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

21/06/1835

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Volume Number: XV    Issue Number: 758
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John Bull "For God, the King, and the People!"

Date of Article: 21/06/1835
Printer / Publisher:  
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Volume Number: XV    Issue Number: 758
No Pages: 8
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JOHN BUIili. " FOR GOD, THE KING, AND THE PEOPLE!' VOL. XV.— NO. 758. SUNDAY, JUNE 21, 1835. Price Id. T HEATRE ROYAL, DRURY LANE.— On Tuesday next, June 23d, Auber's popular Opera of GUSTAVUS THE THIRD. Principal characters by Messrs. Warde, Templeton. Seguin, Mrs. Fitzwilliam, and Miss Kelts. After which, the Farce called TAM O'SHANTER. Taino'Shanter, Mr. W. Farren ; Souter Johnny, Mr. Bedford. To conclude with Auber's Opera of MASAXIKLLO. Masaniello, Mr. Templeton; Elvira, Miss Beits. THEATRE ROYAL, COVENT GARDEN.— Last night but three of Madame Malibran in England.— To- morrow evening will be per- formed, the grand Opera of LA SONNAMBULA. Amina, Madame Malibran ; Elvino, Mr. Templeton. After which, THE RENDEZVOUS. To conclude with the BLIND BOY.— On Tuesday, there will be no performance.— On Wed- nesday, Beethoven's celebrated Opera of Fidelio. Leonora, Madame Malibran ; on which occasion it is the intention of her Majesty to honour the Theatre with her most gracious Presence. THEATREROYAL, HAYMARKET.— To- morrow Evening, THE GOLDSMITH. Cardillac, Mr. Haines; Oliver, Mr. Brindal; Marga- ret, Mrs. Hutnby. Afterwhich, SWEETHEARTS AXD WIVES. Billy Lack a- day, Mr. Buck stone. To conclude with the new Comedy of MARRIED LIFE.— Tuesday, The Besrgar's Opera. Captain Macheath, Mr. Anderson. With Teazing Made Easy ; and Good Husbands make Good Wives.— On Wednesday, Paul Pry. Paul Pry ( first time), Mr. Buckstone. With Open House ; and Good Husbands make Good W ives.— On Thursday, the Comedy of She Stoops to Conquer; with Married Life.— On Friday, The Haunted Tower; with Married Life; and The Queen's Champion. QUEEN'S THEATRE.— Under the Sole Management of Mrs. Nisbett.— Mrs. Nisbett pledges herself to the public, that her Theatre is now one of the coolest in London, owing to her having adopted the " Eastern style of ventilation," which will entirely preclude the possibility of any inconve- nience that may arise from crowded houses.— To morrow, Tuesday, and Wednes- day the entertainments will commence with a Mythological Extravaganza, called CUPID IN LONDON ; or, some Passages in the Life of Love. Principal cha- racters by Messrs. John Reeve, T. Green, Attwood, M. Barnett, Wyinan ; Mes- dames Honey, Harrington, Maxwell, Young, J. Mordaunt. After which, a Petite Comedy called THE DEUCE IS IN HER. Principal characters by Mr. T. Green, and Mrs. Nisbett. To befollowed by THE WATERMAN. Principal characters by Mr. John Reeve and Mrs. Honey. To conclude with THE MARRIED RAKE. COLOSSEUM, Regent's Park.— The New GRANlTsCENERY is just opened to the Public, in addition to the variousother Exhibitions of this Establishment.— XO ADDITIONAL CHARGE. Admittance to each separate Part One Shilling. To the Whole Two Shillings. N. B. The figure of Lord Nelson, in his own uniform, and the various orders he wore, is now in the Saloon of Arts: the likeness is unexceptionable. Messrs. BRAHAM and YATES, a* proprietors of the Colosseum, have the ho- nour to announce that the most EXTENSIVE and MAGNIFICENT l'REPA- RATIOXS are in a rapid state of completion for the amusement and gratifica- tion of the Public. MONDAY EVENING, the 29th of June, will be the opening night, full particulars of which will be duly given. £ JUMMER CONCERTS and PROM ENADES— JENKINS' GARDENS, Regent's Park— similar to those established at Vienna and Paris. On WP'DXESDAY, the 1st J uly, between the hours of three and six in the afternoon, by the Proprietors of the Colosseum, and under the direction of M. Laurent, Grand Overtures, Symphonies, and other pieces of the most distin- guished Composers, by a Band ot fifty Performers, led by Messrs. Collinet, Tolbecque, and Beaudoin.— Price of Admission, 2s. 6d. ORTICULTURAL SOCIETY of LONDON. — EXHI- BITIONS at the GARDEN.— The LAST EXHIBITION will take place on SATURDAY, the 4th of July. Flowers, Fruit, or other subjects intended for exhibition must be delivered at this office, on Friday, the 3d, or at the So- ciety's Garden, Turnham Green, before Half- past Nine o'clock on the morning of the 4th. Fellows may obtain Ticketsfor the admission of their friends at this office, price 5s. each. The gates will be opened at One o'clock on the days of Exhibition. All Tickets issued at the Garden will be charged 10*. each. 21. Regent- street. TH E~ TH AMES TUNN EL, opposite the end of Old Gravel- lane, Wapping, but on the Rotherhithe side of the River, near the Church.— The works have been again resumed.— Notice is hereby given, that the Public may VIEW the TUNNEL every day ( Sundays excepted), from Nine in the Morning ut. til dusk, upon payment of One Shilling for each Person. The Archway is brilliantly lighted with Oil Gas ; and the Eastern Arch is now open to the inspec- tion of Visitors, in addition to the Western one. The work is dry, and the descent by the staircase easy.— By order, J. CHARLIER, Clerk to the Company. N. B. There are conveyances to and from the Tunnel by an Omnibus every hour from Gracechurch- street, and three times daily from Charing- cross, and also by the Greenwich and Woolwich Steam Boats from Hungerford Market, Queenhithe, and Fresh Wharf, at 9,11,2, and 4 o'clock.— Walbrook- buildings, 18th June. WHITE CONDUIT GARDENS; OPtfN EVERY EVENING. — Tn addition to the attractive performances which have nightly been received with such immense applause, on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday will be introduced novelties of a more splendid nature than any ever before pro- duced : amongst which will be a new GRAND BALLET, with beautiful views painted by that talented artist, Mr. Johnson. Mons. Lattnier will dance a hern pipe on his head on the top of a pole thirty feet high, supported by Juan De Ciistre and Mons. Lanaville, surrounded by a superb display of FIREWORKS. Beautiful moving Cosmoramas, & c. & c. For particulars, see bills of the day.— Military and Quadrille Bands will attend as usual. ITNIJKR THE PATRONAGE OF HER MOST GRACIOUS MAJESTY. EXHIBITION of the NEW WATER COLOUR SOCIETY, EXETER HALL, STRAND. Open from Nine till Dusk.— Admit- tance, Is. Catalogue, 6d. H. E. DOWNING, Secretary. IllTlSH INST1TUTION, Pall- mall.— The GALLERYTwitli a Selection of PICTURES by ANCIENT MASTERS, uid nearly one hun- dred Portraits of Distinguished Persons in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, in ena- mel, by the late H. Bone, Esq., R. A., is OPEN daily, from Ten in the morning until Six in the evening.— Admission Is. Catalogue Is. WILLIAM BARNARD, Keeper. f AWRENCE GALLERY, No. 209, Regent- street. His jLA MAJESTY having been graciously pleased to order the Proprietors to place at the disposal of the Royal Academy, Fifty of the Guinea Tickets, for the Use of the Gentlemen Students'of that Institution: they announce that the present Ex- hibition will Close on the 25th inst., and the Second, consisting of Vandykes and Rembrandts, will Open on the 1st of J nly. DELAIDE- STREET GALLERY of Practical SCIENCE, West Strand.— This EXIBITION, combining Amusement with Instruc- tion. is OPEN DAILY, at Half- past Ten, with a frequent succesison of im- portant Novelties, in addition to the other numerous objects of general interest.— Admittance Is. MONSIEUR DAVID> S HISTORICAL PAINTINGS and DRAWINGS, now EXHTBITIXG, 6, Leicester- square.— The Nobility, Gentrv, and Public are respectfully informed, that this Exhibition will Close positively on Saturday, 27th June. The Paintings and Drawings consist of splen- did illustrations of the most prominent occurrences connected with, and arising out of, the French Revolution. Napoleon Crossing the St. Bernard, and the Death of Marat, are conspicuous in these performances of this distinguished - artist.— Admittance One Shilling; Catalogues 6d. These Paintings and Drawings are offered for Sale. IEASILY LEARNT MUSICAL INSTRUMENT. SIMP- Lf SON'S PATEXT TEXOR FLAGEOLET, 266, Regent- street, near Ox- ford- street.— The patronage with which this instrument is honoured by the Nobility and Gentry is a test of its merit. Its deep rich tone is universally ad- mired ; it if eaeilv learnt without the aid of a master, a book of Instructions being given, by which any Lady or Gentleman may teach themselves to play on it, although previously unacquainted with music, and with Simpson's New Upper Joint learners are prevented from playing it out of tune. Just published, No. 54 of " The Minstrel," a collection of New Operatic and National Airs, for this Instrument, Is. each No.— Flutes of superior tone and workmanship at the lowest prices. Instruments repaired and exchanged. OR the GROWTH of HAIR.— ROWLAND'S MACASSAR OIL, a Vegetable Production is the only article that produces and restores Hair on bald places; also Whiskers, Mustachios, Eyebrows, & c.; prevents Hair fiom falling off or turning grey to the latest period of life ; changes grey hair to its original colour— frees it from scurf and dandriff, and makes it beautifully soft, curly, and glossy. In dressing Hair it keeps it firm in the curl and decora- tive formation, uninjured by damp weather, crowded rooms, or in the exercise of rid in e. To children, it is invaluable, as its application lays a foundation for a beautiful Head of Hair. NOTICE.— The lowest price is 3s. 6d., the next price is 7s., 10s. 6d. and 21s. per bottle. Ask for " ROWLAND'S MACASSAR OIL," and observe their name and ad- diess on the wrapper in lacework, A. ROWLAND & SON, 20, Hatton- garden, Countersigned, ALEX. ROWLAND. Impostures call their trash the Genuine and omit the (&) in the signature— of ering it for sale under the lure of being cheap. Sold by the Proprietors as above, and by respectable Perfumers and Medicine Venders, M OPERA.— Signor' Curioni's Benefit, Thursday next.— BOXES and TICKETS to be had at SAMS'S ROYAL LIBRARY, St. James'. s- street— the only night of the season that Bellini's admired Opera of Norma will be performed. An early application is respectfully requested.— Sams begs to announce that at his Library the best PRIVATE BOXES at Covent Garden, Drury Lane, French Play, and Queen's Theatre, may be Engaged by the Night. To- morrow, Madame Malibran will repeat her performance in La Sonnambula, and on Wednesday in Fidelio. Each night W. S. has the best Private Boxes for Disposal. ADAME MALIBRAN, Madlle. Grisi, Madame Garcia, Signori Ivanhoff, Tamburini, Lablache,. Messrs. Moscheles, Neate, Puzzi, Bochsa, De Beriot, Colligney, & c. & c., will perform at the MORNING CON- CERT of M. HENRI HERZ, on MONDAY Next, the 22d inst. A few Tickets remain unsold, and no more will be issued than the room will conveniently con- tain.— 20, Soho- square. NEVER vet was there an Appeal made to the British Public in vain ! Signor LANZA has embarked in the cause of CHARITY ( the Royal Infirmary for Cataract), and without the^ ilblic support, his loss will be very great indeed ; he has engaged to pay everv expense for the forthcoming CONCERT on the 27th of June, at the HANOVER- SQUARE ROOMS, and to give one- half, clear of all responsibility, to aid the funds of the above Charity. The Programme, already published, will fully prove that Signor Lanza has spared indeed no ex- pense, and he must now rely wholly on the generosity and good feeling of the British Public. SIGNOR PUZZI has the honour to acquaint the Nobility, Gentry, and his Friends, that his ANNUAL CONCERT will take place on WED- NESDAY, the 24th of June inst. ( by special pennission), at the residence of the Countess Cornwallis. Hill street, Berkeley- square, under the immediate Patron- age of their Royal Highnesses the Duke and the Duchess of Cambridge, and the fame distinguished Ladies Patronesses as in former years. Signor Puzzi will be assisted by all the eminent Vocal and Instrumental Performers in this country. Sipnor Puzzi b « * gs respectfully to inform his Patrons that his Concert will main- tain its high character for novelty of arrangement.— Subscription Tickets to be had at the residence of Signor Puzzi, 87, Quadrant, Regent street. REAT CONCERT ROOM, KING'S THEATRE.— M. DE BERIOT'S MORNING CONCERT will take place in the above Room, on MONDAY, the 29th of June, 1835. PROGRAMME. PART I.— Overture, " Der Freischutz." Weber. Duetto, 4' Dove vai," Signori Rubini e Tamburini ( Guglielmo Tell) Rossini. Solo, Violin, M. De Beriot .. De Beriot. Aria. " While this heart," Madame Malibran ( La Sonnambula) .. Bellini. Grand Duetto for two Pianos, M. Herz and Mr. Benedict .. .. Herz. Duetto Buffo, " Ma guardate ehe figura," Madame Malibran e Signor Lablache ( La Prova) .. Gnecco. Aria, " La Tremenda," Madame Garcia ( Capuletti) Bellini. Duetto, Signori Lablache e F. Lablache fCenerentola) .. .. Rossini. GRAND DUETTO, Madame MALIBRAN e Madlle. GRISI [ being the first time of their singing together in public] ( Semiramide) Rossini. PART II.— Sestetto, Made. Malibran, Madlle. Grisi, e Made. Garcia, Signori Rubini, Tamburini, e Lablachfe ( Cenerentola) .. .. Rossini. Solo, Horn, Signor Puzzi .. ". Puzzi. Polacca, " Son Vergin vez « > sa," Madlle. Grisi ( I Puritani).. .. Bellini. New Grand Duetto^ Piano and Violin, " Recollections of La Son- nambula" ( first time), M. Benedict e M. De Beriot, Benedict and De Beriot. Ballad, " Upon thy truth relying," Mr. Knizht Cramer. Terzetto, " Le faccio an inchino," Made. Malibran, Made. Garcia, e Madlle. Grisi ( by desire) Cimarosa. New Air, M. Ivanhoff'( Il Bandito e la Sposa) .. .. Benedict and De Beriot. Cadence du Diable, " Tartini's Dream," Madame Malibran e M. De Beriot ( by desire) Penseron. Finale .. Beethoven. Tickets, 10s. 6d. each, to be had of M. De Beriot, 22, Dover- street, Piccadilly ( where Boxes can only be secured; of Mr. Seguin, Regent- street; and of the principal Music- eel. ers. rflHE LAST GRAND EVENING CONCERT this SEASON.— JL Under the immediate Patronage of T. R. H. the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.— KING'S CONCERT ROOM, Hanover- square.— Madame CORRI PALTONI, in conjunction with her Sister Mrs. GEESIN, and Mr. CARD, have the honour to announce to the Xobility, Gentry, their Pupils, and the Public, that their GRAND EVEXIXG CONCERT will take placein the above Room, on WED- NESDAY, July 1st. Vocal Performers— Madlle. Grisi, Madame Degli Antonj, and Madame Corri Paltoni; Mrs. Geesin, Mrs. E. Seguin, Miss Hawes, and Miss E. Romer ; Signori Rubini, Paltoni, Giubilei, Tamburini, and Lablache ; Mr. E. Seguin, Mr. Hobbs, Mr. Hawes, Mr. J. Barnett, Mr. Sinclair, and Mr. Braham.— Mrs. Anderson, Pianisteto Her Majesty, will play a Brilliant Rondo; Mr. Mori, a Grand Fantasia; Mr. Card, a new Grand Fantasia on the Flute. The Band will consist of upwards of Seventy Performers, from the Philharmonic, Ancient Con- cert, and Royal Academy Orchestras. Leaders, Messrs. F. Cramer and Mori; Conductor, Sir Geo. Smart.— Tickets, 10s. 6d. each, to be had of Madame Corri Paltoni and Mrs. Geesin, 34, Golden- square; of Mr. Card, 98, Regent Quadrant; and of all the principal Music- sellers. MERCH MEGAN : a popular Welch Air, with Variations, for the HARP or PIANOFORTE. By Miss REYNOLDS. Dedicated, with permission, to her Royal Highness the Duchess of Kent. DANNELEY, 315, Oxford- street. m/ ffARINO FALIERO.— Just published, all the Music in the XT JL successful Opera, Marino Faliero, viz.: The celebrated Barcarolle sung by Ivanoff, with Italian and English words ; two Arias, by Rubini; two Arias, by Tamburini; Aria, by Grisi; Aria, by Lablache; Duet, by Grisi and Rubini; Duet, by Lablache and Tamburini; Duet, by Grisi and Lablache. The Airs arranged as Solos and Duets for the Pianoforte, for Harp, and for Harp and Piano- forte, and as Quadrilles. Two new Ariettas and four Duettinos, by Gabusse. The Airs from the admired Opera, Fidelio, arranged for the Pianoforte by Mo- scheles ; for Harp, and for Harp and Pianoforte, by Bochsa; for the Violin, by Mori; for the Flute, by Card.— At MORI and LAVEXU'S, New Musical Sub scription Library, 28, New Bond- street; where may be had, as soon as published, all the Music from the new Operas. t TT A SONNAMBULA, with ENGLISH WORDS, as performed JLI at Drury Lane and Covent Garden, with unbounded applause, by Madame Malibran, Mr. Templeton, & c. & c. Published by T. BOOSEY and CO., Foreign Musical Library, 28, Holies- street, Oxford- street. 1. Oh, Love, for me thy power. Air, sung by Madame Malibran .. 3s. Od. 2. Do not mingle one human feeling. Ditto, ditto .. .. 2s. Od. 3. All is lost. " New Scena, sung by Mr. Templeton .. .. 3s. Od. 4. As I view these scenes so charming. Sung by Mr. E. Seguin 2s. 6d. 5. Sounds so joyful. Cavatina, sung by Miss Betts .. .. Is. 6d. 6. Take now this ring. Duet, sung by Madame Malibran and Mr. Templeton .. .. _ .. _ .. .. .. 2s. fid. 7. Oh, I cannot give expression. Ditto, ditto, by ditto .. .. 2s. Od. 8. Lisa, too, can I wrong her ? Quartet .. .. .. 2s. Od. The Opera of La Sonnambula may also be had with the Italian Words, in 10 pieces, from Is. 6d. to5s. each; for the Piano Solo, in 3 books, each 4s.; as Duets for ditto, 2 books, each 7s.; for Harp and Piano, 9s.; Harp Solo, in 3 books, 2s. 6d. and 3s. each. INVERNESS- SHIRE— Excellent Grouse Shooting.— To be LET, for One, Three, or Five Years, as may be agreed upon, the SHOOTING of GLENDOE. The range is extensive, and more than sufficient for two guns. It affords excellent grouse shooting, also black cock, red deer, and roe. Glendoe is situated on the south side of Lochness, towards the west end of the Loch, and in the neighbourhood of Fort Augustus, where there is a good Inn. Fort Augustus is 30 miles from Inverness by road, and the steamers on the Caledonian Canal afford rapid and easy communication both with Inverness and Glasgow. Application may be made to Mr. M'Crae, 22, Fludyer- street, Westminster. TO BE LET, Furnished, a genteel FAMILY RESIDENCE, delightfully situated on the Southampton water, and about five miles from that fashionable town, particularly well adapted for a Gentleman keeping a Yacht. The house, with conservatory attached, stands in a pleasure- garden, and consists of three sitting- room*, seven bed- rooms and dres « ing- room, with requisite offices, coach- house, stabling for six horses, two walled gardens, and about six acres of meadow land. A post to and from the village daily. Rent ^ 200 per annum. A Yacht of 15 tons may be had, if required.— Letters, post paid, addressed to R. S. T., Post- office, Portsmouth. No Office- keeper need apply. ^ IDER, ALE, STOUT, < fcc.— W. G. FIELD and Co. beg to acquaint their friends and the public, that their genuine CIDER and PERRY, Burton, Edinburgh, and Prestonpans Ales, Pale Ale as prepared for India, Dorchester Beer, and London and Dublin Brown Stout, are in fine order for use, and, as well as their FOREIGN WIXES and SPIRITS, of a very superior class. X. B. London and Dublin Brown Stout, Burton Ale, and Pale Ale as pre- pared for India, in casks of IS gallons.— 22vHenrietta street, Covent- garden. AY'S SHORT- NAP BEAVER, HATS, 21s., resemble superb 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 from Oxford- street.— N. B. Be particular iathe number, 251. -. HODGSON'S BRITISH and FOREIGN LIBRARY, 9, Great Marylebone- street. TERMS. jtb 5 0 The Year. 3 3 0 The Half- year. 1 16 0 The ( quarter. 0 15 0 The Month. Subscribers to this Library are entitled to the immediate perusal of all NEW BOOKS, Macazine.% and Reviews. The Subscribers to their NEW READING ROOM are most respectfully in- formed that it will be opened for their reception on the 1st of July. ARROW SCHOOL.— At a Meeting of the Committee for erecting ( by subscriptions varying from one to five guinea* each) a Cenotaph in Harrow Church, to the memory of the late DR. DRURY, held this day ; The Earl of RIPPON in the Chair; It was resolved unanimously:— 1. That it is extremely desirable to ascertain, as soon as possible, the sum or » which the Committee can rely for carrying into effect an undertaking which has been sanctioned by the enthusiastic approbation of all assembled at the two last Anniversary Meetings, as the nature and extent of their plan must necessarily depend on the amount of subscriptions received. ' 2. That all Harrovians and friends of the School who have not already sub- scribed, be earnestly requested to contribute to this fund, and to pay immediately their subscriptions into the Bank of Messrs. Drummond, Charing- cross: or Messrs. Hoare, Fleet- street. 3. That the subscriptions received be now published, and that a complete list of the Subscribers be eventually deposited in the School Library'. Carlton Gardens, June 11th, 1835. RIPON, Chairman. %* The amount of Subscriptions already received is .^ 252 17s. LAW LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY, for the Assurance of Persons in any station of Life. AGENERAL MEETING ofthe Proprietor? will be held at the Society's Office, Fleet- street, on Wednesday, the 24th day of June instant, at half- past 11 o'clock in the forenoon, pursuant to the Provisions of the Deed o£ Settlement, for the purpose of Electing six Directors and two Auditors in lieu ot those who will go out of office by rotation, and for general purposes. One of the auditors will be chosen by the proprietors, and the other by the assured of twet years' standing in the sum of 1,0001. and upwards for the whole term of life. By order of the Directors, June 11. GEORGE KIRKPATRICK, Actuary. Business will commence at 12 o'clock precisely. HAND INHAND FIRE- OFFICE, New Bridge- street* Blackfriars.— Instituted in 1696. For the Insurance of Buildings, Household Furniture, Stock in Trade, & c., witliin the Kingdom of Great Britain. All Persons whose Insurances become due at Midsummer Day, are requester* to observe, that their receipts are now ready, and that the money should be paid within fifteen days from that period. No charge is made for the Policy when the sum insured amounts to .£' 300 at upwards. ROBERT STEVEN, Secretary. PROTECTOR FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, No.~ a5, Old Jewry, London; Regent- street, corner of Jermyn- street, Westminsteri and Wellington- street, Southward— CAPITAL, ^ 5,000,000. Notice is hereby given, That Insurances which expire at Midsummer next,, should be renewed within fifteen days thereafter, or they will become void. Receipts for such renewals are now ready at the above Offices, and' with the re- spective Agents to the Company throughout the United Kingdom. WILMER HARRIS, Secretary. THE RHINE, via ROTTERDAM, at REDUCED FARES.— The well- known splendid Steam- Ship, BATAVIER, of 200 horse power, leaves London every SUNDAY MORNING for ROTTERDAM, and all places on. the Rhine as far as Strasbnrg. Her accommodations are of the most superior description, and the Fares up the Rhine are reduced 25 per cent.; being to Co- logne 31. 5s. 8d.; Mayence 41. Is.; Strasburg 41. 17s. 3d.— Apply to Mr. W. May, 123, Fenchurch- street; Messrs. Hofman and Scheut, 4, Vine- street, Minories; Mr. Colman, 61, Charing- cross ; Spread Eagle- office, Regent's Circus, or 8, CornhilL 1'" N a select and long- established FINISHING SCHOOlinear London, there is now a VACANCY for a young LADY, as an ARTICLED PUPIL, who may be desirous of completing her education under eminent mas- ters, for the purpose of filling the situation of Governess in a private family. Sh » - will be educated and treated- in the same manner as the regular pupils, and at the end of the term to be agreed upon, can either remain to assist in the Estab~ lishment, or an appointment as a private Governess will be provided for her. The first references can be offered, and the premium will depend on the time re- quired.— Address ( post- paid), F. F., Souter's Library, St. Paul's Church- yard, London. DUCATION in FRANCE.— Mr. MONTEUUIS, the Master of the Bourbourg Academy, near Calais, begs to inform his friends in Eng- land that he will come to London on the 23d inst. with some of his English pupils whose time with him is expired, and that on the 4th of July he will return to Bourbourg with the young Gentlemen who may be confided to his care.— Care's of particulars and references may be had of Mr. Fownes, No. 6, Coventrv- street,, Haymarket, where Mr. M. will reside during his stay in London.— An English Classical Assistant and a Drawing Master wanted. | 0~ THE CONTINENT.— A WIDOW LADY, ot high re- Tc spectability, would be happy to accompany two or three Ladies, or joia a cheerful pleasant Party. The Advertiser has been several Continental Tours, and, consequently, this would be an opportunity for travelling abroad that seldom occurs for Ladies, or an Invalid Gentleman. As she wishes her Son and Daughter on this occasion to be of the party, she would not object to take all trouble, and cater for the whole, and the expense might be nearly ascertained by application to B. B., at Mr. Cleaver's, Bookseller. King- street, Portman- square. N IMPORTANT DISCOVERY.— A Clergyman having dis- covered a method of curing himself of a NERVOUS or MENTAL COM- PLAINT, of fourteen years' standing, and within two years has had 400 patients in every variety of nervous or mental disease, many melancholy, and some insane, all of whom he has cured, who followed his advice, except five, offers, from motives of benevolence, rather than gain, to cure others.— Apply or write ( post paid) to the Rev. Dr. Willis, Mr. Rowland, chemist, 260, Tottenham- court- road, from four to five every Wednesday and Saturday. THE NOBILITY and* GENTRY are most respectfully made acquainted that the EXTENSIVE WARE- ROOMS of Messrs. MILES and EDWARDS will present, during the season, the most effective Display of useful and elegant FURNITURE, suitable to every description of building, which has ever been exhibited at one Establishment in this metropolis. Their ECO- NOMICAL SYSTEM of FURNISHING, so generally known and approved, will be continued by them, and in no instance will they permit any but their 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. TOURNAY CARPETS.— This beautiful manufacture can he supplied to any dimensions or design, by LAPWORTH and RILEY, Agents, and Carpet Manufacturers to the King and H. II. H. the Duchess of Kent. A splendid assortment of Royal Velvet, Edinburgh. Saxony, and every other descrip- tion of British manufacture of the first fabrics— ORIENTAL CARPETS. Their collection is of the most recherche character, among which is one of unusually large dimensions and matchless design.