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

14/07/1833

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Volume Number: XIII    Issue Number: 657
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John Bull "For God, the King, and the People!"

Date of Article: 14/07/1833
Printer / Publisher:  
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Volume Number: XIII    Issue Number: 657
No Pages: 9
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JOHN BULL. « FOR GOD, THE KING, AND THE PEOPLE!" VOL. XIII.— No. 657. SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1833. UNDER THE ESPECIAL. PATKONAUJi Ui< MIS jJAJbal'i. ROYAL GARDENS, VAUXHALL. — TO- MORROW, A LADIES' FAN'CY FAIR and FETE CHAMPETRE will be held in the Gardens, in aid of the FUNDS of the ROYAL DISPENSARY for the DISEASES of the EAR, at which several of the Ladies Patronesses have signi- fied their intention of holding sta'ls. The Gardens and Fancy Fair will open at One e'clock, and a CONCERT of Vocal and Instrumental Music will be given in the course of the Morning, in which Signor PAGAN INI, Madame de M ERIC, Madame GRANDOLFI, Signor de BEGNIS, Signor GALLT, Mr. and Mrs. SEGUIN, have kindly con- sented to lend their powerful assistance. In the Evening, the Gardens will be brilliantly Illuminated, and decorated with Flags, Banners, Flowers, and Evergreens, concluding with a Grand Display of FIRE- WORKS. Admission, Four Shillings, Which will entitle the Visitor to Re admission, and to the whole of the Morning and Evening Entertainments. Further particulars in Monday's Papers. The Free List on this Evening will be suspended. ON THURSDAY NEXT, JULY 18th, the ANNUAL JUVENILE FETE will take place. == Price Id. THEATRE ROYAL, COVENT GARDEN.— LAST NIGHT of the Season.— The Public Is respectfully inforned, that Madame Malibran, Monsieur De Beriot, Miss Saunders Osborne, Madame Montessu, and Monsieur Theo. Gueiinot, have given their valuable services to aid this night's Entertain- merits.— TO- MORROW, July 15, will be performed a New Grand Opera, entitled LA SONNAMBULA. To conclude with the Third Act ( in Italian) of Vaccaj's Opera entitled ROMEO E GIULIBTTA. Romeo, Madame Malibran ; Giulietta, Miss Saunders Osborne.— The Doors will be opened at Seven o'Clock, and the Performance* commence at half past Seven, precisely. FOR ONE NIGHT ONLY. THEATRE ROYAL, DRURY LANE.— MADEMOISELLE AUGUSTA has the honourof announcing to the Nobility, Gentry, and Public generally, that her BENEFIT takes place on FRIDAY, next, July 19, on which occasion she has been favoured with the servicesof Madame Malibran, Madlle. Fanny Elsler, Madlle. Teresa Elsler, Madame Montessu, Signor Don- 2elli, Mons. Daument, and Mons. Albert.— The performances will commence with the Opera of MASANIELLO. In Act 1 a Bolero, by Madame Montessu and Mons. Daumont. After which, the Third Act of Rossini's Opera of OTELLO. To conclude with the Ballet Opera of The MAID OF CASHM ERE. In Act 1 will be introduced a Grand Pas de Deux, by Mons. Albert and Mdlle. Elsler.— Tickets to be had of Mademoiselle Augusta, 20, Cecil- street; and of Mr. Par- sons, at the Box- Office, where places may be taken every day, from ten till four. u. l iJN< jr oi PLAIN I'EKfi>, iviEK. Cti|| iS a. iuoa. ei " ' i^ fliid MONT8BRRAT, is - A. nected with the ISLANDS of ANTIGU reque- tedat No. 60, St. James's Street, TO- MORROW, MJNDAY, the 15th I N O R ^ A BROWNE, Agent. inst. at Twelve o'clock precisely. London. 14th July, 1833. T IHE ADJOURNED MEETING of TIU PLANTERS, MORT- GAGEES, ANNUITANTS, and Others, hating property in JAMAICA, will tahe place on MONDAY next, the 15ih Inst., atOne o'Clock, at the Thatched House, to receive the Report of the Committee appgntecf " ~ tary se, appointed to wait on Mr. Secre- Stanley. WILLIAM BURGE. TO THE PROPRIETORS OF EAST INDIA STOCK. Ladies and Gentlemen. THEATRE ROYAL, DRURY LANE.— The Nobility, Gentry, and the Public, are respectfully informed, that arrangements have been made with Signor PAGANINI, for a seriesof Four Concerts ; the Third of which will take place TO- MORROW. In Part 1 a Grand Concerto, in Two Parts, will be performed by Signor Paganini on Two Strings. In Part 2, a celebrated Sonata Sentimentale, on One String only ; and the humorous Variations on the Comic dance of the Witches. To conclude with the Ballet of the Pages of the Duke de Vendome.— The Fourth and last Concert on WEDNESDAY Next. Boxes, 7s.; Pit, 3s. 6d.; Gallery, 2s. NEW VOCAL MUSIC by the Hon. Mrs. NORTON and Mrs. PRICE BLACKWOOD. A SECOND SET of TWELVE SONGS, written, composed, and dedicated to the Countess of Jersey. Price 15s., containing And have I lost thee The Merry Laik How sad it is The lonely Harp I do not love thee Oh ! it is not for a day nor an hour Oh! happy's the life—-( Gypsey Glee and Chorus). I am weary We have been friends together I've taught my lips Would I were with thee The Exile Also the following Compositions of the Hon Mrs. Norton and Mrs. Price Blackwood : A FIRST SET of TEN SONGS and TWO DUETS, dedicated to His Graee the Duke of Devonshire. Price 159., containing They bid me forget thee But thou! Oh ! sing no more The Fairy Bells ' The Change The Mother's Lament Chacta's Lament for Atala The Land I love By- gone hours I have left my quiet home For the sake of those who are gone To- morrow. Single Songs from the above: By- gone hours, 2s.; Delia, 2s.; Fairv Bells, 2s.; They bid me forget Thee, 2s. Publ ished by J. POWER, 34, Strand. HENRI HERZ.— Just published, the celebrated GALOP from Auber's Opera of GUSTAVE, arranged for the Piano forte by HENRI HEHZ. Also in the Press, Three Airsde Ballet fiom the same Opera, arranged by Do.; and Recreations Musicales, in Four Books, containing 24 popular Airs by Do. GOULDIwG and D'ALMAINE. 20, Soho- sqnare. NEW FLUTE MUSIC, viz., Flute and Pianoforte— Nicholson's Beauties of the Opera; Airs from William Tell, Fidelio, Pirata, Spohr's Faust, Crociato, Euryanthe, Anna Bolena, Dame Blanche, Preciosa, Freyschutz, and SemiramideYin all 72 airs), 12 books, each 2s. 6d.; Berbiguipr's Souvenirs de l'Opera, Airs from Masaniello, Semiramide, La Gazza, Don Juan, II Flauto, Freischutz, Tancredi, Figaro, Barbiere. and La Clemenzadi Tito, 72 airs, 12 bks., each 2s 6d. ; ditto's Le Bouton de Rose, 6s.; Toulon's Tu vedrai, Air Suisse, and A1 idea, each 3s. and 23. 6d.; Herz and Tulou's 4 Duets, each 5s.; Hummel's 6. Sonatas, each 4s. and 5s.; Hiinten and Forde's 3 Duets, each 3s. 6d.; Bucher's Le Petit Tambour 6s.: ditto's Paganini's 3 Fantasias, each 2s.; Forde's 48 Trios, for two flutes and pianoforte, each 2s. and 4s. Flute Solos— Miiller's 100 Waltzes, 4s.; ditto's 100 Quadrilles ; Berbiguier's 12 Waltzes, 2 books, each 4s.; his Beauties by Forde, 12 books, each 3s.; his 12 National Airs, with easy Varia- tions, each 1 s. 6d. ; Forde's Cabinet, 300 Solos, 12 books, each 3s.; Dressler's Beauties, 12 hooks, each 3s.; and one thousand other works for the flute. London : published for R. COCKS and Co. 20, Princes- street, Hanover- square. Catalogues gratis. IRITISH 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 6 in the evening. Admittance IS. Catalogue Is. WILLIAM BARNARD, Keeper. THE SEASON.— MILES and EDWARDS's extensive Ware- rooms are now replete with the most perfect Collection of economical as well as Ornamental CABINET and UPHOLSTERY FURNITURE that has ever been submitted to the approbation of the Nobility and Gentry.— No. 134, Oxford- street, between Holies- street and Old Cavendish- street. CIDEK, 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, aud, as well as his FOREIGN WINES and SPIRITS, of a very superior class. 22, Henrietta- street, Covent- garden. ENGLISH BRANDY, distilled entirely from the JUICE of the GRAPE, and thereby possessing all the properties of the Foreign Spirit, yet at onlv half the price, viz. 16s. per Imperial Gallon, may be obtained at BONNEY'S WINE and SPIRIT ESTABLISHMENT, 75, DRURY LANE where may be had sealed glass bottles as samples, 3s. each. Retailed at 2s. per pint.— Orders forwarded five miles free of expence. Observe— No. 75, Drury- lane, is the corner of Ru9sell- court, leading to the Theatre. UPHOLSTERY and CABINET FURNITURE.— The most magnificent display of FRENCH and ENGLISH FURNITURE ever seen in this country, unquestionably the largest and best selected stock in Europe; comprising the greatest variety of styles, and for elegance and work- manship not to be equalled, suitable for every grade of furnishing, and at one- half the usual charge. Window curtains, beds, and upholstery of every descrip- tion, made up with elegance and economy; Turkey, Brussels, Venetian, and Kidderminster carpets of the newest patterns, seasoned floorcloths, paper hang ings, & c — J. STEFFENON1 and Company as manufacturers, continue to pup- ply the trade at the manufactory, 142, Holborn bars, corner of Brook- street. rglO be SOLD, SIX splendid Sussex Store OXEN, of the finest - 1% breed, two of which would ensure a PRIZE at the Cattle Show ; suitable for a Nobleman or Gentleman's Park.— Apply to Mr. Haydon, Butcher, Merton, Surrey. SCENES IN SCOTLAND. Second edition, printed in duodecimo, embellished with 50 engravings, price 5s in boards, SCENES IN SCOTLAND, with Sketches and Illustrations His- torical, Biographical, and Literary, by JAMES HARRIS BROWN — Glasgow: Printed' for R. Griffin and Co., and T. T. and J. Tegg, Cheapside, London, Where may be had, SCENES IN NORTH WALES, price 4s. 6d< in boards. HAVING been recommended by many of my Friends to post- pone 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 ^ md the convenience of the Propiietary 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 hav^ done me the honour to pro- mise me their support, but whose approval of my present determination I have not bad 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 succfssful result. Repeating ray grateful acknowledgments for the Support I have hitherto re- ceived, and earnestly entreating a continuance of it, T have the honour to be, veiy respectfully, Ladies and Gentlemen, your faithful and obliged Servant, JOHN SHEPHERD. 37, Dorset- square, Saturday Evening, 6th July, 1833. TOOTHS PROPRIETORS OF EAST INDIA STOCK. ' AMEETING of the FRIENDS of FRANCIS WARDEN, Esq. will take place at the City of London Tavern, Bishopsgate- street. on TUESDAY, the 23d inst. at One o'Clock preciselr, with a view to consider what measures should be adopted to secure that Gentleman's Election to a Seat in the East India Direction on the first vacancy. Thursday, July 11,1833. ./ TO THE PROPRIETORS OF EAST INDIA STOCK. Ladies and Gentlemen, 1HAVE refrained, until a Vacancy in the Direction of your Affairs should be declared, from announcing, in an official form, the period when I should appeal to your Suffrages in support of my pretensions to a Seat in that Direction. That event having now occurred by the retirement of Mr. Smith, I have the honour to inform you that it is not my intention to proceed to the ballot upon the present occasion ; but that it is my fixed determination to do so on the next that shall take place, when I shall beg leave most earnestly to solicit the favour of your support. In the course of a few days I purpose to assemble ' ir. y friends, and to form a Committee, through whose kind exertions, together with the support which, upon public grounds, I trust you may he disposed to afford to my pretensions, I have the best founded hope of success in the object to which I so ardently aspire. 1 have the honour to be, Ladies and Gentlemen, Your most obedient and faithful servant. 28. Bryanston- sqnare, July 7.1833. FRANCIS WARDEN mn h E Q. JC, V i ± 4 Yf% U A K l ii K ij Jf it - ML No. XCVIII., is just published. CONTENTS: I. The Turkish Empire. IT. Rush's Residence at the Court of London. III. Merivale's Translation from the Greek Anthologies. IV. The Turf. V. Wright's New Translation of the Inferno of Dante. VI. Mazas' Memoirs of the French Revolution of 1830. VII. The Port Admiral. VIM. Customs, Manners, and Domestic Superstitions of the Women of Persia. IX. Hartley Coleridge's Poems. X. Foreign and Domestic Policy. John Murray, Albemarle- street. The First Year complete is now ready in 2 vols, bound, price 21s. each. They contain Sixty beautiful Illustrations of Portraits, Landscapes, and Costumes, produced by the most celebrated Artists, and above 500 Original Literary Articles by the znont distinguished writers, HE COURT MAGAZINE, Edited by the Hon. Mrs. NORTON. The July Number, just published, begins a new year, and affords a favourable opportunity to commence subscribing to this richly embellished monthly pe- riodical. Published by Edward Bull, 26, Holles- street, London; Bell and Bradfute, Edinburgh ; and Cumming, Dublin ; sold also by every Bookseller and Newsman in the Kingdom. T T! HARROGATE.— To PARENTS and GIJARDIANS.— A Lady, well connected, and accustomed to good society offers to RECEIVE mi. der her CARE, and accompany to Harrogate, any amiabie YOUNG PERSON, or TWO SISTERS, whose health, as in her own case, may render a visit to that place desirable; and who, in return for her cliaperoneship and superintendence of the domestic airangements whilst there, would defray the whole expense of the journey, & c. She would not be unwilling, however, to give instruction ( o her wards on other terms, if required, an occupation in which she has had much experience. The most unexceptionable references will be given and required.— Address ( post paid) A. B.. 16, Duke- street, Grosvenor square. ACADEMY FOR YOUNG GENTLEMEN.— Grove House, Grove- street, Hackney.— In consequence of the DEATH of the late Mr. R. S, BARNES, the entire conduct of this establishment has devo'ved upon his Partner and Son, Mr. R, BARNES ; who begs to apprise his Friends and the Public, that his School will OPEN on MONDAY, the 29th instant, and will be conducted wifcto the utmost attention, and upon the same liberal plan and mode- rate terms as heretofore. gJECOND HAND~ SIL\^ 7rCTEA SERVICE, warranted of London manufacture, to be S JLD Cheap ; it consists of a Tea Pot. Sugar Basin, and Milk Ewer. The tea pot is of a full size, with silver handle and silver button ; the sugar basin and milk ewer are both gilt inside, and in every respect to match the tea pot. The whole are very strong and substantial, are very neatly chased, and are in the most modern taste. To save trouble, the lowest price is Twenty Guineas.— May he seen at Thomas Savory's, Watch Manufac- turer, 51, Cornbil! ( three doors from Gracechurch- street). London. OBINS'S ROYAL FILTER OFFICE, removed from No. 6.9, to more extensive premises, No. 163, Strand, opposite the New Church, and Three Doors from King's College, where all Orders will meet with prompt attention, and Prospecti, and all information can be obtained, and the Royal Fil- ters daily seen in operation on Thames and New River Water, Black Tnk,& e.& c. ^ l& ICH FIGURED SILKS lor SALE, at ALLISON and EDWARDS'S, Regent House, 240, Regent street.- On Monday and during the week will be submitted for Public Inspection a choice Stock of- rick Figured Silks, at a great reduction in price, and decidedly worthy the attention of Ladies desirous of purchasing Autumn Dresses. Also a splendid Stock of FRENCH BLONDS, much below their value. N. B. Allison and Edwards, Regent House, 240, Regent- street. CARPETS.— LAPWORTH and RILEY, having manufactured a very extensive Stock of their Newest Patterns, are enabled still to offer their assortment at the former prices. The Royal Velvet Carpet made to any design. A large collection of beautiful Oriental Carpets and Rugs, India Matting, & e. Warehouse, 19. Old Bond- street. FgHO FAMILIES FURNISHING.- The most favourable opportu- JL tunitv now offeis itself to all those who are about to furnish, by applying at RALF'S CHINTZ FURNITURE WAREHOUSE, No 22, Tavistock street, Co- vent- garden, who has now on SALE the REMAINING STOCK of thelate Pro- prietor, consisting of a great ; variety of Chintz Cotton Furnitures, Moreens, Merino Damasks, Dimities, Holland and Gothic Blinds, Table Covers, Curtain Mnolins. Sheetings. Counterpane « , & « . , at most extraordinary l uv prices. rgio LAI) 1ES.— EVANS and LIBERTY, 29, Piccadilly, respect- ill fully invite the immediate attention of Ladies to their extensive stock of FANCY CANTON SHAWLS, which they are now offering at prices unpre- cedented, in consequence of having cleared an Importer of all his stock. ULLER'S FREeSTNG MMrHINE7T> y which different ices, from one to ten quarts, and of the smootbestquality, 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 iV^ Wine, Water, Fruit and Butter ; and FREEZING POWDER of matciiiTss qua'ity. FULLER'S SPARE B ED- AI RE R : this vessel will retain its heat, with once filling, for sixty hours. CARRIAGE and BED FEET- WAITERS 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. Just published, priee 6s. No. XXIJl. of HE 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. Gaethe's Posthumous Works— the Second Part of Faust. V. Hypochondriasis and Hysteria. VI. Geijer's History of Sweden. VII. 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, Germany, Italy, 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 Richter, 30, Soho- square ; and Black, Your. g, and Young, 2, Tavistock- street, Covent- garden; of whom may be had, the prceeding Numbers of this Journal To- morrow will be published, in 3 vols, post 8vo. price 11.7s. boards, ILLAGE BELLES. A NOVEL- w London: Baldwin and Cradock. Paternoster- row. J ust published, atOne Shilling. PRACTICAL TREATISE on the Cure of PILES, HEMOR- RHOIDAL TUMOURS, and PROLAPSUS. By S. MACKENZIE,, 73, Lamb's Conduit- street; whereby the dreadful operation of excision or liga- ture is avoided, by means of a Patent Invention. _ E. Wil « on. Royal Exchange. Latelv published, in a large 8vo. volume, with numerous Tables, price 18s. bds* RGLAXATION, REVENUE, EXPENDITURE. POWER, STA- EL TISTICS, and DEBT of the whole BRITISH EMPIRE ; their Origin, Progress, and Present State ; with an Estimate of the Capital and Resources of the Empire, and a Practical Plan for applying them to the Liquidation of the National Debt. The whole founded on, and illustrated by, Official Tables and Authentic Documents. By PA BLO PEBRER. Besides the general subjects noticed in the Title, the work comprises a condensed account of the Origin, Progress, and Present State of the Stock Exchange, the Bank, and the East India Company ; with an analysis of all the important official documents relating to those corporations, which are indispen- sible to the right understanding of the momentous questions now under discussion. This is a very extraordinary volume; extraordinary for the immense labour that must have been bestowed in collecting and arranging the multifarious de- tails wh'ch compose the surprising mass of statistical information, and more especially as the work of a foreigner."— Eclectic Review, July 1833. London : Baldwin and Cradock, Paternoster- row. hi two vols, post 8vo. 16s. HARACTER; or JEW and By Mrs. LEMAN GRIMSTONE. Charles Fox, Paternoster- row. € GENTILE. A NEW EDITION WITH ENGRAVINGS. Just published, in 12mo. handsomely printed, and ornamented with a richly- en- graved Frontispiece and Vignette, the Eleventh Edition, price 4s. boards, AVISIT for a WEEK ; or, Hints on the Improvement of Time; containing Original Tales, Anecdotes from Natural and Moral History, & c. & c. By LUCY PEACOCK. London : printed for Longman and Co.; J. Richardson; Baldwin and Cradock; Harvey and Darton ; Whittaker and Co.; Sherwood and Co. j J. Harris; and Simpkin and Marshall. Where mav be had, by the same Author, The LITTLE EMIGRANT, a Tale; interspersed with amusing Anecdotes and Instructive Conversations. ISmo. Fourth Edition, ornamented with a plate, price 2s. 6d. half- bound. AMBROSE and ELEANOR; or, the Adventures of Two Children Deserted n an Uninhabited Island. 18mo. the Ninth Edition, with a Frontispiece, price 2s. Gd. half- bound. SANDFORD AND MERTON, COMPLETE IN ONE VOLUME. Just published, a New Edition, with fine Cuts from Drawings by Harvey, in 12mo. price 7&- 6d. neatly half- bound, THE HISTORY of SANDFORD and MERTON. By THOMAS DAY, Esq. London : printed for J. G. and F. Rivington ; Longman, Rees and Co.; Har- vey and Darton ; Baldwin and Cradock ; R. Scholey ; Whittaker and Co.; J » Duncan ; Simpkin and Co.; J. Harris ; G. Wightman ; Houlston and Son ; and E. Edwards Just publi- 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 Vartv, Strand c( / a TURTLE and i he TRANSPARENT PINE- APPLE PUNCH— ft the former at 13s per quart packed in iars, and the Punch at 4Ss per dozen, sold at the CAFE de l'EDROPE, 9, Havmarket. Orders ( if hy letter) with a remittance, immediately attended to. DINNERS, WINES, and every variety of refreshment at this celebrated Hotel, on the same scale nf moderate charges as at the Cluhs. Venison in the Coffee Room everyday.— Apartments for Gentlemen or Families. TWELFTH OF AUtiUST. TO SPORTSMEN. BINNIE and RICHARDSON, 31, Old Bond- street, respectfully beg leave to remini Noblemen ar. d Gentlemen, that their Establishment is the only place in London where the REAL SOFT LAMB'S- WOOL PLAIDS are to be had ; an artiile so much approved of for Shooting and Fishing Dresses, being light, elastic, and durable in wear. B. and R. have likewise an Assortment of other Materials for the same purpose. A well- made Plaid Jacket, Waistcoat, and Trousers .. ^£ 3 10s. CANDLES Composition Sid. per lb.- Wax- wick iVijialds 61d.— Caudles Is. 5d. to 1 s. 7d.— Wax Candles Is. 4d. t Sperm and to 2s. 4d.— Pa- lace Wax Lights 2s. Id.— Inferior Ditto Is. 9d — V- tlow Soap 50s. to 58s. per 112 lbs.— Mottled, 54s. to 62s.- Fine Curd, 72s.- Undsor and Palm Is. 4d. per packet— Old Brown Windsor Is. 9d.— Rose 2s.— Camphor 2s.— Superior Almord 2s. 61.— Sealing Wax4s. 6d. perlb— Sperm Oil 5s. Sd. to 6s. per gallon— Lamp Oil 3s., for Cash, at DAVIES'S Old Established Warehouse, 63. St. Martii/ s- Une, opposite New Slaughter's Coffee- bouse,— Delivered in Town, or packed with ewe for Country, RELIGIOUS LltiELS. ONSIDERATIONS on the LAW of LTBEL, as relating to Publications on the Subject of Religion. By JOHN SEARCH. Did we not strictly command you that ve should not teach in this name."— Acts. v. 28. James Ridgwav, Piccadilly.— Price 2s. LIFE OF FREDERIC THE GREAT. * In 2 vols. 8vo. with Portrait, Second Edition. 28s. bds. IT IFE of FREDERIC the SECOND, KING of PRUSSIA. Ai By LORD DOVER. " A most delightful and comprehensive work.— Judicious in selection, intelli- gent in arrangement, and graceful in style."— Lit. Gaz. London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman. MANGNALL'S QUESTIONS, AND GEOGRAPHY. Just published, in 12mo. new edition, 5s. bd. HISTORICAL and MISCELLANEOUS QUESTIONS, for the Use of Young People ; with a Selection of British and General Bio- g, aphy,& c. By RICHMAL MANGNALL. This edition is considerably enlarged by the insertion of the Astronomical Terms and Biographical Sketches, which, it is hoped, will better entitle the work to a continuance of the liberal patronage which it has already received. The Dates have been compared with the best authorities, and corrected: the whole has been carefully revised ; and additions have been made where neces- sary, particularly a Set of Miscellaneous questions before Christ, an Abstract of the English Reigns from the Year 800 to the Norman Conquest, and Questions on the History of the Old Testament, chronologically arranged. By the same Author, COMPENDIUM of GEOGRAPHY, for Schools, Private Families, and all tho « e who require a knowledge of this necessary Science. 3d edition, correcteda 7s, 6d, bcund. Luudoa; Longman, Ree?, Orme, Brown, Green and Longman, 218 JOHN BULL; July 14. T U ESP AY'S GAZRTT E. DECLARATIONS OK INSOLVENCY. G. A. MILLS, Newark - apon- Trent, grocer— S. STOCKTON, Long yard, Xamb's Conduit- street, wine- cooper. BANKRUPTS. J. BEVTLL, Hanbyford- place, Kenu ington- common. auctioneer. Atts. Smith, New Bridge- street, Blaekfriars ; Graham, Copthall- buildings- J. WRIGHT, " Chancery lane, law bookseller. Att. Phipps, Weavers' Hall, Basinghall- stieet— T. BUI DG WOOD, Folley- lane end. Potteries, Staffordshire, clay merchant. Att. Smith, New Br:.! ge street, Blackfriars— T. BOLTON and R. BARNES, Preston, Lancashire, corn merchants. Atts. Blakelock and F'ddey, Serjeants' Inn, Fleet- street, London ; Alessis. Pilkiugton, Preston— J. BOLTON, Preston, Lancashire, coal merchant. Atts. Adlington and Co.. Bedford- row, London; Parker, Preston ; Walker, Preston— F. MARRIOTT, jan Eaton, Nottingham- shire, bone merchant. Atts. Holme and Co., New Inn, London ; Swann, Notting- ham— T. BROABHURST, Stockport, Cheshire, builder. Atts. Gadsden, Fur- aival's Inn ; Coppock, Stockport FRIDAY'S GAZETTE. BANKRUPTCY SUPERSEDED. R. GUTHRIE, King- street, Holborn, tailor. BANKRUPTS. J. R. CASE," Hunter- street, Brunswick square, grocer. Att. Fisher, Castle- Street, Holborn— W. POTTER., Broad- street, Golden- square, grocer. Att. Addison, VeruJam- buildings, Gray's Inn- square— T. S. FLUDE, Mincing- lane, wine and spirit broker. " Atts. Druce and Sons, Billiter- sqnare— J. PAUL, Houndsditch. baker. Att. Hiil, Rood- lane, Fench urch- street— T. FORD, Canal, load- wharf, Kingsland- road, coal merchant. Att. Paterson, Mincing- iane— J. LANGRI UGE, Salisbury, stay- maker. Atts. Sutcliffe and Birch, New Bridge- street, Black friars— R. HONE, Brighton, grocer. Att. Crosby, King- street, Cheapside— J. and H. R. WILSON. St. Qsyth, Essex, grocers. Atts. Messrs. Davies, King's Arms- yard— E. LEDWARD, Liverpool, hat manufacturer. Atts. Blacksiock and Bunce, Serjeants' Inn, Fleet- street:; Atkinson and Birch, Man- chester ; Deane, Liverpool— J. MILLS, Wrigles, Pontefract, Yorkshire, mer- chant. Atts. Battye and Co., Chancery- lane ; Ainley, Delph, Yorkshire— J. RYLEY, Kenworthy, Liverpool, druggist Atts. Moss, Liverpool; Adlington and Co., Bedford- row— S. RADCLIFFE, Stockport, Cheshire, cotton spinner. Atts. Back, Verulam- buildings, Gray's Inn, London ; Winterbottom and Wright, Heaton Norris— R. Watson, Bury, Lancashire, cotton- manufacturer. Alts, Clarke and Medealf, Lincoln's Inn fields, London ; Grundy, Bury— J. ARK ELL, Stratford upon- Avon, Warwickshire, appraiser. Atts. Loveday. Warwick ; King, Lyon's Inn, London; Hobbes, Stratford- upon- Avon.; Adlington and Co., Bed- ford- row— J. GIFFORD, Lopen, Somersetshire, tinman. Att. J. Baker, jun.. Uminster— M. TYLER, Lyneombe and Wjdcombe, Somersetshiie, retail brewer* Atts. Messrs. Helder, Clement's Inn, Strand, London; Boor, Warminster, Wilt- shire—^ W. KENDRICK, Birmingham, jeweller. Atts. Harrison, Birmingham ; Norton and Chaplin, Gray's Inn- square, London. PARLIAMENTARY ANALYSIS. HOUSE OF LORDS. MONDAY.