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

03/05/1835

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Volume Number: XV    Issue Number: 751
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John Bull "For God, the King, and the People!"

Date of Article: 03/05/1835
Printer / Publisher:  
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Volume Number: XV    Issue Number: 751
No Pages: 8
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JOHN BULL " FOR GOD, THE KING, AND THE PEOPLE!" VOL. XV.— No. 751. SUNDAY, MAY 3, 1835. Price Id. TH EAT RE ROY AL, DRU RY LANE.— To- morrow evening, the Drama of THE SLAVE. vYith A GRAND CONCERT, in which Madlle. ( iiisi, Pijr. Lablache, Sig. Tamburini, &<-. will appear. After which, THE RENT BAY- To conclude with THE NOTE- FORGER: for the Benefit of Mr. Harley.— On Tuesday, the Play of William Tell. With the Interlude of A Day After the - Wedding. And The Note- Forger.— On Wednesday, Gnstavns the Third. After which, an original Domestic Drama. To which will be adt'ed, a Musical Pas- ticcio. To conclude with The Last Whistle.— On Thursday, The Merchant of Venice. With the Farce of Turning the Tables. And The Note-* orger : being the last night of the Company's performing this season. T" HEATRE ROYAL, COVENT GARDEN. To- morrow evening will be performed, MACBETH. And the Ballet of THE REVOLT OF THE HAREM.— On Tuesday, the Opera of Lestocq. And the new Drama of Carlmilhan.— On Wednesday, a variety of Entertainments. With the Drama of Carlmilhan.— On Thursday, the Opera of Lestocq; or, The Fete of the Hermitage: being the last night of the Company's performing this season. THEATRE ROYAL, DRURY LANE.— Mr. HARLEY has the honour to announce, that his BENEFIT is appointed for TO- MORROW Evening. May 4th, when will be acted the favourite Opera of THE SLAVE. With A GRAND CONCERT, in which Madlle. Grisi, Signori Tamburini. and Lablache of the King's Theatre, will appear, with other eminent performers. And, upon this occasion only, by special desire, the domestic Drama of THE RENT DAY, The principal characters by Messrs. Wallack, Cooper, Harley, Mrs. Humby, and Miss E. Tree. With various novelties, combining the entire attraction of the two Theatres. The whole to conclude with a popular Entertainment. Full par- ticulars in the bills of the dav.— Tickets, Boxes, and Private Boxes, may be pro- cured of Mr. Parsons, Rotunda Box- office; and of Mr. Harley, 14, Upper Gower- street, Bedford- square. THEATRE ROYAL COVENT GARDEN.— Mr. HARTLEY, Stace Manacer, respectfully bees leave to inform his Friends and the Public that his BENEFIT is fixed for MONDAY, May 11, on which occasion he ha? the p'easure of announcing that Mr. C. KEMBLE will make his FIRST and ONLY APPEARANCE this Season in Shakspeare's celebrated Comedy of MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING; Benedict, Mr- C. Kemble, his first appearance since his rtturn from America ; Hero, Miss Taylor; Beatrice, Miss E. Tree. After which will be performed a celebrated OPERA of AUBER'S ; the principal characters by Messrs. Wilson ( by the kind permission of S. T. Arnold, Esq.), Seguin, Ginbilei, Bedford. Henry, Miss Bettsand Miss Shirreff.— Tickets, Places, Private Boxes, and Ore'iestra seats to be had of Mr. Bartley, No. 11, Woburn- square ; and of Mr. Notter, at the Box Office. | UEE~ N'S THEATRE.—' To- morrow the performances will f commence wth CAPERS and CORONETS. James, Mr. Mitchell; Lady ^ Merriton, Mrs. Orger. After which, HUSH MONEY. Sir Jasper Touch- wood, Mr. John Reeve ; Tom Tiller, Mr. Mitchell; Sallv, Mrs. Orger. To which will be added, THE YOUNG REEFER. Julian, Mrs. Nisbett. With 1, 2,3,4, 5, by Advertisement. Harry Alias, Mr. John Reeve. To conclude with, THE FEMALE VOLUNTEERS. Captain Helen, Mrs,. Nisbett.— Private Boxes to lie had ( only) at Mr. Sams's Library, St. James's- street. ^ ADLER'S~ WELLS.— Revival of a favourite Melo- drama.— To- morrow will be revived, a Melo- drama of powerful interest and supernatural effect, called THE SIXES ; or, The Devil and the Dice; in which Messrs. Camp- bell, Vale, Heslop, Edwin, King, Miss Macarthy, Mrs. Wilkinson, Miss Askill, and Miss Leoni, will appear. In the course of the piece, several Tableaux Vivans. To be succeeded by a laughable Burletta, entitled QUESTIONS AND QUAR- RELS ; in which Mis3 Julian, Mr. Vale, and Mr. Edwin will introduce several Fongs. To conclude, on Monday and Saturday, with THE MILLER AND HIS MEN. Principal characters by Messrs. Campbell, Heslop, C. J. Smith, Dunn, Elseood, Mrs. Wilkinson, Miss M4Carthy, < fcc. And on each other evening, with 1 HE MAGPIE; or, The Maid of Palaiseau ; in which piece all the company will appear. COLOSSEUM, Regent's Park.— The New GRAND SCENERY is just opened to the Public, in addition to the various other Exhibitions at this Establishment.— NO ADDITIONAL CHARGE. Admittance to each separate Part One Shilling. To the Whole Two Shillings. ADELAIDE GALLERY of PRACTICAL SCIENCE, Adelaide- s'reet, Strand, OPEN DAILY, at half- past Ten.— The Novelties recently introduced are :— The Authorama, a moving Panorama, lately invented in Paris— Metallic Disc, made transparent by motion— Specimen of Cloth taken from a Mummy, and fabricated 2000 years before the Christian era; with the pre- vious Exhibitions of the Microscope— Steam- Gun propelling Balls against an iron target— Automaton Rope Dancer— Magnets, showing light and electricity— Music, Paintings, Sculpture, « e.— Admittance One Shilling. ADMISSION ONE SHILLING. MISS LINWOOD'S GALLERIES of PICTURES, in Leicester- square, are OPEN EVERY DAY, from Ten in the morn- ing until dusk. MR. HENRI HERZ has arrived in London. His Terms for LESSONS, dec., can be obtained at Messrs. D'ALMAINE and Co.' s, 20, Solio- square, who have recently published the following Works by the above Composer:—" Second Theme Original;" 44 Les Ilivales," a Swiss and Italian Melody with variations; " La Cocquetfe," Scene du Bal; the Galop from 44 Les- tocq;" Rondo Espagnol; 44 Vivi tu," and 44 Tu sordo a mei lamenti," both with brilliant variations ; also New Editions of all his former Works. M" USICAL CIRCULATING LIBRARY.— E. CHAPPELL, having been honoured by the suggestions of several of the Nobility and Gentry, has OPENED a LIBRARY for the CIRCULATION of MUSIC, in TOV\ N and COUNTRY, upon a most extensive scale, including all the modern Works, both Vocal and Instrumental, by eminent and popular Composers, to which every Novelty will be added on the day of its publication. E. C. trusts that, from the arrangements entered into, no disappointment can occur in the supply of new Works.— Terms ( and Catalogues, price Is. 6d.) to be had on appli- cation at the Library, 50, New Bond- street. To Ladies desirous of seeing all the New Publications, or wishing to exercise themselves in playing or singing at sight, the constant variety afforded by the Library offers peculiar advantages. Just published, and sold by all Music Venders, y OVE'S DULCE DOMUM! or, " The Myrtle Wreath and • A Laurel Crown;" a Ballad ( founded on an Allegory of ancient Rome), with Piano Accompt., price 3s.; Guitar Accompt., Is. 6d. BLOOMER PHIPPS begs to announce to the fashionable Coteries, that he has ' been favoured by some correspondents at Rome, Naples, < fcc. with a rich gleaning 6f beautiful meiodies, which will successively follow the above Ballad in a suit- able English dress, as Songs and Duets. " Let ' Love's Dulce Domum' be heard in palace, cottage, or theatre, and we will insure to the fair one who shall sing it, the applaase of her delighted audi- • tory."— Critique. 44 This is a classically beautiful ballad, and transports us, in imagination, to the domicile of a Romish maiden, singing of love and home, in the days of the 4 high and palmy state' of the Eternal City."— Musical Review. PATENT STAYS.— VISTIRIN and Co. submit, for the appro- tion of Ladies, their admired fashionable Corsets, of new construction and • superior workmanship, which they engage to fit without fault, however difficult the figure, and without tightness, so prejudicial to health.— Improved PATENT STAYS, to restore the shape of persons awry, affording most comfortable support in cases of spinal curvature, whilst they make defective figures appear perfectly proportionable, without impeding the action of the body, or interfering with sur- gical remedies, and free from injurious steel, padding, cr pressure.— ELASTIC BELTS, which give support to the weak and corpulent, and are highly beneficial to Invalids. Corsets adapted for India. Country residents instructed to transmit orders.— 1, Old Cavendish- street, Oxford street. SYMMETRICAL PERFECTION.— Mrs. GEARY, Court Stay- maker, 61, St. James's- street, has { he honour to announce to the Nobility and Gentry, that she has returned from the Continent, and has now for their inspection ( in addition to her celebrated newly- invented boned 44 Corset de Toilette") a STAY of the most novel and elegant shape ever manufactured, being a combination of all the best principles collected from the most eminent stay- makers in Paris, Germany, Brussels, & c., totally exterminating all that deadly pressure which has prevailed in all other stays for the last 300 years, at the same time producing a figure of such symmetrical perfection, that attempted in any other stay, would nearly amount to suffocation.— To be had only of the inventor, 61, St. James's- street, at two guineas, ready money. ALE, STOUT, CIDER, & C.- W. G. FIELD and Co. beg to acquaint their Friends and the Public, that their genuine BURTON, EDINBURGH, and PRESTONPANS ALES, Pale Ale as prepared for India Dorchester Beer, London and Dublin Brown Stout, and Cider and Peny, 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. DAY'S SHORT- NAP BEAVER HATS, 21s., resemble super fine cloth; a new, elegant, and most gentlemanly Hat; consisting of a com- bination of good qualities hitherto unknown in the manufacture of Beaver Hats;. they need only to be seen to be universally worn. Price 21s. Servants' best Livery Hats, 16s.— 251, Regent street, west side, two doors fromJ Oxford- street..— ILB, Be particular in the number, 251 SONS OF THE CLERGY.— The REHEARSAL of the MUSIC to be performed at this Festival will take place on - TUESDAY, the 5th of May, in St. Paul's Cathedral ; and the ANNIVERSARY will be held on THURS- DAY, the 7th of May, when a SERMON will be preached there, before H. It. H. the DUKE of CUMBERLAND, the Archbishops of Canterbury and York, the Bishops, the Lord Mayor, Sheriffs, Aldermen, Clergy, and others, By the Hon. and Very Rev. GEORGE PEUJEW, D. D.. Dean of Norwich. Divine Service will commence at Two o'clo - k, and the Doors of the Cathedra will be opened on each day at One o'clock. STEWARDS. H. R. H. the DUKE of CUMBERLAND ( sixth time). Rev. William French, D. D. Rev. Joseph Procter, D. D. Rev. John Sleath, D. D. ( 2d time). Robert Marsham, Esq., D. C. L. Rev. James Tate, M. A. Rev. William G. Townley, M. A. Rev. Richard Ward, M. A. James Brogden, Esq. Joseph Delafield, Esq. William J. Denison, Esq., M. P. Charles Dixon, Esq. Joseph Feilden, Esq. William Harrison, Esq' Robert Sutton, Esq The Earl of Bandon ( 2d time). The Lord Bishop of Lichfield and Co- ventry ( 2d time). The Lord Bishop of Hereford. The Lord Bishop of Bristol. Admiral Lord De Saumarez, G. C. B. The Rt. Hon. Lord Stanley, M. P. The Rt. Hon. Sir Jas. Graham, Bt. M. P. The Rt. Hon. the Lord Mayor. The Hon. Mr. Baron Gurney. Sir Claudius Hunter, Bart. ( 2d time). Sir Herbert Taylor, G. C. B. Hon. Chas. Law, M. P., Rec. of London. Sir Frederick Pollock, M. P. The Petformance of Music will consist of The whole of the Dettingen Te Deum The Hallelujah Chorus CHandel. The Grand Coronation Anthem (" Zadok the Priest").. 3 Cantate Domino ( composed for this Charity) Attwood. Anthem, 44 Lord, thou hast been our refuge,"( composed 7 R expressly for this Charity) \ tfojee. Conductor, Sir George Smart.— Mr. Attwood will preside at the Organ. Leader of the Band ( which will consist of the Members of the Royal Society of Musicians), Mr. F. Cramer. The Committee respectfully state, that the south- west door will be open for the admission of any Person contributing Gold, to the Galleries and Closets ; and the north- west door for the admission of any Person contributing not less than Haif- a- Crown, to the. Choir. Tickets for the Dinner on Thursday the 7th of May, at Six o'clock, at Merchant Tailors' Hall, Threadneedle- street, to be had of the'Treasurer, Oliver Hargreave, Esq., 2, Bloomsbury- place, and of Messrs. Rivington, St. Paul's Church- yard, and Waterloo- place, and Messrs. Bleadon, London Tavern, Bishopsgate- street. *** No Tickets are requisite for admission into the Cathedral. ING'S CONCERT ROOMS, HanOver- square.— Honoured by the Presence of T. R. H. the Duchess of KENT . » nd the Princess VIC- TORIA. - Mr. J. B. SALE, Musical Instructor to H. R. H. the Princess VICTORIA, has the honour to announce that his Annual MORNING CONCERT will take place on FRIDAY next, May 8th, at Two o'clock. PROGRAMME.— Part I., Overture : 41 Ruler of the Spirits," Weber.— 44 Frost Scene" ( King Arthur), MissHealy ( pupil of Mr. H. Phillips), Mr. H. Phillips, and Chorus. Puicell.— Duetto: ' 4 Sgombro il Timor," MadUe. Giulietta Grisi and Sig. Tamburini. Rossini.— 44 Romauza e Rondo all'Esp> niola," from Hummel's Concerto in A Flat, Mrs. Anderson.— Glee: 441 wish t. tune,' Mr. Hawkins, Mr. Hobbs, Mr. Walmisley, and Mr. J. B. Sale.— Song: 44 Adelaida," Mr. Bra- jfcam, accompanied on the pianoforte by Mr. J. B. Sale. Beethoven.— Aria: Madlle. Giulietta Grisi, 44 Dell Asilo della Pace." Costa.— Chorus: 44 The many rend the Skies" ( Alexander's Feast). Handel. — Quintett. Mozart. Messrs. Willman, Mori, Watts, Moralt, andLindley. Part II., Glee : Miss Clara Novello, Master Howe, Mr. Vaughan, and Mr. J. B. Sale, 44 Where the Bee sucks." Arne.— Song: Mr. Hobbs, 44 Come if you dare," and Chorus. Purcell.— Song: Mrs. H. R. Bishop, 44 From mighty Kings." Han- del.— Song: Miss Clara Novello, 44 Tyrol qui m'asvu Naitre," accompanied on the Clarinet by Mr. Willman. Panseron.— Welsh Ballad ( by Command) Mr. H. Phillips, 44 They talk of dales."— Aria: Signor Tamburini, 44 Va Sbramando" ( Faust), Spohr.— Glee: Master Howe, Mr. Goulden, Mr. Vaughan, Mr. Hobbs, and Mr. J. B. Sale.— 44 Come see what pleasure." Elliott,*— Trio : Madlle. G. Grisi, Signor Tamburini, and Mr. H. Phillips, 44 O nume benifico." Rossini.— Chorus from Mass, No. 1. Haydn.— Leader, Mr. Mori— Conductor, Mr. G. Sale. Tickets, 10s. 6d. each, to be had at No. 15, St. Mary Abbot's- terrace, Kensing- ton ; 25, Holywell- street, Millbank, Westminster; and at the principal Music Shops. M R. MORI'S EVENING CONCERT, at the CONCERT ROOM, KING'S THEATRE, on FRIDAY, May 15. Performers— Madlle. Giulietta Girisi, Madame Caradori Allan, Madame Stoekhauaen, Madame Fincklor, Madlle. Brambilla, Miss Bruce, Miss Lacy, and Miss Masson ; Signori Rubini, Jvanhoff, Tainbnrini, Lablache, Begrez, Curioni, Giubilei, and Mr. H. Phillips. Mr. Mosehelej, a Fantasie on the Pianoforte ; Mr. Leonard Schulz, a Fantasie on the Guitar; Master Richardson, pupil of Mr. Nicholson, at the Royal Academy, a Fantasie on the Flute : Mr. Mori, s Concerto by Spohr, ( first time); a new Fantasie, entitled *' Souvenir de Vienne, de Paris, et de Londres ;" Maurer's Grand Concertante for Four Violins principal with Messrs. Wolff, Tol- becque, and Eliason. The Grand Symphony by Spohr, " The Power of Sound ;" Grand Overture, " The Isles of Fingal," by Mendelssohn. The Band will be on the grand scale of former years. Leaders, Messrs. F. Cramer and Mori; Con ductor, Sir G. Smart.— Tickets, 10s. 6d. each, and Boxes, to be had at Mori and Lavenn's, New Musical Subscription Library. 28, New Bond- street. HANOVER- SQUARE ROOMS. Under the immediate Patronage of her Majesty, and H. R. H. the Princess Augusta.— Mr. BLA- GROVE ( Violinist to her Majesty) begs to acquaint the Nobility, Gentry, and his Friends, that his CONCERT will take place on FRIDAY EVENING NEXT, May 8. Vocal Performers: Madlle. Grisi, Miss Bruce, Mrs. Bishop, Mrs. Sey- mour, Miss Dickens, Mr. E. Seguin', Mr. Parry, jun., and Mr. Braham. Instru- mental Solo Performers: Mrs. Anderson ( Pianiste to her Majesty), Messrs Bla- grove, Willman, Lindley, Ac. The Orchestra, selected from the Bands of the Philharmonic Society, Antient Concerts, and Royal Academy of Music ( with the assistance of her Majesty's Private Band), will consist of 70 performers. Leader, Mr. F. Cramer; Conductor, Sir G. Smart.— Tickets, 10s. bd. each, to be had of Mr. Blagrove, 83, Norton- street, Portland- place. RS. " ANDERSON'S MORNING CONCERT.— Under the MF _ immediate Patronage and in the presence of H. R. H. the Duchess of Kent and H. R. H. the Princess Victoria.— Mrs. ANDERSjON, Pianiste to Her Majesty, and Instructress to her Royal Highness the Princess Victoria, has the honour to announce that her ANNUAL MORNING CONCERT will take place at the HANOVER- SQUARE ROOMS, on FRIDAY, May 22d, 1835: to commence at Two o'clock precisely. The Concert will be on the grand scale " of former years, comprising the first Vocal and Instrumental Talent in the country, full particu- lars of which will be announced in a few days.— Tickets, 10 » . 6d. each, may be had at the principal Music Shops, and of Mrs. Anderson, 21, Manchester street, Manchester- square. RINGING and the PIANOFORTE.— Mr. JOSEPH DE PINNA ( composer of 44 What fairy- like7 music ;" 44 Gaily chaunt the summer birds;" 44 When rosy daylight flies;" & c. dec.), begs to announce his recent REMOVAL to No. 164, ALBANY- STREET, REGENT'S- PARK, where he con- tinues to give Instruction in the above branches of education and accomplishment. A long experience in qualifying Vocalists and Pianists for the Stage, the Concert- room, and as Teachers, and in instructing many amateurs amongst the Nobility and Gentry, enables Mr. de Pinna, by adapting his system of tuition to the parti- cular views of his pupils, to ensure their progressive and permanent improvement. Mil. LITTLE WORT, Surgeon- Dentist, begs leave to inform his Friends and the Public, that he has removed from Ludgate- hill, to No. 12, BRIDGE- STREET, BLACKFRIARS, where he continues to perform every operation on the Teeth and Gums; also, to undertake those Cases of Artificial Teeth and Palates, in which other members of the profession have failed.— At home from ten till five. THE REV. J. L. NEWXMARCH, M. A., Vicar of Hooton Pagnell, RECEIVES into his house a limited number of PUPILS, to in- struct in the Classics, Mathematics, and general Literature. Masters attend from the neighbouring town of Doncaster to teach music, drawing, & c. The most respectable references as to scholarship and ability can be given.— For terms, & c., apply to the Rev. J. L. Newinarch, Vicarage, Hooton Pagnell, near Doncaster. TO NOBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN, and those concerned in the Letting of FARMS.— A YOUNG MAN of- active habits, who has lived on, and inspected some of the most extensive and best cultivated Estates and Park- farms in the Kingdom, and spent a considerable portion of his time and property in endeavouring to become conversant with every branrh of modern husbandry, wishes to obtain a SITUATION as FARMING- STEWARD. The advertiser has a perfect knowledge of the nature and most approved management of every descrip- tion of Soils; Buying, Selling, Breeding, Rearing, and Fattening of Stock; Culti- vation of forest and ornamental Trees, & c. < fcc. Should the above fail in procuring the advertiser a situation, he will be willing to treat with any Gentleman for a Farm of from 300 to 500 acres, a proportionate part of which must be pasture, and the remainder adapted for the cultivation of Swedish Turnips, Barley, Clover, and Wheat.— N. B. No objection to undertake the management of a Farm for the proprietor, in connection with one on his own account. The most respectable testimonials as to character and capability may be obtained. Applv, if by letter post paid, to A. B., Mr. Pool's, 6, Southampton- buildings, Chancery- lane, London, T SAMS'S LIBRARY, St. James's- street, several excellent CSL SEASON BOXES at the OPERA for Disposal on moderate terms, on the Pit, 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Circles. The Tuesday Nights of a Box on the Grand Tier, near her Majesty's. The Saturday Nights only, or the Alternate Weeks, of a Donble Box on the Two Pair. PRIVATE BOXES Let by the Night at all the- Theatres, French Plays, and Italian Opera. Opera Pit Tickets 8s. 6d. each. A Box at Drury Lane, let for .. .. .. lis. 6d. Ditto at Covent Garden, holding 8 persons .. .. 1 lis. 6d. Sams's Library is liberally supplied with every New Work on the day of publication. RIHHE PITT CLUB, LONDON.— The TRIENNIAL COM- JL ME MO RATION of the Birth of the late Right Honourable WILLIAM PITT, will be celebrated at Merchant Tailors' Hall, on FRIDAY, the 29th instant, VISCOUNT MAHON, M. P., in the Chair.— Tickets, ^' 1.10s. each ( not trans- ferable), may be had on application to the Committee, at the City of London Tavern, Bishopsgate- street, on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, the 26th^ 27th, and 28th, between the hours of Eleven and Four.— May, 1835. EALING SCHOOL SOCIETY.— The NINETEENTH ANNIVERSARY DINNER of this Society will take place at the Free- masons' Tavern, on FRIDAY, the 8th day of May. PRESIDENT— HENRY SIMPSON, Esq. VICE- PRESIDENT— HENRY PITMAN, Esq. STEWARDS. G. W. Shury, Esq. Peter Thorn, Esq. A. Middleton, Esq. R. Piatt, Esq. T. Brettle, Esq. J. A. Cox, Esq. E. Welch, Esq. John Braithwaite, Esq. ALFRED NICHOLAS, Secretary. N. B. Dinner on the Table at half- past Five o'clock precisely. THE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING of the Members ot" the ORIENTAL CLUB, will take place at the CLUB- HOUSE, on MONDAY, the - 1th of May, at Two o'clock precisely. T. CORNISH, Secretary. T IFE ANNUITIES under the 59th Geo. III., 10th Geo. IV., and JBLA 4th and 5tli Wm. IV.— The TABLES for the purchase of Annuities on Sinsrle Lives mav 1 e had on application by letters, post paid, to the ROYAL UNION OFFICE, 5, Lancaster- place, Strand. NATIONAL PNEUMATIC RAILWAY ASSOCIATION. To be incorporated by Act of Parliament, Capital of ^ 200,000, ' in 10,000 Shares of ^ 20 each, on which a deposit of is to be paid on subscribing. DIRECTORS. William Beetham, Esq., F. R. S. Sir William Rawlins Colonel Archibald Robinson Vice Adm. Sartorius, ( Portuguese serv.) Lieut.- Colonel Merrick Shawe William J. Sturch, Esq. Rear- Admiral Wollaston William Wybrow, Esq. William Hosking, Esq., F. S. A., Professional Director. SOLICITORS. Messrs. Beetham, 8, Chatham- place, Bridge- street. BANKERS. Messrs Rogers, Towgood, and Co., Clement's- lane, Lombard- street; and Messrs." Herries, Farquhar, and Co., St, James's- street. Prospectuses, accompanied by scientific opinions of the practicability and effi- ciency of the Pneumatic System of Railway, by Professor Faraday and Dr. Lard- ner, may be obtained of Mr. Hosking, 44, Berners- street, Oxford- street; of Messrs. Beetham, 8, Chatham- place; and of Messrs. Pattison and Co., 57, Thread- needle- street, to all of whom applications may be made for the remaining Shares- All communications by letter must be post- paid. INFANT SCHOOL, St. Margaret and St. John, Westminster.— WANTED, a MISTRESS to conduct the above School: she must be a member of the Church of England, well versed in Scripture, and thoroughly ac quainted with the system of infant education.— Application for particulars to be made to Mr. James Hunt, jun., Hon. Sec., Horseferry road, bet ween the hours of 9 and 12 in the forenoon, on or before Monday, the 11th instant.— Salary ^ 65 per annum. T OST, on the 1st of May, supposed in Hyde Park, a plain JLi SILVER SNUFF- BOX, valuable only to its owner.— Any person restoring the same at Mr. Cresswell's Library, No. i21, Crawford- street, will be hand- somely rewarded. MONEY LENT, at 3, 3}£, and 4 per Cent, to any amount, for short or long periods, to the Nobility, Clergy, and other parties of re- spectability, upon Landed or Personal Security ( such as upon Bond or Note of Hand).— Apply, first by letter, post paid, to J. C., 31, Henry- street, Pentonville, London. TO be LET, on BARNES TERRACE, Surrey, a comfortable TEN- ROOMED HOUSE, in good order, neatly Furnished ; good cellars, water closet, and excellent spring water. Frequent conveyance to town. To be let for a few months, or by the year, on very moderate terms to a respectab'e tenant.— Apply to Mr. M4Diamid, Upper Berkeley- street, Portman- square ; or to Mr. Hull, Post- office, Barnes. TUNBRIDGE WELLS.— CALVERLEY PARK and ESTATE. — T. HODGES, Upholsterer and House Agent, No. 9, Calverle}- place, and 2, Russell- place, Tunbridge Wells, begs to inform the visitors ot this fashionable watering- place, that he has a few capital Detached FAMILY RESI- DENCES to LET or DISPOSE OF, suited to the convenience and comfort of respectable families. The houses are beautifully situated, well built, and are amply supplied with good water. They are a short distance from the new Church, and have the privilege of a very extensive pleasure ground, tastefully planted. Shampooing and Vapour Baths are established on the spot by Mr. Seaman, of Suffolk- place, London.— Any communication addressed as above, will receive immediate attention. RAM RIDGE " HOUSE, HANTS.— To be LET, handsomely Furnished, with immediate possession, for a term of years to be agreed on, with or without any quantity of Meadow Land, not exceeding sixty acres. The House contains a handsome'drawing- room, dining- room, morning sitting- room, and a gentleman's room on the first- floor; six best bed- rooms with dressing- rooms to three of them ; excellent attics, the usual domestic offices, and coach- houses and stables, in complete repair; kitchen garden and hot- house. The House is modern. It is situated about four miles from Andover. and sixty- eight from London.— For further particulars apply to Mr. Garrard, Solicitor, No. 13, Suffolk- street, Pall- mall East, London; or to Mr. Earle, Solicitor, Andover, Hants. Letters post- paid. ORIENTAL CARPETS.— A Select Assortment of these beauti- ful specimens of Eastern magnificence— one of unusually large dimensions and matchless character. LAPWORTH and RILEY, Manufacturers to the King and H. R. H. the Duchess of Kent, have a most unique and splendid assortment of Royal Velvet, Saxony, and Edinburgh Carpets, with every other description of British fabrics, of first qualities. TOURNAY CARPETS.