— Warehouse, 19 and 20, Old Bond- street. OBERT TULE, Goldsmith, gratefully returns thanks to the _ Nobility and his Friends for the very liberal support they have afforded him during the last seven years. He trusts that by producing a constant succession of Novelties in the several Branches of JEWELLERY, PLATE, and FANCY GOODS, he may still merit a continuance of their kind patronage.— 204, Re- gent- street, opposite Conduit- street. ADDRESSED to GENTLEMEN WHO PAY CASH.— THE many losses that arise from giving long credit have induced SHOOLBRED and RENWTCK, Tailors, 34, Jermyn- street, St. James's, to LOWER their PRICES 20 per cent, to gentlemen who pay cash on delivery They presume the known reputation of the house, as it regards style and quality, renders comment unnecessary. Scale as follows:— Blue or black dress coats, 31. 16s., all other colours, 31.10s; blue or black frock coats with silk skirts, 41.15s., all other colours, 41.10s.; blue, black, or other trousers, 11. 16s.; kerseymere or valentia waist- coats, 18s. Fl CLLEll'S FREEZING MACHINE, by which tour different Ices can be made in a few minutes, and repeated as often as required ; also, the Freezing Apparatus, by which Ices can be made by artificial process. The Ice Preserver, in which ice can be kept twenty- one days in the warmest season, to prevent the necessity of opening the ice- house except occasionally. Ice Pails, for icing wine, water, butter, Ac., and Freezing Powders of match- less quality.— Fuller's Spare Bed Airer. This vessel is constructed upon philoso- phical principles, and w- ill retain its heat for sixty hours with once tilljjKr. The above articles of scientific discovery may be seen only at the Manutictorj only, Jermyn- street, ax doors from St. Jaines's- street, Loudon. . 194 j o h n b u l l. June 14. TV ESP AY'S G AZETT E. DECLARATION OF INSOLVENCY. * T. SHEPLEY, Farrthaui, Surrey, hop dealer, BANKRUPTCY SUPERSEDED. B. BO A RDM AN, Norwich, tailor. BANKRUPTS. M WILLIAMS, fveath, Glamorganshire, linen draper. Att Sole, Alderman, Wry London- 11. LEE, R. J. BRASSEY, F. FAR, and G. LEE, Loinbard- street- bankers. Atts. White and Co.. Frederick's-^ cce, Old Jewry— P. SQUIRE and W SQUIRE, Soilthmolton, Devonshire, lines- drapers. Att. Sole, Aldennanbury, London— H. S. SHRAPNEL and M. JOUSIFF, Birmingham, grocers. Atts. Parkes, South- square, Gray's- inn, London ; Harding, Birmingham— S. COOPER, Bath, crocer. Atts. White and Co., Bedford- row, London ;- Bevan and Co., Bristol— J. SYMS. Trowbridce. Wiltshire, clothier. Atts. Fisher, Queen- street, Cheapside ; Timhnell, Trowbridge— J. M. CORTHOM, March, Isle of Ely, Cam- bridgeshire, sheep- salesman. Atts. Alexander and Co.; Carey- street, Lineoln's- inn, London ; Fisher, St. Ives, Huntingdonshire— T. TAYLOR and J. TAYLOR, jlin., Hedon, Holderness, Yorkshire, merchants. Atts. Dynelev and Co., Gray's inn, London ; Iveson, Hedon— J. SCOTT, Berwick- upen- Tweed, currier. Atts. Xnox, Hart- street, Bloomsbury: Marshall, Berwiek* upon- Tweed— S. GRIBBLE, Derby, hatter. Atts. Adlington and Co., Bedford- row, Lendon ; Moss, Derby— W„ TAYLOR, Liverpool, apothecary. Atts. Avison and Sons, Liverpool; Adlington und Co., Bed ford- row, London— W. BARNES, And over, ironmonger, Atts. Garrard, Suffolk- street, Pall- mall East; Earle, Andever— W. DON" KIN, North Shields, wine merchant. Atts. Spencer and Co., Aldermanbury, London; Wheldon, North Shields— J. WEATHE11LEY, North Shields, brewer. Atts. Spencer and'Co., Aldermanbury, London « ; WheMon, North Shields— G. LILLIE and J. PATTERSON, Liverpool, merchants. Atts. Mawdsley, Liverpool; Adlington and Co., Bedford- row, London. FRI DAY7S" G A ZETT E. Downing- street, June 19.— The King has been pleased to appoint the Right Hon. the Earl of Gos- ford, Sir Charles Edward Grey, Knt., and George Gipps, Esq., tobefcis Majesty's Commissioners for the investigation of all grievances affecting his Majesty's subjects in Lower Canada, in what relates to the adminis- tration of the government of the said province.; and the King has been pleased to appoint Thomas Frederick Elliott, Esq., to be Secretary to the said Commis- sioners. DECLARATIONS OF INSOLVENCY. H. IMESON, Tooley- street, ironmonger— J. SMITH, Almondbury, Glouces- tershire, carpenter. BANKRUPTS. H. POWELL, Newington Butts, Surrey, linen draper. Atts. Bell and Co., Bow Church- yard— S. M. STABLE, Fenchnrch- street, wine merchant. Att. Tribe, Great Russell street, Bloomsbury- square— T. WILSON, Barnard's Inn, Holborn, money scrivener. Att. Carlow,- Chancery- lane— W. BELLIIINGER, " Milbank- street,' butcher. Att. Ford, Great Queen- street, Lincoln's Inn- iields— T. PICKFORIJ, Whitechapel, rectifier. Atts. Bennett and Co., Scott's- yard, Lombard- street.— W. GRAY, Lambeth New Market, and Lambeth- marsh, Surrey, • cheesemonger. Atts. Freeman and Co., Coleman- street— T. CARTER, Berwick- street, Soho, tailor. Att. King, Lion's Inn— C. LEA, Halghton, Flintshire, miller, Atts. Blackstock and Co., King's Bench- walk, Temple; Harper, Whit- church— T. WHITE, Kingston- upon- Hull, grocer. Atts Lightfoot and Co., Hull; Walmsley and Co., Chancery- lane— H. PARKER, Chichester, wine mer- chant. Atts. Sowton and Co., Chichester; Sowton, Great James- street, Bedford- row— P. HEWES, Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, grocer. Ait. Weymouth, Lower John- street, Golden- square— J. BRADDOCK and S. BARNES, Oldham, machine makers. Atts. Stubbs and Co., Birmingham ; Norton and Co., Gray's Inn; Row- ley and Co., Manchester— C. PRIESTLEY, Fishergate, Yorkshire, glass manu- facturer. Atts. Williamson and Hill, Verulam- buildings, Gray's Inn ; Blanchard and Co., York— J. BRITTEN, Kingston- upon- Hull, hop and seed merchant. Atts. Shaw, Ely- place, Holborn; and Richardson, Hull— J. M. CORTHORN, March, Isle of Ely, Cambridgeshire, sheep salesman. Atts. Alexander and Co., Carey- street, Lincoln's Inn; Fisher, Huntingdon— J. M. WOOD, Norwich, painter. Att. Taylor, Featherstone- buildings, Holborn; Skipper, Norwich— < 5. TAPSCOTT, Ottery Saint Mary, Devonshire, currier. Atts. Burfoot, King's Bench- walk, Temple; Gidley and Co., Exeter— R. GOUGH, Gongresbury, So- mersetshire, land surveyor. Atts. Clarke and Co., Lincoln's Inn- lields; Phillips, Bristol— W. INMAN, Birmingham, wire- worker. Atts. Newton, South- square, Gray's Inn:; Harrison, Birmingham. PARLIAMENTARY ANALYSIS. HOUSE OF LORDS. MONDAY. 1 he Duke of WELLINGTON withdrew his motion, of which he had given notice, relative to the Order in Council on the Foreign Enlist- ment Act.— The second reading of the Universities Bill, at the re quest of the Duke of WELLINGTON, was postponed by the Earl of RADNOR till the 24th inst. The report of their Lordships' Committee on the subject of the rebuilding of the Houses of Parliament was brought up and agreed to, after a discussion and a division on a motion of the Earl of MALMESOURY, to omit certain words in the report and insert in their stead " a larger space than was allotted for the accommodation of persons in front of the Throne in the old House," which was rejected ' by a majority of 30 against 25. An address to his Majesty, founded upon the report, praying for his sanction, was then agreed to. Lord MELBOURNE," in reply to questions put to him by the Mar- quess of Londonderry, said that the Order in Council was issued on the application of the Spanish Ambassador, and that the Convention - which the Duke of Wellington had negociated between the bellige- rent parties in Spain had been carried into effect. His Lordship bore hi* testimony to the wisdom, humanity, and policy of the measure in question. TUESDAY. Petitions in favour of the grant to the Scotch Church were pre- sented by the Marquess of BUTE and the Earl of KINNOUL.— The Earl of ROBEK presented a petition from certain individuals at Ballymena, in the county of Antrim, who were totally unconnected • with the Protestant Church ( they were, in fact, Presbyterians), expressing their fears at the proposed conversion of the property of the Church of ilreland to Roman Catholic purposes. He perfectly concurred in the sentiments of the petitioners.— The Marriages Legalization Bill was reported, and a clause, on the motion of Lord LY'NDHURST, added. WEDNESDAY. The Royal A ssent was given by Commission to the Consolidated Fund Bill, and several private Bills. Some Bills from the Lower House were forwarded a stage, after which their Lordships ad- journed. THURSDAY. The London and Birmingham Railway Bill was read a third time and passed. The Bishop of EXETER moved for papers forwarded by the Rev. Mr. Stoney to the Commissioners of Public Instruction m October last, being answers to the said Commissioners' queries.— Viscount DUNCANNON consented to the motion, and thepapers were ordered. FRIDAY. The Bishop of EXETER gave notice that he should, on Thursday jqext, present the report of the Rev. Mr. Stoney, complaining of par- tiality on the part of the Irish Church Commissioners. Lord BROUGHAM moved the second reading of the Execution of Wills Bill, which was supported by Lord DENMAN, and opposed by Lord ABINGER and the Earl of MALMESBURY. After a brief dis- cussion the further debate was adjourned to Monday, as Lord BROUGHAM had brought forward the motion without notice. Lord BROUGHAM broughtuj) the report on t- he Patent Laws Bill, in which certain amendments were proposed. The Noble and Learned Lord moved that the Bill, with the amendments, be printed, and referred back to the Committee for further investigation. Tlte Earl of ROUEN presented a petition from Sir Karcourt Lees, offering to prove on oath, that . there was a conspiracy in Ireland to overturn the Protestant Establishment in that countiy. His Lordship believed that there were proceedings in Ireland that would has'e that effect, if not checked. HOUSE OFCOMMONS. MONOAV. On the presentation of. a petition from the printers of York, against the repeal of the whole of the duty on newspapers, and eulogising the general character of the Press, Mr. ROEBUCK amused the House by a - violent tirade against newspapers and their proprietors. The Hon. Member declared the Press to be an immoral and degnided power, couductedby " hiredassassins"— by persons who stabbed in the dark — written by individuals who dared not avow their names— and that its destruction would be a national benefit.— The Homse, on recovering from its amazement, interrupted the Hon. Member with cries of " No no;" Not all," < fcc. The Ipswich affair was again brought forward, and after a good deal of desultory discussion the individuals taken into custody on the Speaker's warrants were committed to Newgate.— The Municipal Corporation Reform Bill was read a second tame.— The Offences against the Person Bill was read a second time, and ordered to be committed.— A motion for an address to the King, in pursuuuee ot the resolutions of the Select Committee, for rebuilding the Houses of Parliament, was agreed to.— On the motion of Mr, GIBBORNE the special report of the Ipswich Election Committee was ordered to be referred to a Select Committee. TUESDAY. There not being a sufficient number of Members preset to take the ballot on some election petitions, the House adjourned. WEDNESDAY- The order for the consideration . of the Worcestershire and Trjfiee election petitions was discharged, in default of the attendance of the parties.— Mr. P. STEWART stated that, in the opinion of the Com- mittee, in> on the publication of the evidence taken before the Com- mittee of the Ipswich election petition, it would be inexpedient to publish the entire report; the Committee would have the necessary selections ready by Wednesday next.— Lord J. RUSSELL brought forward a resolution touching the registry of voters, who had been reported from Election Committees as not entitled to be on the regis- ter ; it was to provide that, on such cases being declared, the Speaker direct that the name be struck off the registry.— The ATTORNEY- GENERAL, in reply to Mr. TOOKE, said the charter to the London University was under consideration, but as the matter was impor- tant he would decline entering into further particulars at the present moment.— Lord J. RUSSELL, in answer to Mr. C. BULLER, said that the arrangement respecting the Chancery Commission was of tem- porary duration, and that the subject was now under the considera- tion of the Cabinet.— Lord J. RUSSELL, in reply to Sir R. PEEL, said that he intended to proceed with the Corporation Reform Bill on Monday.— The Poll Limitation Bill went through a Committee, after an extended conversation, various Members declaring that if a further limitation of the poll took place, there must be an increase in the number of polling places.— Tlie Colonial Passengers' Bill; the Loan Societies' Bill; the Savings' Banks Bill; the Roman Catholic Marriages Bill,< fcc., were severally forwarded. THURSDAY. Committees to try the Belfast and Carnarvon election petitions, were to have been ballotted for this day, but the parties for the peti- tions not appearing, the order for their consideration was discharged. — Mr. STRUTT reported from the Monmouth Election Committee that Mr. B. Hall, the sitting Member, had been duly returned. Several petions were presented. Captain ALSAGER presented one from the Eastern division of Surrey, with 2,000 signatures, against the appropriation clause.— Major BEAUCLERK observed that, though the signatures were undoubtedly those of respectable individuals, this petition by no means represented the feelings of the county on this subject; and that if the challenge were given, he thought he could produce a petition of a contrary character with 10,000, 20,000, or 30,000 signatures.— Mr. FRESHKIELD said if the Hon. Member would only be patient and wait till a dissolution of the Parliament, he would be very likely to experience a more convincing proof than he now entertained of what were the real sentiments of Surrey. Sir G. GREY, on a petition from Lower Canada, said that as a Com- mission was about to proceed there, he should he thought, best dis- charge his duty by abstaining from premature discussions and dis- closures.— Mr. LABOUCHERE observed, that he should exert himself to promote the adjustment of all differences between the Canadas and this country.— Sir R. PEEL asked whether the Commission was completed ?— Sir G. GREY replied in the affirmative, and afterwards named the additions ( Sir C. Grey and Captain Gibson). Mr. A. JOHNSTON then rose to submit his promised motion regard- ing Lay Patronage, Scotland, but hia. progress was checked by the House being counted out. FRIDAY. Mr. Sergeant JACKSON presented a petition from several hundred inhabitants of Cork, praying that no further grant of public money might be allowed for Maynooth College. The petitioners com- plained that the interference of the Roman Catholic Clergy had done away with all freedom of election; and that the Roman Catholics of Ireland were well able to support that establishment, as they paid in voluntary contributions to one man more than would support the College twice over. Everything English and Protestant was the object of unceasing, and unmitigated attacks by the present race of Priests educated at Maynooth. At every election they were the busiest agents, and the greatest promoters of disturbance.— Mr. O'DWYER said the Protestant Clergy interfered much more, and more mischievously, at elections than the Priests.— Mr. SHAW denied that there was any comparison between the two bodies. The Roman Catholic Clergymen proposed and nominated candidates, and dragged the freeholders to the place of polling in a. manner which, if it had been done by Protestant Clergyman, he ( Mr. Shaw) should consider most disgraceful. Their power, if not checked, would supersede the power of ail law and Government, and spread general confusion and discord throughout the country. ( Cheers from the Opposition.)— Mr. O'CONNELL took the liberty of saying that the statements of the Right Ron. and Learned Gentleman were totally false. Was the Right Hon. Gentleman aware that almost all the Protestant Clergy interfered with elections? (" No, no," from Mr. Shaw and other Members.) He would tell them of one where they did, and he could mention names, if he chose. ( Cries of " Name, name.") Mr. Mahony, of Dromore. ( Hear.) But he utterly denied the charge against the Catholic Clergy.— Mr. SHAW would call the recollection of the House to a recent occasion, on which the Hon. and Learned Member made the same assertion respecting other correspondence which he ( Mr. Shaw) had received. The Hon. and Learned Mem- ber then as confidently asserted as he did now that his ( Mr. Shaw's) information was false. The Hon. and Learned Gentleman was ever ready and flippant with his confident assertions, which were after- wards disproved. ( Hear, and laughter.) But what was the result in the case he alluded to when inquiry was made ? He would leave that to the judgment of the House. ( Cheers and laughter.)— Mr. O'CONNELL ( in evident perturbation)— What case do you allude to ? — Mr. SHAW— The case of David Murphy. ( Loud cheers from the Opposition.) — Mr. O'CONNELL ( much embarrassed) said he would deny that his assertions were disproved in that case. Mr. Shaw's own documents did not substantiate his former accusation. (" Oh, oh," and laughter from the Opposition.)— Mr. SHAW— I leave that to the judgment of the House and the country. ( General cheers.)— The petition was then ordered to lie on the table. Notices of various amendments on the Municipal Corporation Bill were given by Lord STANLEY, Mr. GROTE, and Sir R. INGLIS. Mr. GOULBURN, on the part of Sir R. PEEL, intimated that the Hon. Member for Tamworth would move, as an amendment to the 6th. clause of the Corporation Reform Bill, that the payment of rates should be as necessary for the qualification of electors under this Act as under the Reform Act.'' On the motion that the House resolve itself into a Committe of their la'e mission to Spain; together with copies of all reports and communications made to the British Government by those Commis- sioners ; and also, for a copy of any convention for the exchange of prisoners proposed, by Lord ELIOT, and signed by the Commanders- in- Chief of the armies in the provinces of Gnipuscoa, Alava, Biscay, and the kingdom of Navarre.' "— Lord JOHN RUSSELL opposed the motion, and, on the suggestion of Mr. O'CONNELL, Mr. DUNCOMBE withdrew it. Mr. FOWELL BUXTON'S motion, " That a Committee be appointed to inquire whether the condition on which the sum of twenty millions had been granted by that House to the slaveowners in the West Indies had been fulfilled, and to report thereon," was withdrawn, after a long speech from Sir G. GREY, in which he pledged himself that the Government would see the whole of the conditions on which the House voted the grant faithfully performed. In a Committee of the House on Ways and Means, the CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER said that he hoped, in the course of the present session, to be able to state what ought to be done in respect to the equalization of the duties on East and West India sugais, although the present imposts must be continued for the current year. He would, however, submit, a motion- this session for reducing the duties on East and West India coffee, the produce of British territories. The reports of the Roman Catholic ( Ireland) Marriages Bill, and the Prisoners'Counsel Bill were brought up. Mr. HUME brought in a Bill for the regulation of election expenses in England and Wales, which was read a first and second time. Lord EBRINGTON obtained j leave to bring in a Bill, which was read a first time, for repealing the Act of lastsession respecting Weights and Measures, and substituting other clauses in lien tnereol. " After a splendid description of Mount Lebanon, as seen from the road from Bairont to Balbec, in M. De Lainartine's Pilgrimage to the Holy Land," says Blackwood's Magazine, " we havean account of the most interesting people who inhabit its magnificent sites : these are the Maronites. There are several very beautiful pieces of poetry scattered through these volumes. The whole work is a succession of landscape pictures. We should not do justice if we did not men- tion here that Madame De Lamartine, an Englishwoman, has con- tributed to the work before us some of its most interesting pages— not so picturesque, perhaps, as those of her husband, but strongly marked by that good sense and self- possessing delight which charac- terise the natives of England, even in their highest raptures." [ An English translation of M. De Lamartine'n work has just been published by Mr, Bentley. The. aepasional yojtiy lias been metri- cally rendered by Miss London.] FOREIGN AFFAIRS. The French Papers of Wednesday devote considerable space and attention to the proceedings of the Court of Peers, which on Tuesday assumed a more animated^ character than they had borne for several days. Carrier,_ one of the prisoners, had been induced to plead in consequence of certain depositions made by Picot, one of the princi- pal witnesses against the prisoners charged with being concerned in the Lyons riots. It appeared by the shewing of Carrier, and the evi- dence adduced by him in support thereof, that Picot was a police- agent, who had been performing the part of an instigator among the disaffected, encouraging them to acts of open rebellion in order to betray them afterwards to his employers. The Citizen- King of the French has resolved to imitate the English Government in permitting enrolments for the service of the Queen of Spain. The Monitenr publishes the following :—" The King's in- tention being to authorise Frenchmen, who may present themselves with such design, to enter the service of her Majesty the Queen of Spain, and to retain, at the same time, the quality of Frenchmen, applications for such authorisation are to be made to the Minister of Justice, conformably to the twenty- first article of the civil code." The Munitmir publishes also the law just passed for paying to the United States, when satisfactory explanations shall have been re- ceived respecting the President's Message of the 2d of December, 1834, an indemnity of 25,000,000f. in execution of the Treaty of the 4th of July, 1831. Respecting the military operations in the north of Spain, the ac- counts published in the southern prints con tint) e highly favourable to Don Carlos's cause. According to the Bayonne Phare of the 13th, Vittoria, St. Sebastian, and Pamplona, are blockaded by Carlist parties, that intercept all supplies. On the 7th, 200 of the Queen's troops, headed by a Lieutenant- Colonel, went over from villaba to the insurgents— an occurrence which had made an un- favourable impression upon the Pamplona garrison. Four hundred and fifty men of the Royal Guard, captured by the Carlists, were on the 6th incorporated with their battalions. The Marquess de Labrador writes to the Quotidienne and Gazette de France to contradict the report that he is about to proceed to London on a mission connected with the " base, cowardly, and infamous project" of sending to Spain a gang of foreigners against his countrymen. The accounts from Syria and Egypt are afflicting. The arrival of Mehemet Ali at Cairo was deemed preparatory to new inflictions on the people of Syria, whose discontent had risen to an alarming height. At Cairo the plague continued to carry off between 700 ana 800 persons each day. It had nearly subsided at Alexandria, when all of a sudden it again burst forth with violence. His MAJESTY has given the proprietors of the Lawrence Gallery fifty guineas for so many tickets, to be placed at the disposal of the gentlemen students of the Royal Academy. The second exhibition will consist of specimens by VANDYKE and REMBRANDT. According to letters of May 23, from Tunis, the final symptoms of the complaint of the late Dey completely puzzled his physicians, until the examination of his stomach, after his death, when it ap- peared that he had eaten a sheep's head unknown to them, and against their advice. The same account announces that the Foreign Consuls have again submitted to the ceremony of kissing the hand of the new Dey. The Duke of NORTHUMBERLAND has given 1001. towards the erec- tion of the Medical School at Middlesex Hospital, of which his Grace is President. On account of the low and inaudible tone in which some Members, as well as others connected with the House of Commons, express themselves, it has been suggested that a new officer be appointed, to be denominated " Fugleman of Acoustics ;" and who, having been found to possess the ordinary powers of hearing, shall be stationed at a particular point of the House, and shall hold up his hand whenever a Member or clerk shall be inaudible to him. On Monday morning H. St. JOHN MILDMAY, Esq., the candidate for the representation of Hull on the Conservative interest, was intro- duced to the electors, at the Music Hall, Jarratt- street. Mr. MILD- MAY having entered into an explanation of his political principles, resolutions were passed for adopting measures to secure his election. Colonel THOMrsoN is the Liberal candidate. The nomination took place on Thursday, and the polling was to commence on Friday. The KING has conferred the honour of Knighthood upon Capt. the Hon. H. DUNCAN, R. N. Dr. WHITELAW AINSLIE, late of the Medical Staff of Southern India has also received the same honour. We regret to announce the decease of the Duchess of ARGYLL, which took place on the morning of Tuesday. Her Grace had been suffering under continued indisposition for some time past, which medical skill proved unable to alleviate, the fatal disease having been water round the regions of the heart. Her Grace was the Lady CAROLINE ELIZABETH VILLIERS, third daughter to the late, and sister of the present Earl of JERSEY. In 1795 Lady CAROLINE married the present Marquess of ANGLESEY, by whom she had five daughters and three sons. In 1810 this mai. iage was dissolved by the Scotch Conrts, at her Ladyship's suit, and she subsequently married the Duke of ARGYLL. By the first marriage there are living the Earl of Uxbridge and Lord William Paget, the Duchess of Richmond, the Marchioness of Conyngham, the Ladies Crofton, Templemore, and Agnes Byng. The Duchess of ARGYLL was in her 61st year. We have also to announce the death of the Hon. Judge VANDE LEUR, third Justice of the Court of King's Bench, Ireland, which took place on Sunday morning last, at his residence near Raheny. As a Judge he was an ornament to the Bench; his duties might truly be said to have been performed with sound judgment and strict impartiality, whilst his urbanity of manners and dignified deport- ment commanded respect from all who witnessed his decisions. In private Judge VANDELEUR was most highly esteemed for his humanity and benevolence, and he died as he had lived— a Christian.