— The Corporation Officers' Bill was read a second time- Mr. BERNAL and others from the Commons brought up the Roya Engineers' Pension Bill, and the Sea Apprentices'Bill. Read a first time.— Adjourned. TUESDAY.— The Royal assent was given to the Serjeants' Inn, and Beveral other Bills. Several Peers were appointed to conduct a Conference in the Painted Chamber, with the Commons, upon the subject of the East India Resolutions.— Upon their return the Marquis of LANSDOWXE stated that they had met a deputation, and had acquainted them with the concurrence of their Lordships ill all the Resolutions of the Commons without amendment. The Lord CHANCELLOR having moved the order of the day for the third reading of the Local Courts Bill, and the question being put that the Bill be now read a third time,— Lord WHARNCLIFFE opposed the motion. It would not be proper to have prevented a Bill of this kind from having undergone fair discussion and from being made as perfect as it could lie made. They had the Bill now before them, and their Lordships were at liberty to reject it or not. He hoped they would not be deterred from doiDg their duty by anything that might be said or done out of doors. If their Lordships considered the measure as likely to be injurious to society they ought to reject it. If they did not do so of what use was their Lordships ? He admitted that the law, as regarded the recovery of small debts, was such as required the interposition of the Legislature; but means might be found to facilitate the recovery of small debts without such a measure as this. The Noble Lord moved that the Bill be read a second time this day six months.— The Earl of WICKLOW exposed some of the details of the measure, and declared his intention to oppose the Bill. Lord LYNDHURST said he felt that he ought to state to the country the grounds on which he had formed the opinion which he had expressed on a former occasion. He had been charged with being influenced by party motives in his opposition to this measure; and he would beg leave to state the position in which he stood with respect to this Bill. When his Noble and Learned Friend on the Woolsack first introduced this Bill into their Lordships' House he ( the Lord Chancellor) had stated that this was not a Government measure, but that it was brought in upon his own personal responsibility. He ( Lord Lyndhurst) had expressed to his Noble and Learned Friend in private the opinion which he entertained of this BiH; and, if since that period the measure had been adopted by his Majesty's Govern- ment. there could be no reason why he ( Lord Lyndhurst) should shrink from declaring the opinion which he had originally formed. Unlimited power was given to the Kina's Government, or rather to one Member of it, that Member being his Noble and Learned Friend, to create any number of offices which he, in his judicial or discre- tionary power, might deem to benecessary. He might nominate any number of Judges, with appointments of 2,0001., with any number of Registrars, with salaries of 7001. or 8001.. and an unlimited number of- other officers. He would say that such a principle of legislation must be productive of the most injurious consequences. He knew indeed that bis Noble and Learned Friend had personally no wish whatever to avail himself of this patronage; but he might not always hold the office. He ( Lord Lyndhurst) could suppose a person of Eopuiar talents and of the great eloquence of the Noble and Learned ord, but not blessed with his moderation— he could imagine thecase of a person anxious for power, indifferent to the existing institutions of the. country, and ambitious of being the founder of a new system — desirous of popular favour, and anxious therefore to establish a substantial power ; and, should there at any time be aperson holding the office of Lord Chancellor, what better instant could he take to consolidate his power than by such a measure as this ? It had been said that this Bill had been properly called the Poor Man's Bill. There never was a Bill less the poor man's Bill than the present measure. It would enable the man possessed of property to obtain judgment and execution, and to seize the property of the poor man, to sell it, and turn him into the street, in the course of six weeks. It was a Bill to oppress the poor, and put the poor debtor entirely at the mercy of the rich creditor. The Noble and Learned Lord con- cluded a most eloquent speech by declaring that he had no personal enmity to answer, and no private motives whatever to gratify. In the decision of that House he should most cheerfully acquiesce, and he should now beg leave to declare his sentiments in favour of the amendment proposed. Lord PLUNKETT supported the measure.— Lord WYNFORD was quite willing to assist any person in the preparation of a Bill for the more easy recovery of small debts, but not with the expensive machinery of this Bill, to the details of which he had so many ob- jections, and the principle of which he considered a bad one.— The LORD. CHANCELLOR replied.— Their Lordships then divided upon the question, " That the word now, proposed to be left out, stand part of the question ;" that is. that the Bill be now read a third time— CoHtents 81 Proxies 41 — 122 Not Contents.... 81 Proxies 53 — 134 Majority against the Bill being now read a third time 12 The Gallery was again opened for the admission of strangers, but it was immediately cleared for a second division on the question, " That this Bill be read a third time this day six months"— Contents ,,. 73 Not Contents 68 Majority in favour of the third reading this day six months— 5 The proxies were not called on the second division. Three of the Peers who had left the House, not expecting a further division, returned, and voted among the contents, whose numbers wereat first given out as 76, but as they were not actually in the House at the moment of the question being put from the Woolsack their votes were disallowed. . WEDNESDAY— The Agricultural Labour Rate Bill was read a third time and passed. The Municipal Officers Election Bill was also read a third time and passed.— Adjourned. THURSDAY.— The Archbishop of CANTERBURY presented petitions from the dioceses of Limerick and Armagh, the Archbishop of Ar- magh being at the head of the petitioners, against the Church Tem- poralities ( Ireland) Bill. They did not resist a consolidation of the dioceses, should that be deemed advisable, but theyproteeted against, any appropriation ol Churcli property to the service of the State.— Earl BATHURST presented a similar petition from the University of Oxford.— The Duke of WELLINGTON also presented a similar petition from the Clergy of the diocesi s of Cloyne and Youghal. His Grace observed, that he could not present these petitions without stating that in his opinion the measure to which the petitions referred was directly oppot- ed to that policy which had governed the councils of this country since the Reformation, and particularly as to Ireland since the Revolution, to the present moment. The measure was not only a sympton of such departure, but it was a consequence of the system acted upon by his Majesty's present Government for these two years past.— Earl GBEY said, he hoped to he able to show, when the proper time arrived for doinsr so, that the Bill was perfectly consistent with a sincere attachment to the Established Church.— The Puke of BUCKINGHAM said he should resist the Bill, because he deemed it to be one of spoliation.— Lord HARROWBY wished forsome delay, for the purpose of gaining further information ; and eventually Earl GREY consented to postpone the second reading of the Bill till Wednesday. The Court of Chancery Regulation Bill was read a second time. On the motion of Lord LYNDHURST, the Standing Orders were sus- pended for the purpose of enabling hisLoidship to introduce a Bill upon the subject of the Thellusson property— the Bill was read a first time, and ordered to be read a second time on Monday.— Adj. FRIDAY.— The Chancery Regulations Bill went through a Com- mittee, and the Report was ordered to be taken into consideration on Monday. The Lord CHANCELLOR brought forward a Bill, founded on the Report respecting the Ecclesiastical Courts.— The Report recom- mended the abolition of about 300 ecclesiastical jurisdictions— their powers would be transferred to the diocesan officers. The Bill would also correct the abuse as regarded the prosecutions for " brawling ;" it proposed that henceforth such offences should be tried as misde- meanors in the Common Law Courts. Another provision regarded probates of wills: it proposed, as far as they were concerned, the extension of the Statute of Frauds.— The Bill was read a first time. The Lord CHANCELLOR then introduced a Bill for the purpose of establishing a concurrent jurisdiction as regarded the Insolvent Debtors Judges in Wales;— to prevent the retention in prison, in certain plr. ces, and under particular circumstances, of unfortunate debtors beyond the period contemplated by the benevolent princi- ples of the Acts on the subject.— Read a first time. The Loi d CHANCELLOR also presented another Bill, the object of which was to establish a Court of Appeal from the Law Judges, in which three or more Judgesshould preside, and that would leave the Lord Chancellor the time to transact the business of his own Court, and to preside in their Lordships' House. He also proposed an equalization of the salaries of the Chief Justice and the Chief Baron, to be 7,0001. a year; also for the reduction of the salaries of the Vice- Chancellor and the Master of the Rolls. His Lordship said that he should also recommend that the Lord Chancellor's salary be 8.0001. a- year.— Lord ELLENBOROUGH said he entertained serious doubts of the propriety of the changes proposed by the Noble and Learned Lord.— The Bill was read a first time.— Adjourned. HOUSE OF COMMONS. MONDAY.— Several petitions were presented making strong repre- sentations of the ruinous state of the sugar refining trade. Mr. CLAY, Mr. GROTE, & C. supported the representations of the petitioners, de- claring that large establishments and whole districts were rapidly pro- gressing towards ruin, in consequence of the inability of the English sugar refiners to compete with foreign refiners. The Church Temporalities ( Ireland) Bill was read a third time. Several verbal and other amendments were moved. Mr. SHIEL moved an alteration in the clause fixing the incomes of the Arch bishops and Bishops ; he proposed to make those of the former 4,5001.. and of the latter 3,0001. a year. After a good deal of dis- cussion the amendment was negatived. Upon the final division the numbers were, for the passing of the Bill, 2/ 4, against it, 94; majority, 180. The Bill was then ordered to be carried to the Lords. It was arranged that the West India Bill should be postponed until the East India Bill had been disposed of. The Royal Burghs ( Scotland) Bill was read a third time.— Adj. TUESDAY.— At the morning sitting, Lord ALTHORP moved the order of the day for the House resolving itself into a Committee of the whole House upon the Tithes ( England) Commutation Bill.— The Noble Lord stated I is intention to be to omit every part of the pro- posed measure which rendered compulsory the commutation of tithes. In the first place, the Bill would enable parties to contract together without restriction ; and this part he intended to pursue. To the other fiortion of the Bill there might be greater objection. It was the desire of the Government to give general satisfaction, and from what he had beard he did not think that the whole measure was likely to attain that object.—( Hear, hear.)— He had no wish therefore, to persevere in that part which was generally » bjected to; and therefore wished to omit all the clauses after the I2th clause, with the exception of two or three, which were not so material.— After a short discussion, the Bill went through the Committee/< ro forma, and was ordered to be taken into further consideration this day se'nnight. Mr. PETER moved the order of the| day for the second reading of the Bill for the better Observance of the Sabbath.— Mr. ESTCOURT hoped his Hon. Friend would withdraw it for the present Session.— Mr. PETER said he would have no objection, if it was allowed to be read a second time now, and referred to a Select Committee.— Sir A. AGNEW defended some parts of the Bill, when cries of " Divide, divide," resounded from different parts of the House ; but the SPEAKER said it would be useless dividing, as the division would go for nothing, it being past three o'clock. The House resumed at 5 o'clock, when Mr. C. FERGUSSONbrought forward his motion respecting the wrongs and oppression of Poland, and the conduct of the Emperor of Russia towards that country. The Hon. Member, after cautioning Ministers against any attempt to meet his motion by an amendment of the previous question, a subter- fuge which he was convinced would gain them more unpopularity than any act of the Government since they took office, concluded by moving—" That an humble Address be presented to his Majesty, praying that he will be graciously pleased not to recognize or in any way give the sanction of his Government to the present political state and condition of Poland, the same having been brought about in violation of the Treaty of Vienna, to which Great Britain was a party."— Mr. T. ATTWOOD seconded the motion.— After a long and animated discussion, the House divided, when the numbers were— for the motion, 95; against it. 177; majority, 82.— Adjourned. WEDNESDAY.— At the morning sitting, Sir F. VINCENT presented a petition complaining of the arbitrary and irresponsible rules which guided the Inns of Court, in calling or not calling to the Bar indi- viduals who sought that privilege. He at the same time gave notice, that he should move an amendment on Mr. H. Hughes's motion respecting the Forms of Court, with a view of obtaining all the infor- mation respecting the application and the rejection of Mr. D. W. Harvey's claim to he called to the Bar. At the evening sitting, the second reading of the East India Bill was moved, and called forth a long and uninteresting discussion ; but no amendment was proposed. The Bill was read a second time with- out any division, and ordered to be considered in Committee on Friday next. The Burglary Bill was referred to a Select Committee.— The Com- mittee on the Imprisonment for Debt Bill was postponed till Wed- nesday next.— Adjourned. THURSDAY.— In the morning sitting the adjourned debate on the second reading of the Sabbath Observance Bill was adjourned till Tuesday. In answer to a question from Major Beauclerk. Lord DUNCANNON said he had received His Majesty's commands to make immediate arrangements for permitting hackney coaches, and other vehicles of that description, to pass through St. James's Park from Storey's- gate, along the Bird- cage- walk, to Pimlico. On the motion for recommitting the Irish Grand Juries Bill, Colonel CONOLLY expressed his hope, that after the strong desire manifested by the Irish Members, and by a great portion of the Committee. His Majesty's Government would consent to postpone the Irish Grand Juries Bill to next Session.— Mr. O'CONNELL and several other Members expressed a similar wish, although they admitted the Bill not to be without its merits.— Mr. LITTLETON, Mr. GRAT- TAN, Lord EBRINGTON, Mr. RUTHVEN, and others, trusted after the loud complaints that had been made for years against the Irish Grand Jury system, that a measure which avowedly contained many valuable provisions would be allowed to proceed.— The House divided, when the numbers were, for going into a Committee 78, against it 45. Majority 33.— The House accordingly went into Committee pro forma. Some clauses were considered, the Chairman reported progress, and obtained leave to sit again to- morrow. The House proceeded to the further consideration of the Report oil the Letters Patent Bill, when several veibal amendments were agreed to, and the Bill was ordered to be engrossed, and to be read a third time to- morrow.— The Report on the Letters Patent Ex- pences Bill was ordered to be taken into further consideration that day six months. In the evening sitting, a Message from the Lords announced that their Lordships had given their assent to the Agricultural Labourers' Bill, the Corporation Offices Bill, and a number of private Bills. Mr. H. L. BULWER then rose to make his promised motion " for copies of papers respecting the measures pursued by Russia in her interference with the state of Turkey." Previously to proceeding however, he asked whether there was any Administration existing in this countryat present ?— The CHANCELLORO! the EXCHEQUER replied briefly," Here we are I"— Mr. H. L. BULWER said that their presence there proved nothing; but, after the answer, such as it was, he should move for the papers. The Hon. Member condemned the apathetic policy pursued by the Government of this country, and declared it to be his opinion that if the progress of Russia were not speedily checked, she would not only render herself mistress of the great object of her ambition, Constantinople, but ultimately trample upon the independence of Europe.— Lord PALMERSTON ad- mitted that the preservation of the independence of Turkey was essential to the welfare of Europe, and to the balance of power among its different States. He admitted that the Sultan had called upon this country for aid against the ambitious designs of the Pacha of Egypt, and that it had been refused to him. He certainly could not have foreseen, at the time that the Sultan made his application lor aid, that Ibrahim Pacha would have marched so rapidly from vic- tory to victory as he had done. Having made these admissions, the Noble Lord requested the motion might be withdrawn. He assured the House that a correspondence oil the subject was now proceeding ; that he believed Russia would keep faith on this subject; and that he believed, at the time he was speaking, the Russians were withdraw- ing.— Mr. C. FERGUSSON said he could have no faith in Russia, after the manner in which it had trampled on the nationality of Poland, in violation of treaty.— Mr. BULWER, in consequence of Lord PALMERS- TON'S statement, would not press his motion, and withdrew it ac- cordingly. Dr. BALDWIN brought forward his promised motion for a Select Committee to inquire into the effect of absenteeism on the prosperity ofjlreland, and to devise a remedy for the evil; which was eventually negatived without a division. Dr. LUSHINGTON moved for the minutes of the Court- martial on Capt. Robison, who commanded three companies of veterans at New South Wales. The Captain was brought before the Court, by Governor Darling, in 1828, and the trial lasted two months. Finally,. Captain Robison was dismissed the service. A long discussion arose, and Dr. LUSHINGION'S motion was lost by a majority of 31, the num- bers being, Ayes, 42, Noes 73. Lord ALTHORP moved for the appointment of a Select Committee to inquire into the occurences in Calthorpe street. The Noble Lord said that after the verdict of the Jury upon a late trial it was requisite, for the satisfaction of the public, that HII inquiry should be instituted by that House. He did not mean to blame the police by this motion ;. but, on the contrary, he was prepared to say that the inquiry insti- tuted by Governmeut proved that no material blame, if any, was imputable to the police on the 13th of May. He believed it would be found that, although the police had acted with some unnecessary violence, it was not till one of their body had been murdered.— Sir E. KNATCHBULL thought the proceedings of the Noble Lord a very singular and improper course as a precedent.— The motion was then agreed to, and the Committee, consisting of about thirty Members, forthwith appointed.— Adjourned. FRIDAY.— At the morning sitting, the House went into Committee on the East India Bill, for the purpose of filling up blanks, and making verbal amendments— hence motions for instructions to the Committee for new clauses, & c., were not allowed to be putin this stage of the proceeding. On the proposition to fill up the blank for the term of the Charter, Mr. HUME moved, as an amendment, that instead of" twenty" years, it be " ten" years; afterwards proposing an addition to the first clause— namely, that the Charter should be terminable after 10 years, and two years' notice, or power to amend the Charter, as to the Parliament should seem meet, if circumstances required. This amendment occupied the whole morning. Its dis- cussion was resumed in the evening, and ultimately negatived on a division by a majority of 51. The verbal amendments & c., occupied nearly the whole of the second sitting. The Committee proceeded to clause 40, when the House resumed, and the Bill was ordered to be re- committed on Monday.— Adjourned. ~ THE A It M Y. PROMOTIONS AND EXCHANGES. WAR OFFICE, JULY 12. 7th Regt. of Dragoon Guards— Cornet G. A. F. Cunynghame to be Lieutenan by i> ur. vice Sir J Duntze. who retires; Cornet C. H. Thompson, from the 11th Light Dragoons, to be Cornel, vice Cunynghame. 8th Regl. Light Drags.— Cornet T. W. S. Lowndes to be Lieutenant by pur- vice J. King, wlio retires; E. Mostyn, Gent, to tie Cornet by pur. rice Lowndes. 91b Light Dragoons— J. Johnston, Gent, to be Cornet by purchase, vice Sir J Hawley, Bart, promoted. 11th Light Dragoons— W. A. Rose, Gent, to be Cornet by purchase, vice C. H Thompson, appointed to the 7th Dragoon Guards. IstRegt. of l'oot— Staff- Asst.- Surgeon J. Millar, M. D. to be Assistant- Sur- geon, viceS. Dickson, resigned. 7th Foot— Lieut. D. Barton to be Captain by pur. vice C. La Touche, retires ; Sec. Lieut. G. P. Malcolm, from Rifle Brigade, to be Lieut, by pur. vice Barton. 14th Foot— Capt. B. Broadhead, from the half- pay Unattached, to be Captain, vice K. M'Kenzie, who exchanges receiving the difference. 20th Foot— Ensign A. Stewai t, from the Royal Newfoundland Vet. Companies, to be Lieut, by pur. vice W. Heron, whose appointment has not taken place. 28th Foot— Lieut. F. W. P. Parker to be Captain by pur. vice C. Buxton, who- retires; Ens. W. Cadell to he Lieutenant by pur. vice Parker ; H. D'Arcy Kyle, Gent, to be Ensign by pur. vice Cadell. 34th Foot— Ensign and Adjutant T. W. Howe to have the rank of Lieutenant. 40th Foot— Ensign W. B. Bowen, from the lialf- pay Unattached, to be Ensign,, vice Baker, appointed to the 49th Foot. 45tli Foot— Ensign G. M. Metcalfe to he Lieutenart by pur. vice Coke, prom. ; J. Jerningham, Gent, to be Ensign by pur. vice Metcalfe. 49th Foot— Ensign W. P. K. Browne to be Lieutenant, without purchase, vice J, Malcolm, deceased. To be Ensigns— Ensign W. W. Baker, from the 40th Regiment of Foot, vico Browne ; G. F. Bartlev, Gent, by pur. vice Ransome, who retires. 52d Foot— Gent. Cadet V. A. Suitees from the Royal Military College, to be Ensign by purchase, vice Forbes, promoted. 60th Foot— Capt. P. Eason, from the half- pay Unattached, to be Captain, vice H. Seymour, who retires ; Staff- Asst. Surg. W. Odell to be Assistant- Surgeon,, vice W, S. M'Credie, who retires upon half- pay. 76tli Foot— Major J. Clarke to be Lieut.- Colonel without pur. vice Gillmana deceased; Capt. j. Clarke to be Major, vice J. Clarke; Lieut. S. B. Ross to be Captain vice Clarke. 82d Foot— Lieut. G. O. Moore to be Captain by pur. vice Doran, who retires;. Ensign J. Brash to be Lieutenant by pur. vice Moore ; D. Watson, Gent, to be Ensigr, by purchase, vice Brash. 88fh Foot— Capt. H. Shirley, from the half- pay Unattached, to be Captain, paying the difference, vice Gower appointed to the Rifle Brigade. 94th Foot— Lieut. T. Tulloh to be Captain by pur. vice Lockwood, who retires ; Ensign W. F. Webster, to be Lieutenant by pur. vice Tulloh; S. P. Groves, Gent, to be Ensign by pur. vice Webster. 96th Foot— Lieut. R. S. Murray, from the half- pay Unattached, to be Lieute- nant vice E. Sutherland, who exchanges. Rifle Brigade— Capt. E. L. Gower, from the 88th Regt. of Foot, to be Captain, vice J. Woodford, who retires upon half- pay Unattached, receiving the differ- ence ; Gent. Cadet A. H. Horsfoid. from the Royal Military College, to be Second Lieutenant, by purchase, vice Malcolm, promoted in the 7th Foot. 2d West India Regiment— Lieut. W. E. Stanley to he Captain by pur. vice W. M'Vicar, who retires: Ensign R. Hunter to be Lieutenant by pur. vice Stanley ; J. E. Boggis, Gent, to be Ensign by purchase, vice Hunter. Royal Newfoundland Veteran Companies— Ensign J. Nicholls, from the half- pay of the 97th Regt. of Foot, to he Ensign, vice Stewart prom, in the 20th Foot- UNATTACHED.— Lieut. E. T. Coke. from the 45th Foot, to be Captain bypur. j Ensign the Hon. J. Forbes, from the 52d Foot, to be Lieutenant by purchase. GARRISONS.— Lieut. E. Sutherland, upon half- pay, to be Town Adjutant at. Cape Breton, vice Schwartz, deceased. HOSPITAL STAFF.— Staff- Asst. Surg. W. Dawson, M. D. from the half- pay, t » he Staff- Assistant- Surgeoil, vice Odell, appointed to the 60th Foot ; G. Stewart, Gent, to be Staff. Assistant. Surgeon, vice Miller, appointed to the 1st Foot. MEMORANDUM.— Lieut. T. Porter, upon half pay Unatt. has been permitted to retire from the service, by the sale nf an unattached commission. THE APPLE CROP.— Notwithstanding the late tempestuous weather has beaten a great quantity of apples from the trees in Somersetshire* the orchards are likely to bear a very abundant crop, and the price- of cider is still keeping down. HOPS.— In the North Clay district ( East Retford) the hops are doing as well as they were ever known to do. The plant has not received any dangerous check from the late weather. The buds are now ready to burst into blossom, and there is little or no accumu- lation of filth. In Hereford the appearance of the hop yards is very satisfactory; the rains have been beneficial, and the fly is little heard of. The high winds have certainly ruffled the plants, but not to any great extent. August 219. JOHN b u l l : 251 PARISIAN CORRESPONDENCE. DEAR Butt, Paris, July 10, 1833. It is very amusing to those who are on the spot, and who know what 19 really passing in Paris and in the Departments, to read the lucu- brations of such creatures as H. C. B. in the London Globe, and other letters of a similar character, which now and then appear in the Times. Those who read such letters as those to which I refer, would really imagine that France has become the most happy, united, peaceable, and prosperous nation in Europe, and that all the insur- rections, disturbances, misery, and ruin of the last three years had given way to an era of happiness and prosperity. I will, therelore, enumerate the facts of the last week, not travelling farther back than Wednesday. 