— Being the Agents for this highly- estimated article, they are enabled to supply to any design and di- mensions.— Warehouse, 19 and 20, Old Bond- street. THE NOBILITY and GENTRY" are most respectfully mada' acquainted that the EXTENSIVE WARE- ROOMS of Messrs. MILES and EDWARDS will present, during the approaching season, the most effective Dis- play of useful and elegant FURNITURE, suitable to every description of build- ing, which has ever been exhibited at one Establishment in this metropolis. Their ECONOMICAL SYSTEM of FURNISHING, so generally known and approved, will be continued by them, and in no instance will they permit any but ttheir own manufacture to be sold on the premises. The singularly SPLENDID CHINTZES they are now introducing, they flatter themselves will meet with the approbation of the Public: at the same time they consider it necessary to say they are not responsible for any inferior imitations of their designs which are selling by other houses in London as the production of Miles and Edwards.— No. 134, Oxford- street, near Hanover- square. CURTAINS, CARPETS, and CABINET 1" URNITURE.— JOHN RICHARDS and COMPANY respectfully announce, that in con- sequence of having to rebuild their premises, the whole of their SPLENDID and EXTENSIVE STOCK of RICH SILK DAMASKS and TABBARETTS, CHINTZES, MOHAIR, and MERINO DAMASKS, MAGNIFICENT SAXONY, VELVET PILE and BRUSSELS CARPETS, SUPERIOR CABINET FURNI- TURE and CHAIRS, ORIENTAL CABTNETS, Tables, and Fire Screens, in short, everything requisite for Furnishing, from the Mansion to the Cottage, at an IMMENSE REDUCTION. Families about to Furnish will save at least 30 per Cent.— John Richards and Co., 37, Oxford- street. JARVIS'S INDIA RUBBER WATER- PROOF POLISH is the only Polish that resists wet, polishes without brushing, forms no sub- stance on the leather, and preserves it from cracking or getting mouldy. 44 We particularly recommend Jarvis's Polish as peculiarly suitable to our sporting friends who are desirous of preserving their feet dry, and their bones from rheu- matism."— Bell'sLife in London. 44 We recommend our readers to use Jarvis's Polish, as it saves time and trouble, and when exposed to wet does not wash off to soil the clothes."— Weekly True Sun. Manufactory, Jarvis's, 142, Totten- ham- court- road. Sold in bottles, 2s. 6d. and 4s. 6d. each, by all Wholesale and Retail Patent Medicine Venders, Druggists, Saddlers, Oilmen, & c. 138 JOHN BULL. May 3. TUESDAY'S GAZETTE. Whitehall, April 24.— The Kinp hns beer, leased to arrwt letters patent to be passed under the Great Seal of the United Ktagdom, constituting and appointing the Right Hon. Sir John Cam Hobhouse," Bart.; the Right Hon. John Sullivan ^ » » d Sir Charles Coekerill, Bart., his Majesty's Commissioners for the Affairs of India.— The Right Hon. the Karl of Alhe'marle, . Master of the Horse to his Majesty.— Lieut.- ColOnel the Hon. Gtetmye Anson, the fiffice of Storekeeper of the Ordnance of the said United Kingdom.— Henry Labouehere, Esq., to be Master and Worker of his Majesty's Mint! — April 27.— The King has been. pleased to direct letters patent to he passed Tinder the Great Peal, appointing Sir Henry ParneH, Bart., to be Paymastor- * General of his Majesty's Forces, nn- i Treasurer of the Ordnance. The King has been pleased to direct letters patent to be passed under the < 5reat Seal, appointing the Right Hon. John William Baron Duncannon, com Mlonly called Viscount Puneannon ; Major Ge » ? ral Sir Benjamin Charles Stephenson, Knight Grand Cr. ws of the Royal Hatoverian Guelphie Order ; find Alexander Milne, Esq., to be Commissioners of his Majesty's Woods, Forests, land Revenues, Works, and Public Buildings. DECLARATION OF INSOLVENCY. H. KNOX, Park- street, Marylebone, merchant. BANKRUPTS. J. CROSBY, Nottingham, dver. Atts. Sfcarpe and Co., Old Jewry— A. " WEBSTER, St. Michael's- alley," Comhill, victualler. Att. Watson, Lincoln's Inn- fields— J. WILLIS, High- street, Poplar, victualler. Atts. Henderson and Co., JLeinan- street, Goodmari's- fialds— C. R. BELL, Leeds, cloth merchant. . Atts. Strangwayes and Co., Barnard's Inn, London; Blackburn, Leeds— B. PROCTOR, Kadford, Nottinghamshire, lace maker. Aits. Capes, Grav's Inn, London; Wadsworth, Nottingham— T. F. CHAPMAN, Littleham and Exinouth, hotel keeper. Atts. Clowes and Co., Temple, London ; Laidinan, Exeter— T. DANIELL, late of Michaelchurch- coiirt, " Herefordshire, copper smelter. Atts. Simmons and Co.. Truro; Newton, Gray's Tun, London— M. DUNN, Preston, wine merchant. Atts. Chester, Staple* Inn, London; Havdock, Preston— T. RICHARDSON, Norwich, coal merchant. Atts. Staff, Norwich; White and Co., Frederick's- place, Old Jewry— W. BODIN, Cheethain, Manchester. Atts. Rowley, Manchester; Cuvelje and Co., Southampton- buildings, Chancery- lane. FRIDAY'S GAZETTE. Master of the Horse's Office, April 30.— ills Majesty has been graciously pleased " to appoint the Right Hon. William George Earl of Errol to be Master of his Majesty's Buck- homids, viee the Earl of Chesterfield, resigned. Whitehall, April30.— The King has been pleased to direct letters patent to be t> ftssed under the Great Seal, constituting and appointing the Marquis of Conyng- liam to be his Majesty's Postmaster- General. Crown- Office, May 1.— Members returned to serve in this present Parliament.— Borough of Cambridge— The Right Hon. Thomas Spring Rice. Borough of Totness— Right Hon. E. A. Seymour, commonly called Lord Seymour. Town of Berwick- upon Tweed— Lieut.- General Sir R. S. Donkin, K. C. B. Town of Drogheda— A. C. O'Dw- yer, Esq. Borough of Newport— W. H. Ord, Esq. DECLARATIONS OF INSOLVENCY. W. B. GUNNING, Eghain, Surrey, bricklayer— J. HANKES, Chorlton- upon- Rlediock, Lancashire, corn dealer. BANKRUPTCY SUPERSEDED. T. and W. LAYFIELD, Silver- street, St. James's, tailors. BANKRUPTS. W. CHEETHAM, Austin- triars, gunpowder merchant. Atts. Kirkman and Rutherford, Cannon- street— C. M. ULLITHORNE, Red Lion- square, broker. Atts. Richardson and Pike, Golden- square— J. CALDWELL, New Crane, Shad- well, licensed victualler. Atts. Goie, Tjime- street, Leadenhall- etreet— F. HEN- NELL, Air- Street, St. James's, tailor. Att. Bell, Vine- street, Regent- street— I. RA MAS, Brighton, clothes dealer. Atts. Abrahams and Robson, Clifford's Inn— C*. JARMAN, West Smithiield, woollen draper. Atts. Broughton and Briggs, Falcon- square— J. PENRICE a d M. ANDREW, Old Change, City, Warehousemen. Atts. Bell and Co., " Bow Church- yard— S. LOCK and H. BIN- NEY, Berner's- sfreet, dyers. Atts. " Nind and Cotterill, Throgmorton- street— T. HIRKBY, sen.. Harbour Flatt, Westmorland, and T. KIRKBY, jun., Smelt- house Mills, Yorkshire, flax dressers. Atts. Johnson and Wetlierall, Temple; and Taylor, Knaresborough— J. and E. BROWNE, Bath, stationers. Atts. Jones, Crosby- squar- e, Bishopsgate- street; and Hellings, Bath— T. JAMES, Llangam- Jnarch, Breeonslrire, flannel manufacturer. Atts. Vaughan and Co., Brecon ; and Biclmell and Co., Lincoln's Inn. FOREIGN AFFAIRS. The affair of ( he American Indemnity Bill excites much attention at Paris, and seems to have produced some discord in the Cabinet. Mr. Livingston, the American Ambassador, considers the condition of M. Velaze, of not making any payment till satisfaction was given by the President for the offensiveness of his Message, as more de- grading than a flat refusal to pay at all— for one would be a simple njustice, - whilst the other is an insult. M. Thiers blames the facility " With which the Duke de Broglie suffered the amendment of M. Velaze to pass, and in these views he is- supported by M. Guizot. The Duke, on the other hand, has with him M. Hutnann, the Finance Minister, " who adheres to the letter of the amendment, and refuses to part with a single sous until the required satisfaction be tendered. The Courrier Fmnqais says that Mr. Livingston, loudly asserts that neither the present President of America nor his successor, whoever he may be, will consent to retract or explain the Message of Presi- dent Jackson; that Congress will not interfere with his preroga- tive or influence his resolution ; and that, moreover, his ( Mr. Livingston's ) return to America would in all likelihood be followed by the passing of a non- intercourse Sill with regard to France. The Paris papers of Wednesday are chiefly filled with remarks on the impending trials, but give an account of one of the most appalling murders that has ever occurred even in Paris : the evidence of pro- fessional persons who examined the remains of the victim, a female, forty years of age, declared their belief that she had been sawed asunder whilst living"! The two metropolitan theatres are expected to close about the 18th of the present month, when a new but short season will immediately commence. A French paper informs us that Mr. Bunn is now in Paris, lie has engaged Madame Malibran ( who will appear in London in Mademoiselle Falcon's character in La Juive), and also proposes to carry off in addition several of the first- rate sujets of the grand opera. This indefatigable manager returns with the score of Auber's last, ' novelty, he • dieval de Bronze* Vauxhall fids year comes earlier into the field than heretofore, having already announced its intended opening on the lltli of May. During the recess the proprietors of the " Royal property" have not been idle, but have prepared a novelty on an extensive scale, whieh it is expected will prove both striking and attractive. QUEEN'S THECTRE.— A new piece, under the title of The Young Jieefer, has been produced at this fashionable little house, and went • off with much spirit, especially that part of it'which was entrusted to Mrs. Nisbett.— The management of this theatre have made the liberal offer of 6001. to the inimitable'Liston, for the term of three months, with a view to that celebrated actor's again appearing in all his most favourite characters- John Reeve is also engaged, and will make " his appearance to- morrow as. Jasper Touchwood, in the popular farce of . Hush Motley. ROYAL DISPESKARY- FOR DISBASESOF THE EAR.-— 1The Anniversary Festival of this valuable Institution was celebrated on Wednesday at the Thatched Hotu- se Tavern, wheal, in consequence of the indisposi- tion of the intended Chairman, Lsrd F. Leveson Egerton, the Chair • Was filled by Dr. James Tattersal!, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, Londou, whn, in an able and impressive manner advo- cated the claims of this charity on the support of theipublic generally. Since ris establishment in 3816, he E, Jmarked, nearly 10,000 persons, afflicteti with deafness . and. 8therdisefises of the ear, had been cured or relieved, including several cases of deafness and dumbness. He next pait a warm tribute of praise to Mr. Curtis, fee founder and Surgeon of the Dispensary., aad concluded by proposing that gentle- man's health, who, in returning thanks, stated how great, was the satisfaction he felt at having been able to alleviate the sufferings of - so many of his fellow- creatures in this country, and through the - adoption of'his mode of treatment on the Continent, of having there - also contributed'to the advancement of ivedical science.— Amongst the donations- we noticed tie Queen, 101.; the Duchess of Kent, 101.; - the King of the Belgians, 101. 10s.; the Duke of Bucclaueh, 201.; Lord F. Egertea, 251.; Lord Roll e, 51., & c- M- ILITIA.— An Order in Council ias just beenissued, " suspending the calling out ot the militia in Great Britain and Ireland, for the purpose of exercising and training, in the present year." As no ballot & as taken place since 1831, when the Tiailitia were last- called out, consequently the five years for which the men were then en- rolled to serve ( purseant to the Act) will have expired, and, there- fore, before this force. can be again called out, a- general ballot must take place ail over the jLFnited Kingdom", and this may be expected to take place during the next spring, as there has been no instance*, since the peace, of more than five years having elapsed without filling up the regiments of this truly constitutional arm of the service to the full complement of men, and afterwards calling them out for training. . A singular and important discovery to antiquaries has been made m the parish of TinwelJ, near Stamford, of a large subterranean casern, supported in the centre bv a stone pillar. On Saturday the labourers of Mr. Edward PawlettVere ploughing in one of his fields, abutting on the road from Tinwell to Casterton, when one of the horses' feet sank into the earth, by which the discovery was made. A more minute investigation ha ving taken place, it was found to be an oblong square, extending iu length to between 30 and - it) yards, and in breadth to about eight feet. The sides are of stone, the ceiling is flat, and atone end are two doorways bricked up, ADDRESS OF THE BAR TO SIR R. PEEL. "' dear Sir Robert— I have the pleasure of transmitting to you " an address from the Bar, signed by upwards of 400 gentlemen, resident in London, including, as you will perceive, a large propor- tion of the most distinguished members of all the ranks in the profession. '" On this occasion I will merely say that the eminent talents, judgment, and prudence, which you have displayed in conducting the Government, as the First Minister of the Crown, and, above all, your firmness in maintaining the principles essential to the security of the Established Church, have called forth this marked expression of their sentiments from that learned and independent body. " Von will, I have no doubt, receive it as a sincere tribute of respect which they consider ( especially at the present moment) as due to your public character and services. " I remain, my dear Sir Robert, most faithfully yours, " CHARLES WETHERELL. " Lincoln's Inn, April 27,1835." " TO THE RIGHT HON. SIR ROBERT PEEL. " We, the undersigned, members of the English Bar, beg leave to express to you our sincere admiration of the wisdom, temper, and firmness which you have displayed in the administration of his Majesty's Government. " We deeply regret the necessity which has compelled your retire- ment from office, and anxiously hope that the country will not long be deprived of those services which we believe to be essential to its prosperity and security. " The absence from London of many of our number, on professional business, has alone prevented us from offering to you at an earlier period, this expression of our sentiments." " Whitehall Gardens, April 28, 1835. " My dear Sir Charles— Allow me to return through you, the honoured instrument of communication, through which the address of the Bar has reached me, the cordial and respectful acknow- ledgments of my gratitude for the high honour which it confers. " If I had retired from office, withthe painful consciousness that 1 had failed in the defence of the trust ( assigned to me, through any want of devotion to the service of the King, through impatience under defeat, or the apprehension of any difficulty or danger, not connected with public interests, the return to private life, accom- panied with such a retrospect, would have been a grievous disappoint- ment, to me. " But, when I am assured by the distinguished men who are parties to this address, who have been spectators of the contest in which I have been engaged, and are eminently qualified to form a judgment on the motives and conduct of all who have taken a part in it, that, notwithstanding failure, I have established a claim on their approba- tion and confidence, I retire with a reward, so far as personal ambition is concerned, higher than any other to which success could have entitled me. " I trust that the tenure of power by the late Administration, short as it was in duration, has not been without great public advantage, by satisfying a large and most respectable portion of the community that it is possible to combine, with the maintenance of ancient insti- tutions, with the respect for established rights, with the independent exercise of a free judgment by all constitutional authorities, that it is possible to combine with these, the redress of real grievances, the correction of acknowledged abuses, the pure administration of public patronage, and a wise economy in the control of the public expendi- ture. " If we have contributed to establish and confirm such a conviction in the public mind, we shall not have laboured in vain, for we shall have provided the strongest of all securities against reckless innova- tion, and against changes in our laws and institutions, that may be calculated rather to serve the temporary interests of political parties than to conduce to the enlarged and permanent ends of good govern- ment. " Believe me, my dear Sir Charles, " Most faithfully vours, " Sir Charles Wetherell." " ROBERT PEEL." Of all the faults which have been ascribed to the Bishops and the Clergy, meddling in politics seems to have been considered, by the Radicals, the most deadly sin. Only conceive the following speech having been made at a dinner at Sutton last Friday:— Mr. M. TEBIHTTT said he wished to introduce the name of a dis- tinguished individual whom they had all long known, who had always been at his post in support of independence, and had ever shown himself ready to join in liberating the freeholders from the thraldom of the House of Sandwich, from the influence of the Ramsey dis- trict, and the efforts of the Corporation— he meant Dr. MALTBY, Bishop of Chichester. ( Loud applause.) Although that gentleman was now removed from his former associates, still, from some con- versation which he ( Mr. T.) had a few days since with the Bishop's son, he was sure he still took a great interest in the politics of Hun- tingdonshire, and would have great pleasure in giving his assistance and influence in fighting their battles. ( Cheers.) He therefore begged to give the health of the Bishop of CHICHESTER. Amongst the many exhibitions of this season we must not forget to point attention to an extremely interesting one now open at the Cosmorama Rooms, in Regent- street. It is a miniature model of Abbotsford- house, court- yards, out- houses and gardens, done in stucco by a poor self- taught artist, of that neighbourhood, whose performance has been highly applauded in the country where almost every one can judge of its fidelity. The effect is extremely beautiful; and those who have, as well as those who have not, visited the resi- dence of Sir WALTER SCOTT, will be equally delighted with an inspection of this ingenious facsimile. A letter from Exeter, dated Monday, says, " within the last twenty four hours we have undergone a positively awful vicissitude of climate here. At eleven o'clock yesterday morning the sun was excessively hot and the weather in every respect that of summer. Within the short space of two hours we had a sharp fall of snow and hail, and towards evening the cold was piercingly severe. Such weather on the 26th of April in the South of Devonshire it is need- less to say is quite unusual. The ground presents all the aspect of summer— the atmosphere contains all the severity of winter." Dr. GEORGE G REGORY read a paper at the Royal College of Physi- cians on Monday, on the mutual relation between small- pox and cow- pox. He considered the vaccine lymph to have lost much of its virtue from having passed through the system of too many persons: he was led to this conclusion from the circumstance of small- pox being at present so prevalent. It is now 35 years since matter was extracted from the cow, and he thought it necessary, for vaccination to have a proper effect, that fresh matter should be procured from its original source. Thursday, one of a numerous series of sales of tea took place, con- sisting of the recent arrivals from Canton, and was attended fully by those interested in the trade. About 10,000 chests were offered during the day, which met with a pretty brisk demand, but prices about 2d per lb. less than the quotations realised at the last sales. Nearly 1,200 chests were withdrawn, some dispute having arisen as to whether the duty levied on them should be that on congou or bohea. For the private tr^ de teas the declarations for next month amount to about 90/) 00 chests more, and in June next, the quarterly- sale of the East India Company's teas to the extent of 4,000,000 lbs. will commence. Soon after the breaking up of the Court of Common Council on Thursday, Mr. GALLOWAY waited upon the Lord Mayor, and pre- sented to him a requisition signed by upwards of JO Common Coun- c3men. The following is a copy:—" We, the undersigned members of the Cou- rt of Common Council of this City, do herefey respectfully request your Lordship will call an early Court to consider of the propriety of presenting an Address to his MAJESTY on thie resigna- tion of his late and the appointment of his present Ministers,-" The Lord Mayor app oicted Tuesday for- fee consideration of the subject, and directed that that question . should K- fce precedence of all . otSier business. , LITERARY NOTICES. COMPLETE EDITION OF COWFEP. BY THE Rev. MR. GRI. MSHAWE.— " The most beautiful edition of this favourite poet that has yet been given to the public. Itis to be finished in a series of eight volumes, and will be the first complete edition of Cbwper, as a great deal of his Private Correspondence is still copyright. This edition was con- templated by the Rev. Dr. Johnson, the affectionate and devoted kinsman of Cowper— the youthful " dear Johnny" of his Corres- pondence, and the friend who afterwards so tenderly watched over his last illness and closed his eyes. The death of this gentleman has devolved the task of editor upon his brother- in- law, the Rev. T. S. Grimshawe, who having the exclusive power of publishing the whole 1 Correspondence of Cowper— a collection of the most beautiful and interesting letters ever given to the world— proposes to print them entire, and in chronological order. This power, we conceive the chief merit of this edition, as nothing in any other can atone for the • want of these Letters. Without entering " into the question of Co w- per's literary rank, we may at once determine that he is the most' popular of English poets; and that while female readers form so • large a majority, he must remain so. We therefore rejoice in every - now edition of the Household Poet of England, and in this one espe- cially, as with the cheapness so remarkable in these days, it combines accuracy and great beautyin its embellishments."— Tdit's Magazine. THE UNITED SERVICE JOURNAL.— The May number of this our favourite periodical is one of unusual attraction. Ill these " piping times of peace," it is really gratifying to find our officers so delight- fully occupied with their pens, and relating the perilous adventures, by " flood and field," in which they themselves have borne so dis- tinguished a part. _ To the general reader such narratives possess a charm and a fascination peculiarly their own. The new number includes, among its principal contents, two papers connected with Northern Discovery,— the one entitled Polar Scenes, and the other Northern Research, both which must prove welcome to all who take an interest in the voyages of Captains Ross, Franklin, Parry, or Beechey;— Journey from Calcutta to Bombay:— the Diary of a Liberator, a Narrative of the Operations of Dom Pedro in Portugal; — The order Book, or Naval Sketches, a highly characteristic por- traiture of Life afloat;— The Barbary Corsairs;— Scenes in Colombia, — an important Paper on the Military Service of India, < fcc. GILBERT GUBNEY.— The continuation of this most amusing story, by Theodore Hook, appears in the May number of the New Monthly Magazine, which includes, among other attractions, " Political Dic- tation," giving a lively picture of the embarrassments attendant on the system of " pledges;"—" Our Exile in England," being Auto- biographical Sketches of some of the most distinguished of the Spa- nish Refugees;—" Scenery and a Scene," a Love Adventure in the New World ;—" A new Sketch on Irish Highways." By Mrs. S. C. Hall;—" An Adventure on the Green Mountains," a most stirring and romantic narrative;— Records of a Stage Veteran : Predecessors of Matthews— The Three Drury- lane Theatres— Original Profes- sions of Performers— W. Farren's Shyloek— Elliston— Mrs. Siddons, & c.;— Libels upon the Lovely ;— The Last New Murderess, tfce. THE LIFE AND CORRESPONDENCE OF GARRICK.— Having read through these entertaining volumes, we can now appreciate and understand a saying, which we have often heard, viz., " As deep as Garrick." His was not a superficial craft like Joseph Buntin's, who was always boasting himself to be a man of the world, but without Iiretence he had the world at his fingers' ends. In these volumes we lave the world, as it were, doing homage to his genius— the world of fashion— the world of wit— the professional and the unprofessional world. There are three ways by which the world may De won and ruled, and rendered subservient to a man's interest, by genius, by conduct, by business. Garriek was a man of genius, a man of con- duct, and " a man of business, and, we may add, that he was a philosopher in all but talking about it. We see by this work ( of which a new and cheap edition has just appeared) how dexterously he rendered his taste subservient to his interests. MR. BULWER'S NEW WORK.— We are requested to state that Mr. Bulwer's new work, The Student, will be published to- morrow ( Monday); also, that the Hon. Mrs. Norton'^ novel, The JVife and Woman's Reward, is now ready, and may be had of the publishers, Messrs. Saunders and Otley, Conduit- street, at the libraries, and of the booksellers in town and country'. M. de Lamartine's Pilgrimage to the Holy Land, will be published immediately. This enthusiastic traveller and poet explored, in the true spirit of a Christian pilgrim, every part of the hallowed spots of Palestine. He traversed the valley of Jehosophat, ascended the Mount of Olives, wandered by the shores of the Dead Sea, and on the awful plain were stood the doomed cities; he lingered in the sacred garden of Getlisemene, and visited the spot were our Saviour wept over Jerusalem. Of these and many other holy localities the eloquent author has recorded his impressions, and given to his con- temporaries a work which will often be recurred to by the reader of the inspired writings. Miss MITFORD'S NEW WORK.