— Dublin Dispatch. We have also to record the death of that highly esteemed gentle- man THOMAS CARTER, Esq., which took place on Wednesday, the 10th inst., at Edgcott, in the county of Northampton, where he had resided on his property for forty years. He was in early life private secretary to the Duke of PORTLAND, and sat for several years in Parliament for Tamworth, in Staffordshire, and Callington, in Corn- wall. The Ministerial papers say that Mr. RICHARDS, a Member of the Irish Bar, has received the appointment of Chief Justice of Madras, and is to proceed to India, in a week or two. It is also stated that the present Government have avowed a determination to admit the members of the Irish Bar to a full share in the legal patronage of the Crown in India and the Colonies. It is said that general CHICHESTER, who has served in the Penin- sula, is to have the command of a portion of the men now raising in. this country to serve in Spain. A general Agricultural Association is forming, the central point of which is to be in London; the Marquess of CHANDOS to be President,, and WILLIAM CAYLEY, Esq., M. P., Vice- President. Wednesday a numerous attendance of Proprietors of East India Stock took place at the India House, for the purpose of electing a Director in the room of Mr. C. FERGUSSON, who had disqua- lified. More than ordinary interest was evinced by the meeting in the proceedings, as this was the first election, since the renewal of the charter, for placing upon the Court of Directors a member from one of the general body of Proprietors. It was also the first time in wluc. li the privilege was granted, tinder the new Act, for absent Pro September 195. JOHN BULL. 302 prietors to vote by proxy. Capt. SHEPHERD and Mr. FRANCIS WARDEN were the candidates, both of whom had been in office in India for about twenty years, and great exertions had been made by their friends to secure the election of their favourite candidate. A cir- cumstance occnrred during the meeting respecting the mode of carrying the new plan of voting by proxy into operation, which, probably, may lead to disputes as to the validity of the result of the ballot. Mr. WARDEN'S Committee forwarded proxies for him with- out specifically stating the amount of stock held by each Proprietor, residing in the oountry, entitled to vote. Consequently the proxies were sent up incomplete, and a point arose whether the proxies were to be taken as single votes only, though the parties might hold enough stock to entitle them to more than one vote. The Court of Directors referred the case to Mr. Sergeant SPANKIE, the standing Counsel of the Company, who gave it as his opinion that the proxies alluded to could only be registered as single votes. The ballot com- menced at nine o'clock and at eight the glasses were closed and delivered to the scrutineers, who reported the election to have fallen on JOHN SHEPHERD, Esq. The Leipsic Gazette mentions a report that, in the event of the marriage of Prince ADALBERT ( son of Prince WILLIAM of Prussia) with the Grand Duchess MART, eldest daughter of the Emperor NICHOLAS, a new King of Poland would be created, whose independ- ence would be guaranteed by Russia and Prussia. The Leeds Intelligencer states that Mr. T. SADLER is again conva- lescent, and that there is a fair prospect of his ultimate if not speedy recovery. Thursday being the 20th anniversary of the memorable battle of Waterloo, the men and officers belonging to the various battalions of household cavalry and infantry wore laurels in their caps in comme- moration of the day. At 11 o'clock the 1st battalion of Coldstream Guards marched out of their barracks ( St. George's, Charing- cross), for the purpose of mounting King's Guard at St. James's Palace. The colours belonging to the battalion were decorated with laurels, as also were those of the 2d Regiment of Life Guards, who likewise mounted guard at the Horse Guards. There was a numerous assem- blage of persons present to witness the exchange of guards. At the present period, including officers and men, there are not more than 70 in the seven battalions of Guards that were engaged in the conflict. In the three regimentsof Household Cavalry, there are but 36 officers and men remaining of those who were engaged in the battle. The privates have a dinner given them, and leave of absence for three days. A grand dinner was also given to the officers and men belong- ing to the Royal Artillery, at Woolwich, that were engaged. Friday, about sixty highly respectable rate- payers of the parish of St. Pancra- s dined in the long room of the Hawarden Castle, near the vestry rooms. The dinner was in congratulation at the future pros- pect which the Conservative interest of the parish presents at this moment. Mr. Newberry was called to the chair. Upon the removal of the cloth several of the company expressed their detestation at the conduct of the Radicals of this borough, and a strong determina- tion was evident to break up their power in St- Pancras. In the Court of King's Bench on Monday, Mr. Robison was sen- tenced to four mouths ® imprisonment in the Marshalsea, for a libel on General Darling. In the Sheriffs' Court, on Tuesday, in an action for crim. con., Malpas v. Cawley, the Jury gave 40s. damages. The damages were laid at 2,0001. The plaintiff is a barrister, and defendant is a young naval officer. At the time of the seduction, Mrs. Malpas was separated from her husband, under a deed of separation, on account of incompatibility of temper.— In the same Court, a Miss Saunders, of Hemel Hempstead, recovered 5001. damages from Mr. Newman, formerly a farmer, but now a publican at St. Alban's, for a breach of promise of marriage. It appeared that the defendant, having accomplished his criminal purpose with the plaintiff ( who has since given birth to a child), abandoned her, telling her mother that he was going to marry a woman of property. This, it appeared, he had since done, and he allowed judgment to go by default. CAPE OF GOOD HOPE.— There are accounts in town from the Cape of Good Hope to the 5th April, which are of a very favourable cha- racter. The Caffres had been completely driven " from the colony, and the Commander was pursuing them into the interior. The chief, Hintza, had been applied to for the colonial cattle he and his followers had taken from the colonists during the invasion, but he had refused to give them up until he had consulted with the other chiefs in amity with him. The private advices state it would be a long time before the colony would recover from the injury that had teen sustained from the invasion of the Caffres. A young gentleman, about 18, youngest son of the Rev. J. Lynn, Vicar of Crosthwaite, Cumberland, lost his life by bathing in the river Derwent on Monday last. The discovery was made by Mr. Barnes, of Howe, and his son, who happened to be passing along a foot path near the river, where they observed his clothes. Having obtained assistance the body was found in the water at the depth of seven feet. THE HON. MRS. NORTON'S NEW WORK ( The ( Fife, and IVoman's Reward).— The female character never appears to greater advantage than when displayed in those acts of self- devotion which sacrifices all to principle. In IVoman's Reward, we see feminine excellence carried to the very limits of perfection, without in a single instance overstepping the modesty of nature ; and in The IVife, a moral in- culcated of the highest necessity as society is just now constituted. We can recommend these productions not to the perusal only but to the study of all classes. THE STUDENT, BY THE AUTHOR OF ENGLAND AND THE ENGLISH < fec.—" The subjects of these volumes are very various. It is curious however to observe, in the way of interest merely, the result of Mr. Bulwer's masterly mode of treatment. Here are many subjects ex- amined, not one of them, however, seems limited to itself— to the single and critical inquiry. We read as we are told to inquire by the light of imagination. Objects are presented to us as in poetry— not as they are in themselves actually, Dut as they are moulded by other thoughts and feelings into an infinite variety of shapes and combina- tions of power. We feel the greatest interest, single as well as vari- ous. There is the observation which keeps all tilings distinct, yet the imagination which fuses all things. There is the unlimited power of suggestion, yet the point at which the mind rests satisfied. Mr. Buhver speaks in one part ofthebookof " possessing himself in thought of a shadowy aud unreal future." His future is neither shadowy orunreal. Posterity is indeed a difficult mark to hit, but if ever man did it, Mr. Bulwer has sent the arrow home."— Examiner. It will be seen by an advertisement in this day's paper that Signor Lanza has come forward in the cause of charity, and announces a grand Concert at the Hanover- square Rooms, one- half of the pro- • ceeeds of which he very handsomely gives to the Royal Infirmary for - Cataract. There can be no doubt of the public seconding Signor Lanza's exertions on such an occasion. DRURY- LANE THEATRE.— The Maid of Cashmere was performed at this theatre on Thursday. The principal feature was, of course, the dancing, in which the celebrated Taglioni was the leading star. Mademoiselle Varin was also much applauded, aud the house, which ^ vas crowded in every part, bore testimony to the excellence of the performance. A new mythological piece, under the title of Cupid in London, has been produced at the Queen's Theatre, the getting- up of which fully justifies Mrs. Nisbett's reputation as a managress. John Reeve appeared as Cupid, Mrs. Honey as Psyche, and Bacchus was cleverly represented by Mr. Barnet. The piece, of course, was successful. A very amusing and sprightly farce, called I and my Double, was produced at the English Opera House on Tuesday. It introduces the whole comic strength of the company in appropriate characters— and the acting of H emming, Williams, YVrench, and the inimitable Keeley kept the audience in a continued roar of laughter. SAINT ANN'S SOCIETY SCHOOLS.— Fancy Fair.— The public have been informed of the intended fete champetre to be held in Jenkins' Gardens, Regent's Park, on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday next, on behalf of this ancient and excellent Institution. The programme • which has been put forth displays so great a variety of attractive en- tertainment, anil the fgte is distinguished by the patronage of per- sons of such high rank and distinction, that we doubt not but the Committee of Management will realise their anticipation that the Gardens will, on each day, be the resort of the fashionable world, and the Society be benefitted by many hundred pounds. We are gratified to hear that the gifts for sale are even more numerous than the Committee could have expected, and that they consist of articles of great novelty and considerable worth, amongst which are some lithographic drawings by her Royal Highness the Princess Victoria. NAVAL AND MILITARY. WAR OFFICE, June 19. 2d I") rap. Guards— Cornet E. Leiornto be Lieut, bv pur. vice Kearney, ret.; W, L. Ricketts, Gent, to be Cornet, vice Leigh. 3d Llorbt Drags.— Cornet J. Green to be Lieut, by pur. vire Conway, prom.; J. Lindsay, Gent, to be Comet by pur. vice Green. Scots Fusilier Guards— Lieut. R.. D. Willan to be Licit, and Capt. by pur. vice Harford, ret.; W. J. Ridlev, Gent, to be Ens. and Uaof.- by pur. vice Wilian. 1st Foot— Capt. C. Deane to be Major bv pur. vice Deuchar. ret.; Lieut. R. Coring, to be Capt. by pur. vice Deane ;: Ens* W. Jones to be Limit, by pur. vice Goring ; J. Jardine, Gent, to be Ens. by pur. vice Jones. 9th— Lieut.- Col. J. M'CaskiU, from 9eth, to be Lieut.- Col. vice Campbell, excli. 13ttl— Geilt, Cadet G. . Mien, from Royal Mil. Coll. to be- Ens. without pur. vice Bh> therton. whose appointment has not taken place. 28th— Capt. J. P. Kennedy, from li.- p. as Sub- Inspector of Militia ill the Ionian Islands, to be Capt. vice J. E. Acklom exch.; Staff- Assist- Snrg. J. Campbell to be- Surg, vice Galcani, ami. to 4fith, 42d— Surg. J. Paterson, M. D. from the - i'i h. to be Surg, vice Nicholsonrapp. to the Staff. 46th— Ens. G. H. L. Wharton to be Lieut, by pur. vice Beare, proin.; A. Maxwell. Gent, to be Ens. by pur. vice Wharton i'^ urg. M. Galcani. M. B. from 28th, to be Slug, vice Paterso'n, app. to the 42J. 84th— Lieut. T. Bridge to be Adjutant, vice Bolton, resigns the Adjutancy only. 89th— Ens. N. Cowleyrto be Lieut, by pur. vice Kingston, ret.; G. Home, Gent, to be Ens. by pur. vice Cow- lev. 96th— Lieut. R. S. iluiTav to be Capt. by pur. vice Robertson, ret.; Ens. J, Lee, to be Lieut, by pin. vice Murrav; Lord Mark Kerr to be Ensign by pur. vice Lee. 98th Foo't— Lieut. Col. C. Campbell, from the 9th, to be Lieut.- Col. vice M'Caskill, who exch. Hospital Staff— Surg. B. Nicholson, from 42d, to be Surgeon to the Forces, vice R. Scott, ret. on h.- p.; R. H. Evcrard, M. D., to- be Assist.- Surg. to the Forces, vice Campbell, promoted to the 28th. OFFICE OF ORDNANCE, June 19. Royal Regt. of Art.— Lient. Col. J. Power to be Col. vice Bingham, dec.; Capt. and Brevet Major A. C. Mercer to be Lient.* Col. tfice Power ; See. Capt. J. Hen- well to be Capt. vice Mercer; First Lieut W. H. Hennis to be Sec. Capt. vice Hanwell; Sec. Lieut. C. R. Wynne to be First Lieut, vice Hennis ; Sec. Lieut. L. W. M. Wynne to be First Lieut, vice Hollingworth, dec.; Lieut.- Col. Young- husband to be Col. vice A. Fraser. dec.; Brevet Lieut.- Colonel and Capt. W. G. Power to be Lieut.- Col. vice Younghnsband; See. Capt. R. Andrews to be Cant, vice Power; First Lieut. G. Hare to be Sec. Capt. vice Andrews; Sec. Lieut. F. Ramsay to be First Lieut, vice Hare. Commissions signed by Lord Lieutenants.— Royal Wiltshire Yeomanry Ca- valry— Chippenham Troop— W. Earl of Kerrv to be Lieut., vice Fuller, resigned. Devizes Troop— T. H. S. B. Esteonrt, Gent., to be Lieut., vice Polhill, resigned. NAVAL PROMOTIONS, APPOINTMENTS, Ac. Purser— J. Herbert, to the Ringdove. Mates— J. Strange, H. Bailey, to the Excellent. Midshipman— Mr. Soteriades, to the Excellent. College Volunteers — E. A. T. Lloyd and J. J. Kennedy, to the Magieienne; P. A. Halkett, to the Barhaln. Just published, in one volume, price 11. 5s. in boards, printed uniformly with the Peerage, DEBRETT'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. Cailell ; John Richardson; Baldwin and Cradock; S. Bagster; J. Booker ; J. Booth ; Hatchard and Son ; R. Seholey ; Hamilton and Co.; Sher- wood and Co.; Simpkin and Marshall; Parburyand Co.; E. Hodgson; W. Pick- ering; W. Mason ; E. Lloyd ; J. Hearne ; T. and W. Boone ; ana Houlston and Son. Of whom may be had, DEBRETT'S PEERAGE, by the san. e Editor, with Additions to April, 1835, 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. Bv William Courthope, Esq. Price 9s. TEGG'S CHRONOLOGY, CORRECTED TO 1835. In one volume duodecimo, closely printed in double columns, price 6s. in cloth boards, DICTIONARY of CHRONOLOGY; or, HISTORIAN'S L COMPANION : being an authentic Register of Events, from the Earliest Period to the Present Time. The Fourth Edition, considerably enlarged, edited by THOMAS TEGG. London : printed for Thomas Tegg and Son, 73, Cheapside ; Griffin and Co., Glasgow ; Tegg. Wise, and Co., Dublin; and may be procured by order of any other Bookseller in the Kingdom. CHOICE PERRY, equal to Champagne, 18s. per dozen. Real Cocka£ ee Cider, 9s. per dozen ; . pints, 5s. per dozen. India Pale Ale, 8s. per dozen ; pints, 5s. per dozen. ROADLEY, SIMKIN, and CO., Queen- square Store, corner of Gloucester- street, Blooinsbury, beg to call attention to the above from officers and gentlemen accustomed to tropical climates, as well as the public in general, to their extensive variety of Scotch and Burton Ales, light Scotch Beer, Dorchester strong Beer, London double Stout, and Guinness's Dublin Stout, all in the highest perfection. INDIA MATTING.—- The Nobilitv ami Gentry are res informed by the Proprietors of the INDIA MAT WAREHOUSE, 38, Wei] beck- street, Cavendish- square, they have received, and are now on sale at the above place, a few very extraordinary BENGAL MATS, measuring from 12 feet to 100 feet, and from 40 feet to 50 feet, without a seam. These beautiful Mats deserve particular attention, as nothing has ever been seen like them in this country. India and China Mats of every description fitted to rooms, and sent to any part of the country. THE WRITING of PERSONS of all ages, if ever so bad, IMPROVED in eight easy Lessons. The Pupils are received separately, and taught quite privately, or met at their own residences, on very moderate terms. Separate rooms for Ladies. Practical Rooli- keeping, qualifying persons for every situation, taught in 12 Lessons. Arithmetic and) bad spelling improved on an entirely new principle. Apply to Mr. Languiaid, at the old establishment, 122, Regent- street, 10 doors above the Quadrant. Copy the address. DAVIES'S CANDLES, 5d. per lb. ; Moulds, Sid.; Soap, 4jd.; extra fine Moulds, with wax wicks, 6jd.; superior Transparent Sperm and Composition, with the improved plaited wicks, 2s. Id. ; line Wax, Is. 6d.; genuine Wrax, 2s. Id.; Yellow Soap, 42s.. 46s., 52s., and 56s. per 1121bs. ; Mot- tled 52s., 58s., and 62s.; Windsor and I'alin is. 4d. per packet; Old Brown Windsor Is. 9d.; fine Rose 2s.; Camphor 2s.; superior scented Almond 2s. 6d.; finest 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- lane, opposite New Slaughter's Coffee- house, who will meet the prices of any house in the kingdom with the same quality of articles. TO EPICURES, * c. DIN MURK'S SHKIMP PASTE, a superior delicacy to anything yet offered to the public for breakfast, sand- wiches, & i\ Dininore's Essence of Shrimps will be found far superior to the Essence of Anchovies for every description of boiled and fried Fish, being of a more mild, rich, and delicious flavour. Crosse and Blackwell's celebrated Soho Sauce, for Fish, Game, Meats, Made- dishes, < fcc. Crosse and Blackwell's Florence Cream, for Salads, Lobsters, Ac., by which a salad after the Parisian manner is obtained in one minute.— To be had of most sauce- venders, and wholesale at Crosse and Blackwell's Fish Sauce Warehouse, 11, King- street, Soho, London. WEAK LEGS, KNEES, and ANKLES. — SHOOLBRED and REN WICK, of 34, Jermvil- sfreet, St. James's, beg to announce their NEW INVENTED, PATENT ELASTIC STOCKINGS, KNEE- CAPS, SOCKS, & c. The particular property of the Stocking is to give constant support to the leg, in varicose or enlarged veins, weak, swollen, or dropsical affections. The Knee- Cap will be of great use when the knee- joint requires support from accident to the pan of the knee, after inflammation, rheumatic or gouty affec- tions. The Sock is to give support to the ankle- joint after fractures and disloca- tions, or in any case where, from weakness of the part, support may be necessary. Suffice it to say, wherever com inon bandages are requisite, the above articles will beneficially supersede their application, inasmuch as they yield an equally dif- fused pressure over the part affected. PATENT HATS, No. 53, New Bond- street, and 80, Newgate- street.— T. DUGGIN begs leave most respectfully to inform the Nobility and Gentiy- that he is enabled to supply them ( for Cash) at wholesale prices. Very best Beaver Hats, weighing from 3oz. and upwards.. 21s Cash— 26s Credit. Second quality ditto ditto .. .. 17s .. 21s .. Very best Livery Hats .. 16s .. 18s .. Drab Hats, from 7s. 6d. to 21s. Ladies' Hats on the above terms; also a variety of Velvet and other Caps. sc COTTISH UNION FIRE and LIFE INSURANCE CUM* PANYr No. 449, West Strand,. London; George street, Edinburgh; and Col lege- greeny Dublin. Incorporatetn^ Ilopil Charter.— Capital, -*" 5,000, u00. Thomas1 Hawkes, Esq., M. P. Walter Lsarmonth, Esq. Charles Balfour, Esq. Richard Oliverson, Esq. J. Gordon Duff, Esq. Divie Robertson, Esq. James Gooden, Esq. Hugh F. Sandeman, Esq. John Kingston, Esq. Archibald David Stewart, Esq. S. Z. Langtoa, Esq. S. Mackenzie^ JSsq., Manager. FIRE DEPARTMENT. ^ ' fc FSse Insurances effected at the reduced rates, and when for seven years charged six pears only. No charge made for Policies, or for alterartions or removals. LIFE DEPARTMENT. Unquestionable security, combined with low rates of premium, are distinguish- ing features of this Corporation, and of paramount importance'to persons effecting insurances on lives. No entrance fee or extra charge beyond the policy stamp* and Insurances can: be concluded the same day when required: Tallies of rates of Fire or Life Assurances may be had at the Office, 449, West Strand, London. By Order of the Directors, F. G. SMITH, Secretary to the London Board. BUR& ESS'S NEW SAUCE for general purposes having - aine3 such great approbation, and the demand for it containing to increase, JOHN BURGESS and SON beg most respectfully to offer thus their bestjacknow- ledgments to the Public for their liberal patronage of the same; its utility and great convenience in all climates have recommended it to the most distinguished foreign connexions, who have all spoken highly in its recommeraktion. It is pre- pared by them only; and for preventing disappointment to families, all possible care has been resorted to, by each bottle being sealed on the cork witirtheir firm and address, as well as each label having their signature, without which it cannot be genuine. JOHN BURGESS and SON'S long- established and much esteemed ESSENCE of ANCHOVIKS continues to be prepared by them after the same manner that has given the greatest satisfaction for many years. Warehouse, 170, Strand, corner of " the Savoy- steps, London. ( The Original Fish- sauce Warehonse. j DUPUYTREN'S TAMRUKEYHU.— This article, for beauti- fying the- Countenance and purifying the Skin, ^ as invented by the late celebrated Baron Dupuytren, of France. lis powers are truly extraordinary. It removes from the RETE MUCOSUM of the skin ( that tissue upon which its, colour depends) all SALLOWNESS, WANNESS, and TAN; causes a circula- tion of blood in the minute capillaries of the skin ; and gives to the countenance, neck, and arms a beautiful clearness, softness, and healthy aspect. Not one of the least of the advantages of the Tamrukeyhu is, that its effects are not transitory but permanent, and that it maybe used upon the most delicate skin with the greatest safety.— Price 3s. 6d. per Bottle.— Sold wholesale by W. Sutton and Co.„ 10, Bow Chureh- yaid, Cheapside, London; and retail by all Medicine Venders and Perfumers. FOR the FACE and SKIN.- ROWLAND'S KALYDOR.— Pre- pared from beautiful exotics, and warranted perfectly innoeent, yet possess- ing wonderful properties. It completely eradicates tan, freckles, pimples, spots, redness, and all cutaneous eruptions; gradually realizes a delicately clear soft skin ; transforms even the most sallow complexion into radiant whiteness, imparting to it a beautiful juvenile bloom.— Gentlemen, whose faces are tender after shav- ing, will find it allay the irritability and smarting pain, and render the skin smooth and pleasant. It protects the skin from the baneful effects caused by exposure to intense solar heat; and in sun- burns, stings of insects. < fec., it immediately allays the most violent inflammation. Price 4s. 6d., and 8s. 6d. per bottle, duty in- cluded. OBSERVE— Each bottle has the Name and Address of the Proprietors, A. ROWLAND & SON, 20, HATTON- GARDEN, LONDON, engraved on the Government Stamp, which is pasted on each, also printed in red on the wrapper in which each is enclosed. Sold by them, and by every respectable Perfumer and Medicine Vender. \ PROOF that Hair can be restored again.— Gentlemen— It is with the greatest pleasure I now write to inform you, that I hare been using your justly celebrated BALM of COLUMBIA. My head was almost desti- tute of hair, when fortunately your agents, Messrs. Hopper and Co., recommended your Balm, which, I am proud to acknowledge, had the desired effect; for in a very short time my hair was perfectly restored, and it now is as thick as it ever was in my life. I think it my duty to testify to the virtues of your inestimable Balm, and you may give this as much publicity as you please. I am, Gentlemen, yours, & c. JOHN ANFIELD, Princes- street, Hull. To Messrs. C. and A. OLD RIDGE, 1, Wellington- street, Strand, London. OLDRIDGE'S BALM causes whiskers and eyebrows to grow, prtvents the hair from turning grey, and the first application makes it curl beautifully, frees ii from scurf, and stops the hair from falling off. Abundance of certificates from Gentlemen of the first respectability are shown by the Proprietory C. and A. OLDRIDGE, 1„ Wellington- street, Strand, where the Balm is sold. Price 3s. 6d., 6s., and Us. per bottle. N. B. The public are requested to be on their guard against counterfeits. Ask for Oldridge's Bairn.— X, Wellington street, Strand. DYSPEPTIC AFFECTIONS.— BUTLER's COOLING APE- RIENT POWDERS produce an extremely refreshing Effervescing Draught, which is at the same time a mild and cooling aperient, peculiarly adapted to promote a healthy action of the Stomach and Bowels, and thereby pre-- vent the recurrence of constipation and indigestion, with all their train, of conse- quences, such as Depression, Flatulence, Acidity or Heartburn, Headache, Febrile Symptoms, Eruptions on the Skin, & c.; and their frequent use will obviate the necessity of having recourse to Medicines which tend to debilitate the system.-— Prepared and sold in 2s. 9d. boxes, and in 20s. cases, which latter contain the Powders in separate bottles, by Thomas Butler, Chemist, 4, Cheauside, corner of St. Paul's, London ; anil ( authenticated by the Preparer's name and address in the accompanying label and stamp) may be obtainedOT Sanger, 150, Oxford- street; at 54, Lower Sackville- street, Dublin; of Duncan, Flockhart and Co., Edinburgh; Dennis and Son, York; and most respectable Druggists throughout the Kingdom* TO the NOBILITY, CLERGY, GENTRY, & c.— TAYLOR'S ALTERATIVE, and also his FEVER POWDERS, for the cure of the diseases of Infants and Children, are at once amongst the safest and most effica- cious Specifics. The Prescription of a regular and long experienced Surgeon^ ( Win. Taylor, Esq. of Gr-? at Yarmouth)— recommended by Nobility, Gentry, and Clergy ( whose testimonials are enclosed in each Box)— pleasant to the taste as sugar— given without a vehicle* and taken without persuasion. Sold in separatet Boxes of 2s. 6d., 4s. 6d., lis., and 21s.