3il July, and confining myself to notorious and published facts of the last seven days. These facts are not unknown to the correspondents of the Globe or of the Times, especially as I shall draw several of them from the columns of GalignanVs Messen- ger. Read, then, these facts with attention ; and then say whatde- gree of confidence is to be placed in the opinions of the leading Whig Journals of England. FACT 1.— The Marseilles Journals contain the following account of the peaceable and orderly state of that citya fewdaysago. " At nine o'clock on Sunday evening shouts of " Vive Henri V. !" were voci- ferated in the Grande Rue by mobs of persons armed with bludgeons. In their progress they uttered terrible menaces. On arriving at the corner of the Rue Belzance, an earthenware vase was thrown upon them. They immediately took up stones and flung them at the windows of a coffee- house keeper. After tfiis thev proceeded on their course, amidst shouts of " A bus les Republicans! Vive Henri V.!'' When they arrived in the Rue de 1' Eveche, opposite the Bishop's Palace, they shouted " A has la sentinelle! Vive Henri V.!" Later in the evening some young men, Republicans, were bathing, and singing tlie Marseillaise. The Henriquinquists attacked them amidst deafening shouts of 44 A has les Liberalise 1 Vive Henri V. /" This attack led to reprisals, and the Republicans accepted a chal- lenge to fight at the Canebiere. Last night, about ten o'clock, as M. CORGUET was going home, he was assailed by a mob of individuals, who summoned him to shout 44 Vive Henri V. I" An attempt was made to set the house of LA TOURETTE on fire, which is an inn kept by a Republican. In fact scarcely a day passes without more or less collision between the adverse parties— the' Royalists and the Repub- licans." This is the public order of Marseilles. 2.— The celebrated cannon foundry of Creusot, in France, being the largest and most important in this country, has failed, leaving hundreds of workmen out of employ. M. AGUADO alone has lost 120,0001. by the failure. To prevent an insurrection of the workmen the Government is actually obliged to carry on the works at its own expence. Wonderful proof this ofnational prosperity. 3.— Several opposition Deputies, amongst whom are Messrs. COR- RUENIN, ARAGO, SALVERTE, LHERBETTE. and PASSY, have agreed to publish a series of popular lectures for the lower orders on the Budget, in order to excite them to demand the reduction of the Civil List, and also the destruction of the Sinking Fund of the national debt. How admirable a proof is this of the harmony and satisfaction which reign in Fi ance ! The taob are to be excited by addresses on the iniquity of the Budget. 4.— The Abbe Auzou, a Catholic clergyman, has been fined five francs for appearing publicly in the streets of Clichy, near Paris, in bis surplice in a funeral procession to the French church ! This is the religious liberty conferred by the revolution ! A clergyman can- not appear in the streets in a surplice at a funeral procession ! ! 5.-— More disorderly scenes have taken place at Marseilles, in consequence of the usual attacks made by Republicans on Carlists, and Carlists on Republicans. Pistols were fired, and an inhabitant of the Quartier St. Jenn, who had given evidence at Montbrison against the Royalists, Usere tried for the affair of the Carlo Alberto steam boat, was ex posed to popular attacks. It appears then that the people are not all Liberals in France; but, on the contrary, that large portions are Carlists. 6.— The receipts of the Customs at Havre during the first six months of this wonderfully prosperous year, amount to 691,889 francs, or nearly .=£ 28,000 sterling le6s than in the receipts of the same period in iS32. How astonishing a proof is this of returning prosperity ! 7.— La Bagatelle, the pavilion and property of Henry V., situated in the Bois de Boulogne, and put no for sale illegally by the present Government, has not found in all France a single purchaser ! How is this? not because the chateau and park are not beautiful— not because they are not well situated— not because they are out of order or valueless ; on the contrary, this is one of the most beautiful and valuable properties in the environs of Paris. Then how came it to pass, that not a single person attended to purchase it ? For this reason, that the property is the private property of the Duke of Bordeaux— that its seizure and sale are illegal— and that so firm is the conviction that Henry V. will and must come back to France, that no one will risk his money in purchasing the property so seized by the revolution. This is a surprising proof of the return of con- fidence ! in the present Government; not one person in all France can be found who will risk his money in purchasing La Bagatelle I 8.— The system of incendiarism has again begun. At Gault St. Deins eleven houses have been set fire to and destroyed. At Sure, property to a very large amount in farms and buildings lias been burnt to the ground. At Hargui Court five houses and numerous outbuildings have been set fire to, and at another village forty bouses were set fire to, and several lives lost a few days ago. What a proof of the return of " order" and happiness in France I 9.— The miners of Auzin, the property oi the PERIERS, have gained the day, and the company has been compelled to increase the wages of the labourers four sous e ich day, or have their mines destroyed by water. Thus the mob has triumphed, and thus work- men are encouraged to conspire for high wages ! Admirable proof of our return to legality ! 10.— The MemorialAgenais published some time since some tre- mendous articles against the Government on account of its conduct to the Duchess of Berry. The journal has been brought up for trial, and the journalist was acquitted. How was this? Because the jury considered the conduct of the Government infamous, and lias so recorded its opinion in the verdict! That is, 1 suppose, a proof of the general satisfaction with the conduct of the adminis- tration ! 11.— Strict searches have lately been made at all the cane and stick shops in Paris, and also among the itinerant dealers in those articles, for the purpose of detecting which had swords and daggers in them. These have been seiz" d by order of the Government, as also all sticks with heavy leaden heads. Why is all this? Because the Government is fearing another Republican insurrection. Is this then a proof of our return to order? 12.— For some time past political and party duels have been un- usually frequent in and near Paris. On Wednesday last two were fought in the Bois de Boulogne between four young men, two of whom were dangerously wounded An encounter also took place in the plain of Crenelle, where ten soldiers of different regiments fought with the sabre. Two grenadiers were wounded. At Vin- cennes an artilleryman killed his Brigadier in a duel. Other meet- ings are said to have taken place on the Plain of Mousseaux and near the Barrier de Charoune. So much for the return to peace, and order, and satisfaction, of which the Globe and Times' correspon- dents so often speak. 13.— Eleven inhabitants of Clichy, accused of rebellion, and resist- ance to the legal authorities, have been acquitted, though the facts were proved ; and thirty- one inhabitants of Leves Vindon— a similar charge — have likewise been declared not guilty. No where will Jurymen find guilty those who are prosecuted by the Government, however culpable may be the individuals I This is a striking proof certainly of the high estimation in which the Government is held by Jurymen, that it is enough to be prosecuted by the Government to be sure of escape !! 14._ On Saturday domiciliary visits were made by the police at the • residence of the well- known Republicans, CAVAIGNAC, BOISSAYE, GARDAREIN, LACOMBE, and a variety of others. Numbers of papers were seized, and some persons arrested. What does all this mean ? Why, that the Republicans are again plotting by hundreds against the Government. 15.— The Tribune of Friday, and the Tribune of Monday last, have been seized. What for? For violent attacks on Louis PHILIPPE ! This is what is meant by the liberty of the Press, and by the satisfaction of France with the results of her Revolution. 16.— The lace and button makers of St. Etieune, in the Loire, are in a state of combination against their masters, whose lives are threatened by the canaille. A manikin of straw has been placed before one of the manufactories, and many of the workmen went and fired pistols at it. exclaiming, 44 There's a shot for Monsieur such- a- one," naming one of the masters. This is a proof of manufacturing order and happiness 1 h-— The Breton, of Nantes, has the following article from Locmine. in the West of France, of the beginning of this month :— 44 Yesterday a Corporal of the 46th Regiment, belonging to a detachment which remains at Bignan until the arrival of the 33d Regiment, having come hither with some of his comrades, was, on his return, stopped by some Chouans, who led him about all night, and at four o'clock in the morning tied him to a tree. There they mutilated him in the most horrid manner, and then untied him. saying, 44 If you are not satisfied with this, we will finish you." This is a specimen of what is meant by 44 the pacification of La Vendee." 18.— More fires in the Departments— more incendiaries, and destroyers of public and private property. The Seminary of Montauban has been nearly consumed ! The farm, buildings, and outhouses belonging to M. BEYSER, one of the Judges of the Civil Tribunal at Colmar, have been set fire to by an incendiary. And at Serignai, a great number of houses were set fire to at the same- moment. 39.— At a fete on the plains of Grenelle, in the environs of Paris, 200 young men appeared in costumes, armed with sticks. They were all Republicans, and uttered such cries of 41 Down with Louis Philippe," and " Vive la Republique," as to excite tumult and apprehension. The Gendarmes were compelled to interfere, but the rioters escaped. 20.— It appears from a letter addressed to the Tribune, that the Government now suspects conspiracies to be forming against it. even in the Masonic Lodges ; and seizures and arrests, searches, and domiciliary visits have been made, in consequence of a recent meeting of the members of the Trinity Lodge in Paris. I have said enough. I could extend my list of facts to twenty more, which have occurred even during the past week. But this is unnecessary. Your readers will now be satisfied that they should place no confidence in the reports and assurances of the Globe, and the optimist of the Times; but should judge only by facts, which will teach them that we are in the midst of disorder, confusion, and crime. Of what is now passing as to Portugal, I am disposed to say a few words before I close my letter. A curious circumstance occurred in Paris the other day, which will serve to exemplify what sort of materials the army of Don PEORO is composed, and how little those who enlist understand who or what they are about to fight for. A poor devil of a piano- forte tuner, having earned many a franc at the house of a Portuguese gentleman of great respectability in this city, applied to him to allow him to enlist in 14 the army for Portugal." What army ?" asked the Portuguese Royalist. 4' I do not know," said the piano- tuner; 44 but some Poles, who are friends of mine, wish to go and fight in Portugal; and if you will give me some money, to pay their expenses, & c.. up to Paris, we will all go." 44 But who are you going to fight for ?'' re- demanded my respectable informant. 44 I do not know, rejoined the pianist, but we want some money !" My friend, who is too honourable a man to enlist any man blindfold, then explained to the applicant the difference between the two causes and the two armies ; but the pianist was ready to serve either, and only asked for 44 money, money!" What think you of this? I pledge myself for its correctness. It is reported, and believed, that the Spanish Government has informed VILLA FLOR, that unless he shall have left the Algarves by the 15th inst. he will have some Spanish guerillas on his heels very quickly. This conduct, on the part of the Spanish Government is what I anticipated in my letter of last week. By the bye, you and your readers cannot fail to have observed that, at the date of that letter, nota human being knew anything of the nature of that expe- dition but myself; and that I told you, before- hand, all the plans, even the intended place of landing of the rebels. When I wrote that letter, not even the French Government knew anything relative to the expedition : but I was in the secret. Of that expedition, I can only repeat that, in Portugal, they laugh heartily at it; and now the fleet of Don MIGUEL is really ready, I promise you early intelli- gence of the capture of PEDRO and his party. It is by no means impossible, however, that VILLA FI. OR and his men may escape to the Azores; and, as they see their chances in Portugal daily dimi- nishing, 1 have reason to believe that the 4000 men now in Algarves are to get off to Terceira.— I am my dear BULL, yours, P. H. SURREY SESSIONS. THE NEW POLICE.— When the Grand Jury entered the Court on Wednesday morning, to present the remaining bills of indictment, the Foreman took the opportunity of addressing the Chairman upon the subject of the efficiency of the metropolitan police. The various witnesses belonging to the force, had given their testimony in such a manner, and conducted themselves with such propriety of demea- nour, as to call forth the approbation of the whole of the Gentlemen composing the Grand Jury, who were desirous of giving expression to the feeling entertained with respect to the conduct of all those men attached to the new police who bad occasion to appear before them as witnesses.— The Chairman ( Mr. Hedger) thanked the Grand Jury in the name of the county for their services, which, however, would be required in a short time again, in consequence of the inter- mediate Sessions appointed by the Magistrates, and which were ar- ranged to take place preparatory to the ensuing Assizes. With respect to the good opinion formed by the Grand Jury of the effici- ency of the metropolitan police, he ( the Chairman) perfectly con- curred with them, having had many opportunities of becoming acquainted with the manner in which they conducted themselves at those Sessions in giving their evidence.— Tlie Grand Jury were then discharged. THE REV. ROBERT TAYLOR.— In the course of the day an order arrived from the Home Office at the County Gaol, directing the' Governor to liberate the Rev. Robert Taylor, upon entering into his own personal recognizance in the sum of 5001. to be of good behaviour in future, Tlie fine to the King, and also the two sureties, which formed a portion of his former sentence, were remitted ; and the defendant, having complied with the instructions transmitted from the Secretary of State's Office, was released from further imprison- ment. LONDON SESSIONS, Thursday.— This morning the Recorder, Alder- men Venables, Birch, & c., met at Guildhall for the purpose of holding the adjourned Sessions, or further to explain why no Sessions was to be held.— Jurors, prisoners, witnesses & c., were also in attendance.— It appears that at the adjournment of the Old Bailey Court on Tuesday the officer adjourned that Court until Monday, and the London Sessions until this day, as it has been usual to hold them two days after the Old Bailey, he not considering that the latter Court had itself only adjourned.— Mr. Teague. the Governor of the Compter, informed the Judge that he had several prisoners in custody who were prepared to stand trial.— The Recorder said that they should not be prejudiced, and ordered them to be sent for imme- diately, in order that they might either be discharged, or enter to appear hereafter on their own recognizance.— The adjourned Sessions for the City will not be held until the middle of next week, but no day can be fixed until it be known when the Old Bailey Court will close. New BRIDEWELL, TOTHILL FIELDS, WESTMINSTER.— On Tuesday was hoisted a very majestic block of Hayter granite stone, raised by very powerful machinery, to the top of the porch to this prison. The stone work is upwards of 23 feet long, between four and five feet on the bed, and nearly as much in height; weighing near 30 tons after being reduced to its pediment shape. It is said to be four tons heavier than any stop. e at the new Palace, and eight tons more than the famed granite stones at London Bridge ; certainly the largest stone brought to the metropolis. There is to be a Fancy Fair and Concert to- morrow atVauxhall, at which Paganini and other eminent artists will exhibit, for the benefit of that excellent Charity the Royal Dispensary for Diseases of the Ear. OPENING OF THE NEW PIER AT GRAVES END.— On Monday the new grand Stone Pier at Gravesend, erected for the accommodation of passengers to and from the steamers, was opened for the first time. The day passed off' without any attempt having been made on the part of the watermen, who it will be recollected destroyed, about a fortnight ago, a portion of the projection, the Mayor having taken the precaution to swear in 200 special constables to prevent any col- lision. The new pier extends 100 feet from the grand stone pier, and a further addition of 40 feet will shortly be made. It is said that an additional sixpence will be made by the steamers to the fare, to cover the expenses. The watermen, who have lefused all offers of accommodation, and even rejected the compensation offered by the Corporation, have announced their intention of landing and embark- ing passengers at 2d. per head, one half of the fare allowed by the Act. s An unlucky wight wbo lately joined the Preston Temperance Soeietv was expelled as a drunkard for eating part of a plum- pudding that had rum in it!— fVestmareland Gazette. SUMMER ASSIZES. HERTFORD, Thursday.— ROBBERY.— Jatin Green- aged 25, labourer, was indicted for stealing the sum of. 901. from the dwelling- house o? Thomas Reed, farmer, Watford.— The Jury found him Guilty.— Transported for life. MANSLAUGHTER.— George Goodship was indicted for having killed his wife, Sarah Goodship, in the parish of Kitchen, by striking her with his fist, and throwing her against the table and on the floor. Mr. O. Forster said that on the 28th of June,, about eleven o'clock'at night, he was called in to see the deceased. She was then lying on the floor, supported by pillows, and she appeared to be labouring under a very extensive hemorrhage. Several vessels were full of blood, and the floor of the room was covered with blood. In witness's opinion the death of the deceased was occasioned by excessive uterine hemorrhage, which might have been brought on by violent excitement.— The Learned Judge here stopped the case, and under his direction the Jury recorded a verdict of acquittal. HORSE STEALING.— John Bransfon, a well- dressed man, was in- dicted for stealing a mare, value 251. and a bridle and saddle, the property of Mr. John Spencer.— The prosecutor said his mare was safe m his stable on the evening the 4th of last April. In the morn- wig the stable was discovered to have been broken open, and the mare and saddle stolen. Witness having received some information, went a few days afterwards to Barnet. and there saw his mare stand- ing in a blacksmith's shed near the Woolpack Inn. The mare was then in the prisoner's possession. Witness knew the prisoner and his friends, who a short time ago were in very respectable circum- stances.— A witness proved that the prisoner brought the mare to hiir., and wished him to buy it for 261. The prisoner said he was a farmer in Warwickshire, and the mare was his property.— Guilty. James Baker, labourer, aged 31. was indicted for having stolen two wether sheep, the property of Mr. Edward Logsrlen, of Kerfield, — The prisoner was found guilty.— The learned JUDGE said, the law respecting the offence of sheep- stealing had been since last year commuted to transportation for life— a sentence, in this instance, which he should not attempt to mitigate, as the housebreaking implements found in the prisoner's cottage fully convinced him he was no stranger to crimes of a serious character. 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, Charingcross.— J. GLOVER, in addressing himself to Ihe Friends having favoured him with their preference, or intending to do Bo, 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 Ihe 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 (' hick orders attended to. Great May's buildings, 5 7 mo., 33. ( Established 80 years.) RUPTURES.— I. EGG and Co.' s New Patent Self- Resisting and Adjusting GERMAN TRUSS, without Straps or any other compli- cations, continues to he recommended by the first Members of the Faculty for the Cure and Relief of Hernia, as well as for its simple and efficient construction, advantageously possessing over the commonTruss a resisting and repelling power. Ail English Trusses act only on the principle of pressure— the stronger the spring, greater the pressure before and b'hind: and where straps are used a resisting power cannot be applied. Manufactory, No. 1, Piccadilly, where is published by the Inventor, I. EGO, a Treatise on the Cure of Hernia by Mechanical Power, practically adapted to those afflicted. Price 2s. fid. J- 1R. COURTENAY'S LAST POPULAR WURK. ~ The 18th Edition, price 4s. AN HISTORICAL and PRACTICAL TREATISE on SYPHILIS and its CONSEQUENCES, illustrated by many extrao- dinary Cases. To which are added, Practical Observations on Diseases of tiie Genera- tive System, on Nervous, General, and Local Debility, with a superior Mode of Treatment. Iii- result of upwards of thirty years'extensive and successful prac tice. By C. B. COURTENAY, M. D., No.' 27, Howlandstreet, Fitzroy- square, late of Robert- street, Adeiphi. Printed for the Author, and sold by Sherwood and Co. Paternosfer- row; On- whyn, 4, Catherine. street, Strand; Marsh, 145, Oxford- street; Ch& ppeH, 59, Pall mall; Sutherland, 9, Caltonstreet, Edinburgh ; and all booksellers. Of whom also may he bad, DR. COUF. TENAY'S celebrated TREATISE on STRICTURES of the URETHRA and RECTUM, in which Strictures of from ten to twenty years' duration have been effectually cured in a few weeks, and its superiority thereby fully established : being the 2lst Edition, price 3s. " The luminous views taken of these diseases, together with the important warnings against excesses, entitle these works to great prabe, and we may add, as a further recommendation, that they are written with much delicacy and mo- lality."— Inspector and Literary Review. " We entertain the highest opinion of Dr. Courtenay's professional skill, and congratulate him on his successful and judicious application to those severe and often fatal diseases."— European Magazine. GJIUKUESS'S NEW SAUCE for general purposes having gained M 3 such great approbation, and the demand for it continuing to increase, JOHN BURGESS and SON beg most respectfully to offer thus their best ac- knowledgments to the Public for their liberal patronage of the same ; its utility and great convenience in all climates have recommended it to the most distla guisbed foreign connexions, who have all spoken highly in its recommendation. It is prepared by them ONLY ; and lor preventing disappointment to families, all possible care has been resorted to, by each bottle being sealed on the cork with their firm and address, as well as each label having their signature, without which it cannot he genuine.— JOHN BURGESS and SON'S long- established and much esteemed ESSENCE of ANCHOV1 ES continues to be prepared by them after the same manner that has given the greatest satisfaction for many years.— Warehouse, 107, Strand, corner of the Savoy- steps, London. ( The Ori- ginal Fish- sauce Warehouse-} ( 1USIOM HOUSE SEIZURE.— 15,000superior Hambro' damask 7 table cloths of various sizes, with several oozi- ns of splendid damask napkins to match, all to be immediately sold without reserve ; together with about 16,( ICO pieces of fine India nankeens, 7 yards in length, all atls. lld. 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, 3s, per dozes ; damask table linen, 2 yards wide, for kitchen and hall cloths, at 1 s. per vard : ironing blankets at Is. 3d.; window muslins at 4s. per piece of 12 yards; 900 white counterpanes, 2s. 9d. each ; 570 dozen nursery diapers, 5s. 6( 1. per dozen, worth 9s. 6d. : India long cloths at 5s. 9d. per piece of 25 yards : also a magnificent stock of superior gra « s bleached Ii ish and Scotch linens, suited for gentlemen's wear. Is. 6d. per yard, those at 2s. are worth 3s. 6d, : India silk handkerchiefs at 2s. 9: » each, the Company's best goods ; lawns at 4s. 6d. the piece, and French cambric band- kerchiefs at If s. fiif. 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. PELICAN LIFE ASSURANCE OFFICES, Lombard- street, and Spring Gardei. s Matthias Attwood, Esq. M. P. William Stanley Clarke, Esq. F- R. te. John Coone, Esq. William Cotton, Esq. F. R. S Sir William Curtis, Bart. William Davis, Esq. Sir Charles Flower, Bart. Alderman. DIRECTORS. Jas. Alex. Gordon, Esq, M. D. Hugh Hammersley. Esq. Sir Win. Heygate, Bart, and Aldermaa J. Petty Muspratt, Bsq. William Samler, Esq. George Shurn Storey, Esq. Matthew Whiting, Esq. Thomas Parke, Secretary. ADVANTAGES OFFERED BY THIS COMPANY. A very low rate of Premium, particularly on the younger and middle ages ef life, by which the same amount required by other Offices to insure <£ 1000, will secure* .£ 1200, WHEIHER THE CLAIM ARISE SOONER oa LATER, and without the liabilities of a Partnership _ Permission to pass, in decked vessels, along the shores of Great Britain ana Ireland, and between them and the opposite shore from Hamburg to Bouroeaux. Equitable considerations given for the surrender of Policies in cases where it uiay be desirable to diseontinuethe Insurances. ~ THE TWO QUAKERS. ' Friend,' said Aminadab to Obadiah, ' Why such amazement do thy features show?" ' To see, Aminadab, thy Boots on fire, And thou stand harmless in the burning glow I' ' Ah, Friend! dost thou so of discernment lack— Art thou so far of common knowledge barren, Not to perceive ' tis but the radiant black That's manufactured by friend Robert Warren? Last night this Blaeking saved me from the grave; For, idly sauntering on the Thames' side, I sudden fell into the billowy wave. And soon had suak for ever in the tide— Had not the moon on my boots cast a beam. And showed a boatman near, his sallow hide, Who, by their bloom allur'd, came near their gleam, And dragged me fainting from the whelming tide! THIS Easy- shining and Brilliant BLACKING prepared by ROBERT WARREN, 30, STRAND, London ; and sold in every town In the Kingdom. Liquid in bottles, and Paste Blacking in pots, at M., 121. and 18d. each. Be particular to enquire for Warren's, 30, Strand. All others are counterfeit. 