— Upon the publication of her last volume of Our Village, it was suggested to this successful author, that since she had taken leave of rural life, she should visit thenext country town, and present us with sketches of the inhabitants— a class of the community in which may be traced the peculiarities, the prejudices, and the excellences of the national character. Upon this hint it appears Miss Mitford has composed her new work, entitled^ Be/ ford Regis, which is announced for immediate publication. No more faithful delineator of English domestic life exists than this charming writer. ANNE GREY.— We observe that the delightful novel which has appeared under the auspices of the author of " Granby" ( Anne Grey) has already reached a second edition. The tale is certainly beautifully written; there is enough of feeling and nature, enough of interest, enough of true and delicate delineation of character, to charm the most fastidious of readers. The talented authoress may be fairly congratulated on its complete success. MRS. SHELLEY'S NEW NOVEL, " LODORE."— There is a depth and sweep of thought in this work, a knowledge of human kind in its manifold relations with this earth, and a boldness and directness in penetrating to the recesses, and displaying the motives and work- ings of the heart, its feelings and passions— not in woman only, but in man also— which we certainly should have imagined to be far beyond the scope and power of a lady. Yet is there at the same time nothing in these volumes which a lady might not have known, and felt, and written; nor can there be the slightest doubt that they are the production of a feminine mind, albeit one of robust culture and extraordinary vigour. The story treats of the hopes and fears, the joys and sorrows, the delights and dangers, the blessings and the evils, of the fierce and tender passion. A healthy moral pervades the whole of the work. Lodore is indeed one of the best novels it has been of late years our fortune to read.— Eraser's Magazine. THE NEW WORK BY THE AUTHOR OF " STORIES OF WATERLOO,' ENTITLED " MY LIFE."— The public has not tasted, for the last quarter of a century at least, a more delicious morsel of fictitious autobiography than this. Itis, indeed, a true picture ol life— smiles and tears, calms and tempests, following as closely on each other as the sunshine does the shade on the hills in harvest. To us these volumes contain more varied charms than are to be found in many of the best works of fiction in the language. Scenes of the wildest recklessness, adventures ludicrous beyond conception, are ever and anon succeeded by episodes replete with all the intensity of the- deepest pathos, overflowing with all the harrowing interest excited by stupendous guilt, imminent peril, and excessive suffering.— Sun. Lady Blessington's new novel ( The Two Friends) will be eagerly and profitably read, not only for the interest of its story, and for th& excitement that good works of fiction rarely fail to produce, but it has claims upon our attention of a far higher order. Lady Blessington has lived in the best'society, and has had ample opportunities of searching into human character; and her naturally strong mind has enabled her to turn those opportunities to account. The work will be appreciated by all classes— those who read for amusement, and! those who desire at the same time to acquire knowledge, and seek it where the actual is blended with the imaginative. The following fact, says the Derbyshire Courier, will give some idea of the ignorant state of some of those beings who live on the- wild moors which lie so extensively between Derbyshire, Cheshire,. andStaffordshire. The Rev. Mr. H- heard of a man in his parish who had got a charm for the toothache. Wishing to unravel the- mystery, he went to the man and desired to see his charm. He said; it was a verse out of Scriptur, and laid it before Mr. H., who, look- ing at it, read as follows" Peter was sitting over against the gate of the temple, with his head on his hand. Jesus passing by and see- ing him, saith unto him,' Peter, what aileth thee?' He saith, ' Lord I have not the toothache.' » " Well," says Mr. H., " but you know you can't find any such text as this m the Bible." " No," says the man, " that's the very charm. It'a i'tl i'th Mile, but you carina foinil it !'* June 14. j o h n b u l l. 187 WAR OFFICE, May 1. 1st Drags.— Lieut. E. Littledale, to be be Capt. by pur. vice Yates, who ret.; Cornet W. C. Yates to be Lieut, by pur. vice Littledale ; Palk, Gent, to be ' Cornet, by pur. vice Yates. 40th Foot— Brevet Major R. Jebb to be Major, by pur. vice Simcokes, who ret. ; Lieut. T. J. Valiant, to be Capt. by pur. vice Jebb ; Ensign H. C. Tyler to be Lieut, by pur. vice Valiant; R. Armstrong, Gent, to be Ensign, by pur. vice Tyler. 43d*- Lieut. H. W. Paget, from the li. p. Unat. to be Lieut., vice C. E. Nugent, who exch.; Gentleman Cadet R. Lambert, from the " Royal Military College, to be Ensign, by pur. vice Paget, prom. 47th— Capt. P. H. " Michel!, from tht'h. p. as Sub- Inspector of Militia, to be Capt. vice C. F. B. Jones, who exch. rec. the dif. 4Sth— Lieut. J. Mellis, from the 54th, to be Lieut, vice Blackall, who exch. 54th— Lieut. J. Blackall, from the 48th, to be Lieut, vice Mellis, who exch. 69th— Lieut. E. S. Thomas to be Capt. by pur. vice Coke, who retires; Ensign W. Walker to be Lieut, by pur. vice Thomas; Alexander Magnay, Gent, to be Ensign, by purchase, vice Walker. TTnattached— Ensign H. W. Paget, from the 43d, to be Lieut, by pur. Hospital Staff— G. N. Foaker, Gent, to be Assist.- Surg. to the Forces, vice Dawson, prom, in the 56th. Commissariat— To be Deputy Assistant- Commissaries- General: Commissariat Clerk T. Graham; Commissariat Clerk, W. H. Drake. NAVAL APPOINTMENTS, PROMOTIONS, & c. Lieutenants— B. Aplin, to the Carron ; J. Binney, to the Star; H. Byng, to the Sapphire. Master— W. Parker, to the Champion. Chaplain— E. Petman, totbe Barham. Surgeons— P. Sueter, tothe Mangles; W. Donelly, to the Astrea; Mr. A. Savage, to the Norfolk, convict ship. Mate— E. G. Fishbourn, to be Lieut. Second Master— J. Elliott, to the Basilisk. Boatswain— P. Johnson, of the San Josef, to Sheerness Dockyard. Clerk— Maturin, to the Basilisk. ROYAL MARINES.— Major— R. S. Wilkinson, to be Paymaster of the Royal * Pragoons. Captain— Ashmore, to the recruiting service at Gloucester. The following Works are in the Press, and will be speedily produced. In 2 vols post Svo., THE NATURAL and CIVIL HISTORY of ALGIERS. By B. P. LORD, M. B. M. R. C. S. of the Bombay Medical Establishment. In 2 vols. 18mo., with engravings, SHIPWRECKS and DISASTERS AT SEA. A Continuation of two volumes already published in Constable's Miscellany. By Cyrus Redding, Esq. A new edition, with considerable amendments, in 12mo., price 6s., of THE VILLA and COTTAGE FLORIST'S DIRECTORY. By James Main, A. L. S. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. Just published, the third edition, royal 18mo., price 6s. MY TEN YEARS' IMPRISONMENT in ITALIAN AUSTRIAN DUNGEONS. By SILVIO PELLICO. THOMAS ROSCOE. " This little volume is the record of ten years' imprisonment suffered by Pellico — a person whose reputation as a man of literary taste is acknowledged in Italy ; and whose privations and deep sorrows render him an object of interest to all who value liberty, and would not see it shorn of any of its'beams in any land. Mr. Roscoe's preface is written with much spirit and freedom." Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. * FOR THE USE OF SCHOOLS. " 12mo., price 4s. 6d., bound and lettered, and illustrated by three maps, AMANUAL of UNIVERSAL HISTORY and CHRONO- LOGY. By H. H. WILSON, M. A., Boden Professor of Sanscrit, Oxford. This work differs from those in ordinary use, by the insertion of more detailed notices than common of the leading occurrences of Asiatic History, and particu- larly of the History of India. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. Just published, in fcap. Svo. with a vignette, price 6s. in cloth, Vol. II. of the SYSTEM of ZOOL OGY. > 3 By WILLIAM SWAINSON, Esq. Containing the Principles of Classification, the Natural System, and the Geography of Animals. Forming Vol. 66, of Dr. LARDNER'S CABINET CYCLOPAEDIA. Published April 1, HISTORY of IRELAND, Vol. I. By T. Moore, Esq. London : Longman and Co.; and John Taylor. Just published, in 2 vols, 8vo., 21s. boards, THE CABINET; a Series of Essays, Moral and Literary. Edinburgh : printed for Bell and Bradfute; and James Duncan, 37, Pater- noster- row. and Translated by Just published, SPECIMENS of the TABLE TALK © f the late SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE, Esq. Illustrated with n Portrait after-- Phillips,. R. A., and a view of the Sfcwdy of Coleridge. 2 vols. fcap. Svo., 15s. TRAVELS to BOKHARA and VOYAGE n< p the INDUS. By Lieutenant Burnes. A New Edition, 3 vols. fcap. Svo., map and plates-,. Eighteen Shillings-;. ANTIQUITIES, ARTS, and LITERATURE of ITALY. By Joseph Forsyth, Esq. Fourth Edition. In 1 vol. fcap. 8vo.,. 7s. 6d. IV. The DIARY of an INVALID in PURSUIT of HEALTH ; being the Journal of a Tour in Portugal, Italy, Switzerland, and France. By the late Henry Mathews, A. M. A New Edition, being the Fifth, compressed in one vol. small Svo., 7s. 6d. VERACITY of the FIVE BOOKS of MOSES. Argued from undesigned* Coincidences to be found in it, when compared in its several1 parts. By the Rev. J. J. Blunt.— A New Edition. Post 8vo. 5s. 6d. John Murray, Albemarle- street. Just published, in fcap. 8vo., with a Vignette, price 6s. in cloth, Vol. II. of the SYSTEM OF ZOOLOGY. By WILLIAM SWAINSON, Esq. Containing the Principles of Classification, the Natural System, and the Geo- graphy of Animals. Forming Vol. 66 of Dr. LARDNER'S CABINET CYCLOPAEDIA. By the same Author, A PRELIMINARY DISCOURSE on the STUDY of NATURAL HISTORY. Being Vol. 59 of the Cyclopaedia. Complete Works published in the Cabinet of Natural Philosophy:— PRELIMINARY DISCOURSE on the STUDY of NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. By Sir John Hersehel. 1 vol. 6s. TREATISE on ASTRONOMY. By Sir J. Herschel. 1 vol. 6s. HISTORY of NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. By Baden Powell, Prof. Nat. Phil. Univ. Oxford. 1 vol. 6s. TREATISE on ARITHMETIC. By Dr. Lardner, 1 vol. 6s. MECHANICS. By Capt. Kater and Dr. Lardner. 1 vol. 6s. OPTICS. By Sir David Brewster. 1 vol. 6s. HEAT. By Dr. Lardner. 1 vol. 6s. CHEMISTRY. Bv Professor Donovan. 1 vol. 6s. HYDROSTATICS'and PNEUMATICS. By Dr. Lardner. 1 vol. 6s. London : Longman and Co. ; ami John Taylor. Just published, in one volume, price 5s. bound, nrSHE FRENCH Lx\ NGUAGE TTS OWN TEACHER; or, _ 1L The Study of French divested of all its Difficulties. By RENE ALIVA, Author of the Anti- Spelling Book. " This is a very able work ; new, experimental, but not quackish."— Spectator. " We earnestly recommend this work to the study of those who are anxious to understand what they learn."— Court Journal. II. Also, sixth edition, price Is. 6d. bound, THE ANTI- SPELLING BOOK, A new System of Teaching Children to read without Spelling. " This excellent little work shows the possibility of teaching children to read without their being previously harassed by all the barbarous anomalies to be found in the orthography of our language."— Athenaeum. Edward Churton, Public Library, 26, Holies- street, London. V In 3 vols, post Svo. I L L I E A Tale of the last Century. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. R New edition, postSvo., with a map, AP E R S O N A L NARRATIVE of a TOUR THROUGH NORWAY, SWEDEN, and DENMARK. By H. D. INGLIS, Author of " Spain in 1830," " Ireland in 1834," & c. " This volume contains an animated description of the magnificent scenery of " Norway." " A more amusing volume has not, for some, attracted our notice."— Lit. Gaz. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. Just published, price 4s. 6d. DISSERTATION on CHURCH POLITY. By ANDREW COVENTRY DICK, Esq., Advocate. Adam and Charles Black, Edinburgh; Longman, Rees, and Co., London. A E. Just published, price 5s., ^ j< IR WALTER SCOTT'S LIFE of NAPOLEON. Vol. VI. Forming Volume XIII. of the Prose Works. With Designs after Turner. II. WAVERLEY NOVELS, Complete in 48 Vols. New Edition, plates, with Sir Walter Scott's Introduc- tion and Notes, 5s. each volume. With octavo proof impressions of the whole 96 engravings, 12s. extra • charged on each Set. *** The 96 octavo ^ proofs separate, 11. Is. SIR WALTER SCOTT'S POETRY, Complete in 12 vols. New Edition ; Turner's Designs, with the Author's Intro- ductions, various readings, and copious Notes ; 5s. each volume. gggp" With octavo proof impressions of the whole 24 designs by Turner, 6s. • extra charged. %* The 24 octavo proofs separate, 12s. Robert Cadell, Edinburgh ; and Whittaker and Co., London. NEW NOVELS AND ROMANCES, ~ " Just published by Richard Bentley, 8, New Burlington- street, ( Successor to Henry Colburn.) In 3 vols, post Svo., MY L I F By the Author of " Stories of Waterloo," 44 Wild Sports of the West," & c. II. L O D O R E. By Mrs. Shelley, Author of " Frankenstein, & c." 3 vols. •" Full of talent and feeling, and, we must add, of knowledge."— Lit. Gaz. III. THE HEIR OF MORDAUNT. A Novel. 3 vols. By the Author of " Adelaide." IV. SKETCHES OF A SEA- PORT TOWN. By Henry F. Chorley, Esq. " Romance, sentiment, and real life, are all combined in these delightful volumes."— Morning Post. V. FRANCESCA CARRARA. By L. E. L. Author of " The Improvisatrice," & c. 3 vols. <£. A work of remarkable power and genius."— Examiner. VI. Second Edition, revised, with a new Preface, THE LAST DAYS OF POMPEII. By the Author of " Eugene Aram." 3 vols. This is Mr. Bulwer's greatest work."— New Monthly. VII. THE HEIR PRESUMPTIVE. By Lady Stepney. 3 vols. A story full of romantic incident."— Fraser's Mag. VIII. In 1 vol., neatly bound and embellished, uniformly with the Waverley Series, price 6s., HAJJI BABA IN ENGLAND. ^^^ By J ames Morier, Esq. Forming the 45th Volume of ~ THE STANDARD NOVELS AND ROMANCES, Also just ready, In 3 vols, post 8vo., BELF'ORD REGIS. By Mary Russell Mitford, Author of " Our Village," " Rienzi," & c. II. New Work, Edited by Lady Dacre. In 3 vols, post 8vo., TALES OF THE PEERAGE AND THE PEASANTRY. By the Author of " The Chaperon." Just published, in one vol, 8vo., with plates, price 10s. 6d. cloth boards, lettered, ARCHITECTURAL NOTES on GERMAN CHURCHES. A New Edition. To which is now added, Notes written during an Architectural Tour in Picardy and Normandy. By the Rev. W. WHEWELL, M. A., Fellow and Tutor of Trinity College. Cambridge. Printed for J. and J. J. Deighton, Cambridge; and sold in London by Messrs, Longman and Co., Paternoster- row; W. Pickering, Chancery- lane; and J. Weale, 59, High Holborn. Handsomely printed in 4 vols. 8vo., with a portrait, price 21. 10s. in boards, BLACKSTONE'S COMMENTARIES on the LAWS of ENGLAND, in Four Books. With the last Corrections of the Author, and Notes. By JOHN TAYLOR COLERIDGE, A. M., now the Hon. Mr. Jus- tice Coleridge. Printed for T. Cadell, Strand, and Saunders and Benning, Fleet- street, London ; sold also by J. Parker, Oxford ; Deighton, Cambridge; W. Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh; and R. Milliken, Dublin. The first object of this Edition has been to present correctly the text and the Author's references. The Authorities cited have been carefully examined, and many hundred errors have been rectified. The notes upon the Constitutional and Historical parts of the Commentaries are full, and it is trusted that the interesting information to general readers which they contain will be found to be collected in as complete form as possible. Just published, in one volume, price 11.5s. in boards, printed uniformly with the Peerage, , EBRETT'S BARONETAGE of ENGLAND; the Seventh Edition, edited by WILLIAM COURTHOPE, Esq., with a new Set of the Arms, from Drawings by Harvey. This Edition has been carefully revised throughout, and has had the advantage of numerous Communications from the different Families. London: printed for J. G. and F. Rivington ; J. and W. T. Clarke ; Longman and Co.; T. Cadell; John Richardson; Baldwin and Cradock; S. Bagster; J. Booker; J. Booth ; Hatchard and Son ; R. Scholey; Hamilton and Co.; Sherwood and Co.; Simpkin and Marshall; Parbury and Co.; E. Hodgson ; W. Pickering;. W. Mason; E. Lloyd ; J. Hearne ; T. and W. Boone ; and Houlston and Son. Of whom may be had, DEBRETT'S PEERAGE, by the same Editor, with Additions to the present time, and including the Arms of the New Peers. Price 11.8s. Also ( just published), SYNOPSIS of the EXTINCT BARONETAGE of ENGLAND; containing the Date of the Creation, with the Succession of Baronets, and their respective Marriages and time of Death. By William Courthope. • Price 9s. GREAT SALE' 3FPO- dTE THE MANSION- HOUSE. TO the NOBILITY and. PUBLIC.— Disposing of at a very considerable sacrifice ( b « Retail as well as Wholesale), the entire, stu » pendous,* nd truly magnificent Stock of Silk- Mercery, Linen Drapery, Haber- dashery, Hosiery,. and Furriery; also the- superb and fashionable Stock of Mil- linery, Dresses, ESWF Cloaks, of the- ROYAL EMPORIUM, opposite the Mansion- House,— the Proprietors, THOMAS" PAUL and'CO., having come to the deter- mination of relimjOTrsbinc the abowdepartments of their business, for the pur- pose of converting the whole extensive Establishment into one Grand Civic Em- porium of Upholstery, Carpets, and' Cabinet Furniture. To effect which object rhe entire Stock ( inrfading that nowoBiiand of Cabinet Furniture, together with Printed Chintzes, Damasks, Moreens,. amFSilk Tabborefts) MUST beCLEAREI* OFF IMMEDIATELY, WITHOUT' RESERVE, and at nearly half its real value, in order to mske the necessary and ! splendid'alterations during the early part of this season. The present is an unusually desirable opportunity- affording* to all families and economical purchasers generally,. the selection from one of the richest and most useful and varied Sfoeks- in the Kingdom, the best Goods of ever>' description, at the prices of the most inferfor. The Sale commences at ten o'clock each day. Nos. 9, and 10, Mansion House- street, City. AMASK TABLE CLOTHS; SHEETINGS, LINENS, SHAWLS, MUSLINS, & c. v at an IMMENSE REDUCTION from the COST PRICE— JOHN RICHARDS and CO. beg to announce, that in conse- quence of their declining the Drapery Trade,. and havingtorebuild their premises^ the whole of their EXTENSIVE STOCK is SELLING OFF without reserve at a TREMENDOUS SACRIFICE. Large purchasers will save from30to 40 percent. John Richards and Company, 37, Oxford- street.— P. S. A large Lot of BEAUTI- FUL INDIA WORKED and PLAIN MUSLINS, at less than half the cost price. ELASTIC PEN- HOLDER.— PATIENT PERRYI AN ELAS- TIC PEN- HOLDER, with appropriate Pens. The novel construction of. is Elastic Holder, confers on the Pen unequalled advantages, by imparting an agreeeble softness and flexibility, rendering- it so perfectly unconstiained in its. action, that it never fatigues the hand, and enables it to pass over any description of paper with ease and expedition. Nine Pens; with Patent Elastic Holders, 2s. 6d. Sold5 on Cards, by all Stationers and Dealers in Metallic Pens, and at the Manufac- tory, 37, Red Lion- square, London. CANDLES, 4| d. per lb. ; Moulds, 5| d.; Soap, 4£ d.; DAVIES'ST BEST CANDLES, 5d.; extra fine Moulds, with wax- wicks, 6| cl. ; superior Transparent Sperm and Composition, 2s. Id. ; Wax Candles, Is. 6d., and 2s. Id. j Yellow Soap, 42s., 46s., 52s., and 56s. per 1121bs. ; Mottled 52s., 58s., and 62s.; Windsor and Palm Is. 4d. per packet-; Old Brown Windsor Is. 9d. ; Rose 2s.; Camphor 2s.; superior Almond 2s. 6d., Sealing- Wax 4s. 6d per lb.; Sperm Oil 5s. 6d. and 6s. per gallon,;.- Lamp Oil 3s. 6d.— For Cash, at DAVIES'S Old Established Warehouse, 63^ St. Martin'S- lanej opposite New Slaughter's Coffee- house. BURGESS'S ESSENCE OF ANCHOVIES. Warehouse, 107, Strand, corner of the Savoy- steps,. London. JOHN BURGESS and SON, being apprised of the numerous endeavours made by many persons to impose a spurious article for their make eel itincumbent upon them to request the attention of the Public, in purchasing* what they conceive to be the original, to observe the Name and Address correspond with the above- The general appearance of the spurious descriptions will deceiv ® the unguarded, and for their detection, J. B. and Son submit the following Cau- tions: some are in appearance at first sight " The Genuine," but without any name or address— some " Burgess's Essence of Anchovies"— others " Burgess,'* aud many more without address. JOHN BURGESS and SON having been many years honoured with such dis- tinguished approbation, feel every sentimeait of respect toward the Public, and earnestly solicit them 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 such 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. The original Fish Sauce Warehouse. In one volume duodecimo, price 2s. 6d. in cloth, UNCLE PHILIP'S CONVERSATIONS about ANIMALS; with some Hundreds of Wood Cuts. Contents :— Conversation I. About a fly that can ' work with a saw and a rasp like the carpenter.— About grasshoppers and bees that bore holes with a gimlet.— III. About animals that are tailors.--- IV. About the first paper in the world made by wasps.— V. A Story about Tom Smith, and of bees with brushes and baskets, and of a bird with a chisel, and of a knat with a lancet.— VI. About animals that can do mason's work.— VII. About animals that throw earth with a spade; and about an animal with a hook; and about one that is a wire- drawer. Also, Nine Conversations all about extraordinary habits, properties, and actions of different animals, forming one of the most amusing and instructive Juvenile Books yet published. London: printed for T. Teggand Son; and sold by all Booksellers. TYTLER'S UNIVERSAL HISTORY, ( FAMILY LIBRARY.) New edition of Volumes I. and II. price 10s. in cloth boards, of UNIVERSAL HISTORY, from the Creation of the World, to the beginning of the Eighteenth Century. By the late Hon. ALEXANDER FRASER TYTLER, Lord WOODHOUSELEE. To be completed in Six Volumes, forming part of the Family Library. London: John Murray, Albemarle- street; sold by Thomas Tegg and Son, Cheapside; and may be procured, by order, from all Booksellers in the United Kingdom; where also may be had, in three volumes, the new edition of ' MILMAN'S HISTORY of the JEWS. The fourth edition, revised, 12mo., illustrated by three maps, 6s. bd. AN HISTORICAL EPITOME of the OLD and NEW TESTAMENTS, and Part of the APOCRYPHA ; in which the events are arranged according to chronological order. By a MEMBER of the CHURCH of ENGLAND, Author of " Weekly Prayers upon the Creation." Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. " DISSENTERS' MARRIAGES. I. THE MARRIAGE LAW OF ENGLAND. In the press, Second Edition, price 3s. sewed, AN ESSAY upon the LAW respecting HUSBAND and WIFE. By HENRY PRATER, Esq., of the Middle Temple, Barrister. If OPRESTPS DUKE of GLOUCESTER'S SAUCE.— This in- M 4 imitable real Sauce for general use, was introduced under the patronage of his late Royal Highness, to whom C. W. LOPRESTI was many years chief cook. Likewise Lopresti's Cayenne ( liquid), Epicurean Seasoning, Montpeliier Salad Vinegar, Dissolved Anchovies, various exquisite Sauces for Fish, Game, Steaks, Cold Meats, Made Dishes, & c.; Brown Salt for Gravies, and other econo- mical, wholesome, and useful Articles for Table and Culinary purposes. LO— PRESTI'S RECEIPTS for majiy delicious Dishes, & c., price'is.,, or gratis to purchasers of a selection of the condiments, at 22, Mount- street, Berkeley- square. THE BRIGHTON SAUCE* for Cutlets, Chops, Fish, Gravies* Hashes, Steaks, Savoury Dishes, Soups, Wild Fowl, and especially for Cola Meats. This Sauce will be found more usefiil than Pickles, and is the most de- licious auxiliary for palates accustomed to the Eastern. Sauces.-— Not any if genuine but that sold in Bottles, with labels signed in the hand- writing of one of the Proprietors, GEORGE CREASY, North- street, Brighton. To be had of Morell and Son, 210, Piccadilly ; Ball and Son, 81, Bond- street ; Mrs. Cane, 76, Oxford- street; Dickson and Simmons, Covent- garden; Edwards,. King William-. street; Steneyand Son, High- street, Borough. AUTION.- EAU DE COLOGNE.— J. and E. ATK1NSO& beg respectfully to caution the Nobility and Gentry against the numerous Articles sold under this name By a reference to the Import List, it appears that, in last year ( 1834) only four houses in the City of London, imported more than 500 dozen boxes ; and it is computed that nine bottles out of ten are made in this, country, where it is compo.- ed of strong alcohol, generally mixed with prussio aeid and hot essential oils, which, if used internally, are highly dangerous. The genuine Eau de Cologne owes its superiority to the grape spirit,, from which it is distilled, with various salutary, herbs indigenous to, the borders of the Rhine.— They beg to add, they have always a large Stock on hand:— Also,, NAPLES SOAP*. This celebrated Shaving Soap they import from one of the first Manufacturer's in Naples, and it is of a very choice kind. As nothing varies more- in quality than Naples Soap, they respectfully solicit a comparison with others.— 24, Old Bond- street. TO Messrs. ROWLAND and SON* 20, Hatfcon- garden, Lon- don.— Putney, April 2d, 1835.— Gentlemen,—- It is with feelings of the sin- cerest gratitude that I take this early opportunity of sending you my thanks for that inestimable production of yours, the Macassar Oil. I am now in the sixty- seventh year of my age, and for, the last ten years I have beea getting gradually more bald every year, till at last I was induced to make trial of your far- famed1 Oil, and I assuse you that at the present time my hair is as thick and good as> ever it was. I remain, Gentlemen, your obliged'and faithful servant, J. WIGGENS. ROWLAND'S MACASSAR OIL prevents hair from falling off or turning- grey to the latest period of life ; restores grey hair to its original colour, frees it from scuTf and dandriff, and keeps it firm in curl, & e. unimpaired by damp- weather or perspiration; it also produces whiskers, eyebrows, mustachios, & c._ Notice.— The lowest price is 3s. 6d., the next 7s., aad 10s. 6d., and 21s. per bottle. Ask for " Rowland's Macassar Oil," andobserve their names and address- as- above, on the wrapper. Sold by them, and by all respectable Perfumers. I ENUINE NAPLES SOAP.