAL- MERSTON that he had better banish from his recollection his fine speeches about Terceira, get rid of his personal pique against Don MIGUEL for laughing at him, and confine himself to the principle of neutrality which the Government still so impudently profess. Impeachments are rare events, but they are not impossibilities. A VERT numerous Meeting of the West Tndia Body was held on Wednesday at the Thatched House Tavern— the Earl of HAREWOOD in the Chair— the chief object of which was to consider the expediency of protesting against the Bill which Mr. STANLEY is to bring into the House of Com- mons, as legislating for the Colonies without the sanction or consent, or co- operation of the different Colonial Assemblies, in whom the right of legislating is unquestionably vested. We have already quoted the highest opinions and the best authorities upon this point, and there can he no doubt that it becomes the imperative duty of the Colonial agents here to protest in limine against the innovation which, in fact, is to violate every charter and annihilate every right which the Colonies possess. Mr. BURGE most ably and eloquently defended the principle of remonstrance and protest in the present stage of the proceeding ( copies of the proposed Bill having been for- warded exclusively to the Colonial agents), which was op- posed by several gentlemen, not placed as the agents offi- cially are, in the situation of guardians of the rights of their constituents, on the ground that although the agents had been furnished with a draft of the Bill, they had not, and that therefore they were not competent to support any reso- lutions founded upon a proceeding of which they had no official knowledge. Several gentlemen were of opinion that having presented a memorial to Mr. STANLEY upon the particular points under discussion, the resolutions which Mr. BURGE pro- posed would be superfluous, and Lord HAREWOOD coin- ciding in this view of the case, Mr. BURGE withdrew them ; and it was agreed that the Earl of HAREWOOD should apply to Mr. STANLEY to furnish a draft of the proposed Bill to abolish Negro Slavery in the Colonies, and that a Committee should be appointed to receive the same from the Earl of HAREWOOD, and to report upon it to the Meeting on Friday. The Meeeting, at about half after six, adjourned to Friday at two o'clock, at Willis's Rooms, instead of at the Thatched House Tavern. On Friday the Earl of HAREWOOD took the chair at Willis's Rooms, and stated to the Meeting that in conse- quence of what passed at the last Meeting he advertised Mr. STANLEY of the wish of the Meeting to be furnished with a copy of the Bill; and that he himself called at the Colonial Office yesterday, and saw Mr. LEPEVBE, W1IO com- municated to his Lordship that Mr. STANLEY objected to furnish the West India body with a copy of the Bill previous to its being laid before Parliament. It was not for him, his Lordship said, to call for the reasons why such a course was adopted; but he observed to Mr, LEFEVRE that he supposed the reason was, that the Bill was still liable to alterations ; and that Gentleman replied, " Yes, that is one of the rea- sons." But on Thursday evening his Lordship received the following letter from Mr. STANLEY:— Downing- street, July 3, 1833. MY LORD— I have the honour to acknowledge this day the receipt of your Lordship's letter of yesterday's date, containing a Resolution passed by the Westlndia Proprietors requesting to be furnished with a copy of the draft of the Bill for the abolition of Slavery. It is with much regret that I feel myself compelled to decline complying with any request coming forward from such a respectable body, and transmitted through yonr Lordship; but I cannot but hope that your Lordship and the Meeting will be aware of the extreme incon- venience that might result from the practice of submitting to a public discussion of a numerous body of persons interested the details of a Bill not yet before the Legislature. With regard to the present measure I have felt it my duty to communicate the intentions of Government in strict confidence to the Agents of the different West India Colonies, and to them alone, and to invite their remarks upon the provisions of the Bill with reference to the effects which they may have upon the interests of their constituents; and your Lordship, on the part of the West India body, having been made acquainted with the principle upon which we purpose to legislate, it does appear to me that a further publicity given to the details of the Bill before it is brought before the Legislature might be productive of much incon- venience, and I trust your Lordship and the Meeting will be dis- posed to admit the validity of this objection, in which indeed I un- derstood your Lordship to concur when I had the honour of seeing you at this Office.— I have the honour, & c. To the Earl of Harewood. E. G. STANLEY. Lord HAREWOOD, after denying that he had ever con- curred with Mr. STANLEY on the subject, suggested the impolicy of discussing the merits of a Bill that proposed enactments, the nature of which they were not permitted to know ; and put the Meeting on its guard against making needless objections, from a conviction that the Government would gladly lay hold of any plea to render their position more difficult. Mr. BURGE coincided entirely in the opinion of the Noble Lord as to the absurdity of Mr. STANLEY'S allowing the agents to see the bill without permitting them to consult the proprietary. He maintained that, let the conditions of the Bill be what they might, the fact that the Government here are about to legislate for the Colonies, independently of the Colonial Legislatures, was quite sufficient ground for the resistance which he felt it his duty to make to the Bill in its outset. Mr. BURGE concluded a most able speech by moving— " That this meeting had received with astonishment and dismay the refusal of Mr. Secretary STANLEY to comply with their applica- tion ; and that they consider this refusal as contrary to the principles of justice, and as manifesting indifference to the safety of the Colo- nies. They cannot be ignorant that an opposite course has hitherto been pursued in all cases where the welfare of individuals or com- munities has been at stake." The debate upon this Resolution turned rather upon the time of passing it than the matter it contained; and, upon a division, it appeared that 61 persons voted for an adjourn- ment, while 55 voted for the resolution: it being thus de- cided, by a majority of six, that the time for offering resist- ance to the principle of the Bill is when the Bill shall be in the House of Commons. The Meeting will have one effect upon the proprietors and planters in the Colonies: it will shew them, that neither their friends nor their agents have been unmindful of their interests; and it will also shew the true character of the present Government, which can have no good motive for withholding the communication of its plans from a vast body of men so deeply interested in the proceeding; but which, on the contrary, if it meant even fairly by the Colonies, would gladly submit a practical experiment of such magni- tude and importance as that which, if the House of Commons really suffer them, they are about to try to the most exten- sive and liberal discussion. YESTERDAY, somebody in James^ street, Buckingham- gate, opened a Bazaar for the relief of the Poles, and in( order to distinguish the house, stuck a long Pole out of the" window. This is all as it should be. A MOST erroneous notion appears to have obtained, that if a change of Ministry were to take place, a dissolution of Parliament would be a necessary consequence. Why should it be so ? The present House of Commons is as mucb Tory as it is Whig— it is essentially Radical, and the Radi- cals support Lord GREY'S Government, not because it is a Whig Government, but because it is the Government from which they had been taught to expect great things, and from- which, although day after day their disappointment increases, they do not like to withdraw their support, because it is the KING'S Government, and " The KING'S name is a tower of strength." But, if the KING choose to change his Government, or if, in other words, the present Government find themselves unable to carry on the public business, which it is pretty clear they do— or are defeated again in divisions, which it is pretty clear they will be, the present House of Com mons, in spite of the bad character given it by the Times newspaper, is just as likely to support a new Government- which the KING might form, as this which appears to be on the eve of dissolution. It would be a wise, prudent, and convenient measure to continue the present House of Commons as it is. Any Go- vernment which should be formed, would, we are pretty well convinced, meet with its support; for no Government could exist and do so little for the good of the PEOPLE as that which is just flickering in the socket. There is no denying the fact, that the feeling of the great populous and manu- facturing towns is totally changed ; the callous indifference of Ministers, not to call it cruel partiality, on the Factory question, has wholly estranged that part of the population from them ; the mercantile people laugh at them ; the Po- litical Unions revile them with boundless malignity; the respectable portion of society abhor them ; and their sup-- porters are ashamed of them. Glad, indeed, would be avast majority of Members of Parliament to be released from their trammels, and again permitted to exercise their judgments freely ; and wise would they be, if they doubted what course to pursue, if they referred to the wishes and opinions of their constituents. Let this be done, and let these Gentlemen act upon the altered views of the electors, and at all events try a new Government before they oppose it, and we would hazard a round sum, by way of bet, that no dissolution would be necessary to insure the support of the House of- Commons. EVERYTHING seems infected by the destructive spirit which is abroad. One of the Chancery advertisements in the newspapers announces a cause, CHURCH V. KING. THE harvest is of vast importance to this nation always — how much more so now, when the first Reforming Minis- try, besides all its other bunglings and underminings, foreign and domestic, is, in one Session— the first Session of the first Reformed House of Commons— adding, or has pro- posed to add, about forty millions to the debt of England. Such, ye deluded advocates— such, ye deluded victims of " The Bill,'''' is the " RETRENCHMENT" of " REFORM !" The present prospect of the harvest is, perhaps, the most various that was ever seen. Upon all the strong lands, that are well farmed, the crops are extremely promising every where. Much of the corn upon the light soils is thin, and in some cases