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

13/07/1834

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Volume Number: XIV    Issue Number: 709
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John Bull "For God, the King, and the People!"

Date of Article: 13/07/1834
Printer / Publisher:  
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Volume Number: XIV    Issue Number: 709
No Pages: 8
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JOHN BUIili. " FOR GOD, THE KING, AND THE PEOPLE !' VOL. XIV.— NO. 709. SUNDAY, JULY 13, 1834. Price Id. npHEATRE ROYAL, HAYMARRET.— To- morrow evening JL will be performed the Tragedy of HAMLET. Hamlet, Mr. Vandenhoff. With UNCLE JOHN, ami THE SLEDGE DRIVER— On Tuesday, The Sledge Driver. With Sheridan's Comedy of The Rivals, and Nicolas Flam.— On Wed- nesday, Arfaxerkes. With ( first* time) an original Comedy, called Beau Nash! the King of Bath, and other Entertainments.— On Thursday, Clari. With MY Wife's Mother, and other Entertainments — On Friday, Rural Felicity. Witn Separation and Reparation, and other Entertainments. ^ JADLER'S WELLS.— To- morrow, and during the Week, will be performed, an entirely new magnificent Spectacle, from the pen of Mr. G. Almar, called THE CEDAR CHEST; or, The Lord Mayor's Daughter. Principal characters, by Messrs. Archer, Almar, Campbell, R. Honner, W. Smith, M'Carthy, Suter, Dunn, Elsgood, C. Smith, Goldsmith, Wilson, Miss Langley, fylrs. Lewis, and Miss M'Carthy. The piece will terminate with a most magni- ficent Water Pageant. After which, a broad Farcical Burletta, called SPARE BED. General Darvell, Mr. Goldsmith ; Captain Darvell, Mr. Maitland ; Capt. Ardert, Mr. M'Carthy; Mr. Peter Pigeonwiddy, Mr. W. Smith ; Dingle, Mr. Wilson; Jean Jacques, Mr. Dunn; Mrs. Hurricane, Mrs. Lewis; Clarinda, Miss Lanirley; Perditta, Miss Silver. To conclude with THE RED CROW ; or, The Archers of Islington. Characters as before. " ISADORA M A .— The EXHIBITION of the MANCHESTER MT and LIVERPOOL RAILWAY, at the Bazaar, Baker- street, Portman- square, continues to attract the attention of the Nobility and Gentry, and it may be said to be one of the most amusing and instructive Exhibitions now before the Public, and it assuredly is one of the cheapest, as the Admission is only One Shilling. The principal objects on the Route have been very accurately painted by first- rate Artists. The Locomotive Engines are numerous, and give a more correct idea of the mode of transit on this great work of art and science than can be conveyed by any description, however elaborate. Every one of our juvenile friends ought in particular to see it, as it is very instructive for youth. Open from Ten till Six. Admittance, One Shilling. Descriptive Catalogues, with Twelve Plates, One Shilling. THE FRIENDS of the DUKE of WELLINGTON are respect- fully informed, that the WELLINGTON COLUMN is completed, and EXHIBITING at No. 232, REGENT- STREET. They are earnestly requested to inspect it previously to their leaving town, < a account of the limited number which is to be made. " Each admirer of the Duke may now have a sort of domestic monument of his greatness."—- Morning Herald. USIC AT HALF" FIiICEARGYLL ROOMS, 246, REGENT- STREET.— Pianoforte and Guitars to be had cheap. MOORE'S" IRISH MELODIES.— Jusl published, the Tenth and concluding Number of the above celebrated Work, arranged, with Symphonies and Accompaniments, by HENRY R. BISHOP. Prise 15s.— Containing Though humble the banquet Sing, sweet harp Song of the battle eve The wandering bard - Alone in crowds I? ve a secret to tell thee Song of Innisfail The night dance There are sounds of mirth Oh! Arranmore Lay his sword by his side Oh! could we do with this world of ours. SUPPLEMENT TO DITTO, Price 5s.— Containing The Wine- cup is circling { From this hour the pledge is given The Dream of those days | Silence is in our festal halls. This Work is now complete, and may be had in Ten Numbers, price 15s. each, and concluding Supplement, price 5s.; or in Five Volumes, bound in cloth, and in a variety of elegant bindings. London: published by J. POWER, 34, Strand. MURAL FELICITY.— Just published, from thathighlv- success- ful Comedy, the following Songs, Duets, & c., composed by HENRY R. BISHOP Natu re th us in all thy pride O ! open the door, some pity to shew O ! come with me, my sweetest love " What gives life to love? Tell me, sweetest .. Trio Misses Love's life is all a masquerade Duetto Mr. Anderson Miss Paton Mr. Anderson Miss Turpin Paton ,_ Turpin, Misses Paton a 2s. Od. Is. 6d. 2s. Od. Is. 6d & Mr. Anderson 3s. Od. and Turpin .. 2s. Od. When friends are false Duetto .. Misses Paton and Turpin .. 2s. Od. Publishers : KEITH, PROWSE and CO., City Royal Musical Repository, 48, Cheapside. " f^ TEW SWISS AIRS, just published, sung by Madame Stock- hausen : " The Happy Switzer," 2s. 6d.; " UDon the Hills," 2s.; " There is but one," 2s.; " The Bridegroom's Return, or, Ouvrez, Ouvrez," 2s. 6d.— New Pianoforte Music by F. Mendelssohn : Second Rondeau Brillant, 6s.; Fan- tasia, 6s.; Two Musical Sketches, 2s. 6d.; Overture, " Isle of Fingal," duet, 6s. By Francois Hunt en: Trois Airs Italien, La Zaira, La Niobe, and La Norma, 3s. • each. The New Songs introduced in the Operas by Madlle. Grisi, Signori Ru- bini and Ivanoff.— Now publishing, Six Songs, composed and sung by Mr. H. Phillips, 2s.— MORI and LAVENU, 28, New Bond- street. THE COMIC SCRAP BOOK, published every SATURDAY.— Four original humorous Engravings for Sixpence, the letter- press by T. Hood, and other comic writers. The Midsummer Keepsake, with 15 beautiful steel engravings, peculiarly adapted for a literary present to youth, elegantly : bound, gilt edges, 2s. 6d; Marshall's other Midsummer Annuals are the Gift, and Casket, each with fine steel engravings, only Is. 6d. gilt edges. The Bible is ready, with 12 fine steel engravings, elegantly bound ; the Prayer Book, with six fine steel engravings, elegantly bound, gilt edges, 2s. 6d.; Part 2, Marshall's " Gallery of Fine Arts, four fine Engravings for 6d.; Part 2, Marshall's Illustrations of the Bible, four fine steel engravings for 6d. All published at Marshall's West- End Establishment, 204,- South Room Gallery, Pantneon, Oxford- street; who has also on sale Paper Cases, from Is. 6d., elegant Albums, from Is. 6d. Scrap Prints of every description. BOOKBINDING.— Works of the size of the Family Library bound in extra Calf, in a very superior manner, at Eighteen- pence per vol.; every other size proportionably low, by BELLAMY and Co., Bookbinders and Booksellers, 46, Cornhill, London. Lists of prices of Bookbinding gratis. PLOUGH TAVERN and HOTEL, Blackwall.— Those who would eat WHITE BAIT in perfection are respectfully invited to the Plough.— BREACH and CHOULAS, of the London Tavern, having taken the Plough, and made such improvements as will insure the most comfortable ac- commodation, beg leave to solicit the patronage of the Public. They promise liberality and attention in all departments of the establishment, and confidently liope company visiting the . Plough will find the apartments so complete, and the pYospect so beautiful, as to be induced frequently to renew their visit.— Orders Teceived at the London Tavern. RA MSG ATE.— MARINE BOARDING HOUSE, SionHilL— The Proprietor, having considerably improved his establishment, and engaged a Man - Cook of ability, solicits a continuance of that support with which he has been favoured during the last twenty years ; assuring his friends and the ip- Ublic of his best intentions for their comfort. BETWEEN DORKING and GUILDFORD.— To be LET, Furnished, for 2 or 3 years, at One Hundred Guineas per Annum, or for a longer term Unfurnished, the COTTAGE within ten minutes'walk- of Shere or Albury Church ; containing 3 sitting- rooms and 7 bed- rooms, with garden and pleasure- grounds, and a field of 5 acres. The shooting over near 1000 acres of land lnay be rented with it.— Inquire of George Poulter, at Shere, near Guildford ; or of Messrs. Bray and Warren, 57, Great Russell- street, Bloomsbury. IANDAU for SALE, late the property of a Lady, who had it fitted up in an expensive and handsome style for the purpose of taking abroad with her, but owing to the great expense, of getting it over, has left it for « ale. The body is the full size, and veiy handsome, is painted yellow, and lined • with drab, with silk squabs. The Carriage has a set of handsome lee- sprinps on carved blocks, the axles are turned and case hardened.— May be seen at 32, Upper Park- place, Dorset- square. New- road. IDER, ALE, STOUT, & c.— W. G. FIELD and Co. beg to acquaint their Friends and the Public, that their genuine Cider and Perry, Burton, Edinburgh, and Prestonpans Ales, Pale Ale as prepared for India, Dor- chester Beer, and London and Dublin Brown Stout, are in fine order for use, and, as well as their Foreign Wines and Spirits, of a very superior class. 22, Henrietta- street, Covent- garden. WXMSGATE STEAM PACKET COMPANY.— For CALAIS.— The Public are respectfully informed that the RAMSGATE PACKET, E. FOSTER, Commander, fitted with Eneinesby Boulton, Watt, and Co., will leave the Royal Harbour of RAMSGATE every WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY, for CALAIS ; returning from thence the following days, until July 31st; after which time she will run on WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY, and return on THURSDAY and MONDAY. Her time of departure will be so arranged that Passengers may always embark from the Public Stairs, or by an accommodation ladder, for which no chargc is made either at . Ramsgate or Calais. On returning to Ramsgate, the vessel will- at all times be enabled to land her passengers on the Pier ; so " that the inconvenience and danger of landing in boats will be avoided. FARES :— Best Cabin, 10s.; Fore Cabin, 7s. 6d.; Children under ten years of age, 5s. To Calais and back ( is^ me voyage), best Cabin, 15s.; Fore Cabin, Pis.; Children under ten years of age, 8s.— A Stewardess on board for the accommodation of Ladies.— For further particulars apply- to Mr. George Hope, at the Office, Goldsmid- place, Ramsgate.— Ramsgate, June 20th, 1834. KING'S THEATRE.— W. SaMS, St. James's- street, Book seller to the Kinjr, has TO LET, OPERA BOXES, by the Night, on each tier, in the best situations. A variety of BOXES for Signor RUBINT'S BENEFIT, on Thursday, 17th inst. ( at which Grisi and Taglioni will appear), for disposal on very moderate terms. Stalls and Pit Tickets at the usual prices. The best Boxes at all the Theatres, and for the FRENCH PLAYS, let by the Night. Terms to SAMS'S Royal Subscription Library:— The Year J6' 5 5 0 | Half Year £" S 3 0 | Quarter 116 0 Subscribers to this Library are insured ah immediate perusal of all new Works. SAMS'S Portraits of THEIR MAJESTIES, from a painting by Sir W. Beechey, are now ready. NEXT PRESENTATION.— TO be SO* D, the NEXT PRE- SENTATION to a LIVING in Derbyshire, itie present Incumbent is aged 80, and the income between 8001. and 9' 001. fper ammrn. For further parti- culars apply to Mr. William Henderson, Solicitor, ll, Lancaster- place, Waterloo Bridge. TUITION.— A Graduate of the University of Cambridge, whose name is conspicuous on the Mathematical and " Classical Tripos at a recent examination, proposes being in Town during the? long VACATION, and will have leisure during that period to assist the Studies of an Undergraduate belong- ing to either of the Universities.— Letters addressed to Mr. Macplierson, Book- seller, Middle- row, Holborn. EDUCATION.— THREE VACANClES'occurin the BOARD- ING SCHOOL of a married Clergyman at Clapham, the author of se- veral classical, literary, and theological works, and Ionjr accustomed to educate the sons of Noblemen, private and professional gentlemen, of England, the Indies, South America, France, and Spain, to whom and the parents of pupils with him, he gives references. The pupils are limited, and treated as his sons. The system, besides a well- grounded classical, mathematical, and English edu- cation, includes daily lectures on history, belles lettres, astronomy, mechanics, & c.; and French and German, by a Resident Professor. Parental counsel, kind- ness, & c., are the chief discipline. French is spoken. Terms, sixty guineas, including books; no extras.— For particulars, address X. X., post paid, Mr. Hand's Library7, Clapham. M EDICAL PROFESSION.- T- A Gentler n in full practice, VACANCY7?* a J » IT ' ' both public and private, has a VACANCY r.'- r PUPIL, articled or otherwise; and for any period from one to six years. The facilities for acquiring sound practical knowledge are of the very first order-* For particulars apply to Mr. Joh n Green, 94, Hatton- garden. ADOUCEUR, proportionate to the value^ will be given to any individual who could procure for the Advertiser, a gentleman of liberal education, a permanent MERCANTILE or other SITUATION in town or coun- try. The strictest honour and secrecy may be relied upon.— Letters ( post free) to A. Z., Mr. G. F. Hudson, 13, King- street, Cheapside, London. MESSRSTMILES and EDWARDS fee! themselves called upon to inform the Nobility and Gentry, that they are not in the slightest degree connected with another House in Oxford- street assuming the same name, and that their ONLY ESTABLISHMENT is at No. 134, Oxford- street, near Cavendish- square. DRAWING- ROOXM C U RT A INS. — Richest Silk Tabboretts, Royal Crape Damasks, and splendid Chintzes, one. fourth under any- other House. Specimens of the newest designs can be seen fixed in the Show- rooms. A large stock of elegant Cabinet Furniture, Chairs, Couches, Looking- glasses, & c., warranted of the be. st manufacture, in the same proportion. Furnishing Department, Royal Emporium, THOS. PAUL and Co. Opposite the Mansion House. CHINTZ COTTON FURNITURE WAREHOUSE.— This, the oldest Establishment, in London, is now replete with every article of CHINTZ FURNITURE appropriate for Beds, Boudoirs, Drawing rooms. Tents, & c. Old patterns at one half their original price. 22, T 4VISTOCK STREET, COVENT GARDEN. - CARPETS— SOFA and TOILETTE CARETS— LAPWORTH and RILEY have just received some most beautifi. i and curious French Carpets, adapted to these purposes. Also, several TOURNAY CARPETS, of large dimensions, which they can offer decided bargains. A very choice assort- ment of the Royal Velvet and Saxony Carpet, of the most splendid and unique designs. An extensive Stock of Brussels Carpets of the first fabric, which they can still supply on former terms. Persian and Bengal Carpets, India Matting, & c — Warehouse, 19, Old Bond street. WALKINGTON, Upholsterer, Cabinet, and Chair Manufac- turer, begs most respectfully to inform his Friends and Families fur- nishing, he has REMOVED to 2, CHARLOTTE- STREET, one door from Rath- bone- place, where a good assortment of Rosewood Chairs, Sofas, Couches, Card and Loo Tables, Cabinets, Mahogany Chairs, Sideboard Tables, Wardrobes, Drawers, Bedsteads, Bedding, & c., is always ready for inspection, ait Low Prices, and every article warranted for years.— No. 2, Charlotte- Street. rfio TOURISTS, DRAUGHTSMEN, < fec. BIJRGES'S 1 PATENT PANEIDOLON, for sketching any description of country, or architecture, however complicated, without any previous knowledge of drawing, may now be had at 134, Sloane- street, Chelsea. ~ W ONDON- MADE SILVER WATCHES, double- bottomed B A cases, very fine movements, jewelled, & c., maybe bought for 4 guineas each, warranted, of THOMAS COX SAVORY, 47, Cornhill, London. N. B. A quantity of Second- hand Plate for sale. HE RESIGNATION of MINISTERS^ involving an adjourn- ment of Parliament, and a close to the London Season,) induces Messrs. FLETCHER, Military Tailors, & c., 33, New Bond- street, to return thanks to their numerous Patrons, for the extent of support already received, and to inform the World that they continue to supply the best articles of clothing at the following Reduced Prices, for Cash :— Dress Coats ( colours), 31,' 6s.; Frock Coats ( colours), 41. 5s. ; Trousers, ditto, 11. 10s. 6d. ; Blue or Black a little more ; Waistcoats, 15s. 6d. A Suit of Footman's Livery, 41. 5s.— Copy the Address. EST BEAVER HATS, 21s.— Hats of the most approved qualities, superior colours, elegant shapes, which never spot with rain, of unequalled fineness and durability, wholesale knd retail, of the Manufac- turers and Patentees, ROBERT FRANKS and CO., 140, Regent- street, and 62, Redcross- street, City. W EFT- OFF CLOTHES.— Gentlemen having any quantity of H 4 Left- ofF Wearing Apparel, Regimentals, Fancy Dresses, and Costumes of any nation, the utmost Value in CASH wijl be given for the same ; or if required, New Clothes will be made in. Exchange, of the best quality, and in strict accord- ance with the fashions of the day. Apply personally, or by letter, to STEPHEN PEARSON, No. 2, Lamb's Conduit- street.— Appointments attended to, ten miles from London. , FRENCH STAYS and BELTS.— VISTIRIN and CO. solicit Ladies to inspect their fashionable Dress and Riding CORSETS, of inimi- table fit, without tightness, so pernicious to health, at^ educed prices. PATENT STAYS, to improve the shape, rectify projecting shoulders, prevent and remedy spinal curvatures, and, whilst they give essential support, make the figure propor- tionable, without padding or pressure.— ELASTIC BELTS, which reduce cor- pulencv, afford comfortable support after confinement, and are efficacious in Abdominal debility7, or enlargement. Gentlemen's Indian Rubber Belts, and C.. i dren's Stays, of superior construction. Soiled Stays.— 1, Old Cavendish- street, Oxford- street. TURKEY C O F F E E, finest quality, 2s. per lb. MARSHALL and Co. beg to inform the Public that they continue selling the finest Turkey Coffee at .. .. .. .. 2s. per lb. Cocoa Nuts, Nibs, or Ground, finest .. .. .. Is. Chocolate .. .. ditto 2s. Chocolate Powder, m Cans for travelling . . .. .. Is. each. Also some very curious old, high- flavoured Mocha Coffee .. 3s. per lb. At their Tea and Coffee Warehouse, No. 12, Southampton- street, Strand. lOY HIS MAJESTY'S LETTERS PATENT. INSTANT Jt* LIGHT.— JONES'S PROMETHEANS.— The advantage of these Lights over all others ever introduced to th$ Public, is their simplicity and durability; neither time or climate will deteriorate from their original quality; they are composed of minute bulb of glass hermetically sealed, containing a quarter of a drop of sulphuric acid, surrounded by chlorate of potash, and inclosed in wax- paper, for the purpose of burning sufficient time, to seal a letter, and emit, on being burnt, a fragrant perfume. A small pair oi; nippers are recommended for the purpose of crushing the bulb, and thereby causing the flame.— Manufactory, LIGHT HOUSE, 201, Strand. • FULLER'S FREEZING MACHINE,% which different Ices, from one to twelye quarts, can be made in a few minutes, and repeated as often as required. " The Freezing Apparatus, by which pfeam and Water- Ices can be made by artificial process; also, the Ice Preserve^ in which ice can be kept three weeks in the warmest season, to prevent the ^ necessity of opening the ice- house except occasionally. Ice Pails, for icing - wtye', water, and butter, and Freezing Powder of matchless quality. Fuller's Spare Bed Airer.— This vessel is constructed upon philosophical principles, and . will retain its heat with once fill- ing for sixty hours. Carriage and- Bed Feet- W. armers upon the! same principle. The above articles of scientific discovery- may be seen only at the Manufactory, Jermyn- street, six doors from StJauies's- street, Loi^ ofu Just published, 2 vols, post 8vo. 18s. BELGIUM and WESTERN GERMANY, in 1833. With. Excursions to the EIFKL, WTSB ADEN, BADP. N'- BADEN, CASSEL, HANOVER, the H ARTZ MOUNTAINS, & C. By Mrs. TROLLOPE, Authoress of " The Domestic Manners of the Americans." John Murray, Albemarle- street. _ NEW ISSUE OF THE ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA.— Seventh Edition. On Saturday, the 12th of July, will be published, price Three Shillings, to bo continued every alternate week, Part I. of the ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA, revised, corrected, and improved ; and INCLUDING the SUPPLEMENTS to the LAST TWO EDITIONS. With Introductory Dissertations on the History- of the Sciences, by Professors Dugald Stewart, Playfair, and Leslie, and by the- Right Hon. Sir James Macintosh. Illustrated by a new set of Engravings OIK Steel, and comprising a complete series of folio Maps, engraved by Sydney Hall. EDITED BY PROFESSOR NAPIER. The extraordinary circulation attained by many of the cheap publications of the day has suggested to the proprietors of the " Encyclopaedia Britannica," that if a work of high and established character were offered to the public at a pric* and in a form accommodated to the demands of the age, the support which if; might reasonably anticipate would be proportionally liberal. In accordance with this view, they have resolved to com mence a new issue of the " Encyclopaedia- Britannica," in a form which will bring it within the reach of all classes of the community. , The reputation of this Work is now so firmly established as to render a length- ened enumeration of its merits unnecessary. It has been the leading object of its conductors to combine abstract with practical, and solid with pleasing infer—.. mation, in such proportions as would be most useful and most acceptable tot ha public— to deliver the truths of science in the most accurate and intelligible form% and at the same time, to pay due attention to those branches of knowledge which, though not admitting of a scientific shape, are yet deservedly popular, and have a powerful influence on the taste, habits, and character of the individual— in a. word, to render the Work at once a Dictionary of Science, a copious abstract of. Literature and Philosophy, and a book of universal reference. The improvements made upon the present edition, both in the way of amend- ing former articles, and of introducing new contributions, are manifold and ex- tensive, and the Proprietors feel assured that the Seventh Edition of the " Ency- clopaedia Britannica" will, when completed, form the most valuable digest of human knowledge that has yet appeared in Britain in the convenient form of a dictionary. The" additions which have been made are indeed so various and mul- tiplied, as to render it not so much a New Edition of the " Encyclopaedia Britan** nica" as a New Work under that title. A Prospectus of the Work, more fully explaining the mode and terms of pub-^ iication, may be obtained by application to any Bookseller. Adam & Charles Black, Edinburgh ; Simpkin & Marshall, Whittaker, Treacher & Co., and Hamilton Adams & Co., London; apd John Cunanfting, Dublin. SITTWALTER SCOTT'S PROSE WORKS. Just published, uniform with the POETRY and W AVERLEY NOVELS, IR WALTER SCOTT'S PROSE WORKS, Volume the Thirds _ 1 This Volume contains the celebrated MEMOIRS of Richardson, Field- ing, Smollett, Cumberland, Goldsmith, Samuel Johnson, Sterne, Horace Wal- pole, Clara Reeve, Mrs. Radcliffe, Le Sage, Charles Johnstone, and Robert Bage. The Illustrations, Portrait of Smollett, and View of Dumbarton and River Leven, from a Design by J. M. W. Turner, R. A. Robert Cadell, Edinburgh; Whittaker and to., London; and all Booksellers. Of whom may be had, SIR WALTER SCOTT'S POETRY, New Edition, in 12 TO IS. WAVERLEY NOVELS, Complete in 48 vols. COMPLETION of WAVERLEY NOVELS, former editions, in 8vo., 12rao., and 18mo. WrAVERLEY NOVELS, New Issue, Vol. 43. CAPTAIN BASIL HALL'S FRAGMENTS, Third Series, New Edition. TWO SERIES COMPLETED OF "" T ANDSEER'S ILLUSTRATED EDITION of JLl THE ROMANCE OF HISTORY— publishing Monthly. ENGLAND; by HENRY NEELE. 3 vols, with 21 plates, bd. 18s. FRANCE ; by LEITCH RITCHIE. 3 vols, with 21 plates, bd. 18 « . ITALY ; by C. MACFARLANE. Vol I. is just ready. N. B. The 21 plates of each series separately, price 4s. 6d. " This work is novel, and of a very interesting description."— Times. Biill and Churton, Library, 26, Holies- street, London. TO be SOLI), Cheap, and in excellent condition, the JOHN BULL, from its commencement until the end of 1825, in Five Vols. . half- bound.— Apply ( if by letter, post- paid) to X. X., 40, Fleet- street, where they may be seen. THE~ UNRIVALLED CHINTZES exhibiting this Season at MILES and EDWARDS's, are acknowledged to be superior to any hitherto produced in Europe.— CABINET and UPHOLSTERY WARE- ROOMS, No. 134, Oxford- street, near Cavendish- square. s HOOTING.— To be l. KT. in one ot the Midland Conntiea. a. i ™ WELL- PRESERVED MANOR.— For particulars apply ( if by letter, to b « post- paid) to Messrs. Robson, Lightfoot, and Robson, Castle- street, Leicester- gq. APPEAL to the BENEVOLENT.— AN AGED LADY, WHO, formerly kept her carriage, and who is the descendant of a great Naval Commander, has lately, from adventitious circumstances, been reduced to a state of great distress, and involved in difficulties to the extent of 5001. She is perfectly helpless from paralysis, and her youngest daughter ( one of twenty- two children)% who is living with her, is incapable, from internal disease, of assisting her aged mother. The lady having no relatives of her own now living, it has been thought advisable by her friends to appeal to the benevolence of the public to assist her in getting rid of those incumbrances which now oppress her. Should this ba effected, she will be enabled, by means of a pension to which she is entitled, to. pass the remainder of her days in comparative ease. Subscriptions already acknowledged .. .. . , J€ 179 1 0 A friend at Charmouth, by the Record Office £ 2 0 Rev. T. W., by Standard Office 1 1 G. M. C 2 0 Rev. J. Thomas, Great Barstead 1 0 Soldier's Daughter .. .. 10 Lord Skelmersdale • • .. 50 Lady Tankerville .. .. 2 0 Lady M. Monk .. .. 2 0 L. S. G. .. .. .. 3 0 Rev. J. Woodcoeke James Morgan, Esq. M. andE. B. .. Mrs. Smith Miss Smith Miss Eliza Smith A. B. A Lady . • A Lady .. .. jf2 2 Subscriptions received by Mr. Murray, Albemarle- street; Mr. Nisbet, Berner- street; Mr. Bentley ( successor to Mr. Colbnrn), New Burlington- street; and afc the Standard Office, Bridge- street, Klackfrhirs. A" CASE of SEVERE AFFLICTION— A Clergyman of the Established Church, of the highest character, having been prematurely removed from this life, his WIDOW, and Seven Young Children ( the youngest aged only three months), being by this awful visitation suddenly plunged into utter destitution, and having no other resource, earnestly entreat the attention of the charitable to their deplorable situation. It is confidently hoped, that it i* onlv necessary to publish this distressing statement, to ensure the assistance of the benevolent.