— J. and E. ATKINSON respect- sO£~ full recommend to Gentlemen who use this,, by far the best of all Shaving Soaps, to compare the article imported'by. them with what is generally sold under the same name. It is from the first Manufacturer in the Kingdom of Naples, made expressly fjr their Establishment, of the best materials, regardless of expense, and well matured by age.. They beg particularly to solicit attention to a Stock now on sale, which is upwards of 20 years old, and of a quality, rarely to be met with.— N. B. Shaving Brushes, prepared from the best Badger Hair, and warranted, in great variety.— EAU DE COLOGNE, from JeaiiMarie Fariaa, Place Juliers, k Cologne.— 24, Old Bond- street, May 1. Part I. With Respect to Person. Chap. I. Contract of Marriage. Chap. II. Dissolution of Marriage. Part II. With respect to Property. Chap. I. Real Property. Chap. II. Personal Property. r , — rr II. THE MARRIAGE LAW OF SCOTLAND. Just published, price 3s., by the same Author, CASES illustrative of the Conflict between the LAWS of ENGLAND and SCOTLAND with regard to MARRIAGE, DIVORCE, and LEGITIMACY; de- signed as a Supplement to an Essay upon the Law respecting Husband and Wife. London: Saunders and Benning, Law Booksellers, 43, Fleet- street. Edinburgh; Thomas Clarke, George- street. Dublin: Milliken and Son, Grafton- street. 1. Rights of the Husband in the Wife's Property. 2. Liability of the Husband for the Debts of the Wife. 3. The Rights and Liabilities of the Wife with respect to her separate Pro- perty ; and Appendix. In 12mo., price 3s. cloth lettered, a New Edition of VIRGILII MARONIS BUCOLICA; containing an Ordo and Interlinear Translation accompanying the Text; with Scanning Tables, and Preliminary Dissertations on the Latin Language and Versification. Intended as an Introduction to the Reading of the Latin Poets. By P. AUSTIN NUTTALL, LL. D., Translator of Horace and Juvenal on the same plan. " The person who wishes to become a skilful prosoaist, and a sonorous reader of Latin Verse, should study Dr. Nuttall's little book. The translation itself is neat, and as elegant as a strictly verbal metaphrase can become."— Spectator. " For the easy attainment of the Latin language, this small volume is most pe- culiarly adapted. We particularly recommend it to all those persoas who are de- sirous of studying the more difficult Latin Authors."— Oxford University Herald. Dr. NUTTALL'S JUVENAL having been long out of print, a new and much improved Edition, with a Linear Translation and Notes, is now in preparation. Sold by Simpkin and Marshall; Longman and Co.; Whittaker; Duncan; Baldwin; Sherwood ; Souter, and all other Booksellers. XBUSSIA LEATHER WRITING and DRESSING CASES, JLL; DESPATCH BOXES and DRESSING POUCHES; WOOD WRITING DESKS, WORK BOXES, & c.— The greatest Stock of any House in London, warranted of the best quality, at the most reasonable prices, manufactured on the Premises. 10. § Inch Writing- case,, with Patent Inkstand .. .. .. 15s. 14 Inch do. do. .. 20s. 14 Inoh dc, s real Russia, with Bramah's Lock, and do... • • 40s, 10J Inch Leather Writing Desk, with Patent Inkstand .. 19s. 12 Inch do. do. .. .. 24s, 14 Inch do. real Russia, with Bramah's Lock and do- 50s. Every kind of Leather Goods m$ de on the shortest notice. - WRITING-^ PAPER WAREHOUSE,— TURRILL'S REPOSITORY, 250, Regent- street, CAUTION.— The Extensive Sale of the IMPERIAL CREAM, and its high popularity, has induced insidious persons ts> » counterfeit and sell a preparation composed of deleterious ingredients, much to the discredit of the Inventor, and of serious in| Ury 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 Tres* tise on the Human Hair— to counterfeit which is felony— N. B. Patronized bvher Majesty, their Royal Highnesses Princess Sophia, Duchess of Kent, Princess Victoria, Duchess of Cumberland, & c. W OCKYER'S PURE. MAGNESIA, recommended by Sir A* Mjt Carlisle, Dr. Ramadge, Dr. Davis, Professor of Midwifery of the London University, and by all the eminent physicians and cliymisfs,. in preference to any other. Being perfectly pure, it is not liable to concrete in, the stomach and bowels, and it is so entirely frse from unpleasant taste, children will take it without the least difficulty. Half the usual quantity in bulk suffices for a dose.— Sold by the Proprietors, at Lockyer's Magnesia Warehouse, 237, Tottenham Court- road; and their Agents, Sanger, 150, Oxford street; Newberiy^ St. PauPs Church- yard; in Bottles at 2s. 9d., 4s. 6d., and in glass stopper bottles at 10s. each. BILIOUS and Liver Complaints.— TOWER'S* ANTIBILlOUS and APERIENT PILLS are prepared with the intention of placing in the hands of the public a medicine, at once safe and efficient in the alleviation, if not the entire removal, of those disorders, which originate in a debilitated or torpid action of the stomach, liver and bowels, and which comprise all thoss denomi- nated biliows or liver, and stomach complaints,. These Pills are sufficisntly active to stimulate the action of those vital organs,. and relieve constipation, without occasioning that sense of exhaustion and debility which frequently follows the use of purgatives.— Sold in 2s. 9d., 4s. 6d., and lis. boxes, by Thomas Bidder, Chemistv 4,} Cheapside, corner of St. Paul's, London, and ( authenticated b> his name and address in the Government stamp, and a fac- simile of the signature of Mr. John Towers on the label), may be obtained of Sanger, 150, Oxford- street; at the Medical Hall, 54, Lower Sackville street, Dublin; of Duncan, Flockhart, and Co.,. • Edinburgh ; Dennis and Son, York;, and of most respectable Druggists through- out the United Kingdom. , LAIR'S GOUT and RHEUMATIC PILLS, the most extraor-. ( linaiy medicine ever cjiscofered, the safest, pleasantest, and onl/ effectual remedy, relievim oenerallv in two hours the most violeat paroxysm of rheuinatio gout oi rheumatism, repetfiapthe attack with the most astomshmg ease, frecjuenily in twenty. four hours, a « t in eight cases out of ten perfectly lesrfroiFS the patient in two or three days, thus preventing the dreadful dAiMy so justly complauwd ot after a severe attack of gout, saying nothmg of the sufferings of the patient, Ihesa inestimable PiU8 may be taken without the least care or attention of aoy sort, by either sex, yoang or old, with unexampled success. hart- Sold by Thomas Prout, 229, Strand, London | fseven doors from femple- harj, also by all Medicine Venders in town orcowntiy, piice Ss, per bo*. 140 J o h n b u l l. May 3. TO CORRESPONDENTS. tie regret being obliged to postpone until next week the communica- tions frotn Lord MONTFORD by a pressure of public matter— they shall not be overlooked. The lettersto which Voxalludes have slipped our recollection. The " Letter of an Englishwoman" is unavoidably postponed for nnother week. JOHDST BULL. LONDON, MAY 3. His MAJESTY held a Levee on Wednesday, which was most numerously attended. The KING returned to Windsor iu the evening. We regret to state that her MAJESTY has been for some days suffering from the effects of cold, in consequence of which the Drawing- room, announced for last Thursday, has • been postponed until Thursday, the 14th inst. We are, how- ever, glad to say that the QUEEN is rapidly recovering. " WE have heard, with very great regret, that Sir ROBERT PEEL, Lord LYNDHURST, and Mr. GOULBURN have it in contemplation to withdraw themselves from the Church Com- mission— and make way for their successors in the different offices which they held in the late Government, who, with an additional number of Bishops and lay members are to be added to the Commissioners remaining. We do trust and hope that this rumour is without founda- tion— we trust that the friends of the country will not desert the Church and hand it over to those who may be fairly classed amongst its bitterest foes. The individuals whom we have named were not appointed ex- officii), but by name; and their relinquishment of the duty imposed upon them, will more tend to dishearten and dispirit the members and friends of the Establishment, than any circumstance which could possibly occur. In order to prove that none of these individuals in whom the country has faith and reliance, are not called upon by any feelings of delicacy or deference to the existing Government to abandon the charge which has been confided to them, we need only mention that the Commission for inquiring into the state of the Irish Church, issued by the Whig Government, was neither altered nor touched by Sir ROBERT PEEL, but remains to this moment as it was first constituted. We do rust, leither that we have been misinformed as to the inten- ons we have mentioned, or that they will not be carried into fleet. WE copy the following from yesterday's Post:— " Verily poor Lord MELBOURNE is like a young bear— with all his troubles before him ! The Easter recess, which was to have been employed in framing the most important measures to be brought for- ward by the new Government, has, alas ! been otherwise taken up. There have been six Cabinet Councils, we believe, since the forma- tion of the new Ministry— three on the Devonshire election ; and the following ' quondary' has supplied the subject of consideration for the remaining three— Mr. 0 CONNELL is about to be expelled from JRrookes's Club! Several of the leading Members have signed a requi- sition, calling for this measure, or else requiring an ample apology from the Honourable Gentleman for the language lately applied by him to Lord ALVANLEY. This requisition has been signed by the Duke of NORFOLK, the Earl of SEFTON, MR. THOMAS DUNCOMBE, and - very many others. Mr. O'CONNELL has called upon the Govern- ment to support him, aid has given them, to use his own words, their choice between this course and ' public exposure.' The friends of Lord ALVANLEY are peremptory. They declare that Mr. © ' CONNELL must either answer the call which the Noble Lord has made on him for the usual satisfaction, or make the most ample apology for the insulting language he has used. Mr. O ' CON- WELL is peremptory, and refuses either to break his vow or eat his words. Betwixt this cross fire is poor Lord MEL- BOURNE placed. If Mr. O'CONNELL will meet Lord ALVANLEY, Lord MELBOURNE may meet Parliament. If Mr. O'COXNELL is excelled from Brookes's, Lord MELBOURNE will be expelled from office. In this state stand matters at this moment. " If Mr. O'CONNELL will apologise all may yet be well; and a Cabinet ( Council is, we understand, summoned for to- morrow, to ( devise means for bringing about this * consummation so devoutly to 4t> e wished.' " We confess we think a much higher tone should be assumed, and a much more serious course pursued, than that which the twenty- nine Noblemen and Gentlemen who have signed the requisition in question seem to have adopted. Mr. O'CONNELL'S vulgar coarseness should not be considered individually, but as a matter affecting the rights and privileges of the House of Peers itself. He lias told the country that he will join ( and he addresses himself to a Cabinet Minister) in the " peaceable struggle " which is to overturn the House of Lords, and render it an elective Senate, subject to popular control. He takes the first opportunity to begin that struggle, and, shielded as he imagines himself from all personal responsibility, attacks two members of that august assembly because they have dared — one to investigate, and the other to remark upon, his most outrageous declaration, contained in a letter to his friend anil supporter, the present Keeper of his Majesty's Privy Seal and First Commissioner of the Crown Land Revenues, Lord Viscount DUNCANNON. That Lord ALVANLEY, whose proverbial excellence of tem- per and kindness of disposition are, as is generally the case, associated in his character with high spirit and firmness of determination, should upon the instant have demanded satis- faction for what, in the first instance, was certainly a personal attack, is most natural; and that the members of Brookes's Club, upon the refusal of Mr. O'CONNELL to afford the satis- faction required by Lord ALVANLEY, are perfectly justified iu insisting either upon an apology or a meeting as the alter- native upon which Mr. O'CONNELL is to remain one of their members or not, is most true: but, in our opinion, the day is past for that discussion: Mr. O'CONNELL has already refused the meeting or the apology ; he has therefore subjected himself to the penalties of expulsion, and we do not see that any opportunity to adopt " second thoughts " should be afforded him, inasmuch as a forced meeting— supposing he ware forced into one— the result of which should be fatal, would amount to nothing more than the personal sacrifice of a universally be- loved and esteemed nobleman, iu the cause of the order to which he belongs, and to the entire subversion of which, - Mr. O'CONNELL' stands publicly pledged to Lord DUN- CANNON. We say, let the members of Brookes's Club expel Mr. O'CONNELL. The course he will take, if they do, they must know as well as we— he will laugh at them, ridicule them, and say that he is honoured by their rejection; but that will do neither Brookes's Club collectively, nor its members individu- ally, the smallest harm. Mr. O'CONNELL has already pro- claimed Lord MELBOURNE'S incapacity; he has denounced Lord BROUGHAM as a twaddler; he lias declared that Mr. - LITTLETON is too cunning to have any political principle; lie has proclaimed Lord GREY, Lord LANSDOWNE, and Lord JOHN RUSSELL as the malignant, and ( in the second case) the unnatural haters of Ireland; he has declared Lord PLUNKET iucapable of friendships, and possessing the friend- ship of no one. He lias even vlrtuperated his quondam friend Lord DUNCANNON— and these are all members of Brookes's. Why should they care for Mr. O'CONNELL'S slander or invective ? Individually they are already suf- ferers in the highest degree. But if Mr. O'CoNN'ELL is expelled from Brookes's, he withdraws his patronage from its members iu another capa- city. The incapable MELBOURNE, the twaddling BROUGHAM, the cunning LITTLETON, the haters of Ireland, LANSDOWNE and RUSSELL, however potent they may be at the corner of St. James's- place, are his creatures and dependants at the bottom of Dowuing- street. We do not speak of ourselves— we merely repeat what Mr. O'CONNELL himself has stated in all the streets and public places of London. He said I'ERRIN and O'LOGHLIN should be Attorney and Solicitor- General— they are Attorney and Solicitor- General. He said Lord MULGRAVE should be Uord- Lieutenant of Ireland. He permitted Lord WELLESLEY, whom he had insulted as a dotard, to be the King's Lord Chamberlain; and when some one doubted whether any Government could part with Sir WILLIAM GOSSETT, whom O'CONNELL had denounced in his letter to Lord DUNCANNON, his answer was that he must go— HE is GONE ; for although Sir WILLIAM GOSSETT is not actually removed, his removal is decided upon. These are proofs of Mr. O'CONNELL'S power, which Lord MELBOURNE, the dupe of more designing men, cannot deny. Let him take the opportunity of cutting the knot at once; let him stand fairly arid freely upon his own honour and his own character— through life lie has ever maintained the one and the other. Why should he be made the sacrifice of a cabal— the baseness " arid depravity of which, his'generous and confiding nature renders him incapable of appreciating. Lord MELBOURNE declares that he lias had no intercourse with Mr. O'CONNELL. We believe him; but, as Mr. O'CONNELL makes no secret of his power over the Government, we must believe him too. Recollect, we have Lord MELBOURNE'S word on the one side— we have all the appointments and re- movals as proofs on the other. This day, Sunday, a Cabinet— the first Sunday Cabinet ever held since the last removal of the Whig Ministry— is sitting to decide whether a duel shall be fought, or Mr. O'CON- NELL expelled from a Club in St. James's- street— a worthy subject for the Sabbath- day's consultation. Let Lord MELBOURNE recollect this— Mr. O'CONNELL, if expelled, threatens " AN EXPOSURE." We are convinced that that exposure cannot, and will not, affect Lord MELBOURNE— an endeavour for the sake of his subordinates to hush the matter up, will involve his Lordship in their disgrace. Of this too, we are certain, that the matter in debate is not, and ought not now, to be one between Lord ALVANLEY'and Mr. O'CONNELL ; neither is it one between Mr. O'CONNELL and the members of Brookes's Club. It is a question between the HOUSE OF PEERS and the man who has avowed his inten- tion of overthrowing it, and who has commenced the system upon which he means to act by insulting and outraging that assembly in the persons of two of its Members. We trust that this is the light in which the matter will be considered, and that Noble Lords, who look to higher things than a meeting at Chalk Farm, or the balloting box of a club- house, will, with a high feeling of regard to the rights and privileges of every class of society, and a devotional re- spect for the Constitution of the country, bring that question to issue before the Tribunal which alone can settle it with justice, with honour, and with dignity. WE are extremely glad to see that the Citizens of London— we do not mean the worthies of the Common Council, or the unworthies of that uncommon Council the Court of Alder- men, but the Merchants and Bankers of the City— have announced a dinner, to be given to Sir ROBERT PEEL in Merchant Tailors' Hall, on Monday, the 11th inst. It is by manifestations of feeling such as this, that the eyes of the country are to be opened to the real opinions and sentiments of the misrepresented City of London. The demand for ad- mission to this most important civic festival has been such, that the stewards themselves have been limited to one ticket each. To be sure, the list of stewards is numerous, aid we challenge attention to the names which it includes— one hun- dred and twenty in number— and we will venture to say, tliat no city in the world can produce such a power of wealth and mercantile influence as is here combined. It is not to the dirty spouters and shouters of a Common Hall— it is not to the bleatings and blusterings of the Common Council, that the people are to look for marks of civic ap- probation of the conduct of a Minister. Lord GREY was feasted by the City upon the success of the Reform Bill; Sir JOHN KEY welcomed him, and Mr. HAYDON painted him. The only decent people present were the guests— and they were there only because they had lowered themselves to the level of their entertainer. Triumph such as this, must be matter of pain and sorrow to such a man as Lord GREY : his recollections we do not envy, more especially as he paid the penalty of one thousand pounds for the exposure, in the M ay of purchase of Mr. HAYDON'S gigantic caricature of the affair. Lord GREY, then, was Prime Minister;— became to this banquet surrounded by the Members of his Cabinet; there was not a man who had contributed to the cause of KEY and his CONSTITUTION that was absent— and, thanks to Mr. HAY- DON'S pen and pencil, the scene and circumstance have been immortalized, but with Sir JOHN KEY as the head of the party— the friend, the Baronet of Lord GREY'S making. Who else of character, of station, of eminence iu the City was present ? " Look on this picture, and on that." Sir ROBERT PEEL, no longer a Minister— divested of the power and authority which alone made Lord GREY, Mr. ROBERT GORDON, Mr. EDWARD ELLICE, Lord BROUGHAM, Mr. CHARLES WOOD. Lord HOWICK, and Lord JOHN RUS- SELL, " the mitiestof the mitey," . acceptable to the ravenous herd of the Corporation, of which the bell- wether had already received— Oil! " name it not in Gath"— a Baronetcy; is in- vited into the City, not by the father of Mr. JOHN KINGS- MILL KEY, the uncertain parent of two doubtful sons— those separated Siamese-— but by a union of more than a hundred men of the first importance in the first city in Europe— men whose names are known all over the world where English honour and credit are acknowledged and respected— who, with no feeling but that of respect and admiration for his con- stitutional principles, Jiis rigid integrity, his unbending honour, and his patriotic love of country, offer him a public testimonial of their opinions and sentiments. What place could be so aptly selected for this banquet as the Hall of the Company which has ever been distinguished for its constitutional loyalty— the Hall iu which have assembled those who, upon similar principles, have annually commemo- rated the birth of PITT, since the death of that illustrious Statesman. If ever man were worthy to be hailed and welcomed in an arena so honoured and so sanctified— Sir ROBERT PEEL is that man. MR. ROLFE, the gentleman who has been appointed Solicitor- General, has been returned for Falmouth ( the Go- vernment packet station) and Penryn, by a majority of 221 over Lord TULLAMORE, who was put iu nomination by Iris friends, and who was not present at the election, but wli<> 5 had his Lordship intended to stand, and been actually in the- field, would unquestionably have been elected. Lord HOWICK and Sir JOHN CAM HOBHOUSE have not been opposed, and Sir RUFANE DONKIN and Sir THOMAS TROW- BRIDGE have quietly returned to their seats. Iu Essex, Mr. ELWES has consummated the fourth or fifth defeat of Mr. DISNEY— a patient who takes more killing- ( politically) than a badger. Mr. MURRAY', our Lord Advo- cate, has made a bad hit by playing backgammon in a steam, packet on Sunday, by way of curing sea- sickness, which the rigid electors of Maryport consider a striking proof of a fault in the learned gentleman's education and bringing up ; and it is extremely probable that the evidence of a superior regard for bis own convenience and amusement, to that which was due to the sacredness of the Sabbath and the decencies of religion, will lose him bis seat. Sir DUDLEY CAMPBELL, whose piety is unquestionable, will not be opposed in Edinburgh. Lord MORPETH shakes in Yorkshire; and, certainly, the defeat of his Lordship and the " Mite" would more than com- pensate for the success of a waggon- load of TROWRBIDGES. DONKINS, ROLFES, LABOUCHERES, and HOBHOUSES. We trust we shall have to congratulate our readers next week on. the results. WE are authorised to state, that owing to a very repre- hensible remissness on the part of some of the gentlemen of the Foreign Office, we last week quoted from an incorrect copy of the new version of CUPID and PSYCHE, which is now handing about the political world. Lord FORDWICH, Lord HOWICK, and Mr. VERNON SMITH, have each been spoken of as the author. The portion which we last week noticed is, we believe, from Mr. FRANCIS BARING'S copy, but incorrectly transcribed. We hasten to correct our un'ri. tentional error, which is one of great importance, inasmuch as there is no daughter in the case, and instead of making an unsuitable match as to age, the noble hero of the poem is seeking an alliance with a widow of about his own time of life. The story should ran thus:— O for the Coffee ! and O for the Tea! And O for the Widow! said PALMY: PALMY is a youthful Whig, PALMY is a Dandy; And PALMY loves old Mrs. FIG For her gold and sugar- candy. CONSCIOUS that lengthened discussions are ill- suited to the generality of newspaper readers, it always gives us pain when we find it impossible to compress observations which we feol it our duty to make upon passing events of first- rate import- ance. When we state, that what we have now to say relates to the position in which the country is placed by the interference of the Popish Members of the House of Commons with the affairs of the Protestant Church, iu opposition, as it is said, to the conditions and tenour of the oath administered to tlieiri on entering Parliament ( and which oath was the only " security" granted under the odious Emancipation Bill to the Protestants), we may perhaps be pardoned for our prolixity. We have already printed and reprinted the oath in ques- tion— we have already shown, that unless the oath was taken with a mental reservation, which in itself it denies and repu- diates, the thirty- four Popisli Members who carried Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S motion for the appropriation of Protestant Church revenues to the education of Papists, should not have voted upon the question. We are far tiom blaming Papists for injuring Protestantism— we are far from charging them with any crime in desiring to overturn the Established Church of England, in order by degrees to substitute that of Rome ; they are bound to do so, if it be in their power— bound civilly as well as religiously, politically as well as morally; but in order to limit their zeal, and put restraint upon their activity, the oath in question was introduced as a qualification for Parliament;— the question is, do they consider this oath as binding, or do they believe in the doctrine with which we have already charged them, that " intention alone constitutes the obligation," or do they conscientiously believe that to keep any oath which may affect the interests of their Church, is to commit perjury? Let us not trust ourselves, nor quote what we have ourselves already said upon the subject, but let us refer to an authority, which seems so excellent and so unquestionable as to require nothing but citing, to convince the most sceptical that tlioss thirty- four persons ought not to have voted upon the parti- cular question, upon which a majority of thirty- three over- threw the Government in which the country trusted, and which, of all others, Mr. O'CONNELL, and therefore his adhe- rents, feared and hated. The authority which we beg to submit is that, of Mr. ENEAS M'DONNELL, who was agent to the Roman Catholics of Ireland from November, 1824, until the passing of the Emancipation Bill, in 1829. Mr. M'DONNELL has published a pamphlet, called " The Roman Catholic Oath Considered," and we can do no better than extract from it ( p. 5 and 6), tile following passage:— " I shall now proceed to consider the obligation of the oath, and of those protestations and pledges, without feeling that I offer the slightest violence to the principles or characters of others who may dissent from ine. Nothing can be further removed from my mini! than such a disposition. Indeed, I apprehend, on the contrary; that if there should be any jealousy or inclination to complain entertained- towards me, it will be found to rest, not upon my present publi- cation, but upon my past neglect of such publication. For 1 feel, perfectly persuaded that a calm consideration of the facts and views which I propose to state, will induce a general, if not universal, assent to my conclusions throughout the Roman Catholic community,, of every station and degree. " The question is not as to the results that would flow from my construction of the oath, but as to the actual intent and obligations itf that solemn undertaking; and, therefore, any argument founded upon a reference to the supposed inconvenience, injury, or vilification which my interpretation would attach to a Catholic representative, or to his constituents, in consequence of such limitation or restric- tion of his legislative functions, must be rejected as totally inappli- cable and inadmissable. " If the language of the oath be considered injurious or unnecessary, let it be abolished; if unreasonably jealous, let it be modified; if doubtful, let its intent be more precisely ascertained and established. ft June 14. j o h n b u l l ; 191 •: But so long as it Continues clear in its finrpose, and unmitigated in its ' obligations, it hi> rM\> f course, be observed with rigid strictness, be the consequences ofst& ch observance ever so annoying or injurious.