very weakly and poor; but upon such of these lands even, as have been well managed, the recent genial rains have greatly improved the crops, and, should similar showers recur occasionally, the produce from these soils ( generally) will not be muck less than usual ; and this deficiency the cultivators will be better able to bear, because, for the last three years, the light lands have produced two- fold, three- fold, and in some places four- fold, more than was ever taken into the calculation of the rent in their leases. Judging from the appearance of the crops throughout the kingdom, and confident in the mercy of an all- bountiful Providence— whose goodness to this highly- favoured country has ever been most great— there is every reason to hope for an average crop from the aggregate produce of this happy land— happy still, in spite of" Reform," though less happy in consequence of " Reform ;" as, from the universal press of the empire, metropolitan and provincial, it is now quite evident, that almost all persons, and all classes, are beginning to perceive ARE HEGINNING TO FEEL. THE affair of the Stamp Office will of course be sifted— we are told again that there is to be an additional Commis- sioner in what is called the new Constitution of the Board. We are also told that Mr. WOOD, for whom the whole ar- rangement is making, has taken advantage of our hint about Treasury minutes, and refuses to pay the fees usual upon such promotions. The Treasury have agreed to pay for him. Somebody will, of course, move for returns to es- tablish all these facts. THE neighbourhood of Charing- cross was enlivened to a degree of excitement, on Tuesday, by the opening of the New Hungerford Market. The day was fine; and there were cannon fired, and flags flying— and a procession, and a speech, and a band, and a ball, and a balloon. So many attractions could not fail; and, accordingly, crowds were early in the morning pouring to the scene of action, where, for the trifling consideration of five shillings, all the show inside and out was to be seen. It is always agreeable when the gaiety of a spectacle is sanctioned by some useful object. This was the case on Tuesday : the establishment, orrather revival of the market, with all its facilities of water- carriage, cannot fail to be of great advantage to the populous neighbourhood by which it is surrounded; and if— we hear it is not yet permitted— ( he sale boats of fish were to come up direct to its wharfs, without the ceremony of touching at Billingsgate, the people of the west end of the town might get their turbot and salmon at a somewhat more reasonable rate than at present- According to the programme, the procession was mar- shalled, and marched up one side of the market, and down the other side of the market; and passed along one row of columns, and repassed by another row of columns ; entering by one tavern, and making its egress by another ; and at every pause they made, cannon fired— at every step they took, cannon fired— when the flags were hoisted, the cannon fired— and when the parish beadle blew his nose, the cahnon fired j 21.4 JOHN b u l l : July 7.' and then the Chairman made a speech descriptive of the benefits hereafter derivable from the undertaking; and then Mr. GRAHAM, and two gentlemen of the name of HAN COCK, ascended in a balloon. Nothing could be tuorebeau tiful than the ascent— nothing clearer than the atmosphere and the effect produced by the rising of the vast machine could only be equalled by that produced upon the amateur aeronauts by the vast expanse studded with human heads which met their eyes. The party, according to their own account, were most ad- mirably calculated to make the trip pleasant. One Mr. HAN- COCK delighted himself by looking at the earth, and picking out buildings, and roads, and greens, and squares, while the other Mr. HANCOCK amused himself by watching the clouds, while Mr. GRAHAM, observing a happy mean, occupied himself in " scientific pursuits." Thus every man after his own fashion was pleased ; not but that the scientific pursuits of the learned master of the balloon must, we should think, have been somewhat restricted for want of space. Three men packed in a basket, and hung by a string to the bottom of a bag of smoke, have not too much room, and the bodkin least of all. However, they proceeded V. V. at an easy swing over the Isle of Dogs ( or more properly speaking now, the Isle of Docks), at which period the Land- seer of the party asserts, with a confidence which no man can doubt, that he distinctly saw Greenwich Hospital; and thus were they wafted until Mr. GRAHAM, having an eye to the comestibles of the Hungerford sapper, set down his fare in a field near Ockendon, six miles beyond Romford, where, having as usual met with all sorts of kindness and hospitality, they proceeded to pack the balloon on the top of a chaise, with • themselves in the inside, and so reached the starting- post about midnight, when the company received them with shouts of applause, and an enthusiasm fully deserved by the adventurous heroes. The gaieties were undamped by a cross look or an angry Word, and the amateurs of the evening had only departed just in time to make way for the mercantile marketers, who opened for business the moment the pleasure had ended. THERE has been a numerous and splendid Meeting, during the last week, at Cambridge, of the " British Asso- ciation for the advancement of Science," at which were con- gregated all the learned and scientific men of the age. In tile Literary Gazette of yesterday there is a copious detail of all the proceedings of this higllly- gifted congregation. During the sittings of the illustrious body, the degree of Doctor of Civil Law was conferred by the University on Admiral DUNDAS. For what particular service this honour was administered we know not; nor have we room to put upon record all the great things that were achieved in the course of the week. There was a magnificent dinner given to upwards of five hundred persons, in Trinity Hall. The wines were of the first quality, and the vocal department extremely well arranged. MALIBRAN was in high voice at the concerts, which were admirably selected. There was a ball, which was crowded to excess : the newest gallopades, and the ma- zurka, were introduced with great effect; and a display of fireworks, with which this most interesting assembly broke up, was pronounced to be splendid in the extreme. PRO AND CON. The Times says:— ~ " In the House of Lords last night, the report of the Lord CHAN- CELLOR'S Local Courts Bill was agreed to, and without alteration or objection. We might have represented this as a subject whereon to congratulate the country, had it not been for a rumour, sedulously put about, though surely almost incredible, that the party adverse to the bill— that is to say, the Peers lately entered under the banners of Lord LYNDHURST— have not been disbanded, but are merely held in reserve, and that a fatal blow will be struck at that excellent and popular measure on occasion of the third reading next Tuesday.— The bill is the poor man's bill; as such it ought to be deemed more peculiarly under their Lordship's protection. But the overthrow of the bill will be equivalent to the denial of justice to the poor. We are confident that Noble Lords are incapable of such an act; they are incapable of deliberate injustice. We shall, however, venture upon another admonition before the day of trial." COBBETT. in his Register, says :— "•' It is the most damned thing for oppressing the poor man ' that ever found its way from the heart even of a Scotch feeloso- pher. If the Lords dojnot throw out this Bill before they have done with it they will show themselves to be that which I will not describe."—( Reg. June 22.) THE following letter is recommended to the attention of Lord PALMERSTON, with the view less of communicating to his Lordship the occurrence of a calamity, the cure of which is " not in his department," than to shew him the comparative influence of parties in that place. As His MAJESTY'S Ministers admit that they obtain all their foreign intelligence through the newspapers, we think his Lordship will be obliged to us :— Extract of a letter oi the 19th ult. from Ancona:—" A merchant vessel which has justarrrived here in nine days, from Corfu, brings letters, with the following particulars of a horrid catastrophe, which took place in the town of Arta, in Epirus, on the 25th, 26th, and 27th of May last. Several thousand armed mountaineers sud- denly invaded the town in the night of the 25th of May, and imme- diately began slaughtering the inhabitants, setting their houses on fire or plundering them. Those inhabitants who wished to save their lives were forced to pay large sums of money ; such as could not satisfy these exactions were unmercifully massacred in their own houses. The women were treated with the most brutal barbarity, and the children massacred in cold blood. Several rich inhabitants were conveyed out of the town as hostages, in order to obtain from their families the money required of them. Some of these were murdered after the money had been paid down. Many houses have been destroyed by the flames. The Consuls of Russia and England were not respected, but forced to pay large sums to save their lives. The Russian Consul paid about 6.5000fr. The French Consul alone was respected, and several indi- viduals of different nations saved their lives by taking refuge in his bouse. The Turkish authorities and the small Turkish garrison fled to the forts. This frightful massacre lasted three days, after which the infernal band, laden with bootv. returned to the mountains. The whole extent of the damage caused has not yet been ascertained. The band is said to consist of Turkish and Greek soldiers, who formed part of the irregular troops of Greece. The number of persons killed and wounded is considerable. Every house is more or less damaged. The next steam- packet will bring a more circumstantial account of this horrid event. The inhabitants of Janina and other towns of Epirus are in the greatest alarm, and dread a similar catastrophe." For a liberal Government it must be gratifying to know that these murderers, plunderers, and ravishers were GREEKS. The next communication we have to make is for the be- nefit of his Grace CHARLES Duke of RICHMOND, Militia Aid- du- Camp to the KING, and Postmaster- General :— " A. case having been sent to Mr. JOSEPH ADDISON, of the Temple, | for his opinion respecting the right assumed by the Post olfice de- partment to open solicitors' parcels— Mr. A. has replied— "' lam of opinion that the Postmaster- General has no general authority to detain parcels passing through the Post- office, or going by carriers. * * * Upon the whole I recommend solicitors not to be deterred from inclosing letters in their parcels, giving the