1XO those who are afflicted with ASTHM AS, COUGHS, Hwp- ing Coughs, Consumption, Gout, Chronic Disorders of the Chest Sto- i*. n„ wels oarticularlv in Costive habits, Flatulence, Indigestion, Spatm. & c. LrSE^ UE'l EUXt R SANS PAREIL is recommended by . The Lancet; an extract from which will be found, with the most remarkable cases, hi the pamphlet accompanying the Mediem. Sold by a Med, erne Venders, 9, 9d 4s 6d and 18s per bottle.— N. B. Medical Gentlemen supplied at the slVortts't noUce. Z hairpS bottles. Orders ( post paid) to be addressed to 4, Cole, 101, High Hoiborn 220 JOHN BULL July 74.' TO COHHESPONDENTS. KENELM, who writes from Liverpool, is wrong in his data$ we will arrange it. The extract from that excellent paper the Newcastle Journal would be now out of place. Lord DURHAM has resigned— Capt. BARRINGTON has resigned— Mr. ELLICE, who had resigned, is returned to office— in fact, there have been several changes in the family, which would spoil the effect of the remar ks. fVhile ive are on this subject, we may € is well observe to our friend ALPHA, that the statement which he mentions as having appeared in the Guardian London newspaper of Thursday, descriptive of the Stamp Office job, and given as an extract from the Newcastle Journal, was an extract from Bull of Sunday • se'ntiight, copied into the Newcastle Journal. It is curious that the Ouardian should have copied from a provincial paper, as original, an article which appeared in it on the < 6th of July, extracted from this paper, in which it appeared on the 30th of June. RALPH'S curious communication from Bristol ought to have been \ sent to the Committee. The persons interested in the case of Captain TORBETT, at Saint Helena, should, if the circumstances are as represented in the letter, apply to the Court of Directors of the East India Company. The letter about which Dr. SHEPHERD writes has been lying for him at the Office ever since Tuesday. fVe have inserted the letter purporting to come from Admiral X) U.\ DAS. without having verified the hand writing. fVe have some doubts of its authenticity merely from its general appearance. IVe agree with CIVIS, that when the lamp irons are fixed to the WAITHMAN Obelisk, in a similar manner to ithose in that of WILKES, on the opposite side, the appearance will be better and more uniform— besides, it will make the thing useful. fVe are requested to state that the " picture of MICHAEL ANGELO,, by himselfadvertised for sale amongst the effects of the late Mar- chioness of LANSDOVVNE. is not a portrait of iVJr. MICHAEL ANGELO TAYLOR, as has been foolishly imagined. Mr. TAYLOR was intended for an architect, and not a painter. fVe beg to recommend to our readers a Letter on Country Banking,. addressed by a country banker to Lord ALTHORP, and published by KIDGWAY. AS we have not room for very cojrious extracts, we prefer making none to garbling a very excellent pamphlet. A MONDAY EDITION ( for the Country) is published at Three o'Clock in the afternoon, containing the Markets and Latest News JOHN BULL. LONDON, JULY 14. THE KING held a Levee on Wednesday, and returned to Windsor in the evening. On Friday their MAJESTIES honoured the Duke and Duchess of BUCCLEUGH with their presence at dinner at Richmond, where a numerous party were assembled to meet their MAJESTIES. The KING holds his next Levee on Wednesday. THE coming week will shew us much of great political interest. The general rumour is that the atrocious Irish Church Spoliation Bill will be thrown out by the Lords on Wednesday, and that the Ministers will resign on Thursday. Nobody can view the Irish Spoliation Bill with greater disgust than ourselves— nobody is more perfectly aware of the contempt in which the Ministers are held than we are— and yet we doubt whether the consummation of their down fall is so near at hand. That it must speedily arrive is most certain : but what we mean to say is, that as far as we can see, there is no certain assurance that the Bill in question will be thrown out by the Lords, as we are quite sure it ought to be, upon the principle. The active interpreters of the meanings of other people declare that the Duke of WELLINGTON has denounced the principle, and avowed his determination of rejecting the Bill in limine. What the Duke of WELLINGTON may intend, we, of course, have no means of ascertaining; but most certainly his Grace never said anything in his speech the other evening which can fairly be construed into any such avowal. Lord GREY, like an old debater and manceuvrer, chose to say that the DUKE had expressed such a determi- nation ; and the DUKE, although not so old, was at least too able a debater himself to say anything in reply : and from the confident tone in which the Ministerial underlings go about, saying that the Bill is to be rejected at once, and without going to a second reading, we rather incline to be- lieve that it is not. The country ( to whom it is only necessary to exhibit the Ministry in order to make it more and more contemptible,) may perhaps think that if Lord GREY will bend and humble himself to the wiser and more prudent suggestions which the Opposition may make in the Committee, that it would be as well to try them once more, and let the Bill go to the second reading ; but those who recollect the shabby conduct of the Government when the Reform Bill was so tolerated, cry out against trusting them, and call for the instant demo- lition of a measure, the destructive character of which no amendment of its details can seasonably or safely qualify. Another part of the story which is going about, we very se- riously doubt; we mean the fact of the Ministers resigning if ithey were beaten ; they have had beating enough already, if heating went for anything. Although the underlings were running about yesterday, and are running about to- day, we have no doubt, regardless of the sacredness of its character, raising what they call " a clamour"''' against the Opposition, declaring that if the Bill is lost the Ministers go, and if the Bill is not lost, that it is only because the Opposition dare not turn them out that they abstain from dividing. Do these yelping . ctirs and dancing bears think that their vulgar non sense is likely to have any effect upon the minds of such men as WELLINGTON and PEEL ? Or do they believe that their fruitless efforts to excite the Political Unions would, if sue • cessful, have the effect of shaking them in their resolutions, We do no hesitate to express our individual opinion that let the effect producible upon the Ministry be what it may, the Bill SHOULD BE REJECTED upon the principle, because the Government which can legislate for Ireland can legislate for England; the very first use made of the diaboli- cal measure, will be as A precedent for the subversion of Episcopacy here. Sir JOHN WROTTESLEY, it seems, has given notice of a motion in the House of Comn.,° ns anticipation of the rejection of the Bill by the JLojrdy. This, if not the most unconstitutional step ever taken, is meant to be one of the most mischievous— the man himself iC a w'eak man, and can do little harm to anybody except hij friends, and, as for supporters, it is quite clear he will rui.' velT shoi t of those. O'CONNELL, by far the most imporfa. nt man UPON this point— HUME the most obstinate— and " HITTLE HARVEY the most eloquent, have already registei etl ( heir •^ opinions by voting against the present Bill in the Ho.' lse of Commons— they cannot assist Sir JOHN, nor should we intagiup Mr. O'CONNESLL likely to do so, if he could, be- cause lip must be aware that so long as Mr, STANLEY re- mains in the Government his chance of holding any office is wholly and entirely out of the question. We shali see what happens ; but whatever may occur, there is one consolation always in store for Lord GREY'S Minislry— it can n- ever stand lower in the estimation of the country than it does at this moment. MINISTERS generally, and the LORD CHANCELLOR in particular, have received another severe body- blow in the rejection of that most flagrant job the Local Jurisdictions Bill, which was most wisely and properly rejected by the Lords on Tuesday. To BROUGHAM this defeat, coining so soon after the destruction of his Registry Bill job in the Commons, is most lamentable. The restlessness of his manner, the coarseness of his language, the petulance with which he actually flurried the all- but- royal blood of the LENNOXES, by driving away the Parcel- opening Postmaster- General, who attempted to approach him with a hint, during the debate— a hint from the Duke of RICHMOND ! — all declared the real state of his feelings while Lord LYND- HURST was grilling and picking to bits all the absurdities and iniquities of the Bill — the poor man's Bill, as the Times calls it—- truly enough by the way— for it was BROUGHAM'S Bill, and, he poor man, has been beaten in it. So far, was it indeed, the poor man's Bill, and no fuither. But fatal to the character of the Government as is this double defeat by the happy and cordial coincidence of the two Houses— strengthened by the glorious triumph of humanity achieved by Lord ASHLEY, in defiance of the most uncourteous as well as unconstitutional conduct; sharpened by the total emasculation of the Irish Church Bill; embittered by the absolute inanity of Lord ALTHORP in the management of the Bank Charter and the regulation of cash payments, and rendered still more unbearable by the recollection of the Malt Tax disastrous abolition, and its most shameful and unprecedented restoration ;— fatal, we say, as all this must be to the imbecile Government of the moment, it is natural that the individuals composing that Government, and the " creeping things" that follow them, should endeavour by every means in their power to make the country believe that the majority against them either ought not to be so considered, or was obtained by some ex- traordinary means and exertions. Some of the most impudent of their scribes— or, perhaps, we should be nearer the mark if we said, the most impudent of themselves— tell us, that as the numbers of Peers present were equal, the Bill would constitutionally have been carried if it had not been for proxies ; that is to say, the votes of Peers " who are at Naples, or in Wales, & c. & c." That this is a falsehood, the man who wrote it, or who desired it to be written, KNEW ; for although his short experience in the two places in which he has— fas much to Lord GREY'S sorrow and disgust as to ours)— seats, renders him as igno- ant and inefficient in the one as in the other, he must have known that the " just and usual practice of the House of Lords," as the Times words it, is exactly the reverse of what he stated, or caused to be stated in that paper. The following is the standing rule of that House:—•" In the case of an equality, the non- contents, or negative voices, have the same effect and operation as if they were in fact a majority."'''— Lords' Journals, June 25, 1661. So much for this mean falsehood— and now for another: The Bishops, who have been libelled and threatened and bullied by the newspapers, and by the Noble Earl who reads the newspapers, were charged by the Ministerial sup- porters with having ousted the Bill ; and this charge was persisted in until the division was published— Not one Bishop voted in opposition to it— but, notwithstanding all the abuse of the Prelates, all the sanguinary warn- ings to their Lordships not to meddle in politics, and all the plain hints, after Lord GREY'S fashion, about " setting their Houses in order," we find that no less than one Arch- bishop and three Bishops voted for the Bill in person, and another Archbishop and Bishop so voted by proxy— their names we mention to prevent mistakes. WHATELY, Archbishop of Dublin; COPPLESTON, Bishop of Llandaff ; MALTBY, Bishop of Chichester ; and GREY, Bishop of Hereford. The vote of the last is, perhaps, not so remark- able ; as Lord GREY, the brother of the Learned Prelate, was more pleased with the rejection of the Bill than any body else. This we believe— because it was BROUGHAM'S Bill; and Mr. EDWARD ELLICE— the Noble Earl's brother- in- law, who is, as he publicly declared in the House of Commons, perfectly indifferent whether his vote coincides with those ofhis colleagues ornot— has denounced the Bill as abominable Bill," as has also Mr. MICHAEL ANGELO TAYLOR, although his " friend GREY did not consult him about it." Next after this, let us look at the minority, such as it was— let us just count noses, and recollect " how the deuce they got there:" first of noses— Lord BROUGHAM, one; Lord SEFTON, two; Lord LEITRIM, three; Lord HEAD- PORT, four; Lord MEATH, five; Lord BELHAVEN and STENTON, six; Lord HOWDEN, seven ; Lord PANMURE, ght; Lord POLTIMORE, nine; Lord WENLOCK, ten; Lord SEGRAVE, eleven; Lord TEMPLEMORE, twelve; Lord DINORBEN ( a pretty title rendered in Welch), thir- teen ; Lord GODOLPHIN, fourteen ; Lord FALKLAND, fif- teen; Lord WESTERN, sixteen; Lord QUEENSBERRY, seventeen; Dr. WHATELY, eighteen ; DI-. MALTBY, nineteen ; Dr. GREY, twenty ; Lord ERROL, twenty- one ; Lord FIN- GAL, twenty- two ; Lord KINNAIRD, twenty- three ; Lord DOVER, twenty- four; Lord MOSTYN, twenty- five; Lord CLONCURRY, twenty- six; Lord DE SAUMAREZ, twenty- seven; Lord STANLEY, twenty- eight; Lord PAGET ( UX- bridge), twenty- nine ; Lord GREY OF GROBY, thirty;— so, let us breathe a while— thirty— not to speak of the cheaper bargains of promotions in the Peerage— equally binding, if not equally mischievous in other respects; — Duke of SUTHERLAND, thirty- one; Dukeof CLEVELAND, thirty- two; Marquess of WESTMINSTER, thirty- three; Earl of LICH- FIELD, thirty- four; Earl of CAMPERDOWN, thirty- five; Earl of DURHAM, thirty- six; Earl GRANVILLE, thirty- seven; Earl ofRANFURLY ( shewn up in the list of sine- curists in the Times by mistake), thirty- eight; which num- ber will be found very nearly to approach the desired forty, and will reduce the ministerial majority to about the same number. We admit that the promotions are only rewards for past services, but nobody will deny that if Mr. MAULE had been playing at picquet— Colonel HUGHES " skying his popper" — ColoneJ BERKELV acting at Cheltenham— old Mr. Cij. Lls WESTERN smokiiig his pipe at Rivenhall-=- Admiral SAIJ- MAREZ eatijig lobsters at Guernsey, and all the other private Gentlemen who have been raised, had been left where they were, the Times would not have had occasion to misrepresent the rules and orders of the House of Lords upon so close a division. It is impossible to describe the effect produced by Lord LYNDHURST'S splendid speech upon this question. Lord BROUGHAM, we should think, is the man of all the world who must best appreciate its terrible power. There were no antics played— there were no jumpings about, or tumblings upon knees— no waving of hats, or raising of hands— all was plain, powerful argument, all convincing truth ; and we may fear- lessly appeal to men of all parties to pronounce an opinion upon an oration which, we believe, to have been one of the most powerful that ever was delivered in Parliament. THAT Lord BROUGHAM, who is of low origin and vulgar manners, should get violent in debating in a place for which he never was destined— no, not even by Lord GREY— is not surprising; but we are startled when we find the Nobis? Premier, sprung as he is from the MOWBRAYS, and the NEVILLES, and the WARDS, and the PEARSONS, and a long line of such illustrious ancestors, proud of his " order,"" of both his orders, indeed, hereditary and extra, and more- over sober, flying into the most indecent rage with his Royal Highness the Duke of CUMBERLAND, for denying in. the simplest and shortest negative the language produces, some rhodomontade in which the great man was indulging. That the HOUSE of COMMONS is what it is. Lord GREY is to be thanked. The donkey- brayers and cock- crowers in that honourable assembly, together with those who imitate the baaing of sheep and the bleating of lambs, are the pa- triotic representatives of the reformed constituency; but surely in the HOUSE of LORDS both the snarling of Lord BROUGHAM and snapping of Lord GREY are somewhat misplaced. In an assembly which holds within its walls men such as Lord WESTERN, Lord PANMURE, Lord DINORBEN, and others of the same class, we do not look for such abrupt- nesses ; and in Lord GREY, who is proverbially sycophantic to his superiors, his Lordship's rudeness to the illustrious Duke is the more remarkable. His Lordship unites in his character the two characters of Ducker and Craner— the bending humility which he observes in the former capacity, when the smallest in society, being fully com- pensated by the striking loftiness of the latter when he is acting Triton amoug the minnows, and bids his associates ( as the jackass did to the chickens) take care of them- selves. If Lord GREY supposes that he is likely to pooh- pooh down the brother of the KING, as Lord BROUGHAM pooh- poohed the Duke of RICHMOND the other night before all the Lords, and all the Ladies too, his Lordship is mistaken. The Duke of CUMBERLAND has fearlessly and nobly placed himself in the front of those who will, to the last moment, struggle in defence of the Constitution. It is not by per- sonal impertinence that such a man is to be diverted from his purpose by the servant of his Illustrious Brother ; and however glibly Lord GREY thinks proper to use the KING'S name in supporting a Bill not yet before the House, we suspect that his coarseness of behaviour is not likely to make his Lordship a bit more acceptable at Windsor than he is at present. If Lord GREY could possibly be put upon a level with the Duke of CUMBERLAND, these hints might be superfluous,- as it is, it is gently suggested to him— as old ladies desire PAM— at Loo, to be civil. It is said that KEY, Lord GREY'S Baronet, has got a Government contract— if he have, he must go out of Parlia- ment. This should be looked to, as the City are not in the humour to return any more Radicals, and the present LORD MAYOR would be a most proper and popular candidate. HIS MAJESTY'S Ministers and the Boundary Commis- sioners under the Reform Bill had a fish dinner at Greenwich on Saturday. The union of these two bodies was whimsical enough, and marks the grateful sense which the Government entertains of the services of those gentlemen. As is customary upon such occasions, tile- conversation was confined to piscatorial allusions. Lord BROUGHAM was absent, but the great " SeaV was given in honour of his Lordship. Lord IIOWICK was toasted as " the Grayling,'''' and " Lord ALTHORP and his flounders'"' was received with much applause. The jokes about plaice were innumerable as usual. BY this time, we have little doubt but that the Portuguese rebellion is, one way or the othe other, settled. The intelli- gence of Captain NAPIER'S— alias Don PONZA'S— proceed- ings comes to us garbled, and through a distorted medium; and we very much doubt the truth of the stories of the recep- tion it met with on landing. As a piece of generalship, it is clear that dividing the small invading force would have been absurd, if it had been imagined that the day was to be gained by fighting ; the division of so small a body of men could only have been adopted in order to try experiments upon the, popular feeling at different points ; and, if successful, to justify Lord PALMERSTON in assisting the rebels, under the plea of simultaneous risings, in favour of the Brazilian Pre- tender, in different parts of the kingdom. Lord PALMERSTON— we speak advisedly— stands in a mostserious position with regard to the Portuguese question ; and we believe he begins to feel it. He now sees— independ- ently of all his earlier conduct, involving a course of proceed- ings for which he will most certainly have to answer to the country— the rapidly approaching results of his vain and weak administration which now glare upon him. Spain, re- invigorated and refreshed, after having suffered deeply in the cause of liberty against the hated usurper of the Throne of France, steps forward again to vindicate herself from the aggression of her former friends. She is about to resist the invasion of Portugal— preparatory only to a renewal of the devastation of Spain— by force of arms ; to check, per- haps to annihilate, the band of hirelings who have sold themselves to excite rebellion in the tranquil country of at foreign Prince, the ally of their SOVEREIGN; and who,, under the Old- Bailey stratagem of aliases, are at this, moment pocketing the money of France for their services; against Don MIGUEL, while they are receiving the half- pay of England as a retainer for their services in favour of her allies. Those, indeed, are excepted from this double charge who have been induced to sell their English half- pay to the Go- vernment at a low price, and so are those who have been stricken out of our Army and Navy list; but it _ is a dif July 14: JOHN b u l l : 221 ficult matter to find in the columns of that authentic work the names which did belong to a great many of our officers, and in which they draw their money, while they are fighting under others as mercenaries in a rebel army. The Quarterly Review, just published, in an article upon our foreign policy, recapitulates succinctly all the argu- ments anil documents in favour of the rightof DON MIGUEL which have already, and in most cases in the first instance, appeared in this paper, which, we are proud to say was the first, and at that time, the ONLY journal which supported the claims of the KING of PORTUGAL— claims which can- not be disputed, which have been acknowledged by his countrymen, and which are confirmed by the laws. The Post has a remarkably good allusion to some of the gibberish which Lord GREY has been talking about the Coronation Oath, with reference to the only blot in the character of the KING of PORTUGAL which the Revolution- ists think they have hit. The Post says :— " In the House of Lords the other day, when Earl GREY was re- minded by a certain Illustrious Personage that the Coronation Oath would prevent the Sovereign from giving his a9sent to the Irish Church Bill, the Noble Premier declared that it could have no such effect; and many other Peers, among whom was the Archbishop of DUBLIN, adverted to the absurdity of those who would interpose the Coronation Oath against the Monarch's legislative interference in matters relating to church temporalities. " And yet the very same parties contend that the King of PORTU- GAL ought to be bound by the oath extorted from him at Vienna for an illegal purpose and by incompetent persons— an oath intended to bind others more than himself, and required of him whilst yet in a state of durance in a foreign land. What powers it could be possible for the representatives of foreign kingdoms assembled at Vienna to have in order to administer an oath to a Prince belonging to another nation, or how the Portuguese people could be bound by their act, it would be difficult to say ; but certainly if Parliament can release the Sovereign of Great Britain from the solemn obligations volun- tarily contracted by Ilia Coronation Oath, the Cortes of Portugal could invalidate the oath taken at Vienna, when it was, besides, ob- tained under a reservation of personal rights of which the Portu- guese only are competent judges." With regard to the spiritual criminality of the King of PORTUGAL touching this oath, the best answer is that the POPE, the visible head of the Church Universal, was the first Potentate— and he infallible— who recognised Don MIGUEL after his accession to his Throne, and sent an accredited Minister to Lisbon. The Wine question at Villa Nova is one in which Lord PALMERSTON has been somewhat too deeply and too rashly meddling. There is little doubt, we think, but Oporto is now in the possession of the KING— this may very much alter Lord PALMERSTON'S views— but, at all events, the conduct of his Lordship, in going out of his way to pick the quarrel, is worthy of the closest attention when the day of reckoning comes. His care for British interests ! ! ! Whenever the Noble Viscount uses these words in any of the wretched speeches he is now in the habit of making ( for, as a Parliamentary debater, he is gone), it will be only ne- cessary to remind him, as we did last week, of the Dutch Embargo, and the ruinous losses which it occasioned to our merchants, and the money it took out of their pockets to be put into those of the French. Every moment we expect fresh intelligence from the scene of action. We confess that we expect it with the deepest interest— an interest not only created by the desire to see Justice triumph, but excited by the certainty that a con- tinuance of the Portuguese rebellion involves in itself the germs of a general Continental war. SOMEBODY observed, that Lord BROUGHAM looked very black 011 Wednesday morning, after the defeat of his Bill. " Black," said another, " to be sure, his face is in Local Court- mourning. By the way. BROUGHAM reads his judg- ments in Court— who writes them ? THE Times of yesterday quoting from the Quarterly Review the dying declaration of PARKER the mutineer, who was hanged at the Nore, makes this prefatory observation: " The following letter appears in the last number of the Quarterly The poor mutineer had evidently some nobie qualities ; and just and necessary as his execution might be as an example at a dangerous crisis, there is we believe little doubt that had there been no mutiny, the seamen would have had no redress." There is a good spirit in this, especially while a Ministry exists which has made the most indecent and disgusting regulations for the navy, and cut down the rights and privi leges of the army. But it is all of a piece. WE regret to see that a well- meaning gentleman of the name of PETER is trying to get up a second edition of the exploded AGNEW absurdity. Whatever the object of these efforts may be. it is clear that nothing can more effectually tend to array the country in two classes against each other, the one of Atheists and Liberals, and the other of Puritans and Fanatics. How can a gentleman of honour, like Sir ANDREW AGNEW, prevail upon himself— we are quite sure he is too independent to permit any other person to prevail upon him— to declare in the House of Commons that all classes of operatives are anxious for the closest restrictions on the Sabbath which the House can enforce? It is NOT THE CASE. As far as working goes, the operatives are at this moment entirely protected ; no master can compel his journeymen to work on Sunday, and as for menial servants, they are excepted out of the Bill. Does Sir ANDREW AGNEW believe, or wish anybody else to believe, that the operatives want to be " cribbed, cabined, and confined" on a Sunday, debarred from their excursions to tea gardens, their little voyages upon the river, their social pipes and ale; or to have their wives or sweethearts mulcted of their cakes and tea upon the only day in the week in which they can enjoy them ? Does he really mean seriously to say that hard- working people who for six consecutive days have been shut up to labour and toil in heated rooms, in factories, or in gas- lit workshops, desire that they may be hindered from breathing the pure air on the seventh ? And what to the poor— or indeed to the rich— is an excursion without refreshment — without the enjoyment of the Sunday's dinner, the weekly festival at which liis family enjoy his society, and in his society the treat of something " good to eat ?" Why may not these relations, if they prefer good air to bad, go to those " Ordinaries on Sundays at two o'clock" which may be seen announced on every sign- board round London ; or why, if they prefer it, may they not travel thither in chaises or other carriages, if they can afford it ? Whether this is sinful or not Messrs. AGNEW and PETER may perhaps decide; but of this we are sure, that the operatives, except the ajj- eadybenighted Puritan Radicals, inustbe, and are opposed heart and soul to the monstrous restrictions which a couple of very small men are endeavouring to bring them under, because they think it right, and good, and wise. The beneficial effects of the measure upon society may be guessed from the following dialogue between SNIP, a tailor, and SNOB, a shoemaker, living in the same house, each having a wife— one having a child. Time, Sunday morning. SNIP. Veil SNOB— arn't you shaved? Vy the bells is a going for Church— ye von't be ready in time. SNOB. Church— bless your heart, I can't go to Church to- day— the Bill's come into play. SNIP. Ah— I know that to my cost. SNOB. How can I go to Church ? Ve used to send our bit of wittels to the bakus, and then I and SAL used to go to Church, and so give JENNY WALKER sixpence to mind the babhy till we come back ; then arter dinner SAL and I and the babby used to go to Chalk Farm, as reglar as clockwork, every blessed Sunday. She had a cup of the best bohea, with milk hot from the cow— I smoked my pipe and had a pint of ale. Little JENNY used to go to Church in the arternoon, and come and jine us, and so help bring babby back. Nowwe mar'nt get the things baked at the bakus, and JENNY mar'nt come and earn sixpence by looking after the babby— so SAL has to cook the wittels, and I have to mind the child— so there's no Church for us. SNIP. My Missus says she won't do no work— Sundays cause she's afeard of her life of BILL BYERS— so we avn'tgota morsel of grub for dinner, and neither of us knows where to get none— I won't go to Church with this here beard on, six days long, and JIM, him as is the barber over the way, won't shave me for fear of the five pound penalty, so I shall stop where I is. SNOB. Come along in to our place— my SAL isn't so particular— she's read the Hact itself, and swears she's a hexception— we got a line of mutton, vith the kidney in it, and a peck o' taty's— come along wi' your old woman, and let's be jolly. SNIP. Jolly— Hark, Mr. S—, there's one on ' em over the vay— don't ye know ' em— that's one o' BYERS'S boys— if he hears you laugh to- day, two- pun- ten for you. SNOB. PETER'S pence— eh ?