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

02/08/1835

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Volume Number: XV    Issue Number: 764
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John Bull "For God, the King, and the People!"

Date of Article: 02/08/1835
Printer / Publisher:  
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Volume Number: XV    Issue Number: 764
No Pages: 8
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JOHN BULL " FOR GOD, THE KING, AND THE PEOPLE!' VOL. XV.— No. 764. SUNDAY, AUGUST 2, 1835. Price Id. THEATRE ROYAL, DRURY LANE. No Advance of Prices.— Signor BERETTON1 has the honour of announcing, that he will take a BENEFIT at this Theatre, and in consequence of the great attraction of - the performances of last Monday evening, they will he repeated on this occasion, • when thefollowmg popular performers will appear: Madlles. Grisi, Varin/ Castelli, Chavignv, Adele, Clara: Sienors Rubini, Tamburini, Tvanoff, Lablache, Galli, Salahert, De Angeli, and Mons. Periot.— TO- MORROW, Aug. 3, will be per- formed, Rossini's Opera Buffa, compressed into One Act, of IL BARBIERE DE S1VIGLTA. Pxincipal characters by Madlle. Grisi, Signor. s Rubini, Tamburini, Galli, Salabert, De Angeli, and Madame Castelli. After which, the principal Scene from Guecco's Opera Buffa, of PROVA D'UN OPERA SERIA. Principal characters by Madlle. Grisi, Pig. Ivanoff, Sig. Lablache, and Madame Castelli. To conclude with the popular Ballet of LA SYLPHIDE, as performed at the King's Theatre, in which Madlle. Varin and Mons. Perrot will dance a grand Pas de Deux, assisted by the whole Corps dti Ballet of the King's Theatre. THEATRE ROYAL, HAYMARKET.— To- morrow Evening, A CURE FOR THE HEART ACHE. Old Rapid, Mr. W. Farren; Young Rapid, Mr. Vining: Vortex, Mr. Strickland ; FrankOntland, Mr. Webster; Ellen Vortex, MissE. Phillips: Miss Vortex, Mrs. W. Clifford; Jessy Oatland, Miss Taylor. With THE SCHOLAR ; and THE MAID OF CROISSEY.— On Tues- day, She Would and She Would Not; with Uncle John ; and The Maid of Crois- fey.— On Wednesday, Every One has His Fault; with The Scholar; and The Maid of Croissey.— On Thursday, The Busy Body ; with The Maid of Croissey ; and The Scholar. ASTLEY'S ROYAL AMPHITHEATRE.— To- morrow, and during the week, the performances will commence with THE CAMP OF THE WILDERNESS. The new Scenes in the Circle will follow, and introduce four of Mr. Ducrow's highly- trained Steeds in the Minuet and Gavotte danced by them, and rode by Mr. Ducrow, Mr. Hillier, Miss E. Ducrow, and Miss Woolford. Mr. Adams will give his Pantomime Act of The Reaper. The Spanish Muleteer and his Horse of Pastime, by Mr. Hillier. The extraordinary Exercises of Hercules, or the Italian Iron Arm ; and a new Extravaganza, arranged by Mr. Ducrow, called The Savoyard Boys. After the Scenes in the Circle, M. FRANCONI will ap- pear on the Stage with his extraordinary HORSE BLANCHE, being positively the last six nitrhts of his engagement. The Entertainments will conclude with the Drama of TURPIN'S RIDE TO YORK.— On Saturday next, an Illumination will take place, in commemoration of the 100th night of Jerusalem, and last nights of the present Spectacle. tlKEN'S THEATRE.— Under the Sole Management of Mrs. Nisbett.— To morrow, Tuesday, and Wednesday, the performances will commence with a new Fairy Farcetta, called THE GUARDIAN SYLPH. Principal characters by Mr. John Reeve, Mr. Attwood, Mrs. Honey, and Miss Lee. After which, CATCHING AN HEIRESS. Principal characters by Messrs. T. Green, Selhy, Wyman, John Reeve, Collier, and Mrs. Nisbett. To be followed by the QUEEN'S JEWEL. Principal characters by Messrs. Elumer, T. Green, t '" ll> y, Mrs. Nisbett, and Miss Mordannt. To conclude with CUPID IN LON- DON. Principal characters by Messrs. John Reeve, T. Green, Attwood, M. Barnett, Wyman ; Mesdames Honey, Harrington, Maxwell, Young, J. Mordaunt. SADLER'S WELLS.— The unprecedented success which has attended the representation of the new Drama of The Seven Sisters, calls for the announcement of its repetition every evening until further notice.— To- morrow, and during the week, will be presented, THE SEVEN SISTERS; or, The Old Grey Man of Tottenham. Principal characters by Messrs. G. Almar, Campbell, Heslop, C. J. Smith, King, Manders, & c.; Mesdames Williams, Darian, Manders, & c. After which, THE RED ROVER; or, The Mutiny of the Dolphin. Characters by Messrs. Campbell, Heslop, Courtenay, Dunn, Man- ners; Mesdames Julian, James, & c. To conclude with an entirely new Farcical Burletta Extravaganza, called THE MONKEY LOVER; or, A New Way to Win a Wife. T17 HITE CONDUIT G A III) ENS.— Extraordinary Attraction, • V To- morrow Evening only.— The Proprietors have the honour to an- nounce, that, at the particular desire of an immense number of the visitors who attended the tremendously- crowded Gardens on Monday last, they will REPEAT tiie GRAND FETE given for the Benefit of the " Licensed Victuallers'Asylum," with additional novelties. The elegant TRANSPARENT PAGODA, which in its unfinished state excited such admiration, is now complete. The beautiful SCOTCH BALLET, which was received with such universal applause, will be performed. Superb FIRE- WORKS, FIRE BALLOONS, & c. & c.— Admission, Is.; Ladies and Children, 6d. FWIH E THAM ES T UNN EL, opposite the end of Old Gravel- lane, JL Wapping, but ontheRotherhithe side of the River, near the Church.— The works have been resumed.— Notice is hereby given, that the Public may VIEW the TUNNEL every day ( Sundays excepted), from Nine in the Morning until 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 the Green Man and Still, Oxford- street; 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, 1st August, ffi ADMISSION ONE SHILLING. MISS LINWOOD'S GALLERIES of PICTURES, in Leicester- square, are OPEN EVERY DAY, from Ten in the morning until dusk. B" RITISH INSTITUTION, Pall- mall.— The GALLERY, with a Selection of PICTURES by ANCIENT MASTERS, And 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. ELEPHANT HUNTING.