usual instructions relative to their contents, and with the usual mention of other matters, if necessary. And further, if such par- cels should be detained at the Post- office, I should not hesitate to advise an action of trover to be brought against the Postmaster- General and his Deputy, who may be more immediately concerned in the detention.'" The matter will shortly be brought before both Houses of Parliament, some of the cases being of a most flagrant de- scription. We regret that the infrequency of our publication has rendered the following correspondence somewhat stale ; that it can ever be flat, we doubt— unprofiable it never can be. It blends more of the warlike with the literary than such letters generally exhibit; let it, however, speak for itself and the cause which it so brightly illustrates :— SIR JOHN M. DOYLE TO VICE ADMIRAL SARTORIUS. The Aide- de- Camp of His Imperial Majesty the Duke of BRAGANZA, Regent of Portugal, Major- General Sir JOHN MILLEY DOYLE, pre- sents his compliments to his Excellency Vice- Admiral SARTORIUS ; and having only this moment learned that the Vice- Admiral does not mean to honour with his presence the city of Oporto, intending forthwith to proceed to France, Sir J. M. DOYLE has only this mode left of paying his respects to the Vice- Admiral. From the excited state in which Admiral SARTORJUS was during Sir JOHN'S sojourn at Vigo, perhaps his Excellency may not recollect the circumstances that passed on that occasion; indeed, from the well- known politeness and gentlemanly habits of Admiral SARTORIES, it is impossible he could recollect the mode, manner, and form, in which he treated Sir JOHN DOYLE on his reception during his sojourn as a close prisoner by his Excellency's illegal orders at Vigo. Sir J. M. DOYLE feels confident that the moment the Vice- Admiral is reminded of that circustanee, his own gentlemanly feelings will dictate to his Excellency the absolute necessity of offering of his own accord those palliations to the wounded feelings of Sir JOHN, ( and which one gentleman ia entitled to, and always sure of, from another), for the personal insults and degrading treatment Sir JOHN M. DOYLE received in his private as well as public capacity, from Vice- Admiral SARTORIUS on that occasion. Sir J. M. DOYLE will be happy to hear of the perfect re- establishment of the health of Vice- Adm. SARTORTUS, and will bee^ ually iiappyto assure his Excellency of his respect and consideration^ Oporto. June 13. To Vice- Admiral Sartorius. (. JNSWER.) June 16. 1S33. Vice- Admiral SARTORIOUS informs Sir J. M. DOYLE that his reception of Sir JOHN at Vigo, when sent in execution of the com- mission, which the Vice- Admiral has always felt as unjust, illegal, and impolitic, was such as he most certainly ought to have calculated upon,— the arrester became the arrested. The Vice- Admiral leaves to the private feelings of Sir JOHN to decide whether it was delicate to charge himself gratuitously ( for most certainly he could not be compelled to it> with so ungraeious an affair, bearing on the liberty and honour of that same Captain SARTORIOUS to whose exertions and visits in prison, seconded by the aid of the Consul- General, was mainly owing the liberation from the imprisonment au secret, and ultimate entire liberty, of Sir JOHN at. Lisbon. If, however, any of the brother officers of the Vice- Admiral are of opinion that the con- duct was not entirely of a public nature, or that his language or man- ner was not such as was becoming a gentleman in the execution of a disagreeable public duty, the Vice- Admiral will be happy to meet Sir JOHN at any time or place he may appoint, upon their meeting abroad or at home. SIR JOHN'S REPLY. Imperial Palace, Oporto. 10 a. m. June 17. Sir— Having addressed you a note, dated the 13th instant, to which I have this moment been honoured with a reply, it now- becomes an imperative but painful duty on my part to request your Excellency will do me the favour io conceive that ynu have been horsewhipped by Sir J. M. DOYLE, K. C. B". and K. T. S., who laments that your unaccountable and unwarrantable conduct should oblige him to adopt this as the only step your intended flinht from the scene of your gallant exploits has left open. But should your Excellency, on morf mature reflection, revoke your intention of proeeeding forth- with to France, I shall be most happy to receive you at the Foz whenever you are pleased to appoint, and to assure your Excellency that every attention and requisite accommodation will be provided for you during the short period that your residence may be neces- sary on that occasion in Portugal. The undersigned regrets your extraordinary mode of acting precludes him from the possibility of having the honour of subscribing himself with consideration and re- spect, your Excellency's most obedient humble servant, J. M. DOYLE, Major General, A. D. C. To his Excellency Vice- Admiral Sartorius. Sir John Doyle declares Captain Sartorius's interference in his behalf at Lisbon to have heen by the direction of the Earl of Aber- deen, then Secretary for Foreign Affairs. The Times suggests to the Vice- Admiral to adopt the well- known precedent of desiring Sir John " to believe himself run through the body," and a good suggestion too. As we suspect the Foz Is at present in the possession of the King's troops, the gallant heroes must fight it out elsewhere, if they really mean to carry the farce to its conclusion. MOVEMENTS OF THE ARMY SINCE OUR LAST. Thursday morning, at seven o'clock, the annual change of quarters of the Household Cavalry commenced in the following order, viz.:— The 1st Regiment of Life Guards, under the command of Lieutenant- Colonel LYGON, marched from the Regent's Barracks, Regent's Park, to Knightsbridge Barracks ; the 2d Regiment of Life Guards, under the command of Lieut.- Colonel B. LYGON, from Knightsbridge Bar rocks, to Windsor; and the Royal Horse Guards ( Blue), from Wind- sor Barracks, to the Regent's Barracks, Regent's Park, under the command of Lieut. Colonel Sir ROBERT HILL. 12th Lancers, from Manchester to Dublin. 24th Foot, from Montreal to Quebec. 50th Ditto, Chatham, under orders for New South Wales. 51st Ditto, from Vido to Corfu. 59th Ditto, from Enniskillen to Dublin. 80th Ditto, from Belfast toStirling. 2d West India Regiment, from Bahamas to New Providence. The 77th and 93d to return to England early in 1834. PEMICAN. Their Royal Highnesses the Duchess of KENT and Princess VICTORIA arrived at Cowes, for the summer, on Monday, in the Emerald cutter. They were received with a salute from the Castle, and the firing of guns from the different yachts.— The inhabitants presented the following address to their Royal Highnesses :— " May it. please your Royal Highnesses— We, the inhabitants of East and West Cowes and vicinity, begleave to approach your Royal Highnesses with the dutiful assurance of the grateful feelings with which we hasten to welcome the arrival of your Royal Highnesses on these our shores. This second honour conferred upon the inhabi- tants of the Isle of Wight is duly appreciated by us, and we eagerly embrace the opportnnity now afforded of testifying our faithfu1 attachment to the illustrious Family of which your Royal Highnesses are such distinguished members. We sincerely pray that it may please Divine Providence to watch over the valued life of the illustrious Princess, who, under the special guidance of her august and exemplary parent, may become eventually the good and popular Sovereign of a free and loyal people." Their Royal Highnesses received the Deputation with condescen- sion and affability ; and after the Address had been read by the Rev. J. B. ATKINSON, the Duchess of KENT was pleased to return the following gracious Answer :— " GENTLEMEN,—! cannot sufficiently express to you how deeply the Princess and myself fed the sentiments you express. We recollect with pleasure all the former kindness shown us in the Island; and the reception given us yesterday on our arrival was most gratifying. " It is peculiarly agreeable to the Princess and myself to see that the inhabitants of Cowea, distinguished always for their loyalty to their KING, seize this occasion to evince it by showing attention to us as members of his Family. " We come thus early, that I may have the happiness of allowing? the Princess to participate in those national recreations and amuse- ments peculiar to this place ; my object being in this, as in ever-/ other action of my life, to bring her up with the feelings that should distinguish a British Princess irho may be called upon, but I trust at a very distant day, to preside over the destinies of a free and loyal people/' The French KING- and his wife arrived at Vilfe d'Eu on Sunday morning, and preparations were making in Dieppe to receive them, who were expected in that place about two o'clock. At the time the packet left, an escort, composed of the National Guard,- were preparing to leave tire town to meet their Monarch and his Consort. It was expected that the KING would review the National Guards, afterwards dine with the Authorities, and close the day by attending the Ball given by the Mayor. Some very magnificent presents were prepared for the QUEEN and the female branches of the Royal Family,. The KING and QUEEN are attended by two Cabinet Ministers ( MM. THIERRY and ARGOUT), and are expected to be absent from the me- tropolis about a week. A Court of Aldermen was held, on Tuesday, at Guildhall, for ther election of a Recorder, and for the dispatch of public business, which was fully attended.— The Hon. C. EWAK LAW was unanimously elected Recorder, 3worn into office, and took his seat.— Mr. Alderman WiLsow and Mr. Alderman HARMER, the Sheriff's elect, gave bond to take upon themselves that office on the 28th of September next.— The Sheriff's presented their Report of the state of the several gaols. — The Court were afterwards occupied in a debate upon the filth of Puddle Dock, when the subject was referred to a Committee, and orders given for the security of the public. On Monday a meeting was held at the Thatched House Tavern, St. James's- street, consisting of the principal proprietors, mort- gagees, and merchants connected with the Island of Jamaica,, and of several influential persons connected with the other West India colonies. About seventy gentlemen were present. Viscount Sr. VINCENT was called to the Chair, and was supported by the Earl of HAREWOOD, and several Members of the House of Commons. A. ARCEDECXNE, Esq. took part in the business of the meeting.— The following resolutions were agreed to after much discussion:-— " 1. It is the opinion of this meeting that the mode of appropriation adopted, or supposed to he adopted by Mr. STANLEY, is unjust and not fair as regards the Island of Jamaica. 