— well, if we main't speak of a Sun- day in the street, let's come in— ours, you know, is a back room, up two pair— they can't hear us there— come along I say, what shall we have to drink ? SNIP. There's nothing but vater for us as can't afford vine— public- houses is shut— no sarving Sabbath- day. SNOB. I forgot. SNIP. Forgot !— you are lucky. Me and my wife have been put in mind on it: lier sister was brought- to- bed this day week, and they fined her husband a matter of thirty shillings for having labour in his house on the Sabbath. You must take physic o' Saturday night now, for fear it should work o' Sunday. SNOB. Veil, never mind— ve'll try and cheat the old one. There are cunninger dogs than the law- makers, and them is the law- breakers. Go and ask Missus to come and join us. SNIP. Oh, she'll come, and jump too; and I tells ye what— as we knowd we could not have no heavy wet to- day, she got a couple of bottles of Jacky, as will nourish us through the arternoon. SNOB. So it will, BILL ; and we won't stir out at all. If we can't have a drop o' short, or a swig o' heavy among the rurals in the harbours— what's the country to us, we can't live upon hair. SNIP. No, not by no means. If I could but get my chin scraped, I'd try and make myself comfortable. SNOB. Is Barber JEM at home ? SNIP. Yes, shut up in his back parlour a making wigs, where nobody can see him. SNOB. I tell ye vot, let's ax him to eat a hit of our mutton. He han't got nobody to cook for him, poor buffer, so we'll ax him over, and then if he brings his soap and a kipple of razors in his vestcoat pockets, he can shave us two, just by way of amusement, while SAL'S getting the line ready. SNIP. Amusement!— that's quite gone out — there's my poor Missus who used to get from eighteen to four- and- twenty shillings a week a manty- making in Crambo Alley, can't get a stitch o' work to do— nobody wears nothing now— they used only to put on their bits of things onest a week, to shew ' em like, and now they ma'nt go out a pleasuring o' Sun- days, they buys nothing. SNOB. Veil, come along up- stairs, we'll have a day on it, please the pigs; your two bottles of Jacky will last us till bed time, and I'll toss you up who pays for both— I'm not going to swelter out in the sun to walk. SNIP. Nor I— I'll be with you in a twinkling, and when we have got my Missus and barber JEM, we'll just lock the door and drink confusion to the reformers. For the sequel we have not room in detail. SNIP, SNOB, and Barber JEM, ensconsed in theirfast hold, pass the Sabbath with the females in hidden intoxication and carefully con- cealed profligacy— drunkenness progresses. Barber JEM contributes from his store over the way, to the replenishment of the gin- bottle. Jealousy grows out of familiarity— the women tear each other's caps, and scratch each other's faces. SNOB knocks SNIP over the ballusters, and Barber JEM is taken to the station- house dead drunk. In better society things will grow even worse. The mind restricted to drudgery through the week must have relaxa- tion at the end of it; and the tradesmen, and clerks, and their ladies, sweethearts and wives, have aright, in this Christian and civilized country, to share the innocent plea sures of the male part of the creation on the only day upon which they can properly enjoy them. What can be more innocent than going to Richmond^ walking upon the hill3 or paddling about by the water? What more agreeable or healthy than steaming to Gravesend ( where the animosity of the people towards the aristocracy has recently been evinced by their conduct towards the Pier)? What more natural than to eat and drink when arrived there?— No ; that is contrary to the law. What! of nature or nations ?— No ; of AGNEW and of PETER. Surely if young ladies are satisfied, with soles and eels, and ducks and peas, and sage and onion, and port wine and punch, and such things as these, all eaten fairly and above- board at open windows or in the open air, such persons as PETER and AGNEW should, rejoice thereat. Confine them in London, deny them harmless gaiety, pen them up with their lovers and friends, tell them they must not stir out, and like the Snips and Snobs of in- ferior life they will turn their thoughts into other channels, and soles and eels, and ducks and peas, will shortly sink in their estimation, only, however, to give place to a catalogue of other things too numerous to mention in the short space of an advertisement. Oh, if these AGNEWS and PETERS would but be content to take man, as GOD has been pleased to make him, and allow him the free agency with which the Divinity has in- vested him, and not seek to make a faultless monster of him, how much more wisely would they act. If they them- selves believe that piety consists in eating cold meat on Sundays, in avoiding carriages, in eschewing all sorts of social conversation ; if they see perdition in a plum- bun,, and utter destruction in a glass of mild ale, let them hence- forth live on frigid sheep, moan, mump, and be miser- able, and fast, and grieve, in direct opposition to the spirit and character of Christians observing the Protestant Sunday— but do not let them meddle with matters which cannot concern them, and by their success in which, they would infallibly corrupt the body of the people, & nc} en- danger the safety of the commonwealth. THE Times of yesterday says :— " The Cabinet, in relation to Lord HILL'S conduct on the Local Courts Bill, have, it is said, decided, that on the next occasion on which the Commander- in- Chief shall vote against the Government, or be neutral when tliev require his support, either his Lordship must go out of office or they will." This would be good news for the country, although bad for their successors. But it is not true. Whenever BROUGHAM expects to be beaten, he gives out that if he is, he will resign the next morning ; but, like the old French- man, the more he says so, the more he never resigns at all. We had no idea, however, that the Government whipped so se- verely, or felt the exercise of a conscientious independence sodeeply. In the caseof Mr. EDWARDELLICE they certainly do not; for, as we have said in another place to- day, he has declared in the House of Commons that he is perfectly indif- ferent whether liis vote coincides with those of his colleagues or not; and by an adherence to his own views the other night, he left Mr. STANLEY and Lord PALMERSTON, the only two Cabinet Ministers in the House, in a minority. This is the way Mr. ELLICE " Bears" it ; and what is more surprising still, Lord GREY hears it too. IN our last number we noticed the opening of Huogerfoni Market, and the gaieties by which that event was enlivened, but we were certainly not prepared for the ex- tremely advantageous results which have accrued to the public from the restoration of that mart Cor provisions. The market is in every respect commodious— the situation is excellent— the facilities of access, both from the Strand and the river, unexceptionable— the shops convenient and well stored with the best articles, all of which, more espe- cially fish, are selling at prices which will make the yet uninformed stare. Salmon, which the fine fishmongers in the very neigh- bourhood have been selling for two and three shillings the pound, may be there purchased for less than one; all other fish in proportion reasonable. Meat at considerably lower prices than even the surrounding butchers sold it last week ; and fruit and vegetables below the ordinary averages of Covent Garden. We say last week— for the effectproduced by this most sa- lutary reduction has been twofold. Not only can the public purchase excellent articles at these lower prices in the market itself, but they may at present buy of the shop- keepers, who, till now, having the monopoly of the West- end of the town, have asked and received sums for their commodities far beyond the actual value ( allowing them a handsome profit for themselves), and find the market men anxious to serve them. To the Aristocracy this alteration will not be perceptible, as its importance is not great; and as the man of extensive wealth is always considered by his servants as fair game, they will continue to deal with the expensive butcher and fishmonger at the high rates, sharing with those honest persons the extra profits of the chicanery. But to the middling classes the change is important in a high degree, and we should hope that the encouragement which they will give to the new undertaking will be commensurate with the advantages derivable from it. With regard to fish, we repeat, the market is beyond comparison, except with Billingsgate: the boats come to the market- wharf with their cargoes, and do not, as we imagined, pass the ordeal of the old Fish- market; so that the public buy fish in the Strand at Billingsgate piices, without the intervention of the retail fishmongers, who, in order to keep up the price of the better sorts of fish, have been in the shameful habit of destroying them in vast quantities, in pre- ference to selling them at reduced prices to the poorer classes on the second day after their arrival.— As to fruit and vege- tables, it is clear that the advantages of water- carriage, from all the market- gardens of Battersea, Fulham, Isleworth, and Chiswick, must give them a vast superiority over those which are, of a necessity, brought in carts, the same distance, by land to Covent Garden, in which place the enerease of rents requisite to pay for the improvements of the site has ren- dered a corresponding encrease in the price of the commodi- ties absolutely necessary; so that, in the improved shops, the fruit in the market is just as dear as it is at GRANGE'S or any of the most recherche fruiterers in what is admitted to be the dear part of the town. Most disinterestedly do we recommend Hungerford Market to the notice of our readers— there are Bazaars for millinery and trinkets, and threads and tapes, to which all the belles resort. Hungerford is the Bazaar for much more important supplies— already it has become the fashion for the most delicate ladies to promenade amongst its columns to make purchases to the utter discomfiture of their butlers and cooksj who are endeavouring by ali means in their power to 222 JOHN BULL: represent everything cheap as inferior, and everything like a market low ami vulgar— and yet such is the sensation produced in ( he minds of the high shopkeepers that several of them, especially in the neighbourhood of Charing- cross, too proud to reduce their exorbitant demands immediately, have actually taken shops in the Market, where the power of open competition will force them to sell the best article at the inferior prices. It is quile clearthat the establishment deserves the support of the public— without it the efforts of those who have raised it will, of course, be vain; with it a general reduction in the prices of all the necessaries of life in the metropolis must take place. There was a fete, as it is called, at Vauxhall on Monday, for the benefit— of the Poles. Just conceive a concert for the benefit of a great and suffering nation of high- spirited patriots— at which PASTA, PAGANINI, and all the elite of the musical world volunteered to perform. There were more people in the room where the singing was to be, than could he conveniently accommodated, and the consequence was that the audience would not hear PASTA or PAGANINI or anybody else, and the volunteer performers retired im- pressed, we should suppose, with a very favourable notion of the Brilish public, the great enlighteners and eiviiizers of Europe. The affair will perhaps have put some money into the pockets of some Committee- men, but as a Polish f4te it was evidently a misnomer— there was nothing like Polish about it. July 14 ELSEWHERE, we have to- day noticed the happy result of the debate in the Peers on Tuesday. Our present business is with the manner in which that discussion was participated in by the Nnble and Learned Lord whose duty it is to preside in the Upper House of Parliament. Similar to the Chairman of the House of Lords being called to order by the reading of an article in the " Standing" Orders" of that illustrious House, we can imagine nothing, unless it be the calling in of a parish constable to take into custody the master of the ceremonies of an assembly, who had been guilty of " improper liberties" with the ladies. In the state in which it is now, there are the strongest reasons for recommending, to the Woolsack of the Lords, the adoption— or as much of the imitation as possible— of the dignity, grace, calmness, collectedness, foresight, clear- ness of perception, correctness of decision, urbanity of manner, and gentlemanly demeanour, which so strikingly distinguish the present Chair of the Commons. In that House, it is the rule that the Speaker take no share in the debate. The necessity of restraint, upon one holding the supreme offices of Lord Keeper and Lord Chancellor— and appointed thereto by the KING— was no doubt never con- templated in former days, and certainly was never experi- enced till the present time. Though our dislike to innova- tion is strong, we have recently seen so muc!) that is unplea- sant and derogatory— nay, we had nearly said disgusting— ( bug, for instance)— that we are almost induced to suggest, that the rule of the House of Commons, excluding their Speaker from participation in their discussions, should, under existing circumstances, become the rule of the Upper House also. Baron BROUGHAM and VACX has led a rather more than middle- aged life of the most assiduous— the most in- cessant application ; he has acquired much, very much of information upon all subjects— a mastery of none, sar- casm, perhaps, excepted ; a most fluent gift of the gab is his possession ; he emphatically does with his own what he lists: no let, no limit is placed upon his tongue; which he indulges, upon all occasions, in a flow of bile, and a feast of sarcasm, to excess. As sarcasm is the only thing in which, probably, he has 110 superior, most likely he forgets that it is the invariable characteristic of the most common species of vulgar impassioned " eloquence." In the slang of our very useful fellow men, to whom we are much indebted for driving those convenient vehicles, hackney coaches, and cabs, ar. d omnibuses— in the rancour of the virago— it is ever the predominant compound, generally the sole ingre- dient. Unless where it is treated delicately indeed, it has always a tendency to vulgarity ; and proof of its facility is afforded, by its being the every- day language of squabbles and wrangles in the lowest classes. Independently of what is due to the dignity of the Peer- age, and the society of gentlemen, we sincerely advise Lord BROUGHAM, for his own sake, to abstain from an inordinate gratification of this passion. By unlimited excesses, he had very nearly talked himself down in the House- of Commons. Witness the want of " Cheers," the abundance of *' Coughs," the vociferation of Question," that his more recent efforts there, called forth;— till the insane enthusiasm of Reform brought back a fleeting popularity and fashion to his style of declamation, in the House in which it was first heard. Still less is it adapted for the House of Lords, and least of all for the Woolsack. There is another view in which his sarcasm is injurious to him. It causes extraordinary incredulity as to his sincerity, upon any occasion : so much so, that he feels it is requisite, every time he speaks, to announce that he is " sincere.'''' When, some years ago. he made, in the House of Commons, that affidavit— for we may term it so— of bis conviction of the late QUEEN'S innocence, he himself observed that nobody believed him. When he went down upon his knees, in the House of Lords, in 1831, upon the Reform debate, every one thought he was in fun,— that it was a travestie of sublimity, prayer, and religion. When, the other day, upon the ques- tion of intervention with Portugal, he told " Noble Lords," and the country, that the measure was brought forward merely to oust the Ministry, Lord WYNFORD pleasantly re- mind d him of the fable of the Boy and the Wolf; and the country, to a man, coincided in the opinion of the late Lord Chief justice of the Common Pleas. Lord BROUGHAM, also, should mi rid towards whom he directs the shafts of his sarcasm. There are other ill- natured persons besides his Lordship. Some will be ready to ascribe the splenetic remarks he applied to Lord LYND- HURST. to the effect of soreness, from a sense— still stronger since the case of " Drax v. Grosvenor''''— of his very great professional inferiority to the Noble Chief Baron of the Exchequer. Others will say that he accused Lord WYN- PORD of ignorance— legal ignorance!— from a rankling, revengeful, recollection of that Noble Lord's eulogium upon the eloquence of Baron VAUGHAN, when engaged against Lord BROUGHAM, as Counsel, in the case of Thorndike v. Harvey, in the Common Pleas ; the damages in which case were increased by the Jury, in consequence of the injudi- cious and unhandsome defence of the then Mr. HENRY BROUGHAM. Others, again, may suppose that bis growing antipathy to Lord WYNFORD may arise from that Noble and Learned Lord's mention the other night, upon ti e authority of Professor PARK, of the immense number of Mr. PRESTON'S opinions unreversed, without one exception — one •• Drax v. Grosvenor.'''' In his more composed, his less spirited moments, he must regret his violences and violations during the ex- citement of his sarcasm. If he cannot act and speak, like other Learned Lords, gravely and calmly— if he must, like Pegasus mounted by Bellerophon in pursuit of the chimera, foam and snort and paw— if he must lurch, plunge, and lounge from side to side ; now, well thrown back on bis haunches, now fast and firm on his pasterns, now with the mane ( of bis wig) flowing in air, now curvetting, now curved, now rearing erect— Or if he must caricature " Bright Rapture"— bright Rapture calls, and soaring as she sings. Waves in the eye of Heaven her many coloured wings !*' — if he must fling about his arms, bony, gaunt, and spraw- ling, as he speaks— let him still forbear to transgress, in any great degree, that order, that decorum, which it is his especial duty to preserve— let him at least do this, so long as he may continue LORD CHANCELLOR. Empty charges of ignorance against others, will not better liiin in the estimation of those whose good opinions are worth possessing. « Does Lord ELDON, Lord LYNDHURST, or Lord WYNFORD, " or did Lord REDESDALE or Lord COLCHESTER, or dofs Lord MANNERS, accuse another law Lord of igno- rance ? Besides, it is, every way, most desirable that there should be no further fulfilment of the facetious description of GRAY— though not quite in the sense meant by the Poet— " Full oft within these antient walls. When he had fifty winters o'er him, My grave Lord Keeper led the brawls: The seals and maces danced before him!" ' Tis not so to be wise, nor good, nor even great. We see Lord BROUGHAM is practising his sly and safe plan, which he found so convenient in the Commons— we mean of speaking last. What would become of one of his harrangues, if subjected to a reply— by Lord ELLENBO ROUGH for instance ? IN yesterday's Post is the following:—" In the House of Lords last night the LORD CHANCELLOR brought in several Bills, having for their object to effect important alterations in the jurisprudence of the country. It occurs to us, that i" the Noble and Learned Lord would condescend to apply him self to one thing at a time, his career as a judicial Reformer would probably be marked with greater success. The Eccle siastical Jurisdictions Bill, one of the number introduced last night, is a Bill for the suppression of Local Courts, and therefore does not seem to accord very perfectly with the anxiety of the learned anil eccentric CHANCELLOR to create Local Courts for the administration of a different branch of the law. Another of his Lordship's Bills presents an amusingly characteristic trait. One of its objects is to reduce the emoluments of the Lord CHANCELLOR from £ 14,000 a year, which a few months ago the Noble and Learned Lord did not think a farthing too much, to £ 8,000 leaving the CHANCELLOR S retiring pension at the point to which he has had it advanced, namely, at £ 5,000 a year. In one, although not the most dignified sense of the expression, it must be admitted that Lord BROUGHAM is an excellent Judge." WE last week inadvertently omitted to record the follow- ing account of a ceremony which must have been equally gratifying to the excellent man who was the principal actor in it, as to the lovers of good order and constitutional loyalty :— " On Saturday s'enniglit, after the business of the Common Coun- cil had concluded, Mr. R. TAYLOR informed the LORD MAYOR that 209 Members and officers of the Court ltad subscribed to purchase a piece of plate in testimony of their respect for the honourable individual— who might now be termed the father of the Corporation — SAMUEL DIXON, Esq. The cup and cover were then placed on the table, and elicited much approbation for the elegance of the design, and the excellence of the workmanship. The LORD MAYOR then rose and addressed his venerable friend in nearly the following terms:- " ' Mr. DIXON— Sir, we are assembled here to- day for the gratify- ing purpuse of presenting this testimonial of our respect to you as the Fattier of this Corporation. It is not the tribute of a party, nor a trophy of party feeling, but the spontaneous and unanimous offer- ing of esteem and affection which your conduct as a Member of this Court for nearly half a century, has commanded and obtained from all—( hear). You have devoted your time and talent to the service of the Corporation, with a zeal, fidelity, and disinterestedness which has never been surpassed—( hear, hear}. Your constant and vigilant care for the privileges of this Court has never been alloyed by a petty jealousy of any other constituent part of this great Corporation ; and whenever you perceived that any of those privileges^ were en dangered, whenever there was any real attempt to diminish its in fiuenceorallectitsimportance, that bold and manly singleness of purpose which has ever marked your character led you to take an open and a fearless line of conduct in the protection of our rights. You have never attempted to whisper away the reputation of any man ( loud and continued cheering). No one could ever say that you were ' willing to wound, but yet afraid to strike.'— ( Cheers.) — Where approbation is deserved your meed of praise is ever willingly bestowed; where censure is necessary you never shrink for the unwelcome task. This elegant memorial, equally honourable to the givers and receiver, is a proof of the force of example ; for you have never allowed those political sentiments, which you have advocated with as much eloquence as consistency, to interrupt that Kindly intercourse which has existed between you and every member of this Court—( Hear); and they, by their anxiety to enrol themselves aa contributors to this testimonial to one who could command the esteem of his friends and the sincere respect of his opponents, have shewn their readiness to evince their admiration of conduct not merely guided, but characterised, by rectitude, liberality, and candour.