— A PANORAMIC VIEW of the CAPTURE and TAMING of WILD ELEPHANTS in the Island of Ceylon, painted by WILLIAM DANIELL, R. A., will be EXHIBITED at the Room of the Society of Painters in Water Colours, in Pall- mall East, To- morrow ( Monday), and will continue open every da) from 9 in the morning till dusk.— Admittance, One Shilling; Descriptive Key and Pamphlet, One Shilling. M R. HAYNES BAYLY'S New Ballad, THE OLD KIRK YARD, is just published, By CHAPPELL, New Bond- street. CRAMER, ADDISON, and BEALE beg to announce the following New Musical Publications :— Nos. 13,14, and 15 of BEETHOVEN'S WORKS. Edited by J. Moscheles. CRAMER'S " STUDIO PER IL PIANOFORTE," a New and splendid Edi- tion, containing the new Exercises, performed by the Author at his last Concert. In 2 vols., 21s. each. " I PURITANI," Bellini's New Opera. The whole of the Vocal Music. Also, various arrangements of the same Opera, as single Pieces and Duets, for Piano- forte, Harp, < fcc. TEN NEW SONGS, and two Vocal Duets, by Thomas Moore, Esq., sold sepa- rately at 2s. each. Also, by the same Author, " Her last words at parting," a new Ballad, sung with the greatest success by J. Parry. TWO NEW SONGS, " When you and I were boys together." " Ye Mariners of England." By the Chevalier S. Neukomm, price 2s. 6d. each. TWO NEW WORKS, by CRAMER, " Laretraite Loraine," and " Souvenir de Torquay." Price 3s. each. VANOFF and " MARINO FALIERO."— Just published, two beautiful Russian Melodies, sung by Signor Ivanoff, and embellished with his Portrait, highly engraved on steel, 2s. 6d. The favourite Barcarole, " Or che in cielo," arranged as a Harp piece by N. C. Bochsa. Also all the Songs and l) uets in Donizetti's new and popular Opera, Marino Faliero ; the Airs from the • same, arranged as Solos and Duets for the Pianoforte by Edward Perry, as Solos for the Harp,' and as Duets for the Harp and Pianoforte, with ( ad lib.) accompani- ments for Flute and Violoncello. All the Music in the musical Farce, I and My Double, sung by Miss Horton and Miss Novello. In the press, the Music in Halevy's new Opera La Juive, for Voice and Pianoforte, and as Rondos by Herz, as Quadrilles by Musard.— MORI and LAVENU'S New Musical Subscription Library, 28, New Bond- street. FERDINAND DIMECK, of Malta, is arrived in London with an assortment of his SCL'LPTL'RE, for sale; but as he cannot stay long in this capital, he has been advised to DISPOSE OF IT by AUCTION, which will be done by Mr. STANLEY, and the assortment may be seen in a few days, at his Rooms, No. 21, Old Bond- street. This Sculpture in Malta Stone comprises Vases in every form and Size, from the Antique ; Figures, & c. & c. DAVIES'S CANDLES, 5d. per lb.; Moulds, 5| d.; Soap, 4* d.. extra fine Moulds, with wax wicks, 6| d.; superior Transparent Sperm and Composition, with the improved plaited wicks, 2s. Id. ; tine Wax, Is. 6d.; genuine Wax, 2s. Id.; Yellow Soap, 42s., 46s., 52s., and 56s. per 1121bs. ; Mot- tled 52s., 58s., and 62s.; Windsor and Palm 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. COLOSSEUM.— OPEN EVERY EVENING.— The Amuse- ments of this splendid Establishment do not depend upon the Weather. — Performances of Mr. W. H. Williams,- Mr. Thompson ( Exhibitions from the Antique), Mr. Lee, Miss Taylor, Miss Rosina Collins ( the Infant. Violinist), and first appearance of the celebrated M. WERNER. The performance of this extra- ordinary person is unique in its'kind, consisting of what may be termed THE MOUTH ORCHESTRA, and miscellaneous vocal performance of animals, called the Zoological Concert. To morrow, and every evening during the week, Brilliantly Illuminated— Salon des Nations— Indian City and Indian Supper Room, with Waterfalls— Banquetting Room of Mirrors, supported by chrystal columns, and lined with looking- glass, opening into Salons de Danse— Illu- minated Terraces, on which will take place, Exhibitions from the Antique— Philosophical Recreations— Glass Harmonica— Fairy Dreams— Gastroloque— Splendid Display of Hydraulics— Philosophical Pyrotechnics— Glittering Halls of the Water Queen.— Doors open at Nine. Admission, 3s. 6d. COLOSSEUM.— The PANORAMA LONDON, new GRAND SCENERY, CONSERVATORIES, and the various other Exhi- bitions of this magnificent Establishment, OPEN to . he Public, as usual, from 10 in the morning till 6 in the evening.— Admission to^ the whole, 2s.; to each separate part, Is.. N. B. The Daily Exhibitions aTe ENTIRELY 1) 1 S ! iNCT from the Evening. ACU RACY, with a Title for Orders, is WANTED. Salary a secondary consideration. The Advertiser would have no objection to assist an elderly Clergyman, and, if required, educate his Sons for the University or otherwise. His testimonials will show him to be well qualified for such a si- tuation.— Address, post paid, to A. W., No. 33, Fleet- street, London. PREPARATION for the UNIVERSITIES, dc.— A CLERGY- MAN, for many years accustomed to prepare Pupils for the Universities, & c., wishes to add another to the four or five now with him. Any letters, ad- dressed to the Rev. D. D., Mr. Straker's, Theological Bookseller, 443, West Strand, London, will reach him in the country. GOVERNESS.— A LADY, who has resided seven years in a highly respectable Clergyman's family, is desirous of a re engagement. She has been on the Continent, and instructs in music, French, dancing, writing, arithmetic, the rudiments of Italian and drawing, and has also paid particular attention to the more useful and necessary branches of education.— Address, post paid, F. Y., General Post- office, 6, Co nn an gh t- 1 er r ace, Hyde - park. NEW STEAM VESSEL to ABERDEEN.— The ABERDEEN and LONDON SHIPPING COMPANY beg to intimate that their new, splendid, and powerful Steam Ship, the CITY of ABERDEEN, will sail from Miller's Wharf, Lower East Smithfield, on Saturday, August 8, at 12 o'Clock at Noon, with passengers, goods, horses, carriages, & c. for Aberdeen and all the North of Scotland. Shippers of goods will please to address their packages " per Steam from Miller's Wharf." For further particulars, apply to Mr. Underwood, 56, Haymarket; or to William Gordon, at the Wharf. Gentlemen desirous of being at their shooting quarters in Aberdeen, Kincardine, Banff, Moray, or Inver- ness Shires, on the 12th of August, will find the City of Aberdeen, on the 8th, the best and surest conveyance. fA ROUSE and PTARMIGAN SHOOTING.