2. That the distribution of the grant per capita is most simple, the speediest, and most generally just, both as it concerns the colonies and individuals. — 3. That a Committee be appointed to draw up a Memorial to be presented to Mr. STANLEY, conformably to the two preceding Resolutions, and that the following Noblemen and Gentlemen do form the said Committee:— Viscount ST. VINCENT, the Earl of HAP. EWOOO, and Messrs. BURGE, PSHLPOTTS, HODSON, and B S JIRBTT." From returns just made to the French government, it appears that there are in the lodging- houses of Paris 20,500 workmen, of whom only 1,500 are out of employ. We suppose the following will surprise nobody, except, perhaps, Lord PALMERSTON. Lord GREY is prepared, for he reads the news- papers :—" Letters from the Russian capital to the 16th alt. state, that the War Department was more active than customary. A Manifesto had been issued by order of the Emperor, directing the completion of the last levy of recruits in the provinces of Volhynia, Wilna, Brelostock, & c.; and also that a fresh levy of four recruits in every thousand inhabitants should be completed in the provinces of Rieff', Volhynra, Minsk, & c. The Emperor had also directed that the Riga Engineer Corps of twelve regiments should be reorganised." The following is an extract of a letter, dated Trinidad, Hth May, 1833:—" This island is in a great state of ferment; on several of the estates the negroes have struck work, as they are in daily expecta- tion of their emancipation. When they are liberated God knows what will become of them. We have a few hundreds ef Barbadoes slaves here ( who have been seized by the customs and emancipated) committing nightly depredations. In the year 181& there were neither locks nor bolts to the doors in this island, and now, so much has crime increased, you require a nightly watch to protect your pro- perty.— Bristol Journal. The following hand- bill has been published; as one of the signs of the times it is rather important :— " Christ Churcli, Surrey, June 29,1833. " The inhabitants are respectfully informed that, in consequence of the Vestry held on the 13th and 14th instant, having, both by show of hands and by poll, decided against making a Church- rate, and the fund9 in hand lor the purposes of the Church being nearly exhausted, the Wardens will, after the 12: h of August next, be under the painful necessity of discontinuing as well the other current expenses of the Church as those which are attendant upon the per formance of divine service. " JAMES ELAND HOBSON, 1 ™ , , . „ WILLIAM JOSHUA TILLEY, J- Charchwartens. The New Sporting Magazine has the following:— Sergeant ONSLOW was changing horses at the White Hart, at Reigate, one day, the landlady of which kept calling him Captain. " What are you Cap- taining my master for ?" inquired the servant when he got her away ; " don't you know its Sergeant ONSLOW ?" " Yes, yes," answered the landlady with a knowing look, " I know he is only- a Sergeant, but they like to be called Captains." We have to announce the death of Lieut.- General the Earl of POMFRET, K. T. S. His Lordship entered the army in 1791, when he was appointed to an ensigncy in the 3d, now the Scots Fusileer Guards, and was present at the sieges of Valenciennes and Dunkirk, and at the battles of Famars and Lincelles. He served in Ireland during the Rebellion, and in the expedition to the Helder, where he was present at several engagements. March 16, 1800, he was ap- pointed to a company, with the rank of Lieut- Colonel. He served with the Guards in Spain and Portugal until his promotion to the rank of Major- General obliged him to return to England. He was present at the battle of Salamanca, for which he had the honour of wearing a medal. He succeeded to the family honours on the death of his brother GEORGE, the third Earl, April 3, 1830, and married, January 23, 1823, AMABEL ELIZABETH, daughter of Sir RICHARD and the Hon. Lady BOROUGH, by whom he has left two sons and two daughters. The following, we should think, will be found equally interesting to the sportsman and the Society for preventing Cruelty to Animals. We copy it from the New Sporting Magazine.—" The following description, with some directions as to the mode of baiting it, will, I trust, with a little attention, enable the sportsman to use the new hook successfully:— The hook is the common trimmer, of an inch and a quarter in length, to which a piece of gimp, two inches long, is July 14: JOHN b u l l: 215 • to be tied at tire shank, and a loop made at the other end to slip into the swivel at the bait's month ; an incision is first made with a pen- knife close behind the gilts, along the side of the bait, into which the shank ofthe ihook is inserted, and the gimp before mentioned put in at the gills and brought out at the bait's mouth. The gimp is then looped on the swivel, from which a small leaden plummet is sus- pended by two rings; the plummet is put in, and the month of the tait sewn wp through the ring nearest the swivel, and it is ready for business. Care should be taken not to sew up the bait's mouth through the loop in the gimp, but to leave the gimp in one corner of it; nor should the mouth be sewn up so strong as to prevent its tearing open when you strike the pike; for, as no impediments can arise, very slight hold is sufficient to enable you to cast and work the bait without losing it."— This is the refinement of tenderness, and excels in that particular ISAAK himself.— The same Magazine pays the following tribute to Lord SEFTON'S liberality and horsemanship:— His Lordship has now abandoned fox- hunting, but, says the Sporting Magazine, " Lord SEFTON'S style of riding over a country was peculiar. He was one of the quickest men I ever met with in making up lost ground, or turning to his hounds; but when he got well away, he had seldom much ground to make up, and con- sidering his great weight— which eventually estranged him from fox- banting— he was a very brilliant performer in the field. He was averse to timber fences in a run, always avoiding them, if possible, and— as all heavy weights have the power to do— boring through the thickest blackthorn hedges in preference to them. But Lord SEFTON, I believe, does most things well, and certainly no man ever kept fox- hounds in greater style than he did. In allusion to his weight, and the pace he travelled at over a country, the author of Epwell Hunt Poem, in a ludicrous description ( never published) of a run he saw in Leicestershire, in his time, thus speaks of his Lord- ship:— > " ' Karl SEFTON came next, and, for beef on the rib, No Leicestershire bullock was rounder; A wonderful weight, at a vvonderful rate. He flew like a twenty- four pounder !' " Ministers are cutting down the labourers to appoint inspectors, and paring off the shillings to get the patronage of pounds. Various alterations in the establishment at Sheerness Dock- yard have been made during the last week, which came into operation on Monday, the 1st day of July. A letter from the Lords of the Admiralty, bearing date the 27th of June, 1833, gives directions as to the hours which the artificers are to work in future. They arc in all cases to breakfast at home. The superintendents are to fix the hours for bell- ringing according to the local circumstances of the yards. They are to work ten hours in summer and eight hours in the winter. In the shortest days they are to work only seven hours. Five inspectors are appointed, at a salary of 1001. per annum, and seve- ral leading men at five shillings per day. The shipwrights are divided into two classes ; the first to have 4s. 6d. per day, the second to have 3s. 6d. per day, and to work five days per week. Messrs. DOFF, CHEESIIAN, CREED, SOLE, and CANHAJI are appointed to be the five inspectors of shipwrights in Sheerness Dock- yard. At Chatham the following persons are appointed " Inspectors," with a salary of ;£ 100 a year each— viz. Messrs. BROOKES, CHEESMAN, Hoes, POUNDER, PHILLIPS, late measurers, DRIVER, GRAFF, JOHN- STON STURGEON, BANES, BUCK, FRENCH, CARTER, KNIGHT, ENGLISH, BARNABY, HARDING, COUCHMAN. FURSEY, the man charged with stabbing BROOKS and REDWOOD, the policemen, has been acquitted by the Old Bailey Jury; the ver- dict was received with loud revolutionary yells and other cries pecu- liar to the Political Unions, in correspondence with certain members of the Government. The Commissioners of Police have given directions to the differ- ent superintendents and inspectors to order all the constables in their respective divisions to apprehend any person committing an assault, whether they saw it committed or not, fwhere the injured party is in any way cut, bruised, or wounded, and is willing to give the. offender into custody on such charge. COINCIDENCE — INFLUENZA.— March 25, 1743.— HORACE WALFOLE, in a letter to Sir HORACE MANN, in Florence, No. Ixviii, says :— " Well, my dear Sir, the Genii, or whoever are to look after the sea- sons, seem to me to change turns, and to waitinstead of one another, like lords of the bedchamber. We have had loads of sunshine all the winter; and within these ten days nothingjbut snows, north- east winds, and blue plagues. The last ships have brought over all your epidemic distempers; not a family in London has escaped under five or six ill; many people have been forced to hire new labourers. Guernier, the apothecary, took two new apothecaries, and yet could not drug all his patients. It is a cold and fever. The physicians say that there has been nothing like it since the year THIRTY- THREE." A new piece called My Wife's Mother, was produced on Wednesday at the Haymarket; it is written by young MATHEWS the architect, and was completely successful. We rejoice to find the meritorious Haymarket looking up remarkably. The annual sum paid by attornies practising sin England for the licence to exercise their profession, has amounted, during the last few years, to no less than 70,000/. per annum ; added to this, about 1,000 young men are articled annually to attorneys, paying each a stamp duty of 120/. on their indentures, or 120,000 per annum; of these about eight hundred probably are admitted to practice on pay- ment of a further stamp duty of 251. each, or 20,000/. per annum ; so that on the whole Government receives from this profession alone an annual revenue of upwards of 200,000/. One or two legal decisions have been recently made, which are of Importance. It has been decided by Lord LYND HURST, in the Court of Exchequer, that in cases of agistment of cattle, the owner of the field had no lien on the cattle ; neither could a horse be legally de- tained for its keep. This decision is very important to livery- stable keepers. At the Surrey Sessions, on Wednesday, a long Memorial was pre- sented to the Bench from the Grand Jury, who, t will be recollected, was prevented some time ago from inspecting the interior of the County Prison at