— Of the excellent character of the deceased, and of the truth'of the above statement, ample testimony can be given by the undermentioned per- sons, who have kindly consented to receive contributions: Messrs. Fortnum anl Mason, Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly; Messrs. Goslings and Sharp, Bankers, 19, Fleet- street; Mr. Engleheart, 19, Great Knigbt Rider- street, Doctors' Commons; Mr. Pelham Richardson. 23, Cornhill. AGLE LIFE ASSURANCE COMFAN Y, 3, Crescent, Bridge- street. Blackfriars.— Established 1807. FEMALE LIFF. ASSURANCES. The Directors have caused distinct Tables for Male and Female Life to be cal- culated. In consequence of this improvement, theyounger Male Lives are insured at Premiums below the ordinary rates; the Female Lives on terms lower than anv other Office. Prospectus, exhibiting this remarkable distinction at every age, may be ob » tained at the Offices oi the Company. Extracts from the Table are subjoined. . Annual Premiums required for the Assurances of ^ 100 to be received on the DeaUl of a MALE. Age. Seven Years. Whole Life. £ s d £ s d 20 16 3 2 2 6 30 1 12 2 2 9 10 41) 1 17 4 3 4 4 60 2 12 3 4 12 4 60 4 7 11 6 18 2 •• OREIGN LIFF Age. FEMALE. Seven Years. j? s 1 5 1 8 1 13 1 17 3 Whole Life. 15 1 3 2 15 0 15 0, « < J1 • 20 30 40 50 - ASSURANCE. British, Foreign, andVolo'ni'ai Insurances are effected at rates graduated to tha ' The East'and" lSv> sTlndie « , North and South America, and all places of British commercial, militarv, or diplomatic resort, are included in the plan for an e<} lilto.- ble Foreign and Colonial Insurance, which is now submitted to the public— Four- fifths of the Profits are divided among the Assured, whether at hojpe ot abroad. HENRY P. SMITH, Actu » r] r. « 250 JOHN BULL. August 13. TUESDAY'S GAZETTE. Crown Office, July S.— Members returned to serve in this present Parliament— Stewartry of Kirkcudbright: Robert Cutlar Fergusson, Esq., of- Orroland and Craigdarrock, Advocate- General, or Judge- Martial of Lis Majesty's Forces County of Wexford: Cadwallader Waddy, of Kilinacoe, in the county of Wex ford in the room of Robert Shapland Carew, Esq., now Tjord Carew. BANKRUPTCY ENLARGED. T. TURKINGTON and T. WINLAW, Leeds, Yorkshire, tin- plate workers, ( ron July 18 to July 29. BANKRUPTS. J. GOULDING, Basinghall- street, Citv, woollen- draper. Atts. Messrs. Gole, liOthburv— G. PALMER . Above Bar, Southampton, tailor. Atts. Tilson and Co. Coleinari- street— G. MITCHELL, Bnrv- street, St. James's, tailor. Att. Bailey. jBerners- street, Oxford- street— F. MESSENGER, Liverpool, corn- merchant. Att: Chester, Staple Inn, London; Fintow, Liverpool— W. PROUD, Bishop Auck- land, Durham, builder. Atts. Griffith, Raymond- buildings, Gray's Inn, London : Trotter, Bishop Auckland— J. SMITH,' Masbrough, Rotheriam, Yorkshire, aiiller. Atts. Taylor, John- street, Bedford- row, London ; Badger, Rotherham FRIDAY'S GAZETTE. DECLARATION OF INSOLVENCY. " W, BRIGGS, Vineyard, Richmond, Surrey, tailor. BANKRUPTS. W. R. THORN, Southend, Essex, victualler. Atts. Swain and Co., Frede lick- place. Old Jewry— J. FLINT, Siltoe, Bedfordshire, shopkeeper. Att. Stur- mey, Wellington- street, Southwark— W. TURNER, Purleigh, Essex, eaipel ter. Atts. Porter and Nelson, New- court, Temple— J. VINEY, Crouch End Hornsey, carpenter. Atts. Robinson and Barlow, Essex- street, Strand— H. CASE Fore- street, City, grocer. Atts. Adlington and Co., Bedford- row— T. NORVALL. King- street, West Sinithtield, victualler. Atts. Vining and Naylor, Bucklers bury— J. COADE, Jievonport, grocer. Atts. Brown, Iaskeard, Cornwall; and Hicks and Marris, Gray's- Inn- square, London— J. E. OGDEN, EHand, Yorkshire corn- miller- Atts Jaques and Co., Tnn, Batty ' Huddersfield— W. NORMAN, Mendham, Norfolk, wine- merehant. , Barnard's- Inn, London; and Battyeand Hesp ' ' Atts. Car- thew and Son, Harleston, Suffolk; and Fairbank, Staple- Inn, London— H MYERS, White- street, Cutler- street, Houndsditch, stationer. Atts. Norton end Co., Grav's- inn- square, London ; and Harrison, Birmingham— R. BREWER Walsall, Staffordshire, builder. Atts. Dove, Carey- street, Lincoln's- inn, Lon don ; and Barnett, Walsall— W. D. PARKHOUSE, Tiverton, Devonshire. Att: Brooking and Sirrr, Lombard- street, London; Penkivil, Bristol; andSaveryand Clark, Bristol— W. SALTHOUSE, Poulton, Lancashire, maltster. Atts. Ap'pleby and Co., Raymoml's- buildimrs, Gray's- Inn : and Liddell and Co., Poulton—' I*. W. CLISBY, Brighton, builder. Atts. Faithfull, Brighton; and Faithful! King's- road, Bedford- row— T. HOLMAN, Devonport, printer. Atts. Harri: Stone buildings, Lincoln's- inn; and Kelly, Plymouth— R. O. HUGHES, Car- narvon, druggist. Atts. Jeyes, Chancery- lane : and Home, Denbigh. PARLIAMENTARY ANALYSIS. HOUSE OF LORDS. MONDAY.— Upwards of one hundred petitions were presented from Various parts of the country in favour of the Established Church. The Earl of MALMESBURY gave notice that on the second reading the Poor Laws Amendment Bill he should move that it be taken into consideration next Session.— Earl GREY, in reply to a remark c" Lord WICKLOW, censured the conduct of Cabinet Ministers disclosin; what passed in the. Cabinet. The Duke of RICHMOMD said he ha< the King's permission to do so. Earl GREY said he had not, and therefore could make no disclosures ; but the Noble Duke's memory was not accurate in all points. Lord WHARNCLIFFE remarked upon the late period of the Session at which important measures were brought before the House.— In answer to a question from the Duke of CUMBERLAND, the LORD CHANCELLOR declared it. was not his inten- tion to press either the Non- residence Bill, or the Pluralities Bill before the next Session.— The Irish Coercion Bill went through Committee. - TUESDAY.— The LORD CHANCELLOR, after delivering judgment an appeal, desired the clerk to make the minute precisely in the for: of the case Solaste v. Palmer, as he had consulted the Judges upon the subject, and in a Court of Record it could not be done in any other way.— The Irish Securities Bill was read a third time and passed— Numerous petitions were presented in favour of the Church, and against the Poor Laws Amendment Bill.— The presentation of a petition by the Earl of WINCHILSEA from some Dissenters, praying protection to the Established Church, was objected to by Earl GREY on the ground that it was a breach of privilege, since it alluded to the expression used by the Noble Earl touching, the spirit of the age." After a conversation the petition was withdrawn.— The Report ot the Select Committee on the Chimney sweepers' Bill was brought up.— Earl GREY moved the postponement of the consideration of the Report of the Irish Coercion Bill till Wednesday ; as also the second leading of the Poor Laws Amendment Bill until Thursday. His Lordship said he had sufficient reasons to ask for the delay, but he desired he might not then be asked what those reasons were. WEDNESDAY.— The House this day presented an unusually full • attendance of Peers and of strangers. After some preliminary • business, Earl GREY rose to make his expected statement on the subject of the Ministerial resignations. His Lordship was so much • affected on proceeding to announce the fact of his retirement that he was obliged to sit down, after an unavailing struggle with his feelings. 3a a few moments, however, he was able to proceed. After express- ing his astonishment that despatches, not of a public, but of a, private and confidential nature, from the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland should be required, he proceeded to observe—" I must say again that such • a communication, so made ought not to have been divulged ; but the Minister being charged with a breach of faith, in addition to a charge ot vacillation as respected the measure itself, and the discussion which took place in the other House of Parliament on the subject, these things placed us in di fferent circumstances, and the consequence wa. s that my Noble Friend ( the Chancellor of the Exchequer), feel- ing. the ground thus slipping from under his feet— feeling ttie difficult situation in which he was placed in the House of Commons concluded that he could not, with satisfaction to himself and advan- tage'to the country, continue in his present situation. The bein^ deprived of the assistance of my Noble Friend, the leading Minister in the House of Commons, in whom the strength of Ministers in that House lay as a leader, and in losing whom I lost my right arm. placed me in such a situation that I felt 1 could not continue longei in office with satisfaction to myself— with advantage to my Sovereign and my country. Therefore, upon receiving the resignation of my Noble Friend, 1 felt an unavoidable necessity to tender my own resignation, and they have both been accepted; and I have only to discharge the duty of nay office till such time as his Majesty shall be able to appoint a successor."~ The Duke of WELLINGTON admitted that the Noble Earl had explained with great clearness the cause of his own resignation, but he had not explained the cause of the resignations which had led to his own. That . part had been left short of any explanatien, at which he was the more surprised, because, if ever there were a- set of Ministers who, more than al others that had ever gone before them, were placed under the strongest necessity of continuing to serve their Sovereign as long as it was possible for them to do so, the Noble Earl and his colleagues were those Ministers. After taking a review of the acts of the Noble Earl's Administration, the Noble Duke concluded by disclaiming all personal hostility, and declaring that he never, had opposed the measures of the Soble Earl escept with great pain to himself.— The LORD CHANCELLOE. also entered into a review of the measures of Mi- nisters, and showed the difficulties they had to contend with, and in conclusion warmly eulogised the intellectual and moral qualities of the late Premier."— The question, which was that file re} H-> rt of the Committee on the Irish Disturbances jBill should be received, was then agreed to. ^ THURSDAY.— Petitions were presented. in favour of the Established Church, in favour of the Observance of the Lord's Day, and against the- Foor Laws Amendment Bill. The Marquis of LONDONDERRY wished to know whether in point of fact there existed an Administration in this . country at present, or whether any steps had been taken for the construction of a new Administration; if not, he should feel himself justified in moving an adjournment of the House,.— The LORD CHANCELLOR repeated his assertion of the night before, that he knew of no resignation up totbas; moment in the Administration, except that of his Noble Friend, who bad yesterday entered upon an explanation ofthe matter, and his Jfoble Frieiid the Chancellor of the Exchequer. The Noble Lord was understood to decline answering the question whether any steps had been taken to form a new Administration, and the subject was allowed to drop..— The Earl of WINCHILSEA suggested- the postpone- ment of the Committee on the Poor Laws Amendment Bill. The LORD CHANCELLOR said that his Noble Friend would be present to- morrow, and after the second reading would be the proper itime. 1 he County Coroaers' Bill went through a Committee.. FRIDAY,— A conversation ensued as to the mode and time . of pro- ceeding with the Disfranchisement Bills before the House, and it was Tilbmately agreed that the matter should be again mentioned on \ V ednesday next.— Several petitions were presented against the Poor Laws Amendment Bill, and in favour of the Church.— A long dis- cussion ensued or, the question whether the Poor i^ aws Amendment • Bill should be proceeded with iu the present state of affairs, without responsible Administration, and it was finally arranged that next Friday should he fixed for the second reading. The House then i journed. HOUSE OF COMMONS. MONDAY.— An immense number of petitions was presented in favour of the Established Church.— Lord ALTHORP, in presenting papers respecting the state of Ireland, and moving that they be printed, stated that, in consequence of what had taken place on Thursday in that House, Mr. Littleton had tendered his resignation, but he had been induced to retain office at the request of Earl Grey and the rest of the Cabinet. Mr. Hume regretted that there should be such an undetermined and vacillating Cabinet. Mr. O'CONNELL moved, by way of amendment, that the papers be referred to a Select Committee up stairs, with instructions that they should report their opinion thereon to the House. Lord ALTHORP opposed the amend- ment ; and after a most animated discussion, the House divided, and the proposition of Government was carried by a majority of 84.—• Lord CHANDOS brought on his motion on the subject of agricul- tural distress. After a protracted discussion the House divided, when there appeared— for the motion 171, against it 190, majority 16. — The Resolutions in Committee for a grant out of the Consolidated Fund to the Irish Church were carried by a majority of 181 against 106.— The Registration Bill went through Committee, ajud the dis- cussion w- as fixed for Monday next.— The Merchant Seamen's Widows' Bill was reported, and the third reading fixed for Friday next.— The Universities Admission Bill was reported, and the third reading fixed for Wednesday week.— The Lord's- day Bill, No. 2 ( Mr. Poulter), was postponed till Monday next, after a division for the adjournment of 39 against 19.— The London Port Dues Bill was read a third time and passed. TUESDAY.— At the morning sitting, the Friendly Societies' Bill went through a Committee, and the consideration of the report was fixed for Monday. When the House re- assembled in the evening, Mr. A. BARING said that he had a question of importance to put to Lord Althorp had he been present. He regretted that he did not see a Member of the Government in the House.— Lord MORPETH brought forward the motion of which he had given notice, for allowing the Orders of the day precedence of Motions during the remainder of the Session. After a protracted discussion the motion was withdrawn, to let it stand as a notice of motion for Tuesday.— Mr. WARD moved the House to agree to the Report of the Committee on the divisions of the House. The motion was carried on a division by 76 against 32. It was ultimately agreed to make the experiment immediately, with- out the appointment of clerks for the present to take the divisions.— Colonel W ILLIAMS withdrew his motion for leave to bring in a Bill to repeal the Royal Marriage Act.— Mr. SANDFORD got leave to introduce a Bill to amend the Turnpike Act, which was read a first time, and the second reading fixed for Monday.— The Customs Bill was read a second time.— The Committee on'Tithes ( Ireland) Bill was fixed for Thursday, on the motion of Mr. LITTLETON.— The Imprisonment for DebtBill was read a second time. WEDNESDAY.— The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER having an- nounced the resignation of the Ministry, entered into an explanation of the circumstances which led to it. The Noble Lord said, " The private communications from the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland were brought under the consideration of the Cabinet the week before last. From these I had been led to believe that the three clauses ofthe Bill particularly objected to, namely, those having reference to political meetings, would not be considered essential, and would be dispensed with, consistently with the preservation of the peace of that part of the United Kingdom. ' And here it will be necessary I should say, that in that opinion I had the concurrence of my right Hon. Friends, the Members for Edinburgh, for Cambridge, for Coventry, and for Inverness ; but we found ourselves in a minority; the question in the Cabinet was decided against us. Though in'the minority, rather than the Cabinet should be broken up, we, to prevent the inconve- niences of such a result, acquiesced in the determination of the majority. I repeat, that in the state of our information then, I felt, 1 confess, I should have to encounter great difficulty in the conducting of a measure such as this through this House. 1 felt the difficulty was so great that it would be impossible I could, with any dignity, or with credit to myself, after my present opinions were so' far known, conduct this Bill through its stages in the House, and I therefore wrote to my Lord Grey, begging " that he would tender my resigna- tion to his Majesty, which " he was graciously pleased to accept." Mr. LITTLETON repeated his regret for the error into which he had fallen, and alluded to the circumstances under which he had acted. " He assured the House that, when he made that communication, he had no doubt but that the clauses of this Bill would be left out which give so many offehce. So convinced was he that the clauses would De abandoned, that he could not imagine it possible that a result such as that he now deplored would ever have taken place." Mr. O'CONNELL expressed the satisfaction which he felt at the statement of the Right Hon. Gentleman. He rose not to justify himself, but to take his share in the blame.— The Central Criminal Courts Bill was read a third time, and passed.-— The rest of the business was postponed. THURSDAY.— At the morning sitting the Wilful Burning Bill was read a second time after some discussion, and the Prisoners' Counsel Bill went through a Committee, in which it received some amend- ments. At the evening sitting Mr. HUME withdrew his motion on the state of the nation, as there was no responsible Minister present, and moved that the House should adjourn to Monday. The CHANCEL LOR ofthe EXCHEQUER did not oppose the motion, but declared him- self a responsible Minister until his successor was appointed. After some further discussion the motion was agreed to, and the House adjourned to Monday. MRS. TROLLOPE'S NEW WORK, " Germany in 1833," is just published. The author has not confined herself to the beaten track usually followed by English travellers, but has visited the less fre- quented districts of the Eifel, Baden- Baden, Hanover, Cassel, and the Hartz mountains; though at the same time her work conveys the latest information for travellers in Belgium and up the Rhine. THE ANTI- SPELLING BOOK.— Nearly ten thousand copies of this new system of teaching children to read without spelling, have been sold within a few months, and the sale continues so extensive, that it is. calculated this new system will soon become the only system. " The principles of the Anti- Spelling Book," says the Atheneeum, " are so clear, that we may well be surprised at the length of time during which the spelling- system has held undisputed sway; sure we are that the plan here proposed, would be found to combine ease to the teacher with pleasure to the child, while the old system is unmi- tigated pain both to one and the other." " The Anti- Spelling Bookis decidedly more useful than the common spelling books."— Scotsman. BEAU NASH.— A notice of Beau Nash, who is to figure as the hero of the new Comedy at the Haymarket, may not be unaccept- able to our play- going readers. A life of him attributed falsely, as we think, to Goldsmith, is now scarcely to be found except on the shelves of the curious collector. The'biographer styles the Beau in the words of Cicero, " The little King of a little people." Certain it is he raised Bath from comparative insignificance to importance. He founded the pump- room and assembly house, and was by the grateful Corporation rewarded whilst alive with a statue, which was fixed, and yet remains between the busts of Newton and Pope, and which circumstance drew from Chesterfield what Byron would call a " bone- cutting " epigram. Nash was, however, a character, an ex- traordinary jumble of good and evil, of mock importance and vulgar familiarity. He ruled the costume of his subjects, and has been known on a ball night to strip the Duehess of Queensborough of her white apron; indeed, td put down aprons, boots, and other external badges of slovenliness, he wrote a Play for the puppets, which was enacted by Mr. Powell and his party, then flourishing at Bath. Musicians, poets, cooks, dancing- masters, nay, even reformed highwaymen sought him for their patron, for one Jack Baxter, a notorious offender and black- leg, dedicated to him from Taunton Goal his autobiography. Nash forbade the wearing of swords at Bath, to prevent mortal encounters; sedulously checked slander among his female subjects. His equipage was sumptuous, appearing in a chariot and sixgreys, with footmen and French horns. II e always wore a white hat, and to apologise for this singularity, said he did it purely to prevent it being stolen. It is reported of him, that whilst playing at picquet, and overhearing a man exclaim, " Heavens! how happy would all that money make me," Nash, who won the sum, put the money into the roan's hand, saying, " Go, and be happy;"— it is this anecdote, differently related, in the Spectator. Nash was honoured with the confidence of the great; Princes and Lords gave him snuff- boxes, and even Sarah, Duchess of Marlbo- rough, corresponded with. him: many are the instances of his philan- thropy, though he died comparatively neglected in 1761, at the age of 88. His qualities, good and questionable, were Written in English and Latin, by Drs. Oliver and King. FOREIGN AFFAIRS. PARIS, July 9.— The following article from the Augsburgh Gazette has excited much attention at Paris. The French journals predict that England and France cannot remain long in their present posi- tion towards each other— that the sham- treaty of alliance is mere mockery and gasconade— and that Russia has nothing to fear on the side of France. All this is certainly vastly agreeable, after having sacrificed all our old allies for the sake of this new one :— Banks of the Danube, June 25. " There are people, who think they perceive in the increase of the English squadron in the Mediterranean an intention of attacking Russia; they imagine that England can never find the attitude of Russia, as regards the Ottoman Porte, in accordance with its interests, or tolerate a new weight thrown into the balance in favour of Russia ; this new weight is the Russia squadron, which was not required at a moment in which Turkey had no fleet in the Bosphorus, and when the Dardanelles were open to the Russian flag. The ques- tion here is not only the letter of the treaty of the 8th of July, which is so much spoken ot, and the incontestible rights of Russia ; but the prejudice done to England in her dominion of the seas. If France should to- morrow ally herself with Russia, the Russian fleet might join that of the French at Toulon. But England cannot be at issue with France on account of the Ionian Islands. One may see by the coolness which exists between the Cabinets of St. James's and St. Petersburg!! sufficient motives to admit, that the presence of an English squadron in the Bosphorus might have a vast object, and perhaps cause a coup- de- main to be foreseen. The present situation of England and France would be sufficient, if necessary, to prove the possibility of such a coup- de- main. The interest of the Cabinets which wish to avoid war is then to show themselves mediators. The mediation was, in the accord of the Powers, and even Russia, who engaged not to accept the smallest village of Turkey in Europe, and above all in the promise of Russia not to demand the passage of the Dardanelles. The best guarantee for the Porte would be to destroy the supremacy of the Russian naval forces in the Black Sea. This consideration supposes in England, besides the will, the power of attempting a coup- de- inam like that in question. An attack upon Turkey would be an indispensable preliminary, for the Divan would reply negatively to the demand of England, who would immediately dispatch a squadron to the Black Sea. The attack would more certainly be followed by a war if France should make common cause with England, but France and England cannot desire, an European war. How would the Grey Ministry, or any Whig Ministry find the means of making war ? ' Where would a Ministry, which owes every hour of its existence to a perpetual warfare against the King, the Tories, and the Reformers, find in the Parliament sufficient credit to be enabled to make such a war ? The Tories are at present drawn closer to the Emperor Nicholas than Lord Grey or any Whig successor to him can be. Russia would not consent to a proposal like that we have named. It must not be thought that she is afraid of England in her present state ; she would not dread her more united with France. On the other hand, neither must it be believed that England would see with pleasure the destruction of the Russian fleet by an English squadron. Interest, which in our days is opposed to all revolution, is the principal which animates all the western powers. A war made by England and France combined, no matter with what view, would necessarily degenerate into a revolu- tionary struggle against the Conservative principle, and would render the powers more united together. France and England ought to' make these reflections; the increase of the English fleet in the Mediterranean' cannot have the motive ascribed to it, it cannot be conceived without this forced interpretation. We'have seen Aucona occupied, and Antwerp taken, because a French Ministry considered these demonstrations indispensable to repress its internal enemies." The Constitutiannelsays that M. Guizot and M. Thiers proposed, in the Council that the Duke Decazes should be appointed Governor of Algiers— a plan which was resisted by Marshal Soult with such obstinacy, that he declared he would rather resign his post than agree to it. Several of the journals state that the President of the Council urges the nomination of Marshal Molito, and that the Minister ofthe Marine and the Minister for Foreign Affairs are in favour of the Government of Algiers being vested in a military in preference to a civil officer. SPAIN.