— The TOMAN- ^ Ol" TOUL SHOOTING is to be LET for the approaching season, in conse- quence of the proprietor going abroad. It is of great extent, and well known to afford excellent sport. It is a Nobleman's own reserve, and has not hitherto been let. Six guns may be put upon it. There are two Inns upon the grounds, that at the village of Tomantoul is a very good one.— Applications may be made to Mr. M'Crae, 22, Fludyer street, Westminster. "¥¥ 71LTON CRESCENT, Belgrave- square.-^ To be LET on V V LEASE, an excellent FAMILY RESIDENCE, in complete repair; com- prising six bed chambers, a boudoir, two elegant drawing rooms, dining room, library, gentleman's room, with hot and cold baths, and capital basement, re- plete with every convenience.— For terms, and cards to view, apply to Messrs. Wilkinson, Upholsterers and Auctioneers, Ludgate- hill. ' T" HE 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 penfiit 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. T [ O URN AY CARPETS.— This beautiful manufacture can be supplied to any dimensions or design, by LAPWORTH and RILEY, Agents, and Carpet Manufacturers to the King and H. R. 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. TO the NOBILITY and GENTRY.— For SALE ( To- morrow, Monday, and following days), the whole of the remaining STOCK of SUMMER SILKS, at 21^ d. per yard ; Chalis, French Shawls, Swiss and Town- printed Muslins and Cambric Dresses, Blonds, Ribbons, Gloves, & c. & c., forming one of the best selections in London, at a further REDUCTION of 20 per Cent, ( for one week only), at the prices they are now marked, making a reduction of one- half from the original cost, by the Proprietors of the London Silk Establish- ment, 137, Oxford- street.— N. B. A few Boxes of real grass- bleached Irish Linens, Table Linens, and Sheetings, to be sold to Hotel- keepers, or other large pur- chasers, at prices merely nominal, in consequence of being alittle soiled. ROILED STOCK of LINENDRAPERY, < fec., SELLING OFF, at C. V. SMITH'S, 120, Tottenham Court- road, and 32 and 33, Grafton- street, Fitzroy- square.— The alterations now proceeding, necessary to remedy the incon- venience so generally experienced from the crowded state of, the shop, by connect- ing the two adjoining houses, having soiled and otherwise injured the STOCK, the whole is now SELLING at a very GREAT REDUCTION, to effect its immediate sale, and make room for an entire new Stock, with which the enlarged premises will be opened. Especial attention is directed to several large lots of soiled Irish Linens, Sheetings, Huckabacks, Table Linens, and Diapers ; between 800 and 900 Town- printed Muslins, all this year's patterns ; a quantity of Silks and Shawls, scarcely injured ; and likewise a large lot of soiled Hosiery and Rib- bons.— 1202jrottenham^^ FULLER'S FREEZING MACHINE, by which four 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, better, & c., and Freezing Powders of match- less quality.— Fuller's Spare Bed Airer. This vessel is constructed upon philoso- phical principles, and will retain its heat for sixty hours with once filling. The above articles of scientific discovery may be seen only at the Manufactory, Jermyn- street, six doors from St. James's- street, London. BURGESS'S NEW SAUCE for general purposes having gained such great approbation, and the demand for it continuing to increase, JOHN BURGESS and SON beg most respectfully to offer thus their best acknow- ledgments to the Public for their liberal patronage of the same; its utility and great convenience ia all climates have recommended it to the most distinguished foreign connexions, who have all spoken highly in its recommendation. 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 pork with their 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 ANCHOVIES 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.) AROMATIC SPIRIT of VINEGAR.— This agreeable perfumed liquor ( the original invention of Mr. Henry) Which is of well- known effi cacy in relieving faintness and headache, and in counteracting the effects of over- heated or close air, continues to be prepared, in the greatest perfection, by Messrs. Thos. and Wm. Henry, Manufacturing Chemists, Manchester. It is sold in Lon- don, wholesale and retail, by Messrs. Bayley, Blew, and Chapman, Perfumers, Cockspur street ; and retail, price 2s. 9d., by one or more agent in every principal town; but it cannot be genuine, unless the names of the above preparers are en- graved on the Government Stamp, which is fixed . over the cork of each bottle. Proper Sponge Boxes are sold by Bayley, Blew, and Chapman, asjisijal.— As above, may also be had, authenticated by a similar Stamp, HENRY'S CALCINED MAG- NESIA, in bottles at 2s. 9d., or with glass stoppers at 4s. 6d. C* IDER, ALE, STOUT, & c.— YV. G. FIELD and Co. beg to acquaint their friends and the public, that their genuine CIDER and PERRY, Burton, Edinburgh, and Prestonpans Ales, Pale ile as prepared for India, Dorchester Beer, and London and Dublin Brown Stout, are $ n fine order for use, and, as well as their FOREIGN WINES and SPIRITS, ofa very superior class. N. B. London and Dublin Brown Stout, Burton Ale, and Pale Ale as pre- pared for India, in casks of 18 gallons.— 22, Henrietta- stieet, Covent- garden. CHURCH OF ENGLAND MAGAZINE. The AUGUST Number, price 2s. 6d., of THE BRITISH MAGAZINE, and Monthly Register of Reli- gious and Ecclesiastical Information, & c., contains, among numerous Original Papers:— Dens' Theology— Church Matters— Wiclrham Church, Kent,( with Engravings) — The Dark Ages— The Rabbinical Writers.— Correspondence: Antiquities— Sacred Poetry.