— To caution Parents against the imposi- tions of counterfeit Medicines, observe that the genuine has Mr. T.' s signature OJ* each Stamp. To be had of all respectable venders. N. B. The above advertisement is strongly urged upon the attention: of Parents; th< » efficacy of both- kinds of the Medicine has ensured the ret ommendationof that highest personages in this kingdom. _ ^ HENRY'S CALCINED MAGNESIA continues to be prepared with the most scrupulous care and attention by Messrs. Thomas and. William Henry, Manufacturing Chemists, Manchester. It is sold in bottles^, price 2s. 9d., or with glass stoppers at 4s. 6d., Stamp included, with full direc- tions for its use, by their various agents in the metropolis, and throughout tha United Kingdom, but it cannot be genuine unless their names are engraved oa the Government Stamp, which is fixed over the cork or stopper of each bottle. Of most of the Venders of the Magnesia may be had, authenticated by a si- milar Stamp, HENRY'S AROMATIC SPIRIT of VINEGAR, the invention ot. Mr. Henry, aud the only genuine preparation of that article. THE PATENT SELF- ADJUSTING GERMAN TRUSS, acting effectually without pressure or any complication, is recommended by the Faculty for the Cure and Relief of Hernia. The first members of the pro- fession are convinced that pressure is not the merit of a good Truss, but a mecha- nical Resisting power, which cannot be applied to any Truss where straps arei used, and that have a pad behind, or where spiral springs and other complications are introduced. J. EGG and CO., the inventors, engage to cure any reducible Rupture, if left to their management.— Manufactory, No. 1, Piccadilly.— Pub- lished by the Inventor, A TREATISE on the CURE of HERNIA by MECHANI- CAL POWER. Price 2s. 6d._ NEW POPULAR WORK ON DISEASES OF THE GENERATIVE SYSTEM.— Price 4s. N HISTORICAL and PRACTICAL TREATISE on L SYPHILIS and its CONSEQUENCES. Together with Observations on the Nature and Treatment of certain other Diseases of the Generative System ; on Nervous, Local, and General Debility, which, if not timely remedied, termi- nates in a distressing state of impotence, alike destructive to the best energies of the mind and body, for the Cure of which a superior mode of Treatment i » adopted by the Author, with concluding Remarks on the Evils resulting from attempts at self- cure. By C. B. COURTEN AY, M. I)., 42, Great Marlborough- street. Printed for the Author, and sold by Simpkin and Marshall, Stationers'- court; Onwhyn, Catherine- street, Strand ; also at 145, Oxford- street; 59, Pall- mall; 98, Royal Exchange; 248, Regent- street: and all Booksellers in town and country. " The luminous views taken of these diseases, together with the important warnings against excesses, entitle this work to great praise ; and we may add, as- a further recommendation, that it is written with much delicacy and morality.* — Inspector and Literary Review. MR. GUTHRIE'S NEW SURGICAL WORKS, ON the ANATOMY and DISEASES of the NECK of the BLADDER, and of the URETHRA, with their appropriate Means of Cure. Plates. Price 12s., boards ; being the Substance of the Lectures delivered inth^ Theatre of the Royal College of Surgeons, and in the Westminster Hospital*. On the CERTAINTY and SAFETY with which the OPERATION for the EXTRACTION of a CATARACT from the HUMAN EYE maybe performed^ and on the Means by which it is to be accomplished. Stitched, 2s. 6d. Burgess and Hill, Windmill- street; ami: Sams, Royal Library, St. James's- street* NERVOUS DEBILITY, < fcc.— MEDICAL ETHICS.— The tol- lowing Works will serve as guides and monitors to all who may feel inte rested in their perusal:— 1st. The ^ KGIS of LIFE presents an extended view of the causes and effects of self- abuse, intemperance, and libertinism, as tending to produce sexual debility and nervous irritation.— 2d. The SYPHILIST recom- mends itself to the serious notice of the man of pleasure when suffering under the constitutional effects of Syphilis, Gonorrhoea, ( fee.— 3d. HYGEIANA is address- ed to the reserved and sensitive female, who may possess in this work a confidential adviser under the most delicate circumstances; even where the hope3- of mater- nity have been long delayed. " These books can be safely recommended, as well for the moral truths they contain as for the extensive and successful result of the author's experience."— London Morning Journal.— The above may be had of Sherwood and Co., Pater- noster- row; 59, Pall- mall; 4, Catharine- street, Strand ; Porter, I2, Grafton- street » Dublin; 86, Trongate, Glasgow ; 12, Calton- street, Edinburgh ; and of all Book- sellers. The 21st edition> price 5s. each. ,, . , Messrs. Goss and Co. are to be consulted as usual, every day, at their bouse-; and Patients in the remotest parts of the country, can be treated successfully, on describing minutely the case, and enclosing a remittance for advice aad medicine* which can be forwarded to any part of the world. No difficulty can occur, as the medicine will he securely packed, and carefully protected from observation—• No. 7.. Lancayter- place, Strand, London. CORUNNA. ' " L ' O, England remembers that ill- fated day When by Corunna's wide spreading plain, Brave Moore, the great hero, in midst of the fray, By glory encircled, was slain. But England knows not how the village was saved From destruction and pillage and shame. When the sons of Britannia by numbers o'erlaved Retreated, as on the foe came In a nobleman's house in the neighbourhood near, The General in quarters had laid, And a present of Warren's Jet Blacking so clear, To the host that he lov'd, he bad made. And the nobleman's boots by that black did display Such bright, such superlative gleams, That the high- vaulted roof where they hung in arra* Seemed illumined by heavenly beams. When into the village the enemy broke, Destruction and plunder their aim, They scarce in that mansion had ventured to loos Ere they left it as fast as they came: . For they fancied their faces that in the bright bloom That so lovely was shewn by the Blacking, Were their friends' injured spirits had burst from the tomb Corunna to save thus from sacking. . THIS Easy- shining and Brilliant BLACKING is prepared by ROBERT WARREN, 30, STRAND, Londw*; and sold in every town in the pingdom. Liquid in bottles, and lute in pot*, at 6d., 12d., and. m eack. particular to enquire for Warren's, 30, Strand. All others are counterfeit* 270 JOHN BULL. August 23. GIR' A MONDAY EDITION ( for the Country) is published at Three €>\: iui.' k in the aiternoon, containing the Markets and Latest News. JOHN BULL. LONDON, JUNE 21. THEIR MAJESTIES honoured Ascot races with their pre- sence on Tuesday. On Thursday the KING came to London, and dined with his Grace the'Duke of WELLINGTON, at Apsley House, that day being the anniversary of the glorious battle of Waterloo. On Thursday her MAJESTY, and their Royal Highness the Duke and Duchess of CAMBRIDGE and family visited the race- course, and on Friday the QUEEN and Royal Family were present at the grand fete, given at Siou House by their Graces the Duke and Duchess of NORTHUMBERLAND. There will be a Levee on Wednesday, and the last Draw- ing Room for the season on Thursday. THE intelligence from Spain appears to us to be decisive. The garrison of Tolosa abandoned that place on the night of the 4th inst., leaving the sick, one gun, and a great number of small arms with ammunition. The garrison ofBelgara was in the act of abandoning that place, but were driven in Jby the KING'S troops, who are blockading it. CASTOR— a Carlist Chief— has made 400 prisoners, being the wretched remains of ESPARTERO'S column, which hail been previously defeated so triumphantly by ZUMALACAR- HBGUY, The army of the de facto Queen is in a state so disgraceful and so ludicrous, that even the peasantry, unarmed, make both soldiers and officers prisouers. One instance occurred, for which we can vouch, of an officer, only fifteen years of age, making seven of the Christinos prisoners, of whom three were officers, who all surrendered their arms to him and three soldiers. It is a sad sight to see this Government sanctioning a delu- sion such as that which is now prevailing, and under which, gentlemen of small means are letting themselves out to fight, like so many butchers, in the hope of gain, which we per- fectly believe never will be realised. The KING'S army are paid every two days, and no arrears permitted — the QUEEN'S anny may probably receive their wages every two years; indeed, we should suggest to those persons whose misfortunes compel them to assume the Swiss character, that they should be paid at least six months in advance. Experience has shown what the zealous hirelings of the Bra- zilian dynasty gained by their zeal and activity in Portugal. Surely people will not break up from home and become mercenaries without ample security that they are to be paid for their degradation. With respect to Colonel EVANS, we have always been Teady to bear testimony to his gallantly, activity, and zeal in any cause which he chooses to undertake; and certainly Colonel EVANS is placed in a position in society which com- plete^' exonerates him from any suspicion of mercenary inducements to his present pursuit; but Colonel EVANS is surely indiscreet in a military point ot view;— ZUMA- XACARREGUY's forces, now augmented and consolidated, the people flocking by thousands to the Royal Standard, and the KING absolutely idolized in the countiy, present an ap- pearance so formidable, that neither ten nor twenty thousand men will make the slightest impression. All the preparations which have been made in Spain by the KING and his loyal subjects, have been made under the impression— not that Colonel EVANS was going to raise ten thousand men out of the streets, to support the cause of the de facto Queen, but that Lord PALMERSTON, and his friend the Citizen King of the FRENCH, were going to fulfil the conditions of the Quadruple Treaty to which they were foolish enough to agree. They are prepared, therefore, for an irruption of fifty, sixty, aye, seventy thousand men ; and Colonel EVANS must know enough of the character of the kingdom of Spain, to know that even if lie succeed in raising his ten thousand, they are certain of being cut off in detail, without the slightest chance of ultimate or permanent success. We conclude that Colonel EVANS does not mean to accompany the force himself; and it has been au- thoritatively denied that General BACON or Colonel HODGES are to participate in its command. Colonel EVANS will not surely leave Westminster unrepresented; and if lie means merely to send off the expedition, we do think he is bound to explain to the unfortunate applicants for commissions and pay the difficulties which he perfectly well knows must arise in their progress towards— DEFEAT. WE really are at a loss to understand how His MAJESTY'S Ministers have the face to go on as they do. Nothing but a sovereign contempt not only for the usages of Parliament, but of the constituents of that Parliament, could possibly account for the manner in which they so glaringly evade the responsibility which constitutionally attaches to them, and flinch from the fulfilment of the duties which they are bound to perform. Last Thursday week, Mr. PRAED'S motion for papers re lative to the extraordinary cancelling of Lord IIEYTF. SBURY'S appointment, was to have come on— But no; two Honourable Gentlemen, in the confidence of Government, got up and spoke against time, till it was too late to bring on the motion, which, therefore, stood over until Tuesday, on which night several other important motions stood for consideration. Upon this occasion, it was found expedient by Ministers not to reply to Mr. PRAED, or, indeed, permit him to bring for- ward his motion, and there was no House. The next instance of this new mode of legislating occurred when Mr. A. JOHNSTON brought forward hit motion on the Scotch Ch'irch— It was a difficult one for Ministers to manage; accordingly, the House grew thinner and thinner, and the moment it was time, it was counted out. Mr. BUXTON'S motion, shuffled off by these manoeuvres, was eventually brought forward on Friday, upon which occa- sion Lord JOHN RUSSELL afforded the country a new and in- teresting specimen of ingenuousness and candour. Mr. DUNCOMBE brought forward his motion for the pro- duction of all papers connected with the mission of Lord ELIOT and Colonel GURWOOD to Spain;— a motion which evidently required the presence and attention of Lord PAL- MERSTO'N, whose absence we find at once regretted and ac- counted for by Lord JOHX RUSSELL, in these words :— " Lord JOHN RUSSELL trusted the Honourable Member would not attribute the absence of the Noble Lord the Se- cretary of State for Foreign Affairs, to any other cause than the right one, WHICH WAS, that his Noble friend was detained by his duty in attending upon the KING AT WINDSOR ! " This is Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S statement. The fact is, that Lord PALMEKSTON was not in attendance upon the KING at Windsor, but at the breakfast at Sion House, where His MAJESTY WAS NOT. We merely state the fact, as rather illustrative of the anxiety of His MAJESTY'S Ministers to keep out of the way of discussions and debates, and of the system by which their absence from their duties is excused and accounted for. " HER Majesty the QUEEN is in a passion," sayeth FIELD- ING, in Tom Tliiimb. Her Majesty the Queen* of PORTU- GAL seeins to have followed the example of the illustrious DollaUolla, and exhibited a bit of her temper during the last few weeks. Her MAJESTY of herself, and at a blow, issues the following decree:— " Considering the circumstances which concur in the person of the Marquez de SALDANHA, Counsellor of State, I have thought fit to appoint him Secretary of State for the affairs of War. " Let the Count de" LINHARES, Minister and Secretary of State for the Affaires of the Marine President ( if the Council of Ministers thus understand it, and cause the same to be executed. " Palace of the Necessidades, May 2fi. ( Signed by Her MAJESTY'S sign manual.) " To the Conde LINHARES." There is a brevity, a terseness, a determination in this short " ordonnance," which seems to have startled the Por- tuguese, people, who had been persuaded that the mild rule of the amiable Brazilian Princess, and her cordial support of the Charter, and the Constitution, & c. & c. & c., would afford a beautiful contrast to the absolutism of Don MIGUEL, their lawful King, in which expectation they had been naturally strengthened, seeing what aid and assistance were afforded to her Majesty by liberal England, revolutionized France, and regene- rated Belgium. To show how near these credulous people are to the realization of their views, we have only to call attention to the fact, that when the MINISTER suggested to her MA- JESTY the necessity of adopting certain measures contrary to her personal wish, her MAJESTY burst into tears, and ran out of the room, exclaiming " Then I am no longer QUEEN. I cannot do my absolute will as my ancestors have done?'' The refusal on the part of her MAJESTY to sanction the measures proposed by the Ministry produced the resignation of its members, and that resignation produced the decree we have just- inserted. But now, the young lady has taken a new scheme in hand. She declines marrying her late husband's brother, and is bent upon uniting herself to the Due de NEMOURS, one of the sons of the Citizen King of the French, an alliance which, for various obvious reasons, must be most particularly prejudicial to the interests ofEngland, winch, up to the days of the youth- ful QUEEN, have been carefully regarded and respected by Portugal. The moment a remonstrance was made upon the subject to her MAJESTY, her MAJESTY, in order to exhibit her firmness and independence, as well as her grati- tude to the gallant gay Lord PALMERSTON for all his atten- tions and civilities, dismisses her Cabinet because it is too much swayed by a regard for English interests. The Ministerial papers say, that her MAJESTY has declared that she has abandoned the design of marrying the French Prince; but we believe, whatever Lord HOWARD DE WAL- OE N may be told in Lisbon, a very different story is current in Paris, and that affairs have gone at least as far as the com- mencement of a correspondence on the business, between her MAJESTY and the King of the FRENCH, without the con- currence or intervention of any of her MAJESTY'S late Mi- nisters. The Morning Chronicle is seriously angiy at her MA- JESTY'S misconduct, and threatens her with the loss of the friendship and support of England in case of her completing the alliance—' about which, if she secures the support and friendship of France, we suspect she will care but little. Her MAJESTY'S debut in government is a new and striking proof of the unquestionable advantages of revolution. WF, have frequently taken occasion to question the advan- tages arising to the country and its inhabitants, from the sys- tem of over- educating the lower classes; and we have been considerably strengthened in our doubts as to the merits of that system, by observing that the leading advocates of enlight- enment are uniformly persons most distinguished by the vio- lence of their political opinions, decidedly hostile to the existing order of things. But, putting aside for the moment the pos- sible connexion between the schemes of excessive education, and political revolution, we are called upon to notice a docu- ment which has been prepared by order of the Magistrates, by the Chaplain of the House of Correction, Cold Bath- fields, and which exhibits the following remarkable results :—- Prisoners, 20th Sept. 1834 967 Uneducated— 1st imprisonment .. 56 i 104 Imprisoned before .. 48 $ Educated— 1st imprisonment .. .. G4G? ggo Imprisoned before .. 217 S It has been suggested that the extraordinary majority of educated prisoners in this list might arise from the general spread of education, which leaves proportionally fewer persons uneducated ; but that is fallacious, as the Chaplain of the House of Correction observes, " It is not the want of educa- tion, but the absence of principle, that leads to crime." The truth is, that if the lower classes could be taught to read exclusively pious, constitutional, and purely instructive works, the enlightenment of their minds and the cultivation of their intellectual powers might be attended with the most gratifying results— but when it is evident that the plan of the enlighteners is first to render them capable of reading, and next to furnish them with materials for their edification, there can be no hope that anything but mischief and subversion can accrue from the course now actually in progress. The whole force of atheistical and revolutionary principles is concentrated in the cheap press, and, as we happen to know, those who are most earnest and forward in the promotion of enlightenment, circu- late gratuitously through the kingdom the papers calculated to excite the worst passions and generate the most barbarous feelings in the hearts and minds of the people. The document to which we have alluded, is one of extraor- dinary interest, but to complete its utility, an analysis should be made of the cases which it contains, by which the working of the system might be more clearly exhibited in the develop ment of the courses of life pursued previous to the commis- sion of crime by the prisoners of both classes. MR. O'CONNELL has been exhibiting himself in very bril- liant colours during the week. We can give no better ac- count of the proceedings which have taken place than we find in the Morning Post. We therefore make no apology for borrowing what we find there, for the amusement of our readers:—- Mr. O'CONNELL, on Monday night last, exhibited one of those specimens of frontless audacity— one of those barefaced and auda- cious juggleries, for whice he is proverbial, and which have become ii proverb. Constant impunity and daily, nay, almost hourly, prac- tice in similar exhibitions have rend ed tins man reckless of every exposure, impervious to nil ehame. His position, and the means by which he holds it, are anomalies. Society seems to take no cogni- sance of his breach of its laws. Parliament appears to sanction liis contempt of its sanctity. He hourly commits acts for whiefr olier men would be excluded from society— he defies its ordinances, and spurns at its control;— and yet, in this country, this moral country, he proceeds in his lawleii career, unscliathed, unchecked. To- iny he escapes the horsewhip of some outraged Gentleman;— to- morrow- he evades the prosecution of some incensed Attorney- General. So- ciety has no brrrier which he does not break down— the law has no mesn which he does not break through. In the debate on the Ipswich case, on Monday night last, Colonel' PEHCIVAL stated that while Mr. O'CONNELL was visiting Mr. DAS.: ST with the severest reprehension for his conduct in that transaction, h ® ( M. O'CONNELL) had forgotten tliatMr. HUDSON, an Irish Barrister, had been recently appointed to a confidential situation under the Irish Government, under Mr. O'CONNELL'S own auspices, this same Mr. HUDSON having been convicted of bribery by the Dublin Election Committee, who had unseated Messrs. PERRIN and HAHTY for the same offence ;— and Mr. ROBERT GORDON h iving reported his conduct in the strongest possible terms of censure to the House, oil the bringing up of the report of the Committee on that case. This was the substance of Colonel PERCIVAL'S observations. How- does Mr. O'CONNELL answer these observations, and this cha- ge brought against him of having appointed a man, under circumstam- es as nearly as possible similar to those under which Mr. DASENT is now placed, to a high and confidential situation in the Irish Govern- ment? for every one knows that Mr. HUDSON'S appointment ( like all the other appointments in Ireland) was, in point of fact, Mr. O'CON- NELL'S. Mr. O'CONNELL rebuts the whole of Colonel PERCIVAL'S cha- ge ( and, for the moment, produces a strong impression in the House against that Gallant Officer) by accusing Colonel PERCIVAL of hav ng suppressed the fact that Mr. ' HUDSON had subsequently challenged public investigation; that a bill of indictment had been brought against him, and that it hud been ignored; that the same " wretches of wit- nesses'' ieho had been examined before the Committee, had been nil again examined by the Grand Jury in Dublin, and disbelieved in th- nr own place of residence, where they were known, though they were be- lieved in London; and, finally, that Mr. HUDSON had been triumph- antly acqtiitted! This answer to Colonel PERCIVAL'S charge, made in a tone of indig- nant surprise at his suppression of such strong facts, in the case of Mr. HUDSON, produced, as it was natural it should produce, a very strong sensation in the House, and the triumph of the Learned Gen- tleman was, for the moment, complete. But what will our readers' think when we inform them tnat in this answer there was not one syl- lable of truth f Mr. HUDSON had never been indicted before the Grand Jury of Dublin. No " wretches of witnesses" of any hind had ever been examined before them There had been no trial;— no acquittal, THE WHOLE STATEMENT OP MR. O'CONNELL, FROM BEGINNING TO END, WAS A PURE FICTION. The real facts are these. IT was perfectly notorious that the prin- pal bribes in the case of the Dublin election had been paid by Mr. H UDSON ; it was proved before the Committee ( whose special report against Messrs. PEBRIN and HARTY for bribery, through tneir agents, is verbatim the same as that of the Ipswich Committee' against Messrs. KELLY and DUNDAS) ; and it was, moreover, stated by Mr. ROBERT GORDON, in his speech on the subject, that Mr. HUDSON was " the principal giver of the bribes." The ATTORNEY- GENERAL was, in consequence, ordered to prosecute the offenders ; but the matter was quietly suffered to drop, because the Government at that time was favourable to Messrs. PERRIN and HARTY, and because Mr. SHA W'S friends were satisfied when their opponents were unseated, and when Lord INGESTRIE and Mr. SHAW were seated, and did not seek to urge their private revenge against Mr. HUDSON, to his undoing. But, with respect to Mr. HUDSON'S coming forward and courting investigation, what is the state of the case ? Why it was perfectly well known to all at the time that that gentleman absented himself from Dublin, when the prosecution was ordered by the House of Commons, and that he did not return till it was given up ; and yet, in the face of all this, we have the audacious assertion of Mr. O'CONNELL that he came forward to court, investigation; was indicted before the Dublin Gra nd Jury; that the same witnesses were examined against him who had been exxamined in London, and that they were disbelieved; and that Mr. HUDSON, was triumphantly acquitted! If this had been a simple misapjirehension of Mr. O'CONNELL'SIIOW comes all these details of" the same wretches of witnesses,'' 8fc. Sfc., having been examined f How comes all these particulars, which gives to the whole thing, clearly and palpably, the character of the lie circumstantial ? In his statement. Mr. O'CONNELL persisted, until Mr. SHAW stated that Mr. PERRIN'S ( the Attorney- General for Ireland) impression of the matter was exactly similar to his own, and to that of Mr. Sergeant JACKSON, both of whom had been, as well as Mr. O'CONNELL, on the spot at the time. And, THEN, how does Mr. O'CONNELL get out of his mess ? Why, his whole story dwindles down to this, " that in the Four Courts, one day, he heard Mr. HUDSON receive the congratulations of some friends on the Bills having been thrown out!!" Our space to- day will not allow us to deal with more than this part of the case. We shall to- morrow offer a few observations on Mr. HUDSON'S appointment to his present situation, and on one or two-- other considerations connected with the mat ter. On Friday the Post gives its promised sequel:— We offered to our readers on Wednesday last a few observations respecting Mr. O'CONNELL'S conduct, on the preceding Monday, in the discussion on the committal to Newgate; of the several persons against whom the Ipswich Committee had made a special report. We showed in those observations, 1st, that Mr. O'CONNELL advocated- a measure of punishment in reference to those persons, the most severe the House could adopt; 2dly, that, under similar, or rather under much more aggravated, circumstances, he had permitted the promotion of, if he had not himself promoted, Mr. HUD ON to the office of confidential law adviser to the Irish Governmen; and, 3dly, that, for the purpose of screening Mr. HUDSON, to whose case Col.. i * R.' 1VAL had alluded, and for the purpose of repelling the charge of gros- i partiality and inconsistency brought home to himself, he had stated, as