— According fo the Sentinelle des Pyrenees of Bayonne of the 5th inst., a courier of the French Embassy, who left Madrid on the 29tli ult. stated that the Court of Spain is now at Rio Frio, a country seat of the Queen, near St. Ildephonso, and twelve leagues from the capital. This journal says that Zumala- Carreguy having concentra- ted all his forces at Segura, General Espartero marched thither with. 5,000 men, and no doubt was entertained that combining his attack with that of General Rodil, who has arrived at Vittoria, a general and decisive action would immediately take place. It adds that the last letters from St. Sebastian state, that in the course of the preceding Sunday night, the inhabitants of that town were seized with a panic, ill consequence of the approach of the Carlists, under Zumala- Carreguy. At St. Sebastian there were only a few recruits and militiamen, and the inhabitants were apprehensive that the factious within its walls should have an understanding with those without. Favourable accounts have been received from Swan River to the middle of February. The greatest drawback was the high price of labour, but this circumstance holds out great encouragement for set- tlers to repair thither; and some were returning from Van Deiman's Land who had left the Colony on its first settlement. Freemantle had much improved in appearance and convenience; this is greatly owing to the facility with which stone is procured, and the cheap- ness of timber and lime. The natives continue on friendly terms with the settlers, frequenting the towns, and often receiving provi- sions either from the colonists or from the Government stores. At Perth new barracks were recently finished, which are built of brick, and other improvements were in progress. At the settlement over the mountains at York, the land had proved good for culture and for grazing, to a very large extent. The flocks of sheep and the cattle were increasing fast. A herd of wild cattle had been discovered on the banks of the Murray River, not much short of 200. The natives gave notice of its existence to the settlers. They were led to make the discovery known, by seeing a picture which contained a group of cattle. The soldiers of the 63d Regiment had communicated the hooping cough to the natives, who suffer severely from its effects. PAGANINI AND MISS WATSON.— Paganini, in a letter to the editor of a Paris paper, has entered into an elaborate defence of his conduct and intentions with respect to Mr. Watson and his family, both of which he complains have been grossly misrepresented in the London and Boulogne papers. ' After going into a variety of details, , referring to his pecuniary relations with the father, and boasting of the many munificent thingshe had done for him, the Signor proceeds to the charge of abduction, with which he has more urgently to do. Upon this subject his own language is this—" I now come to the accusation of abduction, the burden of which is, that it was an amourette which actuated Miss Watson to rejoin me at Boulogne. Perceiving in that young person a great talent for music, which her father was not in a condition to cultivate, I proposed to him to make- her my pupil, assuring him that after three years' study, she would be able, by her talents, not only to secure an independence for her- self, but be the means of assisting her family, particularly her mother.. My propositions, at one time rejected, at another accepted with, warm expressions of gratitude, were still undetermined upon when I quitted England, again renewing to Watson my offers in favour of his daughter, Miss Watson, who, by the way, is 18, not 16, as has been stated, and has already appeared upon the stage, and with every fair prospect of sucess, if it had not been marrred. Not feeling happy at home she fled the paternal roof, and, recollecting the pro- position which I had made to her father, came of her own accord ( so marked in the original) to claim protection from him whose counsels, and kindnesses had encouraged her to hope for a better future. It is not true, then, that I have enleye Miss Watson, and if I had had any such intention, the opportunities for carrying it into effect were numerous and seasonable enough ; as she was often left alone in the house. But I have the courage to avow that Miss Watson was sure of finding in me the protection and assistance which her fathea denied her. In this, Sir, I obeyed only an impulse of kindness and; generosity, which, instead of blame and false accusations, would merit the praises of all well- meaning persons, who are alone capable -" preciating a good action. As for those who see in it, but a inism, and disgraceful sentiments, I treat them with pity and contempt. And, to conclude upon this unpleasant affair, I protest strongly that my conduct has been without reproach, my intentions, honest, disinterested, and conformable to the ideas of morality and religion— both of which inculcate the giving assistance and protec- tion to the oppressed. Thus, my conscience is free from any pang as to all that has passed respecting this young person, who deserves a better fate. In conclusion, I may say that I still feel strong enough within myself to dispise this fresh attack of bad faith and malice against a man for whose life some glory and false persecution appear still to dispute, without, however, at all shaking his courage,—. . Nicolo Paganini." June 219. JOHN BULL. 191 VICE CHANCELLOR'S COURT. The Attorney- General v. the Churchwardens of St. Dunstan's- in- the- East.— Sir E. Sugden moved in this case, on behalf of the de- fendants, that the plaintiffs' bill as amended might be taken off the Hie. The original information, which had for its object the re- covery of certain charitable funds for the benefit of the parish, had been stopped by the Attorney- General, on the ground that the relators were insufficient persons, some of them being paupers, and therefore incompetent to guarantee the payment of the costs of the suit. Leave had subsequently been given to amend the bill in this respect, and the plaintiffs did so by adding the name of a new relator. In consequence, however, of the late absence of the Attorney- Gene- ral iu Scotland, the plaintiffs, finding some difficulty in procuring the Learned Gentleman's sanction to the amended bill, had filed it with- out that sanction, which they had only obtained after his return to town from Edinburgh. This, Sir E. Sugden conceived^ was an irre- gularity which would induce the Court to direct the taking of the bill off the file. In thecase of " The Attorney- General v. Fellowes," it had been expressly decided that an amended information conld not be filed without the sanction of the Attorney- General, though the original information might have been signed by him. The present case was exactly in point, and though it was true that the Learned Gentleman's sanction was obtained subsequently to the filing of the bill, yet the notice of motion having been given without that sanc- tion, the plaintiffs were bound to suffer the costs. The Learned Counsel, m conclusion, made some very severe - remarks on the way in which these informations, now become so common, were got up, and 011 the mode in which the names of relators were obtained. Mr. Bacon followed on the same side. His Honour, no Counsel appearing to oppose the motion, granted it, subject to what might be said on the other side. Mr. Anderson shortly after appeared in Court, and expressed his surprise that the motion should have been brought on in the absence • of . Sir William Home ( with whom he was for the plaintiffs), and his indignation that imputations shonld have been cast on those who had the management of the suit. He was at a loss to divine the reason, - except it were for the sake of prejudicing the case, that so much ex- traneous matter should have been introduced when the question merely turned upon a point of practice. He contended, that the ir- regularity beinj* simply the result of inadvertence on the part of the plaintiffs, would be too severely punished by an order for taking the oill of the file. There was no alteration in the frame or form of the record, but the only emendation was the substitution of the name of one relator for that of another. Under these circumstances, he trusted that some modification might be made in the order, and that the costs would not be exacted to the extent contemplated, but that the defendants would merely be allowed the costs of the present application. His Honour thought that no reason had been assigned to induce him not to make the order as asked. The original information had been stopped on account of the insufficiency of the ostensible relators, and the suspicion that they would not be able to give the defendants security for costs. These were, it appeared by the affidavits which had been read, mere shadows, and not competent to perform what the information promised they were able to do. It was a question whether the information was even now much amended, as the only alteration which had taken place was the substitution of one name for another. The reason assigned for not obtaining the Attorney- General's fiat was not, in his opinion, satisfactory. The affidavit might have been sent down to Edmburgh, where" they could have been read as well as in London. He should therefore grant the order as asked. HOP INTELLIGENCE.— TVorcester July 9.— Many persons thought that the tempest and rain on Saturday night would prove beneficial, by clearing the plants of the filth ; but with a few exceptions, this has not been the result— at least not at, present; a few days will enable us to form a more decided opinion. The opinion, however of the trade upon the appearance of the plantation is such, that prime Worcester hops are now worth 91. 9s. and few onsale at that price; 100 pockets - of Old Olds were sold by auction in our market on Saturday, and brought from 48s. to 65s.; some bought at the latter price afterwards changed hands at 68s.— Our duty is down to 5 and 60001. THE EMIGRATION COMMITTEE.— On Thursday upwards of 340 female emigrants, under the direction of the Emigration Committee, embarked in the Hero steamer at St. Katharine's wharf. The great majority of these females are young persons whose ages vary from 1G to 25, and among them were many whose personal appearance was certainly prepossessing. They are all young women of good character, and they are all obliged to furnish testimonials of their respectability before they are allowed to embark. Among them were a mother and seven daughters, a father and mother, the former of them a fine specimen of the old English yeomen, accompanied by ten daughters and two sons. Several whole families almost equally numerous. There were in the whole 15 agricultural famihes. These emigrants are to be conveyed to Sydney, iu Australia, at an expense to themselves of 51. a- head, the Government paying the additional expense of their passage, and in cases where they are not in a situa- tion to pay the 51. immediately, time is allowed them to make the payment after their arrival at the place of their destination. They were all in the best possible health, but showed great regret and sorrow at taking leave of friends and relations. The preamble of the great Western Railway Bill has been carried in the Committee of the House of Commons, after an unexampled contest of 55 days, and an expenditure of 40,0001. The Islington Market Bill was thrown out in the Committee of the House of Commons, by a majority of two votes only, after a conside- ration of nearly six weeks, during which a host of witnesses pro and con. were examined. In allusion to this, in a Court of Common Council on Thursday, Mr. Hale, the Chairman of the City Lands Committee, suggested the propriety of sending notice to Parliament of the intention to move for a Bill to enlarge the present market at Smithfield, so as to answer the public convenience to the fullest • extent. Hollingshed, the St. Neots Bank robber, whose recommittal we noticed in our last, was, it is said, reported to have died a few weeks •• after he was sent on board the vessel which was to convey him across the water: some weighty infirmities might have caused this prema- ture decease ; certain it is that Hollingshed was very soon again in England, and upon the qui vive for the practice of his" former profes- sion. Bungay was the last scene ofhis operations, and it is sup- posed that he was done out of a greater part of his share of this robbery by those who assisted him in the adventure ; and the proba- bility is that if he had not got himself into the difficulty with young Norris, in the disastrous speculation of the mustachios and the coach, at Pimlico, he would have held out as a first- rate cracksman for a con- siderable time longer, as he was most cautious in keeping out of the way of such of the Police as knew his person. It is rather a singular instance of the reverse of fortune, that the person who was at the period of Hollingshed's trial here in 1830, solicitor to the London Bankers, is now a cad to an omnibus!— Cambridge Chronicle. The Northampton Assizes commenced on Tuesday. The cases on the Crown side are principally Unionists, charged with adminis- tering unlawful oaths, with one of arson, as follows:— Valentine Brice was charged with having set fire to a hay stack at Hackleton, the property of Thomas Old. The prisoner was dissatisfied with the prosecutor's son for having decided against him in a disputed point - at a game at bowls, and having been before on ill terms with him, he went home, procured some matches, and fired the stack.— The Jury found the prisoner guilty, but recommended him to mercy on the • ground of humanity. At) the Old Bailey Sessions, on Monday, John Edwards, Peter Lucussagne, and Jeremiah Weedon, the three men who stood in- dicted for assaulting Mr. Gee with intent to rob him, were placed at the bar to plead. The prisoners pleaded not guilty, and were then removed from the dock. They were shortly after again brought up, and were charged with demanding, and by force and menace, the sum of 12001. from the prosecutor. The Court, after a few observa- tions from the prisoner's Counsel, was of opinion that as no money had been taken from the prosecutor, the indictment could not be sustained, and the prisoners were consequently acquitted. The pri- soners were again indicted for demanding, with force and menace, certain valuable deeds, on the 12th of May last, from Mr. William Gee. The Court decided that the indictment could not be sustained, . as the point was precisely the same as the last. The prisoners actu- ally obtained possession of the property, yet they committed no felony, inasntuch as the order and deeds were not in the ." peace- able" custody and possession of the prosecutor, which was necessary to complete the offence. The prisoners were then acquitted. Mr. Adolphus applied to the Court for the detention of the prisoners, as there was an indictment pending against them. at Clerkenwell for the assault. The Court consented, observing, that if the facts were true, a most aggravated assault had been committed, and the prisoners were liable to be punished for it. Mr. Phillips applied for the libera- tion of the prisoners on bail. The Court assented. NAVAL AND MIL1TAR. Y. The King has been pleased to confer the honour of Knighthood upon Aretas William Young, Esq., Lieut.- Gov- ernor of Prince Edward's Island. WAR OFFICE, July lltli, 1834. 1st Reirt. Dragoon Gds.— Cornet A. Scott to be Lieut, by pur. vice Smith ret. ; Ens. S. P. Groves, from 94tb F. to be Cornet by pur. vice Scott. 3.1 Drag. Gds.— Staff- Assist.- Surg. D. Lister to be Assist.- Surg. vice A. Campbell, ret. upon h.- p. 4th Dragoon Gds.— Lieut. G. B. Gosset, from tilth Foot, to be Lieut, bv our. vice rvn. on,. OA T1... XT at Q..(- c„,,„ 1 T :_ I i Collins to be Captain by pur. vice Campbell, ret.; Cfornet H. H. Kitchener to be Lieut, by pur. vice Collins ; J. A. Cameron, Gent, to be Cornet by pur. vice Kit chener. 16th Lijrht Draffs.— Lieut.- Col. W. Persse, from 13th Lt. Dratrs. to be Lieut.- Col. vice Murray/ dec. 4th Foot— Major H. W. Breton to be Lieut.- Col. by pur. vice Mackenzie, ret.; Capt. J. England to be Major by pur. vice Breton Lieut. W. Lonsdale to be Capt. by pur. vice England; Ens. R. H. Monypeimy t< be Lieut, by pur. vice Lonsdale; G. Kino:, Gent, to be Ens. by pur. vice Mony- penny. 6th— Ens. J. C. Mansergh to be Lieut, without pur. vice Sharpin, prom m 55th ; Gent. Cadet F. H. Lang, from Royal Mil. Coll. to be Ensicrc, vice Man sergh. 7th— Ens. R. Ross, from 52d, to be Lieut, by pur. vice Norman, prom 28th— Ens. E. Mackay to be Lieut, by pur. vice Elton, ret.; W. A. Gwvnne, Gent, to be Ens. bv pur. vice Mackay. 36th— Lieut. A. Nugent to be Capt. by pur. vice Scott, ret.; Ens. H. Keppleto'be Lieut, by pur. vice Nugent; G. J. Knox, Gent, to be Ens. by pur. vice Kepple. 55th— Lieut. A. Sharpin, from 6th, to be Capt, without pur. vice Armstrong, whose promotion has not taken place; Ens. E. Warren to be Lieut, without pur. vice Boyd, dec.; E us. W. Hagart, from h.- p. 1st, to be Ensign, vice Warren. 59th— Ens. G. F. F. Boughev to be Lieut, by pur. vice Hare, ret.; W. Fowlis, Gent, to be Ens. by pur. vice Boughey. 60th— Capt. F. Murray, from 64th, to be Captain, vice rigott, exch. 62' d— Ensign Henry Wells to be Lieutenant by purchase, vfee Butler, who retires. 64th— Captain G. Pigott, from 60th, to be Captain, vice Murray, exeh.; Ens. G. C. B, Stirling to be Lieut, by pur vice Gossett, app. 4th Drag. Gds.; S. H. Smyth ' ' ' ~ • —' — Lieut. G. Witham to be Capt. by > e bv mir. vice Hill. 72d— Lieut. T. E. Lacv to be CaDt pur. vice Villiers, ret, Ei Gent, to be Ens. by pur. vice Stirling. 68th- pur. vice Durnford, ret.; Ens. A. E. Hill to be Lieut, by pur. vice Witham , Johnson, Gent, to be Ens. by pur. vice Hill. 72d— Lieut.' T. E. Lacy to be Capt. by ur. ret.; Ens. A. Harris to be Lieut, by pur. vice Lacy; G. P. Irskine, Gent, to be Ensign, by pur. vice Harris. 74th— Lieut. R. Binneytobe Capt. by pur. vice Battersby, ret.; Ens. S. F. De Saumarez. to be Lieut, by pur. vice Binney ; G. Monkland, Gent, to be Ens. by pur. vice De Saumarez. 94th— Gent. Cadet G. Maunsell, from Royal Mil. Coll. to be Ens. by pur. vice Groves, app. 1st. Drag. Gds. 2d W. I. Regt.— A. H. Laplie, Gent, to be Ens. without pur. vice Bird, app. Ceylon Regt. Unattached— Lieut. G. R. Thompson, from 3- tth, to be Capt. without pnr.' Hospital Staff— Assist.- Surg. W. G. Byrne, from 77th, to be Staff Assist.- Surgeon, vice Lister, app. 3d Drag. Gds. Memorandum— The date of Lieut. Halkett's commission in 2d Foot is March 17, 1834, and not March 8,1834, as stated in the Gazette of the 4th inst. With the exception of the regiments mentioned in our late num- bers, no other moves will take place until the arrival of the Lieu tenant- General commanding, who is daily expected. Two squadrons of the 9th Lancers are mentioned as being likely to be brigaded with the 3d Dragoon Guards and 15th Hussars in tliis garrison, in which case their quarters at Newbridge will be replaced by three companies of the 90th Light Infantry from Naas. We are happy to find all the troops destined for foreign stations are to embark from their imme- diate neighbourhood, wlthoutgivingthe men the annoyance of a long march before hand as heretofore. This arrangement has given great satisfaction.— Hibernian United Service Journal. Sir James Kempt, the Master- General of the Ordnance, is shortly expected to visit Ireland with Colonel Fanshawe, for the purpose of examining the new system introduced in December last. It is then- intention to inspect the principal ordnance stations with a view to effectingfurtherrecfuctions, if practicable— of this we have our doubts. The engineer officers complain of increased duties being imposed on them, while their clerks and other subordinates have been reduced. LIABILITY or HALF- PAY OFFICERS.— The following important decision, as to the liability of officers on half- pay to fill parish offices, was heard at the Essex Quarter Sessions last week:— Lieutenant- Colonel IVilliam Henry Meyrick v. his Appointment Overseer of Buhner.— Mr. Ryland said he understood in this case there was no party who appeared in opposition, but yet he could hardly say that this was in the shape of a motion. He should pro- ceed to prove the facts of appellant being a Colonel in the army; that he was as such liable to be called out, and that there were per- sons in the parish more fitted for the office than he was, and that would entitle him to be relieved from serving. There was a case quoted by Mr. Chitty, in the last edition of Burn, from Burrow's Reports, in which the appointment of an officer liable to be called out was quashed, it being proved that there were other fitting per- sons in the parish to fill the office. He was bound in candour to admit that the case did not go to the extent to which Mr. Chitty had quoted it, but still it went quite far enough to exonerate this gentle- man.— William Arnold, a clerk in the office of Cox and Greenwood, army agents, proved that the appellant was a Lieutenant- Colonel on half- pay, and liable to be called out for service. He was paid by Cox ana Greenwood up to the 31st of last March. He was unat- tached.— Simpson, constable of the parish of Bulmer, proved that there were nine or ten persons in the parish liable to be appointed as overseers.— Mr. Ryland then called the attention of the Bench to the case of the King v. Gaynor, in which the Quarter Session quashed the appointment, and the Court of King's Bench, on being applied to, refused to reverse it, because the appellant was a magistrate and an officer.— The Court referred to this case, and after some further discussion the appeal was allowed. PORTSMOUTH.—- On the 10th, Commodore C. Bullen, C. B. of the Royal Sovereign yacht, gave Sir James Cockburn and the officers of Marines, ere they embarked, a splendid dinner on board his yacht. The Messenger, transport steamer, sailed the next day to the east- ward, with the detachment of Marines destined for Chatham. An- chored at Spithead, in a passage of 17 days from the Tagus, H. M. S. Asia, Capt. Richards, with the flag of Rear- Admiral Parker, C. B. She has brought home a company of Marines and a part of the marine artillery, under the command of Major Laurence; the remainder of the Marines employed in the Tagus on a special service were embarked in a transport for England, and sailed ten days prior to the Asia's leaving. The Farleigh, convict- ship, which sailed from Spithead 27th Oct. last, with 476 male convicts on board, under the superintendence of Dr. A. Osborne, R. N. J passengers, Surgeon E. Pilkington, h.- p. 21st Foot, with Mrs. Pilkington and seven chil- dren, to locate, arrived at Sydney 15th Feb. Four convicts died on the passage. DEVONPORT.— Arrived the Stentor, navy transport, from the east- ward, and waits for orders.— The Brises was undocked on the 7th, and Talbot was taken in to be new coppered, and to have her defects made good.— Arrived the Maitland transport from Lisbon, with a battalion of R. Marines on board, under Lieut.- CoL Adair, C. B.; she sailed again on the 9th with those belonging to the Portsmouth division, as well as those lately paid off from the Donegal. The Jupiter, 30, Mr. Easto, Master, was paid wages same day, and has since sailed for Cork, to take on board a regiment for Ceylon. Letters have been received from the Champion, dated Marseilles, June 30. She was to sail for Malta the next day, and from thence to proceed to England. , Ou Thursday afternoon Lord Hill, as Commander- in- Chief, held a Levee at the Horse Guards, attended by Gen. Sir G. Nugent, Com- missary Gen. Pipon, Maj.- Gen. Lemon, Sir R. Kennedy, Earl of Moray, Col. Westburton, Col. Young, Col. Cooke, Col. Anderson, Maj.- Gen. Sir Thos. Reynolds, and about thirty other distinguished officers. Lord Fitzroy Somerset's Levee on Tuesday was attended by the Earl of C'aledon, Major- Gen. Le Mesurier, Sir W. B. Proctor, Sir W. Summerville, Cols. Anderson, Daubeney, Sir M. M'Creagh, Horton, Rolt, Eckersley, Cooke, Young, Tayers; Majors Ratcliiie, Thornhill, Reed, and about 40- other officers." It is reported that an order is about to be issued from the Horse Guards for the substitution of trowsers for kilts in the Highland re- giments. Capt. Brandreth, Rovat Engineers, who went passenger in the Sir Edward Paget from Portsmouth on the 1st ult., is appointed Commiss ioner to superintend the transfer of the Island of St. Helena from the East India Company to our Government. Capt. Andrew King took the command of the Astrea at Falmouth on the 5th inst., and commenced duty as superintendent of packets on that station. Capt. William King, the late commander and superintendent, left for Plymouth on Tuesday last, accompanied by his family, in the neighbourhood of which place it is understood they intend residing. Admiral Sir Thomas Williams, the Commander- in- Chief at Ports- mouth, hoisted his flag on board the tender Sylph, in which vessel he has proceeded to visit the several districts of his station, attended by the cutter Seaflower, Lieut. Morgan. The North Star, 28, Capt. Harcourt ( destined for the South Ame- rican station), will go out of harbour in ten dav^, and immediately sail for her destination. The Rattlesnake, 28, at this port, is about to be commissioned, rumour says, by Capt. G. R. Drinkwater.— Ports- mouth Journal. . The following fifteen ships a re ordered to be paid off on their ar rival, tlieir period of service having expired:— 1The Asia, from Lis- oon ; Malabar, Actceon. and Rover, from the Mediterranean ; Dublin, Sumarang, and Satellite,, from South America; Curacoa and Ma- girrenne, from the East Indies; / ernon, Sapphire, Tweed, and A/ ban, from the West Indies; Pluto, from the Coast of Africa.— Hampshire Telegraph. The Lords of the Admiralty, much to the satisfaction of merchants, have determined on adopting steamers only, for the conveyance of the regular mails to Portugal from Falmouth. The following midshipmen passed their ordeal in seamanship on Wednesday on board the Victory, viz.— Mr. C. C. Otway, of the Scylla, Mr. A. B. Christie, late of the Dee steamer, and Mr. E. M. Levcesten, of the Thunder surveying vessel. Sir G. Cockburn is about to come home owing to ill health ; and he will be succeeded by Rear- Admiral Sir F. Maitland, Superintendent of Portsmouth dock- yard, who is to be succeeded by Sir J. Gordon, of Chatham. GRENADIER GUARDS.