— Reviews of New Books— Miscellanea— Documents relating to the Church and Poor— Ecclesiastical Intelligence— University News— Ordinations— Preferments— Events of the past Month, and the usual Variety of Information interesting to the Church and Universities. Printed for J. G. and F. Rivington, St. Paul's Church- yard, and Waterloo- place, Pall- mall; J. Turrill, 250, and T. Clerc Smith, 287, Regent- street. BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH M AG AZ IN E. No. CCXXXVIII., for AUGUST. Contents:— I. Anglimania— II. Alison's History of Europe during the French Revolution— ni. Translations from the Greek Anthology. By William Hay— IV. The Sketcher. No. 12.— V. Foreign Policy— VI. The Lansbys of Lansby Hall— VII. The Rural Muse. Poems by John Clare— VIII. To the River Tweed — IX. Church Robbery— X. Song for the Opening of the Goldsmiths' Hall, July 16th, 1935— XI. Willis's Poems— XII. The Doctor. First Dose. William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh ; and T. Cadell, Strand, London. FRASER'S MAGAZINE, No. LXVI1I., for AUGUST, 1835, price 2s. 6d., contains: Coleridge's Table Talk— Bombardinio on Manners, Fashion, Foreign Travel- ling, and Things in General— Gallery of Literary Characters, No. LXIII. Henry O'Brien— Grahame on Canals— The Barbarian Pjye— The Dissenters and the Uni- versities— A Series of Modern Latin Poets. ( From the Prout Papers, No. XV. Jerome Vida's Silkworm— Cobbett— The Greek Pastoral Poets. Theocritus— The National Controversy. I. Its Subject- Matter. II. The Parties to the Con- troversy. IH. The Policy of each Party. James Fraser, 215, Regent- street, London. THE DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE, No. XXXII., for AUGUST, price 2s. 6d., contains : The Irish Church Abolition Bill— A Tale of Ten Years Ago— My Life. By the Author of " Stories of Waterloo," & e.— The Avenged Bride— Spiritual Despo- tism— Bores of My Acquaintance. No. III.— Letter from an Old Orangeman— The Rebellion of Silken Thomas concluded— Sonnet— Sylvse. No. II.— The Betrayed One— Passages from the Diary of Terence O'Ruark, A. M.. No. VI.— Christianity and its Evidences— Obituary : Bishop of Ferns; Mr. Meade, F. T. C. D- Dublin: printed for William Curry, Jun., and Co.; Simpkin, Marshall, and Co., and Roake and Varty, London. Sold by all Booksellers in the Ignited King- dom; of whom may be'had Vols. 1 to 5,16s. each cloth lettered, or any singles. Number at 2s. 6d. fHlHE GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE for AUGUST," Ji_ contains, among other articles, the following :— Cooke's Memoir of Lord Bolingbroke.— New Record Commission, No. II. Close Rolls of King John — Rare and unpublished Coins of Roman Emperors, & c. struck in Greek Cities ( with a Plate).— British Relations with China.— Record Commission in France. — Plan of the Cathedral of Old Sarum ( with a Plate).— Memorials of Literary Characters, No. VII. Letters of Lord Bolingbroke ; Dr. Stukeley's Journal; Family of Dr. Donne.— Ancient Book of Medical Recipes, & c. & c.— With Review of New Publications ; Literary, Scientific, Architectural, and Antiquarian Intel- ligence.— Obituary, with memoirs of the Earls of Courtpwn and Longford ; W. Smith, Esq., M. P.; W. Cobbett, M. P.; Charles Mathews ; E. Troughton, F. R. S. & c. & c. The First, Second, and Third Volumes of the New Series of the Gentleman's Magazine, price 16s. boards. W. Pickering, Chancery Lane. On the first of Aucust was published, price Is. THE HORTICULTURAL REGISTER. Edited by JAMES MAIN, A. L. S. Contents :— On the Cultivation of the Cauliflower— On Covering Fruit Trees— On the Mildew of Plants— On the Germination of Seeds— On Landscape Garden- ing— Reviews— Extracts from Botanical Publications— Miscellaneous Intelligence — Remarks on Vegetable Phenomena— Operations for the Month, & c. < fcc. London : Orr and Smith, Paternoster- row. MRS. BUTLER ( FANNY KEMBLE)— WASHINGTON IRVING— ROSCOE— MACKINTOSH.— The New Number of the NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW for July, just received, con- tains :— Strictures on Mrs. Butler's Journal— Washington Irving's Tour to the Prairies— Dunlap's History of American Art— Life and Character of William Roscoe— Machiavelli— American Almanack— Memoirs of Casanova— Mrs. Child on Slavery— Audubon— Webster's Speeches— Note on Sir James Mackintosh, & c. & c. Price six shillings sewed. Richard James Kennett, No. 14 York- street, Covent Garden ( removed from 59, Great Queen- street) ; of whom may be had, lately published, The MINISTRY for the POOR, a Discourse before the Benevolent Fraternity of Churches, by William Ellery Channing, price Is. 6d. sewed. TJust published, price 6s., the Twenty- ninth Number of HE LAW MAGAZINE, or QUARTERLY REVIEW of JURISPRUDENCE. Contents:— Military Law— The American Penitentiaries— Life of Sir Vicary Gibbs— Mercantile Law, No. XIV.— Merchant Shipping— Limitations to Next of Kin— Pleading and Proof of Consideration in Actions on Bills and Notes— Whether Fixtures can be deemed Goods and Chattels in the Reputed Ownership of a Bankrupt— Digest of Cases— Abstract of the Public General Statutes— Events of the Quarter— List of New Publications. London: Saunders and Benning, Law Booksellers, 43, Fleet- street. BRITISH ASSOCIATION at DUBLIN.— The General Instruc- tions of the Committee, with further particulars for the use of Members about to attend the Meeting, are given in THE ATHENAEUM of THIS DAY, Saturday, August 1. O PRINTERS, BOOKBINDERS, and ' others.— WOOD and SHARYVOODS, 16, Chiswell- street, London, inform the Trade that their Catalogue ( No. X.) is now ready, and may be had gratis, upon application, or. will be forwarded into the country through any London house, it contains an unusual assortment of Materials used in the above Trades, including two Printing Machines, a Steam Engine and Boiler, Columbian, Atlas, Albion, Stanhope, Li- thographic, and other Iron Presses, upwards of 20 Wood Printing Presses, Athol and other Standing Presses, Copperplate Presses, a complete Stereotype Foundry, upwards of 250 Founts of second- hand Type, mostly in excellent condition, and a very large assortment of Bookbinders' Tools.