- " ft certaix/ J was not intended that the Relief Bill of 1829 should provide ne* e futilities for Catholics to injure the Church Establishment. This will be admitted on all hands : and yet is it not equally clear, that their admission to seats in the two Houses of Parliament would have provided such facilities, if some corrective had not been also em- bodied in the Bill? Now, IT IS OBVIOUS THAT THE ONLY CORREC- TIVE I'ROVinEn BY THE BILL is THE OATH. Again, no man will be found so rash as to con tend that, if the Minister who framed aud pro- posed the oath in 1829 had openly stated to Parliament and the Protestant public at the time, that its object was to recognise and establish the right of Roman Catholic Members of both Houses to legislate upon the rights and privileges of the Church Establishment, such form of oath, or any other form, accompanied by such an avowal of its object, would have been tolerated, for a moment, by the Legis- lature. Surely, then, if the jealousy would have been so determined at that time, it cannot be deemed reasonable or just, at the present day, to attach to that oath a signification which would, confessedly, have ensured its rejection at the time of its formation. It will ' be seen, bv- and- by, that those restrictive obligations are not only not oppose'd to the avowed principles and desires of the Roman Catholic community, but are, on the contrary, in strict and manifest accordance with their uniform declarations, during a long succession of years, without one single exception to that uniformity, that I can bring to mind ; therefore, the limitation cannot be deemed so unreasonable, or so unexpected, as some per- sons would appear to consider it; and it is not unworthy of remark, that the disproportion between the numbers of Catholics and Pro- testants in Ireland, and also the amount of the revenues of the Establishment, were, at least, as highly estimated when the oath was framed in 1829, as at the present day. " It is not sufficient to resist my construction of the oath upon the ground that it would deprive the Catholic representative and his con- stituent* of the exercise of his talents and influence in the settlement or arrangement of an important subject. Such consequences may be deemed by some persons both annoying, unjust, and injurious ; but what have we to do with consequences, when the question is about oaths? Moreover, the exceptions in the Bill are not limited to Members of Parliament, but are, expressly, extended to Chatholic members of corporate bodies, and others of the same communion, who are excluded from the excrcise of those powers annexed to their respective offices and possessions which are connected with the admi- nistration of authority in matters affecting the interests of the Church ; and it may be added, that the limitation of the prerogatives of the Legislator by the Bill is not by any means so narrowed as the limitation of the prerogatives of the Crown, in the selection of its ser- vants, judicial, military, and political. " In fact, I have always considered, and am still decided in that impression, that the oatll of 1829 was framed and proposed by the Minister, and adopted and enacted by the Legislature, as a security against the hostile interposition of Catholics, particularly Catholic Members of the two Houses of Parliament, in the affairs of the Church Establishment, including especially the property of that Establishment. If we refer to the words of the Act itself, and to the statements and explanations of the Minister who introduced it, we shall find this fact placed, according to the best of my judgment, beyond a possibility of doubt." Nothing can be clearer or more just than the view here taken by Mr. M'DONNELL, who proceeds to show, by quo- tations from the Parliamentary Reports, that when some Honourable Member, in the year 1829, suggested the intro- duction into the oath of a more specific disavowal of any in- tended attempt at the subversion of the Protestant Establish- ment, Sir ROBERT PEEL rejected such a course as needless, and Sir ROBERT INGLJS having proposed the introduction of the words " ecclesiastical as well as civil," Dr. LUSHINGTON observed:— s " No man can doubt the meaning of the words, ' I will defend, to the utmost of my power, the settlement of property within this realm.' These words ( he adds) include every description of property, not only as relates to a court of law, but also in the common sense of every man whatsoever. Therefore, the words are sufficient to all intents and purposes." Mr. M'DONNELL goes on to prove, by incontrovertible testimony, that the spirit and intention of not interfering when the subject of the privileges of the Established Church was under consideration, supposing the Papists to be admitted into Parliament, were distinctly avowed and declared by them for at least seventy years. He proves the entire truth of this assertion by quotations from addresses and answers, letters, evidence, and documents upon the subject, during that period of time. We regret that want of space prevents our submit- ting at least an abstract of these most convincing proofs of Mr. O'CONNELL'S justice and impartiality. For the conclusion of his " Considerations" we must find room. " Speaking of the " oath," and the other conditions of the Emancipation Bill of 1829, Mr. M'DONNELL says:— " Not a single Catholic dissented from those views, or complained of the terms of the Catholic Oath, although it was circulated, toge- ther with the debates, in every quarter of Ireland, by the public press, and 1 had forwarded to every Catholic Bishop in Ireland a bers, in interfering with the rights and privileges of the Church Establishment— Query, is not it reasonable to suppose that they. must have intended that the oath which they framed should be interpreted according to my construction of its obligations? " 7tli.— If the Catholics had required that the oath of 1829 should be so framed as to enable Catholic Members of both Houses to speak and vote in support of measures for the severance and appropriation of the Church property, or of any portion thereof— Query, is it likely that the Duke of Wellington, Sir Robert Peel, and the other Members of the Government at that time, would have framed and proposed to Parliament an oath that would be intended by that Government to admit of such interpretation ? " 8th.— If the Duke of Wellington and Sir Robert Peel had candidly stated to the King and the two Houses of Parliament, that such was the intent and object of the oath; as, no doubt they must and would have done, if they had contemplated such a construction— Query, is it probable or credible that the King or either House of Parliament would have adopted any form of oath framed for such purpose, or have passed any Bill of Relief in which it would have been embodied ? " I own, that if I could feel justified in pressing these queries upon the attention of some of the Catholic Members of the two Houses of Parliament, I should be much tempted to intrude one step far- ther ; and to suggest, that they might, with some advantage, review their station with a degree of consideration, not far removed from caution; lest it may, some day or other, ana that, too, perhaps, not a very distant day, be made to appear, that while they fancied them- selves exercising the authorities and enjoying the dignities of command, they were, after all, really filling the parts, not of masters and di- rectors, but of followers and instruments; and that their advanced position, at the head of the legions of the movement, was not so much that of chieftains as of pioneers. " 1 am disposed to guard any obstinate or ill- advised opponent to my views against holding the notion, that an acquiescence in my sentiments would connect us with the maintenance or revival in any degree of the old ascendancy. Such a statement or insinuation would be opposed to justice and to truth. The Catholic oath did not ori- ginate with Protestants; it was not Protestant, either in its concep- tion, its birth, or its growth. It is substantially, literally, purely, emphatically, a Catholic oath; suggested by Catholics, desired by Catholics, conceded to Catholics, framed in the spirit, and ahnost in the terms, proposed by Catholics, and taken by Catholics. The Declaration of 1757 embodied that spirit and suggested the oath, as we have already seen, forty years before the oath was enacted by the Protestant Parliament of Ireland in 1793. The petition of 1792 also aided in the suggestion. And as to the oath of 1829, it was preceded not only by that declaration of 1757, but by every one of those pledges, declarations, petitions, and other publications vo- luntarily emanating from the Catholics of both countries to which 1 have referred ; aud, I am well convinced, I could truly add, by hun- dreds, nay, thousands of others, of similar import. The fact being, that the Protestant connexion of that oath of 1829, " hath this extent, no more," that a Protestant Parliament reduced to the form of an oath, the professions, pledges, dispositions, and declarations of the Catholics. " I conclude, therefore, with the repetition of my early declara- tion, that if I were a Member of either House of Parliament, I should not feel myself at liberty to vote or speak in support of anv mea- sure having for its object the severance of any portion of the Church property from the Establishment, for any purposes whatever; and I should, of course, feel equally bound to decline being, directly or indirectly, connected with any resolution or other proposition in- volving, expressly or by implication, a recognition of the principle of such severance. Indeed, the more vague and indistinct such reso- lution or proposition might be, the more direct and resolute should be my abstinence from any participation in its support. I do not copy of the Mirror of Parliament, containing the report of Sir ROBERT PEEL'S speech, of the 5th of March. The Relief Bill passed on the 13th of April, and I received from those Prelates the most cordial assurances of their approbation of my conduct during the whole time of my service as agent to the Catholics of Ireland, which I notice here, as not undeserving of public attention ; inasmuch as it proves their coincidence to the last moment, with the views which 1 pub- lished, or circulated, during that period, respecting the subject now before us. " Here, then, I close my proofs of the uniform uninterrupted ac- cordance of the Catholic body with the interpretation of the oath, as propounded by the Minister of the Crown, who introduced it. I have entered into this chronological detail of proof, in deference not only to the public generally, but more especially to those persons of the Catholic communion, who have hitherto indicated a dissent from the positions which those proofs are intended to establish. I feel that I nave a right to expect, in return, that if no proofs equally cogent, and still more, if, as I verily believe, no proof whatsoever can be ad- duced in support of an opposite view of this most important case, I shall be deemed entitled to expect a practical recognition of the justice of my construction of the oath; which I should seek, not so much for my personal comfort, as for the vindication and general ease of the Catholic community at large, in this United Kingdom. " I feel a perfect, entire consciousness, that I have justified my sentiments. If, however, there still be others found to question, or to doubt, that I have furnished sufficient evidence to establish my right to entertain that conviction, I pray them to estimate the ques- tion as one of th^ se, into the consideration of which we are not at liberty to admit finy subordinate feelings of prejudice or predilection. Let them, before they- make up their minds to a final judgment, con- sider, calmly aud separately, the following queries:— " 1st.— If those declarations of Catholics, collectively and individu- ally, lay and ecclesiastical, commencing in the year 1757, and carried down uniformly till 1829, were not made for the purposes which 1 state — Query, for whatpurjioses were they made? " 2nd".— If those declarations, addresses, copies of Catholic Oaths, petitions, tracts, and other publications of Catholic Societies, and Catholic individuals, were not circulated for the purposes which I state— Query, for what purposes were they circulated ? " 3rd.— If the evidence given by Catholics, lay and ecclesiastical, before Committees of Parliament, was not given and circulated for the purposes which I state— Query, for what purposes was it given and circulated? " 4th.— If the Catholic Oaths of 1793, and 1829, were not framed for the purpose which 1 state— Query, for what purpose were they framed ? " 5th. — If the object of Government and Parliament, in 1829, had been to frame an oath in accordance with the declarations, petitions, addresses, publications, and former oaths of the Catholics of both islands— Query, must they not have f ramed a form of oath conform- able to the views which I profess to entertain ? " 6th.— If the object of Government and Parliament, in 1829, had been also to frame an oath, calculated to remove the honest alarms, and calm the apprehensions of opponents, and to provide some se- surity by form of oath, to be taken by Catholic Members of Parlia- ment, against the hostile exercise of their privileges, as such Mein- presume to direct the conduct of others, but I desire to possess myself, as I now do, of the means to prove, if necessary, at any future pe- riod, for the vindication of my own consistency and good faith, or the fame of my country, that he who had been, for some years, the agent of the Catholics of Ireland, if he did not control what he conscientiously considered to be the erroneous course of others, had, at least, raised his warning voice against a course, which, iu his opinion, tends, directly and expressly, to justify, not the confidence and promises of friends, but the distrust and predictions of enemies: a fact, inglorious and galling though it be, which a pe- rusal of the debates in the House of Commons, even for the single month of March, 1829, would most painfully but not less unqucstiona bly, establish." This pamphlet should be universally read. It is written by an honourable and conscientious man : and, in spite of a letter which appears in the Morning Chronicle from Mr. SHEIL, defending himself for giving notice of a motion upon the subject of Church preferment, will, more clearly than anything that has yet appeared, proclaim the hollowness of the professions by which the Protestant Government was in- duced at last to yield the measure of Emancipation. With respect to Mr. O'CONNELL and his " pioneer leaders," so judiciously cautioned by Mr. M'DONNELL, we think we can show, from the columns of this paper, that Mr. O'CON- NELL'S opinion of, and regard for, the oath was very much the same in May, 1829, as it appears to be now; for, iu his address to the county of Clare at that time, he used these words:— " Send me to Parliament, and I will struggle hard to pro- cure a diminution of heavy and illegal exactions, and an equita- ble distribution of the revenues of the Established Church between the poor on the one hand, and the most meritorious and really laborious of the Protestant Clergy on the other, by operating to the DEPRIVATION of at least part of the enormous wealth of the PAMPERED and OVERPAID pluralists and dignitaries.'''' It seems, therefore, that Mr. O'CONNELL was of opinion that the " security" only made his own " assurance doubly sure," for here, even before the ink was dry with which the oath was penned, we find him promising to do that, which, by the means of his creature Lord JOHN RUSSELL, he has now actually brought under discussion, and, by the aid of his Popish followers, carried, as far as the admission of the prin- ciple by Parliament goes. We again repeat, that Mr. M'DONNELL'S pamphlet should be universally read. It is written in the honourable desire of vindicating those of his own ereed from imputations of treachery and perjury, to which he clearly sees they must render themselves liable by persisting in the course which they have— as he seems to think, under dictation— consented to adopt. Most assuredly the time is come when the ques- tion must be decided, whether the Popish Members are right or wrong in their interpretation of this oatll— because, if they arc wrong in their construction of it, they must, by the Act which gives them seats in Parliament, abstain from voting on questions affecting the Protestant Church; and if they are right, and that they yet have the power of voting upon such questions, the Act must be so amended as to de- prive them of it; for, as Mr. M'DONNELL, the Roman Catholic agent, most properly and pertinently asks, " If such was the intent and object of the oath ( as now construed) is IT PROBABLE THAT THE KING, OR EITHER HOUSE OP PARLIAMENT, WOULD HAVE ADOPTED ANY FORM OF OATH FRAMED FOR SUCH A PURPOSE, OR HAVE PASSED ANY BILL OF RELIEF IN WHICH are proceeding in a very direct manner to exhibit symptoms of that sort of indiscretion. It behoves every constitutional Conservative to have his eyes about him. Without such dirty work the triumph is secure; and even the delicate majority of FOUR, by which the Old Lady at Holland House has declared Lord JOHN will be returned ( a nice calculation with a constituency of eight or nine thousand), will be converted into a minority of a hundred times greater number. WE are requested to state that there is a misprint in Sir- ROBERT PEEL'S letter to Lord DARLINGTON, in reply to the Address of the whole of Shropshire. The beginning of the- letter is printed thus:—" My dear Lord,— I request that you and Mr. CLARE will be so good," & e. It should be Mr. CLIVE, his Lordship's colleague for the representation of that loyal and constitutional county. A meeting was held on Friday at the Freemasons' Hall,, of the electors of Middlesex, for ttie purpose of addressing his MAJESTY on the change of Ministers. The meeting was—- although the notice was extremely short— numerously and most respectably attended, and the following Address was carried by acclamation :— " To THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY. " We, the undersigned Magistrates, freeholders, and electors of the- countv of Middlesex, venture to approach your MAJESTY-, with the unfeigned expression of our loyalty and devotion to your Royal Per- son, and of our unshaken attachment to those principles in defence of which your MAJESTY'S august House ascended the Throne of these- realms. " We desire to offer these assurances to your MAJESTY at the pre- sent moment, in consequence of the attempt lately made in theCom- mons' House of Parliament to tamper with the rights and endow- ments of the united Protestant Church established in these kingdoms^ — an attempt made in opposition to the votes of a majority of the Representatives of England ; but rendered partially successful by the votes of those Members of the Commons more especially who had taken a solemn oath at their entrance into the House ' to do nothing- to disturb and weaken the Protestantreligiou, or to disturb the settle- ment of property as established by the laws.' " Under these circumstances, not denying the power of the Legis- lature to amend the distribution of Protestant Ecclesiastical Funds- for Protestant Ecclesiastical purposes, we crave permission to ex- press to your MAJESTY our firm conviction that the assumption of a right on the part of Parliament to seize upon and appropriate to any other objects w" hatsoever any part of our religious endowments, is wholly unjustifiable, and contrary to every sound principle, whether of morals or of legislation. Nor can we doubt that the perpetration of an act of so violent and arbitrary a description would tend greatly to unsettle the foundations of all property, to shake public confidence, in the laws, and to bring on those national calamities of which such measures have in all other cases proved the certain forerunners. From a just solicitude, therefore, for the public peace and tranquillity, for the. stability of your MAJESTY'S Throne, and, above all, for the perma- nence and prosperity of that Protestant Church and religion with which we believe the welfare of your people to be indissolubly con- nected. we beseech your MAJESTY to withhold your Royal sanction from all such proposition." This Address, which was seconded in a very able and elo- quent speech by Mr. THOMAS WOOD, our late candidate and future representative, will lie for signature in different parts of the county, and will, we are sure, receive the support of every man of right feeling and loyal principle. In order to exhibit the state of public sentiment as re- gards Sir ROBERT PEEL, we extract the following observa- tions of Sir PETER LAURIE with reference to the dinner to Sir ROBERT PEEL on the 11th, which we have elsewhere noticed. " Sir P. LAURIE expressed his firm conviction that the great mass- of the intelligence and the respectability of the country were deter- mined to uphold the Throne and the national institutions. Of this he would afford a strong instance when he stated that no sooner was.- it known that a dinner was to be given in the city of London to Sir COVENTRY. RELIEF EMBODIED ? IT WOULD HAVE BEEN THE account of the nomination of the candidates for South Devon is most gratifying; and our private letters assure us, that nothing but the grossest bribery can return Lord JOHN. AVe have had our attention called to certain persons against whom proceedings are likely to be taken for being guilty of that most enticing vice. The recent punishment of an indi- vidual detected only iu one instance, may perhaps deter the desperately zealous; who, if we are not very much deceived, LORD STRANGFORD, who has so ably and zealously ex- erted himself in Parliament in advocating the cause of the oppressed manufacturers of Coventry against the heartless and unnatural free trade system, was requested to present an address from that city to Sir ROBERT PEEL. His Lordship complied with the wish of the loyal inhabitants who, to the number of nearly 1,800, signed the tribute of respect and esteem to the late Premier. We have now the pleasure to subjoin the answer of Sir ROBERT PEEL, which we are sure cannot fail to be in the highest degree gratifying to the people of Coventry:— Drayton Manor, April 30th, 1835. MY DEAR LORD,— I have received, with the utmost satisfaction,., the Address from Coventry which you have been deputed to convey to me, and which reached me this morning. I have been far more than repaid for the labours and cares of office by testimonies of public approbation like that with which the city of Coventry has presented me. They will be a great encouragement to- me to persevere in the firm maintenance of principles which are essential to the, stability of government and the protection of the rights and interests of all classes of the community. I offer, in return, my cordial thanks for the honour which this Address confers upon me, and my best wishes that the manufacturing industry of Coventry, protected from all illegal and fraudulent com- petition, may secure to the working classes full remuneration for their skill and labour, and promote the general welfare of an ancient, and loyal city. I have the honour to be, my dear Lord, most faith- fully yours, ( Signed) ROBERT PEEL. The Right Hon. Viscount Strangford, G. C. B., & c. & c. & c. IN addition to the Conservative Associations which we have before noticed, we have to enumerate those of Carlisle, K uaresborough, Northumberland, North Shields, Brighton, Southampton, Hampstead, Worcester, Yorkshire, Marylebone, and the City of London. It is most cheering to find the respectable and influential part of the popula- tion thus coming forward and shaking out in defence of all that is valuable to the country. " LORD JOHN RUSSELL. THE following statement appeared in the Times of the 28th of last month:— A few days before Mr. SHEIL'S motion on the subject of Lord LONDONDERRY'S appointment as Ambassador to Russia, Lord JOHN- RUSSELL met Lord LONDONDERRY at the Duke of DEVONSHIRE'S, and having been on terms of great intimacy with him at Vienna and elsewhere, he took that opportunity of telling him that he< considered the attacks which had been made on him in the public papers as harsh and unfair— that a communication had been made to him by an Irish Member of an intention to bring his case before the House of Commons— that he believed he hud dissuaded him from doing so, and that, at all events, he 149. j o h n b u l l, Mag 3. would have nothing to do with so personal an attack. Lord LON- DONDERRY was naturally pleased at this mark of friendship, and hanked him for it. On the Friday following Mr. SHEIL, however, did bring forward his motion; and on the Monday, Lord LONDON- DERRY, who had not announced to any One what his intentions were, was visited by Mr. HOLMES, who informed him that it was necessary lie should make up his mind speedily, as Lord JOHN RUSSELL in- tended to take the business into his own hands, and ask Sir ROBERT PEEL a question on the subject that day. Lord LONDONDERRY denied the possibility of such being the case, and told Mr. HOLMES what had occurred at Devonshire House. He then went to the House of Lords, and was scarcely on his legs to announce his resignation, when he heard that Lord JOHN RUSSELL had risen in the Commons, and put a question to Sir ROBERT PEEL as to whether his appointment was to be cancelled or not. Lord JOHN subsequently also said, " that he considered the appointment so ill- advised as to call for the observations made by other gentlemen as well as Mr. SHEIL." Thisanecdote requires butfew comments. It is lamentable to think that the rancour of party feeling should so far prevail over an otherwise honourable mind, as to . tempt a man like Lord JOHN . RUSSELL to make a gratuitous offer of friendship, and then fly from it, as he did, without the slightest reason for doing so. We believe that Lord LONDONDERRY had an opportunity of speaking his mind to Lord JOHN RUSSELL at Devonshire House since the affair; and that he plainly told him, before Sir ROBERT GORDON, his opinion of his conduct. As this statement has appeared in almost all the papers in the United Kingdom, and as no contradiction has been given to the facts it contains by any of the persons mentioned in it, we are bound to believe it genuine. What, then, are we to think of such conduct ? Is the shortness of memory under which Lord JOHN RUSSELL is labouring, the result of the Reform Bill ? or, if it be not short- ness of memory, would any man have adopted such a line of conduct as his Lordship has, before that measure had been consummated ? Perfectly aware of the tender mercies of Whigs, we do not think it prudent to subject ourselves to the remarks of the Law Officers of the Crown by giving Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S conduct— as here described— its proper name. We leave it to irresponsible readers to judge for themselves. THE British Magazine for the present month gives the fol- lowing abandonment of the project of the Cockney College, which, with its additional remarks, seem to us conclusive :— NO. 1. At the anniversary dinner of the Orphan Working Asylum, Lord BBOUGHAM, was in the chair: and in returning thanks, after his Health had been drank, his Lordship said—" He might have expected tome applause from fellow- labourers in the great cause to which he had devoted his life ; but the very cordial and flattering manner in which his health had been drunk* quite overpowered his warmest ex- jjectations. After some general observations upon the progress of education, his Lordship said, that no plan in which he had ever been engaged had caused him so much mortification as the failure ( he might call it) ofthe University of London. There were several most eminent professors in every department of literature and science employed at the University ; but tne truth was, that the people of London were so aristocratically inclined, that they would rather starve themselves to pay 2501. to send their sons to Oxford or Cambridge, where they might associate with the sons of Lords and Bishops, than pay 101. per annum to the University of London, where they might receive an education quite as complete and extensive. It would be very well if they would be persuaded to put the 2001. in their pockets, and send five sons to be educated iu London for the remainder." ( Great cheering.)