Horsemonger- lane, complaining of this which they deemed an invasion of their right, and also of the conduct of Mr. HEDGER, the Chairman, who had fined one of the Jury 10/. on ac- count of some expressions which he employed in the course of the discussion upon that occasion. Mr. LAWSON, the Clerk of the Peace, having been requested by the Bench to give his opinion as to the legal right of the Grand Jury to inspect prisons, negatived their claim, and adduced numerous authorities in support of his opinion. Upon this Mr. IIAWES, who had warmly supported the pretension of the Grand Jury, consented to withdraw their Memorial. In the case of HODSON V. TERRILL, which was an action respecting stakes on a cricket match between the Birmingham and Warwick Cricket Clubs, Mr. Baron BAILEY delivered the judgment of the Court of Exchequer, which was, that under the " Act to prevent excessive gaming," if at any game the stake exceeded 10/. it was ex- cessive, and the losing party might recover the deposit from the stakeholder before it was paid over, and if it was paid to the winner, the loser might recover it back within three months, in a special mode by action of debt; and if the loser did not sue within that period, it was competent to any person to sue the winner for penal- ties to five times the amount of the bet. In the present case his Lordship said, there was a dispute whether the game was lost or not; but the decision of the Court did not turn upon that, for they took it for granted that the game was lost. He had doubted whether this could be deemed to be won at one time or sitting, but on considera- tion he thought that the fair meaning of the words were " one tran- saction ;" and though this game occupied more than one day, still it was but one transaction. There was caught in a stake net, near Findhorn, on Tuesday last, a sturgeon, eight feet six inches long, three feet in circumference, and weighing 203ibs. It was immediately packed in ice, and was sent by the Brilliant steam- boat to be forwarded to Lon- don.— Inverness Journal.—[ We have heard of Major STURGEON, but this is evidently STURGEON maximus.] HETHERINGTON, the printer and publisher of the Poor Man's Guardian, was discharged from the New Prison on Saturday, the 21st of June, after an imprisonment of six months, the maximum of punishment authorised by the Stamp Act, under which he was con- victed. His sentence was indeed for twelve months, but as both convictions took place on the same day, and the commutations were dated accordingly, they fell due on the same day, and the authorities could not detain him longer. It appears, however, that no sooner were Government accquainted with his unexpected release then they instructed the authorities- of Bow- street to prefer an indictment against him, on a charge of sedition, in having recom- mended to the working classes to attend no public meetings for the future without being well provided with knives, in order that they might resist any effort of the police to crush them. A bill was accord- ingly presented before the Grand Jury of Middlesex on Tuesday after- noon.—[ We do not mean to say that Mr. H. does not deserve all he has got, and may get. in the way of punishment at the hands of the Government; but of this we are certain, that treason, sedition, and blasphemy are daily published in the minor prints which tran- scend in infamy any of the things for which he has suffered, and which ( being, we presume, sanctioned by the Political Unions) are permitted without the slightest notice from our excellent Secretary for the Home Department or from our liberal ATTORNEY- GENERAL. On Tuesday afternoon, at two o'clock, about one thousand persons assembled in the neighbourhood of Portman- market to witness the sale of a wife. At the appointed time the hus- band, accompanied by his wife, entered the crowded arena, the latter having been led to tbe spot in the usual manner, with a halter round her neck. The business then commenced, amidst the hissing and hootings of the populace, who showered stones and other missiles on the parties. The first bidding was 3s., and the next 4s., after which an interval elapsed, amidst the call of" Going, going," from the auctioneer. At last a dustman stepped forward, and exclaimed, " I wool give five bob" ( 5 » .) The woman was " knocked down" for the sum, and the dustman carried her off' amidst the hisses of the crowd.—[ How is it that the Magistracy or even the police suffer such degrading and illegal exhibitions as this ?] THEATRICAL— Marylebone.— A young man, respectably attired, and assuming an attitude as dignified as that of the late John Kemble in Coriolanus, took his stand at the bar on Wednesday morning, to answer to the following charge preferred against him by a young woman named Mary Smith:— Complainant stated that she was passing down the Bayswater- road with a friend at about twelve o'clock the previous night, when the prisoner, without any provo- cation, laid hold of her and knocked her down. On her friend going to her assistance he treated her in the same violent manner. He was at the time much intoxicated. Ann Parry corroborated com- plainant's statement; in addition to which she said the prisoner had stolen a white handkerchief, her property. Police constable G 25 gave evidence as to the assault and the finding the handker- chief on the person of the prisoner. Prisoner: The statement is all false, and such characters will swear anything.— Mr. RAWLINSON : You seem to speak very freely of their characters; pray what are you, Sir?— Prisoner ( with much emphasis and dignity of manner): I belong, Sir, to the theatrical profession.— Mr. RAWLINSON: A tragic actor, I suppose, from your last night's conduct, when no doubt you thought you were rehearsing the handkerchief scene in Othello. ( Much laughter.) The pugnacious votary of Melpomene was them amerced in the penalty of five shillings for being drunk, and was allowed to retire with Desdemona and Emelia, for the pur- pose of making compensation for the assault, which not being able to do to their satisfaction ( they requiring the immense sum of two shillings and sixpence each), the tragic actor was consigned to the lock- up room. TO JOHN BULL. 9, St. Bride's Avenue. Fleet- street, July 1. 1833. SIR,— In your Paper of yesterday, you have been pleased to state, in speaking of the Waithman obelisk, that " the situation chosen for this pillar is the site of the shop where WAITHMAN began business ; but it is not calculated for eternity, for it stands upon an arch over Fleet ditch, into which, some of these days, its own weight will no doubt bringit, lead, bottles, coins, and all." Did not this charge involve my professional character as an archi- tect, and perhaps injure the subscription, which I believe is not closed, I should not have troubled you, and will thank you to permit me to contradict this statement. The site was selected by myself and Mr. KELSEY, the Surveyor to the Commissioners of Sewers, who said, " Place it where you will, so that it does not endanger the arches of our sewer, nor impede the public highway." The Fleet ditch is arched over in Farringdon- street, from Hol- born- bridge to Fleet- bridge, in two sewers, one on each side of Fleet- market, and they unite and fall into one much larger in the middle of the intersection of Bridge- street, Ludgate- hill. and Fleet- street, which runs under the opposite ( John Wilks's) obelisk in a circuitous form by the Cresent in Bridge- street, into the Thames under Blackfriars- bridge. It is in a solid part of the fork of this iunction, that Mr. KELSEY and myself marked out the site; and when I excavated, I found the sub stratum formed of old bricks and mortar rubbish, down to the bed of the old river Fleet, between all the walls and not upon any of the arches of the sewer. Some eight or ten feet of this dry rubbish was taken out, nearly ten feet square, the subsoil well rammed and formed into concrete, by saturating itwith hot stone lime grout. The cubical hole was then entirely filled with a concrete formed of hot stone lime and broken granite, upon which I placed the foundation stone, a cube of granite eight feet square and two feet thick ; and it is in the upper surface of this stone that the cavity is formed which contains the bottle, & c., about which you have ex- pressed your opinion. A good maxim in building is, " a little stronger than strong enough;" and I take leave to assure my employers, through you, that the foundation is a great deal stronger than merely Btrong enough, and will, I hope, allay youi fears about its tumbling into Fleet- ditch,— I have the honour to be. Sir, your very obedient servant, JAMES ELMEP, Architect to the Committee. We are extremely sorry to have annoyed Mr. ELMES by our observations upon what the City people call Mr. WAITH- MAN'S " Monument Yard"— we really had no idea that an architect had been employed in the business. ECCLESIASTICAL INTELLIGENCE. PREFERMENTS. The Rev. WM. PARKER, A. M. has been instituted to the Rectory of Saham Tony, Norfolk, on the presentation of the Warden and' Scholars of New College, Oxford. The Rev. Dr. SLEATH, head- master of St. Paul's School, has been appointed Sub- Dean of the Chapel Royal, in the room of the Rev. W. Holmes, deceased. The Rev. Mr. LEWIS has been appointed Chaplain to tbe Royal Navy Hospital at Chatham, in the room of the Rev. Mr. Drage,. resigned. The Rev. GEORGE WADDINGTON, M. A. Prebendary of Chichester^ and Fellow of Trinity college, Cambridge, has been presented, by the Master and Fellows of that society, to the Vicarage of Masham cum Kirby Malzeard, Yorkshire; vacant by the death of the Rev. Mr. Lawson. The Rev. W. A. CHATFIELD, B. A. and late scholar of Trinity col- lege, Cambridge, has been presented, by tbe Master and Fellows of that society, to the Vicarage of Stotfold, Beds; vacant by the death of the Rev. Dr. Brasse. The Rev. JOHN ATHAWES, M. A. of Trinity college, Cambridge, has been presented, by tbe Master and Fellows of that society, to tbe Rectory of Loughton Magna, Bucks; vacant by the death of the Rev. Mr. Basket. The Rev. EDWARD MARSHALL KEMPE, has been instituted, by tbe Bishop oi the Diocese, on his own petition, to the Vicarage of Lin- kinhorne, Devon, void by the death of the Rev. J. Coffin. The Rev. S. J. Etty, of New College. Oxford, has been appointed a Minor Canon of Winchester Cathedral, vacant by the death of the Rev. Wm. Hill Newbolt, D. D. The Rev. JOHN HILTON, A. M. has been collated, by his Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury, to the Vicarage of St. Nicholas Atwade, void by the death ot the Rev. J. Davis. OBITUARY. At Wordesley. in the 63th year of his age, the Rev. CHARLES NEVE, A. B. Vicar of Kilmerston, Somersetshire, ami upwatds of thirty years Perpetual Curate of Brierley Hill, Staffordshire. The zealous and faithful discharge of his clerical duties, his humane attention to the sick, and his extensive and unos- tentatious charities, rendered liim, while living, universally beloved, and his death generally regretted. After a short but severe illness, deeply regretted, by bis family and a large circle of friends, aged 55, the Rev. WM BOHUN YEOMANS, D. D. Rector of Bucknall, in the county of Oxford, and of Warndon, in Worcestershire. At Southmolton, the Rev. W. BEEHEE, aged 45. At Greenwich, the Rev. GEORGE MATHEW, Vicar of that parish. UNIVERSITY INTELLIGENCE. CAMBRIDGE, July 5.