— On Saturday last a brilliant review of the three battalions took place in Hyde Park, before the Duke of Wel- lington, Lord Hill, and a numerous Staff of General and Field Officers. At ten o'clock the 1st battalion, under the command of Lord Saltoun, marched from ou> t of the Tower, and arrived on the ground in Hyde Park at half- past twelve o'clock ; the 2d battalion^ from Portman- street barracks, under the command of Col. D'Oyley, next arrived, followed by the 3d battalion from the Wellington bar- racks, under the command of Colonel Lambert. The review com- menced at one o'clock. The numerous evolutions that were per- formed were conducted in a superior style, and drew forth the uni- versal satisfaction of his Grace, his Lordship, and the whole retinue of military officers. After the review concluded, which was at three o'clock, the Colonels of the battalions, officers, and men, received great praise for their excellent military performances. The Park, from tlie fineness of the day, was crowded by fashionable and elegantly dressed ladies. THE UNIVERSAL LIFE ASSURANCE " SOCIETY, 69, Comhill, London, for Lives, Survivorships, Endowments for Children, ami for the Purchase and Sale of Reversions and Annuities. CAPITAL, . i' 500,000. PATRONS. Sir Georae Thomas Staunton, Bart. I Sir Ralph Rice. M. P., F. R. S. Colonel Sir Robert H. Cunliffe. Major- Gen. Sir Jasper Nicholls, K. C. B. Colonel Sir James Sutherland. ' DIRECTORS. Sir Henry Willock, K. L. S. Chairman. John Stewart, Esq. M. P., Deputy Chairman. John Bagshaw, Esq. Alexander Baillie, Esq. Augustus Bosanquet, Esq. Charles Dashwood Bruce, Esq. Ellis Wat- kin Cunliffe, Esq. William Ivilburn, Esq. TREASURER— Pascoe Charles Otway Mayne, Esq. Robert Monro, Esq. John Rogers, jun. Esq. Rees Goring Thomas, Esq. James Duncan Thomson, Esq. Captain Samuel Thornton, R. N. St.. Leger Grenfell, Esq. AUDITORS. Crawford Davison Kerr, Esq. I John Arnold Mello, Esq. Timothy Wiggins, Esq. BANKERS— Sir James Esdaile and Co. PHYSICIAN— Benjamin C. Pierce, Esq. M. D. SOLICITORS— Messrs. Nind and Cotterill. The Directors of this Society have caused investigation to be made with great care into all the institutions for Life Insurances existing in thiseountry, and they trusT they have been fortunate in selecting from each what, as a whole, will place their Establishment on the most secure, judicious, and satisfactory footing, both, to the Proprietors and to the Assured. The subjoined specimen of Rates, being as low as is consistent with perfect security, will show the advantages offered to the Public by the UNIVERSAL, which further secures the interests of the Assured by returning to them THREE- FOURTHS OF THE PROFITS. Table, showing the Annual Premium for assuring 100 on a Single Life. Age. Whole Life. Seven Years. One Year. je s. d. je s. d. £ s. d. 15 1 15 0 10 2 0 18 2 20 1 18 8 1 2 11 1 1 9 25 2 3 3 16 6 1 4 1 30 2 8 10 1 10 4 18 4 35 2 14 11 1 13 9 1 12 5 40 3 3 0 1 17 1 1 15 4 45 3 12 2 2 3 3 1 19 8 50 4 5 6 2 15 1 2 8 9 Rates for Joint Lives, Survivorships, & c. may he ascertained, by application at the Office. A Court of Directors, attended by a Medical Officer, will be held every Thurs- day, from one till three o'clock, for effecting assurances; and attendance will ba given at the office daily, from ten to four o'clock, to furnish information, to re- ceive proposals, and to transact the ordinary business of the Society. By Order of the Board of Directors, London, June, 5, 1834. ROBERT CHRISTIE. Actuary. CHURCH and STATE CHRISTIAN FREEDOM SOClEi'V** Stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free. The glorious liberty of the children of God. _ f The Universities, somewhat venially perhaps, feel scandalised at the proposition to admit into their bosom the omnium gatherum hostile host of what is called Orthodox Dissent, with all its interminable varieties of theological twaddle : but would they object to open their portals edgeways to the little, nor unfriendly, fra- ternity of Scripture Christians, whose single error is possibly an excessive partia- lity— a punctilious reverence— for the litera scripta of the Sacred Oracles ? Jealous to a degree as the Church of England always seems to be of the title of Unitarian — forward, as on all occasions she is to affirm herself the advocate of the strict unity of God— why should: a mere idle logomachy exclude the fellow patrons not more avowedly of a common tenet ? Who- more averse to believe what cannot be iroved by Scripture than the member of the Church of England ? Who is content o abide not almost only but altogether by the Scripture as the Unitarian ? Their fundamental doctrine and principle thus alike, what is there to sever them in dis- cipline ? There is nothing in Unitarianism inimical to Episcopacy. Hoadley and Laud were Unitarians : so were Newton and Locke. Is not the Church of Eng- land justly proud of numbering such names among her clergy and laity ? And if only a slight preference of the Bible to the Thirty- nine Articles made these mas- ters in Israel what they were, should nothing more than a kindred infirmity to theirs in so problematical a point of taste or opinion, interdict any young man matricu- lation at a place where text and comment are held in all but equal estimation ? TRAVELLING CASES, DISPATCH BOXES, ani LEATHER WRITING DESKS.— The greatest Stock of any House in London, warranted of the best quality, at the most reasonable prices, Manufac- tured on the Premises.. 10} Inch Writing- case, with strong Lock and Patent Inkstand 15s l Inch do. do. do. .. .. .. 17s « Inch do. do. do. .. .. .. _ Inch do. real Russia, with Bramah's Lock, and do 40s. 10} Inch Leather Wriiting Desk, with strong Lock and Patent Inkstand — ... .. Inch do. do. do. . Inch do. do. do. Inch do. real Russia, with Bramah'sLockandr'do.. Dressing Cases,. Pouches,. Writing Desks, Work Boxes, & e. Leather Goods made on the shortest notice. Tnrrill's Repository, 250, Regent- street „ 19s, .. 28^ „ 60*. Every kind of BURGESS'S ESSENCE OF ANCHOVIES. Warehouse, 107, Strand, corner of the Savoy- steps, London, JOHN BURGESS and SON, being apprised of the numerous endfeavours made by many persons to impose a spurious art icle 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 Addresscorrespond with the above. The general appearance of the spurious descriptions will decelv ® unguarded, and for' their detection, J. B. and Son submit the following Cas- ts : Bome are in appearcmee at iirst sight " Tile Genuine," but without any name or address— some " Burgess's Essence of Anchovies"— others " Burgess," and many more without address. JOH N BURGESS awl SON having been many years honoured with such dis- tinguished approbation feel every sentiment of respect toward the Public, and earnestly solicit their, to inspect the labels previous to purchasing what they con ceive to be of their make, which they hope will prevent many disappointments. BURGESS'S NEW SAUCE, for general purposes, having given snch great satis- faction, 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. Tbe original Fish Sauce Warehouse. TfcAVIES'S MUCH- ADMIRED CANDLES.— Candles, 5Jd. per aJ> lb.; Wax Candles, 15s„ 21s., aud 24s. per 121b.; Sperm and Composition, and 21s. ; Wax- wicked Moulded Candles, burning equal in time to s. , Mottled Soap 58s. and 62s. per 1121bs.; Yellow 52s. and 56s.; finest Curd 2s.; Windsor and Palln Is. 4d. per packet; Old Brown Windsor Is. 9d.; Rose 2s.; Camphor2s.; Marine Is. ; superior Almond 2s. 6d.; extrasuperline Sealing- wax 4s. 6d. per lb.; Sperm Oil 6s. and 6s. 6d. per gallon ; fine Lamp, 3s. 6d. ; improvea Floating Lights Is. per box— For Cash,' at DAVIKS'S Old Established Ware- house, No. 63, St. Martin's- lane, opposite New Slaughter's Coffee- house; where any articles advertised at lower rates may be had, the quality and prices being the same as those deceptively warranted the best.— Delivered in town, or packed withcare for the country. CAUTiON^ The Extensive Sale of the IMPERIAL CREAM, and its high popularity, has induced tnsidions persons to counterfeit and sell a preparation composed df deleterious ingredients, much to the discredit of the Inventor, and of serious injury to the Hair ;: to • prevent which, please to ask for ARNOLD'S IMPERIAL CREAM, for the GROWTH of HAIR, and observe that each pot is signed on the label, " Thomas Arnold, 20, High- street, Kensing- ton ;" with a Practical Treatise on the Hnman Hair- to counterfeit wMM felony.— N. B. Patronized bv her Majesty, their Royal Highnesses the 1 rmcesa Sophia, Duchess of Kent, Princess Victoria, Duchess of Cumberland, & e. \ 220 A MONDAY EON- ITM ( for the Country) is published at Three © ' dock in the afternoon, containing the Markets and Latest News. JOHN BULL. LONDON, JULY 13. AFTER the departure of Her MAJESTY on Saturday, the KING returned to Windsor. On Wednesday, His MAJESTY held a Levee, upon which day Lord GREY and Lord ALTHORP tendered their resignations," which His MAJESTY was gra- ciously pleased to accept. The KING has not been in town since. The QUEEN arrived safely at Rotterdam at six o'clock on Sunday evening. . At Helvoet Her MAJESTY was received and - welcomed by the Duke of SAXE WEIMAR, in the name of the King of HOLLAND. Prince FREDERICK of Holland, and his Princess, and the Duke and Duchess of SAXE- WEIMAR, had previously repaired in one ofthe Dutch Government's steam- boats to Helvoetsluys to meet her MAJESTY, with whom they returned to Rotterdam. The English and Russian Ministers also waited on her MAJESTY. Soon after landing the QUEEN proceeded to the Hague. Her MAJESTY, who is described as maintaining a strict incognito, travels under the title of " Countess of LANCASTER." It is said she intends to visit Gouda, and then return to Rotterdam, whence she will continue her journey to Germany by the way of Nimeguen. WE are unable to give our readers any positive intelligence as to the Ministerial arrangements. By those who had not the pleasure of dining in company with the Right Honourable EDWARD ELLICE in Carlton Gardens, on Friday, the leading article of yesterday's Chronicle, embodying all the Right Honourable Gentleman said upon that occasion, will be read with considerable interest, inasmuch as it appears to be a sort of manifesto on the part of the rabid portion of the Ca- binet, which, however contradictory in many of its points, is in effect a declaration of the vital necessity tor a Radical Go- vernment. The last line, however, betrays the source ofthe declaration ; for although the author has, all through, been writing editorially, he ends by asking " how WE could hope for support," & c., in his Ministerial character. The state of the case we believe to be this:— The KING sent for Lord MELBOURNE— not to form a Government, but to advise and explain ; and the first idea was, if possible, to patch up the Ministry, which in point of fact was entirely dissolved by the resignation of the Premier. This, it was clear, could not be accomplished, because the same reasons which induced Mr. STANLEY and four of his friends at one time— Lord GREY, Lord ALTHORP and three of his friends, at another time, to resign, must have operated again when- ever the renewal of the Coercion Bill, the Irish Tithe and Appropriation Bills, and the absurd Irish Commission, should have again come under discussion. That scheme was very shortly abandoned as impracticable, and a second " hare was started," which was no ether than the principle of " putting some putty and paint upon the old lath and plaster," and incorporating men of different parties, who might form a safe and salutary Ministry. To those who kuow the moderation of His MAJESTY7 ' S character, it must be evi- dent that such an association would have been highly agreeable; but here, the very same objections opposed themselves, and Lord MELBOURNE very soon found that such a course was impracticable. The conduct of Ministers, in having set fire to the House, and then running away from the danger, no man can palliate; nor is there a human being, capable of judging for himself, who does not see and appreciate the difficulties in which the SOVEREIGN is placed, not only by the retreat of his servants from their duty, but by the difficulties of forming a new Go- vernment, arising wholly and entirely from the misrule aud mismanagement by which they have involved the country in perils and dangers, difficulties and embarrassments. Under these circumstances, we, for our own parts, see no course left for the MONARCH, but to send for such of the heads of the Conservative Party as he may consider most de- serving of his Royal confidence, and obtain from them counsel and advice in the emergency and difficulty in which his late servants have thought proper to leave him—- Nay, so strong is this feeling in our minds, that we are of opinion that, while we are writing this, communications have been begun, having that object in view. Should this be the case, we trust that no false delicacy, no reluctance, no hesitation will be evinced on the part of the Conservatives to rally round the Throne. The question seems to be, whether, under the operation of the REFORM BILL, fny Ministers can carry on a Government ? It is clear that hose who prepared and passed that measure, of which they now think fit to brag, CANNOT. The country, therefore, must be satisfied that some other party CAN ; and we have that reliance 011 His MAJESTY'S paternal and constitutional love for his People, which induces us to believe that he will call to his councils men, who, during the administration of affairs by Lord GREY'S Cabinet, have never evinced the slightest degree of factious opposition, nor the smallest desire to regain those posts of power which their reckless, popularity- hunting successors have rendered posts of difficulty and of danger. The reports spread and circulated are as numerous as they are false, and although we do not venture to assert the fact, we firmly believe that we shall next week have to congratu- late our readers upon the existence of a CONSERVATIVE GOVERNMENT. IT is, we believe, quite true that the King of SPAIN has suddenly and hastily quitted this country. It may be recol- lected that at tile time of his MAJESTY'S arrival we stated the probability of such an event. The affairs of Spain wear a very singular aspect, and the retreat of the QUEEN REGENT from the capital, has added very considerably to the general dismay. We forbear men- tioning the alleged reason for her MAJESTY'S " temporary retirement," but we have very little doubt of the truth of what we have heard. It may be this combination of circumstances which has in- duced Don CARLOS to return to Spain, and not, as has been generally reported, his want of confidence in British protec- tion, promised by Lord PALMERSTON. THE past week has been an important one. The Pea- and- Thimble Tables have been upset and smashed, and the motley crew are scattered and dispersed; some there be, however, who cling to the wreck manfully-— with what ulti- mate success their adhesion will be crowned, we shall see. For ourselves, we have so much to say, and to notice, that we JOHN BULL have been forced to pick up bits of ttte rtiins l- aused by the explosion, and descant upon each F<^ gment separately. In this way we hope to get at all the little points and corners with which they abound; for instance. let us take FRAGMENT I. Lord GREY'S " last crying speech and confession" makes a beautiful fragment. What a pity it is that Dame BARBAULD is dead; such " a beautiful illustration of her celebrated poem, beginning— " Pity the sorrows of a poor old man," would have been, to her, a sight infinitely more moving than it was to the House of Lords. What was Lord GREY SO agitated about? why did he weep ?— Those who have not the pleasure of knowing his Lordship, might fancy that the tears which ( as SHAKSPEARE has it)— " Coursed one another down his innocent nose," were shed at parting with office ; because, as to being over- come, at six o'clock in the evening, by the gracious kindness of the KING evinced at three o'clock in the afternoon— that, nobody can credit. That a Minister who, for four years, has been daily and hourly receiving the most convincing proof's of his SOVEREIGN'S affection and regard, should be so vio- lently shaken by this last condescension— except, indeed, by the conviction that it was the last— seems rather too much. It was, nevertheless, a piteous sight to the tender- hearted ; nor were the assiduous attentions of the Duke of RICHMOND, as bottle- holder to the Thimble- rig champion, less interesting. It was, however, an, April shower— for bright in reality, and brighter by the contrast, were the fun and amusement pro- duced by the noble ex- Premier when he recovered from his fit of sorrow, and made himself intelligible. In this fragment take we what he said of himself, his fa- mily, his patronage, and his impartiality— and in all our frag- ments of to- day, we adopt the principle of making verbatim extracts from the published reports of the Parliamentary debates. Now, under this head, we find Lord GREY reported to have said this :— " It has been urged against me that I, more than any other Minis- ter, have used my patronage as a Minister of the Crown for the be- nefit of my own family. It Vvas imputed to him that many members of his family, even only distant relations, got appointments under the Government. Some, indeed did get appointments from other Members of the Government, not from him. He left office with a moderate fortune, adequate, however, to bis wants, and with a large family; but not a shilling of the public money remained in his pocket, or in the pocket of any member of his familySome of his relatives were placed certainly by him in public situations, but they were not sinecures; they " were laborious situations; they dis- charged all the duties attached to them; and he would appeal to their Lordships whether he was not justified by circumstances in so acting ( hear)— whether the individuals were not in every respect qualified lor the situations, and might not have been selected to till them, even though unconnected with him ? He would appeal to the country, and he felt confident that, in justice, it would be said the individuals whom he had promoted were not unworthy of it, nor had he any occasion to disguise his conduct." There is very much of senility in this. The explanation was as superfluous as it is ridiculous— it was wholly uncalled for, and if alluded to at all, could have been defended only upon tile ground which we have always taken in favour of Lord GREY, namely, that it was natural for a man to provide for his own family and connections, and extremely unnatural ( unless, as has occurred in some cases in the late Ministry, the provision silenced an enemy, or bought a friend) to provide for enemies and opponents ; but to attempt to repel the charge seriously, is the - very acme of weak- ness. His Lordship says,—" not a shilling of their salaries and emoluments remained in their pockets"— that depends entirely upon whether they saved or spent their earn- ings ; and, when lie appeals to the countiy as to the ability, and virtue, and talent of the individuals whom he had pro- moted, it becomes absolutely necessary to say a word or two. Who upon the face of the earth, except a brother, would have bestowed the Grand Cross of the Bath upon Sir HENRY GREY, a shelfed officer— who has not seen a shot fired for nearly half a century— after having given him the Grand Cross of the Guelph ? Who, but a brother, would have given the Honourable and Reverend EDWARD GREY, a Bishopriek ?— and who but a brother, would have dared, in the teeth of Lord BROUGHAM'S declarations and enactments, to have superloaded that brother with a Prebeudal Stall at Westminster ? AVho, but a father, could have induced a cousin to make Lord HOWICK an Under- Secretary of State ?— or who but a father- in- law, could have made Mr. CHARLES WOOD Secretary ofthe Treasury ? Nobody, but a father- in- law, would have thought of appoint- ing Mr. FRANCIS BARING a Lord of the Treasury ; nor would any Minister, standing in a less nearer relation to Lord DURHAM, have elevated that Nobleman to an Earldom. So we might go on through a list of at least thirty- six persons, who are nearer or more distantly related to the Premier, who, in the midst of his tears and tribulations, justified the course of " grabbing" which he has pursued, by declaring that neither himself nor any of his connexions are the better for it. His Lordship forgets, however, the Lieu- tenant- Colonelcies, and the Captaincies, and the Commander- ships, and the Regiments, and the Bisliopricks, and the Stalls, and the Livings, and the Embassies', and the Governments— all of which go on, although he goes out; or, if in some cases they cease, their fortunate holders become entitled to pensions. Why did not the honest Lord ALTHORP put his venerable friend upon his guard upon this occasion, as he cautioned his honourable friend, Mr. LITTLETON upon another—" Don't commit yourself.'''' FRAGMENT II. MR. LITTLETON, the Secretary for Ireland, sends for Mr. O'CONNELL, the individual specially denounced in the King's Speech; pending an election in Wexford, over which Mr. O'CONNELL was known to possess considerable influence, and during the progress through the House of Commons of Bills, the success or failure of which very much depended upon the line adopted by Mr. O'CONNELL ; and having sent for him, tells him, in strict confidence, that he is acting very imprudently in " agitating" the country, for that the Coercion Bill will not be renewed— that neither he, nor the Lord LIEU- TENANT, wants to have it renewed— so that he may put his fears upon that point at rest. Mr. O'CONNELL, in conse- quence of this confidential communication, shews his entire independence of the Government, aud his devotion to the in- terests of Ireland, by letting them return their Member, and pass their Bill. After this, Mr. LITTLETON communicates to Mr. O'CON- NELL that Government has changed its opinion, and the Coercion Bill is to be renewed. O'CONNELL, quite indig- nant, moves for the correspondence which has taken place between the Ministers and the Irish Government 011 the sub- July 13. j « ' t, which motion is negatived. The papers, however, hav- ing been furnished to the House of Lords, we there find that, on the 18th of April, Lord WELLESLF. Y distinctly and ear- nestly entreats the renewal of the Coercion Bill. In the: middle of June, Mr. LITTLETON tells Mr. O'CONNELL that neither he nor the LORD LIEUTENANT desires the renewal j, and on the 4th of July, Lord GRE\ t throws Mr. LITTLETON. overboard in the House of Lords, by stating that there has- been no change of opinion on the subject. In the case of Baron SMITH, it may be recollected, that Mr. LITTLETON was pledged confidentially to support him* and became his principal accuser— in the case of Lord WICK- LOW, it may be recollected, that he secured his Lordship's- acquiescence to the Irish Grand Jury Bill by pledging himself that the Government intended to bring forward a new Bill this Session, to alter, amend, and rectify all those parts of the; first Bill, to which Lord WICKLOW, and, indeed, the whole country, objected. Lord WICKLOW- suffered the Bill to pass— not the smallest show of the promised new Bill has been, made. In the last case, Mr. LITTLETON acted as he had done in the two former ones, and " did," to use the great Agitator's own words—" did" Mr. O'CONNELL. The ex- posure was awful— and yet Mr. LITTLETON held on; and,, worst and last disgrace of all— for him— O'CONNELL, the humbugged, the despised, the deluded, the spat- upon of LITTLETON, gets up in tbe House of Commons, and praises' him— besmears him with the slaver of compliment, and varnishes him up with the coarsest Blarney butter. So far damaged was this LITTLETON— this empty, heavy dunce— whose fate we foretold the moment that he was per- mitted to save himself from his tumble out of the Chair of the House of Commons, to the first step of which his yanity had led him, by being put up into the Irish Secretaryship ; when a more precipitous despatch to the lowest pit of all was prepared for him by the " last crying speech and confession" of poor dear Lord GREY. Hear what he says, speaking of this most disgraceful negociation between the Agitator de-- nounced in the KING'S SPEECH, and a sort of semi- demi KING'S Minister. The veteran Premier, speaking of the Coercion Bill, says— " My Lords, having gained your assent to this opinion on a for- mer occasion, it cannot be necessary for me to add anything more • upon this part of the subject, more especially as at the time 1 intro- duced the Bill I went into a statement at considerable length of all the circumstances which appeared to me material. But, my Lords, on this occasion it will be naturally expected by your Lord- ships that I should enter into some explanation ofthe circumstances which have occurred, and which have produced the new situation in whicb I now stand.—( Hear.)— It cannot be necessary that I should recall your Lordships' recollections to what passed very lately in this House upon certain questions put and answers given.—( Hear, hear.)— 1 was asked, my Lords, whether, in any communications that; had taken place upon this subject with a person known for the strong part he has taken in the affairs of Ireland— I do not wish to use any other terms with respect to that individual; he must be sufficiently- known to your Lordships— I was asked whether I had been any party to those communications. I stated then, and 1 repeat it now, that those communications were vwt only made without my concurrence— ( Cheering)— but without my knowledge.—( Loud cries of ' Hear, hear.')— And, had I been previously apprised of them, there is no power or interest which I possessed tha t would not have been exerted to have prevented them from taking place; for well knowing as I did, as events have since proved, that no communication, not even the slightest, could be held by any person connected with His Ma- jesty's Government with that quarter—( Cheers)—- impressed as I was with that opinion, I never could have given my consent to the hold- ing of such communications, or have omitted any effort to prevent them." This is highly creditable to Lord GREY— most highly ; but let us just ask, before we proceed one inch farther, does not this statement prove to demonstration that, which we have always asserted, and which has always been strenuously and im- pudently denied by the crawling newspapers retained by the Ministers themselves ; who have, over and over again, de- clared, that the history of a disunited Cabinet was a false history, and that our repeated assertions that the Government w- as a Government of departments, without con- cert or combination, were groundless. Here is the full cor- roboration of all we have ever said ; turn back to our columns, it will justify everything we have ever said. Here is the Premier, permitted by his colleagues— at least one or two of them, to state in the House of Lords that, which those col- leagues knew to be false— Lord GREY stated that no such negociations were going on. Why ?