— Patriot. NO. II. We could have wished that the London University were more worthy of the support it has received; but we cannot conceal from ourselves that it is, as a University, a failure. It has as yet established nothing hut a huge mass of almost uneniployed brickwork. It has no reputation. It had, and it has, some eminent Professors belonging to it, but their reputation seems rather to have been buried under its • weight than to have been able to lift it into a share of their own renown. Its diplomas, specifying upon what authority those grants are made, are not likely, till it be improved, to be'worth much. Nothing can make them, in fact, valuable but a well- founded repu- tation acquired by the institution which grants them.— Courier. [ And after these declarations, and after the Privy Council, full of persons anxious to get a charter for it, felt the impossibility of doing this in face of the evidence brought before them, the House of Commons, without any evidence, wishes to force the KING to use his prerogative, and demands a charter for what its author pronounces to be a failure! ] , " Rough Leaves" from his journal in Portugal, while he was there on a mission of some sort for this country. His details of the seige of Oporto, in the course of which 16,000 individuals lost their lives, are interesting from their simplicity and unquestionable accuracy. We have heard of a work forthcoming upon a much larger scale, embracing the same subject, which is to be illustrated with some most beautiful views; however, Colonel BADCOCK has the merit of being first in the field of literature, as he seems always to have been in that of war. As Colonel BADCOCK'S services were " neutral," he expresses no opinion upon the state of Portugal at the period of which he treats ; and as he speaks of the " usurpation " of Don MIGUEL, we should be inclined to think him a " liberal" in Portuguese politics: but we must say, his facts and statements prove, beyond question, the general popularity of thq dejure KING, who was everywhere treated with the highest respect and warmest affection, and spoken of with loyalty and enthusiasm. Why he did not get possession of Oporto will, we should think, strike everybody with amazement who reads this most agreeable brochure. Those who have no idea of the com- forts ofa six or eight months' bombardment from a dozen batteries, will pick up a few notions which may serve to enlighten them. In noticing works of sterling value, which are periodically appear- ing, we must not overlook a Critical, Proimuncing, and Explanatory Dictionary of the English Language, of which the fourth monthly number is before us. It is collated by Mr. JAMES KNOWLES, the nephew of THOMAS SHERIDAN the elder, author of Lectures on Elocution, < fcc., and father of Mr. SHERIDAN KNOWLES, the writer of some of our best modern plays. The present number contains a " new word;" and the manner in which that new word is explained by the author, does as much honour to his feelings as it does credit to the eminent man to whose skill and ingenuity Mr. KNOWLES is indebted for relief from a torturing disorder, and the country at large for the word itself. Mr. MONTGOMERY MARTIN has just published the fourth volume of his elaborate History of the British Colonies, a work of great value and importance to the mother country. The present division of the work contains an account of the British possessions in Africa and Australasia. We have not yet had time to read it through; but we shall do so forthwith, and propose to give our readers some extracts from the most interesting parts of it. We regret that we are unable to- day to notice more of the new publications, which— since authors are like trees, and put forth their leaves in Spring— are hourly coming out; but we promise our readers another detachment of cursory remarks next week. OUR table is crowded with novelties of all sorts. The publishing season may indeed be said to have set in; and we find, amongst our favourite writers of fiction, Mrs. NORTON the leader of the present squadron. We dislike painful interests; but we suppose ladies must be allowed to exercise their undoubted privilege of exciting and tormenting. The IVife, and Woman's Reward; or, rather, Woman's Reward, and the Wife ( for so they come in order), are full of brilliancy and pathos. In knowledge of society, and of the feelings and passions by which it is actuated, Mrs. NORTON has no rival. Whether her faithful likenesses make us admire society the more, is a ques- tion; that they make us admire her more, there can be none. The Heir of Mordaunt is also a novel of considerable merit, from the pen of a niece, as we are told, of Lord CATHCART. We are, we admit, of that order of critics who think that any elaborated detail of the plot or incidents of a work of fiction, given in a notice of its publication, is injurious in the highest degree to its effect, and most unfair towards the reader. It very much resembles in its character the old custom of heading every chapter with a precis of the coming events. Sup- pose a man, while deeply interested in a domestic romance, comes to chapter 9, and reads something like this by way of prologue:— " Henry pursues Emma toSpeenhamland— sees hermother— renews liis offer— is again rejected— gets upon the outside of the Bath coach -— conversation withDr. Bagsbury— falls asleep— tumbles off the coach -— wheel goes over his leg— strange adventure— Emma's arrival at the castle at Marlborough— sees Henry through a glass door— falls into a fit — has water thrown inherfacebythe chambermaid— cock parrot picks a tortoisehell comb out of the back of her head— faints again— Henry attempts to inn to her aid, but cannot— Mrs. Morgan comes in from the garden— great astonishment— Colonel Rice arrives unex- pectedly from India— mutual explanations— Henry's leg gets well suddenly— the Colonel presents Emina with thirty thousand pounds, and an enamelled watch— Mrs. Morgan gives her consent to the mar- riage— Henry and Emma fall into each other's arms— happy con- clusion." Why, after being made acquainted with all these curious and natural occurrences in the head of the chapter, and by antici- pation having arrived at the knowledge of the eventual happiness of Henry and Emma, who would be at the trouble of reading the de- tails ? We say, read a book, and judge of it— or, if you wait for com- mendation, take it generally. If we were now to trace the Heir of Mordaunt through the three volumes, in which we have been so much interested ourselves, we should destroy all the interest for those who were to follow- us; we therefore say, read it— which we say sincerely. Lieutenant- Colonel BADCOCK has published a work, which he calls His Grace the Duke of WELLLINGTON, Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports, arrived at Dover on Thursday se'nnight, from Walmer Castle, under a salute from the guns at the heights, and immediately proceeded to hold a Harbour Sessions, at which an order was made to prosecute the extensive works for some time past carried on for the improvement of the harbour's mouth fo a termination, and with this view a contract was entered into with Messrs. MACKINTOSH, the engineers of Poplar, for the completion of such works. We have to announce the death of JOHN RUSSELL Esq., son to Lord WILLIAM RUSSELL, and nephew to the Duke of BEDFORD. The QUEEN has graciously signified her intention of honouring the annual examination of the children of the City of London National Schools with her presence, at the Mansion House, on the 27th of this month. We can confirm the statement of the Dublin Evening Mail, that Mr. O'CONNELL has dismissed the Irish Under Secretary of State, Sir W. GOSSETT, Lord ANGLESEY'S Undersecretary. Lord MEL- BOURNE did his utmost to save Sir WILLIAM, but the head of the Government and of the Tail, was inexorable, Lieut. DRUMMOND late Private Secretary to Lord ALTHORP, succeeds Sir WILLIAM.— Standard. It is said that Lord DENMAN is to be Speaker of the House of Lords, and that Lord SHAFTESBURY alone will be joined with his Lordship in the Commission. Lord ALVANLEY is said to have commissioned the Hon. GEORGE D. DAMER to demand an apology for the gross epithet applied to him by the Irish Dictator. DANIEL O'CONNELL! and Dr. WADE! appear in the list of sub- scriptions for Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S return, as subscribers ofthemuni- ficent donation of 11. sterling each. The Duke of RICHMOND, at his last tithe audit, made a considerable reduction in the rents of most of his tenantry in Sussex. The installation of the Marquess of CAMDEN, at Cambridge, will take place in the second week in July. The double- refined sentimentalists who shtidder at the absolutely necessary naval and military punishments, would do well to read the following account of the state of discipline in the " glorious days of good Queen BESS:"— A contemporary author gives the following account of the naval punishments in the reign of Queen ELIZABETH :—" The arms of the offender were placed across a capstan bar, and a basket of bullets, or some other weight fastened around his neck. In this position the delinquent was kept, either until he had confessed the crime of which he was accused, or till the time of his punishment had expired! The bilboes was another species of punishment— irons, or a kind of stocks thivt pinched the delinquent according to the degree of his crime. Malefactors were also frequently ' ducked' in the water, which was effected by a rope being placed round the waists of each, slung from the yard- arm, which raised him at one moment in the air, and in the next plunged him into the sea. Sometimes men were towed through the water, which was termed ' keel- hauling,' and in that po- sition a gun was fired over their heads. If one seaman killed ano- ther, he was bound to the dead man and cast overboard. If any one attempted to strike his captain, he forfeited his right arm. If any stole the goods of another he was ' ducked,' and sent ashore on the first land they met, with a loaf and can of beer. If any one stole any of the property of her MAJESTY'S ship, the man was to be hung by the heels over the side of the vessel till his brains were dashed out, and then cut down into the sea. For sleeping on watch the following punishments were inflicted :— For the first time, to be headed with a bucket of water; for the second, to be suspended by the wrists, and have water poured down his sleeves; third, to be bound to the mast with irons, and have gun chambers or a basket of bullets tied to his arms ; for the fourth, to be hanged at the bowsprit, with bread and beer, and a knife to cut himself into the sea, or starve. Desertion was punished by hanging. Mutiny about victuals— bilboes. All petty officers were punished by whipping." The anniversary dinner of Rugby School was held on Wednesday, at Warwick. We extract the following remarks upon the proceedings by which this scholastic festival was distinguished, from the Nor- thampton Herald:— " It is with pain and sorrow that we refer our readers to ourrepor t of the proceedings at the Rugby meeting on Wednesday last. It is with sadness that we give an illustration of those principles which we think it is the tendency of Dr. ARNOLD'S instruction and example to produce. It will be seen that, on the toast of' the King' being pro- posed from the chair, BOUGHTON LEIGH, Esq., suggested, in few but proper words, that as when the Church should be destroyed there would soon cease to be a King in England, the old English toast which unites the altar and the throne should be adopted, and that, in com- pliance with the practice now of every day observance,' Church and King' should be drank as a sentiment by the meeting. Now, if there is one thing more common than another in these days, and in parti- cular at places of education conducted on the principles of the Church of England, it is to give the toast proposed By Mr. BOUGHTOS LEIGH;, and never have we seen it. before reftwed vrhen offered. And; that this was felt to be the case at the dinner' iir question on the part* of a great majority, we are warranted in believing, from the loud cheers with which Mr. BOUGHTON LEIGH'S proposition was received. Vet, strange to say, the most virtuous asd inoffensive words that a loyal man could have uttered, were immediately denounced by a party, evidently marshalled and instructed1 for the purpose; and' thus, the toast of ' Church and King' was not only shouted down by a packed section of the assembly, but actually" rejected by Mr. F. SKIPIVITH ( a son of Sir GRAY SKIFWITH !> and'the Rev. 1 IR. YRY BIDDULPH, two deputy stewards, as a political toast. How'Church and King' should be regarded as a more political toast than that of ' King,' we confess ourselves unable to comprehend, still less do we see ( if his sentiments were what they ought to be) whr such a toast should be deemed as offensive to Dr." ARNOLD. Besides, if the toast had been even more political than that for which it was offered as a substitute, still the guilt of offering it, was after all, but shared by Mr. BOUGHTON- LEIGH with all the best and most patriotic noblemen and gentlemen of the land, and ought assuredly to have been treated with mildness and not intemperate invective, ' if for no other reason, stillfor the numerous precedents whichmightbe quoted in its favour. The truth, however, we believe to be, that, by too natural a mistake, the clamour with which the packed partyliad intended to support Dr. ARNOLD'S name when proposed as a toast, escaped from the bags of every son of CEolus on the first svmpton of respect for the Church. _ We are borne out in this conjecture, not only from the extraordinary indignation which, from no apparent cause, followed fMs proposition of Mr. BOUGHTON LEIGH, but from the furious reception which he met with in the same quarter, when Dr. ARNOLD'S- name being offered as a toast, he simply rose from his seat and stood up to ad- dress the chairman, and whether it was to support or object to the toast— either of which according to all precedent and rules of order on such occasions he had a full right to do— what, we- repeat, Mr. BOUGHTON LEIGH intended to say, no one in the room had an oppor- tunity of knowing. The instant, however, that he rose- he was met with clamorous resistance on the part of individuals sufficiently noisy and persevering to drown him to silence, so that he sat down without any person being acquainted with the reason why he had been so treated. We have since been informed that Mr. BOUGHTON LEIGH meant to express himself simply and quietly in the following words : — " ' Mr. Chairman, under existing circumstances. I trust I shall be pardoned for rising to express the high admiration I, in common with other neighbours of Dr. Arnold, entertain for his private character, and the respect which in common with every one I feel for his classical attainments. I must, however, painfnl'as is the protest, beg not to be considered as in any degree extending my approbation to those religious and church principles which have lately appeared from Dr. Arnold's pen in printed publications. Since silence might be regarded as approval, and as the question is one to which men's minds are at this time elsewhere most seriously directed, I think the depart ure from the usual etiquette on such social seasons a secondary- consideration, when compared with the evil that, might arise from a misconstruction of silence. 11 is needless to say that in this protest I intendno personal offence to the individual who is no doubt as sincere in his opinions as I am in my objections ; or, that I regard the subject not as a political one, but as a religious matter, vitally connected with education, and with the object of this meeting. 1 shall drink the health of Dr. Arnold with pleasure as a private indi- vidual, but not as the instructor of Rugby school.' " Now, we ask, what possible objection any man, that places reli gion and education above the mere unmeaning courtesies of a public dinner, could have made to this speech of Mr. BOUGHTON LEIGH, if it had_ been listened to?— or what offence Dr. ARNOLD, as a con- scientious man, could have taken at a protest so obviously devoid of every local and personal feeling ? Surely, the only opportunity, both in point of time and place for such an expression of opinion upon a momentous topic, was not to be denied to Mr. BOUGHTON LEIGH, or to the many that agreed with him in sentiment; and, let us ask, what compliment there can ever be in toasts, if no power of objection rests in the breasts of those to whom they are submitted ? Not to dwell upon a subject, on which no doubt the approver of Lord_ JOHN RUSSELL'S ' principle' will comment in a manner that may require our notice next week, we will conclude this article with one observation. The trustees cannot possibly continue indifferent to a grievance, so seriously felt by a large portion of the public as to force itself on the attention of such ameeting as that of Wednesday last, and supported, despite the natural delicacy and local feelings of many a Christian and Conservative neighbour of Dr. ARNOLD, by so large and reflect- ing an assemblage. It is with that hope that we rejoice at the display of feelings which must have been powerfully excited to be expressed on such an occasion; and till that hope is. gratified, the trustees may depend upon it, no Christian parent that, is possessed of a vested right in the foundation and advantages of Rugby school, will, or can, or ought to be satisfied." Captain BERKELEY has declined a seat at the Admiralty Board, because it was quite clear, if he accepted it, he would lose his seat in Parliament for Gloucester.— EDWARD ELLICE abstains, from a similar apprehension about Coventry— and Lord ALBERT OONNYNGHAM, who would well have become the Vice- Chamberlainship, has received such a hint from Canterbury, as has induced him to decline the Wand and Key, Y/ hich were within his reach. A Conservative society has been established at Huntingdon, the first meeting of which was held last Wednesday, we believe. The Cambridge Chronicle says:— Much interest was felt in the whole proceedings, and no sentiment was more warmly cheered, a s marking the independent character of the meeting, than that delivered by one of the speakers—" that the society acknowledges no attachment to the interest of any particular family or individual, but desires to offer its support upon public grounds, and to those only who will maintain and uphold the institutions of the country." Though hut little allusion was made to Mr. ROOFER, dissatisfaction was expressed at the conduct he had pursued in the present session of Parliament, as being totally opposed to the unso- licited declaration he made upon the hustings— that he would give no factious opposition to the Government. His votes before the country told how faithfully he had kept that promise. Beginning with the Speakership, he joined the party of Lord JOHN RUSSELL, and voted with them in every measure to the final one of the appropriation of the revenues of the Irish Church.— Upwards of 150 names were en- rolled as members of the society; and, after thanks had been voted to the Chairman, the meeting broke up. Societies of a similar character are in process of organization all over the country— the mask is now thrown off, and the ulterior objects of the Radicals and Destructives too distinctly developed to admit of further doubt, or leave the well- disposed subjects ofa happy country any course to pursue but that of congregating in self- defence, and in the vindication of those principles, by the support of which, England had become the happiest country upon the face ofthe earth. The following is a new and agreeable, but by no means extraordi- nary proof of the advantages of liberality and an anxiety to meet the wishes of the people:— On Saturday, at a numerous meeting of the Marylebone Vestry, Dr. FELLLOWES brought forward the subject of the opening of the Regent's Park to the public. He stated that a portion had been thrown open, but that it was only an inconsiderable part of what had been appropriated to the public when Sir John Hobhouse was Chief Commissioner of Woods and Forests. Had Sir JOHN continued in that office, justice would have been done to the public. Dr. FEL- LOWES'S motion was, " That a communication be made to his Ma- jesty's Commissioners of Woods and Forests, to urge the immediate opening of that part of the Regent's Park, a grant of which was made to the public by Sir John Cam Hobhouse, the grant having previously received the sanction of his Majesty; and to claim the part of the Regent's Park which has been added to Sir Herbert Taylor's man- sion and to the Toxopholite Society, and also to protest against fur- ther appropriation of the Park to private purposes/ This motion was received with much cheering, and carried unanimously. — The Commissioners of Woods and Forests have opened every part of the Regent's Park that can be opened, as we believe, without vio- lating the conditions of the leases of the houses to which, by those leases, the enclosed gardens are guaranteed. The idea that, the people are to claim what the Crown has granted as an equivalent for property ceded in the city for the advantages of our trade and com- merce at St. Katharine Docks, at the will of the Marylebone Vestry, May 3. JOHN BULL. 143 is almost as absnrdas Sir JOHN HOBHOUSE'S " grants." We presume the Doctor who ' brought forward tliis gratefnl, becoming, and decent proposition, is the gentleman who was Chaplain to the pious QUEEN CAROLINE. There are few Fellows like him to be found in the conIItry. It may serve, however, as a lesson to the Conciliators. The following extract from the Watchman, the acknowledged organ of the Wesleyans, speaks pretty plainly the feeling entertained by that body upon the subject of Lord JOHX RUSSELL'S appropriation scheme:— The principle of Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S motion is as much a sub' • versive one, with regard to the religious part of the Constitution, as that of universal suffrage would be to the political part, and there- fore it would be most unfair to class either among the legitimate fruits of reform. Yet this is most artfully done in order to give it currency amongst a class of unreflecting politicians, with whom the word reform exercises so magic an influence over their understand- ings, as to sanctify spoliation itself, when thus masked under specious pretences. Such indiscriminate zenl for the reformation of abuses meets with its parallel only in that blind fury which, at the Reforma- tion, employed the piek- axe in demolishing, along with idolatrous images, the mere tasteful decorations of the altar- screen, and other similar unobjectionable trophies of the chisel. If, indeed, that great event could not otherwise have beeii accomplished, we should have counted no sacrifice too great, ;> nd have considered the moral benefit which resulted from such headlong and rampant zeal far more than tantamount to the loss of all those monuments of art, however valu- able, over which antiquarians mourn with inconsolable regret.. In like manner, we contend the Irish Church will be resuscitated • without the application of Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S principle of spolia- tion. That principle exposes the interests of Protestantism to the most imminent peril, because, if ever carried out into practical operation, the effect will be to provide for a Popish and unscriptural education at the public expense, to the exclusion of Protestants, who cannot conscientiously send their children to schools from which the entire Bible, devotional exercises, and all direct instruction in pure Christianity are by law excluded. The Northampton Herald says:— We state upon an authority which we cannot possibly question that on Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S being asked by a friend what possible motive and object could have influenced him to pursue so desperate a course against the constitution and religious feeling of his country, his Lordship replied as follows : —" I have considered the nation m danger either of despotism or of anarchy, and I prefer anarchy." We have not the slightest doubt of the truth of this declaration, and it helps to confirm our often- expressed opinion that in the struggle • which is now going on the contest is between property and plunder, religion and profaneness, not despotism, but well regulated liberty, and national confusion and bloodshedding. The Bengal Hurkaru of the 1st of January states that a military force, consisting of several native regiments, under Brigadier- General STEVENSON, had commenced its march on the 10th of December, for service in Rajwara. PERSIA.