— At a congregation on Saturday last, the fol- lowing degrees were conferred :— Honorary Master of Arts: Sir David Brewster, Trinity coll.— Doctor of Civil Law : R. S. Dixon, Trinity hall— Licentiate in Physic: D. L. Thorp, Caius, coll.— Bachelor in Civil Law: J. S. Roupell. Trinity hall— Bachelors in Physic: G. F. Evans, Caius. A. Hicks, Magdalene coll.— Bachelor of Arts : Henry Barlow, St. John's coll. At the same congregation, the Rev. Dr. Lloyd, of Trinity college, Dublin, was admitted adeundem of this University. On Tuesday last, beingCommencement day, the following Doctors, and Masters of Arts were created :— DOCTORS IN DIVINITY— Rev. S. Lee, Trinity ; Rev. W. S. Gilly, Cath. ball DOCTORS IN PHYSIC— W. G. Peene. C. M. Leman, J. Johnstone, Trinity coll. DOCTOR OF CIVIL LAW— R. S. Dixon, Trinity hall MASTERS OF ARTS: KING'S COLLEGE— J. W. Astley, G. Tuackeray, T. Phillpotts, C. Luxmoore. ST. PETER S COLLEGE— C. Tucker, G. H. Vacbell, R. Fawcett, E. Cory, W. Fletcher, H. Dowell. M. D. Williams, W. F. Raymond, T. Moore, W. J. James, R. Hawthorn, and J Kirkpatrick. CLARE HALL— P. W. Rav, W. H. Molineux, W. P. Baily, T. D. Hall, W. K. Jonas, T. Hills, I.. E. Dryden, and B. T. Williams. PEMBROKE COLLEGE?— H. T. Liveing. T. England, and R. N. Rarnes. CAU- S COLLEGE— J. AI. Flodweli, T. Wall, S. Jackson, W. H. Bland, W. Jay, R. C. Vauglian, and T. L. J. Sunderland.— TRINITY HALL— P. Le Neve Foster. CORPUS CHKISTI COLLEGE— J. Cox, J. Pullen, E. Steventon, C Chapman, .1. Hooper, T.- C. Barton, H. G. Walsh, T. Dwver; W. Millett, J. Elliott, Samuel Lee- gatt, C. F. Bagshawe, J. C. Blathwavt, and T. Browne. QUEENS COLLEGE— F. Hose, W. D. Rangeley, F. Upjohn, J. Brown, J, E. Dalton, E. Weigall, J. L. Clarke, J. S. Sbackleford, G. Kember, E. Long Eve, F. Norris, and S. N^ wall. CATHARINE HALL— W. D. Fyson, H. Kulrfir, P. Simpson, J. Crofts, A. Watson. JESUS COLLEGE— J. S. Lake, S. Rowe, S Coates, and R. Ingram. CHRIST'S COLLEGE— A. Fitck, J. Penfold. G. V. Jackson, W. I). Fox, Thos. Burrowes. G. Simpson, W. F. Carter, and E. A. Powell. ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE— T. Greenwood, W. M. Lawson, C. C. Babington, F. C. Crick, C. T. \\ bitlev. C. Merivale, C. Clarke, J. M. Herbert, J. Dunnington, W. P. Walker, J. Hodgkinson. J. C. Burnett J. Colley, J. Fielden, E. Carrington, W. F. Beadop. J. l. awes, F. Reade, W. Singleton, J. Blackburn*, C. Pritchard, F. J. StainJorth, G. Wharton, G. Moody, K. Shields, W. Hewson, H. C. Marsh, E. H. Pickering, T. L. Hill, G. S. Barrow, J. Browne, and W W. Farr. MAGPALENE COLLEGE— G. Uripibart, E. Dodd, .1. Foster, H. J Lockwood, G. F. Lewis, E. Yard ley, F. T. W. Fitzroy, A. A. Young, H. J. Jackson, W. Breynton, TRINITY COLLEGE— C. Le- tourgeon, W. Butler, S. Marwidin, L. Thompson, J. M. Kemble, J. Mann, T. Wilkinson, T. H. Steel, T. B. Burcham, C. Words- worth, .1. M. Heath, J. Frere, J. Wilson, U Smith, W. Foulger, E. Vaux, E. H. Ravenhil, W. L. Birkbeck, W. J. Travis, W. Colquboun, C. Bigshy, C. E. Rod- gers. J. Brogden, P. Carey, C. Hebert, H. Prater., T. Myers, J.. Y. Cookson, F. W. Rhodes, W. B. Tate, R. Mosley, W. Ramsbay, H. B. Sims, E. A. IUingarortb, A. Gordon, R. P. Hoare. T. Wilson, S. Davis, J. F. Todd, R. C. Trench, G. Ark- wright, J. Taylor, T. Greenwood, T. Quayle, J. Feainley, W. G. Ponsoilbv, and E. H. Handley. EMMANNUELCOIIL.— F. Watkina. B. Buston. W. Wall, J. R Brown, W. C. Helder. SIDNEY COLLEGE— G, Johnson, J . W. L. Heaviside, M. T. S. Ilaimbach, V. K. Child, and T. F. Laying. DOWNING COLLEGE— W. P. Hulton and T. P. Michel!. At a congregation yesterday the following degrees were conferred : Masters of Arts: T. W, Greaves, St. John's ; A. Way, Trin. coll. Geo. Ray, B. A. of St. Peter's college, was on Saturday last elected a Foundation Fellow of that Society. ORDINATION. The Lord Bishop of LINCOLN intends to hold his next ordination at Buckden, on Sunday the 22il of September next. Candidates are required to send their papers thither to his Lordship before the 10th of August. MISCELLANEOUS. NATIONAL SOCIETY.— Tbe Committee of the National Society held its monthly meeting in Westminster on Wednesday. There were present— the Archbishop of Canterbury, Bishop of London, Bishop of Hereford. Bishop of Bangor, Mr. Justice Park, Archdeacon Wat- son, Mr. Norris, Mr. Trimmer. Mr. Davis, Dr. Walmsley. Dr. D'Oyley.— Grants amounting to 8001. were voted in aid of building and enlarging new school rooms in thirteen places, and the schools of fifteen places were received into union. The appointment of a Head Master to the Free Grammar School, Stourbridize, in the room of the' Rev. J. TAYLOR, deceased, took, place on Wednesday afternoon ; the choice of the Trustees fell upon the Rev. GIFFORD WELLS, of Barford House, Warwickshire. We understand there were twenty candidates for the situation. The highly respected Vicar ol Harborne, the Rev. JAMES THOMAS LAW, has, we understand, remitted 171 per cent, on his tithes for the past year. The Bishop of WORCESTER confirmed 498 persons on the 26th ult. at Dudley. TIVERTON SCHOOL.— At the Meeting of the trustees of this institu- tion on Saturday last, Mr. GEORGE SWEET, son of the Rev. C. B. SWEET, of Kittesford, was elected a Gilbert's Exhibitioner on their foundation; and Silver Medals were presented to Mr. H. FOWLER, son of Mr. FOWLER, of Torrington. for speaking, and to Mr. R. HILL, son J. HILL, Esq., of Lyme, for latin verse composition. The per- formances of the day were attended with the highest interest to a numerous audience. The Giflord Scholarship at Exeter College Oxford, has re- cently been adjudged to Mr. WALTER MOORE, of Trinity College, and late ofthe New Grammar School in Plymouth. During the storm on Wednesday week, Tasburgh Church steeple as struck by lightning, which knocked off several large copings, sed completely through the roof of the church, shattered one of the walls, and exploded, filling the interior with sulphurous smoke. No person, fortunately, was near the edifice at the time. IRELAND. The Lord Bishop of CLOGHER held a confirmation in the Church of Enniskillen on Thursday, when 944 persons were confirmed. The Rev. WM. STACK, eldest son of the Rev. EDWARD STACK of Tubrid, has been appointed to the Curacy of Templeport, in the dioceee of Kilmore, county Cavan, .. -., 316 JOHN BULL! July T. STQCK EXCHANGE.— Saturday EVENING. The Consul Market has but slightly varied during the week, the general price having been at 90. The closing quotation this after, noon was 90* i. There has been considerable speculation in Bank Stock, which has advanced to 207i, 2081. India Bonds are 32 to 34, and Exchequer Bills 52 to 54. There has been some activity in the Northern Securities. Russian Bonds are 1041 5, Dutch 92J, and Belgian 93. Brazilian Bonds are 6Si, and Portuguese Scrip 21 i disc. Spanish Bonds have been as low as 18, and have since rallied to 181 f, but the market is flat. 3 per Cent. Consols... shut. 3 perCent. Reduced.. 89* 3* per Cent. Red 96* i New perCent shut. 4 per Cent. 1826 1C2| I Bank Long Ann shut. Bank Stock.. 2071 203i India Stock shut. Ditto for Account.. 247i India Bonds 32s 34s pm. Exchequer Bills.... 52s 54s pm. Consols for Account 901 I The Hamburgh papers of the 2d instant contain a very long article, dated Berlin. June 25, in which the existence of very serious disturb- ances in the Prussian states is most anxiously denied. It is admit- ted that some six or seven foreigners have been arrested, but the siative Prussians are said to be perfectly contented with the present order of affairs in the kingdom. The Standard of last night has the following:—" We have re- ceived the official documents of the capture, by the Governor of Pe- Biche, of a Pedroite vessel, sailing under English colours, off that harbour. It is called the Eugenia, commanded by GEORGE WILSON, mounting thirteen guns, and was about to join the squadron which sailed for the Algarves. The names of the officers, as well as we can decipher them from the Portuguese spelling, are— ANDREW ANDER- SON, GEORGE FITCH, GEORGE SAMUEL SWINS, JOHN GRAY WOODWARD, lieutenants; HAMILTON ALCHSON fAcheson?), surgeon ; JOHN FISHER, purser. The schooner was manned by about ninety hands. The prisoners told the Governor of Peniche that two other much larger vessels were about to sail from England to join the expedition. Is this the neutrality guaranteed by the vote of the House of Com- mons and the message from the throne." M. VON DEDEL, the Dutch Envoy, accompanied by BARON VERS- YOLK VAN SOLEN, Minister for Foreign Affairs at the Hague, is ex- pected in town to- day or Monday, from Rotterdam. COLD BATH FIELDS' AFFAIR.— Yesterday, GEORGE FURSEY was put to the bar to take his trial on the second inditcment for the minor offence. After charging the Jury, Mr. Justice GASELEE said as there was no opposition on the part of the Crown, or any intention to pro- secute the prisoner, he must be discharged. The prisoner then retired. Loss OF THE AMERICAN STEAMER LIONESS.— The steamer Lioness, Capt. Cockerelle, on her passage from New Orleans to Natchitoches, was entirely destroyed by fire on the 19th ult. Several lives were lost; among whom was the Hon. Josiah S. Johnson, U. S. Senator, of Louisiana; Hon. E. D. White, a representative in Congress, was badly wounded. The long agitated question of the Deccan Prize Money is fixed to be heard before the Lords of the Privy Council on Tuesday next. All the Law Lords and most of the Cabinet Ministers will be present. THE REVENUE. THE accounts of the revenue, up to the 5th July, were yesterday made public. There is a deficiency on the Quarter of 5.251/. The decrease in the Excise, on the whole year, ending July 5th, 1833, is 218,880/.; of this sum 183,740/. is the decrease of this Quarter, July 5th. It is observable, also, that the three last quarters, as compared with the corresponding quarters of 1832, all present a decrease of revenue ; it is the October Quarter only that presents an increase. In the quarter ending October, 1831, the receipts were 11,396 739 In the quarter ending October, 1832 12,093,586 Balance in favour of the October quarter of the year 1832, forming the first quarter of the year in the official table ending July 5,1833 .£ 696,847 The decrease on the three succeeding Quarters stands thus:— 5th January, 1832 11,818 545 5th January, 1833 11,789,072 .