—( Cheers.)— And now, Sir, in the name of this Meeting, allow me to express our sincere and hearty wishes that your valuable lite may long be spared in health and strength to continue to serve your fellow- citizens by still holding out the example ttiat the surest way of rendering manhood useful and old age honourable — the surest way to secure the respect and attachment of men of all parties— is by preserving an unsullied and unimpeachable character for consistency and courtesy in a public station— for honour and benevolence in private life.'—( Loud cheers.) " His Lordship then read the inscription on the cup, and pre- sented it to Mr. DIXON, who returned thanks in a most appropriate and feelingaddress, and expressed the high gratification he felt from this testimony of respect h iving originated witn those whose politics were diametrically opposed to his own." VATOR, WHO COELD HATCH A HALL'- FORMED NOTIOX, PRODUCED IT TO THE PUBLIC— whin every man might become a Preacher, and almost every Preacher could collect a congregation." The wisdom of the nation is very reasonably supposed to reside > n Parliament. What can be concluded of the lower classes of the people, when, in one of the Parliaments summoned by Cromwell, it was seriously proposed, that all the Records in the Tower should be burnt, that all memory of things past should be effaced, and that the whole system of life sjtoulil commence anew ? — PEM. CAN. On Monday last took place the grand ceremony of opening the new Landing Pier at Southampton, amidst an immense assemblage of spectators. The entire number, it is supposed, would be at least 25,000, and it is stated that there were as many as 10,000 persons upon the pier at one time. The spectacle was rendered doubly attractive by the attendance of the Duchess of KENT and the Princess VICTORIA, who are at present residing at Norris Castle, East Cowes. JOHN JOLIFFE, Esq. the Mayor of Southampton, caused an invitation to be sent to their Royal Highnesses, to which a polite and prompt acquiescence was granted. On ascending the deck cf the Royal yacht on which their Royal Highnesses and suite were standing, a deputation, standing uncovered, made their obeisance, and the Hon. P. ii. DE BLAQUIERE spoke an appropriate address, to which her Royal Highness replied as follows :— " Gentlemen, it aficrds the Princess and myself the greatest satis- faction to comply with the wishes of the inhabitants of Southampton to be present on this very interesting occasion. We have every reason to do so, when we gratefullv recollect their extreme kindness tons, which their loyalty to the King led them to evince on our former visit. It is also a very great advantage to the Princess being taught thus early to see the importance to be attached to works of utility; and it is my anxious desire to impress upon her the value of every thing that is practically useful to all classes of the community. IT is gratifying to feel that the nation is fast sobering down into a rational calm, and that the day is not far distant when the people will look back with incredulous astonishment on the follies ar. d the crimes to which they had been exposed by the recklessness and the vanity of those who ought to have taught them better. The steady and dependable. Brougham and Faux may then have leisure for reflection, and, indulging in his love of study, may be anxious to learn some instance of a nation's returning reason, if so, in Dr. Johnson's Life of Butler, when alluding to the Revolu- tionary times which the Poet had described, he will find these ob- servations of the biographer :— " It is scarcely possible, in the regularity and composure of the present time, to image the tumult of absurdity and clamour of con- tradiction. which perplexed doctrine, disordered practice and dis- turbed both public and private quiet, in that age when subordination was broken and awe was hissed away; WHEN A AY UNSETTLED INNO- The Deputation were then severally presented to their Royal Highnesses, and their Royal Highnesses proceeded to the pier in their Royal barge, steered by the Gallant Admiral. The Royal party entered a marquee erected on the pier for the purpose, and partook of a collation provided for the occasion. An Address was then presented from the Mayor, Bailiffs, and Burgesses of the ancient and loyal town of Southampton ; to which a very gracious reply was re- turned :—" It affords roe great pleasure to name the pier ' The Royal Pier.' And I am to add our sincere good wishes that it may promote the prosperity of the town." A regatta succeeded, after witnessing which their Royal Highnesses returned to Cowes, leaving on all those who had the honour of approaching them the most favourable impression of their kindness and condescension. Mr. DUNCOJIBE, late Member for Hertford, has been found guilty of a libel on the Mayor of that town. The Jury have, however, ri commended him to mercy. Sir JAMES SCARLETT'S fee in the case of LAMBERT and HANNAM, is six hundred guineas. Mr. PEMBERTON, the other day, refused a fee of 3000 guineas, oflered to him if he would leave his own Court to plead in one cause before the CHANCELLOR. All the people who have been transported by the Middlesex Magis- trates, for the last sixty years, have been illegally convicted ; and may all, if they please, come home again and bring actions for da- mages against the Government who sent them out: and all those who have been confined for different periods, may proceed in a simi- lar manner for falsejj'mprisonment. Mr. ROTCH. the Chairman, has very much distinguished himself by his conduct in the affair. Canada Papers to the 2d of May have been received. A meeting o! the citizens of Quebec and the vicinity was held on the preceding day, at which an Address to the KING was agreed to, praying his MAJESTY to maintain the present constitution, and that he may not regard any representations made to his Majesty's Government by the Honourable DENIS B. VIGER, as coming from the great body of the colonists, but merely as the declarations of a revolutionary fac- tion in the Colony. It appears from these Papers that the Attorney anil Solicitor General of Upper Canada had been dismissed, without the cause of their dismissal having been assigned; and this proceed- ing had occasioned a strong feeling, as it was regarded as a concession to the Radical party. Lord OXBRIDGE is about to be married to the second daughter of Sir CHARLES and Lady I! A GOT. THE LATE EARL OF PLYMOUTH.— The demise of the late Earl of PLYMOUTH, which took place on Wednesday, was very unexpected. His Lordship, on Tuesday evening, was in the full enjoyment of health and spirits. He dined with his Countess in Grosvenor- square at six o'clock, and afterwards proceeded with her Ladyship in a carriage and four to Deptford, where they embarked on board his Lordship's yacht, which was to sail at an eai; ly hour on Wednes- day morning for Cowes. During the night the Noble Earl was attacked by apoplexy, and although the first medical aid was pro- cured with all possible expedition, he expired at one o'clock on Wed- nesday afternoon. His remains were brought to his late residence in Grosvenor- square the same evening, whence they will be conveyed for interment in the family vault at Ewell Grange, in Worcestershire. Lord PLYMOUTH was born on the2d of July, 1789,— married August 5, 1811, Lady MARY SACKVILLE, eldest daughter of JOHN FREDERICK, third Duke of DORSET. His Lordship left no issue, but we find by SHARFE'S Peerage— which " we last week conscientiously recom- mended to the notice of our readers— that the title is not, as was generally supposed, extinct. His Lordship is succeeded by the Hon. and Reverend ANDREW WINDSOR, seventh child and third son of OTHER LEWIS, fourth Earl. The present Peer was born in 1784, and is unmarried. We have also to record the death of the Right Honourable GEORGE JAMES WELBORE AGAR- ELLIS Lord Dover, which took place on Wednesday at his house in Whitehall. Lord DOVER was the son and heir of Lord CLIFDEN, and was created Lord DOVER in Lord GREY'S Administration onthel6tli of June, 1831. He mar- ried on the 7th of March, 1822, the beautiful and accomplished Lady GEORGIANA HOWARD, second daughter of GEORGE sixth Earl of CAR- LISLE, by whom he had three sons and three daughters. Lord DOVER was a nobleman of great taste and of considerable talent, and has advantageously appeared before the public as an author and biogra- pher. In the present unhappy Ministry his Lordship for a short time held the office of First Commissioner of Woods and Forests, which, however, he resigned on account of ill health. Some time afterwards his Lordship was compelled to undergo a painful opera- tion in the side, from the effects of which, and the complaint which required it, he never recovered. His mind was highly cultivated, his manner was extremely preposessing, and his loss will be felt not only in the extensive circle of his immediate relations and connexions, but in society generally, of which his patronage of the arts and his general accomplishments made him a valuable and estimable member. The Dublin Times of Tuesday has the following account of a me July 14: JOHN b u l l: 93 lancholy accident.—" The infantry corps were out yesterday at a brigade drill, practising some manoeuvres under the eye of the LORD LIEUTENANT. On the troops being ordered to their barracks, at two o'clock, Captain WEBBER, aid- de camp to Sir HUSSEY VIVIAN, rode home by the Zoological Gardens, where he was thrown off his horse, and a hackney- coach galloping dose in the rear instantly passed over him, inflicting a mortal wound on the head. The unfortunate young gentleman was conveyed in the greatest agony to Sir EDWARD BLAKENEY'S house in the Royal Barracks ; and although the Surgeon General and other medical officers were immediately in attendance no relief could be afforded him, and he expired in about a couple of hours."— A coroner's inquest has since been held on the body, which has returned a verdict of accidental death, but attributes some blame to the coachman DUFFY, who, however, received an excellent cha- racter from his master. The Guardian gives the following sad account of the state of the late Recorder, rendered more shockingly painful by the fact that the mistake which induced his resignation was not his :—" We under- stand that the late Recorder has taken his fatal mistake so much to heart, that his depression of spirits causes the most serious appre- hension for his life. It appears that it is the custom of the Recorder to point out in the list the convicts less worthy of Royal mercy than the rest, and the case in question he had marked in the list was of that description, and he had ticked it off accordingly. On the list being returned to him this mark remained, it having been omitted to be effaced by a line being drawn through it thus , as is inva- riably the case when the Royal mercy extends beyond tbe Recorder's limit; and it was this circumstance which led to the deplorable error for which his sensitive mind is now paying the sad penalty." The Morning Post of Friday says :—" We noticed on Wednesday the indecent haste with which some Members of the Committee ap- pointed to investigate the proceedings at former elections in the borough of Liverpool met and chose a Chairman, and performed other acts, which they were not authorised to do, because theirnum- ber did not amount to a Parliamentary quorum of eight. At the time we were not aware that these acts involved any public expendi- ture, or extended beyond internal arrangements for the future ope- rations of the Committee. The appointment of a dozen Chairmen would have cost no money ; but these patriots, who are so careful of the public purse, thought fit to send summonses for forty- seven witnesses from Liverpool, who are now in town, in obedience to the commands of this unauthorized body ; and although these witnesses are now waiting to be examined, the Committee did not think fit to meet yesterday; consequently, a day's expenses of forty- seven wit nesses are lost. But this loss is sustained by the public, and there fore it is of no importance in the minds of the friends of purity of election at Liverpool." Mr. MATHEWS on Friday night terminated his fourteenth At Home at the Theatre Royal, Adelphi, when he delivered an extempor farewell address to the audience in his usual happy style, of which the following is the substance :—" Ladies and Gentlemen, my season has come to a termination. I am placed in an awkward situation. I am a plant by myself surrounded by those of foreign growth ; but. notwithstanding it being the fourteenth year that I have transported you, I have put out a bill which was accepted by your smiles and approbation; and I am happy to say that every member in the house cried ' Hear, hear, hear.' I am not skilled in the Italian nor in the German languages, and therefore beg that you will accept my gratitude in plain English. There are, Ladies and Gentlemen, you are aware, an Italian opera and a German opera, but I trust, and must believe, that you will not forget there is an English opera, ( alluding to Mr. ARNOLD'S company playing attheAdelphi Theatre) I now take my leave of you for nine months, at the expiration of which time I shall present you with another bill, and I hope you will find me and my table as green as ever; and, Ladies and Gentle- men, although you may bestow your favour upon more deserving objects, allow me say that you cannot on any more sincere or more grateful than your humble servant, CHARLES MATHEWS." On the conclusion of this address immense applause, under which Mr MATHEWS retired, pervaded all parts of the house, which was greatly crowded. Major- General Sir BENJAMIN D'URBAN, K. C. B., who has just returned from the government of Demerara, has been appointed to succeed Gen. the Hon. Sir G. L. COLE, G. C. B., the Governor and Commander- in- Chief of the Cape of Good Hope, who is to return home, his term of office having expired. The appointment of Captain- General of the Cape is one of the most valuable colonial Governorships in the gift of the Ministers; the salary is 7,0001. per annum, paid by the Colony, besides other emoluments, and very con siderable patronage. Sir L. COLE was the successor of the late Lord C. SOMERSET at the Cape. INSOLVENT DEBTORS' COURT.— Orders have lately been issued for the hearing of cases up to the 1st of August, on which day the Court will, it is said, positively adjourn the sitting until September. I has been the practice for years, with the exception of last year, for the Court to rise the latter end of July for six weeks, at the expira- tion of which to sit for a fortnight, and again to rise for six weeks, making the vacation, with the exception of a fortnight, run over a period of three months. It has been discovered that the witnesses against the prisoners tried at the present Old Bailey Sessions were not regularly " sworn in Court" before they gave evidence to the Grand Jury, and conse- quently that the prisoners were not legally tried. The opinion of the Judges is, at present, that the Court must begin de novo as to convicted felons, unless they signify that they are content with the verdict of Guilty passed against them, and this is not probable, bScause the convict cannot be worsted by undergoing a second ordeal. The following curiosity ha3 been received by the Editor of the Coventry Mercury :— Sir i have Been taking your Paper for this 25 years and i hope you will find aveacont please For this Curosety there is now growing in a garden belonging to Botton shoemaker at sowe aguesbrey tree baring two sorts of Guseberres the Crown bob Ruf red and the smiling Beauty smouth white Both in Parfict groth hee may bid tefiance to the all Engenland For Cultervation of guseberry tree thouge asimple shoemaker. iremain yours aman of siance T S W At an adjourned Sessions held on Tuesday at Hammersmith, Sir J. S. LILLIE, Chairman, it was decided to relieve the parish of Ful- ham from the payment of the statute duty exacted by the Metropo- litan Road Trustees for the maintenance of their roads. The Ma- gistrates having called on the Commissioners for returns of their annual receipts and expenditure, and it appearing that the surplus revenue amounted to several thousands a year, the Magistrates at once exempted the parish. This is the first decision of the nature since the establishment of the Metropolitan,, Trust, and is therefore worth recording, . Mr. VVyop, whose hotel was burned down, and whose loss has been very great, had a benefit concert on Wednesday, at the Opera House ; but, although there was a great array of talent, the audience was sma'l. The truth is, that the real cause of the concert was not made sufficiently public. We had no idea who the Mr. WOOD was, and considered it was the singer of that name, as^ no doubt did many others. We regret its failure. PAGANINI is going to be married to an English girl of fortune and talent— so say the newspapers. It is late in life for him to leave off playing the fiddle, in order to play the beau. An eclipse of the sun will take place on the 16th instant. It com mences about an hour after the rising of the sun, and when it has attained the altitude 8 deg. in the E. N. E. the visibility of the eclipse will be confined to Europe, the northern regions of Asia, and a few of the islands of the North Pacific Ocean. To Spain, Portugal, and Italy, but a small portion of the sun will be eclipsed; on the contrary to the northern ^ boundary of Europe, Nova Zembla, and Northern Asia the eclipse will be great, and some places central and total ; the excess of the lunar above the solar diameter being at the time of the eclipse lm. 29s; The plan of Government for reducing the debt-, by inducing stock- holders to accept an annuity of 31. for a term of 100 years for every 1001. stock subscribed, the holder to receive a bonus of 31. per cent, and a quarter's dividend, has totally failed. The books to receive subscriptions were open the whole of Wednesday and Thursday, and we are informed not a single individual has accepted the pr^ osal It is understood that the 300,0001. set apart out of the surplus revfcnu of the country to commence this project will be appropriated in the purchase of stock, or in Exchequer Bills. There are advices from the Russian capital down to the 27th ult, They announce that a good deal of activity coninucd to he displayed in the War Department, and the fresh levies ordered in Minsk aud other parts of the kingdom were proceeding. Trade continued brisk, and up to the present date about 16,000 casks of tallow had been shipped off for the country. The exchange on London was at 10| d. There had arrived since the commencement of the season 190 British ships, and 54 had sailed. The total number of vessels that had arrived was 427, of which 218 were foreign, and 19 American W. WILLIAMS, Esq. solicitor, of Monmouth, lately received a par eel from his agent in London by the Gloucester mail, inclosing docu ments connected with a Chancery proceeding, unaccompanied by any letter. The parcel had been opened in the coach- office in Lon don, and when delivered at Mr. WILLIAMS'S house one end was com pletely open, so that the contents might have easily dropped or been taken out. It is needless to dwell on the serious consequences that may eventually result to both solicitors and suitors from this sloven ly system of espionage. Of the public racing men at Newmarket, Messrs. CROCKFORD GULLY, RIDSDALE, SADLER, the CHIFNEYS, & C., we need not say much their deeds being almost daily before us. But looking at the extra ordinary results of these men's deeds, who will not admit racing to be the best trade going ? Talk of stub's, talk of winnings, talk of racing establishments, our GRAFTONS, RICHMONDS, PORTLANDS, and CLEVELANDS, with all their " means and pliances to boot," are but the beings of a summer's day, when comparedjwith those illustrious personages, and their various transactions and doings on the turf. Here is a small retail tradesman, dealing in a very perishable com modity, become our modern Croesus in a few years, and proprietor of several of the finest horses in England! Behold the champion of the boxing ring, the champion of the turf, the proprietor of a noble domain, an Honourable Member of the reformed Parliament, all in the person of a Bristol butcher ! Turn to a great pioprietor of coal- mines, the owner of the best stud in England, one who gives 3000 guineas for a horse in the comely form of a Yorkshire footman We have a quondam Oxford livery- stable- keeper, with a dozen or more race- horses in his stalls, and those of the very best stamp, and such as few country gentlemen, or, indeed, any others, have a chance to contend with. By their father's account of them ( see " Genius Genuine," by the late SAM CHIF. NEY) the two Messrs. CHIFNEY were stable- boys to Earl GROSVENOR. at eight guineas a- year, and a stable suit. They are now owners of nearly the best horses, and— save Mr. CROCKFORD'S— quite the best houses, in their native town. There is the son of the ostler of the Black Swan, at York, betting his thousands on the heath, his neckerchief secured by a dimond pin. Then to crown all, there is Squire BEARDSWORTH of Birmingham, with his seventeen race horses, and his crimson liveries, in the same loyal but dirty town, in which he once drove a hackney coach. Taking for granted that all this is done honestly, why should we despair of having the gratification to see the worthy little devil who trots with this sheet to Stamford- street, appear{ flsoine fine morning on Newmarket Heath, with his seventeen race- horses, his crimson liveries, and his diamond pin?— Quarterly Review, No. 98. Just published. Heading, Berks, 10th July, 1833. SIR,— On perusing your paper of the 7th instant, which is sent me from London weekly, I perceive a remark from your Cambridge correspondent, that the Honorary degree of D. C. L. had been conferred on Admiral DUNDAS, whose services were unknown to him. I beg leave to acquaint you for his information, that that honour was not conferred on me at Cambridge, but at Oxford. I have likewise to ac- quaint you that I was at the capture of tlnee of the enemy's Commanders in Chief, viz: — Langara, De Grasse, and Villineuve; and in the Trafalgar action I commanded the Naiad frigate, besides being in different drawn battles under Admiral Sir Samuel HOOD and GRAVES. I am, Sir, your very obedient servant, THOMAS DUNDAS, Rear Admiral, K. C. B. ECCLESIASTICAL INTELLIGENCE. PREFERMENTS. The Rev. JAMES MICKLEBURGH has been instituted to the Vicarage of Ashill, Somersetshire, by the Bishop of Bath and Wells. Patron, the Rev. R. Whish. The Rev. G. LANDON, son of the Dean of Exeter, is appointed to the Vicarage of St. Erth, vacant on the demise of the Rev. Samuel Gurney. Archdeacon HODSON has been installed into the Canonry void by the decease of the Rev. Hugh Bailye. The Rev. RYDER ( sou of the B'shop) will succeed to the Canonry resigned by Archdeacon Hodson.— Lichfield Paper. The Rev. CHARLES BURY, B. A. late Curate of St. Chad's, has been presented, by Wm. Spurrier, Esq. to the Perpetual Curacy of Albrighton, near Shrewsbury. The King has been pleased to present the Rev. DAVID BUCHAN DOUIE to the Church and parish of Drysdale, in the presbytery of Lockmahen and county of Dumfries, vacant by the death of the Rev. John Henderson. The Dean and Chapter of Canterbury Cathedral have presented the Rev. WM. YORKE DRAPER, B. A. to the Rectory of Brooke, in Kent, void by the death of the late Dr. Wellfitt. The Rev. JOHN CUBITT, M. A. has been instituted to the Rectory of Oxwiek, Norfolk, on the presentation of John Blake, Esq. of Norwich. The Lord Bishop of Cork has been plesed to appoint the Rev. SAMUEL KYLE, A. M. Rector of Rathclaran, to the Archdeaconry of Cork, vacant by the death of the late Venerable Archdeacon Thompson. The Rev. S. Courtney, Vicar of Charles, Plymouth, has appointed to the Curacy the Rev. W. HARE, of Stonehouse. OBITUARY. On Wednesday, at Ills father's, in Basil- ghall street, the Rev. JKHN^ BARROW, At Teignmoujh, the Rev. JOHN VVE, Rector of Wotton, Northamptonshire. At the Rectory House, Weston Snhe- ige. in the county of Gloucester, the Rev. CHARI. ES EDWARD HENRY, aged 26, deeply lamented. At his renider. ee, Upper Phillimore. phice, Kensington, the Rev. Dr. THOMAS B. CLARKE after oniv a few davs' illness. UNIVERSITY INTELLIGENCE. OXFORD, JULY 11.— On Saturday last, being the last day of Act Term, the Rev. Godfrey Faussett, D. D., late Fellow of Magdalen College, was unanimously re- elected Margaret Professor in Divinity. On the same day the following degrees were conferred -. — Doctor in Music: Benjamin Blyth. Magdalen Hall — Bachelor in Medicine ( with licence to practise) : James Edward Winterbottom, St. John's, Grand Compounder.— Masters of Arts : Samuel Grinishaw, Brawn- nose; John Griffiths, Fellow of Wadham ; Rev. George Wm. Murray, Merlon.— Bachelors of Arts: Hon. Henry Bertie, Christ Church; Edward Hardwicke, Queen's; Charles Lewis Cornish, Fellow of Exeter. MISCELLANEOUS. The election of an Evening Lecturer for the parish of St. Stephen, Coleman- street, took place on Wednesday, when the Rev. Mr. PRATT was elected by a majority of 166. The unsuccessful candidate had resigned at an early period of the contest. The Rev. Mr. MATTHEW, vicar of Greenwich, died on Wednesday se'nnight. The living being in the gift of the Crown, we understand that a meeting of the parishioners and inabitants of that important suburb was held, to agree upon an address or petition to Lord GHEY in favour of the claims of Dr. WAITE, who has been for many years alternate preacher, and, we believe, curate of the parish. Dr. WAITE is highly praised by the Times newspaper. IMPORTANT TO PARISHES.— On Friday the Vestry Clerk of the pari.