— because he had been kept in total ignorance of them. And this was an united Cabinet. Now, hear again, this deplorable Mr. LITTLETON— and if pity can be excited for such a man, most pitiable indeed he is. What happens to him ? Why, it turns out, that the honest, fat, and ingenuous, though not ingenious Lord ALTHORP— the constant associate, the Cabinet colleague of the Premier— is at the bottom of all these negotiations with O'CONNELL— which Lord GREY, from not knowing of, first denied, and, when they came to his knowledge, so- properly denounced. Yes ! the Noble Viscount, whose real character is best known in his own county— he, was the first mover of this most notable scheme of calling the denounced of the KING into co- operation with the KING'S Government who denounced him ! That dull and respectable grazier, the late CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, got up in his place on Thursday night, and said this—( and we again pray our readers to recollect the energetic and contemptuous scorn with which Lord GREY, the head of the united Cabinet, denounced the very idea of a negociation with O'CONNELL):— " When the question as to the renewal of the Coercion Act first came under the consideration of the Cabinet, and its decison was re- quired, I felt it to be my duty to concur in the renewal of that Act, with the omission only of the clauses relating to Courts Martial. I hope I need not say I did it with the greatest reluctance, and that nothing but my conviction of its absolute necessity would have in- duced me to do so. After that, however, communications of a pri- vate and confidential nature from the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland to individual Members of the Government, brought the subject again under the consideration of the Cabinet in the week before last. I may here state that it was about this time that my Right Hon. Friend the Secretary for Ireland, suggested to me the propriety of inform- ing the Hon. and Learned Member for Dublin that the question of the renewal of the Coercion Act was not finally settled, but was still under consideration. I saw no harm in this, and I stated that I could perceive no objection to the suggestion; but at the' same time I said to my Right Hon. Friend that I hoped that he would use the greatest caution in his communication, and that he would by no means commit himself." Was there ever such an exposure ?— If LITTLETON had not been a fool, Lord GREY' never would have known that Lord ALTHORP was a knave: the whole blame, if any, would have been thrown upon LITTLETON, and ALTHORP would have humbugged GRIZZLE ( as EDWARD ELLICE calls the late Premier), and the united Cabinet would have gone on in all its ordinary candour and complacency. But, says Lord ALTHORP, in continuation :•— " But when, on Thursday, I heard the statement of my Right Hon. Friend the Secretary for Ireland, and then for the first tiW June 221. JOHN BULL. 191 xtas made aware of the nature and extent of the communication which he had made to the Honourable and Learned Gentleman, / certainly thought it most probable that the difficulties and embarrass- ments to which I have already alluded, in which I should be placed, would prove insuperable. The debate on Monday niglit on the motion of the Honourable and Learned Gentleman proved to me that they wereso, and convinced me that it was impossible for me to conduct this Bill through this House, or indeed the public business, and the business of Government in this House, with either credit to myself or with advantage to the public."—( Loud cheers.) Was there ever meanness like all this? If Mr. LITTLE- TON had not been out- blarneyed by Mr. O'CONNELL, Lord ALTHORP would have cajoled Lord GREY, and the tiling would all have gone right; but as O'CONNELL lias as much talent in his little finger as LITTLETON has in all his body, including the tiling he fancies a head, O'CONNELL out- gene- ralled him, and broke up the whole affair— and then, to crown all, as we have already said, when he saw LITTLETON quail- ing under his disgrace, as Lord ALTHORP quailed upon the former occasion, when he alone knew what he had been guilty of, O'CONNELL praised, patronized, and encouraged tile aforesaid LITTLETON; and Mr. GRATTAN concluded the farce by proposing, in the House of Commons, " a cheer,"— a pot- house huzza for the miserable Irish Secretary. It must be owned that the unfortunate lout shook his head, like SHERIDAN: S Burleigh, " as if there were something in it," when the sarcastic Member ironically talked of his talents and virtue. FRAGMENT III. Lord GREY finished his career as Premier, the Head of an avowedly pledged non- intervention Ministry, by laying upon the table of the House of Lords the Quadruple Treaty, formed, made, perfected, and concluded by the most reckless course of international interference that could have been pursued by any set of men holding office. This is admirable;— but yet, perhaps, the old Gentleman himself has been wholly innocent of any participation in these most melancholy absurdities. We know that while the well- preserved dandy, PALMEKSTON, was wriggling himself about in tile boudoir or saloon of some ci- devant beauty Lord GREY some time since took upon himself to make a communication direct to a foreign Government, which eti- quette required to be made through Lord PALMERSTON So, on the other hand— indeed we know the fact in several instances— the leading measures which have deposed two lawful Sovereigns, which will speedily agitate all Europe, which may unite the Northern Powers against us, in combination with what poor Lord PALMERSTON pretends to believe, or is made to believe, our dearest friends, have been taken without the slightest communication with the Grey, head of the Government. The exposures of the disgraceful proceedings ofthe Ministry which have been made during the week, have given the country a perfect insight into things which were but thinly veiled before. But, there is a passage in Lord GREY'S reported speech which out- does alibis former out- doings. It is that, in which he repentingly alludes to the foolish and injudicious cutting down of different departments, to the prejudice of the country and its service, for the mere sake of popularity. These are the old Gentleman's words :— " Aly Lords, places to an enormous amount have been abolished. The patronage of the Crown has been diminished to what many of your Lordships may consider a most inconvenient state: and as a Minister of the Crown, being now disposed to speak with truth and honesty, my only doubt is whether the principle has not been carried too far."—( Loudcheers.) — So, Lord GREY, who has lent his hand to the ruin and destruction of hundreds of families, and to the en- dangering the service of the country, for the sake of getting the praises of liis acknowledged friends, the Political Uuions and their colleagues, declares that, although he acted upon the principle as a popularity- hunting Minister, " BEING NOW DISPOSED TO SPEAK WITH TRUTH AND HONESTY, he thinks the principle has been carried too far." The emphasis which the Noble Lord laid upon the mono- syllable NOW, was quite as ludicrous as his Lordship meant it to be affecting; but to hear him take credit for the healthful state of the country, when, not three months ago, a parade of rebellion, in the shape of secretly- armed Unionists marching by thousands and tens of thousands through the streets, in a state of organization most awful, was made, was more ludi- crous still; and, as the Duke of WELLINGTON said, parti- cularly so, when these very Ministers had caused more blood of English subjects to be shed thau since 1780 had been shed in an equal space of time. And then Lord GREY complimented his Attorney- General, who made himself Chancellor iu spite of him, by talking of the improvements iu the law, " all owing to the Noble and Learned Lord on the Woolsack." What are the improve- ments ?— the Bankruptcy Court ?— or what ? He took credit for the Reform Bill— a measure which already has produced ruin of trade, of confidence, and good order— a despicable failure as far as the mobocracy is concerned, and a hateful blot upon the country as affecting her best interests ; and then he bragged of the settlement of the slave abolition question. What nonsense!— who knows what the effects of that will be ? — who knows where the twenty millions of compensation are to come from ?— who knows that there will be a planter alive in four- and- twenty hours after the absurd, unjust, and stupid enactment comes into play ? He then brags of the settlement of the East India question. Why ?— Great changes have been made, but who knows how these changes will operate ? Any Pea- and- Thimble man can change liis pea— but cui bono? Let us see the state of East and West India interests seven years hence, and then let us judge of all the liocus pocus of these very active, and amiable, and cordial Ministers. The old Gentleman got savage with Sir ROBERT PEEL for moving for papers connected with the Coercion Bill affair; which Sir ROBERT did because it appeared absolutely neces- sary to have enough of the correspondence to render the mat- ter inteligible, and most certainly with no view of overthrowing a Government which he has so mainly contributed to support; and that it was, which drew down upon him the calm, dignified, and cutting rebuke ofthe Duke of WELLINGTON. Lord GREY could not help shewing his teeth— we beg pardon— the last survivor ol the Dental Tontine has departed— but snarling at the man, who, of all others, he expected to be his successor; for requiring that, without which no light could be thrown upon the sneaking affair of ALTHORP, O'CONNELL, LITTLETON, and Co.; and yet, although Lord GREY whistled out his indignation at " the gross idea" of requiring private and con- fidential papers to elucidate an affair which he himself de- nounced, he also whistled out Cabinet secrets, right and left, without the smallest hesitation or compunction. We dare not follow the CHANCELLOR through his very warm and energetic speech, lest we should follow Mr. BITTLESTON to the bar of the House of Lords; for, although the LORD CHANCELLOR, when he proceeded in State with his seals and his mace to give evidence on the Law of Libel, avowed his opinion that libel should not be punished, and that every man should say of another whatever he chose, it has now been shewn that, as " present company is always ex- cepted," so he, the Highest Hum Firm Bogee of the land, is always an exception tG the general rule. But we may be Eermitted to say that his Lordship was considerably affected— e was warm— hot— boiling hot— and complimented Lord GREY with so much earnestness that anybody who did not know what he really felt, and what he says behind his back, would really have thought that he lamented liis departure from the head of the Ministry, instead of chuckling with the secret resolution of succeeding him. There is one tiling we wish to mention in a friendly way to Lord BROUGHAM— Weknow his thoughts, and his ambition: if they are realized, and to use his own phrase, " he gets rid of his wig," he will be lost. The wig of a Chancellor, like the cas- sock of a Bishop, is a shield, proof against everything except words ; but if Lord BROUGHAM doffs that hairy " life- pre- server" which he has worn ever since he has been in the House of Lords, he must become a very different personage from what he is. Things which men are bound to overlook out of respect to the station, will not be overlooked when that station is abandoned; and although everybody knows that Lord BROUGHAM has always been most ready to maintain his " words''' by " acts" it would be extremely unpleasant for a Prime Minister to attend at Chalk- farm three times a week, very early in the morning, which would be the inevita- ble result of his Lordship's adherence to his present style of conversation and remark, if he were wigless. SEVERAL of the Pictures at the National Gallery have been recently purchased at high prices. We believe the following will be found a pretty correct list:— 34. Boy and Donkey 66. Puppies 17* 2. View looking towards Chichester 176. Portrait of a Hack 237. A fat Ox 246. An old Windmill 293. The ^/ fc- house Door 314. Portrait of Dr. GRAVES 344. The Sulky Boy .. 396. Moonshine 469. The Cobbler's happy moment 496. A cold Day 505. Shirking the Plate 556. A Fox on the look- out ., 594. A Boor smoking 623. Near Leatherhead 741. Poppies 759. Entrance to Ragland .. 758. The tired Leader 835. A Frieze Sir JOHN KEY— for his son. Lord PALMERSTON. ^ Rev. SIDNEY SMITH. Lord EBRIXGTON. Lord ALTHORP. Mr. COBBETT. S GOVERNOR of ST. GEORGE'S ( HOSPITAL. The CEMETERY SOCIETY". Lord DURHAM. Mr. O'CONN ELL. £ Earl GREY. Mrs. H. C. The Duke of MARLBOROUGH. Lord BROUGHAM. H. R. H. the Duke of SUSSEX. JOSEPH" HUME, Esq. Miss MARTINEAU. 5 The WESTMINSTER BANKING I COMPANY. Lord ALTHORP. Captain Ross. We shall communicate any additional purchases which may take place. We regret to find that the cholera is not only making its re- appear- ance in foreign settlements and colonies, but that it has again shewn itself in Ireland. A very long and important letter on the subject by Dr. STOKER, appeared in last week's Warder. The Exeter paper says—" Mr. STEVENS, of Plymouth, has been the means of pointing old an irregularity in the instructions issued by Government to overseers, as to preparing the list of voters, which if acted upon, would have the effect of disf ranchising, far the next year, the great bulk of the county constituency, by leaving out of the lists all but new claimants. We perceive that the authorities have been prompt in issuing fresh instructions to the overseers since Mr. STEVENS'S communication with LordMELBOuRNEon the subject."— The country is very much obliged to Mr. STEVENS, whoever he is— but what will it think of Lord MELBOURNE and the instructions of Government? Mr. VANDENHOFF seems to have made a hit at the Haymarket— the " proof of the pudding," the proverb says, " is in the eating and we conclude that the manager of that theatre would not repeat Coriolanus in the dog- days, if the crowded and fashionable appear- ance of the audience did not justify the proceeding. FJRREN is also there— in himself a host : we trust he was in the House of Lords on Tuesday. Lord GREY'S performance would have giv^ n him some invaluable hints for any new part, like UJ^ CLE FOOZLE. MILITIA.— The Lords Lieutenant of counties have received circu- lar letters from Lord MELBOURNE, dated the 27th ult. informing them that—" The Committee appointed to prepare estimates for the militia, for the present year, being desirous to learn the exact state and condition of the permanent staff of the several regiments, and it being necessary, iu order to obtain the requisite information on this head, that the staff of ep. ch regiment should be inspected; I have the honour to acquaint your Lordship, that officers of his MAJESTY'S regular forces will be directed forthwith to visit the head- quarters of the different regiments, for the purpose of making this inspection; and I am to request that your Lordship will direct all the persons belonging to the permanent staff of the regiment in the county under your charge, to hold themselves in readiness to be inspected. We disbelieve the following statement of Thimble- rig profligacy which lias appeared in several of the low Radical papers:— " COMPENSATION TO THE BAPTIST AND METHODIST MISSIONARY SOCIETIES.— The Government have, as we anticipated, determined to extend their grant to these Societies for the loss they sustained by the domolition of their Chapels in the West Indies by a licentious and persecuting mob. It will be seen from the parliamentary pro ceedings, that this intention has been announced by Mr. SPRING RICE, the new Secretary for the Colonies, but the exact amount of the additional grant is still under the consideration of Government. It is understood that it will not be less than six or seven thousand pounds in addition to to the 50001. already granted. On this subject, the congregations attending for divine worship in Salem Chapel, in Queen- street Chapel, in Albion Chapel, in the Baptist Chapel, and In npnl'tTA's- strApt } in riM. I -' i'i!< hfl. Vft all nptitinnurl thp I Trm u o .- if in George's- street Chapel, in Leeds, have all petitioned the House of Commons during the present week, and the petitions have been pre- sented by Mr. BAINES." When KING LEOPOLD was at Paris, the Russian Ambassador never waited upon his MAJESTY to pay his respects. It is said that the most urgent solicitations were made to induce his Excellency to do so, but they had no effect upon M. Pozzo de BORGO. Disturbances at Brussels continue every night, in which windows are broken, and other liberal proceedings taken; the mobs are dis- persed by the military and gens- d'armes, and picqnets stationed in the neighbourhood of houses declared to be attacked, all night. The eldest son of the King of SPAIN is styled by the suite " Prince of ASTURIAS," the second title in the Spanish Royal Family, The Prince is a youth sixteen years of age, and with his brothers, Dons JOHN and FERDINAND, is to be instructed in English. The Duke of WELLINGTON and Count LUDOLPH, the Sicilian Minister, whose Court refuses to acknowledge ISABEL II., visited the Royal exiles, during the stay of the King at Gloucester Lodge; and M. CASTELLO, the ex- Spanish Consul, and his Lady are still frequent visitants there. We are glad to hear that Earl BATHURST is very much better. His Lordship has suffered very severely. We understand that the reigning Houses of Italy connected with the Spanish Bourbons, have entered into a protest against the suc- cesssion of the female line in Spain, and that the Duke of LUCCA is charged to present it to the Emperor of AUSTRIA, and to request his opinion and mediation. Major- General PILKINGTON'S death makes a vacancy in the post of Colonel- Commandant of Engineers, which, it is said, will be filled by Sir FREDERICK MULCASTER. Mr. BARRETT, the Editor ofthe Pilot, was released last week from Kilmainhain Jail, after an imprisonment of six months. The Ghent Messenger has an extract from a paper, called L'Industrie, which announces the intention of the Clergy of Ostend to revive an old custom, and go in grand procession to bless the sea. As it observes, this proceeding, equal in absurdity to the marriages, in other days of the Venetian Doges, is not well suited to the times. The only object we can see in such a measure is the providing for all good Roman Catholics an inexhaustible quantity of EAU BENITE. THE BISHOP OF LONDON.— The Bishop of LONDON, attended by Prebendaries HALE, WATTS, PARKER, and WODSWORTH, held a Visitation at St. Paul's Cathedral on Monday morning, which was most numerously attended by the City Clergy; an appropriate sermon was delivered from the text, " Be ye wise as serpents, and harmless as doves," by the Rev. Dr. RUSSELL, Rector of Bishops- gate ; after which the Bishop, attended by his Clergy, delivered in the chapel of the Cathedral an admirable Charge, in which he adverted to the evils of non- residence and pluralities, and the unequal distribution of the Ecclesiastical revenues, the rights of the Clergy to those revenues, and the just appropriation of them without spoliation. After the consecration of St. George's Church, Macclesfield, on Tuesday last, a cold collation was set out in the Town Hall, to. which the Lord Bishop of CHESTER was invited. About two hun- dred of the most respectable gentlemen in the town were present, and in the course of the day his Lordship embraced the oppor- tunity of publicly stating that the Declaration attributed to His MAJESTY, and first published in the Standard and the St. James's Chronicle, WAS CORRECTLY REPORTED. " That Declaration ( con- tinued his Lordship) HE HIMSELF HAD THE PRIDE AND SATISFACTION OF HEARING FROM HIS MAJESTY'S LIPS; and it had been conveyed to the public IN SUCH PRECISE TERMS that it had astonished him." This announcement was received with deafening applause, which continued for several minutes. The King of FRANCE, CHARLES the Tenth, the Duke d'ANOou- LEME, and the Duke de BADE, are at Toplitz. The Duchess d'A^ GOULEME and Mademoiselle are at Carlsbad. There has been circulated by all the papers a ridiculous story about Lady DUCKETT, the widow of Sir GEORGE DUCKETT the banker, hav- ing fo. ind a parcel of valuable papers. Sir GEORGE has no widow,, seeing that he is alive. Accounts from Hanover say that the Duke and Duchess of CAM- BRIDGE will visit the Baths in Bohemia this summer, and remain there a long time. It is reported that the Duke and Duchess of CUMBERLAND are expected at Pyrmont. The Wurtemburg Gazette of the 3d inst. annqunces that the Duchess of OLDENBURGH lias been safely delivered of a Prince, and that on the occasion of his baptism the Constitution will be proclaimed. The late Lord ARUNDEL, who expired at Rome on the 21st ult., was the tenth Baron ARUNDEL, of Wardour, and brother- in- law to the Duke of BUCKINGHAM, having married Lady MARYANN GREN- VILLE NUGENT TEMPLE, only daughter of the first Marquis of BUCK- INGHAM. His Lordship was a Count of the Holy Roman Empire, and F. S. A. As liis Lordship has died without issue the title devolves on his next brother, the Hon. HENRY BENEDICT ARUNDEL, now Lord ARUNDEL. The late Peer, we believe, was the only Roman Catholic Nobleman who entertained Conservative principles. His Lordship broke up his establishment at Wardour Castle some time since, and retired to the Continent. We understand, says the Edinburgh Evening Post, that the salaries of the Judges in the Court of Session are to be increased— those of the heads of the two Inner Courts to 5,0001. each, and those of the other Judges to 3,000.— all the Judges to do duty as Lords of Session, Justiciary, and Jury Court. It is also proposed, we believe, that any Judge, of the age of 75, and who has done duty for fifteen years, shall' be allowed to retire on full salary. We think the following Judges may, and very likely will, avail themselves of this privilege, viz:— Lord President HOPE, Lords GLENLEE, BALGRAY, GILLIES, and" CRINGLETIE. This would make room for a famous scramble amongs the Whig Lawers. Montreal papers to the 5th of June inclusive, state that up to that period emigration continued unchecked, nearly 10,000 having arrived out, and that if the losses, which have been almost unprecedented, had not occurred that number would have been increased to 11,000. A petition from the Clergy, gentry and inhabitants of the Isle of Wight, with 1,800 signatures, in favour of the existing connection between Church and State, was presented to the Lords on Tuesday night by the Earl of MALMESBURY. Mr. St. JOHN LONG, the rubbing painter, died on Friday, the 4th inst., after a lingering illness of nearly two years. The monument to be erected to the memory of Dr. DOYLE will bear the following inscription— his own dictation:—" Hie JACET J. K. L." The Dungarvan Election Committee has decided that Mr. JACOBS was duly elected to sit in Parliament for the borough of Dungarvan, and that the petition against his return was neither frivolous or vexatious. A boat, which has been identified as belonging to the Thais packet, was lately found on the coast of Galway, Ireland, high and dry on some rocks a short distance from the land. As the Thais has not been heard of for some months, this discovery leaves little doubt as to- the fate of that vessel. Mr. HILL, of the Midland Circuit ( who so much distinguished him- self in the " Who is the Traitor" case), Mr. ERLE, of the Western, and Mr. THESSIGER, of the Home, have been made King's Counsel. The omission of Mr. PLATT'S name in this list, and the placing his junior on the Circuit over his head, is a matter of much surprise and animadversion. The motives to which this circumstance is attributed are such as, in the present sensitive state of some of our legal func- tionaries, it would not be prudent or perhaps safe to allude to* 222 especially hoping, as we do, that they are erroneous. If theY are correct, they form the most formidable attack upon the independence of the Bar which has been for a long time heard of, and cannot, in that case, rest unexplained.— Morning Paper. A letter from Lisbon states that Don MIGUEL protested, as soon as he arrived op board of the British frigate at Sines, declaring that force alone had obliged him to sign the paper which appeared in the Chronica, and that he did not yield up the right which the laws of the Monarchy gave him to the throne. He also protested against the intimation made to him of its being intended to send him to the island of Gozo, near Malta. Itis added that PALMELLA, accompanied by the British Minister and Admiral PARKER, went on board of the frigate whilst yet in Cascaes Bay, to persuade Don MIGUEL to with- draw his protest, which he refused to do. Sir J. MORDAUXT, Bart., is about to be united to Miss MURRAY, daughter of the Bishop of ROCHESTER, and niece to the Earl of KINNOUL.— It is confidently rumoured, that Mr. COCKERELL, ( son and heir of Sir CHARLES COCKERELL, Bart.) is about to be united to the Hon. Miss FOLEY, sister of Lord FOLEY. On Thursday was married, at St. George's Church, Hanover- square, the Viscount MAHON, only son of Earl STANHOPE, to EMILY, . daughter of Major- General. Sir EDWARD KERRISON, Bart., M. P. The ceremony was performed by the Right Hon. and Rev. Lord BAYNING, and a select party of the respective families breakfasted in Stanhope- street, from whence the happy pair set off for Chevening, the seat of Earl STANHOPE. THE NEW POLICE.