— The German Journal of Frankfort gives the following, of the ISthDecember, from Teheran:—" The new SnAHhas determined to renew the war in the Khorasean, which was interrupted by the death of his father and grandfather, and his own accession to the throne. An army is equipped ready to beseige H erat in the spring. It is to be commanded by THORSA MYRSA, the SHAH'S brother. Another explosion of Vesuvius took place on the evening of the 2d of April. The shocks were so violent that the five craters vanished, and all were united into one frightful abyss. Immense masses of rock were projected to a vast height, and fell like a tremendous shower on the sides of the mountain. At Torre Obel Greas and the environs great fears were entertained; but the explo- sions were of short duration, and at one o'clock in the morning the mountain was quiet. Sir ROBERT PEEL disclaims the merit of having relieved the neces- sities of Mr. BANIM, as stated in the papers a few days ago— the assistance afforded to that gentleman having been supplied by the benevolence of his MAJESTY. On Friday se'nnight the electors of Devonport and Stonehouse entertained at dinner the Right Hon. G. R. DAWSON, late candidate for the representation of that borough. The dinner took place in the Town Hall, that being the only place in the borough large enough for the occasion. Shortly before five o'clock, long before which time the room had become completely crowded, Mr. STAPYLTON and several other friends entered, and were received • with loud cheers. At five o'clock the dinner was served up, and immediately afterwards the Chairman, J. RAMSEY, Esq., accom- panied by Mr. DAWSON and his three sons, Sir J. Y. Buller, Capt. Fanshawe, W. Foote, Esq. ( returning officer), Dr. Young, and the Rev. Mr. Ley, entered the room, and took their seats at the upper table. Mr. D4WSON, on his entering, was enthusiastically cheered. The usual toasts followed, and several excellent speeches were made— that of Mr. DAWSON, in particular, was loudly cheered, and the whole went off with great applause and satisfaction. The Cincinnati Republican acknowledges the discomfiture of its party in the election for Hamilton county in the following eloquent termsWe are beaten! There is no necessity for making long faces about it! The Storer party have catawampously chawedus up!" In the parish of Paddington the Conservatives have gained a com- plete triumph over the Radical party. A poll being demanded, the ballot proceeded with considerable spirit on both sides during the entire of two days, and terminated in favour of the Conservatives; the highest Radical on the list polling 452 votes, and the lowest Conser- vative 573; the highest being 1,032. The Jacksonian Prize for the year 1834, has been awarded by the Council of the Royal College of Surgeons to Mr. I). W. CnoiirTON, of Birmingham, for the best Dissertation upon the injuries and diseases of the nose and of the nasal sinuses. The Gloucestershire Chronicle reports that Mr. HALL, the Member for the Monmouth Boroughs, will give up his seat ( which has already cost him 9,0001.) rather than go to the expense of opposing the, peti- tion presented against his return by Mr. BAILEY, jun. The Dublin JVarder says:— When the O'CONNELL Government comes into full operation, we shall have " fine times of it." Destruction will take her sweeping course, and nothing of Protestant property, liberty, and life, can be expected to exist, but by sufferance of the spiritual Oligarchy', the Romisli Priests. Grass won't grow or trees stand without a license and protection from their Reverences, which, no doubt, will prove a productive ritit to them. Within the last fortnight, NINE HUNDBED young trees were cut down, in one night, in the plantation of Oakly Park, near Kells, county Meath, the residence and property of Capt. GRAHAM. This gentleman is so kind and good a neighbour that even in the spirit of Whitefoot devilishness, it is difficult to account for so wan- ton a violation of property. Perhaps, although yet undiscovered by any of our great naturalists, there is such a thing as religion in vegeta- tion, and that the trees were Protestants. A Radical faction having got into the Zoological Society, attempted on Wednesday evening to force some objectionable members into the Council— this was very properly resented by the other party, and a ballot demanded, when as usual in such cases, the signal for riot and confusion was given, and in the end the proceeding was declared to be informal, and a new ballot ordered for the 27th inst., we believe. Wednesday being the birthday of the Princess de BEIRA and In- fanta of Spain, the Carlist Spaniards in London paid their respects to her Royal Highness, the emigrants more particularly, to express their grateful acknowledgments for those bounties which her Royal Highness has extended towards ail and each of tliem during their long and painful expatriation. Her Royal Highness is the eldest idaughtw of tlie late JoJia VI, of Portugal. ECCL ESIASTJCAL INTELLIGENCE. PREFKUMKNTS. The Rev. PETER SPENCER, to the Vicarage of Ewel, in Kent; on the presentation of Lord Chancellor Lyndhurst. The Rev. WM. WARINO, A. M., to the \* icarage of Welford, in the county of Northampton, vacant by the death of John Terraby ; on the presentation of the Lord Bishop of Oxford. The Rev. JOHN HAOUE BLOOM, B. A., to the Vicarage of Castle- acre, in Norfolk; on the presentation of Thomas W. Colte, Esq. The Rev. JOHN PEROWNE, to the Rectory of St. John, of Madders- market, in the city of Norwich ; on the presentation of the Warden and Scholars of New College, Oxford. The Rev. JAMES HARGREAVES, A. M., Vicar of Shenstone, to the valuable Rectory of Baudsworth, in the county of Stafford. The Rev. W. PALLING, M. A., of Sidney Sussex Hall, Cambridge, and Chaplain of the Town Gaol there, has been presented to the Rec- tory of Dymchurch, in the county of Kent, by his Majesty, and col- lated to the adjoining small Rectory of Blackmanstoue ( upon which there is not any Church) by his Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury. On Monday, the Rev. WM. MAUSH, M. A., Rector of St. Thomas's, Birmingham, was inducted into that Living by the Rev. John Gar- bett, M. A., Commissary to the Bishop of the Diocese. The Rev. THOMAS SIKES, M. A., Curate of Luton, Beds, to the Rectory of Puttenliam. OBITUARY. At the Rectory, Asbton- upon- Mersey, Cheshire, in the 86th year of his age, the Rev. R. I'. Johnson, A. M.. for 61 years Reclor of that parish. At the Spring Gardens, Teignmouth, in the 77th year of his age, the Rev. George Fortescne, Rector of St. Mullin and St. Penniek; county of Cornwall. UNIVERSITY INTELLIGENCE. OXFORD, April 29.— In a Congregation holden this day the follow- ing degrees were conferred :— Masters of Arts: Rev. D. T. Knight, Lincoln; Rev. W. Pennefather, Balliol; II. Hobhouse, Balliol; H. Phillips, Queen's; Rev. J. A. Emerton, Magdalen Hall; Rev. J. E. Sewell, New College.— Bachelors of Arts: T. A. Trollope, Mag- dalen Hall; G. II. Pinckney, Exeter. In a Convocation holden in the afternoon of the same day, the Proctors of the last, year resigned their offices, and the new Proctors having been previously elected by their respective colleges, were presented for admission to the Vice- Chancellor: Senior Proctor: The Rev. E. G. Bayly, M. A., Fellow of Pembroke.— Junior Proctor: R. Evans, M. A., Fellow of Jesus. The former was presented by the Rev. G. W. Hall, D. D., Master of Pembroke; the latter by the Rev. H. Foulkes, D. D., principal of Jesus. After taking the oaths, and being admitted by the Vice- Chancellor, with the usual ceremo- nies, to the office of the Proctorship, the new Proctors nominated the following gentlemen to be the Pro- Proctors for the ensuing year:— Rev. W. R. Browell, M. A., Fellow of Pembroke; Rev. W. W. Champnevs, M. A., Fellow of Brasenose; Rev. W. H. Cox, M. A., late Michel Fellow of Queen's; E. A. Dayman, M. A., Fel- low of Exeter. CAMBRIDGE, May 1.— Yesterday morning the Rev. George Arch- dall, B. D., Fellow of Emmanuel College, was elected Master of that Society, in the room of the Rev. Dr. Cory, deceased. The following gentlemen of Trinity College were yesterday elected Scholars- of that Society:— P. H. Frere, W. T. Turner, Mansfield, Hedley, Gambier, Pirie, Pollock, Walford, A. .!. Ellis, Conybeare, and Humphry ; Farrar, Patterson, and Baber, Westminster Scholars. The Vice- chancellor has given notice that, in consequence of Wednesday next the 6th of May having beer, appointed for receiving the University Address, the Congregation fixed for that day is post- poned to Friday the 8th of May. The select preacher at St. Mary's for the present month is the Rev. Professor Scholefield, of Trinity College. ORDINATIONS. At a general Ordination holden in the Cathedral Church of Peter- borough, on Sunday last, the Lord Bishop of PETERBOROUGH admitted the following gentlemen into holy orders :— Deacons: J. Croke, B. A., Jesus coll., R. Knight, B. A., St. Peter's, Camb.; W. Pennefather, B. A., Balliol coll., Oxf. ; J. O. Seager, B. A., Trinity, A. P. Thomp- son, B. A., Corpus Christi, H. White, M, A., Downing, Camb.; S. C. Walker, B. A., Queen's, Oxf.; J. G. Camming, B. A., Emmanuel, W. C. Hanson, B. A., Pembroke, Camb., by let. dim. from the Lord Bishop of Norwich ; H. Cotterill, B. A., St. John's, Camb,. by let. dim. from the Lord Bishop of Ely.— Priests: R. B. Burgess, M. A., Queens' coll., Camb.; G. Garrick", B. A., University coll., Oxf.; J. H. Hill, B. A., St. Peter's, J. Price, B. A., Queen's, Camb. At an Ordination, held by the Lord Bishop of BATH and WELLS, on Sunday, the 19th ult., in the Chapel within his Lordship's Palace at Wells, the following persons were ordained:— Deacons : Hon. R. C. T. Boyle, B. A., Christ Church coll. Oxf.; C. J. Fox, B. A. and J. H. Harding, B. A., Magd. hall, Oxf.; H. D. Fussell, B. A., Sid- ney Sussex coll. Camb.; J. S. H. Horner, B. A., Exeter coll. Oxf.; W. H. Howard, B. A., St. John's coll. Camb.; H. James, B. A., Balliol coll.; R. W. James, B. A., Pemb. : H. Kingsmill, B. A., Trill.; E. S. Phelps, B. A., Wadham ; N. Watts, B. A., Universty coll. Oxf.; C. Grvlls, B. A., Trin. coll. Camb., by letters dimissory from the Lord Bishop of Exeter. MISCELLANEOUS. The public dinners at Lambeth Palace will commence on Satur- day, the 9th day of May instant; the service in the Chapel at half- past six precisely. Those who intend to honour the Archbishop of CANTERBURY with their company are requested to send their names before twelve o'clock on the preceding day. A contest has taken place for the Lectureship of St. Andrew's, tfolborn. The candidates were the Rev. Mr. RoDWELi, and the Rev. Mr. ROBINSON At the close of the poll the numbers were declared as follow :— For the Rev. Mr. RODWELL, 654; the Rev. Mr. ROBIN- SON, 268; majority 386 in favour of Mr. RODWELL, who returned thanks. Mr. ROBINSON offered his acknowledgments to the rate- payers for the handsome support given to him, who was almost a stranger among them, and congratulated their former Curate upon his success. His Majesty, with that munificence for which he is so eminently conspicuous, " has just presented to the Provost and Fellows of Eton College, a most superb and splendid model of the chapel of t: ie es- tablishment over which they preside. The model is of a frosted silver, so exquisitely contrived, that it bears an exact resemblance to free- stone. The windows are engraved upon polished silver, and are so managed as to cause the beholder to think they are actually transpa- rent, and that the light which is reflected upon them proceeds from the interior of the building, instead of being the effect of the bril- liancy of their external surface. The model is nearly twenty inches in length, and preportionably high. It is in the proportion of the eighth of an inch to a foot to the chapel itself. It stands on a plateau of silver, engraved so as to represent a mosaic pavement, the plateau being in length two feet and a half, and having on one side the arms of the present Royal Family, supported by the lion and unicorn, and on the other the arms of Henry VI. At the one end are the arms of the college, and at the other the inscription by which this proof of Royal munificence is illustrated. In Birmingham and the neighbourhood, the election of parish officers last week produced the usual scenes of tumult. At St. Mar- tin's, comparatively few of the members of the congregation, or of the respectable rate- payers, attended, and in consequence the Rev. Mr. M'DONNELL ( the " Catholic priest), Mr. EDMONDS, and other members of the late Political Union, had it all their own way, and re- elected Mr. WINFIELB, the late parish warden, whose re- sistance to the granting or collection of any Church- rate while he has been in office, strongly recommended hiiii to their support.— At Aston, the respectable rate- payers took a different course. They attended in such numbers that the anti- Church party were com- pletely defeated, and obliged to content themselves with protests.— The Birmingham Advertiser of Thursday says—" We have authority for stating that the leading Radicals of this parish ( Aston) have, to a man, paid their Church- rates." The ceremony of consecrating St. Matthew's Church, Kingsdown, Bristol, was performed on Thursday se'nnight, by the Lord Bishop of LICHFIELD and COVENTRY,_ who officiated for the Bishop of BRIS- TOL. A very handsome service of plate was placed upon the com- munion table, which was a present to the Church by the ladies of Bristol. An interesting ceremony took place on Monday last at Stoke Canon, near Exeter, when the foundation stone of a new Church, in place of the ancient fabric, which had become incompetent to the sacred purposes for which it was designed, was laid in the presence of a large number of persons. A chapel is commenced building in West Castle- street, Bridge- north, for the Rev. H. DALTON, to preach the doctrines of the late Mr. IRVING.— The proceedings against the Rev. Gent, in the Eccle- siastical Court of Bridiinortli, for Irvingism, are still going on, for though he has resigned the Living of St. Leonard's, the Ordinary has intimated that the resignation could not be properly accepted under all the circumstances attending this case. T N E W WORK S, Just published by Richard Eentley, 8, New Burlington- street, Publisher in Ordinary to his Majesty. In 2 vols, Svo. with Plates, EN YEARS IN SOUTH AFRICA. Including a Description of the WILD SPORTS OF THAT COUNTRY. By Lieut. J. W. Moodie, 21st Fusileers. " A most entertaining book of travels, and to emigrants will prove of the utmost practical utility."— Naval and Military Gazette. Under the Directions of the Lords of the Admiralty. In 2 vols. 8vo., with Plates. A VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY TO AFRICA AND ARABIA. Performed in H. M. S. Leven and Barracouta, From 1822 to 1826, under the command of Captain F. W. W. Owen, R. N. By Captain Thomas Boteler, R. N. III. ROUGH LEAVES FROM A JOURNAL KEPT in SPAIN and PORTUGAL, in 1832, 33, and 34. 1 vol. 8vo. By Lieut.- Col. Badcock. IV. A WINTER IN THE FAR WEST. By Charles F. Hoffman. 2 vols, post 8vo. " A delightful book. No one has given a truer or more vivid description than Mr. Hoffman of American wilds and American people."— Court Magazine. By Order of the British Government. In 2 vols. 8vo'., with Maps and Plates, A VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY TO THE SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN, In 1829, 30, and 3J. By Captain Henry Foster, li. N., F. R. S. " Quite as amusing as the voyajres or Cook or Anson."— Courier. Also just ready, M. De La Marine's- Travels in the East.. In post 8vo., with a Portrait of the Author, A PILGRIMAGE TO THE HOLY LAND, SYRIA, & c., in 1834. By M. De La Martine. *#* The occasional Poetry will be metrically rendered by Miss Landon, II. In 2 vols. Svo., with two Portraits, from a Painting by Kneller, and a Bust bj, Rysbrach, by permission of the Earl of Egremont, MEMOIRS OF LORD B O L IN G B II O K E, AND OF HIS TIMES. By George Wingrove Cooke, Esq., Barrister- at- Law, B. A., Oxon. Just published, in 2 vols. 8vo., with plates, price 11. Is. in boards, OBSERVATIONS on ITALY. By the late JOHN BELL, Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, Edinburgh, & c. Second Edition, corrected and enlarged. " The subject on Italy we imagined had. been thoroughly exhausted; and, eminent as were the talents which distinguished Mr. Bell's professional career, we were prepared to expect little from his pen beyond a few critical remarks. But we know not how it was, the preface, so modestly,- so touchingly written by. his editor, his widow, led us insensibly on, and we were anxious to see how he commenced his tour."— Page 1. " The justness of thought, the sensibility and philosophic spirit of this ex- ordium promised an itinerary of no mediocre description. Mr. Bell's language is vigorous, terse, and pure; his lights and shadows are disposed with a masterly hand ; his page, like a mirror, reflects the scene in its natural order and colour.. He looked around him with the eye of a poet, and he seemed to forget his suffer- ings from health, when revelling in those romantic dreams, which when duly chastened, and touched with a spirit of devotion, shed such a charm on existence. Take as an instance his first evening visit to the Cathedral of Milan, page 57. Take also the Bridge. of Pavia, the only description realizing the impressions of that enchanting spot, page 80. Led by such a guide as Mr. Bell, we traverse the beaten road of Italy with new delight; and we know of no work to which we- could refer for such fascinating descriptions of landscapes and manners as are to he found in this volume. For instance, where shall we find descriptions powerful and affecting, such as his profession of a nun ? We regret that this episofle is too long for insertion; we substitute for it one of his nights in Flo- rence, <> vhich we venture to say is without any parallel in any composition in. prose or poetry. Mr. Bell's observations on Rome are inspired by all the choicest- associations of classical antiquity. The chanting of the ' Miserere' has lonpr been celebrated, and a thousand times described by tourists; the following magical; representation is worth the whole of them put together. The description of Easter Sunday is still more magnificent."— New Monthly Review. Naples :— Printed by Fibreno; for John. Rodwell, New Bond- street, London. NEW WORKS, Published bv Longman, Rees, Orme. and Co., London. YARROW' REVISITED, and other Poems. By W. WORDSWORTH, Esq. 1 vol. fcap. 8vo. 9s. A Collected Edition of Mr. WORDSWORTH'S former Poems. 4 vols. fcap. 24s. The EXCURSION may be had separately, 7s. 2. Mr. James's New Novel. THE GIPSY; a Tale. 3 vols, post 8vo. 31s. 6d. By the Author of " Darnley," " Richelieu," " Mary of Burgundy," " Life and Adventures of John Marston Hall," & c. " A romantic and interesting story."— Lit. Gaz. THE CORPORATIONS of ENGLAND and WALES, Vol. I. By A. E. Cockburn, Esq., Barrister- at- Law, one of the Commissioners. The Second Volume, which will complete the work, will be published almost immediately. 4. THE ENGLISH in INDIA, and other SKETCHES. By A Traveller. 2 vols. 21s. " These tales by a traveller possess much interest and exhibit much ability. The author has observed life, and studied the workings of the human heart..... He is a man of the world, who has seen life, and paints it as it really is."—- Spectator. 5. A POET'S PORTFOLIO ; or, Minor Pbems: in three Books. By James Montgomery, Esq. Fcap. 8vo. 8s. bds. 6. ROSABEL ; or, Sixty Years Ago. A Novel. By the Authoress of " Constance." 3 vols. To be published on Monday, May 11. DR. COPLAND'S DICTIONARY of PRACTICAL MEDICINE. Part III. Svo. 9s. 8. THE BRITISH FLORA ; Comprising the Phenooramous or Flowering Plants, and the Ferns. By W. J. Hooker, LL. D., & c. 3d Edition. 8vo. 12s. 9. ENCYCLOPAEDIA of GEOGRAPHY. By Hugh Murray, F. R. S. E. Assisted in Astronomy, & c. by Professor Wallace; Geology, & c. by Professor Jameson; Botany, & c. by Professor Hooker; Zoology, & c. by W. Swainson, E? q. With 82 Maps, drawn by- Sidney Hall, and upwards of 1000 other Engravings oa Wood. In 1 vol. 8vo. 31. bds.; or 12 Parts, at 5$. each. This work may also be had done up in two volumes, if desired. 10. THE EDINBURGH REVIEW, and Critical Journal, No. 123. IMPORTANT AND INTERESTING NEW WORKS Just published by Edward Churton ( late Bull and Cliurton), Public Library,. 26, Holies- street. Just completed, in 2 vols. 8vo., price 14s., and 1 vol. royal 4to. price 11. lis. 6d., elegantly bound in morocco cloth, with gilt edges,- containing 96 Engravings, ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE BIBLE. From original Paintings made expressly by R. Westall, Esq., R. A., and J.. Martin, Esq. With Descriptions by the Rev. Robert Caunter, B. D. " Never was there a work more likely1 to get at once into the palace and the cottage than this : it has in it every quality of interest, human and divine, to secure it a sale of millions."— Observer. 2. MEMOIRS of MIIIABEAU. 3. LIFE of PRINCE TALLEYRAND. 4. THAUMATURGIA ; or Elucidations of the Marvellous. By an Oxoniam 5. JACQUEMONT'S JOURNEY in INDIA. 6. RECOLLECTIONS of MIRABEAU. By Dumont. 7. MEMOIRS of MARSHAL NEY. 8. JUNOT'S CELEBRATED WOMEN of ALL COUNTRIES. 9. The AUTOBIOGRAPHY of JACK KETCH. 10. The ROMANCE of HISTORY. 11. PROVINCIAL SKETCHES. 12. The SKETCH BOOK of the SOUTH. 13. The CAPTIVE. 14. The MECHANICS of LAW- MAKING. 15. A MANUAL of ENTOMOLOGY. 16. WHO SHALL BE OUR LEADERS? 17. The PEOPLE or the PEERAGE? _ 18. The PRIME MINISTER. Just published, in crown 8vo., price 7s. bound, a NewlSdition of ANALECTA GRJECA MINORA, ad usum Tironum accom- modata cum Notis Philologicis qnas partin. Collegit partnn Scnpsit. ANDREAS DALZEL, A. M. V* To this new Edition are addfed by the learned Editor, Mr. Bailey, of the Grammar School, Cambridge, extracts from the Third and Fourth Books of Xenophon's Anabasis; the First Book of Homer's Iliad, with the Digamma supplied throughout, & c. & c., illustrated with Notes. Also the English Inter- pretations to the Lexicon, now first given, and the quantities fully marked. Mr. Bailey has further improved this Edition by a Preface, tracing the analogy of the Digamma, & c. , ,_ „. . , _ „ . London : printed for T. Cadell; J. G. and F. Rivington ; Longman, Rees. and, Co.; J. Richardson; J. Booker;. Baldwin and Cradock; Hamilton and Co.; J. Duncan; Whittaker and Co.; Simpkm and Marshall i and Bell and BraUiutt* Edinburgh j and G. and J. Robinson, Liverpool. 144 j o h n b u l l, H % STOCK EXCHANGE— SATURDAY ETESIXO. The transactions in the Consol Market have not been of very ma- terial importance during the week, bat there has been a scarcity of money, which has occasioned a degree of pressure, niid after having been 9314 since our last report, the price closed this afternoon at 92% 3i. From a similar cause, Exchequer Bills and India Bonds are both lower, the former being at 33 35, and the latter at 20 21. In the Foreign Market the Settlement of the Account took place on Thursday, and passed over without any defalcation. There has been a considerable improvement in Portuguese Bonds, which have been at 102V, and are now 101 % 2, with a firm Market. At the Settlement a large amount of Bonds were taken in, among others, the great holder, Mr. Thornton, took in 50,0001., making the amount of the Five per Cents, he now holds at no less than G/ » , 0001. As, in addition to this, the jjartv operating with him hold nearly the same amount, and as this is held, not for speculation, but for invest- ment, the extreme firmness of the Market is easily accounted for. " The fluctuation in the Transatlantic Bonds, during the Account, has been very large: Colombian were done as high as fell to 44 and this afternoon closed at 49^ 50. Chilian Bonds were done at 59, fell to 51, and left off this afternoon at 55/ 4 6l4. Mexican were done at 53, fell to 45, and closed this afternoon at 49% 50. In Spanish Bonds also there has been great variation during the Account: they were, at the commencement of the Account, 67, from which they advanced to 7214, and they closed this afternoon at71i£ %• The dividends on Belgian Bonds are now in course of payment, and the price, ex dividend, is \ 02% 3) i. In the Northern Bonds there is little to notice; Russian Bonds are 108& 9; Danish are 773^ ; Dutch Five per Cents. 101 & 2, and the Two and a Half per Cents. 