- b of St. Pancras applied to the Middlesex Magistrates, sitting in Quarter Session, to audit and allow the yearly accounts of the parish, in conformity to a Local Act of Parliament. The application was opposed by the auditors of the parish accounts, appointed under the new Vestries Act. who argued that that Act, by giving power to appoint auditors, had virtually repealed the Local Acts. The Chairman, Mr. ROTCH, M. P., suggested to the Bench that their better course would lie lo pass the accounts, leaving it to the auditors, under the Vestry Act, to apply to the Court of King's Bench. The other Magistrates concurred in this opinion, and the accounts were passed. The Rev. Dr. BLOMBERG, the neivly appointed Vicar of St. Giles, Cripplegate, has generously requested the parishioners to accept, in his name,. the sum o! 3001. per annum in aid of the poor- rate; this tax having for some time pressed very heavily upon them. The National Scotch Church, Regent- square, which has been almost deserted since the ejection ol Mr. IRVING, was on Sunday filled by, perhaps, one of the most numerous and respectable congregations ever assembled within the walls of a church. Such, indeed, was the anxiety to hear the Rev. Dr. CHALMERS, who had been announced to pieach on the occasion, that the church was crowded to overflow long before the service commenced and thou- sands were unable to find admittance. After the sermon, which it is unnecessary to characterise larther than to say that it was in every way worthy of the high character of the distinguished indivi- dual by whom it was delivered, Dr. CHALMERS alluded to the splendid promise of usefulness with which the Church was originally opened, and to the painful circumstances by which that promise had been frustrated. He said that the thousands who used to assemble under its roof were now cut up and dispersed, leaving but that remnant of a flock, who, rejecting that fascination which had ied so many astray, continued to worship God according to the laws and ordinances observed by their forefathers, ft was in consequence of the diffi- culties in which the Church was thus involved, that he stood before them to appeal for assistance ;' and when it was recollected that tbe difference in the doctrines ofthe Church of England and Scotland were complexional and not substantial he confidently anticipated aid pot merely from his own Presbyterian connection, hut from all, who, in this age of. he feared growing hostility to all Establishments, were anxious to uphold the ancient faith. At the conclusion ofthe sermon a very liberal collection was made in behalf of the building fund, which we believe, is more than 9,0001. in debt. There were upwards of fifty carriages at the church doors ; and among the distinguished individuals presentwere the Duke of WELLINGTON, Sir ROBERT PEEL, Si JAMES GRAHAM,& C. The Rev. CHARLES MACKIE, M. A. of St. John's college, Cambridge, was elected, on Saturday last, head master of the Free Grammar School of Appleby, in the counties of Leicester and Derby. The election is vested in the hands of the Governors of the school, and on this occasion there was a strong contest. The vacancy was made by the resignation of the Rev. G. W. Lloyd, D. D. who has presided over the school for a peiiod of about thirty years. The annaul Sermon on behalf of the Society for the propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, was preached at Wocester Cathedral on Thursday week, by the Hon. and Rev. J. S. COCKS, one of the Pre- bendaries, from the text, " Thy Kingdom rome." The discourse was an admirable and truly Scriptural appeal in favour of Christian Missions, the duty of contributing to support which was enforced on irrefragable grounds. The Lord Bishop of WORCESTER and many of the Clergy were present. The collection amounted to 261. 16s. Sid. The Dean and Chapter of Gloucester Cathedral intend to establish a sermon on Sunday afternoons in the Cathedral ; the preachers will be paid by the members of the Chapter. There is a growing con- viction, that, if the Established Church is to maintain the honourable station she has hitherto held, her clergy must exbibit- an energy, zeal, and self denial, commensurate with the character ofthe times. This will be the most effectual reply to the reflections now so lavishly cast on the Ministers of the Church.— Worcester Journal. The Bishop of GLOUCESTER has augmtnted the two small livings ofllorsley and Upton- St'- Leonards, in his diocese, by a perpetual payment of 15l." a year each from the revenues of his see: and the Governors of Queen Anne's Bounty have met these benefactions by a grant of 2001. to each of those benefices. Wehave pleasure in stating that two Sunday School- rooms, in con- nection with the Established Church, are about to be erected at Oldbury. The Rev. Mr. SPROSTON, the perpetual Curate, laid the foundation stone last week. We sincerely hope this will lead to better things for that long neglected place; and we heartily wish Mr. SPROSTON success in his unwearied exertions for the benefit of its inhabitants. BRISTOL CATHEDRAL.— We regret to state that this beautiful structure has sustained considerable injury by the fall of an arched buttress which supported the south west angle of the tower. Itcame down with a loud crush on Monday afternoon last, between four and re o'clock ; some of the masses of stone which formed the buttresses fell on the corner of the house adjoining |( used as the Recruting District- office) and did considerable damage; and, what is still more unfortunate, the pinnacle of the. tower, deprived of its support, has been shaken out of its perpendicular, and a fissure is observable from the battlements to- nearly the roof of the transept. A notice from the Hon. and Rev. Lord WM. SOMERSET, the Prebendary in resi- dence, announces the discontinuance of divine service at the Cathedral, in consequence of apprehended danger.— Bristol Journal. The Very Rev. Archdeacon ROBINSON, of Calcutta, has been nomi- nated to fill the new bishopric of Madras. St.' Mary's Church, Southampton, which had been closed for the last ten months for the purpose of being enlarged and repaired, was re- opened for Divine service on Friday next. The Meeting of the three Choirs of Worcester, Hereford, and Gloucester, will take place this year in the latter end of September, at Worcester, under the direction of Mr. C. CLARK, the Organist of the Cathedral in that city. The festival is to last lour days. Mr. WOLFF, the converted Jew, who has been travelling a great deal in Persia and the North of India in search of the ten tribes, is now proceeding to the West, and has sent challenges, by way of pre- cursors, to all the Popish Priests at Bombay. It was expected he would have fouud his way to Calcutta, but circumstances have caused him to abandon his original intention. The dwelling house of the Rev. J. IIATCHARD, at Plymouth, was on Monday se'nnight robbed of a considerable sum of money, and an elegant snuff- box, presented by his fellow- townsmen as a mark of esteem for the Rev. Gentleman's conduct during the cholera. Sus- picion attaches to a man who has absconded, and who was employed by Mr. H. as an object of charity. ,. , , , , The " Reverend" Boatswain SMITH has twice this week furnished the loungers of Brighton with amusement, and the pickpockets with occupation, bv delivering what he is pleased to call • sermons ' upon the Steine. We commend the " Reverend gentleman for having an eye at the same time to business :— the placards annonncmg bis intention terminated with a modest postcriptum, ( our readers will perhaps think it, like that of a lady s letter, the most important part ofthe whole), intimating that after the service the Sailors' Magazine we think that was the title- might he hid for sixpence! , 224 JOHN b u l l : July 14. STOCK EXCHANGE.— SATURDAY EVENING, The Consol Market has been pretty steady until yesterday, when it became very depressed, and the quotation for the Account closed this afternoon at 893 i; Bank Stock left oft at 206i 7£ ; and India Stock at 245, 246. Tlie former has again been an object of consider- able speculation. The Northern Bonds are very heavy, and Belgian, which touched upon 94 in the early part of the week, have fallen to . Russian Bonds have declined to 1041 5, and Dutch to 4811. Portuguese Sciip, which, on the arrival of the last accounts from Algarves, had risen to 1 dis., has since been very flat, and lias fallen to 21 dis.— We have had some animation both in Exchequer Bills and India Bonds, and the former left off at 58, 59 ; the latter closing at 34, 35. - 3 per Cent. Consols... 871 88 3 perCent. Reduced.. 88£ 3i per Cent. Red 951 96 New Si per Cent 95i 4 per Cent. 1826 102? 3 Bank Long Ann shut. Bank Stock 206j 207i [ ndia Stock 245 6 Ditto for Account.. 247i India Bonds 33s 35s pm. Exchequer Bills.... 58s 59s pm. Consols for Account 891 h Despatches from St. Petersburg!), as also the St. Petersburgh Gazette* received yesterday, mention a plot against the life of the Emperor of Russia on the part of some Polish exiles who left Paris a short time ago, and bound themselves by an oath to effect this assassination. It was first made public by a journal, which gave an account of the reception of a deputation which waited upon the Emperor in Finland to congratulate him on the frustration of the conspiracy. It seems that the Russian authorities did not wish the matter made public, but on this account appearing deemed it right to allude to it in the Uazette. The sensation created throughout Russia is very great, and all sorts of precautions are employed to protect the Emperor in his various visits to the frontier towns. We have Barbadoes papers to the 30th May. The remainder of the Parliamentary grant, amounting to 50,0001., for the sufferers by the hurricane, had arrived out in His Majesty's ship Pearl, from Jamaica and Halifax. A shock of earthquake had been felt at Georgetown, Demerara, at the end of April, but no damage is mentioned. We are sorry to hear that the health of the Countess of ABERDEEN - continues in a very precarious state. Sir HENRY HALFORD and Dr. HOLLAND remain in constant attendance on her ladyship. The Countess has suffered from extreme debility for several months. The Commissioners of Woods and Forests have given directions for the houses between the Cannon Brewery and Hyde Park corner to be taken down, and an iron railing to be erected in their place.— The houses stand upon crown land. Mr. THOMAS, the Superintendent, has received hjs appointment as deputy constable of Manchester, and is expected shortly to go down to commence his official duties. The French King has ratified the Convention made between the Postmaster- General of this country and the Director- General of the Posts of France, for establishing a daily estafette between London and Paris, instead of only four days a week, and for the return of mis- directed letters. The Post- office steam- packet will, according to this arrangement, send daily to and from Dover and Calais, and even on Sundays the French letter bag will be transmitted from Calais. The London and Birmingham Railway will be 122 miles long, and the rise 256 feet. The different levels require one rise 315 feet in 15 - miles, or 11 minutes only. There will be ten tunnels, and two lines, six feet distant, with places for turning out. It will pass under Prim- rose- hill, by Watford, Northampton, and Kilsby, entering Warwick- shire, near Farnborough. The travelling rate will be 20 miles an hour, and the distance be performed in 5£ hours, or between break- fast and dinner. 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BRIDGMAN'S EQUITY DIGEST.— Third Edition, three volumes, royal octavo, containing the most extensive Table of Equity Cases ever published. 41.14s. Gd. boards. A SUPPLEMENT to this THIRD EDITION of BRIDGMAN'S EQUITY DIGEST; also to BRIDGMAN'S PRACTICAL DIGEST in EQUITY. In Two Parts. By Robert Scott, Esq. of the Middle Temple, Barrister at Law.— This Supplement will be given Gratis to the Purchaser of the Three Volumes of the Equity Digest, and the Volume of Practical Digest, by the Messrs. Bridgman. A TREATISE on ECCLESIASTICAL and CIVIL DILAPIDATIONS, with an Appendix, containing Precedents of Notices, Valuations, Commissions, & c„ ar. d Cases decided on the subject. The Third Edition, enlarged. By J. Elmes, Architect, Surveyor of the Port of London. 18s. boards. The above Works have been printed and published by Samuel Brooke., 35, Paternoster- row, and are sold by all respectable Booksellers. DODSLEY'S AND RIVINGTON'S ANNUAL REGISTER FOR 1832. Just published, in a large volume 8vo, price lfis. boards, THE ANNUAL REGISTER; or, a View of the History, Po- litics. and Literature of the Year 1832. « London: printed for Baldwin and Cradock; J. G. and F. Rivington ; Long, man, Rees, and Co.; Jeff- ry and Son ; J. M. Richardson ; J. Booth ; J. Booker J. Rodwell; Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper; Hamilton, Adams, and Co.; Whit taker and Co. ; E. Lloyd ; J. Dowding ; Simpkin and Marshall; G. Lawford ; 1. Laycock ; S. W. Sustenance: and Renshaw and Rush. By whom is also published, in a very large volume, price 24s. A GENERAL INDEX to the ANNUAL REGISTER, from its commence- ment in 1758 to the year 1819, inclusive; after which period each successive volume has a distinct Index. *•* Separate volumes to complete sets maybe had of the publishers, but as several are becoming scarce, an early application is recommended. A few complete sets from the commencement in 1758 may still be had. BOOKS LATELY PUBLISHED BY J. H. PARKER, OXFORD. Sold by Messrs. Payne and Foss; Riringtons ; Whittaker, & c.; and by E. Gardner, at the Oxford Warehouse 7, Paternoster- row, London. Four volumes 8vo. 21. 8s. in sheets, THE WORKS of ARCHBISHOP CRANMER, collected and arranged by the Rev. Henry Jenkyns, M. A. Fellow ol Oriel College. Two volumes 8vo. 18s. in sheets, BISHOP PEARSON'S EXPOSITION of the CREED. A new edition, re- vised and corrected by the Rev. E. Burton, D. D. Regius Professor of Divinity and Canon of Christ Church. Works by the samp Editor — Octavo, 5s. in sheets, TESTIMONIES of the ANTE- NICENE FATHERS to the Doctrine of the TRINITY and of the DIVINITY of the HOLY GHOST. Also, the Second Edition with considerable additions, 8vo 13s. in sheets, TESTIMONIES of the ANTE- NICENE FATHERS to the DIVINITY of CHRIST. Two volumes 8vo. 11.10s. boards, The GREEK TESTAMENT, with English Notes. Two volumes 8vo. 11. 2s. 6d. boards, ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY of the FIRST THREE CENTURIES. The second edition eniarged, 6 vols. 8vo. 21. 7 » - in sheets, BISHOP BURNET'S HISTORY of HIS OWN TIME; with Notes by the Earls of Dartmouth and Hardwick, Speaker Onslow, and Dean Swift: to which are added OTHER ANNOTATIONS. N. B. The additional Notes may be had Gratis by the purchasers of the last Oxford Edition. In4to 21.19s. in sheets, MISCELLANEOUS WORKS and CORRESPONDENCE of the Rev. JAMES BRADLEY, D. D. Astronomer Royal, Savilian Professor of Astronomy in the University of Oxford, & c. & c. With a Memoir, by S. P. Rigaud, Esq. To which is added an Account of Harriot's Astronomical Papers. Two volumes, 8vo. 15s. in sheets, ORTGINES LTTURGICiE, or Antiquities of the English Ritual, and a Dis- sertation on Primitive Liturgies. By the Rev. William Palmer, M. A. of Wor- cester College. Octavo, 10s. in sheets, The FIVE BOOKS of MACCABEES, in English; with notes and illustra- tions. By Henry Cotton, D. C. L. Archdeacon of Cashel, and late Student of Christ Church. Octavo, 10s. 6d. The BOOK of ENOCH the PROPHET ; an apocryphal production, supposed for ages to have been lost, but discovered at the close of the last century in Abys- sinia; now fiist translated from an Etiiiopic MS. in the Bodleian Library, by Richard Laurence, LL D. Archbishop of Ca- hel, late Professor of Hebrew in the University of Oxford. Second Edition, corrected and enlarged. Two volumes, 8vo. 11. Is. boards. A SKETCH of the HISTORY of the CHURCH of ENGLAND to the Revo- lution in 1688. By T. V. Short, B. D., Student of Christ Church. By the same Author, 8vo. 10s. 6d. boards, SERMONS on some of the Fundamental Truths of Christianity. Octavo, 12s. boards, SERMONS, intended to shew a sober application of Scriptural Principles in the Realities of Life. With a Preface addressed to the Clergy. By John Miller, A. M. late Fellow of Worcester College. Octavo, 13s. boards, The SCHOLASTIC PHI LOSOPH Y considered in its relation to CHRISTIAN THEOLOGY. By Renn Dickson Hampden, M. A. Principal of St. Mary Hall, and late Fellow of Oriel College. NEWTON'S MILTON New Edition, 4 vols. 8vo. 11.12s. boards, The POETICAL WORKS of JOHN MILTON, with Notes, principally from Newton, Dunster, and Warton. By E. Hawkins, D. D. Provost of Oriel College. Octavo, 6s. DISCOURSES upon some of the PRINCIPAL OBJECTS and USES of the HISTORICAL SCRIPTURES of the OLD TESTAMENT preached before the University of Oxford, by Edward Hawkins, D. D. Provost of Oriel College, and Prebendary of Rochester. New Editions, 8vo. 10s. 6d„ 18mo. 6s., 32mo. 3s. 6d. The CHRISTIAN YEAR. Thoughts in Verse for the Sundays and Holydays throughout the Year. NEWEST SYSTEM OF COOKERY. New Edition, in 8vo. closely printed in double columns, comprising upwards of 500 paees, and 5,000 of the most Modern Domestic Receipts, 12s. fid. bound, rHE COOK'S DICTIONARY. By RICHARD DOLBY, Of the Thatched House Tavern, St. James's- street. To this new edition great additions have been made, consisting of a body of new Receipts, numerous engraved Designs for laving out the Table, & c. & c. REVIEWERS' OPINIONS. His " Dictionary" savours of all that is excellent in taste, substance, and arrangement. It is indeed an admirably digested Manual, teaching both the decorative and the solid.— County Chronicle. This book bids fair to become the sole oracle of English and foreign cookery and confectionary.— Morning Po? t. Combining all the most recent inventions and improvements in the art.— Globe. Published for H. Colburn by R. Bcntley. New Burlington- street. NATURAL HISTORY FOR YOUTH. Just published, in a handsome thick 12mo. volume, with numerous Cuts, finely printed by Whittingham, price 9s. canvas lettered, ADESCRIPTION of more than THREE HUNDRED ANIMALS, interspersed with entertaining Anecdotes, and interesting Quotations from Ancient and Modern Authors To which is added, an Appendix on Allegorical and Fabulous Animals ; the whole illustrated by accurate Figures, finely engraved on wood, after Bewick. In this enlarged edition, fifty additional cuts have been given, drawn from iving specimens by Harvey, and beautifully engraved ; with a new frontispiece exquisitely engraved bv Thompson. This pleasing work now comprises within a moderate compass the whole range of Natural History, viz.— Quadrupeds Birds, Fishes, Serpents, Reptiles, Insects, Worms,& c. London : Baldwin and Cradock, Paternoster row. The following Works for the Instruction and Entertainment oi Youth are pub- lished as above, neatly bound and lettered:— SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON ; or Adventures of a Father and Mother and Four Sons in a Desert Island. The Eighth Edition, ornamented with 12 Engrav- ings, 12mo. price 7s. fid. The LIFE and SURPRISING ADVENTURES of ROBINSON CRUSOE, with a Biographical Account of Daniel Defoe, written expressly for this Edition. A New Edition, complete in one volume, 12mo., beautifully printed by Whitting- ham, and ornamented with 49 very superior Wood cuts, from Drawings by W. Harvey. Price 8s. AUSTINHALL; or, After Dinner Conversations between a Father and hig Children, on Subjects of Amusement and Instruction. 12mo., illustrated with fine Engravings, price 5s. A DISCOURSE on the OBJECTS, ADVANTAGES, and PLEASURES of SCIENCE. A New Edition, in foolscap 8vo. illustrated with fine Engravings, price 5s. This fascinating little work, but without the fine illustrative engravings * iven in this edition, lorms the first number of the " Library of Useful Know- dge." STORIES of OLD DANIEL, 12mo. the Tenth Edition, much improved, price 6s. ELLEN CAMERON, a Tale for Young Ladies. Fine Plate, from a Drawing by Harvey, 12mo. price 5s. KEEPER'S TRAVELS, with fine Engiavings, after Drawings by Harvey. Fourteenth Edition, l2mo, price 6-. GUY'S POCKET CYCLOPAEDIA: or, Epitome of Universal Knowledge. The Tenth Edition, extensively improved, with numerous appropriate Cuts, 12mo, price 10s. 6d. STORIES from the HISTORY of ITALY. By Anne Manning. With fine Frontispiece and Vignette by Harvey, 12mo. price 7s. fid. A HISTORY of FRANCE, in Familiar and Entertaining Language for Young People. By Mrs. Moore. Third Edition, 12mo. Six ' Engravings, price 7s. 6d. The TALES of SHAKSPEARE, by Charles Lamb. A New and elegant Edition, with twenty two superb cuts, from designs by Harvey, and finely printed by Whittingham, in one volnme, 12mo. price 7s. 6d. TOM KIN'S SELECT POETRY. A New Edition, in 18mo. fine Frontis- piece, price 3s. The PARENT'S OFFERING. By Caroline Barnard. 12mo, a New Edition, enlarged. Fine frontispiece, price 5s. MRS. LEICESTER'S SCHOOL ; or, the History of Several Young Ladies, as related by themselves. The Ninth Edition, with fine frontispiece, 12mo. price 4s. —. E AST INDIA Strong Congou and Green Fine 9trong Congou and Bloom Strong Pekoe flavour Good and fine Hyson Finest Plantation Coffee COMPANY'S ENDED. TEA SALE 4s. 6d. 4s. Sd. 5s. Od. 5s. 4d. 5s. 4d. 6?. Od. 7s. 0d. 8s. Od. 2s.— Mocha .. 3s. Teas packed in lead, for the country, without any charge, ftjr Agents are wanted in many country towns to sell packet teas. Apply for particular? ( pest paid; to F. and ft, SPAR- ROW, 8, Ludgate. hill, ASYLUM FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC I. IFE OFFICK, 70, Cornhill, and 5, Waterloo. Place, London. DIRECTORS. The Honourable WILLIAM FRASER, Chairman. Colonel LUSHINGTON, C. B. Deputy Chairman. Foster Reynolds, Esq. William Pratt, Esq John Kymer, Esq. Francis Kemble, Esq. C. W. Hallett, Esq. Capt. G. Harris, R. N. C. B. William Edmund Ferrers, Esq. Thomas Fenn, Esq. G. Farren, Esq., Resident Director. PHYSICIAN— Dr. Ferguson. SURGEONS— H. illavo. Esq F. R. S., and T. Callaway, Esq. DOMESTIC INSURANCE. OWEST rates ever published, whether for a term or for the 4 whole of Life. The following are selected from the even rates :— Age. Whole Life. 7 Years. Age. Whole Lile. 1 7 Years. 20 1 11 9 0 17 1 40 2 17 1 1 1 10 8 30 2 2 0 1 2 10 50 4 2 0 1 2 1 7 One third of the Life premium maybe lett unpaid, to be deducted from the sum assured, on a scale equal to interest at 4 per cent. ASCENDING SCALE OF PREMIUM. Age. First 7 Years. Succeeding 7 Years. Every year ol Life alter. 20 I 1 4 16 2 2 4 7 30 1 8 7 1 15 1 3 0 11 40 1 13 3 2 7 0 4 9 8 50 2 11 11 4 Oil 7 0 3 This scale ought to supersede all others m cases oi Annuity, or Leases lor lives, in which very low rates for so long a period as 14 years will be found highly advantageous. VOYAGES AND FOREIGN RESIDENCES. Persons voyaging or residing abroad, Masters, Supercargoes, and others, in- sured for the whole of life or for a specific voyage. PREGNANCY, INFIRM HEALTH, AND OLD AGE. Females need not appear ; the rates for diseases are moderate, and Policies are granted to persons of advanced age. Insurances may be effected without delay. TURKEY CARPETS— ON ACCOUNT OF THE IMPORTERS.* MR. GEORGE BROOKS begs respectfully to inform the Public, that he will SELL by AUCTION, at Garrawav's Coffee House, ' Change- alley, Cornhill, on FRIDAY the 26th Instant, at Twelve o'Cloek pre- cisely, a Parcel of about TWO HUNDRED TURKEY CARPETS of very superior quality, just arrived ex Cora. Captain Lc Grand, from Smyrna, and landed in the London Docks. Being the property of the merchant they will be sold at exceedingly moderate prices, and will be warrauted sound and perfect in every respect; they will be found upon inspection of excellent bright colours and various sizes. Also about Fifty Persian and Turkey Rugs. For the convenience of families thev will be sold a single carpet in each lot, and will be on show from Tuesday, the 23d Instant to the time of sale, at Mr. George Brooks's Carpet Warehouse, No. 2, Turnwheel- lane, Dowgate- hill, where Cata- logues, with dimensions maybe had. N. B Mr. George Brooks has removed from No. 28, Great Eastcheap, to No. 2, Turnwheel- lane, Do. vgate hill. MAGNIFICENT ENGRAVINGS ETCHINGS, DRAWINGS, AND MINERALS. TO be SOLD by AUCTION, at the PALL- MALL GALLERY, No. 53, TO- MORROW, July 15, and following Days, at One o'clock each dav, bv Mr. LINDLEY, of Dublin, the verv superb collection of ENGRAV- INGS,' ETCHINGS, ORIGINAL DRAWINGS, and MINERALS, removed from Ireland for SALE in London, by order of the Trustees of Henry Harring- ton, Esq. The first department contains a rare and valuable assemblage of the finest specimens of the Graphic Art, all choice and many unique, containing the works of the following Masters:— ENGRAVINGS. ETCHINGS. Ostade P. Porter Ruysdael Canaletti Callott Castiglione Karl du Jardin P. Sandby A. Kauffman,& c. Faithorne Filler A. Durer Hollar Burnet Goltzius Houbraken Iiaiubach Rembrandt Woollett Masson Visscher Strange Wille Boiswert Hogarth Le Bas Waterloo Heath Desnoyers Watteau Sharp Schiavonetti Both Bartolozzi It. Morghen, & c. A. Vandervelde ORIGINAL DRAWINGS. Raphael Domenichino A. del Sarto Paul Potter Ostade f'orreggio A. Carracci Velasquez Snyders Berthem Titian Guercino Vandervelde Holbein & c. & c. P. Veronese Zuccarelli Paul Brill Van Bloemen Amounting to upwards of Twenty Thousand. The Mineralogical Specimens form one of the largest Collectionsjextant; rare and brilliant in matchless variety, uniting the earthly and metallic minerals, and abounding in the finest gems, numbering near Thirty Thousand. The whole has been collected by Mr. Har- rington, who united fine taste with a discriminative judgment, at aii unlimited expense, thus rendering the present sale peculiarly interesting to the amateur in the arts and the promoters of science. Catalogues to be had at the Gallerv, One Shilling each. GENERAL AVERAGE Plt- ICES UF CORN Per Imperial Quarter, of England and Wales, for the Week ending July 5. Wheat 54s 7d I Oats 19s 1 d I Beans 33s lid Barley 26s 4d | Rye 32s 10a | Peas 37a 9d Average of the last Six Weeks, which regulates the Duty. Wheat " 53s fid I Oats 18? 