— The Middlesex Grand Jury, on bringing into Court their last presentments, took occasion to bear testimony to the general good conduct of the police who had been examined by them, and to the zeal, activity, and shrewdness which several of them had displayed in tracing out cases of crime, and bringing them home to the perpetrators. Accounts from Demerara state that the Commissioners appointed for that colony, nnder the Slavery Abolition Act, for ascertaining the average prices at which slaves were sold, from the 1st of J anuary, 1823, to the 31st December, 1830, had reported the price at 1161. Mr. PENDARVES, M. P., has been approved by his MAJESTY as Recorder of Falmouth. The Bristol Journal says:— " Most of our readers who are acquainted with Bath are aware that the column which was began in Laura- place, as a memorial to future generations of the passing of the Reform Bill, has not now one stone left upon another, and from the following significant note in yesterday's Bath Herald we think Lord G REY has very little chance of his promised piece of plate:—* A correspondent, who states that he was a contributor to the subscription set on foot in this city at the passing of the Reform Bill, for the purpose of presenting a piece of plate to Earl GREY, is anxious to know what has become of that fund, in whose hands it is placed, and why it is not accounted for?' " So much for the Reformers of Bath. Next comes the following from Edinburgh :— " THE REFORM MONUMENT.— At length the parties concerned in this mysterious affair have ventured into the light, not, however, till • we had left them no alternative. Week after week we have demanded an explanation as to the manner in which the funds contributed towards the erection of a Reform Monument had been managed, and what had become of them. That explanation has been made tardily and reluctantly. And what does it amount to ? We are intormed by an advertisement in the Scotsman of Wednesday last that the money subscribed being inadequate for the purpose in view, it will be returned to the contributors ! Why was this not done twelve months ago ? Of course nobody will apply for their penny subscrip- tions, and the money will remain where it is. It will then fall to be, in some sort, public property : not that we should have anything to do with it; but we trust it will be sent to some charitable institution, in which event we shall be happy to admit that the original sub- scribers have been instrumental m doing, contrary to their intentions, a public good. But, after all, what does this melancholy short- coming in the Reform funds prove ? It surely shows that the Reformers are a mere handful of persons, or at least that they care nothing for that Bill which they consider so great a boon to the people. The people ! what an ungrateful people ! Not subscribe four hundred pounds to commemorate the glorious triumph of Reform, the means of their emancipation from the grinding oppression of the boroughmongers ! Oh, monstrous! the thing is not to be believed ! Posterity will say that it is a fiction of the Tories, a joke of the Evening Post! '' Tistrue, ' tis pity, pity ' tis'tis true ;' or rather it is the very reverse of a pity !"— Edinburgh Evening Post. It is a strking illustration of the contradictory nature of the spirit of the times, that the very men who profess to be endeavouring to abolish imprisonment for debt, are, at the same time, the most stren- uous advocates for the New Poor Bill, which, it has been aptly observed, is intended principally to legalize imprisonment for povertym " We are assured," says the Constitutional, " that the squadron assembled at Toulon, and which is destined to act in the Levant, has just received notice of its speedy departure." The Tribunal of the First Instance, at Paris, has just decided that the marriage of a Frenchman with a foreign woman is to be regulated by the French law, even though the Frenchman subsequently to the marriage had fixed his domicile in the foreign country where he had contracted such marriage. It will therefore be necessary for English ladies about to marry Frenchmen to understand exactly what the law of France is upon this subject. A novel method of swindling was practised at Grimbsy, last week, by a w ell known character named " DICK KING," who went to the house of Mr. SCOTT, and informed him his father had fallen down dead in the street. Mr. SCOTT was at the time taking breakfast, bnt this intelligence shocked him so much that he gave it to KING who instead of helping him to mourn, helped himself to the meal. As he had received nothing on starting, Mr. SCOTT gave him five shil- lings, and immediately himself proceeded to Gainsborough with all possible speed; but on arriving there, instead of meeting " his father's corse borne to the grave," hej met him alive and well, pur- suing his daily avocations. A fatal accident occurred at Brighton on Friday week. Mr. KELLY, Adjutant of the 1st Dragoons, was proceeding on horseback over the Downs, from the Cavalry barracks to Lower Roek Gardens, when by some accident he lost his, seat, and fell to the ground, it is presumed, in a fit. Unhappily, his foot being in the stirrup, he was dragged a considerable distance before the horse could be stopped. He was at length rescued in a dreadfully mutilated state, and expired in the course of that afternoon. The hero of Navarino has completed his job— the Committee ap- pointed for the purpose have recommended a grant of 60,0001. to be distributed among the officers, seamen, and marines who were present at that untoward event— of which, we believe, the Admiral himself sacks a third or thereabouts. The Chief Justice of the Common Pleas very properly fined a Jury- man 101., on Monday last, for leaving the box and going home during a trial in that Court. The Paris Constitutionnelstates Marshal SOULT to have successfully opposed the appointment of the Duke DECAZES to the Governorship of Algiers. The Courier mentions the report that intelligence reached [ Paris on Tuesday of the British squadron having returned JOHN BULL from Nauplia to Malta. The ( Juotidienne states the Sicilian Am- bassador, Prince BLTERA, to have remonstrated with the French Government upon the Journal des Vebats' late article on the Qua- dripartite Treaty, in which the King of NAPLES'S approaching acces- sion to the alliance is announced, and to have been answered that the said Journal was not an official one. According to letters from Rome of the 24th ult. the POPE was about to visit the Legations. Captain DEVAUX, a French officer who held a high command in the troops of Persia and of the Pasha of Bagdad, has died at Kermanshah, poisoned, it is said, by the Commandant of that district. Further accounts from Madrid to the 29th represent the approaching cholera to have caused such alarm that it was thought the Cortes would not meet on the appointed day, as the Proceres were fleeing, and the Procuradors from the non- infected provinces were likely to keep away. By advices from Bayonne of the 3d inst. two thousand of Rodil's troops are stated to have passed through Vittoria, on their way to Alava and Navarra. The united Carlist Juntas had issued a Proclamation declaring that a French intervention was not to be dreaded, the Northern Powers having entered their protest against it. The Moniteur publishes a circular letter of Louis PHILIPPE to the Bishops of France, desiring them to celebrate a mass on the 27th in commemoration of the " illustrious victims" who fell in the " glorieuses journees." A Swiss paper gives an account of a great Musical Festival which has taken place at Sulgen. The number of performers, vocal and instrumental, exceeded 1,000. The Choral Society of Thurgovia alone amounted to 700. Amongst the spectators attracted by this interesting meeting were the Queen HORTENSE and Prince LUCIEN BONAPARTE. It is understood that his MAJESTY" is extremely anxious to remove the impression so generally entertained by the Yeomanry Officers of their having been slighted and treated unhandsomely by the paltry curtailment of their allowances, and those of their men, which the short- sighted economy of the Thimble- rig Ministry forced upon the country, and upon those honest men who have volunteered their services to assist in upholding its sacred institutions. An elderly gentleman of the name of LOWDELL, residing in the Ken- nington- road, on Tuesday night put a period to his existence by deliberately bleeding himself in the arm. He was a person in affluent circumstances, and no cause can be assigned at present for the rash act. i THE QUARTER'S REVENUE.— The usual official tables of the state of the Revenue for the last quarter were made up on Saturday night. As compared with the preceding financial year, there appears an advantage in favour of this to the amount of .390,2361., and upon the quarter also a favourable excess of 350,952]. The Customs are more productive this quarter than the same period last year by 414,2051, though upon the whole year they are deficient 116,4771- The Excise, upon the other hand, exceeds the receipts of last year by 353,0361. though, upon a comparison of quarters, it shows less by 151,0761. The income from stamps is uniformly more productive than last year, the excess in the case of the year being 148,7671., and upon the quarter 38,5041-. Taxes have increased upon the quarter 3,7641., but decreased upon the year by 121,4001. The revenue arising from the Post- office shows a decrease of 70001., upon the quarter, but an increase of 50001. upon the whole year. Those taxes classed as Mis- cellaneous present a decrease upon the year and quarter, in the one of 21,6241. and in the other of 3,7401. The amount of Exchequer bills required to meet the charge on the Consolidated Fund for the coming quarter is estimated at 6,852,6011. The increase of Stamp duties arises not from any increase in the legitimate source of that branch of the revenue, but from the mileage duties paid by the numerous stage- coaches and omnibuses, and from the revenues which were formerly under the charge of the Hackney- coach office, in Essex- street, having been transferred to Somerset House. On Friday evening about seven hundred males and females, friends and supporters of Sir Edward Sugden, were regaled in the malting and yard of Mr. Comings, at the back of St. Peter's College. The Cambridge band was in attendance, and after tea dancing com- menced. The evening passed off with much spirit and good humour. Mr. S. Rice's friends gave a similar party on Tuesday, on Mr. Warwicker's extensive premises, under the cognomen of " Barnwell Festival."— Cambridge Chronicle. That industrious and philanthropic personage Joseph Ady, who knows of " something advantageous" to every body, has recently addressed letters to the trustees or ministers of all the Dissenting congregations in this city, informing them that by paying a sovereign each, he can tell them liow they may obtain 101. for each congrega- tion annually for ever. This was certainly a very tempting offer, but the persons to whom Joseph addressed his letters doubting his " sovereign remedy," have not troubled themselves to answer him. — Worcester Journal. On Sunday morning last, as a waggoner was proceeding on his' journey towards Bath, he discovered on the road a small bankers' parcel, apparently dropped from the Devonport mail, which had passed shortly before.; the man immediately made inquiries, and ascertained the rightful owners, who rewarded his honesty with the munificent sum of two- pence !!.' The following is an extract from a letter dated Montreal, June 9, 1834:—" We are all afraid that the inquiry into the state of the province will end in leaving us as we were. It will be a victory to the clique, who are already proclaiming their triumph. Certain it is that if nothing more is required of the House of Assembly than to make the Judges independent ( and this appears to be the sum of Mr. Stanley's speech), he might as well not have troubled himself about us. He made strange mistakes in his speech, such as Lord Aylmer advancing 70001. of his own money, that the mutation fines to the Seminary are 25 per cant, instead of l- 12th or 8 6- 3d per cent, ( for which 5 per cent, is always accepted), and several others of which the clique avail themselves. If nothing better than is gene- rally expected takes place all the elections will go in favour of the clique. The import trade of the country is ill the most abject state. The quantity of timber left in the woods, from the want of spring freshets, is very considerable, and its price much enhanced by the monopolising spirit of one house. From the lower ports we have accounts of still larger defalcations in the quantity of lumber brought down." A vonng couple in this city, who had been duly " c • lied in Church" and the happy day appointed, met on the evening of Saturday last, for the settlement of some necessary preliminaries, when a few words occurring ( that great sonrce from which mischief ever will arise), he asserted his lordly authority, rather before his time, and knocked his intended bride down. This, of course, she took in great dudgeon, and, on the Sunday morning, having another offer, as early as cir- ; cumstanees would permit a licence was procured, and " for better and for worse" she was on Monday united to one whom she hoped wonkl prove a gentler mate.— Ejcetir Post. I July IS. ECCLESIASTICAL INTELLIGENCE. PREFERMENTS AND APPOINTMENTS. The Rev. WILLIAM TROLLOPE, M. A. of Pemhroke College, Cam- bridge, and late one of the Classical Masters- of Christ's Hospital, has been nominated to the Vicarage of Great Wigstcm, Leicestershire,, in the patronage of th « Governor of that institution. The Rev. THOMAS BCTLER, of Shrewsbury, has been instituted by the Archbishop of York, to the Rectory of Eangar, in the county of Nottingham, on the presentation of the Crowm. The Lord Bishop of Leighlm and Ferns has appointed the Rev. SOLOMAN RICHARDS to the Prebend of Clone, in the diocese of Ferns, vacant by the death of the- Rev. Mark Charters. The Marquess of Hertford has appointed the Rev. R. HILL, Curate of Ballinderry, to the living of Aughbagallon, vacant by the death of the Rev. John Gortlin. The Rev. JOHN S. WAGSTAFFE, M. A., Curate of Wycomb- cum- Chadwall, Lincolnshire* has been presented to- the Wednesday Lec- tureship at Grantham, void by the decease of theRev. W. P. Thack- ray. patrons— the Mercers' Company of London. OBITUARY. On Thursday, aged 72, at. Bromyard, the Rev. David Evans, formerly for many years Master of the Grammar School, in that town. Suddenly, in London, the Rev. Joseph Dear, late of Chelwood House, Somerset. On the 20th lilt, aged 71, the Rev. Thomas Gaskell, Incmnljent of Newton Heath. He was a gentleman beloved and respected by all who knew him, con- spicuous for the variety and extent of his charities, and an exemplary parish priest. Rev. Paul Whittingham, 2o years Minor Canon of Norwich Cathedral; Vicar of Martham, Norfolk ; Rector of St. Saviour, Norwich ; Vicar of Pedgford, Nor- folk ; and Rector of Baddingbaaj, Suffolk. UNIVERSITY INTELLIGENCE. OXFORD, July 12.— Saturday the Rev. H. R. Harrison, M, A. of Lincoln, was elected Fellaw ; Monday Mr. E.. Wells was admitted Actual Fellow of New College. A t Winchester College, on Wednesday, the following were placed on the highest part of the roll, for the successions at New College:— Messrs. Price, Hall, Upton, Lee, Tripp, Jarvies, Bathurst, Bedford, and Baker. Same day the following prize compositions were recited:— Gold Medals: English Essay, " Dead Counsellors, are safest!" A. W. BAKER, Commoner. Carmen Latinum, " Lex data in Monte Sina;" N. DARNELL, on the foundation.— Silver Medals: Oratio Latina, " Cicero in M. Anconium;" W. DARNELL, on the foundation. English Speech, " iEschmes against CtesiphonJ. STORY, Com- moner. ORDINATIONS. At the parish Church of St. George, Hanovei- square, in the county of Middlesex, on Sunday, the 22d of June, the following gentlemen- were ordained by the Lord Bishop of Carlisle, by letters dimissory from the Bishop of Ely -.— Deacons: Hon. W. T. Law, M. A., W. M. Oliver, M. A., and C. Shorting, B. A., St. Peter's coll. Camb. I W. H. Molineux, M. A., Clare hall Camb.,- J. Mills, B. A., Pem- broke coll. Camb.; A. N. Bull, B. A., Sidney Sussex coll. Camb.; C. Chichester, S. C. L., Downing coll. Camb. j F. L. Bazeley, B. A.,. Queens' coll. Camb.— Priests: W. P. Baily, B. A., Clare hall Camb ; W. Brooke, B. A., King's coll. Camb. ; J. W. Blakesley, M. A., J. Hailstone, B. A., and T. H. Steel, M. A., Trinity coll. Camb.; T. Gaskin, B. A., Jesus coll. Camb.; J. Hymers, M. A., G. Lang- shaw, M. A., C. Merivale, B. A., G. A. Selwyn, B. A., C. Yate, M. A., and W. Pound, B. A., St. John's coll. Camb,; W. D. Range- ley, M. A., Queen's coll. Oxford; H. Smith, B. A., Pembroke coll. Camb. The Archbishop of YORK intends to hold a general Ordination at Bishopthorpe, on Sunday, the 2d of August. Candidates are to send their papers on or before the 18th July, and to appear at the Palace personally, by ten in the morning, on the 31st. The Lord Bishop of BATH and WELLS will hold an Ordination at Wells on Sunday the 19th of October next. Candidates are required to send in their papers to the Registrar of the Diocese by the 19th of September. The examination will commence at the Pal& ce on Thursday morning, the 16th October, at 10 o'clock. MISCELLANEOUS. HUNTINGDON.— On Thursday 1 he Lord Bishop of LINCOLN con- firmed in the churches of All Saints and St. Mary in this town, when 636 males and females were admitted to the rite of confirmation. On the following day the Clergy of the Diocese underwent his Lordship's triennial visitation, when an impressive sermon was delivered by the Rev. Mr. WHALL, of Thurning. His Lordship's charge to the Clergy- was an elaborate composition, as remarkable for the elegance of its diction as for the soundness of its views aiid arguments. It took nearly an hour in delivery, and was listened to with unwearied attention and delight by a crowded Church. A meeting of the Clergy, lay members and friends of the United Church of England and Ireland, residing in the Deanery of Hawkes- bury, in the Diocese of Gloucester, was held at Chipping Sodbury last week, when an Address, thanking his MAJESTY for his gracious Declaration to the Bishops, was unanimously agreed to. The meeting was attended by about 200 of the Clergy, principal Gentry, and Yeomanry of the neighbourhood, Sir BETHEL CODRINGTON, Bart, in the Chair. He strongly reprobated the conduct of any Minister of the Crown who would endeavour to obtain his MAJESTY'S assent to a Bill for the despoiling of the Irish Church. SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE.— The usual half yearly meeting of the members of this venerable and excellent Society, residing in the Nottingham district., was held iu the vestry of St. Peter's Church, on Wednesday week ( the Venerable Arch- deacon WILKINS in the Chair), when it was announced that the So- ciety had placed the sum of 40001. at the disposal of the Foreign Translation Committee, for the purpose of promoting the circula- tion of the Holy Scriptures and versions of the English Liturgy in foreign languages. This important information was accompanied with a request to the Committee to solicit subscriptions in aid of this very desirable object. In consequence of this communication the meeting adopted the resolution of making known this circumstance to the members resident in the district, and of taking effectual steps to obtain subscriptions in furtherance of this laudable design. The Lord Bishop of this diocese has been engaged during the pre- sent week in consecrating several new churches. On Monday his Lordship consecrated St. John's Church, Bollington; on Tuesday, St. George's Church, Macclesfield; on Wednesday, the new church a t Bullocksmitliy: and on Friday, St. John's Church, Smallbridge, Rochdale.— Manchester Courier. The new church at Shildon, calculated to contain 1300 persons, was opened for divine worship on Sunday last by license from the Lord Bishop of DURHAM. The Rev. Mr. MANISTY, Curate of the new chapeliy, officiated on the occasion. HARROW SCHOOL.— The Governor's Scholarships for this year have been awarded to Mr. THOMAS FASSETT KENT, son of THOMAS KENT, Esq., formerly of Trinity College, Oxford, and step- son of the Lord Bishop of LONDON; and Mr. CHARLES T. WILSON, son of HORACE H. WILSON, Esq., Professor of Sanscrit in the University of Oxford. On Wednesday week the Lord Bishop of BATH and WELLS held his triennial visitation at the Abbey Church, Bath, and prior to which his Lordship confirmed 440 young persons of both sexe3. The ser- mon was preached by the Rev. J. PEARS. His Lordship, in con- cluding his charge to the Clergy, observed, " That a dark cloud still hung over the Church ; a love of change and a spirit of insubordina- tion were too extensively prevalent; that respect for constituted authority, and that attachment for the venerable institutions of the land which distinguished the Englishmen of former days, had lost their ancient influence. It was for the Clergy to meet the feeling of the times with an unshaken constancy tempered with brotherly for- bearance." Thejparishioners of Ross lately presented their late Curate, the Rev. THOMAS UNDERWOOD, jun., M. A., with three superb silver salvers, each having a suitable inscription engraved thereon, as a lasting mark of their respect for his public and private character, and of ilie grateful sense they entertain of his valuable services, during a period of nearly nine years. Dr. LUSHINGTON has given it as his opinion that missionary meet- ings held in churchfes, without authority from the Crown or diocesan, are illegal. The proposed Wesleyan Methodist College hasbeen put an end to, at least for the present, by a vote of the quarterly meeting ot the London North Circuit. Mr. LESSEY presided. The project was opposed by the Rev. H. MOORE, as a departure from the simplicity of Methodism; Mr. RICHARD SMITH, son- in- law of the late Dr. ADAM CLARKE, also opposed it. . The Right Rev. the Lord Bishop of LINCOLN, accompanied by the Venerable the Archdeacon, held his Triennial Visitation iu Leices- ter on Tuesday and Wednesday last. The attendance of the Clergy and churchwardens was more than usually ntimerous. The Rev. Mr, HUMFREY, Rector of Laughton, preached before his Lordship and the Clergy on Tuesday; and the Rev. Mr. LIEVRE, Rector of Little Ash by, on Wednesday. His Lordship delivered a very im- pressive charge, in which he entered extensively upon the subject July 13. JOHN BULL. of Chnrcfc property— the< varions projects now in agitation for Church ! Jn 8vo. new edit, improve'), 8s. Iif- hd, Reform— tlie claim's preferred bv the Dissenters, their grievances, < fec. j " KILEMEXTS of PRACTICAL BOOK- KEEPING, by SING LE Thursday the County Meeting of the Societies tor Promoting JUi M;? ENTRY; according to present Practice. W ith Prnc- ' Christian Knowledge, " and for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, took plaice at the Guildhall. After a powerful sermon preached by the Rev. Dr. FANCOURT, at St. Martin's, a collection of 40). and upwards, was announced to the members, who returned to the Hall to transact the business of the Society, when the Bishop of the Diocese presided. The Rev. A. IRVINE, one of the joint Secre- taries, read a report of the proceedings during the last year, shewing the interests of tlie Societies to be in a flourishing state in this county. The Members then adjourned to the Three_ Crowns Hotel, where they partook of a splendid dinner, crowned with great good humour, and with the expression of sentiments highly honourable to those who uttered them, and most strikingly distinguished for their warm and inextinguishable attachment to the Established Church. C. W. PACKE, Esq. the Lay Steward, as Chairman of the Meeting, presided with the utmost urbanity, and his sentiments highly honour- able to him as an English gentleman, were welcomed with the most cordial applause. We were happy to see in the company not only many Clergymen, but most of the gentlemen of distinction, both in the town and county ; and were particularly gratified to see the Mayor aud many of the Aldermen and other Members of the Cor- poration come publicly forward in support of these Societies. In these times of rebuke and indignity to our National Church such a sight is most gratifying, and proves in our opinion, incontestibly, that Britons will still be true to thoir Church and KING, and that Terms. By JAMES . pres tical Exercises, and an explanation of Commercial MORRISON*. To correspond with the ahove, MORRISON'S FOUR SETS of BLANK BOOKS, ruled. By the same Author, CONCISE SYSTEM of'COMMERCIAL ARITHMETIC, adapted to modern Practice : designed as a Text- Book for Schools. 3d edit. 4s. 6d. bd. KEY to the above, ( is. bd. London : Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green and Longman. " Gon will preserve the right."— Leicester Journal. The intere *-' c 1— ' formed in St Rev. R. W. ALMOXO, M. A. Rector. The young man who has'thus openly renounced the errors of Judaism, is a native of Soljevi, in Poland: his Jewish name is JACOB LAZARUS, to which that of JAMES was added in liis Christian baptism. He has been carefully examined in the doctrines and principles of Christianity by several Clergymen and gentlemen, who do not entertain the slightest doubt as to" the sincerity of his conversion to the saving truths of the Gospel.— Nottingham Journal. EAST- RIDING VISITATION*.