facts, a series of circumstances, not one single one of which had the slightest foundation in truth. We stated that we had a few additional observations to offer on these subjects, and we proceed to- day to redeem our promise as briefly as we can. Mr. HUDSON, the Gentleman to whom Colonel PERCIVAL alluded,, was placed, by the report of the Committee appointed to try tlie merits of the Dublin election petition in 1831, in circumstances simi- lar to those in which Mr. DASENT is at present placed. In tlie speech of the Chairman of that Committee, on the bringing up of the report, this Gentleman is more strongly alluded to than any- other of the agents concerned on that occasion in the distribution of bribes ; yet this Gentleman we find, in the short space of four years from that period, appointed to one of the most confidential situations under the Irish Government! Thus, for the same crime, Mr. HUDSON is presented with an honourable and lucrative appointment; and Mr. DASENT is rewarded with a lodging in Newgate ! We seek not, in saving this, to palliate the conduct alleged to have been committed by Mr. DASENT ; we merely point out the different award meted out to each delinquent. With reference to the present ATTORNEY- GENERAL for Ireland, the following is the first clause in the special report of the Committee on Dublin election petition, presented Augusts, 1831 :— " That Robert Harty and Lewis Perrin, Esqrs., were by their agents, guilty of bribery at the last election for the said city." The LEWIS PERRIN alluded to in the above extract is his Majesty| s present Attorney- General for Ireland; and if report say true, is to be the new Judge, in the room of Mr. Justice VANDELEUR, deceased! We have but one more illustration to offer on this matter. Two of the gentlemen committed to Newgate in the Ipswich case, were, on Monday last, by the greatest exertions of their friends, accommodated with a " private room in that prison. The other gentlemen were lodged in the public infirmary, and, on awaking on the morning alter their committal, found on one side of them, a man convicted of mur- der,— and, on the other a person, under sentence of transportation! In our observations on the proceedings of Monday last we stated that Mr. O'CONNELL'S answer to Colonel PERCIVAL, in tliecnseof Mr. HUDSON, was only to be equalled by his reply to Mr. SHAW, in the case of MuRrHY. This case may have escaped the recollection of our readers, we therefore give them a slight resume of it :— CASE OF MURPHY. Mr. O'Connell had, during a discussion on the Orange Societies of September 6. JOHN BULL. 197 Ireland, challenged Mr. Shaw ( who had in the debate alluded to the death's head and cross- bones intimidation which had been practised at the Kerry election) to adduce a single instance of breach of the peace or personal violence having occurred in connection with the Kerry election. Mr. Shaw answered, on the moment, that he had heiii* A from Lord Kenmare, and believed, that Mr. O'Connell him- self had, shortly before the election, threatened a man of the name of Murphy, a wealthy Roman Catholic trader in the town of Kil- larney, that if he voted for the Knight of Kerry he should have a cross put upon his door— that no customer should'enter it— and that he should feel the consequences,— and Mr. Shaw added that he un- derstood that, four days after, this mail's house was attacked and his person assaulted. Mr. O'CONNELL, upon this, advanced towards the centre of the floor, mid, in the most solemn manner, declared, " inthe presence of the God who was to judge him, that, from beginning to end, the story was ut- ter/// false." Mr. Shaw immediately communicated with Lord Kenmare, and requested the particulars of the case; whereupon Lord Kenmare furnished Mr. Shaw with a document which he afterwards read to the House, signed by a certain David Murphy, and which he offered to verify at the bar, or by affidavit, stating that immediately before the Kerry election Mr. O'C'onnell had sent his son- in- law for Murphy, and, in the presence of many witnesses, asked him if he meant to vote for the Knight of Kerry? That he answered he did not. Upon which Mr. O'Connell declared that, if he did, a cross should be put npon his door— that no man should enter it— and that he should not get a feed for his horses or a standing for his cars between Killarney and Cahirsiveen— that four days after, his house was attacked, his person violently assaulted, and" an attempt made to burn his house, so that it became necessary to disperse the mob by a military force, and that at the ensuing sessions several persons pleaded guilty to the assault, and were then suffering imprisonment for it!!! And what was the wretched subterfuge by which Mr. O'COXXELL attempted to escape from this solemnly- attested document brought in judgment against him ? Why, he answered, " That if he had been told at the time that MURPHY'S Christian name was David he would have recollected it! That he did not deny that the conversation, as given by Murphy, had occitred, but that it was spoken jocularl/ i!! and that as to the subse- quent assault, he had not heard of it at the time!!'." Hear this. Gentlemen of the House of Commons! bearing in your mind, that the reply given, when the accusation was first made, was this— " I NECLARE IX THE PRESEXCE OF THE GOP THAT IS TO JUDGE ME, THAT. FALSE." We leave this able exposition as we find it— comment seems to be perfectly unnecessary. WE have received the following letter from General DARLING, with an accompanying statement: case at present, we leally do not see how he can possibly overcome these. FROM BEGINNING TO EXD, THIS STORY IS UTTERLY TO JOHN BULL Sir,— As the proceedings in the Court of King's Bench, in the case of Mr. ROBERT ROBISOX, have now been brought to a close, and false and exaggerated statements having, from time to time, been put forth, while I have been restrained by a sense of justice and decorum from replying to those statements pending the indictment, I request you will look into the enclosed '* case," and shall further be obliged by your noticing in your paper, such of the facts as may appear likely to remove the erroneous impressions which the statements alluded to have been calculated to make on the public mind. I am, Sir, your most obedient humble servant, RICHARD DARLING. 5", Haymarket, \ hth June, 1835. It is impossible for us to afford space for the insertion of the charges made against General DARLING by Mr. ROBTSON, with the General's replies. Everybody knows what difficul- ties must arise in the administration of a Colonial Govern ment, where passions and prejudices are strongly excited on the one hand, and where the exercise of absolute power on the other is essential to the existence of such societies. We take charge F., and the reply, as a fair specimen of the statements of Mr. IIOBISON, and General DARLING'S vindi- cation of himself. ( CHARGE F.— Mr. Itobisou's Court Martial.) That the charges upon which Mr. ROBISON was brought to a Court Martial by General DARLING were infamous and unfounded, and originated in the most vindictive motives, on account of the feel- ing of disapprobation expressed by Mr. ROBTSON at the sight of SUOD'S irons, respecting which lie admits, in another place, that he publicly used strong language in censure of General DARLING. Page viii. Affidavit, p. 6. Mr. UOBISOX complains of the constitution of the Court Martial; and that although he objected to two of the members, namely, Cap- tain C'ROTTY and Captain FORBES,' the Deputy Judge Advocate, his objections were over- ruled. Affidavit, p. 13. "( REPLY F.— Court Martial.) General DARLING expressly declares that, the charges preferred by hiln against Mr. ROBISON did not emanate from malicious or per- sonally vindictive motives or feelings, but solely from a desire to maintain the discipline of his Majesty's service. And it is proved that those charges were well founded, by Mr. Uobison having been sen- tenced to be dismissed the service, and by the refusal of his Majesty's Government to restore him, followed by the refusal of the House of Commons, after full debate, to interfere. General DARLING declares that the officers constituting the Court Martial, were named without, any unfavourable bias to Mr. ROBI- SOX,^ and were the most fit froin their rank and experience in the service that could be found. The Court consisted of nine Members, whereas five would have been sufficient, and in proof that the Court was formed with a strict regard to impartial justice, General DARLIXG states that he addressed a letter to the officer in com- mand of the troops at Van Dieman's Land, directing him to order two Captains, without naming them, to repair to Sydney for the purpose of becoming members of the Court., and ob- serving that as the case was one in which the discipline of the service was concerned, it was desirable that these officers should be men of experience. And as a further proof of the care taken to have the Court composed of officers of experience, General DARLIXG st'ates, that all the members of the Court, with the excep- tion of one only, have long since been promoted, in consequence of tlieir standing and seniority in the service. Page 7. Mr. ROBISON had a right to challenge any member of the Court against whom he might have a fair ground of objection, and he did challenge one member, and one only, viz. Captain CROTTY, on the ground that he was his own intimate and particular friend. Page 18. The other charges appear to us to lie explained away with equal clearness; but we think it just to General DARLING to add the following reasons which he gives for not having proceeded against Mr. ROBISON by criminal information, a course which would have elicited this very denial and contradiction of Mr. ROBISON'S charges, in open Court. The General says he was prevented taking this course by the assurance of his Counsel, that, so far from its proving the means of elucidating the truth in a case of such vague and multifarious libel, relating to occurrences at times long since past, in a distant Colony, he would find himself involved by it in a labyrinth of contradictory affidavits, entailing upon him much expense, vexation, and delay, and which the Court would have no opportunity of investigating, so as to form a correct judgment, of the truth ; and that it would besides be unsuitable to notice, otherwise than by the ordinary course of indictment, a libel of so gross a character, relating to matters which had already been made the subject of investigation, and WE have to announce the death of a man, who wanted only the quality of consistency, to have been one of the brightest ornaments of his country— WILLI AM COBBF. TT ; an event which took place on Thursday, at his farm at Barnes. Mr. COBBETT was born on the 9tli of March, 1762, in the neighbourhood of Farnham, where his father was a small farmer, whose fields as a lad he assisted to till. His parent taught him and his brothers reading, writing, and arithmetic, and with his father and family it appears he remained until he was eighteen or nineteen years old, when conceiving an affection for the sea sen- ice he offered himself to Capt. BERKELEY, of H. M. S. Pe- gasus, then at Portsmouth, to enter as a sailor. Both Capt. BERKELEY and the Admiral, however, remonstrated with him against this step, and he proceeded to London upon the im- pulse of the moment, and during the journey became ac- quainted with a hop- merchant, who had dealt with his father. This gentleman endeavoured in vain to persuade him to return home, and young COBBETT procured a situation as copying clerk to Mr. HOLLAND, of Gray's Inn, where he remained for nine months closely confined to the desk, except on Sundays. This dull and incessant labour to a mind which must have ever been active and comprehensive, became at last irksome to him, and he quitted London for Chatham, where he enlisted. In doing so he proposed to join the Marines— still probably retaining his partiality for the sea— but by some mistake or misunderstanding he found himself entered in a regiment, the service companies of which were in Nova Scotia. During the year he remained at Chatham he improved his education in all its branches, and was raised to the rank of corporal. Eventually he sailed to Nova Scotia, aud thence was removed to New Brunswick, where he remained six years, and by steadiness and good conduct rose to be serjeant- major of his regiment. in 1791, the regiment returned to England. He obtained his discharge, and married in 1792. About that period, he brought forward some charges against certain officers for corruption and misconduct, and demanded a court- martial upon them. This is not the moment to enter into the discus- sion of that subject; the result was that he abandoned his design, and in March went to France, and in October to America, in which country he eminently distinguished himself by his powerful vindication of England against the attacks of the violent republicans and revolutionists of the day, and, consequently, drew down upon himself the ire of the leading partisans of'those factions. A Dr. RUSH brought an action against him for libel, and obtained 5,000 dollars damages, which, from the injustice of the decision, disgusted Mr. COB- BETT with America so completely, that he quitted it and came to England in 1800. He opened a bookseller's shop in London, and started his Political Register, a work which, from its first number to its last, has been eminently remarkable for literary talent and power. The sale of the Register became immense, and Mr. COBBETT purchased Botley, in Hampshire. In 1810 lie was sentenced to pay a fine of a thousand pounds and be imprisoned for two years in Newgate, for a libel con- nected with the subject of military flogging; but the confine- ment of his person did not fetter his mind or restrain his pen. In 1817, having successfully conducted his Register to that period, he again went to America, and returned to England in 1819. He stood for Coventry, aud was defeated. His estate at Botley had become in some degree involved during his absence, and was disposed of. He subsequently took the farm at which he died, at Barnes, and during the last twelve or fourteen years has greatly exerted himself in agri- cultural matters. In the year 1832 lie was elected Member of Parliament for Oldham, for which place his death occa- sions a vacancy. This is certainly not the time to descant upon the versatility of Mr. COBBETT'S political opinions; nor have we space to do justice to the great talents aud merits which contributed to outweigh the faults which are undoubtably attributable to part of his long career. Whatever those faults were, he is now at rest, and we feel that we only fulfil a duty by adding our faint testimony of praise to his powerful abilities, and record- ing his death in our columns of to- day. Messrs. Sewell and Blake discovered tlmt certain acts had been done which, if proved, would constitute a charge of felony against Pilgrim. Then what was the next course pursued ? Mr. Pilgrim begged of his solicitor to intercede with the sitting Members to use their influence with his employers, and to get him out of the scrape. He went to London, as a suppliant to Mr. Clipperton and Mr. Kelly, to induce them to ask his employers to forego the charge. Mr. Kelly would not do anything to compound a charge of felony, and what" did Mr. Pringle ? He went, to Norwich to his employers, placed himself in the position of being arrested by the Speaker's warrant; he then placed the letters of Mr. Clipperton and Mr. Kellv into the hands of a Radical Barrister, who, out of friendship to his client, put them into the hands of Mr. Wason, to make what use of them he thought fit. This was the state of the case from begin- ning to end. Mr. DUNDAS said he would not mention at large all the cases where efforts were made to entrap his friends at the late election ; he would only mention one, in the case of a person named Abbott, whose name had since been struck oil" the poll for bribery. This Mr. Abbott came to him repeatedly, and asked him for 25/. to build a bakehouse; Abbott followed him in the streets, but he would give him nothing. Abbott went also to his ( Mr. DUXOAS'S) brother, who he thought would be less wary in election matters ; at last he succeeded in getting some one to give him money, urging his deep distress. This Gentleman had since been recommended by Mr. Wason to a respectable draper in Covent Garden, and he came to give his evidence before the Committee dressed out in as fino clothes as any dandy in Bond- street. Did they imagine these per- sons who gave evidence accusing themselves did so for nothing ? ( Loud cries of " No, no.") The Hon. Gentleman went on to say, Mr. Kelly and himself were desirous of the most complete investiga tion of the proceedings at the late election, and they begged the electors of Ipswich to suspend their judgment until the'whole of the evidence should be laid before the public. Mr. DUNDAS'S address was received in the most gratifying manner. IPSWICH. THE election for Ipswich terminated on Friday, when Messrs. MORRISON and WASON were declared duly elected, the numbers being at the close of the poll— MORRISON .. .. .. 542 WASON 533 BROKE .. .. .. 455 HOLMES .. .. .. 433 We feel it due to Mr. DUNDAS to give insertion to the fol- lowing extract from a speech delivered by him at Ipswich, explanatory of the circumstances which have become matter of Parliamentary inquiry:— Mr. DIIXDAS appeared, he said, to vindicate his own character aud that of his Hon. Colleague, Mr. KELLY, against the foul asper- sions which had been thrown out against them. _ It had been said that a system of bribery prevailed at the last election, and it was by that means his colleague and himself were elected. No candidates had ever come forward with purer intentions tosolicitthe suffrages of the electors of Ipswich than his colleague and himself. They re- solved fairly to solicit the independent suffrages of the electors, and if they had found a majority against them respectfully to retire ; but they received the promises of a majority, and were returned. With regard to the manner in which that contest was conducted, he had been engaged in many elections, and- would assert., upon the honour of a Gentleman, that the expenses of the last election were not one- fifth of those incurred at the election in 1826. By means of the pub- lic press calumnies and prejudice had been excited against them, and the eyes of the public had been blinded to the facts of the case. The evidence taken before the Committee would shortly be before the public ; when it would appear that the whole case proved against them was that four persons had been bribed; and yet, upon ex parte evidence, the res; pectable constituency of Ipswich had been'branded with the same infamy as Grampound and Old Sarum— had been stigmatised as the most corrupt borough in the kingdom. He would slate a few facts with regard to Mr. Pilgrim's introduction into the borough. A short period before the election the respectable firm of Sewel and Blake had business with Mr. Kelly in the Court of King's Bench; Mr. Blake, finding that Mr. Kelly was a candidate to re- present Ipswich, wrote to that Gentleman, stating that he had no influence at Ipswich, but if Mr. Kelly had offered himself at Nor- wich he could have done something for him, and offering to send him the assistance of two clerks during the election— he had only to ask _ V! J, 1,„ J !,„„„ ,(• ,1 „,•],„ t|.„ „„„ 1, t; f., t, wi .. 1 and they should be sent. Mr. Kelly thanked Mr. Blake, but de- Hhich had been disposed ot by the constituted authorities of clined h; s offer. A Iittie wllile afterj \ secoild ietter came, offering the State. - - — • - • - - Mr. ROBISON is now suffering the penalty of the law under the sentence of the Court of King's Bench; but that sentence was consequent upon the publication of the libel, and not upon the substantiation or overthrowal of his allegations and state- ments. General DARLING, therefore, now gives the public an explanation of the circumstances. It remains to be seen whether Mr. ROBISON admits the justice of the gallant General's conclusions; but as to the tacts, as we look at the A PARAGRAPH, wholly without the knowledge of the Editor of John Bull, having been copied into the " Intelli- gence" of this Paper last week—( for which part of the Paper, or its contents, we once for all disclaim any responsibility)— headed " Cheap Knowledge," a Mr. EFFINGHAM WILSON, a bookseller somewhere under the Royal Exchange, has re- quested us to give place to an explanation which lie thinks it necessary to give about it. His letter is addressed to the Times, aud we extract it: — TO THE EOITOR OF THE TIMES. SIR— The impartiality for which the Times journal lias always been distinguished, even towards those with whom it differs on the subject of politics, encourages me to request a nook for the purpose of refuting a very gross calumny which appears in your paper this morning, extracted from the Morning Herald of yesterday.— I am. Sir, yours most obediently, EFFINGHAM WILSON. Royal Exchange, June 12. " Cheap Knowledge!"— Under this head the Morning Herald'of this day has taken occasion to comment, on my humble exertions, in. a manner not in accordance with the best taste: for that I should have cared little, had it not been at variance with truth. In the first instance, it is stated that. I am " a member of the Common Council of London." I neither ain nor ever was a member of that body. It is further stilted that I have " copied from the newspapers, and pub- lished in the shape of a pamphlet, Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S speech on corporation reform; aud all for the small charge of 3d." That I have so published his Lordship's speech is fact, but it is not " copied from the newspapers." The report which I have published is taken, by permission of the proprietor, from the Mirror of Parliament, and will be found more atlength, aud will even bear comparison with the immaculate Morning Herald, which, be it remembered, was in the habit, day after day, during the progress of the Reform Bill, of making up its leader, without permission or acknowledgment, from the Pluck Book ; aud when this act of bare- faced plunder was protested against by me, it was pretended that the editor had been imposed upon by one of his contributors, but that justice should be done to the work oil a future occasion.— June 11. *,' The point, however, as to the cheapness of knowledge thus dispensed remains untouched. Mr. Pilgrim's services as a clerk, and he ( Mr. Kelly) was induced to accept them. He ( Mr. DUNDAS) did not see Mr. Pilgrim half- a- dozen times during the election. What Mr. Pilgrim did he knew not. He would pledge himself that, beyond writing letters and tak- ing checks, neither he ( Mr. DUNDAS) nor his colleague were cogni- zant of Mr. Pilgrim's acts. A short time after the election, Pilgrim went to his employers in a state of alarm, stating that be wished to leave the country upon his own account. He applied to a solicitor „„ s„ . . in Norwich to interest himself with the solicitor who was employed tion that your means are injudicious. Against what are you de- to conduct tfie petition to send him out of the country; but that was | fending yourselves ? Are you united for the purpose of protecting refused. Afterwards Pilgrim went abroad, and while lie was abroad your principles, and the representatives of your principles, against LORD STANLEY has addressed the following letter to Sir T. D. HESKETH, Bart:— Carlton Gardens, June 8. MY BEAR SIR THOMAS— I have this morning received a copy of the Preston Pilot, containing an account of a meeting which was held in that town on Thursday last, for the purpose of forming a Conser- vative Association for north Lancashire. As this meeting was very numerous and respectable ; as it was composed exclusively of those whom I have the honour to reckon among my constituents; as my opinions, or supposed opinions, were referred to by more than one speaker at that meeting; and as I have evtr sought for rather than shrunk from an opportunity of making those opinions known to those whom I ought to represent, and to whom I am responsible for my conduct, I avail myself of the occasion offered to me for the purpose, not of impugning " the motives of those who originate, but explaining why I deprecate the formation of such an association. I address myself to you as having been the Chairman of that meeting, and as being the'Chairman of the Permanent General Committee, without any fear tha t a difference of opinion on the policy of the course now pursued will in any respect diminish the sincerity of our old personal friendship. I do not deny that the present is a period at which great interests are at stake. " I do not deny that the Reform Bill itself, necessary as I believe that measure to have been, and called for by the deliberate opinion of the country, may have had the effect of stimulating thfr desire of political change," and of exciting in men's minds an over- weening anxiety for alterations in our institutions, and an unreason- able expectation of advantages to be derived therefrom— I am far from denying that to correct such exaggerated expectations, to rea- son away such overstrained desires, nay, even to expose the sophis- tries of ignorant or mischievous quack doctors in politics, who im- pose upon the ill- informed, by persuading them that til? benefit to be derived must be commensurate with the strength of the dose ad- ministered, may become the duty of those whom Providence has placed in a station to give them the means of forming a more dispas- sionate judgment, ana the influence to add weight to that judgment on the minds of others. But that such objects inay be most benefi- cially promoted by an organisation of clubs and corresponding so- cieties— that such organisation, though it were compelled by an overwhelming necessity, can be productive of even partial good without entailing at least corresponding evils of fearful magnitude— I do, for my own part, utterly disbelieve. And, with regard to North Lancashire especially, where, let me ask, is the cogent necessity which calls for the formation of such a society ? Are your objects general, or local ? If local— if this be indeed a meeting of the constituency of North Lancashire, for the purpose of impressing or enforcing upon those who are the legiti- mate organs by which their sentiments are made known to, and effectual with, the Legislature, namely, their County Members, the views which are set forth in your first resolution— I ask to which of us, my Honourable Colleague or myself, is this hint addressed? Which