£ 29,473 5th April, 1832 8,643,688 5th April, 1833 8,551,268 £ 92,420 5th July, 1832 10,852 993 ,5th July, 1833 10,847,742 £ 5,251 The total decrease on these three corresponding quarters, there- • fere, will stand thus :— January quarter 29.473 April quarter 92,420 July quarter 5,251 Total decrese on the three last quarters £ 127,144 Deduct these decreases of the three last quarters, 127,144., from ' the increase on the October quarter, 696,847/. and the surplus of the revenue of the whole year as compared with the preceding: year is ^ 696,847 127,144 Increase on the year ending July 5th. 1833 ^£ 569.703 GEOGRAPHY AND ATLAS ON A NEW PLAN. A Third Edition, in royal 18mo. 3s 6d. neatly bound and lettered, embellished with numerous engravings, illustrating: Manners, Customs, and Curiosities, RUDIMENTS of GEOGRAPHY; designed to assist theMemory by Comparison and Classification. By W. C. WOOD BRIDGE, A. M. The Geography is accompanied by an Atlas, exhibiting:, in connection with the Outlines of Countries, the prevailing Religions, Forms of Government, degrees of Civilization, the comparative size of Towns, Rivers, and Mountains ; and the Climates and Productions of the Earth. In royal 4to. coloured, 8s. half- bound. This Atlas has been compiled from the best authorities, and contains all the late discoveries of Parry, Weddell, Denham. and Clapperton. Whittaker, Treacher, and Co., Ave Maria lane. The attention of the Heads ot Schools and Tutors is invited to the following List of the improved Series of PINNOCK'S CATECHISMS of the ARTS and SCIENCES, Nine- pence each. They are embellished with Frontispieces ( engraved on steel), Portraits, Maps, and Woodcuts. French Grammar General Knowledge Geography Geology Geometry German Grammar Greek Grammar Hebrew Grammar Heraldry History of England History of Scotland History of Ireland History of France History of Rome History of Greece History of America, 2Pts, History of the Jews Horticulture Hydrodynamics Italian Grammar Land Surveying Latin Grammar Liturgy Logic Mechanics Medicine Mental Philosophy Mineralogy Modern History , Morality These Catechisms are intended to form the basis of every branch of useful knowledge, and ai e of themselves, in fact," an Epitome of the Arts and Sciences." The style in which they are written is at once clear and simple, conveying in- struction to the youthful mind in a manner unattainable by the use of more ela- borate and comprehensive works. In short, while they fix on the mind the lead- ing facts in History, and the fundamental principles of Science, the memory is relieved from the burden of retaining a mass of minutae with which larger books » eeessarily abound The following may be had, with an explanatory Map to each, Is.:— Modern Geography, Bible History, History of England. For the use of young persons studying French, the History of England, Geo- graphy, and Bible History, are translated into that language. Is. each. The Botany, with coloured figures of the 24 Linnsean Orders, Is. Whittaker, Treacher, and Co. Aye Maiia- iane. Agriculture Algebra, 2 Parts Anatomy Ancient Geography Ancient History Architecture Arithmetic Astronomy Bible and Gospel History Botany British Biography Pitto Geography, viz. :— Pt. l. England & Wales 2. Ireland 3. Scotland 4. Colonies in Eu- rope andAmerica 5. Colonies in Afri- ca, Asia,& c. 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Saturday, Dec. 19.1S32. Just published, 12s. bound in cloth, by Hamilton. Adams and Co THE TEETH, in relation to BEAUTY, VOICE, and HEALTH. The object of this work is to shew the cause and natuie of the various diseases to which the teeth are liable, and to point out the means of prevention in early life, no less than of cure when time or neglect hare occasioned decay. The novel theory here laid down, and which was originally baaed on the most obvious principles of physiology, has been confirmed by the successful practice of twenty years. Some observations are added on Artificial Teeth. Bv .1QHN NICHOLLES, Dentist, 35. Conduit street, Bond street. Shortlv will be published, price 7". THE ECCLESlAZUSiE, or FEMALE REFORMERS of ATHENS. Translated lrom Aristophanes by the Rev. ROWLAND SMITH, A M., St. John's College, Oxford. Subscribers names received at Parker's, Oxford ; and Whittaker's, London. T HE QUARTERLY REVIEW, No. XCVHl., will be published on WEDNESDAY NEXT. FRASER'S MAGAZIN E. Monthly, Haif a- Crown. The July Number commences a new Volume, and affords a good opportunity to those desirous of subscribing. Names received by all Booksellers in the kingdom ; and however remote from London the Subscribers mav reside, no charge is made beyond the 29. 6d. _ Just pubti- hed, in octavo, WHAT MUST the PEERS DO ? or Remarks on the Present Crisis. By the Hon. ARTHUR TREVOR, M. A. F. A. S, of Christ Church, Oxford. Rivingtons, St. Paul's Church- yard, and Waterloo- place; and Roake and Varty, Strand. Just published, in 8vo, price 2s. 6d. AN ESSAY on TITHES, Part II. Containing an Inquiry into the Interest of the Poor in Church Revenues prior to the Reformation. With a Supplement on the Origin of the Quarta Pars Episcopalis of the Irish Church. By the Rev. W. H. HALE, M. A. Chaplain to the Bishop of London & c. Printed for J. G. and F. Rivington, St. Paul's Chuich- yard, and Waterloo- place, Pall mall; and B. Fellowes, Ludgate- street. Just published, in 8vo. grice 3s. ALAST and SUMMARY ANSWER to the QUESTION—" Of what use are and have been English Cathedral Establishments?"— With Observations on Cathedral Services," Anthems, and Duetts." In answer to Lord Henley. By the Rev. WILLIAM LISLE BOWLES, A M. Sold by J. G. and F. Rivington, St. Paul's Church- yard, and Waterloo- place, Pall- mall. REV, W S. GILLY'S MEMOIR OF NEFF. Just published, in small 8vo with a Map, price 6s. in boards, a New Edition of AMEMOIR of FELIX NEFF, Pastor of the High Alps; and of his Labours among^ he French Protestants of Dauphine, a Remnant of the Primitive Christians of Gaul. By W. S. GILLY, D. D., Prebendary of Durham, and Vicar efNoiham. Printed for J. G. and F. Rivington, St. Paul's Church- yard, and Waterloo- place, Pall- mall. Just published, price Is. ALETTER to the LORD HIGH CHANCELLOR, occasioned by his Lordship's late Allusions to the " Independence" and " Disinte- restedness of Attornies and Solicitors." To be had of Messrs. Simpkin and Marshall, Stationers'- court, Ludgate- hill; and of Messrs. Jeffery and Son, 4, Pall mall. CHINA TRADE. In a few days will be published, in 8vo price Is. A CORRECTED REPORT of the SPEECHES of Sir GEO. STAUNTON on the China Trade, in the House of Commons, June the 4th and June the 13tb, 1833, with an APPENDIX. Printed for Edward Lloyd, 57, Harley- street. Cavendish- squre ; and to be had also of Simpkim and Marshall, Stationer*'- hall- court. BOOKS FOR TRAVELLERS.— The TRAVELLER'S ORACLE; or Maxims for Locomotion. By WILLIAM KITCHINER, M. D. New Edition, 7*. 6d. " Mirth and motion prolong life." " We recommend the ' Travellers' Oracle' as a very amusing and instructive publication ; it is worth buying and reading, and will become, we doubt not, a popular book."— Atlas. The CONTINENTAL TRAVELLER'S ORACLE. In 2 pocket vols. 15s. " It Is long since we have met with so clever a publication.— There is a fund of sound sense and valuable counsel for travellers."— Literary Gazettee. III. The HISTORICAL TRAVELLER; a Series of Narratives, illustrative of ilie mo9t interesting epochs and places connected with the History of Europe. By Mrs. CHARLES GORE. Second Edition, 2 vols. 8s. bound. IV. GUIDE TO ITALY. By LADY MORGAN. New Edition, revised, 3 vols. 8vo. 24s. V. GUIDE TO FRANCE; or Narrative of an English Familv's Residence there during Four Years. By HENRY BEST, Esq. 8vo. 10s. 6d. VI. SWITZERLAND; in a Series of Letters. By JOHN CARNE, Esq., author ot " Letters from the East." One vol. 8vo. Nearly ready. Published for for H. Colburn by R. Bewtley, New Burlington- street. CHEAP LIBRARY OF MODERN FICTION. On the 1st July, price only 4s. per volume, bound in morocco cloth, GR A N B Y. By T. H LISTER, Esq. Forming the Sixth Monthly Set of COLBURN'S MODERN NOVELISTS; A collection of the most celebrated Works of living Authors, published at a lower rate than the Waverley Novels. Sets already published:— Feb. 1. TREMAINE— March 1. PELHAM— April P. THE CHELSEA PENSION- ERS— May 1. THE DISOWNED, by the Author of PELHAM— June 1. DE VERE, by the Author of TREMAINE. II. The INDICATOR and the COMPANION ; a Miscellany for the Fields and the Fire- side. By Leigh Hunt. In 2 vols, post 8vo. ( nearly ready). III. The FIRST SERIES of the WALPOLE CORRESPONDENCE ; compris- ing his Letters to Geo. Montague, Esq., Lady Ailesbury, Lady Craven, & c. 4 vols. 8vo. 3ls. 6d. IV. The THIRD SERIES of SAYINGS and DOINGS. By Theodore Hook, Esq. 3 vols. 24s. V. FALKLAND, a Tale. By the Author of " Pelham," and " Eugene Aram." lvol. 9s. 6d. VI. SECRET MEMOIRS of IRELAND, from 1780 to 18C0, and HISTORY of the UNION, with delineations of the principal Characters connected with that important measure. By Sir Jonah Barrington, Member of the late Irish Parliament for Tnam,& c. 2 vols, with 40 portraits of distinguished persons, curious letters and documents in fac- similf,& c. Published for H. Colburn by R. Bentley, New Burlington- street. HISTORY OF THE NOBILITY AND GENTRY. In a few days will be published, 8vo. the Fourth Part, price 7s. 6d., completing the First Volume, with the Armorial Bearings accurately engraved, HISTORY of the COMMONERS of GREAT BRITAIN and IRELAND. By JOHN BURKE, Esq. Forming a desirable Companion to the Peerage and Baronetage. " This is a great and important undertaking. Of the Peers and the Baronets of Greats of Great Britain we have heard and read ; but of the Commoners— of families celebrated in history— we remain in total ignorance. We are glad to find Mr. Burke employed in removing a national reproach. He has contrived to make his book not only very useful but highly interesting— many rare and curious anecdotes having been introduced."— Globe. Published lor H. Colburn by R. Bentley, and sold by all Booksellers. II. Beautifully printed in double columns, uniformly with the Peerage and Ba- rone age price 28s. bound, The EXTINCT, DORMANT, and SUSPENDED PEERAGE. By JOHN BURKE, Esq. This work connects in many instances the new with the old Nobility; and it should be particularly noticed, that this new work appertains nearly as much to extant as to extinct persons of distinction ; for though dignities pass away, it rarely occurs that whole families do. III. Mr. BURKE'S PEERAGE and BARONETAGE of the UNITED KING- DOM, Coirected to 1833, with all the new Creations ; with upwards of Fifteen Hundred Engravings of the Arra « , & c. In two vols. 8vo. Price 21.1 Cs. bound. DEDICATED TO THE DUKE OK DEVONSHIRE. Just completed, in one volume royal 4to., price 51. 