— W. and S. have recently purchased the celebrated Letter Foundry of the late Mr. G. C. Austin, of 10, Worship- street, which is acknowledged by the first printers in the kingdom to be unrivalled. XTRACT of a Letter from Naples, May 6.—" Captain Kran- shair, of the 4th Regiment of the Line, in the service of his Imperial Ma- jesty the Emperor of Austria, aged 44 ) ears, has been bald ever since the age of 18. He was strongly recommended to try Rowland's Macassar Oil by a gentle- man who had already experienced its good effects:— In less than two months his hair grew on the bald parts, which is now very thick. The Captain is highly pleased, and has spread its fame."— ROWLAND'S MACASSAR OIL prevents hair from falling off or turning grey; changes grey hair to its original colour; frees it from scurf, and makes it beautifully soft and curly. NOTICE— The low- est price is 3s. 6d.; the next 7s., 10s. 6d., and 21s. per bottle: Ask for ROW- LAND'S MACASSAR OIL, and observe their Name and Address on the wrapper in lace- work, " A. ROWLAND & SON, 20, Hatton- garden," Countersigned, " ALEX. ROWLAND." Impostors call their trash the genuine, and omit the (&) in the signature— offer- it for sale under the lure of being cheap. SYLUM FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC LIFE OFFICE, 70, Cornhill, and 5, Waterloo- place, London.— Established in 1824. VERY LOW RATES. Two- thirds only of the premium required to be paid annually on Life Policies, the balances being deducted with interest at 4 per cent, from the sum assured, which leaves the advance less than is usually demanded on term assurances. ASCENDING AND DESCENDING SCALES OF PREMIUM. These were originated by the Asylum Company. The even rates are lower than ever before published. PREGNANCY, INFIRM HEALTH, AND OLD AGE. Females need not appear; the rates for diseases are moderate, and Policies are granted to persons of advanced age. GENERAL CLASSES TO ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD. Distinct classifications of places, according to salubrity of climate, have been arranged at general rates of premium. A specific price for any particular place, or for a single voyage, may be ob- tained bv application at either of the Company's Houses, where insurances may be effected without delay. ___ _ TO EQUITABLE POLICY HOLDERS. The favoured Members of the Equitable Society who live until January, 1810, will have further large additions to their Policies.— The representatives of those who die previously, would merely obtain a return for the current years of the Decennial period.— To facilitate the operations of the fortunate holders, the Asylum will grant Assurances for the whole of life, for a smaller advance of money than is necessary for a term of Ave years in the generality of offices. v ' 1 G. FARREN, Esq., Resident Director, 296 JOHN BULL. September 13. TUESDAY'S GAZETTE. DECLARATION OF INSOLVENCY. C. TAYLOR, and J. H. RUSSELL, New Boud- street., taiters. BANKRUPTCIES ENLARGED. G. DOWNES, Tickhill, dealer, from July 17, to Ang. 14— H. GOODE, Birmingham, grocer, from July 24 to Sept. 11. BANKRUPTCIES SUPERSEDE ® * T. JONES, Birmingham, collar maker—' S. JACOBS, Manchester, merchant. BANKRUPTS. T. R. WILLIAMS, L. S. COXE, and G. CHAMBERS, Lamb's- build- ings, Bunhill- row, manufacturers of japanned and silk wares. Atts. Coe and Co., Pancras- lane, Bueklersbury— G. T. BROWN, Mark- lane, sack manufac- turer. Alt. Stafford, Buckingham- street, Strand— G. TUNSTALL, Worcester, hop merchant. Atts. Michael, Bed Lion- square ; Amos, Evesham— T. ASH, Birmingham, druggist. Atts. Newton, South- square, Gray's Inn, London ; Harrison, Birmingham— S. WINCHURS, Birmingham, brass- founder. Atts. Ivimey, Chancery- lane; Wright, Birmingham— W. H. S. HARTLEY, Upper Gloucester- place," Regent's Park, music- seller. Atts. Lee, Winchester; Sheppard, Lower Grosvenor- street, Grosvenor square. FRIDAY'S GAZETTE. Whitehall, July 30,1835. — The King has been pleased to grant unto the Right Hon. Charles Tennyson, of Bayons Manor and of Usselby House, in the county of Lincoln, one of his Majesty's most Honourable Privy Council, and Representative in Parliament for the Metropolitan borough of Lambeth, his Royal licence and authority, that he and his is? ue may, in pursuance of a direction contained in a codicil to the last will and testament of his late father, George Tennyson, of Bayons Manor and L'sselby House aforesaid, Esq., in order to commemorate his lineal descent from the ancient and Noble family of D'Eyncourt Barons D'Eyn- t » urt, and his representation as coheirof the Earls of Scarsdale and Barens D'Eyn- court of Sutton, take and use the surname of D'Enycourt, in addition to and after that of Tennyson, and also bear the arms of D'Eyncourt, quarterly in the first quarter, with those of his own family; such arms being first duly exemplified according to the laws of arms, and recorded in the Herald's Office, otherwise his Majesty's said licence and permission to be void and of none effect: And also to command, tnat the said Royal concession and declaration be regis- tered into his Majesty's College of Arms. DECLABATIONS OF INSOLVENCY. R. RANKIN, Liverpool, joiner— P. CAMPBELL, Jerusalem Coffee- house, toaster mariner. BANKRUPTS. W. ELTON, Basinghall- street, dealer in woollen cloths. Att. Jacobs, Crosby- Square— J. E. C. BENTLEY, Great Newport- street, Lone- acre, dealer in pictures. Atts. Amory and Coles, Throgmorton- street— T. EMMETT, Holborn hill, pin maker. Att. Davidson, Bread- street— W. JONES, Wigmore- street, Marvlebone, carpenter. Atts. Hill and Randall, Welbeck- street, Cavendish- square — F. HIRCHFELD and G. WILKINSON, Windsor- terrace, City- road, wax chand- lers. Att. Smith, King's Arms- yard— J. ALLEN, Bermontlsey, brewer. Att. Rushbury, Carthusian- street, Charter- house- square— C. SELLEY, Cheltenham, innkeeper. Att. Sherriff, Lincoln's Inn- fields— C. STARLING, Knightwick, Worcestershire, miller. Atts. Gwinnell and Co., Worcester; Becke and Co., Essex street, Strand— R. W. GOODALL, Birmingham, florist. Atts. Adlington and Co., Bedford- row; Marsham, Birmingham— W. WRIGHT, Rougham, Norfolk, horse dealer. Atts. Sewell, S waff ham; Ling and Harrison, Blooms- bury- square— R. HAMMOND, Warwick, plumber. Atts. Sharpe and Co., Old Jewry; Haynes, Warwick. PARLIAMENTARY ANALYSIS. HOUSE OF LORDS. MONDAY. The report of the Committee on the Certiorari Bill was brought tip, and the third reading fixed for the 5th of August.