of us is supposed to require it ? Which of us has failed to up- hold the necessary connection between the Established Church and the State, the just prerogatives of the Monarch, the privileges of the House of Lords as an independent branch of the Legislature, and the deliberative power of the Commons' House of Parliament unfet- tered and uncontrolled ? For my own part, education, birth, posi- tion in society, principles, prejudices if you will, all conspire to in- duce me to lend each and all of these my constant and unflinching support; nor, so far from believing them endangered, with the excep- tion of the first, have I heard any one of them seriously questioned by any considerable portion of any deliberative assembly; and, for the first, I should have hoped that the part which I have taken, the efforts which I have made, the sacrifices to which I have submitted, would have vindicated me, in the eyes of those who coincide in opi- nion with you, from any charge of hostility, or even indifference, to the connection between Church and State. But you assure me, I will suppose, that I deceive myself! and that your association is directed neither against my colleague nor myself; and with no purpose but the dissemination within the sphere of your respective influence of the principles which you possess in common. I am most willing to believe it; and still, admitting that your intentions may be good, 1 cannot divest my mind of the convic 198 JOHN BULL, June 21. some dangerous counter organisation, occupied in disseminating re- publican doctrines, in weakening the prerogatives of the Crown, in undermining the independent character of the House of Lords, in controlling the freedom of the House of Commons ? If such general organisation there be in North Lancashire, I have lived in an igno- rance of it which I do not wish disturbed. But if there be none such, as assuredly it is most desirable that there should be none, con hi the ingenuity of man suggest a source more certain to send forth suck bitter waters than the spirit which will be engendered by the establishment of your association ? AH the arguments of self- defence, all the reasoning by which, as from an overpowering necessity, you justify a deviation from the ordinary channels in which political feeling diffuses itself and evaporates, pass at once to the side of your opponents. They are those whom it is sought to oppress by combination— they are those who appeal to the sympathy of the country for the maintenance of the freedom of conscience, and more especially of " the deliberative powers of the House of Commons, uncontrolled'' by otherinfluence than that of the constituents of each individual Member. You may say that you are numerous, and strong, and united; that your opponents, even if nume- rous, are disunited among themselves, and comparatively unimportant in wealth and station. If it beso, you have little to fear, and little need of organization to oppose them. But beware, then, for your own sakes, how you remove one cause of their weakness ; beware of forcing them, for the sake of resisting your aggressions, to forget their own differences; beware how you organize the whole country in such a manner that every man must be a partisan ; and do not deceive your- selves by thinking* that such an occurrence, forced on by you, would strengthen your influence or . augment your proportionate numbers. Beware, above all things, how you array the landed Gentry and their dependents, in our mixed population, against the inhabitants of the mercantile and manufacturing towns, You ask no change in your comity Representatives, but you fear the democratic influence ill the manufacturing boroughs. If you wish to create, to foster, to en- venom it, interfere in their elections by your Conservative associa- tions— bring an extraneous influence to bear on their internal pro- ceedings, and if there be a democratic spark in the town you will kindle it into a flame. But if, extending your views beyond local objects, you seek to form part of a general organization throughout the empire, of county clubs, and local clubs, and district associations, acting in concert, usurping, in fact, the powers of a Government, and combining to carry on the affairs of the country through their instrumentality, I can conceive nothing more dangerous to public liberty, nothing more injurious to a stable or a rational Administration, than such a state of things. Power vested in clubs acting in concert for national objects was one of the most dangerous symptoms of the early stages of the French Revolution. Thank God, I see no cause here to anticipate such scenes as. then occurred J but if there be a course calculated first to control the House of Commons, next to call in question and put in jeopardy the privileges of the House of Lords, the Church, and the Throne, and in the progress of the operation to destroy public peace, private happiness, and national confidence, it would be a system which should establish throughout the country, for political objects, and for permanent and systematic exertions, two rival sets ot political associa- tions, engaged in a deadly struggle with each other for the maintenance of extreme principles— throwing over by joint consent, at the first onset, the incumbrance of all those who would lend themselves neither to the one nor to the other, and then entering upon a protracted ( and the more protracted the more embittered and irreconcilable) warfare of opinion. You will not do me the injustice of supposing that my views of this question are biassed by the consideration that I should myself be part of the lumber thrown overboard in the first process of clearing the deck for the general action. In such a state oi affairs public life would have even less attraction for me than it has at pre- sent. I hold it to be an honourable distinction to be the representa- tive of a great county ; you must forgive me if I say that I should hold it none to be the nominee of a club self- styled either Conservative or Liberal. Already, . as you are aware, other associations are establish- ing themselves with avowed objects not less plausible than yours, to maintain the freedom of elections, to protect the registration of votes, ifec. The promoters of these associations admit that their effect will be to tear the country in pieces, and to render the task of Government almost impracticable; but they shelter themselves under a political necessity of counterbalancing the combined organization of associations similar to yours. It is a lamentable state of things when national good is sacrificed for the attainment of party triumph ; but that party incurs a heavy responsibility which takes the first step towards provoking such a conflict. ' I have already said that I do not impugn the motives of those who have been engaged in forming the North Lancashire Conserva- tive Association. When I conceive the fundamental institutions of the country to be endangered, no one will more strenuously and ear- nestly defend them than I will; but, my feelings and opinions having been so directly referred to at your meeting, I hope I am not imper- tinently or unnecessarily obtruding myself when I ventured express my belief that the course pursued is uncalled for by an urgent ne- cessity ; and, if not urgently necessary, then mischievous; and when I'presume earnestly, as a friend to the peace and happiness of our common country, and especially of our hitherto undisturbed and contented district, to warn you not to incur certain and formida- ble evils in the pursuit of very doubtful good; and above all to beware lest you create the very evil which you seek to avoid, and render that danger real or imminent which as yet is distant, if not imaginary.— Believe me, my dear Sir THOMAS, very sincerely yours, _ STANLEY. There is very much in Lord STANLEY'S letter which every Conservative must approve. For ourselves we have not tin- frequently expressed some doubts as to the utility of political associations— but we cannot hesitate to say that, in the present state of affairs, when the Destructive party are incessantly active in furthering their pernicious objects, it becomes the duty of every man to be upon his guard, and, by combining witli his friends and neighbours, endeavour to counteract th e combinations which the enemy are making. It is only at his own weapons that such an enemy can be successfully op- posed. TO JOHN BULL. St. Ann's, Jamaica, March, 1S35. Sir,— Observing in the John Bull of the 4th of January, that you have thought the correspondence between the Marquess of SLimi and myself worthy of notice, I am induced to give you some further information, which will corroborate my assertion," that my offence was not in any respect a military one. On the 3d of July, 1834, I received from the Adjutant- General the following order:— M. G. O. Head Quarters, 1st July, 1834. A Court of Inquiry will assemble at St. Ann's Bay, on Monday, the 21st inst., to investigate the conduct of Col. SENIOR, Lieut.- Col. STANLEY1, and Adjutant HILTON, of the St. Ann's Western Regiment of Militia, and to report minutely upon the present state of the Regi- ment. The Court will consist of the following officers : Major- General MILLER, President, & c. The President is hereby directed to forward the proceedings of the Court with the evidence that shall be adduced before them, together with the opinion of the Court, to Lieut.- Col. DOYLE, for the informa- tion of his Excellency the Captain- General. ( Signed) E. T. GUY, To Col. Senior. Adjutant- General. In acknowledging the receipt of the above order, I demanded a copy of the charges to be preferred against me, and received the following letter in reply :—- Head Quarters, 12th July, 1834. Sir,— I have received your communication. I have nothing to do • with any charges that may be brought against you; if such be neces- sary in a Court of inquiry, they will issue from another quarter. 1 presume, in the present inquiry, the officers of the regiment, and the law under which they act, will give every information re- quired to the Court. I am, Sir, your most obedient servant, To Col. Senior. E. T. GUY, Adjutant- General. On the 12th of July I received from Major- General MILLER the following order:— District Head Quarters, Falmouth, D. O. July 7,1834. A Court of Inquiry having been ordered to assemble at St. Ann's Bay, on Monday, the 21st inst., Colonel SENIOR, or officer command- in!? the St. Ann's Western Regiment, will order the Adjutant of the - said regiment to attend the Court and produce first— The returns of the musters of the 3d of May last, and of the 7th of June, as delivered in by the respective officers commanding companies on those days. Second— All excuses for absence at either of those musters. Third— A return of all warrants issued againstabsentees at each of the said musters. Fourth— The orderly book of the regiment. The Colonel or officers commanding will also order the following officers to attend the Court of Inquiry to give evidence, if called on : Major BURBIDUE; the Captains or officers commanding Com- panies ; the Adjutant, Quarter- master, Secretary, and Marshal of the regiments. Should Colonel SENIOR not be in possession of the documents ordered to be produced, he will direct the Adjutant to wait upon the officer in whose possession they are, and demand the same. ( Signed) WILLIAM MILLER, M. G., 3d District. Colonel Senior, or Officer commanding St. Ann's Western Regt. I did not receive any further information on the subject— and, although I had no order to attend, I thought it my duty to be present. The Court assembled on the 21st of July, and sat till very late on the night of the 22d, the whole time with closed doors. I was called in on the afternoon of the second day, and asked a few questions re- specting the state of the regiment at the muster in July, but received no information whatever of what had passed during the sitting of the Court; nor was I allowed to call a single witness : and as the Court of Inquiry was ordered for the purpose of investigating my conduct during my absence from the regiment at the musters of the 3d of May and the 7th of June, 1 could not have supposed that I was re- sponsible for anything which might have occurred on those days. My absence was unavoidable, and well known to the Captain- Ge- neral, for I was during that time detained in Spanish- Town Jail, under an illegal arrest, when on my way to attend a court- martial; and our learned Chief Justice took two months to consider whether I was entitled to protection under the Militia Law, and at last re- leased me on condition that 1 should not proceed against the Provost Marshal for the illegal caption, and false imprisonment for more than two months. Immediately after my return home the Court of Inquiry was or- dered, as if one act of inj ustice and oppression was not sufficient, and as if the Governor was desirous of finishing what the Chief Justice had began. From the time of the Court of Inquiry in July, I continued in correspondence with the Governor as Captain- General, and sent up recommendations for promotions and commissions, all of which were accepted and gazetted, as late as September— as I received a letter from Lieut.- Colonel DOYLE, dated Aug. 30, acquainting me that his Excellency the Captain- General had been pleased to approve my recommendation of officers for promotion, and gentlemen for com- missions in the St. Ann's Western Regiment; which shows very clearly thatnothing could have been elicited against me on the Court of Inquiry ; and I have every reason to believe that no further no- tice would* have been taken of it, had I not, early in September, written to the Governor to complain of the conduct of Captain CON- NOR, the Stipendiary Magistrate for St. Ann's ; soon after which I received the letter from the King's House, dated 27th Sept. ( already published in the John Bull of the 4th of January), desiring me to send in the resignation of my commission as Colonel of the St. Ann's Western Regiment, under the pretence of some facts having come out before the Court of Inquiry, which rendered me unfit for the command of the regiment. As a further proof that my offence was not a military one, why was the Adjutant ( who had certainly committed an offence against mili- tary discipline, by disobeying the orders of Lient.- Colonel STANLEY, who commanded the regiment in my absence, and writing him a letter on military affairs in the most disrespectful terms) not deprived of his commission ? I think the following letter from Lieut. - Colonel STANLEY will bear me out in what I have advanced respecting the Court of Inquiry:— St. Ann, 16th Sept, 1834. Sir,— Having applied for and obtainedjhis Excellency the Captain- General's permission to be allowed to resign the commission I hold as Lieutenant- Colonel in the St. Ann's Western Regiment, I now beg to tender the same through you, for his Excellency's acceptance, and in thus retiring from the regiment., I think it right to take advantage of the opportunity afforded me, to observe that it has been mentioned to me, as a current report, that both yourself and I have had communications made as to the result of the Court of Inquiry; but whatever may have been the case with you, that I have not received the slightest intimation, by letter or otherwise, from any person whatever on the subject, nor up to this moment of writing do I know what, or if any, notice has been taken of the matter, or from the secret and private manner in which the proceedings of the Court were conducted, one iota of the evidence that was adduced upon the occasion, further than what I myself gave, and which I can have no objection to bemade public, as well as every other part of my conduct, as connected with the regiment, satis- fied as I am, whatever may be the opinion entertained or ex- pressed by others, that I have throughout been actuated by the purest and most disinterested motives, by a laudable and anxious desire to promote the character, discipline, and credit of the corps, conscious as I was that such must necessarily prove conducive to the honour, safety, and permanent advantage of every member of it, and which, considering the peculiar nature and cir- cumstances of the times, and the discouraging difficulties under which I acted, and which would have debarred many from the attempt, ought in justice to have procured for me the approbation and support, as well as the thanks and gratitude of not only every one connected with the regiment itself, but of every well- wisher for the peace and security, and consequent happiness and prosperity of the country. I am, Sir, < frc. ( Signed)' E. F. STANLEY, Lieut.- Col., Sawk. Colonel Senior, St. Ann's Western Regiment. It may be as well here to remark that Lieut.- Colonel STANLEY having commanded the regiment at two musters ( in May and June), was very desirous of continuing in command, and during my absence, had written to the Major- General, and the Marquess of SLIGO, some complaints respecting the state of the regiment while under my command, which induced his Lordship to order the Court of Inquiry; but how I could be responsible for the discipline of the regiment when absent from it, I cannot comprehend. The regiment had been inspected by the Earl of MULGRAVE in January 1834, andhis Lordship expressed gieat satisfaction both at the strength of the regiment and the correctness of its movements. From the facts I have stated, I think I have very clearly proved that the Marquess of SLIGO does not act according to his own judg- ment ; but that he has advisers who can influence him so far as to make him a cat's- paw where they wish to gratify any private resent- ment, and in that case is a very unfit Governor for such a colony as this. If you think this worthy of a place in your valuable paper, and can afford time and space for any comments on it, you will oblige, Your most obedient servant, G. W. SENIOR. TO JOHN BULL. College, Oxon, June 10th, 1835. SIR,— Pray gratify your constant reader and admirer by printing in juxta- positionin the columns of your widely- circulating Journal the following extracts from the work of a late traveller in Ireland; one rather inclining to the liberal side, praised by men of all parties, and now to be mentioned with greater respect, because, alas! he is no more. A straw thrown up, they say, will show which way the wind blows; and between the two extremes— the Education Board and the Chancellor of the Exchequer's sclioeisat the one end, and the Home Secretary's appropriation of the surplus in parishes where there am few or no Protestants, at the other, he that runs may read— a child may judge what chance Protestantism has in Ireland. I am, Sir, your obedient servant, A. M. " The same day that I visited the Mendicity Society, I visited also two other institutions— the House of Industry, and the Foundling. The former of these is upon an enlarged, and very admirable footing, and is altogether as fine an institution of the kind as I have any where seen. The Foundling Hospital was, at one time, an immense insti- tution, providing for not less than 10,000 children. This institution is now breaking up, and is to be superseded by separate county hos- pitals. The education of the children in this great hospital having been a Protestant education, the Catholic party in Ireland would not look upon it with much favour ; and the new arrangement is generally said to be the result of Catholic interest— I know not with what truth."— lnglis's Ireland, I., 18. " In the town of Galway are several extensive schools, two of them receiving aid from the new Education Board; one of these belongs to the monk schools; the other is under the care of the sisters of the Presentation Nunnery: and iu each of them about 300 children are educated. In many respects, I found reason to be pleased with these schools : there appeared to be no want of attention on the part of the instructors ; the pupils seemed to have profited by their instructions in reading and writing; and one humane regulation particularly pleased me :— a plentiful breakfast of stirabout and treacle is provided for the poor children, before they enter upon their daily tasks. At the same time, I cannot think the funds of the Education Board are legitimately applied in supporting the nunnery . and monk schools. I understood the principle ot the Board to be, that there was to be no preference of one religion over another; and that the schools were to be so constituted, that Protestant and Catholic might be able to join conscientiously in their support. _ But here, in this nunnery school at Galway, are all the paraphernalia of Popery: the building is a con- vent ; the teachers jire nuns with beads and rosaries ; the chapel has all the accompaniments and distinguishing marks of Catholic chapels of the most Catholic countries; and it does appear to me utterly im- possible, that Protestants should countenance schools of this descrip- tion."— II., 29. " There are, in Waterford, several large public institutions. But the most important institution which I visited was a Catholic school, at which upwards of seven hundred children were instructed. This is a new establishment, called by some, monk- houses; # it is an asso- ciation of young men, who dedicate their lives to the instruction of youth, and'who call themselves " Brothers of the Christian Schools." Itis, in fact, a monpstic institution, bound by vows, like other orders; and although I am far from questioning the motives either of the founder, Mr. RICE, or of the young men who thus make a sacrifice of themselves, yet I cannot regard favourably an institution under such tuition. I know too much of Catholicism in other countries, to doubt that intellectual education will be made very secondary to theological instruction; and although I am very for from ascribing all, or any large portion of the evils of Ireland to the prevalence of the Roman Catholic faith, yet I would rather not see a system of education extensively pursued, in which the inculcation of Popish tenets forms the chief feature. These schools are established in many other towns besides Waterford; and where I meet with them I shall not fail to notice them. There are at present ninety members of the order of " Brothers of the Christian Schools," and their number is rapidly increasing."— I., 65. We some years since noticed the establishment of the University Life Assurance Society, in which, as its name implies, the lives of members of Oxford and Cambridge exclusively are insurable. The results of the undertaking at the close of the first ten years are most satisfactory. On the 5th of this month Lord CANTERBURY presided at a meeting, at which were present Lord LYNDHURST, the Bishop of GLOUCESTER, Sir FREDERICK POLLOCK, Sir ALEXANDER GRANT, Sir ROBERT INGLIS, with many others; upon which occasion a very large addition to the policies was declared, as well as a bonus to the shareholders. It is worthy of remark, that to a policy effected for 5,0001. in 1825, additions to the amount of 1,0001. have been made, which realizes the most sanguine expectation, and will, as we hope and believe, arouse a spirit of inquiry amongst individuals whose income is solely dependent upon their lives, and whose families are but too often left distressed in consequence of a neglect of this easy method of securing a provision for them. An Assurance Society in which, as in the case of this to which we are now alluding, nearly the whole of the profits are devoted to the benefit of the assurers themselves, produces similar advantages to them, as a Saving Bank does to individuals of smaller means. We are extremely glad to hear of its prosperity. The Cambridge Chronicle has the following excellent article :— Great men, with but few exceptions, some time or other are al- most sure to incur unmerited censure from ignorant and low- minded partisans. Not infrequently the very best actions of their lives are so construed as to furnish matter of offence, and their purest and most patriotic views distorted by Radical envy into base motives of self- interest. Of this vulgar calumny, it is well known that the high- minded Duke of WELLINGTON, once deservedly the. idol of his country, has not escaped his share ; felt it, we believe, he has not, because he is wise enough to know how fleeting is the breath of popular favour, and how worthless it is, except it De won by deeds which the con- science approves. Even his last humane official act, the mission of Lord ELIOT into Spain, has furnished great cause of accusation to many petty scribblers and political wiseacres, yea is now brought forward by some of them, who know about as much of the affairs of Spain as of Timbuctoo, to account for the late disasters to the liberal cause in that country. We are always glad to adduce the testimony of an adversary to any point, especially because it has for the most part the effect of settling any dispute respecting it. Hear then Lord MELBOURNE ( Speech in the House of Lords, June 15), as to this :— " I agree in all that the Noble Marquess ( LONDONDERRY) has said respecting the propriety and humanity of the negotiation recently carried on in Spain by Lord ELIOT. That negociation was founded on the justest principles, undertaken with the best views, and carried into etlect in the most satisfactory nauner. There is no eulogium which the Noble Lord can pass upon the whole of that proceeding in which I am not fully prepared to join. The negociation terminated in a convention which is extremely satisfactory in itself, and has been most fortunate in its consequences— it has been the means of saving • the lives of many hundreds of persons, who, sinceits ratification, have been taken prisoners in the unfortunate war which has been carried on in Spain." Let the defamers of the Duke of WELLINGTON read this, and blush for shame. Let them say whether the protocolling Lord PALMERSTON has effected any like geod during the whole of the four years which he has spent in the Foreign Office? Can it any longer be a question, who of all men in the country is best fitted to uphold the dignity and interests of England, as Secretary for Foreign Affairs ? INQUIRY AT WOLVERHAMPTON.