7d I Beans 32s 11^ Barley 25s 4A j Rye 31s lid | Peas 34s 0^ Duty on Foreign Corn for the presentweek Wheat 33s 8d I Oats 19s 9d | Beans 21s 3d Barlev 24s 4A I Rye 22s 9d I Peas 18s 3d BIRTHS. At Ley ton, Essex, on the 8th inst., the lady of Wm. Taylor Copeland, Esq. M. P., of a daughter. On the 11th inst. at Friar's- place, near Acton, the lady of Charles B. Curtis, Esq., of a son. On the fitli inst., the wife of William Cocfield, Esq. of Bolton- row, May- fair of a daughter. On the 3th instant, at East Horsley, Surrev, the lady of the Honourable and Rev. A. P. Perceval, of a daughter— On the 10th inst., Mrs. Charles Barry, of Foley- place, of a son— On the 10th inst. at Woolwich, the lady of Robt. Dash- wood, of the Royal Engineers, of a daughter— On the 8th inst. at Bedford, the lady of R. Henley Pavne, Esq , of a son. MARRIED. On the 11th inst. at St. Thomas's, Southwark, bv the Rev. J. Blenkarne, A. M. Henry Blenkarne, Esq. of Dowgate- liill, to Catherine, youngest daughter of Jas. Browell. Esq. of Guy's Hospital. On the 11th instant, at St. Mary's, Bryanston- square. by the Rev. Dr. Dibdin, Alexander Ogilby, Esq., eldest sou of Robert Ogilby, Esq., of Pellipar House, in the county of Londonderry, Ireland, to Isabella, daughter of the late Reverend William Curwen, of Harrington, Cumberland. On the 9th inst. at St. James's Church, Wm. Hawes, Esq. of Montagu place, Russell- square, to Anna, daughter of Samuel Cartwriglit. Esq. of Old Burling- ton- street— On the 6th inst. at St. George's, Hanover- square, Lord Albert Convng- ham, second son of the late Marquis Conyngham, to the Hon. Henrietta Maria, fourth daughter of the late Lord Forester— At Florence, on the 25>. h June, Alex- ander Bower, Esq. eldest son of Graham Bower, Esq. of Kincaldrum, Scotland, to the Countess Plagie Kossakowska, daughter of the Count Corwin Kossakowska and the Countess Louise Potocka, Poland— On the 9th inst. at St. Mary Wool- noth, Legh Watson, Esq. of Manchester, to Eiiza, the second daughter of Mr. William Layfield. of Sherborne lane, Lombard- street— At Brighton, on the 9th inst. Alexander Hamilton, second son of Andrew Loughnan, Esq. of Nottingham- place, to Aritonia, fifth daughter of the late Nicholas Power, Esq. of Queen- square— On the 9th inst. at St. Helen's, Isle of Wight, Henry Anson Nutt, Esq. 7th Madras Light Cavalry, to Helen, eldest daughter of John Young, Esq. of Westridge, Isle of Wight— On the 11th inst. at St. George's, Hanover square. Henry Kingscote, Esq. to Harriet, eldest daughter of C. T. Tower, Esq. M. P. of Weald Hall, Essex— On the 11th inst. at St. James's, Westminster, Mr. William Walton, jun. of Kingston- on- Thames, to Miss Elizabeth Bennett, daughter of James Poole, Esq. of Old Burlington- street— On the 11th inst. at St. Mary's, Bryanstone- square, having been previously married according to the rites of the Catholic Church, William Jones, Esq. of Clytha, Monmouthshire, to Jane Frances, third daughter of Edward Huddleston, Esq. of Purse Caundle, Dorsetshire— On the 11th instart, at Midhurst, Sussex, the Rev. William Harding, M. A., ate of University College, Oxford, and Vicar of Sulgrave, Northamptonshire, to Anne Cromwell, widow of the late Rev. C. E. Thurgar, and daughter of P. Williams, Esq., late of Edwardes place, Kensington. DIED. On the 10th inst. at Dover Hou= e, Whitehall, in the 37th year of his age, the Right Hon. George James Wei bore Agar Ellis Lord Dover, only son of Viscount Clifden— On the I'Jth inst. at half- past one o'clock, of an apoplectic attack, aged 44, the Right Hon. the Earl of Plymouth— On the 9th inst. at Newport, Isle of Wight, Mrs. Turnbull, late of Baker street, London, aged 77— At Hoddesden, Herts, on the 3d inst. Mr. M. Sams, aged 71— On the 10th inst. at Great Mar low, Lady Mortlock, wife of Sir John Mortlock- On the 27th ult. at Hemingford Grev, Huntingdonshire, Ann, relict of the Rev. M. Holworthv, late Rector of Elsworth, in Cambridgeshire, aged 76— On the 6th inst. at Farleigh. in Kent, Martha Maria Beresford, widow of the late Rev. William Beresford, Rector of Sunning, Berks, aged 88— On the 8tli inst. at Wimbledon, Sir Wm. Beaumaurice Rush, in his 83d year— On the 10th inst. Susannah, wife of William Graves, Esq. of Walthamstow— On the 6th inst. at St. Alban's- place, Pall mall, Captain Chat. Julius Kerr, of the Royal Navy.— On the 10th inst., in Berners- street, Sir John Bedingfield, Knight Commander of the Guelphic Order.— At her house in Thornbury, on the 9th inst., aged 73, Susanna Maria, daughter of the late Colonel Beverly Robinson, and sister of Lieut General Sir Frederick P. Robin- son, and of Commissary- General Sir W. H. Robinson. LONDON; Printed and published by EDWARD SHACKELL, at No* 40, FLEET- STREET, where, only, Communications to the EdStosr ( post paid. J are received• JOHN BULL. « FOR GOD, THE KING, AND THE PEOPLE!'* VOL. XIII.— No. 661. SUNDAY, AUGUST 11, 1833. Price Id. Under the Especial t'atrouajje of His Majesty. TOJOYAL GARDENS, VAUXHALL.— To- morrow ( Monday), JLm, the Hardens will open with the usual routine of amusements, consisting - of the CONCERT, Promenade, Picture of Antweip, Pyroteclinicon, Gymnastic Exercises, and concluding with FIREWORKS and Water Scene. Doors open at Nine.— Admittance, 4s. The QUEEN'S BIRTH- DAY will he celebrated at the Gardens on WED- NESDAY next, the 14th, when a SPLENDID GALA will be given. On which occasion many novel devices in ILLUMINATIONS, of the most magnificent ^ description, will be prepared ; and every attention paid to produce a DISPLAY of FIREWORKS superior to any vet exhibited. On Monday, the 19th inst., the Hardens will be appropriated to the BENEFIT of Mr. SIMPSON, Master of the Ceremonies of Vauxhall Gardens 36 years. Just published, " My Native Hills," by Bishop, and " The Pride of our • Valley," by Lee. Both sung by Mr. Robinson. CHESS.— Notice has been received from Norwich, that the MATCH pending between Mr. LEWIS, the Author of a useful and instructive volump on Chess, and several other Gentlemen, is to he resumed on Tuesday next, the 13th inst. Mr. Lewis, through whose absence from town this interesting contest has suffered a temporary suspense, will be here to meet his antagonists at six o'clock precisely. The Match is played in the large room, East side of the Grand British and Continental Coffee House, 66 and 67, Corn- hill, which room, from its size and convenient arrangements, offers the Public * very facility of witnessing the performance of some of the most scientific plavers in Europe. To non- subscribers the admi « " » ion is One Shilling, including a cup of the ; flnest Mocha, and one of the best Havannah Cigars. ~ § ~ EFT OFF MILITARY and PLAIN CLOTHING.— Officers JLA of the Army and Navy, and Gentlemen having any quantity of LEFT • OFF WEARING APPAREL, Coronation Dresses, Court Suits, Epaulette Swords, Sashes, Shuhracks, 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. JTS A TENT LEVER WATCHES Ml With Silver Glass over Dial, double bottom Cases, 6 guineas. With Silver Hunting double bottom Cases, 6£ guinea*. Watches on this ce'ebrated construction ( the most accurate on which a watch can be made) are now offered at the above prices, with the latest improvements, 5. e. the detached escapement, jewelled in four holes, capped, hand to mark the seconds, hard enamel dial, and maintaining power to continue going while wind- in? up. THOMAS SAVORY, Watch Manufacturer, 54, Cornhill ( 3 doors from XJracechurch- street), London. TURTLE and the TRANSPARENT PINE- APPLE PUNCH the former at 13s. per quart packed in jars, and the Punch at 48s per - dozen, sold at the CAFE de (' EUROPE, 9, Haymarket. Ordeis ( if by letter) with a remittance, immediately attended to. • DINNERS, WINES, and every variety of refreshment at this celebrated • Hotel, on the same scale of moderate charges as at the Clubs. Venison in the Coffee Room everyday.— Apartments for Gentlemen or Families OLD SHERRY.— GEORGE PHI BBS ( late Sanford and Phibbs, formerly of New Bond- street) calls the attention of the Nobility, Gentry, and Public in general, to his present Stock of the above Wine, at the following prices per Dozen:— 36s. .42s. ,48s. .54s. .63s. .72s. .84s .. 105s. .120s. G. P. lias also a large Stock of all the most approved FOREIGN WINES and SPIRITS, in cask and bottle, and at moderate prices. The Trade supplied with Old Bottled Wines of every description. No. 11, Blenheim street, New Bond- street. CRUDER, ALE, STOUT, & c.— W. G. FIELD hega to acquaint J 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 per lb.— Wax wick Moulds 6£ d.— Sperm and Composition Candles Is. 5d. to 1 s. 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, 54s. to 62s.- Fine Curd, 72s.—' Windsor and Palm Is. 4d. per packet— Old Brown Windsor Is. 9d.— Rose 2s.— Camphor 2s.— Superior Almond 2a. 6d.— Sealing Wax 4s. 6d. nerlh — 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. SPLENDID BRUSSELS CARPETS.- The Public may select, from the LARGEST and most SPLENDID STOCK of BRUSSELS CARPETS in Europe, without one farthing advance, for cash on delivery, but on no other terms. Lowest price .. .. 2s. 9d. a yard. Highest do. .. .. 4s. 6d. GRAHAM and CO., Manufacturers, 294 and 295, High Ho^ born. JP. S.— 200 Entirely New Patterns are included at the highest price. LINEN AND SILK BAZAAR, 337 & 339, OXFORD- STREET. CTRONG. STRACHAN, and WOOLLEY will OFFER on TO- MORROW ( Monday), and for this week, the REMAINING LOTS of Oriental arid Dresden china, vases, jars, dishes, plates, musical clocks, India taffities, worked dresses, French blonde, cambric handkerchiefs, shawls, & c. • & c. The whole being seizures, and purchased at the last Custom House sale ; and, in order to clear the whole off, they will be SOLD at half the original cost price.— 337 and 339, OXFORD- STREET. FULLER'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 quality. FULLER'S SPARE BED- AIRER: this vessel will retain its heat, with once filling, for sixty hours. CARRIAGE and BED FE ET- WARMERS upon the same prin- ciple. The above articles ot 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. CCONSOLATION to the TREMULOUS WRITER.— The Pubiic J mav look to this most singular and unique invention with confidence, as an inestimable source of comfort to those who experience any difficulties in the command of the pen, occasioned by tremor or nervous affctions, heat of cli- mate, agitation of spirits, excess or overexertion, weakness from age, injury of the thumb or fingers by sprain or otherwise, even to the loss of part. This happy relief exists in a little INSTRUMENT, the appearance of which, whea in use, escapes observation, is capable of giving firmness, confidence and freedom and cannot fail to assist the declining powers of a good penman, and would ma- terially improve the performance of a had one. It is honoured by the patronage and recommendation of Sir Astley Cooper, and otner highly respectable profes- sional gentlemen. A few minutes practice will prove its efficacy, and it has this advantage over all medicine, its powerincreases by use, and one prescription wil ast for life. Made in elastic gold, price 25s. each. Sold by T. Tucker 269, coiner of the Strand, opposite the Crown and Anchor Tavern. ' BURGESS'S ESSENCE OF ANCHOVIEh. Warehou « e, 107, Strand, corner of the Savov- 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, in purchasing what they conceive to be the Original, to observe the Name and Address correspond wi'li the above. The general appearance of the spurious descriptions will deceive the unguarded, and for their detection, J. B. and Son submit the following Cautions: some are in appearance at first sight " The Ge- nuine," but without'any name or adaress— some " Burgess's Essence of 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 satisfaction, continues to be prepared by them, and is recommended as a most useful and convenient Sauce— will keep good in all climates. Warehouse, No. 107, Strand, ( corner of Savoy- steps.) London, ( The Oiigina. Fish Sauce Warehouse J - TO THE WORTHY AND INDEPENDfcN V L1VJSR* AjNJJ JSiiU. t, TOKS OF LONDON. Gentlemen, NO words can express my gratitude for the strong demonstration of confidence evinced by the highly- respectable meeting of this day. TO TH E POLL I WILL GO, whether I may have one opponent or more ; and I may aid that, with a continuance of your kind exertions, I must come from that Poll your Representative, and be enabled to prove myself, Gentlemen, vour devoted and faithful servaant. FRANCIS KEMBLE. Committee- Room, London Tavern, Aug. 9th, 1833. TO THE WORTHY AND INDEPENDENT ELECTORS OF THE CITY OF LONDON. Gentlemen, THE principles on which I have sought your suffrages appear by my Canvass to be those of the majority oAthe great Constituency of London. I earnestly entreat your piesence at GuiMhall on MONDAY next, to declare that they are so. I have to offer my especial thanks to those Electors who, differing from me on some points, nevertheless promise me their support. I trust they believe that efforts to remove abuses ( wheresoever they maybe found, or by whomsoever countenanced) are at least as likely to be made by those who agree with me in political sentiments, as by any party opposed to us. 1 confess I cannot discover the blessinns that have flowed from the all- pro fessing Whigs, and would desire to see a Government relieving the difficulties of an over- taxed population. I am, Gentlemen, resolved that, if elected, of which I ought to entertain no doubt, you shall not be disappointed. I am, Gentlemen, your devoted and faithful Servant, Committee Room, London Tavern, Aug. 10, 1833. FRANCIS KEMBLE. Bl UotvjiNGtrixiiYi £> i- Aivjui^ vji^. s *.. KY liEViJ^ W will be continued throughout tiie Recess in Monthly Numbers, price One Shilling. This New Series affords a favourable opportunity for commencing the Work, which has been stamped with public approbation during the Session ; and advertisers will also find it a cheap and extensive medium for announce- ments of every description Orders received bv all Booksellers. Advertisements should be sent to the Publishers, Messrs. Simpkin and Marshall, Stationers' Hall- court, eaily, to insure insertion. ADMISSION ONE SHILLING. TSS 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. nRITISH INSTITUTION, Pall Mall.— The GALLERY, with R3 a Selection of PICTURES from the Works of P' JOSHUA REYNOLDS, Mr. WEST, and Sir THOMAS LAWRENCE, the I. ree last Presidents of the Royal Academy, IS OPEN DAILY from 10 in the morning till 6 in the evening. Admittance Is. Catalogue Is. WIL LI A " i BARNARD, Keeper. SKINNERS* HALL, 3d August, 1833. THE Worshipful COMPANY of SKINNERS hereby give Notice, that they are ready to grant sevei- a; LOANS of .£ 209 each to Young Freemen of the Company for the space of Thrfc Years, at interest, after the rate of 21. 10s. per cent, per annum, upon security to be approved of by the Master and Wardens. All Freemen applying for the Loans must have served an Apprenticeship of seven years to their Trade or Business, and must aUo have been employed two years at the least as journeymen at wages, and must be Householders of good repute, and produce proper Testimonials of Apprenticeship, and of their capabi- lity to give the required Seiurity. T. G. KEN SIT, Clerk. WANTED, a young Person, from the age of twelve who is active, good tempered, and of the Established Church, to ASSIST generally in a SCHOOL, near Islington, wbeie great opportunity of improvement will be afforded. A premium of twenty pounds will berequiied for the first year, and a progressive salaiy given ; to commence the second, and be advanced in propoition to usefulness.-— Letters, post paid, addressed to A. B. care ot Mrs. Freeman, 77, Goswell- road, wilt meet due attention. THE SEASON.— MILES and EDWARDS's extensive Ware- rooms are now replete with the most perfect Collection of economical a9 well as Ornamental CABINET and UPHOLSTERY FURNITURE that has ever been submitted to the approbation of the Notmjty and Gentry.— No. 134, Oxford- street, between Holies- street and Old Cave- kiri* '. i i et. l^ fORFOLK.— MANORS and MANSION, to be LET, in the _ l_ xi most desirable part of the county. The mansion is capable of accom- modating a large family, and the manors are of the first description, strictly pre served, and abounding in game.— Apply, post- paid, to J. H., Messrs. Wilcocks and Co., 149, Bishopsgate- street without. ESTBOURNE GREEN, HARROW ROAD.— To be LET, till the latter end of October, ( the family going to the Sea) a HOUSE in the Cottage style, containing two drawing rooms and a dining- room, en- suite, ( the latter opening into a conservatory), library, nuisery, and two best water- closets, and making up ten or eleven beds ; coach bouse and stable, pleasure and kitchen gardens, and the use of a cow. The garddner paid by the proprie- tor. The house is handsomely furnished, and the grounds are secluded and in good order. An excellent Pew in the parish church. For Cards to view apply to Mr. Clarke, House Agent, Holies- street, Cavendbh square ; or to Messrs. Bates, Wei beck'stieet. AT a MEETING held on the 1st July last, of the FRIENDS of the late Major General SIR JOHN MALCOLM, G. C. B. and K. L. S- The Viscount CLIVE in the Chair; it was resolved that a Subscription sh « uld be opened for a MON UM ENTA L STATUE to be erected in WESTMINSTER ABtiEY, to perpetuate the remembrance of the public seivicea and private virtues of the Deceased. SUBSCRIPTIONS TO A MONUMENTAL STATUE TO THE MEMORY OF THE LATE SIR JOHN MALCOLM. Col. William Alston Col. V. Agnew, C. B. .. Duke of Buccleugh .. Lieut.- Gen. Bell .. William W. Bayley, Esq. .. Samuel Briggs, Esq. Miss A. M. Briggs Lieut.- Col Barnewall Samuel Baker, of Rochester George Baker, E « q. Capt. Thomas Baker Mrs Blackburn Major R. E. Burrows Mis. W. H. Brown Mrs. Eliza Brown Mrs. Emma Brown .. Lieut, and Adjutant Brown The Viscount Clive The Lord Cowley The Hon. Robert Clive The Hon. Arthur Cole Sir Robert Campbell, Bart. Admiral P. Campbell, C. B. Thomas Cockburu, Esq. .. Henry Colebroke, Esq. .. Colonel Cunningham Lt.' Gen. Sir Thos. Dallas, C. B. Captain Dirom Mrs. Dirom of Mount Annan Robert Dirom, Esq. Ensign Durham, H. M. 37th Regt. The Pacha of Egypt, per S.\ Brig^ s, E « q J The Right Hon. Henry Eilis The Hon. W. F. Elphinstone The Hon. Mount Stuart Elphinstone Col. W. K. Elpbinstone J. F. Elphinstone, Esq. N. B. Edinonston, Esq. Col Fair, C. B. .. Kirkman Finlay, Esq. Thomas Fortescue, Esq. Lieut.- Gen. Sir Colquhoun Grant, K. C. B. Right. Hon. Sir James Gra- ham, Bart. Major G. Graham The Rev. W. Graham David Halliburton, Esq. Patrick Hadow, Esq. Col. Houston, C. B. Col. W. Hull f, ,, £ 8. s. so 0 Lieut.- Col. B. Hay, of Chat-\ 25 0 bam .. • • J 109 0 Lieut.- Col. Hodson 3 3 5 0 Sir R. H. Inglis, Bart. 10 a 10 0 Rev. Dr. M. Irving 3 3 25 0 Rev. A. Irvine .. 3 3 5 a Rev Rubertirvine 5 0 50 0 Richard Jeukins, Esq. 20 0 5 0 Dowager Ladv Lubbock .. 2 0 2 0 Sir J. W, L rb'bock, Mart. .. 50 0 2 0 Archibald Little. Esq. 50 0 1 0 William Little, Esq. 10 0 5 0 Lieut. Little, 9th Lancers .. 10 0 2 0 Duke of Montrose 50 0 I 0 LadyAlaxwei!, of Ca'denvoud 2 2 1 0 Grseme Mercer, Esq. 20 0 5 0 Andrew Macklew, Esq. 10 0 50 0 Mrs. Miuto 1 0 25 0 T. T. Mitchell, Esq. 2 2 50 0 The Duke ot Northumberland 100 C 30 0 Henry Newnham, Esq. 2 2 10 0 Major Noble ' 2 0 5 0 The Earl ot Powis 100 0 20 0 The Lord Prudhoe 50 0 20 0 Sir Thomas Parley, Bart. .. 5 0 20 0 Col. Pasley. C B. ' .. 25 0 50 0 Captain John Pasley 25 0 5 0 Mrs. P r « lev, of Entield 5 0 5 0 Lieut. Colonel Patrickson .. 10 0 2 0 Lieut. Thomas Paik, Royal! 5 0 2 0 Marines .. .. J 100 0 The Earl of Ripon 50 0 10 10 s 0 Col. J. Russell. U. B. 10 e 21 0 James G. Remington, Esq. .. 30 0 James Ritchie, Esq. .. 10 0 50 0 Major Ritchie 2 2 5 5 W. H. Roberts, Esq. 2 0 5 5 Tire Viscount Sidmouth 60 0 10 a Thomas Snodgrass, Esq. 50 c 5 5 Lieut. Col. Meyrick Shaw .. 5 0 10 0 Sir Edmond Stanley 3 3 25 0 Major John- Smith 20 0 Hanbury Tr acy, Esq, 50 0 30 0 Thomas- Telford, Esq. 50 0 Rev. John Vernier ' 1 0 50 0 The Duke of Wei ington .. 100 0 5 0 The Marquis of Wellesley 50 0 1 1 Sir W. W. Wyin, Bart. 50 0 25 0 Major- Gen. SilH. Worsley,! 50 o 10 I'l K. C. B. .. .. / 5 0 Sir John Waist, Bart. 10 0 15 0 Fiancia Warden, •> 20 0 SHOOTING COMPANION. In one large vol. 8vo. with One Hundred and Fifty Wood- cuts, and " Doncaster Race for the Great St. Leger Stakes, 1832," engraved on Steel by Ogg, from a Drawing by Pollard, expressly executed for this Work, price 25s. appropriately bound in cloth, ^ HHE FIELD BOOK; or, Sports and Pastimes of the United JSL Kingdom By the Author of " Wild Sports of the West." " The title of this book is calculated to do great injustice to the importance of its merits, for our readers will not be a little'surprised to learn that the modest denomination of ' Field Book' belongs to a vast and comprehensive Cyclop ® , dia, in which every subject, every minute point, that can in the least degree inte- rest a country gentleman, is explained with a learning and ability, and a general accuracy, such as renders it one ot the most valuable contributions of the time to our standard literature."— Monthly Review. London: Effingham Wilson, 88, Royal Exchange. just published, in ERASER'S MAGAZINE for August, price 2s. 6d. ADISCOURSE on the RIGHT of the BISHOPS to SIT IN PARLIAMENT. James Fraser, 215, Regent- street, gjr This being only the Second Number of a New Volume of this Periodical, a good opportunity is afforded to tho= e desirous of taking it in regularly. The Number for July begins the Eighth Volume, of which a few copies remain un- sold. Every bookseller in the Kingdom receives subscribers' names. Just published, in 2 vols, price 11. Is. EN AND MANNERS IN AMERICA. By the Author of " Cyi il Thornton,"& c. W. Blackwood, Edinburgh ; and T. Cadell, London. COLONEL HAWKER ON SHOOTING. Seventh Edition enlarged, ( Thirty Plates and Cuts,) 18s. cloth. INSTRUCTIONS to YOUNG SPORTSMEN; with an Abridg- ment of the Old and New Game Laws. Bv Lieut.- Col. P. H AWKER. " Col. Hawker is one of the be9t shots in England, and his ' Instructions to Sportsman' the very best book we have on the subject."— Blackwood's Mag. London: Longman. Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman. Just published, in 8vo. Second Edition, revised and c riected, I5s. in cloth, DANTE'S INFERNO, translated into English Rhyme; with an Introduction and Notes. By ICHABOD CHARLES WRIGHT, A. M. late Fellow ot Magdalen College, Oxford. " Mr. Wright's superiority over his predecessors is greatly founded upon the fact of bis having endeavoured to transfer the precise versification of his author, together with liisthoughts. * * * Mr. Wright has very luckily solved the problem of the English tei za rima. * * # Readers who are most familiar with the Divine Comedy itself— its mighty whol£— will best understand the diffi- culties with which Mr. Wiiibt has had to contend, and will most admire the talent which has done so much, not to evade, but to overcome them. * * The merit of the execution will unite all competent judges in cordially entreat- ing him to proceed."— Edinburgh Review. " Mr. Wright's translation is remarkably elegant."— New Monthly Magazine. " To the English reader this work must be a valuable acquisition; and we sincerely hope that every possible means will be taken to make it known, as we ieel assured that that alone is wanting to make it universally read and admired." — Metropolitan. " Mr. Wright has not only closely adhered to his original, but has pieserveaits grandeur and force."— Athenseum. London: Longman and Co. Nottingham: W. Dearden. THE WEST INDIES. Just published, price One Shilling, THE IMPORTANCE of the BRITISH COLONIES in the WEST INDIES ; the danger of a general and immediate Emancipation of the Negroes; and a Sketch of a Plan for a safe and gradual Emancipation* on terms favourable to all Parties, and without any Loan. Whittaker, Treacher, and Co., Ave Maria lane. THE WEST INDIES. In 2 vols, post 8vo. price 21s. THE DOMESTIC MANNERS and SOCIAL CONDITION of the WHITE, COLOURED, and NEGRO POPULATION of the WEST IV DIES. By Mrs. CARMICHAEL, Five Years'Resident in St. Vincent's and Trinidad Mrs. Carmichael's facts and reasoning are all opposed to the anti- slavery repre sentations, ami tend to support the opinions maintained by those who advocate the West India interests, and insist on the inexpediency and danger of interfere ingtoo much with the existine state of things."— Literary Gazette, July 27. Whir, raker, Treacher, and Co. Ave Maria- lane. T BOOKS RECENTLY PUBLISHED By Wbittaker, Treacher, and Co., Ave Maria- lane, London. 1. HE ABBESS. By. Mrs. TROLLOPE. 3 vols. 31s. 6d. " Unquestionably some of the chapters equal any thing in the language for iveliness and truth."—- Athenaeum. " The proper elements of romance abound in its pages."— Sunday Herald. By the same Author, The DOMESTIC MANNERS of the AMERICANS. Fourth Edition. 2 vols, Svo. with 24 Plates, 21s. 2. SHIPWRECKS and DISASTERS at SEA. By Cyrus Redding, Esq. With Twenty- one Engravings. In two volumes, 7s. 3. MY TEN YEARS' IMPRISONMENT in ITALIAN and AUSTRIAN DUNGEONS. By Silvio Pellieo. Translated by Thomas Roscoe. Small 8vo. 6s. " This is a most interesting work."— Athenaeum, May 18, 4. THE PICTURE OF INDIA. Second edition, with several Engravings, vols., 12s. ha! f morocco. 5. MRS. SARGANT'S LETTERS FROM A MOTHER TO HER DAUGH- TER. Fourth edition. 3s. 6d. silk. 6. WHITE'S NATURAL HISTORY OF SELBORNE, edited, bv Sir W. Jar- dine. With Engravings. 12mo. 4s. Enlarged edition, small Svo. 6s. 6d 7. PHILIDOR'S ANALYSIS OF CHESS, with fifty- six new problems. By G. Walker. Foolscap, 8vo. 7s. 8. CAPTAIN BASIL HALL'S VOYAGES to Loo Choo, and in the Eastern Seas, including his interview with Napoleon, at St. Helena; and a Journal ritten on the Coasts of Chili, Mexico and Peru. 3 vols. 18mo. 10s. 6d. 9. LIFE OF ROBERT BURNS. By J. G. Lockhart, LL. B. I8mo. 3s. 6d. 10. INGLIS'S PERSONAL NARRATIVE OF TWO JOURNEYS through OR WAY. SWEDEN, and DENMARK, and through the North of FRANCE and SWITZERLAND. 2 vols. 7s. II. The HISTORY of the CIVIL WARS of IRELAND. By W. C. Taylor, vol-. 7°. Price 7s. k iN tire PORTRAITS of ENGLISH AUTHORS on GAR- DENING, with Biographical Notices. Second Edition. By the Author Gleanings on Gardens, chiefly respecting those in the ancient style in Eng- land."— Sold by Wilson, Cornhill; and Onwhyn, Catherine- street. The Gardener's Magazine notices the first edition of this work in very respect- able terms ; and this second edition is thus noticed bytlie Revue Encyclopfidique: " Q'roique 1' ouvrage sott rGellement une biographie, l'auteur a su lui dormer rm inteiet dramatique, une vivacite de coloris qui anime ses pointures. Quoiqu'il ait cosacre son travail aux ecrivains Anglais qui ont contributj par leurs ouvra- ges a la propagation desconnaissances d'horticulture, il n'a pas tout. a- fait oublie tes auteurs Fraufais: et lorsqu'il parle de quelques- uns de nos jardiniers, e'est avee une scrupuleuse impartiality, en digne citoyen dela republique des lettres. C'est un livre d'agrement, ouvrage de gout." And the Gardener's Magazine thus speaks of the Gleanings:—" The author has a just feeling for grand and generous sentiments, as well as for a taste for gardens. The whole, indeed, of his excellent little work breathes the spirit of kindness and philanthropy, the ^' H'i tf-- shortness of which every reader will regret. Wherever it is wished to create an '. enthusiasm for gardening pursuits, this little book should be thtovvn in M* W* X « M. ^ i^ E^ I"}-^/ Titers rs mi/ T^ w- rrti o w fhii/ M L' r* • GS
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