—- The very Rev. Archdeacon WKA. VG- HAM held his visitation on Thursday, at Beverley. The sermon was delivered in St. Mary's Ghurch, by the Rev. Mr. CARTER, Vicar of Bainton, after whicli the Clergy, d'C. adjourned to the cliancel, where the Archdeacon delivered his charge. It was a very moderate and conciliatory address, and breathed a spirit of ardent attachment to the Church; and he impressed upon the Clergy by whom he was sur- rounded the necessity of diligence and pastoral care towards their re- spective charges, we were sorry to see that the Rev. Gentleman was suffering under indisposition, so much so as to render him several times inaudible. After the charge the Churchwardens for the several parishes were sworn in. The parish of Holy Trinity, Hull, was reserved until the last, when an application was made by Mr. ROBINSON, on the part of Mr. MOXON, who was se- cond on the poll at the election, to have thet gentleman sworn in. He founded his application on the ground that the candidate " who had the greatest number of votes, polled several who were not eligible to vote, and these being deducted from the gross numbers, left Mr. MOXON a considerable majority. _ A protest, signed by Mr. Moxon and another, was also put in. On the other side, it was argued that the candidate first on the poll had been declared duly elected by the Chairman of the meeting ; that the return had been signed in the usual form by the Vicar, and countersigned by the vestry clerk. The arguments on both sides were very ingenious, and at considerable length. Mr. MOXON, in his protest., intimated his intention of applying to the Court of King's Bench, for a mandamus, should the other party be sworn in, and tile official at length decided that there was so much doubt that at pre- sent he wonla not swearin either applicant; but unless Mr. MOXON should, by the lath November, obtain a mandamus, then he would swear m the other party applying. The following Addresses and Petitions were presented to the King at the Levee on Wednesday last:— By the Archbishop of Canterbury— From the Clergy of the Deanery of Taunton ; the Clergy of the Archdeaconry of Salop; the Clergy of the Archdeaconry of Derby ; the parishes of East Brent and Soutli Brent, Hutton ancf Locking, Weston Super- Weall, and I- Iuntspill, county of Somerset; Eling, county of Southampton ; Coleshill, Warwickshire; Danley Wiske, North Riding, York; St. Nicholas, Cork; St. Mary, Shaiidon, Cork; Abbey Stowey, county of Cork; the Presbytitv of Garioch, Scotland; parish of Bewillochar, Aber- deenshire, aid the parish of Bourtie, Aberdeenshire, humbly expressive of gratitude for his Majesty's determination to support the United Church of England and Ireland, and praying his Majesty's continued protection. The Earl of Falmouth— From the gentry and inhabitants of Fal- mouth and its vicinity, expresssing their alarm for the safety of the Protestant Establishment, and assuring the King that his Majesty's declaration as recently delivered to the Prela tes, nas filled them with admiration and gratitude. A similar address from the town of Pen- zance and its vicinity ; and a similar address from the parish of Lawenhitton, in Cornwall. Lord Saltoun— From the Lord Lieutenant, Deputy Lieutenants, and landholders of the county of Aberdeen, in favour " of the Church, as by law established. Mr. Herbert— From South Wilts, in favour of the Established Church. Viscount Cole, M. P., and Mr. Mervyn Archdall, M. P.— From the High Sheriftj nobility, gentry, Clergy and Protestants of the county of Fermanagh, to thank his Majesty for his gracious declaration to the Bishops, in support of the Established Church, and to declare their unshaken loyalty. Lord Prudhoe— From Chillingham, county of Northumberland, thanking his Majesty for the avowal of his sentiments to the Bishops, and prayer to his Majesty, to preserve the alliance between Church and State ; and from the parishes of Alnwick, Shillbottle, Lesbury, Loughoughton, Alwinton, Holystone, and Belford, county of North- umberland, thanking his Majesty for his gracious declaration to the Bishops, and prayer to his Majesty to preserve the rights and privileges of the Church, and to sanction no change which might endanger its efficacy. The Marquess of Exeter— From the borough of Stamford, to thank his Majesty for the declaration of his Majesty's determination to support the Established Church in its full integrity. Earl of Westmorland— From Thranston and its vicinity, in the county of Northampton, expressing thanks to his Majesty for his gracious declaration of supporting the Church. Earl Amherst— From the Archdeaconry and Clergy of Middlesex and Essex, expressing their dutiful acknowledgments to the King for his Majesty's most gracious and repeated assurances of protection to the Church. The Earl of Winchilsea— From the inhabitants of Tenby and its vicinity; Leigh, county of Stafford ; Sebergham, county of Carlisle ; and Ahenagli, county of Cork; expressing their attachment to the United Church, thanking his Majesty for his reply to the address of the Prelates and Clergy of the United Church, and avowing their determination to use every endeavour in their power to support his Majesty in the execution ofthose resolutions. Mr. William Miles— From the inhabitants of the south- eastern part of the county of Somerset, testifying their deep sense of gratitude to his Majesty for the assurance of his determination to maintain invio- late the integrity of the Church. Mr. Blackstone, M. P.— From the Mayor and Corporation of Wailingford, thanking his Majesty for his declaration to the Arch- bishops and Bishops in support of the Church. Earl Cawdor— From the inhabitants of the parish of Narberth, thanking his Majesty for his gracious declaration in favour of the Established Church Earl Grosvenor— From the town of Congleton, county of Chester, expressing gratitude to his Majesty for his determination to main- tain the Established religion of the State. DR. BUTLER'S ATLASSliS. GEOGRAPHY, & c. In Svo. price 12s. half- bound, ATLAS of MODERN GEOGRAPHY, consisting of Twenty- three coloured Maps, with Index. By S. BUTLER, D. D., Archdeacon of Uerby, Head Master of Shrewsbury School. A- c. By the same Author, ATLAS of ANCIENT GEOGRAPHY, consisting of Twenty- one coloured Maps, with an accentuated Index. Svo. 12s. half- hd. GENERAL ATLAS of ANCIENT and MODERN GEOGRAPHY. Forty- four coloured Maps and two indexes. 4to. 24s. hf.- bd. %* The latitude and longitude are given in the Indexes. OUTLINE COPY- BOOKS, adapted to the Atlasses. SKETCH of . MODERN and ANCIENT GEOGRAPHY; for Schools. 8to. new edit. 9s. bds. PRAXIS on the LATIN PREPOSITIONS. 8fo. 4th edit. 6s. 6d. bd » . KEY to the same. 8vo. 6s. bds. London : Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman. LIND. LEY MURRAY'S ELEMENTARY WORKS, New Editions, with the author's last Corrections. Tg^ NGLISH GRAMMAR; comprehending the Principles and u i Rules of the Language, illustrated by appropriate Exercises, and a Key to the Exercises. 2 vols. 8vo. 21s. bds. ENGLISH GHAMMAR. 12mo. 4s. bd. ABRIDGMENT of the ENGLISH GRAMMAR. Is. bd. ENGLISH EXERCISES, adapted to the English Grammar. 2s. 6d. bd. KEY to the ENGLISH EXERCISES. 2s. 6d. bd. The Exercises and Key in one volume. 4s. fid. bd. INTRODUCTION to the ENGLISH READHR, or a Selection of Prose and Poetrv. etc. 3s. bd. ENGLISH READER, or Pieces in Prose and Poetry, from the best Writers. 4s. tid. bd. SEQUEL to the ENGLISH READER, or Elegant Selections in Prose and Poetry. 4s. fid. bd. INTRODUCTION an LECTEUR FRANCOIS; on Recueil des Pieces choisies ; avee PExplication des Idiotismes et des Phrases difficiles. 3s. 6d. bd. LECTEUR FRANCOIS; ou Recueil des Pieces, en Prose et en Vers, tirees des Meilleurs Ecrivaius, pourservira perfeetionner dans la Lecture. 5s. bd. ENGLISH SPELLING BOOK, with Reading Lessons, adapted for Children. Is. 6d. bd. FIRST BOOK for Children, fid. sewed. London: Longman, Rees, Orine, and Co.; and Darton and Harvey. York: Wilson and Sons. Of whoin may be had, LIFE of LINDLEY MURRAY, bv Himself. 8vo. 9s. GRAMMATICAL QUESTIONS, ' adapted to Murray's Grammar. By C. Bradley, A. M. 2s. 6d. bd. FIRST LESSONS in ENGLISH GRAMMAR ; designed as an Introduction to Murray's Grammar Abridged. 9( 1. CHEAP WINES AND SPIRITS. lO PRIVATE FAMILIES and ECONOMISTS.— W. MOULS thankfully acknowledges the extraordinary Increase of Business which his System of Trade has already secured to him, and begs to submit tl^ following List of prices to a discriminating Public :— Tc PORTS. Per Doz. Excellent, from the Wood 24s Old Crusted ditto . .. 28s Superior, very fine, 5 yrs bottled 34s Very curieus, of the most cele- brated vintages .. 40s Fine old Crusted Ports, in Pints and Half- pints. CAPES. Excellent WTine 14s Superior ditto, Sherry flavour 17s.. 20s Genuine Pontac, first quality 20s SHERRIES. Per Doz. Good stout Wine .. 22s Excellent Pale or Brown 23s Fine old'Straw- coloured ditto 34s Curious old East India ditto 40s Marsala, first quali ty . • 24s Fine old Lisbon and Moun- tain Bucellas, very fine West India Madeira Old East India ditto Fine old Rota Tent Sparkling Champagne Clarets 24s.. 28s.. 34s 34s 34s 52s.. 58s 34s.. 40s 60s.. 66s 54s.. 58s.. 70s A large Assortment of Wines on draught at the lowest prices. SPIRITS. English Gin of the best quality Mouls's celebrated Old Tom .. The best Old Jamaica Rum The finest old French Brandy Irish and Scotch Whiskies, genuine from the Still Fi ne Old Ruin Shrub Patent Brandy Bottles and Hampers to be paid for on delivery, and the amount allowed when returned. FOR READY MONEY ONLY. No Orders from the Country can be attended to without a Remittance. No. 8, HIGH- STREET, NEWINGTON BUTTS. 6s 8d & 8s per gallon. 9s 4d 10s 6d 12s 24s Od 26s 6d 12s Od 16s 10s 6d 12s 18s Just published, the 16th Edition, revised and corrected to the present year, 4s. 6d. bound. GEOGRAPHY and HISTORY. By a LADY; for the use of her own Children. London: printed for Longman, Rees, and Co.; T. Cadell; Baldwin and Cra- dock ; J. G. and F. Rivington ; J. M. Richardson ; J. Duncan; J. Booker ; Hamil- ton and Co.; Whittaker and Co.; Simpkin and Marshall; Sherwood and Co.; J. Souter ; Darton and Harvey ; S. Hodgson ; Holdsworth and Ball; and Houlston, and Son. Just published, a new and improved Edition, with several Engravings, 6s. bd. GOLDSMITH'S NATURAL HISTORY, abridged for the use of Schools and Young Persons. London : printed for Longman, Rees, and Co.; J. G. and F. Rivington ; Hamil- ton and Co.; Whittaker and Co.; Simpkin and Marshall; J. Souter; J. M. Richardson ; Cowie and Co. ; Darton and Son ; and Houlston and Son. KEITH'S ARITHMETIC IMPROVED. The Eleventh Edition, price 4s. 6d. THE COMPLETE PRACTICAL ARITHMETICIAN; con- taining several new and useful Improvements adapted to the use of Schools and Private Tuition. By THOMAS KEITH. Corrected and enlarged, by SAMUEL MAYNARD. In this Edition an article on the management of Surds has been introduced, and much more comprehensive view of Exchanges, furnished by Mr. Maynard. A KEY to this New Edition will shortly be published. London: printed for Longman and Co.; Baldwin and Cradock; J. G. and F. Rivington; J. Duncan; Hamilton and Co.; Whittaker and Co.; Hatchard and Son; Simpkin and Marshall; J. Souter; Houlstd'n and Son; and Wilson and Sons, York. '. • Just published, with Wood- cuts, 8vo., price 10s. 6d., IPPOPATHOLOGY : A Systematic TREATISE on the DISORDERS and LAMENESSES of the HORSE, with their modern and most approved METHODS of CURE ; embracing the Doctrines of the English and French Veterinary Schools, the Opinions of Professor Coleman, Director Girard, Hurtrel d'Arboval, and other British and Foreign Veterinarians. By WILLIAM PERCIVALL, M. R. C. S. and V. S. First Life Guards. Also, by the same Author, THE A N A T O M Y OF THE HORSE. Price jf 1. London: Longman and Co., Paternoster- row. Just published, price Is. 6d. sewed, HE LABOURER AND HIS WIFE. Being the Fourth Number of SOCIAL EVILS AND THEIR REMEDY. By the Rev. C. B. TAYLER, Author of " The Records of a Good Man's Life," & c. Smith, Elder and Co., Cornhill. T L'ECHO DE PARIS, SECOND EDITION. Just published, considerably augmented, with a Vocabulary of all the Words and Idioms, and fourteen Wood- cuts, price 4s. 6d- bound in cloth, TT 9 EC HO DE PARIS: a Selection of Familiar Phrases, which Ja Pupil would daily hear said around him, if he were living among French people. By M. A. P. LEPAGE, Professor of the French Language in London. London : published by Effingham Wilson, Royal Exchange. Just published, with numerous Plates, 3 vols. 8vo. TRAVELS into BOKHARA; being the Account of a Journey from INDIA to CABOOL, TARTARY, and PERSIA; also, Narrative of a Voyage by the Indus, by routes never before taken by any European, while on a Mission to the Court of Lahore, with presents frdm the King of Great Britain. By Lieut. ALEXANDER BURNES, F. R. S. John Murray, Albemarle- irtreet, Lord Kenjon— From the Magistrates, Clergy, gentlemen, and in- habitants of Whitchurch and Wem, Shropshire; Malpas, Cheshire; and from the officiating minister of Gresford, Denbighshire, from a public meeting there held, thanking his Majesty for his declaration to the Bishops on the subject of Church Reform. Addresses to the same effect were also presented from the Pro- testant inhabitants of 54 parishes in the South of Ireland, from the inhabitants of New Sarum, and the Sonthern portion of the county of Wilts, from the parish of Hartlepool, in the county of Durham, from the several townships of Poulton- in- the- Fylde, Thornton, Carleton, Hardtown, with Newton and Martown, in the county palatine of Lancaster; from the parishes of Honiton, Moretonliampstead, Ipplepen Bishopsteignton and Lifton; from the gentlemen, Clergy, and other inhabitants of the Deanery of Hawkesbury, in the county of Gloucester, signed bv 1,200 persons j from several of the Clergy and *> tkejs residing in Bedford ana the jjeigkbowftoood. FOR TOURISTS IN THE HIGHLANDS. In the course of the month of July, in one pocket volume, post 8vo., accompanied by a most elaborate and complete Map, engraved by Arrowsniith, and contain- in j? the most recent information respecting Roads, & c., for the use of Travellers, GUIDE to the HIGHLANDS and ISLANDS of SCOTLAND, including ORKNEY and ZETLAND ; descriptive of their Scenery, S! a- tistics, Antiquities, and Natural History, with numerous Historical Notices. By GEORGE ANDERSON, General Secretary to the Northern Institution for the Promotion of Science and Literature; and PETER ANDERSON, Secretary to the Inverness Society for the Education of the Poor in the Highlands, This work is the result of an extensive and familiar acquaintance with the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, and the various publications relating to them. The authors are constantly resident in the Highlands, and have enjoyed peculiar opportunities of personally visiting and examining, and they have purposely inspected, almost every scene and object described in their work. In any instances where this is not the case, they have been at pains to procure authentic informa- tion from persons on the spot. The design of the undertaking is to present a full, but succinct, delineation of this part of the kingdom, in a style interesting to the general reader, but so arranged as to form a complete Traveller's Guide. Such a work has been long and much wanted. The materials of the present volume have been gradually accumulating in the authors' hands for upwards of ten years; and thus, not being a hasty production, it will, it is hoped, prove an acceptable and useful contribution to the history of the North of Scotland. John Murray, Albemarle- slreet; sold by all Booksellers in the United Kingdom. DEDICATED TO SIR JOHN HERSCHELL, Bart. Just published, price 4s. 6d. cloth, THE GRAMMAR of ASTROLOGY, containing all things ne- cessary for CALCULATING a NATIVITY, by common Arithmetic, By ZADKIEL THE SEER. This work will enable any person to calculate his own Nativity, and decide for himself, by the modern and'improved rules of Astrology, how far that science is true or false. The Author calls upon Men of Science to make the experiment; believing that the character, disposition, fitness for any particular employment, and general destiny, may be foreknown by the simple rules laid down in this work. It contains the Nativity of Lord Byron's Daughter, with the calculations given at length. London: Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper, Paternoster- row. THE GAMEKEEPER'S 1 lied, price 5s. 6d. DIRECTORY, and COMPLETE ___' VERMIN DESTROYER; containing Instructions for taking and killing all kinds of Vermin ( both four- footed and winged)— Instructions for the Preser- vation of Game— Of hatching the Eggs of Partridges and Pheasants which have been mown over, and rearing the young— Taking Wild Fowl and Fen Birds- Means of preventing Poaching— The Game Laws, & c. With illustrative Engra- vings. By T. B. JOHNSON. London : Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper. Of whom may be had, THE TURF GUIDE, AND EXPOSITOR; Containing Instructions for Breeding for the Turf— Training— Remarks on Trainers Jockeys, aad the system of Cocktail Racing illustrated— The Science of Betting so as always to come off a winner; and every other information connec- ted with the Turf. Price fo. ByC. F. Brown. BREWSTER S ASIATIC VEGETABLE, or EXTRACT of COCOA NUT OIL, for strengthening and promoting the growth of Hair.. This rich and emollient Oil is rendered, by a peculiar process, extremely agreeable, and its nutritive properties preserved; it gives a brilliancy to the hair, removes the dandriff, and increases the strength ; it is the best article possible for dressing and regenerating hair, has an agreeable fragrance, and has only to be known to- be an established appendage to the Toilet. Sold in bottles, 2s. tid. and 5s. each.— Vegetable Wash, for cleansing'and beautifying hair, where hair has been turned harsh by improper applications. This article will be found of the greatest service• Bottles, 3s. and 5s. each. Almond and Honey Soap, combining the emollient and balsamic properties of the almond and honey in the highest perfection ; it removes sun- burn, prevents chapped hands, & c. Royal Perfumed Lavender, Eau Botanique for the handkerchief, Carthamus Flower and Betel Nut Tooth Powers, Cold Cream of Almonds, & c.— Sold, wholesale and retail, by BREWSTER, Hair- cutter and Peruke Maker to the Royal Family, 48, New Bond- street. FOR PRESERVING AND BEAUTIFYING THE HAIR . OWLAND'S MACASSAR OIL is composed of Vegetable i ingredients, and is universally admired and acknowledged superior to all oiherprejiarations, for improving the growth, and restoring the hair on bald parts, prevents it falling off or turning grey, to the latest period of existence— strength- ens the weakest hair— produces " a thick and luxuriant growth— and makes it beautifully soft, curly, and glossy. Subduing all relaxing tendencies, it firmly keeps the hair in curl, and other decora! ive formation, during many hours, unim- paired by damp weather, crowded assemblies, the dance, or equestrian exercise. This Oil is the friend of both sexes— for, while it facilitates the progress of female beauty, it enhances, by producing Whiskers, Mustachios, & c., the graces of manhood. Notice.— Each bottle of the Original Macassar Oil is enclosed in a Wrappei^, which has the Name and Address, in Red, on Lace- work, A. ROWLAND and SON, 20, Hatton Garden, Counter- signed ALEX. ROWLAND. The lowest, price is 3s. 6d., 7s., 10s. ( id., and 21s. per Bottle.— All other prices,- or any without the book and label, are Counterfeits. Sold by the Proprietors, as above, and by all respectable Perfumers, & c. RITISH CONSUL'S OFFICE, Philadelphia.— Know all per- sons to whom these presents shall come, that I, Gilbert Robertson, Esq., hi& Britannic Majesty's Consul, do hereby certify, that R. Warton, Esq. ( who attests to the efficacy of OLD RIDGES BALM'of COLUMBIA, in RESTORING HAIR,) is Mayor of this City, and that M. Randall, Esq. is Prothonotary of the Court of Common Pleas, to both , whose signatures full faith and credit is due. I further certify that I am personally acquainted with J. L. Inglis, Esq., another of the signers, and that he is a person of great respectability, and that I heard him express his unqualified approbation of the effects of Oldridge's Balm in restoring his Hair. Given under my hand and seal of office, at the City of Philadelphia, Dec. 29, 1823. ( Signed) GILBERT ROBERTSON. OLDRIDGE'S BALM causes whiskers and eye- brows to grow, prevents the hair from turning erey, and the first application makes it curl beautifully, frees it from scurf, and stops it from falling off. Abundance . of certificates from gentlemen of the first respectability in England are shown by the Proprietors, C. and A. OLDRIDGE, 1, Wellington- street, Strand, where the Balm is sold. Price 3s. 6d., 6s., and lis. per bottle. CONSOLATION to the TREMULOUS WRITER. The Public may 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 tremour or nervous affections, heat of climate, agitation of spirits, excess or over exertion, weakness from age, injury of the thumb or fingers, bv sprain or olherwise, even to the loss of part. This happy relief exists in a little INSTRUMENT, the appearance of which, when 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 bad one. It is honoured by the patronage and recommendation of Sir Astley Cooper, and other highly respectable profes - sional gentlemen. A few minutes' practice will prove its efficacy, and it has this advantage over all medicine, its power increases by use, and one prescription will lastf for life. Made in elastic gold, price 25s. each. Sold by T. Tucker, 269, comer of the Strand, opposite the Crown and Anchor Tavern. 10 the~ NERVOUS, DEBILITATED, nd INFIRM.— The Society for the Restoration of Health confidently recommend HARVEY'S RESTORATIVE CORDIAL to all those who are suffering under Nervous De- bility, or Irritability, or Infirmity, from excess or weakness from anv other cause, as the only Medicine which will in all cases immediately relieve and effect a cure- This delicious restorative will be found an excellent family remedy in cases of Low Spirits, Faintings, Giddiness, & c.; it forms, when diluted, a tonic and re7 freshing beverage, and indeed ought to form the only drink of those subject to attacks of the Gout, particularly of those who apprehend Gout in the Stomach.— Sold in bottles at 4s. 6d. and lis. each, or two in a neat case for travelling at 9s. and 22s. each case; five 9s. cases 21., five 22s. cases 51. Orders by post, ( paid) ad- dressed to I. J. Edwards, Resident Director, London Hall, 90, Charlotte- street, Rathbone- place, punctually delivered in any part of London; also forwarded packed to all parts of the United Kingdom upon receiving a remittance? or re* ference, or Post- office order for the amount. CONSOLATION for G73UTY SUBJECTS.— BLAIR'S GOUT and RHEUMATIC PILLS continue to afford the most astonishing proofs of their efficacy in all gouty and rheumatic affections, pains in the head or face* lumbago, & c. ' They nerer fail to give immediate relief from the most violent paroxysms of rheumatic gout or rheumatism, and one box, price 2s. 9d. will convince the hitherto unhappy patient of the certainty of returning ease and com- fort. The proprietor, anxious to alleviate the sufferings of those afflicted with this tormenting malady, respectfully invites them to partake of the benefits of this discover)-, assuring the timid that in no case can its use be attended with the least inconvenience.— Sold wholesale and retail, and for exportation, by Thomas Prout, 229, Strand, London, seven doors from Temple- bar, and by most Medicines Venders in Town or Countiy.— N. B. The usual full allowance to Country Agents, on payment being ordered in London. '___ - CONFINED BOWELS occasions Indigestion. Stomach and Liver Complaints, Spasms, Flatulence, Head- aches, riles, Strictures of the Rectum, Irritation of the Urinary Organs, Nervous Affections, Coughs, Eruptive Diseases, and a host of other distressing symptoms, the whole of which may be entirely obviated by the use of the Lavement Pump, manufactured by SAVORY and Co., 369, Strand, three doors from Exeter Hall. The practice is approved and recommended by the Faculty at large, and the apparatus very simple and easy of application. Price 25s. upwards. P. S. Messrs. Savory and Co. beg to intimate that their Lavement Pump is under the immediate superintendence of a Physician, whose opinion will be afforded to all enquirers on the applicability of the Instrument. For minute information on the domestic importance of this practice the reader is referred to Dr. Scott's " Treatise on Lavements," which may be procured also of Savory and Co. KUPTURES.— J. EGG and Co.' s New Patent Self- Resisting and Adjusting GERMAN TRUSS, without Straps or any other compli- cations, continues to be 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 common Truss a resisting and repelling power. All English Trusses act only on the principle of pressure— stronger the spring, the greater the pressure before and behind; and where ctiaps are used a resisting power cannot be applied. Manufactory, No. 1, Piccadilly, where is published by. the Inventor, J. EGG, a Treatise on the Cure of Hernia by Mechanical Power, practically adapted to those afflicted. Price 2s. 6d. THE TWO QUAKERS. 1 Friend,' said Aminidab to Obediah, ' Why such amazement do thy features shew ?' 4 To see, Aminadab, thy boots on lire, And thou stand harmless in the burning glow ' 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 blacking sav'd me from the grave; For, idly sauntering on the Thames' side, I sudden fell into the billowy wave, And soon had sunk for ever in the tide Had not the moon on my boots cast a beam. And shewed a boatman near his sallow hide, W ho, by their bloom allnr'd, came near their gleam, And dragged me fainting from the whelming tide!" THIS Easy- shining and Brilliant BLACKING, prepared bv WARREN, 30, Strand, London ; and sold m every town in the Kingdom. Liquid in bottles, and Paste Blacking in Pots, at 6d., 12s., and 18d. each. particular to inquire for Warren's, 30, Strand. All others are counterfeit. 224 JOHN BULL. July 13. STOCK EXCHANGE.— SATURDAY EVENING. The resignation of the heads of the Administration, has, as might be expected, caused^ some considerable excitement in the Money Market, but the decline in Consols has not exceeded 1 perCent., and the quotation at the close of business this afternoon was 92% %. There has been a complete panic in Portuguese and Spanish Stock to- day, occasioned by very heavy sales, and the price of the latter Stock has been as low as 41, a fall of per Cent, during the present Account. It closed at 92 & %. Portuguese Bonds have fallen to 83% 84, which was the last quotation. The Market in other Stock has experienced a decline; Brazilian being 77X 8K ; Columbian 30} 4 31; Dutch 5 per Cent. 97% % ; Belgian 97X 8X ; and Mexican 433- f. One of the reasons for the decline in Spanish and Portuguese Bonds, is, tbat it has been current here to- day that Don Carlos, with several officers, has embarked for Spain. 3 per Cent. Consols, 90 % 3 per Cent. Reduced, 91U % 3J£ per Ct. Reduced, 98^ 99 New 3% per Cent., 98& % Four per Cent. 1826,99% % ( assented) Ditto 101 % ( dissented) Bank Long Annuities, Bank Stock, 2\~% Ditto for Account, India Stock, 270 271 Ditto for Account, India Bonds, 23 25 pm. Exchequer Bills, 49 50 pm. Consols for Account, 92% Jf The Paris Papers of Thursday state that the crops and vineyards have severely suffered from tempests in different parts of France. Storms also ' have ravaged some of the northern districts of Spain. The removal of the court from Madrid, it is supposed, will be inju- rious to the interests of the Queen, and the success of General Rodil is by no means considered certain. We learn from St. Petersburgh that theCrown Prince and Princess of Prussia bad arrived there on the 2d instant, and had been received by the Emperor with much ceremony, and by the populace with great rejoicing. Captain Ross had also arrived in that city. Letters from Genoa mention that the Board of Health on the 26th June laid on a quarantine of fifteen days, and the cargo to be landed in the Lazaretto, on vessels from Murcia with foul bills of health.