— This investigation terminated on Saturday evening. One hundred and fifty- two witnesses were exa- mined ; and of the mass of evidence adduced, that in favour of the measures adopted by the Magistracy to maintain the public peace, and in support of the marked forbearance and humanity of the military, greatly preponderated. Several privates of Captain MAN- NING'S troop were examined. From their evidence it appeared, that by Captain MANNING'S orders, they, in the first instance, only used the flats of their swords to disperse the mob, but this seems only to have encouraged violence, and almost every one of the troop ( the Captain included) were struck with stones. The men examined exhibited their helmets, all of which bore marks of blows from stones; the soldier whose horse was killed by being stabbed with some sharp instrument, was severely hurt by a stone while standing near his dead horse! Captain MANNING stated that only 35 ball cart- ridges were used, and he believed the soldiers bit the balls from some of these. He said there was a recent order ( from the Horse Guards) that when soldiers are ordered to fire in a riot; they must load with August 30. JOHN BULL. 199 tiall, and fire " at" the people. This order is understood to have teen issued from a conviction that tfiis mode of proceeding is, in th e end, more humane than Tiring over the heads of a mob with blank cartridge, which has been found rather to encourage acts of violence. — Before Sir F. ROE left Wolverhampton, an expression of thank " was tendered by several respectable inhabitants to him, for his cour- teous behaviour, and for the impartiality with which he had con- ducted the inquiry.—- It appears by a statement in the IVolverhampton Chronicle that only four gun- shot wounds have been reported, and one very slight sabre wound.— Two subscriptions have been com- menced in the town— one in order to present to Captain MANNING ttnd Lieutenant BRANDER some testimonial of approbation of their conduct; and another on behalf of MARRIOTT, the hoy who lost his leg in consequence of a shot passing through his knee. REGISTRATION OF VOTERS.— As it is by no means improbable that the electors of the kingdom will be called upon to exercise their franchise before the expiration of another year, all parties are using their utmost efforts to increase their strength, by getting the names of their friends on the register. In Worcester, during the last week or two, the number of freedoms taken up has been larger than for months before. The Constitutional and Reform Associations through- out the country are making the most active arrangements for urging " claims" and " objections." Yesterday ( 20th inst.) the overseers of parishes published a notice on the Church doors for persons to send in their claims to vote, at county elections, and claims must be delivered on or before the 20tli of July next. Of course persons who are already on the register, and retain the same qualification, are not required to renew the claim. Persons qualified to vote in cities and boroughs, must, before their names can be placed on the list, pay all the poor rates and assessed taxes, due previous to the 6th of April last, by the 20th. We find by the following paragraph in an evening paper, that the tender sympathies of Lord JOHN RUSSELL have been excited in behalf of the Dorchester rioters. It is quite refreshing, and may in some degree account for the necessity of coercion in England whenever the Whig- Radicals are in office, and when their friends, the mob, feel confident of support in rioting:— " We understand that two of the six men who were convicted atj Dorchester in March, 1834, and transported for seven years, for the offence of administering unlawful oaths, namely, James and George Loveless, are to receive a pardon in the colonies, for the remainder of the term, provided their conduct has been good since their trans- portation. The other four are to receive immediately a pardon in the colonies, and after they have been there two years, if their conduct is good, will receive a full pardon." We hear that YATES has entirely withdrawn himself from the Adelphi Theatre, and means to devote his talent, and that of his lady, to some other sphere of action. We regret this, because we really believe the Adelplii to be one of the very few profitable places of public amusement now in existence. The new and gigantic plan of the Colosseum may succeed, but it appears rash to leave a certainty for an uncertainty. We have heard that this determination has been made in consequence of some differences between YATES and his— at present— suffering partner, MATHEWS. We know nothing of the matter from anything like authority, but we very much regret that the prevalence of the report gives something like credit to it. The Globe states that the reports that Colonel HODGES, General BARNARD, and Colonel BACON are engaged in the Spanish expedi- tion, are without foundation. The Courier says, that the members of the Privy Council to whom the petition of the London University for a Charter had been referred, have, in their report to the KING, presented last week, begged that his MAJESTY will discharge them from giving any opinion • whatever on the subject. Lord ABINGER has decided that the Commissioners of the Court of Bankruptcy have neither the power to fine, nor commit, for contempt. This decision was come to in the case of Mr. FAULKNER ( of the firm of Messrs. ADLINGTON, GREGORY, and FAULKNER, solicitors), who was fined by one of the Commissioners for an alleged contempt. A letter from Bologna states that a marriage has been agreed upon between a daughter of Lord LUCAN and the son of the Polish General GRABINSKI, who took part in the revolution of 1831. The lady, it is said, will have a dowry of 40,0001. qvihonore < ligni sunt habiti, in unaquque classe secundum ordinem alptmbeticum disposita:— IN DISCIPLIXIS MATHEMATICS ET PHYSICIS. CLASSIS I.— Adams, Joannes, ex / Ede Christi; Buller, Gulielmus C., e Coll. Oriel; Cardwell, Edvardus, e Coll. Ball.; Phelps, Guliel- mus J., eColl. Oriel. CLASSIS II.— Harris, Hon. Carolus A., e Coll. Oriel. CLASSIS HI.— Tate, Carolus, Richmond, e C. C. C. CLASSIS IV.— Grimes, Edvardus, e Coll. Oriel ; Holme, Thomas, e Coll. Reg.; Thomas, Dunckley, e Coll. Exon ; Williams, Joannes, e Coll. Jesu ; VV right, Georgius, e Coll. Vigorn. R. WALKER ) R . , . _. . . G. R. BIIOWELL £ Exammatores m Discipline, G. H. S. JOHNSON S Mathematicis, et I'hysicis. Summa Quint ® Classis, sive cseterorum omnium qui examinatori- bus satisfecerunt, 101. CAMBRIDGE, June 16.— I'orson Prize.— On Tuesday last the Por- son Prize ( for the best translation of a passage from Shakspeare into Greek verse) was adjudged to William James Kennedy, of St. John's college.— Subject— Third Part of King Henry VI. Act. II. See. 2; beginning, CLIP.—" My gracious liege," and ending—" To hold thine own, and leave thine own with him." ORDINATIONS. The undermentioned gentlemen were ordained by the Lord Bishop of Lincoln, at Buckden, on Sunday last, the 14th " inst.:— Deacons : R. P. Alington, B. A., E. Garfit, B. A., B. Potchetf, B. A., St. John's coll. Camb.; G. H. Franks, M. A., Exeter coll. Oxford; the Hon. J. Grey, M. A.. Trin. coll. Camb.; J. Overton, B. A., Magd. hall, Oxford; J. Taddy, B. A., Clare hall Camb.; W. R. Waters, B. A., Corpus Christi coll. Camb.— Priests : W. de Pipe Belcher, B. A., Magd. hall Oxford; T. Chambers, B. A., W. Handley, B. A., E. Moor, B. A.. St. John's coll. Camb; G. A. Chaplin, B. A., Magd. coll., Oxford; H. Cotesworth, B. A., St. Peter's, Camb; H. Drum- mond, M. A., Balliol, Oxford; W. II. Dyott, B. A., Trinity, Camb.; C. H. B. Gladwin, B. A., Jesus, Camb.; E. Kelly, B. A., Cath. hall, Camb.; C. Lloyd, B. A., Christ Church, Oxford; G. W. S. Mon- teath, M. A., Magd. hall, Oxford; C. Needhain, B. A., Jesus coll. Camb.; F. C. G. Pawsey, B. A., Emman. coll. Camb.; C. Peers, B. A., Cath. hall, Camb.; S. R. Pigott, B. A., St. Edmund hall, Ox- ford; C. L. Smith, M. A., Fellow of Christ's coll. Camb. The Bishop of LINCOLN'S next ordination will be held at Buckden, on Sunday, the 20th of September. Candidates are required to aend their papers to his Lordship before the 9th of August. At an ordination held on Sunday the 14th inst., by the Lord Bishop of Gloucester, at St. Margaret's Church, Westminster, the follow- ing gentlemen were admitted into holy orders:— Deacons: J. Hicks, B. A., Oriel; E. H. Nibbett, B. A., W. R. Coxwell, B. A., Exeter coll., Oxf.; C. F. Newmarch, M. A., St. Alban hall; W. G. Tucker, B. A., St. Peter's, Camb.; G. W. Sandys, B. A., Pemb. Oxf.; G. S. I THE LATEST WORK OS IRELAXD. In 2 vols. 8vo., price 21s., the Third Edition, R E L A N D in 18< U. By H. D. IXGLIS, Author of " Spain in 1830," & c. Written in an honest and impartial spirit."— Edinburgh Review. Drawn by a careful and impartial man."— Times. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. In 3 vols, post 8vo., price 11.10s. VI L L I E R S . i A Tale of the last Century " A story which powerfully engages the attenion and the feelings To enable the reader to judge of the fidelity of his portrait of his favourite character, Lord Stair, the author has subjoined a short memoir of the life of that distinguished soldier and statesman."— Spectator. " The author has chosen a period little hackneyed by the novelist."— Literary Gazette. " Lord Stair, the Kinp-, the French Regent, and all the principal public charac- ters of the day, are brought upon the scene in the various stages of the work with dramatic effect. His style is remarkable for vigour."— Sunday Times. WhittakerandCo., Ave . Maria- lane In i vol. Svo., price 5s. boards, BCLOGiE LUCRETIANiE ex recensione Forbigeri. In nsum So hoi a1 Buriensis edidit, notas aliorum excerpsit, suas contescuit JOANNES EDWARDS, A. M. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. In Svo., price 5s. THE CONSERVATIVE STANDARD of the BRITISH EMPIRE ; erected in a time of Trouble, for all tho e vho fear God and honour the King. By the Rev. GEORGE BURGES, Vicar oi Halvergate, and of Moulton, in Norfolk. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. ECCL ES IASTICAL INTELLIGENCE. PREFERMENTS, APPOINTMENTS, & c. The Rev. JOSEPH DANIEL, to the perpetual Curacy of Elmore, in the county of Gloucester, vacant by the death of the Rev. P. C. Guise; on the nomination of Sir John Wright Guise, Bart. The King has been pleased to present the Rev. WILLIAM 11 ANNA to the Church and Parish of East Kilbride, in the Presbytery of Hamilton and shire of Lanark, vacant by the death of the Rev. Jaines French. OBITUARY. On the 12th inst., atCleasby, in the county of York, the Rev. Richard Waistell, for upwards of fifty years the respected and beloved Curate of that parish. The death of this truly pond man has caused the most poignant grief amongst his parishioners, by whom his irreparable loss will be long and severely felt. Of rapid consumption, in his 31st year, the Rev. George Gray Stuart, seventh and youngest son of the late Hon Archibald Stuart, of Balinerino and Couper Angus, North Britain, and of Blandford, Dorset; and nephew of Francis, Earl of Moray, K. T.; Vicar of Milbonrn St. Andrew and Dewlish, Dorset ; Domestic Chaplain to the Right Hon. Lord Gray, of Gray and Kinfauns ; and late Curate of Heckmonwicke, Yorkshire. The Rev. Thomas Whorwood, many years Vicar of Headington, near Oxford, aged 58. Mr. W. died very suddenly at midnight. He had evidently been de- clining in health for some time past; but on the day of his death he was walking in the streets of Oxford, and buried a corpse the same evening in his own parish. When about to retire to rest, he suddenly fell back in his chair, speechless; medical aid was immediately sent for, but it was of no avail, as he was soon a corpse. At the Vicarage, Whittingham, aged 87, the Rev. Edmund Law, B. A., 31 years Vicar of that place, formerly Rector of Musgrave, in the county of West- moreland, 32 years Curate to the Rev. Archdeacon Paley, and in the Commission of the Peace tor the county of Cumberland. UNIVERSITY INTELLIGENCE. OXFORD, June 16.— 1Tho Chancellor's prizes for the present year have been this day adjudged to the following Gentlemen :— Latin verse, " Julianus Imperator Templum Hierosolymitanum instaurare aggreditur," James Cowles Prichard, Scholar of Trinity. English essay, " The influence of ancient oracles on public and private life," James Howling Mosley, B. A., of Oriel. Latin essay, " De Jure Clientele apud Romanos," Roundell Palmer, B. A., Probationer, Fellow of Magdalen, Ireland and Eldon Scholar, and late Scholar of Trinity. Sir Roger Newdigate's prize for the best composition in English verse," 1 he burning of Moscow," Wm. Robert Seymour Fitzgerald, Commoner of Oriel. Yesterday air. John George Hickley Blount Scholar of Trinity, and Mr. Arthur West Haddon; Commoner of Brasennose, were elected and admitted Scholars of Trinity College, and at the same time Mr. Thomas Brooking Cornish, Commoner of Wadliam College, was elected Blount Scholar of Trinity. June 18. This day the following degrees were conferred :— Masters of Arts: Rev. C. Lloyd, Jesus ; Rev. R. E. Roberts, St. Edmund Ilall; Hon. and Rev. J. Norton, Rev. D. Brent, Kev. W. E. Elwell, University; W. Marsden, Wadham; Rev. S. R. Wood, Christ Church; Rev, E. D. Wickhain. Balliol; Rev. W. Harrison, Braseanose ; C. Marriott, Fellow of Oriel.— llac/ ielors of Arts: H. T. Estridge, New Inn Hall, Grand Coinp.; A. Lloyd, Scholar of Wadham ; J. Simcox, Wadham; J. F. Hodson, C, W. Faber, W. Fenton, F. Boughey, Christ Church; Rev. J. Irvine, Magdalen Hall; C. W.. Landor, Worcester; H. Burney, Scholar of Exeter ; F. B. Wells, . C. Reade, Demies of Magdalen; E. C. S. Kynaersley, W. Birley, A. B. Spry, Trinity; T. Bacon, Merton, ' June imina CamUatorum Termino l'aschatis, A. £>. 1835, Exeter.— Priests: H. Knapp, B. A., St. John's, Oxf.; W. W. Caza- let, B. A., Trin. Camb,; A. Cameron, B. A., Mafd. hall; G. L. Parsons, M. A., Christ church; J. N. Edwards, B. A., Worcester; L. Evans, B. A., Oriel coll. Oxf.; R. B. Kinsman, B. A. Trin. Camb., let. dim. from the Bishop of Exeter. On Sunday the 7th inst. the following gentlemen were ordained for the Lord Bishop of Norwich, by the Lord Bishop of Carlisle, at St. George's Hanover- square, London:— Deacons: W. Barlow, A. B., Jesus; W. Bleckley, A. B., W. M. Hurlock, A. B., St. John's ; H. Browne, A. B., N. R. Herring, A. B., F. N. Reeve, A. B., Trinity coll.; H. P. Haughton, A. B., Brazennose, the Hon. T. M. Rous, A. M., Balliol, Oxford; J. N. Micklethwait, A. B., Magd.; S. R. Mills, S. C. L., H. E. Preston, A. B., Queens'; E. Sparke, A. B., Caius, Camb Priests: F. E. Arden, A. B., J. Bullen, A. B., St. Peter's; J. Bailev, A. B., Cath. Hall; W. Borton, A. M., J. N. Dalton, A. B., J". C. I'latten, A. B., E. N. Rolfe, A. B., Caius, Camb.; J. Burrows, A. B., Trinity, Dublin; R. S. Dobson, A. B., R. Smith, A. B., St. John's, Camb.; C. W. Edmonstone, A. B., Christ Church, Oxford; C. English, A. M., J. W. Gowring, A. B., Trinity; W. Godfrey, A. B., Jesus; H. L. W. Herring, A. B., J. J. Tuck, A. B., Corpus Christi, C'amb ; J. May, A. B., B. vaux, A. B., Trinity, Oxford; G. Sims, A. B., Emmanuel, Cambridge. A t an ordination, held by the Lord Bishop of Salisbury, in the Chapel of his Palace, on Sunday the 7th inst., the following persons were admitted into the holy order of— Deacons: The Hon. W. H. Spencer, M. A., Christchurch coll.; T. Protheroe, B. A., Brasen- nose; H. N. Loring, B. A., Exeter, G. E. Turner, S. C. L., Magd. hall, Oxford.— Priests: W. Sheppard, Clerk, B. A., Exeter coll., R. Townsend, Clerk, B. A., Brazennose, Oxford; D. Macdonald, Clerk, B. A., Trin. coll., J. Williams, Clerk, B. A., Magd. Camb. MISCELLANEOUS. We regret to learn that the Bishop of SALISBURY is so indisposed that he is unable to proceed with the confirmations in his diocese, fixed for the present period. His Lordship was taken so ill while peforming the ceremony of confirmation at Warminster as to render it necessary to convey him to the Vicarage, whence he proceeded to his palace at Salisbury. The parishioners of St. Martin- in- the- Fields have presented to their late much respected Vicar, the Rev. GEORGE RICHARDS, D. D., a handsome silver soup tureen and stand, and two large dishes and covers, surmounted with the group ( from the original design) of St. " lack, dividing his cloak with the beggar. They are In a uo'- ket volume, the Fifth Edition, DS. in clbth, THE SECRETARY'S ASSISTANT. " One of those useful little books which, having found how serviceab'e it is lor almost daily reference, you wonder that you could ever do without. This Assistant gives you superscriptions, lists of ambassadors and consuls, forms of petitions and memorials, ami other pieces of instruction for intercourse with society.''— Literary Gazette. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. NEW WORKS. 1. f IF£ and TIMES of WILLIAM III., CT / King nf England, and Stadtholder of Holland. By the Hon. Arthur Trevor, M. P., M. A., < fee. & c. Vol. 1, 8vo., 12s. 2. THE DOCTOR, & c. Vol. 3. Post Svo., 10s. fid. 3. TRAVELS in ETHIOPIA; above the Second Cataract of the Nile: exhibiting the State of that Country and its various Inhabitants, under the Dominion of Mohammed Ali; and illus- trating the Antiquities, Arts, and History of the Ancient Kingdom of Meroe. By G. A. Hoskins, Esq. 4to., with a Map, and 90 Illustrations, 31.13s. 6d, cloth. EGYPT and MOHAMMED ALI; Or, Travels in the Valley of the Nile. By James Augustus St. John. 2 vols. VISIT to CONSTANTINOPLE, And some of the GREEK ISLANDS. By John Auldjo, Esq., F. G. S. Author of " Ascent of Mont Blanc." With Plates, etched by George Cruikshank. 10s. fid. " Mr. A. is an observant traveller and a pleasant writer. His pen, like his pencil, seizes the outline and marked features of the scene, and represents them with graphic neatness and effect."— Literary Gazette. 6. NINE MONTHS' RESIDENCE in NEW ZEALAND and TRISTRAM D'ANCUNHA. By Augustus Earle, Draughtsman to his Majesty's Surveying Ship the Beagle. 8vo., 7 plates, 13s. THE M O R A L ' of FLOWERS. With 24 beautifully- coloured plates. 1 vol. royal Svo. Second Edition, with Additions. 30s. half- bd. This Edition contains some additional Poems. " Full of exquisite poetry."— Blackwood's Mag. Longman, Rees, Orme, and Co. Martin on horseback, very massive, weighing 798 ounces 2 pennyweights, and bearing the following inscription :—" The parishioners of St. Martin- in- the- Fields to the Rev. George Richards, D. D., upon his resignation of that Vicarage, in acknowledgment of his highly valuable pastoral services; as also for his active exertions and munificent donations for the spiritual welfare of the parish. 1835." On Saturday last a deputation from the small parish of St. Helen, Bishopsgate- street, presented to their venerable Vicar ( the Rev. JAMES BLENKARNE) a handsome tea service of plate, with an inscrip- tion expressive of the affection and esteem in which the parishioners at large have ever held their worthy pastor during his constant ministry for 36 years, whilst receiving the least secular reward of any incumbent in London. A few days ago, the Rev. HOWEL JONES, who has been Curate of the parish Church of Bradford, Wilts, for upwards of 20 years, was presented by the Churchwardens, on behalf of the subscribers, with a tea service of plate and ail elegant salver, together of the value of 551., and, in addition, with a purse of 62 sovereigns. The salver bears a suitable inscription, expressive of the subscribers' approbation of Mr. JONES'S conduct during the above long period. On Tuesday week a splendid silver tea service was presented to the Rev. JOHN PRICE, Incumbent of St. Paul's, Blackburn, by his congregation, as a token of respect for his character as a Christian pastor, during a period of 33 years. On Wednesday above 1,200 of the inhabitants of St. Pancras parish were summoned before Colonel BIRD, and E. ORME Esq., county Magistrates, sitting in petty Sessions, in the large room at the St. Pancras Female School House in the Hampstead- road, to show cause why they have refused or neglected to pay the amount of a Church- rate laid in June last. A number of the persons summoned immediately paid the amount; but several obj ected for conscience sake, and on other grounds, while a few questioned the legality of the rate, the whole of whom were informed by the bench that the payment would be enforced. Considerable excitement prevailing throughout the parish, in consequence of the number of summonses issued ( upwards of 4,000), a public meeting of tlie rate- payers is called for Monday to consider of the course to be adopted under the circumstances. An Episcopal Chapel was opened on Sunday last on Wharton- green, in the parish of Davenham. Cheshire. The Macclesfield Courier says, a smaller Chapel, on Rudheath, in the same parish, was opened a fortnight ago, which, we understand, was built by voluntary contri- butions amounting to upwards of 3001. The style of the buildings is quite ecclesiastical, and is likely to form a new era in Church building. The architect, Mr. LATHAM, of Northwich, is now employed in erecting several similar edifices in the county. It was not before known that a Church capable of containing two hundred persons could be erected for the small sum of 3501. There is no fear of the Church falling, if the same spirit pervade the aristocracy at large which seems to be animating the gentry of Dev enham and vicinity. BROMSGROVE SCHOOL.— Two of the Scholarships at Worcester College, Oxford, attached to this school bv Sir THOS. COOKES, Bart., having become vacant, the Verv Reverend the Provost, accompanied by the Senior Fellow of the College, arrived at the school on Thurs- day, the 11th inst.; for the purpose of filling up the vacancies, when, after an examination of the candidates, Mr. THOS. DOLBEN, son of the Rev. T. DOLBEN, Rector of Ipsley, and Mr. J. W. DAVIS, son of Dr. DAVIS, of Presteign, were electe3 scholars. The Clergy of the Archdeaconry of Chichester have petitioned Parliament against the proposed alienation of its revenues from the Irish Church; and on Thursday there was a meeting of the Arch- deaconry ot Lewes for the same purpose. N E W W () It K S, Just published by Richard Bentley, 8, New Burlington- street., Publisher in Ordinary to his Majesty. In 3 vols, small 8vo., with a Portrait of the Author, APILGRIM AGE TO THE HOLY LAND, & c. By M. DE LAMARTINE. " This beautiful work is descriptive uf scenes certainly never before painted with so much eloquence and feeling."— Blackwood's Magazine. BELFORD REGIS. By Mary Russell Mitford, Author of " Our Village," Rienzi," &<•• 3 vols. " A work of very considerable merit, and will be read with avidity."— Atlas. III. In 2 vols. 8vo., with two Portraits, from a Painting bv Kneller, and a Bust by Rysbrach, by permission of the Earl of Epremont, M E M O I R S O' F LORD BOLINGBROK E, AND OF HIS TIMES. ByG. W. Cooke, Esq., Rarrister- at- Law, B. A., Oxon. " The best account of this great statesman which has yet appeared."— Edin-* burgh Evening Post. HORSE - SHOE' ROBINSON. By J. P. Kennedy, Esq., Author of " Swallow Barn," & c. 3 vols. 27s. V. TEN YEARS IN SOUTH AFRICA. Including a Description of the WILD SPORTS OF THAT COUNTRY. 2 vols. Svo. with Plates, Bv Lieut. J. W. Moodie, 21st Fnsileers. " One of the most agreeable and instructive books that has ever been published respecting the Cape Colony."— Morning Herald. MY LIFE. By the Author of ". Wild Sports of the West," " Stories of Waterloo," & c. " Here is enough of adventure and incident to furnish out three novels. Pathos, humour, and terror, quickly succeed each other in these amusing pages."— Courier. O IT T R E - M E R ; Or, a Pilgrimage to the Old World. By an American. 2 vols. 18s. vm. CORTES; Or, the Fall of Mexico. A Romance. By Dr. Bird, Author of " Calavar," efce. 3 vols. The following will appear immediately : In 3 vols, post 8vo. THE MONIKINS. By J. Feniinore Cooper, Esq. Author of " The SpyV' " The Pilot," & c. In 1 vol. 8vo., price 10s. 8d., with a Portrait of Mr. Beckford, from an original Painting bv Sir Joshua Reynolds, An EXCURSION to the MONASTERIES of ALCOBACA AND BATALHA. By William Beckford, Esq., Author of " Vathek," " Italy; with Sketches of ^ pain and Portugal," & c. III. New Work, Edited by Lady Dacre. In 3 vols, post 8vo. TALES OF THE PEERAGE AND THE PEASANTRY. Bv the Author ol " The Chaperon." IV. The concluding volume of MADAME J U N O T ' S MEMOIRS. V. Complete in 1 vol. price 6s., with two Engravings, THE PARSON'S DAUGHTER. \ By Theodore Hook, Esq. Forming the tfith Volume of THE STANDARD NOVELS AND ROMANCES. MR. DON'S IMPROVED EDITION OF MILLER'S GAMJENER'S" DIC- TIONARY. . Handsomely printed in 4to., with numerous wood- cuts, price 31. 12s. m clotn boards, the Third Volume, of vv GENERAL SYSTEM of GARDENING and BOTANy know containing a complete Enumeration and Description of all 1 lants hitherto • n; with their generic and specific Characters, Places of browtd. . me ol Flowering, Mode of Culture, and their Uses in Medicine and Domestic Jv onomy: founded upon Miller's Gardener's Dictionary, and arranged according to the a- tural System. By GEORGE DON, F. L. S. ' T London: printed for J. G. and F. Rivington; J. and W. T. Clar- te: Iynginan and Co.; T. Cadell; J. Richardson; J effery and Son; Baldwin and Cradock ; J. Booker; J. Booth ; Harvey and Darton ; S. Baxter ; Mierwood and Co.; Harding and Lepard ; J. T. Setchel; Whittaker and Co. ; Snnpkin and Marshall; and E. Hodgson. . . „. ... i •. « The first and second Volumes may be had, urice 31.12s. each, in boa"' » and the fourth and last Volume is in the press. A Glossary is given ill^ the 1- • Volume, aud an Index to each. The Woik may also be had in Parts, at bs. 398 j o h n b u l l. June 14. STOCK EXCHANGE.