— A great number of petitions for and against the Municipal Corporations Bill " were presented. Lord MELBOURNE, in reply to some observations of the Duke of Newcastle, said that he knew nothing of the establishment of a Jesuit College at Loughborough, beyond what had appeared in the newspaper.-. TUESDAY After the presentation of several petitions against the Municipal Corporations Bill, Lord STRANGFORD presented one from Coventry praying to be heard by Counsel against the Bill.— Lord MELBOURNE said that if it were sought to defeat the Bill by delay, this was the course to pursue. The motion led to a long conversation, the Earl of FALMOUTH, Lord STRANGFORD, the Earl of WINCHILSEA, Lord LYNDHURST, the Duke of WELLINGTON, and other Peers, strongly supporting the prayer of the petitions to this effect. It was eventu- ally agreed to that two Counsel be heard for all the Corporations. The Bill was then read a second time without opposition, and Counsel ordered to be heard on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. WEDNESDAY. Numerous petitions were presented against the Municipal Corpo- rations Bill.— The report of the Select Committee to inquire into the disturbances in Ireland was presented, after which their Lordships adjourned. THURSDAY. The second reading of the Roman Catholic Marriages ( Ireland) Bill was postponed till Tuesday. A great number of petitions were presented against the Municipal Corporations Bill.— Lord BROUGHAM denied that he was exposed to the charge of delaying the Bill because he had sanctioned the hearing of Counsel. It would save time. Counsel were then called to the bar, to be heard against the Cor- porations Bill on behalf of sundry Corporations. Sir C. Wetherell and Mr. Knight appeared. Sir C. Wetherell addressed their Lord- ships at great length, condemning the Bill as altogether democratic, Republican, and Radical in its principles. He proceeded till near ten o'clock, when he retired on account ofthe extreme heat; and he afterwards, through Lord Kenyon, begged the indulgence of their Lordships till the next day, as he was too exhausted to proceed.- The request was conceded. FRIDAY. Several petitions were presented against the Municipal Corporations . Bill. The several Bills on the table of the House were advanced a stage. Sir CHARLES WETHERELL concluded his address at the bar, against the Municipal Corporations Bill. Mr. KNIGHT followed on the same side, until half- past If o'clock, when the House adjourned, it being arranged that Counsel be further heard at one o'clock on Saturday. HOUSE OF COMMONS. MONDAY On the Order of the Day being moved for going into Committee on the Irish Church Bill, Mr. S. CRAWFORB moved, as an amendment, an address to his Majesty, praying him to take into consideration the distress in Mayo, which he withdrew after a short discussion.— Lord J. RUSSELL, in answer toa question from Major BEAUCLERK, said that it was most probable that his Majesty's Government would ground some measure on the subject of the inquiries now going on in Ireland on the introduction of poor laws into that ccKintrv. Mr. GOULBURN intimated thatit was not his intention to revive the discussions on the appropriation clauses in the Irish Church Bill, • which had been decided by the vote ofthe House. He andhis friends • would cornine themselves to a reeord of their opinions against the principle which had been admitted.— Lord STANLEY subsequently said that he should follow a similar course. On the House resolving itself into Committee, Lord MORPETH mentioned an alteration which he meant to propose in one of the clauses, which placed in the hands of the Comieissioners of Educa- tion the surplus of the reserved fund. It had beea inferred from this that disappointment, was likely to arise in certain districts from the delay that wocld occur in the application of any surplus. The alteration, therefore, they meant to propose was, that the Land Tax Commissioners should pay over this surplus to the Consolidated Fund, and that from and after April, 1836, the sum of 50,0001. should be payable from the Consolidated Fund to be applied to the educa- tion of all classes of his Majesty's subjects in Ireland. His Lordship further observed that the future system of ttationaledecation would he the same as that at present carried on by the established Board.— The consideration of the clauses up to the" 49th was then proceeded with, when the Chairiaan reported progress. TUESDAY. The amendments of tie Lords to the Merchant Seamen's Registra- tion Bill were agreed to-— Captain G. BERKELEY brought up the report of the Committee on the motion to admit ladies to hear the debates. The report was received with cheers, and ordered to be printed.— The Reuort of the Hull election Committee was brought up, and Colonel Thompson, the sitting Member, declared elected.— Lord JOHN RUSSELL, in answer to a question from the Marquess of Chandos, said that it was not unlikely that the Budget would be brought forward on Monday nest.— Mr. MAXWELL moved for leave to bring in a Bill for the better protection of the artisans of Great Britain and Ireland employed in weaving the hand- loom. After a discussion the motion was rejected on a division, by 129 against 41. — Mr. MACKINNON'S motion for a Select Committee to consolidate turnpike trusts, and to raise some other revenue for the roads than by toll, was withdrawn.