— The letters from Gibraltar of the 15th June state that although the health of the population had continued good throughout the season, it was to be regretted that within the last 48 hours some suspicious cases, supposed to be cholera, had appeared in the garrison. The Courier of last night savs :—" Just as we are going to press, we learn from an unquestionable source that the news of Don Car- los having embarked on board the United Kingdom steamer, is true. She was fitted out as a vessel of war." Mr. Cobbett gives the following account of the cause of the late Cabinet's decease:—" The news that has reached me to- day has not at all surprised me. I always said, that if Lord Althorp were to quit his place, Lord Grey could not remain in his an hour. He was the soul of the concern, and he bas appeared to me to have been weary ofthe concern for a long time. The excuse for the breaking up of the Ministry is a mere excuse. It is no one thing that has broken them up : it is the mass of difficulties ; that mass, however, greatly added to by the mixture of laudanum and brandy, with a due spice of natural insanity, and a twofold surplus of jaw. No Ministry on earth would bear up against this : it is the true receipt for destroying a Ministry and destroying a State." The revolutionary press ( says the Post of yesterday) rings, as might have been expected, with' the old cry that the country would not tolerate a Tory' Ministry. We say, on the contrary, that the country would hail with delight a Conservative Ministry, formed npon liberal and comprehensive principles, and that the longer the appointment of such a Ministry may be delayed the more severe and rigorous will be the system to which the people will be obliged to submit. A reform of all real abuses in Church and State is quite compatible, notwithstanding the slanders of the enemy, with such a Government as we advocate, and can be safely accomplished by no other. The ceremony of betrothing between his Serene Highness Prince Frederick of Sa'xe- Altenbourg, third son of the reigning Duke, and brother to the Queen of Bavaria, and Lady Mary Talbot, eldest daughter of the Ear of Shrewsbury, took place at Ressingen, in Ba- varia, on the 29th of hist month. Lady Mary has been raised to the rank of Princess of Talbot by the King of Bavaria. The marriage will be celebrated in the month of September, at the Castle of Alten- bourg. An alliance is shortly to take place between the Hon. Randal E. Plunkett, eldest son of Lord Dunsany, and the accomplished and beautiful Miss Hoare. This distinguished young lady is the only • child of the son and heir of Sir Richard Colt Hoare, Bart., of Stour- head, Wilts, and is closely connected with the first families in either country.— Evening Mail. Lord Dennian is said to have occasioned much dissatisfaction by the alterations which he has made in the times for holding the as- sizes, at more than one of the places on the Western Circuit. In Hampshire, where the business has generally occupied a week, he has only given four days, while to Dorsetshire, where the business is comparatively light, he has assigned nearly double the usual time.— Morning Herald. Sir Wilfred Lawson, Bart., of Brayton Hall, Cumberland ( brother- in- law of Sir James Graham), is said to have been so strongly im- pressed by the arguments of Mr. Pollard, who is lecturing in behalf of Temperance Societies in that county, that he has had the whole of his brandy, rum, gin, and whiskey, taken from his cellars to the back of the hall, and destroyed by fire in his own presence. Accounts have been received, giving further particulars of the de- struction caused by the dreadful earthquake in South America. It appears that the town of Santiago had been built on a hidden vol- cano, which, on the 20th of January, when the first shock of the earthquake took place, burst. The earth shook violently, and- a space of land, about three leagues long and two broad, sunk, with the forest that covered it, and its supernces presented the aspect of a savanna, covered with stones and sand. Although the trees of the forest were generations old, not a root remained, nor a leaf to show- where they stood. During twenty- four hours the earth shook with- out ceasing, and the entire town, with its environs, were reduced to one heap of ruins. The cottages of the peasants were swallowed up by tbe opening chasms, which yawned at every point. The waves, which the earth formed, rolled, in every sense of the word, like those of the sea when agitated by a tempest, and rose to a great height. Eighty persons at Santiago were swallowed up, and the remainder only escaped by flying to a neighbouring hill. The whole scene is represented as one of desolation, and nothing was seen around but misery. The New English Opera House will be opened to the public to- morrow. It is somewhat singular that an architect of Mr. Beaz- ley's acknowledged skill and great experience should have made an omission in the plan of the Theatre which occasioned someperplexity. It was not discovered until the building was nearly finished that no provision had been made for access to the gallery; and as the " Gods" of the present day are not gifted with wings, it was found necessary at the eleventh hour to construct a wooden staircase outside, and to break an entrance into the gallery through the outward wall. Cholera prevails in Dublin. A mongst the victims on Monday is a gentleman much lamented, who was in prime health and spirits m his office on Saturday, Francis Armstrong, Esq. Register in the Court of Chancery, brother- in- law to George Moore, Esq. late M. P. He died after a few hours'illness, at his house, North Frederick- street. MURDER.— In tbe parish of Murragh, on Sunday evening last, in consequence of one child being hurt by another in play, the friends of the former, not thinking that the offending child had been sufficiently chastised by its family, met two of the brothers and attacked them ; one ran for assistance, but on coming back found his brother with his head fractured— he died in a few hours I— Cork Herald. PIN MONEY.— The Lorjl Chancellor gave judgment on Friday, in an appeal to the House of Lords relative to pin money, that is of considerable importance. Henry Howard, Esq., as personal repre- sentative of the late Dowager Duchess of Norfolk, claimed to re- cover from the estate of the Duke 32,0001. for arrears of pin money, at the rate of 10001. per annum, for the last thirty- two years, during which period it had remained unpaid, in consequence, as it ap- peared, of the unsound state of the Duchess's mind. Tbe Court below had decided the question in his favour, and the appeal was made against that decision. The Lord Chancellor; in giving judgment ob- served that it could never be the intent of pin money, that the hus- band should be compelled to pay that and milliners' bills too, and the late Duke had allowed the Duchess, in consequence of her imbecile state, every necessary requisite for her exalted station, instead of paying her the 1,0001. settled upon her at her marriage. Besides, there was no instance of arrears of pin money being allowed to any person except the wife, and it had been decided again and again that • even the wife could not claim arrears of pin money beyond a year. The Noble and Learned Lord concluded by moving the reversal of the decree of the Vice Chancellor, Just published, in 4to., 21. 2s. rjlRANSACTIONS of the ROYAL SOCIETY of LITERA- JL TURK, Vol. II. Part II. CONTENTS. I. Granville Penn on an Ode of Horace. II. Dr. Nolan on the Music of the Greeks. III. Archdeacon Todd on the Services rendered to Literature by Archbp. Laud. IV. Dr. Jamieson on the Vitrified Forts of Scotland. V. Sharon Turner on the Asiatic Origin of the Anglo- Saxons. VI. Sir Thos. Phillips on Monastic Liliraries and Archives in French Flanders. VII. Rev. T. D. Fosbroke on Parliaments before the time of Edward I. VIII. Prince Hoare on the Moral Character of Shakspeare's Dramas. & c. IX. Dr. Jamieson on the Antiquity of the earliest Scottish Coins qxtant. X. W. R. Hamilton on the Descent of Apollo in the First Book of the Iliad. XI. Rev. F. Nolan on the Grecian Rose. XII. Mr. Roscoe on the MS. Library at Ilolkham. XIII. Colonel Leake on an Inscription found at ^ Egina. XIV. S. T. Coleridge on the Prometheus of ^ Escliylus, and the Mysteries of Ancient Greece. XV. A. W. Schlegel de l'Oripiru' des Hindoos. XVI. C. Wordsworth on an Inscription found at Athens in 1833. XVII. J. G. Wilkinson on the Vocal Powersof the Statue of Meinnnn. XVni. Tomlinson on the Sarcophagus in the British Museum, called the , Toinb of Alexander. XIX. Mr. Arundel's Discoveries in Asia Minor; the Sites of Colosste, and Antioch of Pisidia. John Murray, Albemarle- street. CLASS BOOKS FOR SCHOOLS. Published by Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. PINNOCK'S EDITION of GOLDSMITH'S HISTORY of ENGLAND, improved by C. W. TAYLOR. 22d Edition, with several Engravings, 6s. bound and lettered. PINNOCK'S GOLDSMITH'S HISTORIES of GREECE and ROME. New Editions, with Engravings. By W. C. Taylor. 5s. Gd. each. PLATT'S LITERARY and SCIENTIFIC CLASS BOOK. New Edition, with Engravings, 5s. 4. TAYLOR S HISTORICAL MISCELLANY. 4s. 6d. 5. TAYLOR'S HISTORY of FRANCE and NORMANDY. 6s. 6. PINNOCK'S EXPLANATORY ENGLISH READER. New Edition, 4s. 6d. 7. INTRODUCTION to PINNOCK'S ENGLISH READER, for the Junior Classes. 3s. 8. PINNOCK'S JUVENILE READER, for Children from 4 to7 year old. ls. 6d. 9. CROLY'S BEAUTIES of the BRITISH POETS. New Edit, with Engravings, 7s. 10. PINNOCK'S COMPENDIOUS HISTORY of the BIBLE. 3s. 11. The MORAL POETICAL MISCELLANY. 3s. 12. Dr. HARRIS'S NATURAL HISTORY of the BIBLE, with Engravings, 8s. HISTORICAL EPITOME of the OLD and NEW TESTAMENTS. Third Edition, 5s. 14. BELL'S SELECTIONS, DESCRIPTIVE of the REMARKABLE PHF. NO MENA of NATURE. 3s. 6d. 15. ARCHDEACON WRANGHAM'S COLLECTION of the EVIDENCES of CHRISTIANITY. 3s. 6d. The Third Edition, improved, price 4s. 6d. bound and lettered, ACOMPANION to the GLOBES; comprising an Astronomi- cal Introduction, the various Problems that may be performed by the Globes, preceded by the subjects to which they refer, with numerous Examples, recapitu- latory Exercises, & c. To which is added an Appendix, containing the Deriva- tion of the Names of the Sun and Planets, and a brief History of the Constella- tions, & c. Designed for the use of Schools aud Private Families. By R. T. LINNINGTON. KEY to the PROBLEMS. 2s. Printed for Whittaker, Treacher, and Co., Ave Maria- lane. In 12mo., the Fifth Edition, with considerable Additions, price 4s. 6d. bound, THE SCHOOL ORATOR; or, Exercises in Elocution, theo- retically arranged : from which, aided by the short Practical Rules to be committed to memory, and repeated afterthe manner of recitingthe Rules in the Latin Syntax, Students may learn to articulate every word with propriety ; be assisted in the removal of minor impediments ; be taught to modulate the voice, and to speak with accuracy of inflexion, from the easist to the most difficult spe- cimens of English Oratorical composition. By JAMES WRIGHT, Public and Private Lecturer on English Elocution. Printed for Whittaker and Co.; Longman, Rees, and Co. ; and Simpkin and Marshall. In 8vo., price Is. ADEFENCE of the ESTABLISHED CHURCH of ENG- LAND : a SERMON preached in the Parish Church of Hemel Hemstead, Hertfordshire, June 8, 1834. By the Rev. J. H. B. MOUNTAIN, M. A. Vicar of Hemel Heinsted Rivingtons, St. Paul's Church- yard, and Waterloo- place; and Butttield, Hemel Hemsted. Lately published, THE CHURCH of ENGLAND CHAMPION. By the Rev. W. BAILEY. A few of the first. Ten Nos. still to be had ofthe publishers, price 5s., or 6d. each ( 244 pages 8vo.) This publication refutes the attacks of all the enemies ofthe Church ; and is most earnestly recommended to those, interested in the all- engrossing topics of the present alarming crisis. " Mr. Bailey is a most upright and zealous defender of the Church to which he belongs ; and he wants neither learning, nor industry, nor sagacity, well to support his claims"— Gentleman's Magazine for May.— Similar notices are to be seen in the Literary Gazette, Christian Examiner, Protestant Journal, Essex Standard, & c. & c. & c. Sold by Rivingtons. St. Paul's Church- yard, and Waterloo- place. SOUTH AUSTRALIA. Just published, THE NEW BRITISH PROVINCE of SOUTH AUSTRA- LIA ; or, A Description of the Country. Illustrated by Charts and Views, and an Account of the Principles, Objects, Plan, and Prospects of the New Colony. In a small pocket volume, bound in cloth, price 2s. 6d. London : Charles Knight, 22, Ludgate- street. T On the 12th of July was published, HE PRINTING MACHINE; or, COMPANION to the LIBRARY. No. X. Price 4d. London: Charles Knight, 22, Ludgate- street. Just published, by Chapman and Hall, 186, Strand, IIAT MAY BE DONE in TWO MONTHS. A SUMMER'S TOUR through BELGIUM, up the RHINE, and to the LAKES of SWITZERLAND ; also to CHAMOUNI, and over the Col- de- Balme to Martigny, Arc. With a Table of Routes, Distances, Course of Exchange, Fares by Diligences, Boats, & c. 12mo. cloth, price 5s. 6d. SEQUEL TO THE BOY'S OWN BOOK. Handsomely bound in embossed cloth, with gilt edges, price8s. 6d. The BOOK of SCIENCE ; a familiar Introduction to the principles of Natura Philosophy, adapted to the comprehension of young people ; comprising Treatises on Mechanics, Hydrostatics, Hydraulics, Pneumatics, Acoustics, Optics, I'yro- noniics, Electricity, Galvanism, and Magnetism. Illustrated by many curious and interesting experiments and observations, and including notices of the most recent discoveries. Embellished with upwards of 200 Engravings on Wood. Foolscap 8vo., elegantly printed, price 8s. SCENES AND - RECOLLECTIONS OF FLY FISHING, in Northumberland, Cumberland, and Westmoreland. By STEPHEN OLIVER, the Younger, of Aldwark, in Coin. Ebor. With Wood- cut Illustrations. " Here is a wee bit. bookie, written by a true angler; and we are only sorry that it is but a wee bit bookie, for it is inspired with the right spirit, and must have a place in every library— shelf Walton."— Blackwood's Magazine. FRENCH MAGAZINE. On Saturday, July 12, was published. ¥ E CAMELEON; a Magazine of French Literature, tfcc. M- A No. VI. price 2d. Also, Part i, containing Six Numbers, price One Shilling. " We are delighted to see any French periodical divested of politics. Our young friends will find " Le Cameleon" pleasant reading, and well adapted for cnltivating their acquaintance with the language."— Lit. Gaz. June 28. Should it continue as it has commenced, it may safely be admitted into those families where the fearof the promiscuous literature of France has hitherto pre- vailed. The selections are judicious, and afford favourable specimens of the style of the best modern writers."— Spectator, July 5. London: H. Hooper, 13, Pall- mall East. In a few days, BRITISH WEST INDIAN COLONIES; Being the Second Volume of Mr. MONTGOMERY MARTIN'S HISTORY OF THE BRITISH COLONIES. Compiled from Official Documents, hitherto unpublished. With fine original Maps, by Walker. Price 21s. morocco cloth. Printed for Cochrane and M'Crone, 11, Waterloo- place. Of whom inav be had, Vol. 1, containing POSSESSIONS in ASIA. • lust published. THE CIVIL ENGINEER is NOW on SALE. Division I., containing BOULTON and WATT'S PORTABLE STEAM- ENGINE, complete. Twelve imperial folio Plates, and Book of descriptive references. One Guinea. Ackermann, 96, Strand ; Weale, Architectural Library, High Holbom ; Taylor, Architectural Library, Holbom ; Hebert, Cheapside; Blunt and Stephenson, Civil Enorinters, 51, Great Ormond- street; and of all English and foreign Booksellers. THE CONCLUDING LOTTERY.— SWIFT and CO. respect- fully state, that the GLASGOW LOTTERY, to be DRAWN on the 22d of THIS MONTH, is the LAST that will or can be drawn under the existing Act of Parliament. The fortunate Purchasers have the option of receivillgthe value of tho Prizes, which consist of Freehold Lands and Houses, in Money, as soon as drawn, deducting only Five per Cent, on those above i'JOO, to cover tlie risk and expenso of selling the property. SWIFT and Co.' s Offices are at No. 19, Comhill, facing the Royal Exchange ; No. 255, Regent- circus, Oxford- street ; No. 38, Hay- market, corner of Coventry street; where Prizes of ^' 10,000, ,*' 5,0l) 0, .^" 2,000, ifcc. were recently sold, and the Money paid with the punctuality that has distinguished the firm of Swift and Co. for nearly forty years. The Scheme contains— ^• 16,000 . 10,000 . - 3,000 2,000 1,600 1,500 1,400 1,100 ^• 16,000 10,000 3,000 2,000 1,600 1,500 2,800 1,100 Besides others of ^ 800, _ f500, ^" 400, & c. Present Prices— Ticket. _ fl3 13s. Half 6 0 I Eighth 18 6 Quarter 3 15 6 | Sixteenth..... 0 19 6 BRITISH WINES, in the highest state ot perfection, are manu- factured by E. and T. TAYLOR, whose long and extensive experience in the manufacture of every description of this wholesome and highly- esteemed beverage, enables them to offer to the Public Wines of the most superior quality, and free from adulteration, at unprecedentedly low prices. Their Ginger Wine, which is of the most exquisite flavour, possessing high qualities of a medicinal nature, is strongly recommended by the faculty to all persons labouring under the painful effects of spasms and flatulency. As a " Dinner Wine," their Calcavella is in tlie greatest repute at the tables of the most distinguished families in the empire.— Oil, Italian, and British Wine Warehouse, 17, Lower Holborn, oppo- site Furnival's Inn. SALKS BY AUCTION. VALUABLE ESTATE at ASTON ABBOTTS and GROVE, in the County of Bucks.— By Messrs. FAREBROTHER and Co., at the Black Swan Inn, in Leighton Buzzard, on TUESDAY, the 26th day of August next, at 12 o'clock at noon, in such lots as shall be aereed upon : fees, chief rents, and other perquisites thereto belonging. Also, the ADVOWSON of the VICARAGE of the pleasant and healthy village of Aston Abbotts, with the Parsonage House, and about 100 acres of Glebe Land thereto belonging, of the annual value of ^ 200. Also, several excellent FAKMS, principally meadow and pasture land; toge- ther with 18 substantial Cottages and Gardens, situate within the Manor of Aston Abbotts, and in the occupation of very respectable tenants, containing ONE THOUSAND AND THIRTY ACRES. Also, a very desirable FREEHOLD ESTATE, situated in the townships of Grove Slapton and Linslade, in the county of Bucks, being principally meadow and pasture land, in the occupation of respectable tenants, containing FIVE HUNDRED AND TWENTY ACRES; And which farms are situated near to the respectable market town of Leighton Buzzard, and will be divided into lots to suit the convenience of purchasers! Mr. William Hart, of Wing, will shew the Estate. The above Estate is situated in a fine sporting country ; it adjoins the Grand Junction Canal, and the London and Birmingham Railway will pass through a portion of the Grove part of it, and which will give additional facility of convey- ing all its produce to the London market. . Printed Particulars describing the Estate, with Plans annexed, may be had six weeks previous to the time of sale, at the Offices of Messrs. Mousley and Barber, in Derby ; of Messrs. Willis, Leighton Buzzard ; of Thos. Tindal or Joseph Rose, Esqrs., Aylesbury; of Messrs. Few, Hamilton, and Few, 2, Henrietta- street, Co- vent- garden, London; and at the principal Inns at Buckingham, Woburn, Bed- ford, and Dunstable; and at Messrs. Farebrother and Co.' s Offices, 2, Lancaster- place, Strand, London. VALUABLE ESTATE IN STAFFORDSHIRE.— By Mr. BREARY, at the King's Head Inn, in Dudley, on TUESDAY, the 15th day of July, 1834, at 2 o'Clock in the afternoon, subject to such conditions as will then be produced : AVERY Valuable FREEHOLD ESTATE, at Throwley, in the parish of Ilam, and county of Stafford, containing 1435 acres, 3 roods, 20 perches, in a ring fence. The Estate is divided into farms of convenient size, and occupied by highly- respectable tenants. The rents are principally derived from cattle and cheese, and do not in any considerable degree depend upon corn ; and the land is more particularly favourable to keepiug Sheep. The Estate is upon the Metalliferous Limestone, and affords, in lime of the most fertilizing quality, a cheap and inex- haustible means of improvement The specimens of lead ore which have been obtained, lead to the conclusion that the miner would be well rewarded for his enterprise; but from accidental causes, capital has not hitherto been applied to try the mineral riches of the property. The Old Hall may be repaired at a small expense, so as to make it suitable for the residence of a Family ; and the Farm Buildings attached to it are new, con- venient, and most substantially built. , Tfce Poor Rates and Highway Rates are moderate.— Throwley is six miles from Ash borne, and within one mile of the mail road from Ashborne to Leek. For further information apply to Messrs. Mousley and Barber, Solicitors, Derby, where a Plan of the Estate maybe seen; to Messrs. Few, Hamilton, and Few, 2, Henrietta- street, Covent- garden, London; to Mr. Robert Bromley, Land Sur- veyor, Derby ; or to Mr. Spencer, of Throwley, who will shew the estate. Derby, June 2d, 1834. GENERAL AVERAGE PRICES OF CORN, For the Week ending July 5. Per Imperial Qr. Wheat .. 48s lid ( Rye 33s lid Barley ... 28s lid | Oats 24s 6d | Beans. Pease ... Duty on Foreign., j ^ heat • 36s 9d 45s 6d 38s 8d 19s lOd Average of last Six Weeks. Wheat.. 48s Barley... 28s Oats 23s Oats 12s Rye 21s Rye 32s lid Beans 36s 4d Pease .... 41s 6d Beans.... 15s 6d Pease.... 8s Od BIRTHS. On the 6th inst. the Marchioness of Abercorn, of a daughter— On the 6th inst. at Milford House, Lymington, the lady of Lieutenant Colonel D'Arcy, late R. A., of a daughter— Ontne 5th inst. in Bryanston- square, Mrs. George Lenox Conyng- ham, of a son— On the 8th inst. the lady of Richard Twining, jun. Esq., of the Strand, of a son— On the 9th inst. at Hampstead, the lady of James G. Murdoch, Esq. of a daughter— Onlhe 9th inst. in Tavistock- square, Mrs. John Rew, of a daughter— On the 9th inst. at Swathling, near Southampton, Mrs. J. Mott, of a son and heir— On the 3d inst. at Ramsgate, the lady of P. A. Browne, Esq. of a son— On the 9th inst. at Westonbirt, Gloucestershire, the lady of Robert B. Hale, Esq. of a son. MARRIED. On the 21st ult. at Spalding, George Augustus Moore, Esq., eldest son of Lieut. Colonel George Moore, 59th Regt. N. I. in the Hon. East India Company's Ser vice, to Anne Elizabeth, youngest daughter of the Rev. William Moore, D. D., of Spalding. On the lst inst. at Midhurst, Sussex, Mr. Guy, of Robert- street, Adelphi, Sur- geon, to Caroline, eldest daughter of James Monk, Esq.— On the 4th inst. at Good- nestone, Sir Brook Bridges, Bart., of Goodnestone Park, Kent, to Fanny, eldest daughter of the late Lewis Cage, Esq., of Milgate, in the same county— At Guernsey, on the 17th ult. Major J. K. Chubley, to Ellenor, third daughter of Staff- Surgeon Paddock— On the 9th inst. at Trinity Church, John Laurie, Esq. of Harley- street, to Eliza Helen, youngest daughter of Kenrick Collett, Esq., of Harley- street, and Holcrofts, Fulham— On the' 9th inst. at Newhaven, Sussex, William John Whyte, Esq., of Euston- square, and Lincoln's Inn- fields, to Emily, third daughter of Thomas Cbippen Faulconor, Esq. of Newhaven— On the 10th. inst. at St. Pancras Church, Alfred S. Taylor, Esq., of Great Marlborough- street, o Caroline, daughter of the late John CancellOr, Esq. of Upper Gower- street— On Tuesday, at Acomb, Lamplays Wickham, second son of the Rev. Lamplays Hird, A. M. of Low Moor, near Bradford, Prebendary of York, and Vicar of Paul, to Fanny, second daughter of Wm. Hale, Esq. of Acomb— On the 9th inst. at St. George's, Hanover- square, John Jolly, Esq., to Caroline Hutchins, daughter of the late Dr. Callcott— On the 10th inst, Samuel Haines, Esq. of Tavistock- place, to Ann, daughter of the late Major Kitchen, of the Hon. East India Company's Service— At Brighton, on the 8th inst. Henry Pooley, Esq., Royal Engineers, to Alicia Almeria, youngest daughter of Sir D. Latimer Tinling Wid- drington, K. C. H. DIED. On the 8th inst. in his 85th year, William Hammond, Esq., of Queen- square, Bloomsbury. At his house in Great George- street, Westminster, Alexander Copland, Esq., of Gunnersbury Park, in the county of Middlesex, in the 61st year of his age. On the 7th inst. at his apartments, Woodstock- street, Bond- street, Lieutenant- General Sir Wm. Aylett, K. M. T. aged 73— On the 21st ult. ten days after his arrival at Rome, the Right Hon. James Everard Lord Arundel, of Wardour, of a bilious fever and inflammation of the bowels, in the 48th year of his age— On the 29th ult. at Woodview, in the county of Dublin, Anne Jane, the wife of Isaac Barre Phipps, Esq. of Berbice— On the lst inst. at Eastbourne, sincerely lamented, in the 70th year of his age, Thomas Preston, Esq. of Nottingham- place— On the 4th inst. deeply regretted, in her 30th year, Anne, wife of Mr. Richard W. John- son, wine- merchant, of Gloucester— On the 6th inst. at his residence, Craven- hill, Bayswater, after a long and most severe illness, Major- General Pilkington, Inspec- tor- General of Fortifications, and Colonel Commandant of the corps of Royal Engineers, aged 68 years— On the 7th inst. Reginald, the infant son of Colonel and Lady Susan Lygon— On the 9th inst. in Cambridge- terrace, Edgware- road, Mary, wife of James Wheble, Esq. of Wroodlev Lodge, Berks— On the 9th. inst. Sophia, the wife of Edward Jones, Esq. of Birchanger- place, Essex— On the 10th inst. at. her house in Burton- crescent, Margaret, eldest daughter of the late Anthony Stokes, Esq. Bencher of the Inner Temple— On the 30th ult. in Fitz- william- square, Dublin, Sophia, wife of the Rev. J. Prior, and daughter of the late John Odell, Esq. of Carriglea, county of Waterfonl.— On the 6th inst. after a few hours' illness, Mr. William Lawrence, late of Serle's Coffeehouse, Carey- street, Lincoln's Inn, aged 51. LONDON: Printed and published by EDWARD SHACKELL, at NO. 40, F l e e t - s t r e e t , where, only, communications to the Kiitor ( post paid) are received,
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