— SATURDAT. In the Consol Market there has been, during the week, some de- gree of depression, and Money has, upon the whole, been rather scarcer. Consols for the Account this afternoon closed at 91 % Vj Exchequer Bills at 28 to 30, and India Bonds at 8 to 10 pm. Monday last^ was, as we have in former articles stated, the day fixed for the final arrangement of the Ions unsettled Foreign Ac- count ; but it appears that inanv of the brokers had been obliged to give their principals out of doors a farther lenity until the 22d, and, in consequence, it was generally supposed th'at that extension of time would be granted to the brokers, who depended solely upon the receipt of the money to redeem their own engagements. Besides, it was argued with much fairness, that as from the 29th ult. to the 15th inst. had been granted to the larger and more influential members to disentangle themselves from the meshes in which they had been fixed, the smaller and less affluent ones were injustice entitled to an increase of opportunity to emerge from their difficulties. To the surprise of many, however, on the following day, no less than seventeen defaulters were declared, some of whom, we are informed, offered an immediate payment of two- thirds of their engagements, • with a promise of the remainder by the 22d. This arbitrary ana partial mode of procedure became the subject of well- deserved animadversion, and so strong were the feelings expressed upon the matter, that on a memorial being presented to the Committee, begging their careful examination, > re they continued to proclaim any further defalcation, that body thought fit then to grant the re- quired delay. This is a most manifest act of injustice to those indi- viduals who, on the Thursday were " declared," and who ought at least to have been partakers of the benefit granted to their more fortunate brethren. They have been placed by this injustice in a position they ought not to have occupied, and a slur has been cast upon a selected few, that ought, indeed, never to have been • cast, or if it had, ought to have been shared by the many. If the members of the_ Stock Exchange act thus mercilessly towards each other, what lenity or fairness can the gambler expect'of them ? Honour and equity ought to be considered the staple articles of the Stock Exchange ; but after conduct of this description it would seem as though they were prohibited articles. If the members of the Stock Exchange, like the Kilkenny cats, turn upon each other and thereby show a disposition anything than amiable, the public will, at the end of the contest, be by no means broken- hearted should there be as little of them left as remained of the celebrated quadrupeds we have alluded to. But we hear this afternoon of a more gross act of partiality and selfishness on the part of those so rigorously and austerely beut upon justice on Tuesday last. We are informed that a very large ( we may call him) unsett/ er has been allowed a further respite of another week to arrange his large differences, and that this has been granted, not because there was anything in the case to call for such favour, but because the parties having the power to award it are his principal creditors, are consequently personally in- terested, and in the teeth of the common rule of right, have done that for themselves they would not do for their neighbours. If this is borue out on . Monday, it will be such an instance of Stock Exchange honesty as will ultimately cause this establishment to die like the maddened scorpion, by the venom of its own sting. In the Foreign Market there continues to be a great depreciation iu Spanish and Portugese Securities, as well as in the Transatlantic Bonds. The Spanish Bonds are 385s" 9H, and the Scrip 19H 18% dis.; Portuguese Five per Cents, closed at 85^, and the Three per Cents, at 583^ 9. Columbian Bonds left off at 35% 36, and the Mex- ican at 35% 36%. In the Northern Bonds there is nothing of moment to notice ; Dutch Five per Cents, are 100% ; the Two- and- a- Half per Cents. 55% H ; Russian 108% %, and Belgian 99%. The Paris journals of Thursday continue to dwell upon the mea- sures contemplated by the parties to the Quadruple Treaty of Alli- ance for affording assistance to the Queen- Regent of Spain. Accor- ding to the Courier Franqais, the question excites much discord in the Paris Cabinet, and may shortly bring on a change. The Temps, which states that Holland has already abundantly supplied Don Carlos with money, arms, and ammunition, affirms that lie has re- cently received further supplies to the amount of six or seven mil- lions of francs. _ The accounts from the north of Spain are confined to the contra- dictory statements of the southern journals. The Bordeaux Election's advices from Bayonne of the 13th state that Zumalacarreguy is under the walls of Bilboa, with an imposing force ; that a cannonade has - taken place; that an English ship of war has landed six guns and ibrty men, in order to assist the garrison and Urbanos; but that, although a stubborn resistance be contemplated, the town is not ex- pected to hold out long. The Memorial ties Pyrenees, on the con- trary, represents Espartero to have left four thousand men in the place, and it » capture as improbable. LEICESTER CONSERVATIVE DINNER.— On Thursday last, the Lei- cester Conservative Society held their third anniversary at the Town • Hall, when upwards of 200 Gentlemen sat down to a sumptu- ous dinner. Soon after four o'clock, the chairman ( R. Cheslyu, Esq.) entered the room. Among the gentlemen present we ob- served :— Sir George Beaumont, Bart., R. Gough, Esq., N. Goldsmid, Esq., — Glossop, Esq., John Ragg, Esqv R. J. Hood, Esq., W. K. " Walker, Esq., — Dewes, Esq., Captain Cheslyn, Reverends R. Davies, Beresford, Dyott, Harrington, Neal, Newby, Thorpe, J. levies, Tebbutt; Aldermen Lovell and Hodges; Messrs. Johnson, Knight, Lawton, Loseby, R. Luck, G. Marston, Rogers, Revis, Tailby, What, toff, Weston, dfcc. < fec.— Some very able speeches were delivered on the occasion. DREADFUL ACCIDENT.— Friday, as Captain Townsend, of Park- street, Grosvenor- square, was proceeding on horseback along North Audley- street, the animal took fright at the noise made by some rub- bish shot out of a cart, andgallopped off at a most furious rate of speed. Captain Townsend in endeavouring to hold the animal in, broke the rein ; the horse being then left without control, galloped into Oxford- street, and had not proceeded many yards when it ran against a hackney- coach with such tremendous violence that the paunels of the coach were stove in, and the animal received such in jury that it immediately fell down, and could not rise again. Cap- tain Townsend fell heavily on his head, and fractured the frontal bone of the skull in a most dangerous manner; his left arm was also broken. He was afterwards removed to his residence, without any hope of his surviving. RELIGIOUS MEETING AT EXETER HALL.— Yesterday a very nume- rous and highly respectable meeting was held at Exeter Hall, the object of which was to prove " thereal tenets of the Church of Rome, as held by the Roman Catholic Bishops and Priests of Ireland."— The chair was taken by Lord Kenyon, who proposed that the business of the meeting should be commenced by the reading of prayers, which was done.— The Rev. Dr. M'Ghee then rose, and after some prepa- ratory observations, produced a work iu eight volumes, entitled " Denn's complete body of Theology," and then proceeded to con- tend that this work had for twenty- seven years been adopted by the Roman Catholic Archbishops and Priests as the basis of their creed, and that Dr. Murray, the Catholic Archbishop of Dublin, had ex- pressely sanctioned it as a standard authority for the Catholic Priests of that country. Dr. M'Ghee then moved a resolution, " That Denn's Theology had been adopted by the Roman Catholic Bishops of Ireland for the guidance of the Catholic priesthood since 1808, and that it had been used as a Conference Book in the province of Leinster since 1831."— The resolution was seconded by Dr. Cook.— The Chairman before he put the resolution said he would openly call upon Mr. O'Connell, if he was present, and wished to speak against it, to do so. No answer was made to this appeal, and the resolution, was agreed to unanimously.— Dr. M'Ghee then spoke of the importance of the resolution which had just been agreed to, and said it had decided a question which had been long agitated, as it pronounced a decided opinion upon the real principles of the Catholic Hierarchy. After contending that the book in question was as full of errors, intolerance, and persecution, as the worst enemies of the Catholics could charge against them, Dr. M'Ghee laid down the following as five leading principles which it propounded as those of the Catholic Creed:— f. That Protestants of all denominations are deemed Heretics by the Church of Rome.— 2. That Baptism gives dominion to the Church of Rome. 3. That so far from granting toleration to Protestants, it is duty of the Catholics to exterminate their rights of worship. 4. That it is duty of the Church of Rome to compel Protestants, by corporal punishment, to submit to the Catholic faith. 5. That the punishments which the Church of Rome pronounces against Heretics, are confiscation of property, imprisonment, and death.—( Sensation.) It seemed to have been anticipated that some Roman Catholic Prelates would have been present to repel the charges made against the doctrines of the Catho- lic Church, but this was not the case. The promulgation of the dif- ferent tenets appeared to excite considerable attention, and the various statements elicited frequent marks of interest. The subject vas wider discussion when the Reporter left. Next week will be published, price 6s. No. II. of COCHRANE'S FOREIGN QUARTERLY REVIEW. Contents:— Art I. National System of Education in France— TT. Lappenberg's History of England— III. Qninet's Ahasuerus— IV. ' Capefigne and bismondi's Histories of the Religious Wars of France— V. On Proverbs and Popular Savings — VI. . Madrid in 1S34— Vlf. Courts of Love in the Middle Ages— VIII. Recent Travellers in Syria: Midland, l'oiijonlat, Lamartine, & c. ; New Openings of Commerce in the East— IX. Lncien Bonaparte's Answer to Lamarque— X. Madame Saint- Sunn's Description of the Hotel de Cluny— XI. Stotterforth's Rhenish Minstrel: Traditionaiy and Legendary Ballads of the Rhine— Gleanings of Foreign Literary Intelligence, No. II.— List of New Continental Works. Published by Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane ; and Robert Cadell, Edin- burgh; and sold by all Booksellers. Of whom may be had, Cochrane'? Foreign Quarterly Review^ No. I.; and the Foreign Quarterly Review, No. XXVIIT., price 6s. each. Also. complete Sett? and single Numbers of the same Journal since its commencement. Just published, in 2 vols. Svo., 21s. boards, THE CABINET; a Series of Original Essays, Moral and Literary. Bv ARCHIBALD BELL, Esq., Advocate, F. R. S. E. Edinburgh: printed for Bell and Bradfute. London: James Duncan, 37, Paternoster- row. ___ Now ready, in two volumes 8vo., 24s. boards, AMEMOIR of tiie LIFE and PUBLIC SERVICES of SIR THOMAS STAMFOHD RAFFLES, F. R. S., « fcc., particularly in the Government of Java, 1811— 1816, and of Bencoolen and its Dependencies, 1817— 1824; with Details of the Commerce and Resources of the Eastern Archi- pelago, and Selections from his Correspondence. By his Widow. London: James Duncan, 37, Paternoster- row. SACREirEPIC POEM BY W. J. A. ABINGTON, M. A. Of Trinity College, Cambridge. Second Edition, under the immediate Patronage of Her Most Gracious Majesty the Queen, In 1 vol. royal 8vo., elecrantly bound in fancy cloth, CHAOS and the CREATION ; an Epic Poem, in Eight Cantos, with Elucidative Notes ; the Author in the first edition having appesred under the assumed name of " Trinitarius." Dedicated to the University of Cambridge. " There is adisnity in his thoughts and splendour in his language not un- worthy of that great argument."— Allan Cunningham. " The Poem contains positive originality. The notes are beyond all praise."— New Monthly Magazine. See also Spectator, Athen.- eum, Metropolitan, Asiatic Journal, & c. & c. Hatchards, Piccadilly; Fraser, Regent- street; Stevenson, Cambridge; and all Booksellers. THE TOURIST IN THE HIGHLANDS. J ust published, in one pocket volume, postSvo. 16s., containing 760 closely printed pages, accompanied by a complete Travelling Map of Scotland, engraved by Mr. J. Arrowsmith, rf^ l UIDE to the HIGHLANDS and ISLANDS of SCOTLAND, VH" Including ORKNEY and ZETLAND. By GEORGE and PETER ANDERSON, of Inverness. John Murray, Albemarle- street. Just publi- hed, price Half- a- Crown, PIETY and PATRIOTISM UNITED; or, The Church the Champion of Liberty. With Notes ; and an Appendix, containing Ex- tracts from the Form of Prayer, appointed for the Fifth of November, annually ; and suitable to these awful times. Dedicated to the Archbishops, Bishops, Clergy, and Members generally of the United Church of England and Ireland. By the Editor of the " Textuary and Ritualist." " Pro Ecclesia Dei." " London: J. Hatchard and Son: L. and J. Seeley; Smith, Elder and Co.; J. Souter; E. Suter; J. isbet and Co.; Roake and Varty; R. Fauntleroy; and sold by all other Booksellers. TheTEXTUARY and RITUALIST is a Biblical, Liturgical, and Theo- logical Magazine, published Monthly, price Sixpence : it began with Jan. 1835. NOVELTIES IN LITERATURE. Just published, in 3 vols, post 8vo., price 31s. 6d., " W71 RNEST CAMPBELL, an Historical Novel. _| QJ By JOHN AINSLIE, Esq., Author of " Aurungzebe." Dr. MADDEN' S TRAVELS in the WEST INDIES. In 2 vols, post 8vo., with a Plate of " Negro Emancipation," after Rippingille. Price 21s. in cloth. SKETCHES of BERMUDA. By SUSETTE HARRIET LLOYD. In one vol. post 8vo., with Map and Plates, 10s. 6d. IV. Dedicated, by permission, to Lord Morpeth. In 3 vols, post 8vo., 31s. 6d. BOSWORTH FIELD; or. The Fate of Plantagenet, an Historical Tale. By the Author of " Arthur of Brittany." Printed for James Cochrane and Co., 11, Waterloo- place, 3, St. James's- square, Saturday. MR. MACRONEhas this day published the following NEW WORKS of FICTION:— I. PLANTAGENET. 3 vols, post 8vo. 44 From a prince to a ' prentice !— a low transformation— that shall be mine !"— Henry IV. II. THURLSTON TALES. By the Author of " Tales of an Arctic Voyager." 3 vols, post Svo. Ill The Rev. Mr. Wright's LAST of the CORBES. 1 vol. postSvo., 10s. 6d. *** Mr. Boaden's Neapolitan Romance " The Doom of Giallo," ( 2 vols.), and Godwin's " Transfusion," may be had at the Libraries, and of all Booksellers. On the 1st of July will be published, price 6d., No. I. of THE MAGAZINE OF DOMESTIC ECONOMY. Containing:— Address to the Public— In- door Economy— Ont- door Eco- nomy— House- keeping, Cookery, and Gardening— Medical Advice— Bathing— Theatres and Exhibitions— Tide- table, calculated for all the Watering- places— List of Fairs— Table of Steam Navigation, showing the date of sailing and ar- rival of every steam- vessel in the United Kingdom— Market prices of all articles in season, & c. & c. & c. The Prospectus may be had of the Publishers. Orr and Smith, Amen- Corner, Paternoster- row. Just published, in Svo. price Is. 6d REMARKS on the CHARACTER ascribed by COLONEL NAPIER ( in the Fourth Volume of his History of the War in the Peninsula.) to the late Right Hon. SPENCER PERCEVAL. By DUDLEY M. PERCEVAL, Esq. With LETTERS to and from COLONEL NAPIER on the subject. James Fraser, 215 Regent- street. Just published, price 3s.; Interleaved, 4s. AMANUAL of the SECTS and HERESIES of the EARLY CHRISTIAN CHURCH ; and brief Biographical Notices of the Principal Writers and Divines; with an Appendix, containing an account of the most re- markable Modern Sects, and a Chronological Table. By the Author of " Ques- tions on Adam's Roman Antiquities," & c. & c. Oxford: Henry Slatter, High- street; Longman and Co., Whittaker and Co., and Simpkin and Marshall, London. Just published, price 2s. LETTER to LORD MELBOURNE, on the IRISH CHURCH and on the IRISH TITHE. By J. BROADHURST, Esq. Printed for T. Hookham, Old Bond- street. Just published, in postSvo., price7s. 6d. bds. THE HISTORY OF THE ASSASSINS; derived from the Oriental Sources. Translated from the Original German of the Chevalier Joseph Von Hammer. By OSWALD CHARLES WOOD, M. D. Smith, Elder, and Co., Cornhill. SENIOR ON FOREIGN POOR- LAWS AND LABODRERS. Just published, in Svo., price 7s. STATEMENT of the PROVISION for the POOR, and of the CONDITION of the LABOURING CLASSES, in a considerable Portion of AMERICA and EUROPE. By NASSAU W. SENIOR, Esq. Being the Preface to the Foreign Communications contained in the Appendix to the Poor- Law Report. B. Fellowes, Ludgate- sfreet ( Publisher to the Poor- Law Commissioners). Just published, in 8vo., price 7s. ETTERS on the PHILOSOPHY of UNBELIEF. J the Rev. JAMES WILLS. Printed for B. Fellowes, Ludgate- street. By Yesterday, in 1 vol. post8vo., illustrated with numerous Engravings, THE PHILOSOPHY of MANUFACTURES ; or, an Exposi- tion of the Scientific, Moral, and Commercial Economy of the Factory Syss tern of Great Britain. Bv ANDREW URE, M. D., F. R. S., M. G. S., M. A. S., Lon- don ; M. Acad. N. S. Philadelphia, & c. & c. London: Charles Knight, 22, Ludgate- street. Just published, in 8 vols, price 42s., THEOLOGIA MORALIS et DOGMATIC A reverendi et eruditissimi, domini Petri Deus, in Universitate Lovan S. Theological, Licentiate Ecclesiae Metropol. S. Rumoldi Mecklin. Can. Grad. et Archiprese, necnon Seminaiii Archiep. Pra* sidis, etc. Editio Nova et Absolutissima quippe cui nunc primum accedunt epitome ex operibus Benedicti XIV. necnon et yarire summorum pontificum pra'sertim vero ejusdum pontificis constitutiones literae encyclicce, etc.— Dublinii: ex typ. Richardi Coyne, Typog. et Bibliopol. R. C. Coll. Maynooth. Sold by Geo. Gowi'e and Co., 31, Poulty, London. BRC) CKP: D0N'S ROAD BOOK. Now ready, in 8vo., price 24s., strongly bound in cloth, rfl^ HE ROAD ROOK from LONDON to NAPLES. By W. JL BROCKEDON, Esq., F. R. S. Illustrated with twenty- five highly finished Engravings, by W. and E. Finden. The traveller to Naples will find in this volume all the necessary information for his journey, by Paris, Lyons, Turin, Genoa, Pisa, Florence, and Rome, with views of the striking objects and beautiful scenes on his route, and five useful maps. %* A few proofs, imperial 8vo., 31s. 6d.; India proofs, 42s.; Proofs before letters, 4to., 63s. Subscribers to the work in parts have now the opportunity of completing their sets. " Do you wish to visit Italy ? By all means possess yourself of Mr. Brockedon's book— it will direct and guide you throughout your journey to all that is most interesting."— Sunday Times. John Murray, Albemarle- street j gold also by C, Tilt, Fleet- street,. H In 3 vols. fcap. Svo. price 18s. in cloth, I S T O R Y of the G E R M A N 1 C EMPIRE. Bv S. A. DUNHAM, Esq. Forming a portion of the CABINET CYCLOP. ICDIA ( Historical Series), edited by Dr. Lardner. Complete Works published in the CABINET of HISTORY. SCOTLAND. By Sir W: Scott. 2 vols. 12s. ITALIAN REPUBLICS. By J. C. L. de Sismondi. 1 vol. 6i. NETHERLANDS. By T. C. Grattan. 1 vol. 6s. OUTLIVES of HISTORY. Bv ThomasKeightley. 1 vol. 6s. FRANCE. Bv E. E. Crowe, 3 vols. ISs. * UNITED STATES of AMERICA. 2 vols. 12s. POLAND. ByS. A. Dunham. 1 vol. 6s. CHRONOLOGY of HISTORY. By Sir H. Nicholas. 1 vol. 6s. THE CHURCH. Bv the Rev. H. Stebbing. 2 vols. 12s. SPAIN and PORTUGAL. Bv S. A. Dunham. 5 vols. 30s. EUROPE DURING the MIIiDLK AGES. By S. A. Dunham. 4 vols. 2! j. SWITZERLAND. ! vol. fis. FALL of the ROMAN EMPIRE. By Sismondi. 2 vols. 12s. London : Longman and" Co.; and John Taylor. In 1 vol. Svo., price lis. cloth boards, THE SATIRES of JUVENAL and PERSIl'S, from the Texts of Ruperti and Oriellius • with English Notes, partly conunled from va- rious editions and translations, and partly original. By CHARLES WILLIAM STOCKER, D. D., Vice- Principal of St. Alban Hall; late Fellow of St. John's College, Oxford ; and Principal of Elizabeth College, Guernsey. London: printed for Longman and Co.; T. Cadell; E. Williams; Baldwin and Co.; J. Booker; Hamilton and Co.; Whittaker and Co.; J. Souter; Simp- kin and Co.; J. H. Parker, Oxford. T POPULAR WORKS BY DISTINGUISHED AUTHORS. CAPTAIN MARRYAT'S NEW WORK. Now ready, in 3 vols., post Svo., HE PACHA OF MANY TALES. By the Author of " Peter Simple" and " Jacob- Faithful." New Work by the Author of " The Collegians." In 3 vols, post 8vo., MY NEIGHBOURHOOD. Ry the Author of the " The Collegians." III. The Hon. Mrs. Norton's Novel. In 3 vols, post 8vo., THE WIFE. By the Hon. Mrs. Norton. IN7. New Work by the Author of " Cecil Hyde." In 3 vols, post 8vo., HARRY C A L V E R L E Y. By the Author of " Cecil Hyde." The Countess of Blessington's New Work. In 3 vols, post 8vo., THE TWO FRIENDS. By the Countess of Blessington. VI. New Novel edited by the Author of Granby. In 3 vols, post Svo., Second Edition, ANNE GREY. Edited by the Author of Granby. Saunders and Otley, Conduit- street, Hanover- square. SALE BY AUCTION. Valuable Freehold Estates, South Weston and Wheaifield, near Tetsworth, in the countv of Oxford.— Ry Mr. R. HOWLAND, on TUESDAY, June 23, at Two, in Two Lots, at the Royal Oak Inn, Tetsworth, by order of the Devisees in Trust of the late Robert Stone, Esq., TWO excellent FREEHOLD ESTATES at South Weston and Wheatfield aforesaid, consistingof a capital brick and tiled Farm- house, Yard, Barns, Stables, Sheds, Orchard, Garden, and Cottage, old Enclosures, and open Field Land, containing by admeasurement 93a. 2r. 29p. The whole let to Mr. Wm. Hester at the yearly rent of 1301. The Estate is Freehold, in a fine sporting country abounding with game, adjoining the Sherborne and Adwell pre- serves. The Land is in a high state of cultivation, and the Premises are in ex- cellent repair. Mr. William Hester is a most respectable and responsible tenant, and has occupied the Farm for 35 years.— To view, apply to Mr. W. Hester, the tenant, at South Weston, of whom printed particulars may be had ; also at the principal Inns in the neighbourhood and place of sale; and further particulars known of Messrs. Burgoynes and Thrupp, Solicitors, 160, Oxford- street, west comer of Stratford place, London ; orthe Auctioneer, Thame, Oxon. G EN ERAL A VE11A GE PRICES OF CORN, For the Week ending June 13. Per Imperial Qr. Wheat .. 40s Id ( Rve 30s Od Barley ... 29s 6t! Beans.... 39s 9d Oats .... 24s 2d j Pease .... 36s 7d Duty on Foreign .. j^ heat .. 47.^ Average of last Six Weeks. Wheat.. Ms 8H Barley... 30s 9d Oats 23s lOd Oats.... 12s 3d Rve .... 22s 9d Rve 31s Beans 38s Pease.... 36s Beans.... 12s Pease.... 15s STOCKS. Bank Stock India Stock 3 per cent. Consols 3 per cent. Re. l 31 per cent. 1818 3} per cent. Reduced New 3} per cent Bank Long Annuities India Bonds Exchequer Bills Consols for Account Mon. Tu. Wed. ' l'hur. Fri'iay 216 215} 215} 216 216 — 261 — 261 — 9l| 91j 91 90f 90! 99{ — 99j 99 99! 998 99- 3 991 98| 100J 100} — — 16j 16^ 16- J 163 16f 9 p 10 p 11 p 9 p 8 28 p 28 p 30 p 31 p 30 p 915 92J 91| 915 91j Sat. 216 91 SSJ 16J 10 31 91j BIRTHS. On the 11th inst., at Calne, Wilts, the lady of the Rev. Bolton Bramler, of a son— On the Htll inst., at Faringdon, Berks, the lady of Wm. Bennett, Esq., of a son— On the 17th inst., in John- street, Bedford- row, the lady of Charles Gore, Esq., of a daughter— On the 15th inst., the lady of Frederick Crowder, Esq., of Chelsham Lodge, Surrey, of a son— On the 15th inst., in Russell- square, the wife of Edmund 11. Daniel!, Esq., of a daughter— On the 14th inst., in York- place, the lady of William Brown, Esq., of a son— On the 12th inst. at Downes, the lady of James Wentvvorth Bullcr, Esq., of a son and heir— On the 15th inst., in Chester- street, the lady of Henry Whittaker, Esq., of a son. " MARRIED. On Saturday, the 6th inst., at Woburn, Bedfordshire, by the Rev. Henry Hut- ton, M. A., Mr". John Cochran, of the Strand, London, to Elizabeth, sixth daughter of Mr. George Hall, of Wolmrn. At Drosford, Hants, on the 16th inst., Capt. Charles Parker, R. N., son of the late Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, to Kate, widow of the late Rev. Hely Hutchinson Smith, and third daughter of the late John Williams, Esq., of Elm- grove, South- sea— At St. George's, Bloomsbury, C. B. George, Esq., to Eliza Iyoob, only surviving daughter of George Giles, Esq., of Enfield, Middlesex— On the 16th inst., at Lanfaes, Anglesea, Charles Longman, Esq., of Nash Mill, Herts, and second son of T. N. Longman, Esq., of Mount- grove, Hailipstead, Middlesex, to Anna Maria Snrmon Hampton, daughter of J. H. Hampton Lewis, Esq., of Henllys— On the 18th illst., Robert VV. Von Glehn, Esq., to Agnes, only daughter of the late T. Duncan, Esq., and of Mrs. Reierson, of Upper Harley- street— On the 16th inst., at Trinity Church, St. Marvlebone, Charles, the eldest son of Charles Littleilale, Esq., of Portland- place, to Emily, theeldest daughterof Charles — uu lue nut i list., hi nnsi'uiiiu, oiiiicj, i u <- ..'.. - r i Mackenzie— At Richmond, Surrey, on the 16th inst., Henry Brown, Esq., erf the Bombay Civil Service, to Eliza Ann, youngest daughter of the late Sir Harry Verelst Darrell, Bart.— On the 16tll inst., at St. George's, Hanover- square, Capt. James Campbell, 87th F'isileers, to Catherine, daughter of the late Edward Da- niel, Esq., of Ramsgate— On the lath inst., at Burghclere, Hants, the Rev. v\ il- liam Anneslev, M. A., third son of the Rev. Arthur Annesley, Rector of Clifford Chambers, Gloucestershire, to Laura Anne, eldest surviving daughter of the late Major- General Jones, of Foninon Castle, Glamorganshire. DIED. On the 1 and Rev. in the 7C... .— — , , .. , Laforey, Bart., K. C. B.— At Eltham, Kent, on the 13th inst., Mrs. Bell, of No. 3, Cleveland- row, St. James's, after many months of severe illness, to the great grief of her afflicted linsband and children— On the 14th inst., at her house in Saville- row, Margaret, widow of Timothy Brent, Esq.— On the 14th inst., after a short but severe illness, Anthony Merry, Esq., of Dedhain- honse, Essex— Oil the 14th inst.,. at Ipswich, in the 90th year of his age, John Cobbold, Esq., of Holywells, near that town— On the 14th inst., Cecil Tufton Phelp, Esq., Lieute- nant Royal Navy, second son of the late Colonel Phelp, of Coston, Leicestershire — fill the 25th ult., at Moor's Cottage, Dorset, Eliznbeth Mary, the amiable wife of the Rev. R. Ness, D. D., Rector of West Parley, and second daughter of the late Rev. John Derby, Vicar of Ellingham, Hants— On the 17th lust., at the Mansion- house, in his 16tll year, after a long illness, John, the youngest son of the Right Hon. the Lord Mayor of London— On the 16th inst., Mrs. Mary Crabtree, of St. Andrew's- place, Regent's- park— On the 12th inst., after a very short illness, at the house of Thomas Russell, Esq., Croydon, the Hon. George Anderson Pclham, aged 49, onlv brother of Lord Yarborough— On the » th inst., at Porto Bello, near Edinburgh, Miss Charlotte A. M. Ocliterlony, aped 22, grand- daughter of the late Sir David and sister to Sir Charles Ochterlony, Bart.— On the 10th illst., at his residence in I'arli- place, Regent's- park, John Eaines, Esq.— On the 14th inst., at Dartington Parsonage, Philis Jane, wife of J. N Spedding, Esq., of Mirehonse, Cumberland, and second daughter of the Rev. Archdeacon Fronde, aged 25— At an advanced age, on the 10th inst., at her residence, Guyers- house, Pickwick, Wilts, Susan, relict of the late Rev. Henry Brindley— On the 15th, aged 83, Edmund Griffith, Esq., for many years Magistrate at the Marylebone Police- office— At Torquay, on the ltitb inst., Catharine Elizabeth, only daughter of the late Robert Augustus Hyndman, of the colony of Dcineraia. LONDON : Printed by EDWARD SH ACKELL, Printer, of No. 14, Amwell- street, Pentonville, in the County of Middlesex ; and of No 40 Fleet- street, in the City of London • and published by the said EDWARD SHACKELL, at his Printing- office No. 40 Fleet- street, aforesaid, at which last place alone, commamcatwas for the Editw ( post- paid) are received..
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