58% % Bank Stock, 216 217 Ditto for Account, India Stock, Ditto for Account, India Bonds, pin. Exchequer Bills, 33 35 pin. S ner Cent. Consols, 92} f % Ditto for Account, 92% % 3 per Cent. Reduced, per Ct. Reduced, New 3% per Cent., Bank Long Annuities, By the Paris papers of Thursday we learn that the supplementary grant of 1,200,000 francs, demanded by Ministers for secret services, was voted by the Chamber of Deputies on Wednesday, by a majority of 130, the numbers having been, on a division— tor the grant 259, against it 129— majority for Ministers 130. This sum, added to the original grant for the year ( 1,500,000), makes 2,700,000francs ( 108,0001.) placed at the disposal of the Government. A new obstacle is pre- sented to the trial of the political prisoners, who have on various grounds challenged a great number of Peers, so many, indeed, as to leave but 25 competent for trial, if the challenges be admitted. In the intelligence from Spain, received yesterday, it is stated that the belligerent parties came to action on the 20th, and continued fighting the whole of that day and the 21st. The result is not known. We have not yet learnt what passed in the interview between Don Carlos and Lord Eliot, further than that Don Carlos agreed to any Bieasures which would pnt a stop to the cruelties going forward. It is reported that he positively refused to listen to any conditions which required him to yield his claim to the throne. A French Colonel is stated to have been shot at Corunna, who had been seized with in- structions authorising him to act in Don Carlos's name in Gallicia. The Madrid journals also announce that the Archbishop of Santiago lias embarked for Mahon, and that General Gromarest and the ex- Alcade Pedrosa are on the eve of sailing for the Mariana Islands, • whither they have been banished. The Aligemeine Zeitung of the 26th, says, that emigration from Greece into the Turkish provinces is taking place on a large scale, no less than 2,000 people having left the Morea for Macedonia. Great poverty and discontent seem to prevail in the dominions of KingOtho. _ The Earl of Mulgrave, it is expected, will leave town to- morrow, < to assume his official functions as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. At his late visit to Devonport, Mr. Dawson was presented with a beautiful gold snuff- box bv the Ladies of that borough, with the following inscription:—" Presented to the Right Hon. George R. Dawson, by the Ladies of Devonport and Stonehouse, in testi- mony of their admiration of his able advocacy of true Conservative principles." A meeting, convened by the High Sheriff of Cheshire, at which were assembled upwards of 3,000 of the nobility, gentry, and yeo- manry of the county, was held at Northwich on Tuesday, when an Address to His Majesty, was agreed to, regretting that a factious op- position should have driven the late Ministers from power ; and also expressive of alarm at the attempts made by the House of Commons to increase the power and influence of the Roman Catholic Church at the expense of the Protestant Establishment. The Address was proposed Dy Lord Delamere, and was seconded by Mr. Mainwaring. Mr. T. Egerton, M. P., Mr. T. Trafford, Mr. R. E. Warburton, Sir R. Brooke, and Colonel Forde spoke in its favour.— An Address to Sir Robert Peel was al3o agreed to at the same meeting. That old public favourite, Harley, takes his benefit at Dniry- Lane to- morrow, and the entertainments which he has provided can- not fail to attract as full an audience as ever this popular actor was favoured with on any similar occasion. PREROGATIVE COURT.—( YESTERDAY.) THORPE V. THORPE.— Dr. Addams said this case was one of an extraordinary nature. The deceased was Mr. Thorpe, of his Ma- jesty's Treasury, whose wife also held an appointment as house- keeper to the Treasury, in which she had teen 40 years. By her emoluments and economy, she had saved 16,0001. The deceased husband was a most eccentric man, secluding himself from society, and fond of writing, but not the least idea was entertained that he would prepare a paper to distribute the money gained through his wife; a will, however, was found, in which, after giving legacies to his daughter and her children, he left the residue of the fortune to a relation, Mr. Richard Thorpe, who, however, would not propound the paper. The learned advocate said, by one of the codicils he directed the interest of 6,0001, to accumulate till 1872, and then to be divided among his daughter's children ; a power was given to divide, however, in 1860 if it was thought advisa- ble. The deceased, he contended, could not be called sane, as the codicil sounded to folly; and he therefore prayed the Court to pro- nounce for an intestacy. The Court, after some discussion, rejected the motion, contending that, with the testamentary papers executed by the deceased, though eccentric, it could not pronouce for an intestacy. EMALE EMIGRATION to VAN DIEMEN'S LAND.— The first- class Ship CHARLES KERR, of 500 tons, fitted up under the direction of the EMIGRATION COMMITTEE, expressly for the conveyance of FEMAI. ES, will sail from the Thames for VAN DIEMEN'S LAND on the 9th of July next.— His Majesty's Government, in order to encourage the Emigration of Single Women to the Australian Colonies, with a view of reducing the great dis- parity which exists there between the sexes, and of improving their social condi- tion, has authorized the EMIGRATION COMMITTEE to grant a FREE PAS- SAGE to such SINGLE FEMALES, from 15 to 30 years of age, a « the Committee shall ascertain to he of good health and morals, and likely to conduct themselves with discretion and usefulness in the Colonies. They will be accompanied by a carefully- selected Surgeon and Matrons, to watch over their health and comfort on the voyage, and will be received and protected by the local Government on their arrival, until placed in suitable situations. All particulars may be known, on application to Mr. John Marshall, Agent to the Emigration Committee, 26, Bircnin- lane, Cornhill;— applications from the country, by letter, to be sent, under cover, addressed—" To the Under Secretary of State, Colonial Department, London." OVEL, RAPID, UNRIVALLED, and at REDUCED FARES.— The superb STEAM- PACKETS, " Red Rover" and the " City of Canterbury," commenced running Daily and alternately, Morning at 8 precisely, yesterday ( Saturday), 2nd May, from St. Katherine's Wharf, for HKRNE BAY ( calling at GRAVESEND), and back, on the same day. On the arrival at Heme Bay, fast post Coaches proceed to Ramsgate, Margate, Canterbury, and Dover. Tickets for the Season, Four Guineas each, to be had, and private parties accom- modated with a Packet, on application to Captain LARGE, or H. P. EDGF. LL, Agent, Heme Bay Steain- Packet Office, St. Katherine's Wharf, or at 42, Alders- Era te- street. FARESTo, from, or to and from Heme Bay : Saloon 6s.; Fore- Cabin 5s. same day; Children half- price. To or from Gravesend: Saloon 2s ; Fore- Cabin Is. 6d. ( except Sundays at 2s. each) ; Children Is. only. To, from, or to and from Gravesend to Heme Bay and back, same day, 4s. each; Children half- price. MACSHANE, Upholsterer, Cabinet and Chair Maker, # begs to announce that Dr. Duffin having conferred on him the exclusive right of manufacturing his newly invented RECLINING EDUCATION CHAIRS and TABLES, for the prevention of Spinal Curvature in young Ladies, that the same may be purchased, by order, at his Ware- rooms, No. 32, Foley- place, Great Portland- street.— For observations on the peculiar advantages of the above articles, vide Duffin on " Lateral Curvature of the Spine," published by Longuian and Co. BEST BEAVER HATS, TWENTY- ONE SHILLINGS.— HATS of the most approved qualities, superior colours, elegant shapes, which never spot with rain, of unequalled fineness and durability, wholesale and retail. Manufacturers and Patentees, ROBERT FRANKS and Co., M, BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE, No. 235, for MAY, 1835. Content* :— I. Wordsworth's New Volume— II. Nights at Mess. Chap. II— III. Michael Lynx, " The Man who Knew Himself'— IV. Sonnets by " The Sketcher"— V. Shakspeare in Germany. Part3— VI. Demo- cracy in America. Bv Mons. de Tocqueville— VII. The* Cruise of the Midge. Chap. 14. The Moonbeam ; Chap. 15. The Breaking Wave— VIII. The Child's Burial in Spring. By Delta— IX. Despondency and Aspiration. A Lyric. By Mrs. Hemans— X. Change of Ministry— XI. The Female Characters in our Mo-- dern Poetry. No 1. William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh ; and T. Cadell, Strand, London. " WTVRASER'S MAGAZINE for MAY, 1835, No. LXV., price JL 2s. 6d., contains: Turner's SacTed History of the World— Northern Germanv: a Sketch— A Dream. By the Ettrick Shepherd— Foreign Literature, No. I. Spain and Portu- gal— Gallery of Literary Characters, No. LXX. Lady Morgan, with a full- length Portrait— Speeches delivered in Banco Reginae, Mirabeau v. Dumont— Hora? Sinica?, No. III.— Anonymous Publications— The Mask, or Part of a Story— The Days of Erasmus. ( From the Prout Papers.) A Father's Confession— The Visit of Helen to the Sca? an Gate— A Decade of Novels and Nouvellettes— The State and Prospects of Toryism, May, 1S35— A Letter to Francis Baring, Esq., Joint Secretary to the Treasury. By an Old Whipper- in. James Fraser, 215, Regent- street. T The May Number of HE METROPOLITAN, Edited by Capt. MARRYAT, R. N., Author of " Peter Simple," 44 Jacob Faithful," & c. & c. Contains among others, the following interesting papers :— Grimshawe's Life and Letters of Cowper. Sketch of the History of England from 1814, chiefly domestic. Life of Jack Ketch. Ephraim Slow. On War. Farewell to the Mountains. Notices of New Works. The Drama, Fine Arts, & c. & c. Faction Unmasked. Japhet in Search of a Father. The Present State of the Drama. Sour Grapes. The Life of a Sub- Editor. Duet. The Oxonian. Coco's Isles. The Grave of Coleridge. Faithless Jean. Saunders and Otley, Conduit- street, Hanover- square ; Bell and Bradfute, Edin- burgh ; Smith ? nd Son, Glasgow ; and Wakeman, Dublin. — Albemarle- street. BOSWELL'S JOHNSON. THE THIRD VOLUME of Mr. MURRAY'S Edition of the LIFE of Dr. JOHNSON, is JUST PUBLISHED. With the BEST NOTES of the BEST EDITORS, illustrated with two Views, price 5s. bound. John Murray, Albemarle- street. On Tuesday next, ABBOTSFORD and NEWSTEAD. By WASHINGTON IRVING. John Murray, Albemarle- street. s T Vols. II. and III. 4to. 31. 3s.; large paper, 51. 5s. TATE PAPERS relating to IRELAND during the Reign of 1 HENRY Vin. Published under the Authority of His Majesty's Commission. John Murray, Albemarle- street. Just published, 2 vols. Svo. with a Portrait, 21s. HE LIFE of Lieutenant- General SIR JOHN MOORE, K. B. By his Brother, JAMES CARRICK MOORE, Author of" A Narrarive of the Campaigns of the British Army in John Murray, Albemarle- street. T Just published, Svo. 10s. HE ACHARNENSES of ARISTOPHANES with English Notes, Critical and Explanatory. Adapted to the Use of Schools and Universities. By THOMAS MITCHELL, A. M., late Fellowof Sydney Sussex Coll., Cambridge. In October will be published, bv the same Editor, THE WASPS of ARISTOPHANES. John Murray, Alb em arte- street. FAMILY LIBRARY. On Friday, the 15th of May, price 5s. cloth boards, Vol. 51 of THE FAMILY LIBRARY, being the Second Volume of the HISTORY of INSECTS, with many Cuts. London. John Murray, Albemarle- street; sold by Thomas Tegg and Son, Cheapside; and maybe procured, by order, from any Bookseller in the United' Kingdom. Vol. 52, with Four Engravings, will be ready on the 1st of July. Under the Superintendence of the Society for the Diffusion of Political Knowledge On the 1st of May was published, THE COMPANION to the NEWSPAPER. No. XXIX. Published Monthly, priee 4d. Contents:— Municipal Corporations ( England and Wales)— Changes of Admi- nistration and" History of Parties, ( continued)— Report of the Committee on Medical Reform— Trade, Statistics, & c.— Parliamentary Register— Political Re- trospect for April— Chronicle of Occurrences. London: Charles Knight, 22, Ludgate- street. SIR JAMES GRAHAM ON THE IRISH CHURCH QUESTION. Now ready, thoroughly revised and corrected, price 2s. 8vo. SPEECH of the Right Honourable SIR JAMES GRAHAM, Bart, ( delivered in the House of Commons on the 30th of March) on the IRISH CHURCH QUESTION. Published by authority. John Macrone, 3, St. Jamesrs- square. Just published, price is. ALETTER to CHARLES PURTON COOPER, Esq., of Lin- coln's Inn, Banister at Law, Ac. < fcc. & c., on the Appointment of a Per- manent Judge in the Court of Chancery in the place of the Lord Chancellor, and a Change in the Appellate Jurisdiction of the Court of Chancer)' and the House of Lords. By CAUSIDICUS. London : Henry Lindsell, Wigmore- street. Just published, PartV., containing 80 quarto pages, 3s. 6d., of ANEW DICTIONARY of the ENGLISH LANGUAGE. By CHARLES RICHARDSON. William Pickering, publisher, Chancery- lane ; and may be had of every Book- seller in the kingdom. Just published, price 6cP. THE CASE of the GENERAL ASSEMBLY of the CHURCH of SCOTLAND, shortly considered, in an Outline of its present applica- tion to Government for Additional Endowment. Edinburgh: Fraser and Co.; and Smith, Elder,. and Co., Cornhill, London. A new editioni, with several illustrations, from drawings by Schetky, 2 vols, post 8vo., price 21s. THE NAVAL SKETCH- BOOK. Second Series. By Captain GLASCOCK, R. N. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. On Monday will be published, price 4s. THE PRIME MINISTER. Dedicated to Sir Robert Peel. A Poem, political and historical ; por- traying, in heroic verse, the present great crisis of the country, the relation of Mr. O'Connell to the Government, and the conduet of the late Premier, and the late Opposition. By a^ PEER, " Most anxious for his country's good."— Mallet. Edward Churton, Public Library, 26, Holies- street. Just published, priee6d., LETTER to ISAAC TOM KINS and PETER JENKINS, on L PRIMOGENITURE. By TIMOTHY WINTERBOTTOM. Pickering, Chancery- lane, London. On the 6th inst. price 4s. 6d. boards, the Fourth Edition of THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY of a DISSENTING MINISTER. With Additions; and with remarks, by the Rev. Author, upon the various Reviews which have appeared of former Editions. " It is a safe prediction, that the leaders of Dissent will either stifle or abuse the book, yet the smothering system can scarcely sncceed— it is sure to be read— sub- stantial truth it certainly is," and nothing but the truth."— Monthly Repository, Dec. " We warmly recommend this most excellent work to public notiee."— British Magazine. " This volume is sure to make a considerable stir in the religious, high church, and dissenting world."— Literary Gazette. Smith, Elder, and Co., Cornhill. r j „ t 140, Regent- street, London, J e2j Redcross- street, City, POPE'S WORKS. 1st of May, THE SECOND VOLUME of POPE'S WORKS; with a new Life, Notes, and Critical Notices on each Poem, by the Rev. Dr. CROLY ; Original Letters, < fcc. The HOMER is not included. To be completed in 6 vols, at 5s. each. " Of Dr. Croly's fitness for the task he has undertaken there can be but one opinion. Himself a scholar, a critic, and a poet, we have a right to anticipate all the illustration of which the author is now susceptible; and what is done in the first volume fairly fulfils this expectation. The memoir, though excessively severe on Warburton, contains many just remarks. The embellishments are very appropriate."— Literary Gazette. " We rejoice to see the ' Bard of Twickenham' in his present attractive and popular form. We do not know that the editing of Pope could have been placed in better hands than those of Dr. Croly. The annotations and criticisms on the poems are judicious, and aid the reading of the text materially. The illustra- tions are of a superior order: the getting up of the work is perfect."— Monthly Magazine. " This is a handsome work. Dr. Croly has written an agreeable memoir: the narrative is consistent and clear. But it. is not by a new memoir alone that this edition courts our notice; there are notices and notes to each poem. To trace the history of every piece— intimate where he found inspiration in others, or saw with his own eyes, or versified, as he did in many instances, the passing events of polite life— as a labour worthy of such an editor as Croly."— Athenaeum. " There are occasional passages in the Life of deep and eloquent remark,. The edition is very elegantly prepared."— Examiner. Printed by A. J. Valpy, and sold by all Booksellers. THE COURT JOURN^ L.^— NOT'fCE.— The , Piiblic are respectfully requested not to CorrfoVtud this publicationwith'ahy other that may in anv degree resemble it in title/ TO those who iiAwnot bfe fa. miliar with its plan and objects, it may be necessary to state that. THE COURT . JOURNAL AND GAZETTE OF THE FASHIONAi^ tE WORLD is a sfahipedNewspaper, Sublished every Saturday, and supplied fr « n? sf post a ere, by all I^ vvs - Vendeis and ooksellers in town and country. Every Ntfiftber contains, exclusive! of original and entertaining papers, in prose and verse, bf distinguished writers'— Reports of all matters connected with Court and Fashionable Life, Literature, thi Dr& ma, Italian Opera, Music, Concerts, Exhibitions, Costume, Correspondence with Foreign Courts, and the general News of the Week; constituting it tfrtf most complete fashionable Miscellany ever produced. Office, 19, Catherine- street, Strand. _____ APTAIN ROSS'S NARRATIVE.— The ATHENiEUM of YESTERDAY contains copious Extracts from Captain Sir John Ross's forth- coming work on the late Arctic Plxpedition; together with Commander Ross's Account of his last Exploring Excursion when he crossed the Peninsular of Boothia, reached the Western Sea, and within 200 miles of Cape Tumagain. RAND FLORICULTURAI7FETE7 in honour of the PrirT^ Victoria's Birth day.— CHAPMAN and HALL'S HORTICULTURAL JOURNAL contains the full particulars of the above. 186, Strand, May 1, 1835. _____ nil HE GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE, for MAY, contains, M_ among others, the following articles:— Mrs. Lee's Life of Cuvier— Sir J. Mackintosh's Character of Canning — Biography of Dr. Wilson, Secretary of State to Queen Elizabeth— The Parisian Omnibus of the Seventeenth Century- Old English Poetical Facetiae, No. II.— Londiniana, No. I. Excavations at the Tower, and recent Antiquarian Discoveries— Character and Writings of Micyllus — Newcastle, Co. Glamorgan ( with a View)— St. Ebbe's Church, Oxford ( with a view)— Fine Arts— Literary and Scientific Intelligence— Antiquarian Researches — Obituary ; with Memoirs of the Earls of Portmore, Scarborough, and Nelson ; Sir R. Travers; E. J. Curteis, Esq.; Henry Hunt, Jisq.; Rev. W. Carey, D. D.; M. Dupuytren, Ac. Price 2s. 6d. Published by W. Pickering, Chancery- lane. LITERARY NOVELTIES FOR MAY. ' The following Works are now ready for delivery, at the various Booksellers in Town and Country:— SKETCHES AND RECOLLECTIONS. By JOHN POOLE, Esq., Author of " PaulPry." 2 vols, with portrait. COMPANION TO THE SCRIPTURES. New and Cheaper Edition, in 2 vols, post Svo., price 16s., TRAVELS TO JERUSALEM AND THE HOLY LAND, THROUGH EGYPT. By the Viscount De Chateaubriand. III. T R E M A I N E ; OR, THE MAN OF REFINEMENT. The Second and concluding Volume, forming the May Number of COLBURN'S MODERN NOVELISTS. Publishing after the plan of the Waverley Novels, at only 5s. per vol. bound. The Fifth Number, price 8s., of the cheaper Edition of SIR JONAH BARRIN GTON'S MEMOIRS OF IRELAND AND THE UNION. Containing all the 40 illustrations of the original Edition. %* One more Number will complete this Work. V. GARRICK'S LIFE AND CORRESPONDPINCE. Second and cheaper Edition, in 2 vols., containing upwards of 2000 letters from the most eminent men of the age. VI. THE LADY'S OWN COOKERY BOOK. New and cheaper PMition, price 8s. 6d. The production of a Lady moving. in the first circles of rank and fashion, aided by the comimraications of an extensive circle of Friends, and comprising no less tnan 1600 receipts. Published for Heniy Colburn, by R. Bentley. Agents for Scotland, Messrs. Bell and Bradfnte, Edinburgh j^ for Ireland, Mr. John Cu mining, Dublin. Justpublished, in 1vol. post 8vo., priee 12s. With a View of the Lake, engraved from a Drawing by W. Westall, A. R. A. UL L S M E R E r A POEM. " Those who have visited, in the spirit of genuine admiration, the Lakes of Westmoreland and Cumberland, will derive considerable pleasure- by reference to this poetic volume."— Court Journal. London : Samuel Hodgson, Wimpole- street. GENERAL AVERAGE PRICES OF CORN, For the Week ending April 25, Per Imperial Qr. 6d Wheat .. 38s 7dfRye 31s Barley . .. 32s Od Beans 36s 5d Oats .... 23s 5d | Pease .... 34* lOd ( Wheat .. 47s 8d # Barlev . .. 13s lOd Duty on Foreign . Average of last Six Weeks. Wheat.. 39s 5d Bariey... 32s 6d Oats.... 22s lid Oats 13s 9d Rve .... 24s 3d Rye 30s lid Beans. .... 36s 5d Pease.... 35s 6d Beans.... 15s 6d Pease.... 16s 9d STOCKS. Mon. Tu. Wed. Thiir. P'riday Sat. 218 218 217J 217J 217 3 per cent. Red..... 91| 91g 91 i 91 j 91? — 92$ 62J 92} 92J 92} 92| 993 99f 99J 991 —• — 99| 99} 99| 99 — — 100* 100i 1003 100J 100| — — — — — — — Bank Long Annuities 17 17 17 l « f 17 — 19 p 19 p 19 p 15 p 17 p — 36 p 30 p 36 p 34 p 3ft p 35 92f 92J 92| 92? 921 92| BIRTHS- On the 30th uTt., the Marchioness of Hastings, Baroness Grey de Ruthyn, of a daughter— On the 28th ult., at Southampton, the lady of RoberiJ CItatterbuck, Esq., of a son— On the 29th ult., in Cleveland- row, the lady of John Nussey, Esq., of a daughter— On the 28th ult., at Charlton, the lady of Major Gore Browne, Royal Artillery, of a son— On the 25th ult., in Harley- sfreei, Caven- dish- square, the Countess of Kerry, of a daughter— On the 25th ult., at Narford Hall, in the county of Norfolk, Mrs. William Daniel Tysson, of a son. MARRIED. * ' On the 29th ult., at St. Georges's, Hanover- square, by the Rev. Edward Scobell A. M., Incumbentof St. Peter's, Vere- street, Colonel PJdward Bcacawen Frede' rick, of Berkeley- square, to Caroline Mowbray, third daughter of the late George Smith, Esq. On the 28th ulfc., at St. Paul's Church, Islington, by the Rev. Henry Reid, M. A., William, third son of Andrew Reid, Esq., of Lionsd'own, Herts, to Louisa Margaret, second daughter or / Eneas Barkly, Esq., of Hijrlibury Grove. On the 21st ult., at Donhead, St. Mary, Wiltshire, the Rev William Blen- nerhassett, Rector of Twerne, Dorset, to Emma Sophia, daughter of the late Francis Houssemayne Du Boulay, Esq., of Walthamstow, Essex-— On the 27th ult., at the British Embassy, Paris, Nathaniel Bland, jun., Ekj » , of. Randall's Park, Surrey, to Anna Maria, eldest daughter of the late John Smith, Esq., of the Hon. East India Company's Civil Service, at Madras— Onthe 29th ult., at Finchley, William Edward Lake, Esq, of Park- place, Fkichley, to Sarah, youngest daughter of R. Wisdon, Esq., of the same place— On the 29th ult., at St. George's, " Hanover- square, Sir Robert A. Douglas, Bart., Capt. 12th Foot, to Martha Pllizabeth, eldest daughter of Joshua Rouse, Esq., o£ Blenheim House, Southampton— On the 29th ult., at Brixton, Edmund John, eldest son of John Gore, Esq., of Etloe House, Essex, to Harriet Caroline, second daughter of Charles Cradock, PJsq., of Denmark- hill, Surrey— At St. Clement's Danes, onthe 28th ult., Captain Percival Brownv 41st Regt., to Emma, youngest daughter of John Paternoster, Esq., of Norfolk- street, Strand— On the 28th ult., at Christ Church, Marylebone, the Rev. Sanderson Robins, M. A., to* Caroline Gertrude, youngest daughter of the late Mr. and Lady Caroline Barham— At Staindrop, on the 28th ult., John Murray, Plsq., of Hartley House. Coulsden, Surrey, to Frances Wilmot, youngest daughter of Capt. F. H. Coffin, R. N., of Staindrop Hall, Durham^ DIED. On the 1st inst., Thomas Simpson, Esq., of Heme Hill, Surrey, and New Bridge- street, Blackfriars, in his 88th year, after a life of exemplary piety and benevolence. On the 29th ult., at Welham, near Malton, in the 68th year of his age, Robert Bower, Esq., to the inexpressible grief of his family and friends. On the 28th ult., Mrs. Barr, of Walthamstow, Esssx, in the 79th year of her age. On the 29th ult., at the Bridge House, Southwark, Eliza Frances, wife of John Newman, P) sq., and only daughter of the late Rev. B. Middleton, Sub- Dean of Chichester Cathedral. On the 29th ult., at her house in Charges- street, the Right Hon. Lady Graves— On the 25th ult., at Bath, Major- Gen. Sampson Fueeth— At Brighton, on the 28th ult., the wife of James Bouwens, Esq., daughter of the late Sir Richard Ryeroft, Bart.— At Penzance, of consumption, on the 26* h ult., Richard Alexander, Esq., late of his Majesty's Corps of Royal Engineers, in the 38th year of his age—- On the 12th Dec. 1834, on board the Exmouth, on his passage from Calcutta to the Cape of Good Hope, Henry Millett, Esq., of the Bengal Civil Service— On the 26th ult., Richard, eldest son of Thomas Jesson, Esq., of Hill Park, Westerham, Kent, aged 30— On the 25th ult., at Cadogan- place, Sarah, the wife of Captain Thomas Johnson, R. N.— On the 22d ult., at Camden- terrace, Kentish- town, Jas. Heywood, p; sq., late 21st Light Dragoons— On the 24* b ult., at her house in South- street, Grosvenor- square, Charlotte, widow of the late Scroope Ogiltfie, Esq.— On the 28th ult., aged 47, Charlotte, the wife of John Hunter, Esq., of MountSevern, near Llanidloes, Montgomeryshire—^ On the 30th ult., in her 20th year, Ellen, the eldest daughter of Edward Leslie, Esq., of Laytonstone— At Bath, on the 29th ult., Elizabeth Sophia, wife of Peter Langford Brooke, Plsq., of Mere, and daughter of Vice- Admiral Sir Charles Rowley, K. C. B.— Onthe 28th ult., at Lvnn, in the 85th year of his age, universally respected, Sana**! Lane, Esq., late of Bath, many ypars Collector of his Majesty's Customs at the port of Lynn— On the 19th Dec. at Bombay, of fever, Capt. Graham Lloyd, oft he/ th Regt. Bombay N. I., in the 35th year of his age, second son of the late Edmund Lloyd, Esq., of Harley- street. LONDONTPriid^ dbV EDWARD SH ACKELL; PrinteVofNo. l4, Amwell- st^ F Pentonville, in the County of Middlesex ; and'of^ 40 Fleet- street, ir. the City of London ; and published by the said EDWARD SHACKELL, at his Printing- office, No. 40, Fle^ t; street, aforesaid, at which last place alone, communication*, for the Editor ( pQst- Vaid) arc received*.
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