— Mr. S. RICE obtained leave to bring in a Bill for the consolidation of the three offices of Paymasters of the Army, Navy, and Ordnance. , WEDNESDAY. Capt. BOLDERO inquired whether there was truth in the representa- tions tliat some British sailor* had been shot by order of Don Carlos ? — Lord PALMERSTON replied that the only information he had received was from the Commander of the Ringdove, which stated that some marines having straggled away had been taken ; that one had been shot in consequence of the order of Don Carlos respecting all foreigners in arms ; and that the others had been marohed into the countiy. These men had belonged to Commodore Henry's squadron, who assisted in the defence of Bilboa against Don Carlo's. A motion of Mr. FRESHFIELD, that Mr. Clipperton be discharged from Newgate, was carried on a division by 56 against 34. The House then went into Committee on the Church of Ireland Bill.— Clauses 58 to 100 were forthwith adopted without discussion. — Mr. SHAW objected to clause 101, as he could not consent to abolish ministers' money.— Mr. WALKER supported the clause, w- hereupon Mr. SHAW inquired whether the Hon. Member had entered himself a member of the Established Church; and thereupon some warm language was used, Dr. LUSHINGTON, Mr. HUME, die., taking part therein.— The Bill went through the Committee, Lord MORPETH afterwards moving that there be advanced 50,0001. from the Conso- lidated Fund to the Irish Church Commissioners, for the purpose of being used to promote general education.— Agreed to. The House then resolved into Committee on the Church of Ireland Act, 3 and 4 Wm. IV., c. 100, sec. 19, relating to the 1,000,0001. advanced for the relief of the Clergy of Ireland, and to regulate the remaining portion of the disbursement.— This proposition led to an extended discussion, in the course of which Mr. O'CONNELL stig- matised the Clergy of the Established Church of Ireland as men under the exclusive influence of pounds, shillings, and pence. Mr. SHAW denied that the religion to which he belonged ought to be designated as a religion of pounds, shillings, and pence. ( Cheers.) He did not think this Bill could affect the Protestant religion itself, but he must say that the Church Establishment of any State had to do with pounds, shillings, and pence. The established religion was that which was endowed ty the State. It was that religion which the Hon. and Learned Member for Dublin had sworn to maintain, although he now wished to subvert it. ( Cries of " Order, order.") Mr. O'CONNELL ( with great warmth)— I rise to order, Sir. That which the Hon. Member states is a false assertion. ( Loud cries of " Order, order," cheers, and general confusion.) Mr. SHAW— What I stated I am prepared to repeat. ( Great con- fusion, and cries of " Order, order.") Mr. O'CONNELL— The Right Hon. Gentleman has been guilty of falsehood. ( Continued confusion and excitement, and cries of " Order,"' and " Chair, chair.") He accuses me of baring done one thing and sworn another, and that, I repeat is false. ( Renewed cries of " Order, order," " Chair, chair," and confusion.) Mr. BERNAL— As long as I have had the honour of sitting in this Chair I have never witnessed such disorder, and I will not, I beg to assure Hon. Members, tolerate it any longer. Mr. SHAW— The Hon. and Learned Member for Dublin knows perfectly well that nothing he may say can affect my temper or that of any gentleman. ( Cheers, and c'ries'of " Order.") He knows full well the reasons why he dares to use such a term as that of falsehood to me. Here a scene of tumult and confusion ensued which it would be impossible to describe. A number of the Irish Members sitting near Mr. O'Connell rose simultaneously, and from the menacing attitudes they assumed, and the state of excitement under which thev laboured, we " fully expected that some serious result would have talcen place. One of them in particular, Mr. Ronayne, called out with great vehe- mence, both of voice and gesture, more than once, " ' Tis false, ' tis false!" Almost every Member in the House had risen from his seat, when Mr. BERNAL "( the Chairman) was at length compelled to demand immediate order: and was successful in this, from the determined manner in which he put it to theCommittee, that if Hon. Gentlemen would persist in numbers to break through the order of the House, he should have no other alternative than to leave the Chair, and break up the Committee, which he would do if order was not immediately restored. The discussion then proceeded without further interruption, and the motion was eventually agreed to. The Chairman then reported progress. The County Coroners' Bill and the Polls at Elections Bill severally passed through Committees without any material amendments, after which the House adjourned. THURSDAY. At the morning sitting, the Trinity ( North Leith) Harbour Bill was deferred till the next Session, it being opposed by the Government, to afford an opportunity to negotiate as to the return of money advanced by the Treasury for the construction of Leith Docks. The Ministers' opposition was supported by 55 to 22. The Cruelty to Animals Bill, the Public Institutions Bill, and the Public Walks Bill, were passed a stage, after some discussion. At the evening sitting Mr. Clipperton was called to the bar, repri- manded and discharged.— Mr. Keith was afterwards called to the bar, and taken into the custody of- the Sergeant- at- Arms ( Sir W. Gossett, who officiated for the first time). The report of the Committee on the Irish Church Bill, embodying certain resolutions, was brought up and agreed to. Lord F. EGERTON reported to the House from tha Yarmouth Com- mittee that a man named Prentice had refused to answer questions. He was ordered to attend the House on Friday. The ATTORNEY- GENERAL said that he had, with the sanction of the Government, prepared two charters, which he thought would satisfy the object of the House in a resolution to which they had come, and the gracious intentions of his Majesty. By the first charter the London University was established, not as a University, but as a College, under the name of" The London University College," with power to manage the attairs of the institution as they were now managed. By the second charter a Metropolitan University was established, with power of granting degrees to all who_ shall study | there, or at institutions similar to the London University College. Mr. HUME afterwards moved, in consequence of the evidence adduced before the Ipswich Election Committee, that More Keith be committed to the custody of the Sergeant at Arms, which, after an extended discussion, was agreed to. Mr. M. O'CONNELL moved for a Committee on General Darling's conduct, which was opposed by the Ministers, but after some dis- cussion, it was carried— the numbers being, for the motion, 57; against it, 49; majority, 8. FRIDAY. A conversation took place relative to Mr. Keith, who is in Newgate on the Speaker's warrant. The matter will be further discussed on Monday.