5s. ; or in imperial 4to., proof plates on India paper, price 101.10s: MEMOIRS of the BEAUTIES of the COURT of KING CHARLES II. By Mrs. JAMESON. Embellished with Twenty two Portraits hy the most distingnished Artists ; forming a splendid illustration of the Memoirs of Pepys, Evelyn, Clarendon, and other writers connected with that gay and interesting period. " Independently of the great attractions of this publication as a work of art, its literary and historical interest will be found remarkable. It ought to be parti cularly noticed, that these memoirs are written by a lady, and as a lady ( in her feminine character) ought to write. Most of the women were amiable and inte- resting, as well as beautiful, and connected with our political history, and with, the noblest families of the present time— several have been effectually cleared from the aspsrsions cast on them, and placed in a new and interesting point of view."— Globe. Published for H. Colburn, by R. Bentley, New Burlington Street TO TOURISTS. AN Improved Edition of MOGG'S PATERSON'S ROADS, with an Appendix, price ! 8s. boards. A COMPANION TO PATERSON'S ROADS, being an entirely new and very beautiful MAP of ENGLAND, price 21. in a Case. MOGG'S NEW MAP OF TH E COUNTRY FORTY- FIVE MILES ROUND LONDON, price 21 12s. 6d. in a Case. MOGG'S NEW POCKET ITINERARY, an improved Edition, with aMap> price 8s. bound. Published by E. Mogg, 14, Great Russell Street, Covent Garden. Just published, THE DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE. No. VII. for July 1833 — Price 2 « . 6d. Containing— 1. The Coming trisis, an Historical Study— 2. Lines to the Ab- sent— 3. Turkey and Greece, the Sultan and Capo d'Istrias— 4. Chivalrous Ro- mances of the Germans, by Herr Zander— 5. Enitrma, bv the Right Hon. R. B„ Sheridan— 6. The Court Martial, a Tale of Portugal— 7- The Star of Dark- ness— 8. Gold and Silver. The Chinese Empire- 9. Remarks on the His- tory of Rome— 10. The Music of Scotland— 11. The Voice of Nature— 12. The French Revolution, No. II.— 13. Ballad hy Robert Gilfillan- 14. The Rivals, a Tale— 15. Review: Travels of an Irish Gentleman in search of a Religion— 16. University Intelligence— 17. Critical Notices. Dublin: William Curry, Jun. and Co. London: Simpkin and Marshall. Sold by all booksellers. Just published, priee 6s. No. XXIII. of THE FOREIGN QUARTERLY REVIEW. CONTENTS. ART. I. French and English Biographies of Newton ( Biot and Brewster). II. Beranger. III. The American System of Prison Discipline. IV. Gsethe's Posthumous Works— the Second Part of Faust. V. Hypochondriasis and Hysteria. VI. Geijer's History of Sweden. VIT. The North of Italy and the Tyrol. VIII. Poetry, and Lives of the Troubadours. IX. Mohammed and Mohammedanism. X. Rush's Residence in England. XI. Menzil's Travels in Austria. XII. Russell de Albuquerque, a Portuguese Tale. XIII. Tromlitz's Novels. XIV. Retzsch's Outlines to Schiller's Song of the Bell. XV. Manno's History of Sardinia. Miscellaneous Literary Intelligence from France, Germ\ ny, It* ly, Switzerland, and Oriental Literature. List of the principal New Works published on the Continent and in America for the last three months. Published by Treuttel and Wurtz. and Ricliter, 30, Soho- sq- iare ; and Black, Young, and Young. 2, Tavistock- street, Covent- garden ; of wtiom may be had, the prceedina: Numbers of this Journal. IMPORTANT NEW SCHOOL BOOK. In I volume large 12mo. neatly bound, price 6s. 6d. T ECTIONES LATINIE, or Lessons in Latin Literature; being- JAJL a Choice Collection of amusing and instructive Pieces in Prose and Verse* selected from the most celebrated Latin Authors. By J. ROWBOTHAM F. R. A. S., London, Author of German Lessons, Grammar, & c. " The existing mode of learning, like the Juggernaut idol, crushes beneath its wheels Its pros- trate and devoted worshippers. Every attempt to improve the fault should be favourably regarded ; and knowing that Mr, Rowb" tham is a most successful and indefatigable teacher, we were prepared to find something worthy of notice. Our expectations have been realized ; and instead of giving an elaborate critique, we shall content ourselves with stating, that we can most strongly recommend his work to all our juvenile friends as an invaluable treasure."— Weekly Disp. London : Effingham Wilson, 83, Royal Exchange. On the 29th of June was published, price 6s. the Twenty- seventh Number of THE BRITISH CRITIC- QUARTERLY THEOLOGICAL REVIEW— and ECCLESIASTICAL RECORD. CONTENTS— Curtis's Misrepresentations of the Authorized Versions of the Bible— The Religious and Poetical Character of William Cowper— Carwithen's History of the Church of England, Vol. III.— Montgomery's Lectures on Poetry and General Literature— Abercrombie on the Moral Feelings : Whewell's Bridge- water Treatise— Rush's Residence at the Court of London— Hampden's Bamp- ton Lectures— Miss Martineau's Religious Works— Travels of an Irish Gentle- man in search of a Religion— State of the Dioceses in England Wales— Proceed- ings of the Universities. Printed for J. G. and F. Rivington, St. Paul's Church- yard, and Waterloo- place, Pall- mall. Perpetual Advowson and next Presentation to the Rectory of Over, Donysborne, between Cirencester and Gloucester, producing about 4501. per annum; age of Incumbent 69. By Mr. HOGGART, at the Mart, on FRIDAY, July 19th,. at Twelve. THE PERPETUAL ADVOWSON AND NEXT PRESENT- ATION to the RECTORY of OVER, Donysborne, otherwise Dountes- borne Abbots, on the road between Cirencester and Gloucester, and only five miles from the former; comprising an excellent Rectory House, with numerous OSfiees, Gardens, and two Paddocks; also, in lieu of Tithes, a valuable Farms, containing about 356 acres, with a good Farm- house, Farm- buildings, Home- stead, & c., and certain other rents, amounting to about. 101. 13'^. per annum. The whole Income may be fairly estimated at between Four and Five Hundred Pounds per annum, and the age of the present Incumbent is Sixty- nine. Particulars at the Bell Inn, Gloucester; Hotel, Hereford ; King's Head, Ci- rencester; Star, Oxford; Hoop, Cambridge; of Messrs. Tilleard'and Miller, Solicitors, Old Jewry; at the Mart; and of Mr. Hoggart, 62, Old Broad Street, Royal Exchange. GENERAL AVERAGE PRICES OF CORN Per Imperial Quarter, ef England and Wales, for the Week ending June 28. Wheat 54s 4d I Oats 19s 3d I Beans 34s ~ Barley 26s lOi | Rye 32i 7a | Peas 36s Average of the last Six Weeks, which regulates the Duty. Wheat 53s 4d I Oats 18s 4d j Bean Barley 25s Id | Bye 31s 4d | Peas 32s Duty on Foreign Corn for the present week Wheat 33s 8d I Oats 19s 9d I Beans 21s 3d Barlev 24? 4i I Rve 22s 9d I Peas 21s 3d 54 74 94 BIRTHS. On the 4th July, at 26, Connaught- square, the Hon. Mrs. Stopford, of a son. On the 1 st inst. in Grosvenor square, Lady Charlotte Calthorpe, of a daughter — At Richmond, on the 29th ult. the Lady of Major R. H. Close of a daughter— On the 30th ult. in Piccadilly, the wife of Mr. Wheatley, of a daughter— At Ely, on the 1st inst. the lady or Thomas Page, Esq. of a daughter— On the 2d inst. the lady of H. Kirk, Esq. of Piercefield Cottage, Regent's Park, of a son— On the 4th inst. at Southgate, the Lady of J. D. Taylor, Esq. of a daughter— On the 3d inst. at Bath, the Lady of the Rev. J. H. Bradney, of a daughter— On the2d inst. at Gayton, in the county of Northampton, the lady of the Rev. Dr. Butler, of a son— On the 3d inst. at Sutton Cottage, the Lady of Robert Bower, jun. Esq. of a daughter. MARRIED. On the 2d inst. at Belford. by the Rev. W. N. Darnell, Rector of Stanhope, Wm. Atkinson, Esq. to Jane Margaret, youngest daughter of William Clark, of Belferd Hall, county of Northumberland, Esq. On the 25th June, 1833, at Holt, by the Rev. W. R. Taylor, Rector of Bar- ningbam, Thomas Andrews Girling, Esq. of the Grove, Holt, Captain H. P. 5th. Regiment, to Mary Ann, eldest daughter of the late William Withers, Esq. soli- citor, Holt. Norfolk. On the 27th ult. at the parish church of the Claines. in the county of Worces- ter, John Wrothe Thomas, Esq. of the 80th Regiment, to Mariannne, only daugh- ter of the late Richard Ingram, Esq of the White Ladies, in the same county— On the 27th ult. at St. Ann's Shandon Church, Cork, the Rev. Isaac Harris, domestic chaplain to the Right Hon. the Earl of Bantrey, and afternoon preacher at Portman Chapel, Baker- street, to Margaret, youngest daughter of the late Anthony Connell, Esq. of Cork, banister at- law, and Recorder of Kinsale, ia said county— On the 1st inst. at St. George's, Hanover- square, John Thos. Mott, of Barningham Hall, in the county of Norfolk, to Caroiine Stoane Stanley, youngest daughter of Mr. and Lady Gertrude Sloane Stanley— On the 1st inst. at Rougham, Suffolk, the Rev. John Hull, of Brasenose College, Oxford, to Lucy Brooke, the second daughter of Robert Bevan, Esq. of Rougham Rookery— On the 2d inst. at St. George's, Hanover- square, Charles, eldest son © f Admiral Stir- ling, of Woburn Farm, Chertsey, in the county of Surrey, to Mary Elizabeth, daughter of Henry Harrison, Esq. of Heath Bank, in the county of Chester— At St. Mary's, Bryanston- square, on the 3d inst. the Rev. Barton Lodge, of Great llford, to Louisa Elizabeth, third daughter of the late John Smee, Esq. of the Bombay Civil Service— On the 4th inst. at All Souls Church, the Rev. Richard Stephens, of Culver House, in the county of Devon, to Maria, second daughter of the Lord Bishop of Exeter— On the 4th inst. at St. Martin's in- the- Fields, the Rev. T. M. Wetherell, second son of the Rev. Richard Wetherell, of Pashley House, Ticehurst, Sussex, to Anne, youngest daughter of Henry Winchester, Esq. of Oakfield Lodge, Hawkhurst, Kent, and Alderman of the city of London. DIED. At Kensington, on the lit inst. aged two years and two months, Louisa Fanny, daughter of George White, Esq.— On the 2d inst. George Wm. Salmon, Esq. of the Inner Temple, barrister- at- law— On the 1st. inst. at Nova Scotia House, Ips- wich, Richard Hail Gower, aged65— On the 3d inst. ar his residence in Bedford- row, James Wood, Esq. of Temple- bar, London— Suddenly, atHarpenden Lodge, Herts, on the 23d ult. Sarah, wife of T. Dunmore, Commissary- General to the Forces— At her son's house, Ewell, on Saturday, the 29: h ult. Elizabeth, widow of the late W. C. Lempriere, Esq. of Jersev, aged 69— On Saturday, the 29th ult. at Maidstone, Robert Smith, Esq.. M. D. after a painful illness— On the 29tli ult. at his house in Russell place, in the 83d year of his age, Wyndham Knatchbull, Esq.— At Aylesbury, Bucks, on the 3d inst. Jane, only surviving daughter of Joseph Rose. Esq — On the 3d < nst. aged four years, Isabel Harriet, the daughter of Mr. J. B. De Mole, of Merchant Tailors'! Hall. LONDON: Printed and published by EDWARD SBACKELL, at No* 40, FLEET- STREET, where, only, Communications te the Editor pout paid) art} received*
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