— The case of Mr. Prentice, the witness who had declined to answer certain questions put to him before the Yarmouth Elec- tion Committee, occupied the House for some time. After he had been examined at the bar a division took place as to whether he shoxild answer the question. It was carried in the affirmative, by a majority of 119 against 49. Mr. Prentice was then called in, and, having again declined to give a reply to the inquiry, he was ordered into custody ofthe Serjeant at- Arms, on the motion of Lord JOHN RUSSELL. The Committee on the Irish Tithe Bill for the insertion of ad- ditional clauses was postponed till Monday.— A Select Committee to consider the York election was appointed on the motion of Lord JOHN RUSSELL.— The Bill relating to the revenues of the Established Church was read a third time. Mr. Sergeant PERRIN brought forward his motion for leave to bring in a Bill to provide for the better regulation of Corporations in Ireland. The Bill chiefly proposes to assimilate the law to the projected law for England, suggesting, however, a 51. household franchise as requisite in Ireland, in many instances, to secure a constituency. After a short discussion, the motion was agreed to. The Bill was afterwards brought in and read a first time. Lord MORPETH moved for leave to bring in a Bill for the prevention and speedy punishment of offences against the public peace in Ire- land, which was agreed to. The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER could not name a day when he would bring on the Budget, although pressed on the subject by Sir R. Peel. The Music and Dancing License Bill went through a Committee. The report of the Imprisonment for Debt Bill was agreed to, and the third reading fixed for Monday. The Stafford Disfranchisement Bill was postponed for a fortnight. Mr. Aid. WOOD obtained leave to bring in a Bill for the regulation of steam- boats on the Thames. LORD BYRON.— The admirers of our Noble Bard will not be a little surprised to hear that an original poem, from his Lordship's pen, of nearly 300 lines, appears in the August number of The New Monthly Magazine, and when we add that the subject of the said poem is " The Natural History of Love," we think we have said enough to raise the reader's curiositv to the highest pitch.— Another favourable periodical with us— The XJnited Service Journal— has also several very attractive articles in the new number, such as " The Death Ship," " Recollections of Rough Work," " Sketches of Malta," and a new paper illustrative of the Voyages of Captains i Franklin, Parry, and Beechey, called " PolarScenes?' 1 NAVAL AND MILITARY. WAR OFFICE, July 31.. 6th Regiment of Dragoon Guards— Troop Serg.- Major T. Manders to be Cornet, by pur., vice Dickson, prom.: Cornet T. Manners to be Adjutant, vice Brown, prom, in the 2d West India Regt. 10th Light Dragoon.-— Lieut. Sir J. G. Baird, Bart., to be Adjutant, vice Preston, who ret. 13th Foot— Lieut. H. Haveloek to be Adjutant, vice Brownrigg, cashiered; Lieut. W. R. Stretton. from the h.- p. Unat., to be Lieut., vice Haveloek, app. Adjutant. 33d— Second Lieut. W. G. C. Monins to be First Lieut., by pur., vice M. Ross, who ret. ; E. Battye, Gent., to be Second Lieut , by pur., vice Monins. 29th— Lieut. C. Humfrey to be Capt.. by Eur., vice Keosrh, who ret.; Ens. E. H. M. Kelly to be Lieut., by pur., vice - umfrey; J. M. Walter, Gent., to be Ens., by pur., vice Kelly. ' 3/ fh— Staff Assist.- Surg. J. W. Mocre to be Assist.- Sum., vice M'Donogh, who res. 51st— Hon. D. Erskine to he Ens., by pur., vice Hopwood, appointed to the Grenadier Guards. 80lh— Capt. P. Plunkett, from the h - p. Unattached, to be Capt., vice W. E. Page, who exch. 81st— Capt. J. Tbomp- on, from the h.- p. S9th Ft., to be Capt., vice G. de Rottenburg, who exeh. Rifle Brigade— Lieut. C. Du Pre Eger- ton to be Capt., by pur., vice Burges, who ret. ; Second Lieut. G. K. Carr to be First Lieut., by pur., vice Egertoll; W. Hale, Gent., to be Second Lieut., by pur., vice Carr. 98th Foot— Major J. Brown, from the h.- p. Unattached, to be Major, • ice J. G. Le Marchant, who exch. Staff— Major A. Campbell, from the b.- p. Unaft., to he Paymaster of a recruiting district, he having repaid the difference, • vice Coekburn, retired on h.- p. Memoranda— The promotion of Ens. Pratt to the Lieutenancy in the 36th Foot, to be dated 8th June, 1835, and not 24th July, 1835, as stated in the " Gazette" of that day. The Christian names of Mr. Hurford, appointed Veterinary Surgeon to the 16th Lancers, are Richard John Gedaliah. Commissions signed by Lords Lieutenant.— Town and County of Haverford- west— G. L. Phillip.-, Esq., to be Deputy Lieutenant. Roval South Gloucester Light Infantry— W. H. Lander, Gent, to'be Ensign. Winterbourne and Staple- ton Troop of the Gloucestershire Regiment of Yeomanry Cavalry— G. Cave, Gent, to be Lieutenant, vice Jones, resigned ; H. Vaughan, Gent., to be Cornet, vice Cave, promoted. West Essex Yeomanry Cavalry— R. W. H. Dare, jun., Gent., to be Cornet, vice Hamilton, resicned. NAVAL PROMOTIONS, APPOINTMENTS, & c. Lieutenants— W. Smith, to the Meteor, for service in the West Indies ; J. H. Weller, to the Coast Guard. Surgeon— H. J. Lacon, to the Russell. Assistant- Surgeons— J. M'Kittrick, of the Curacoa, to be Surgeon ; G. W. Prichett, to the Pigeon. Master's Assistant— F. W. B. Barker, to the Meteor. Mates— Fanshaw, of the Melville, and P. Rainer, to be Lieutenants. Lieut.- Col. Adye, of the Royal Artillery, has been appointed Di. rector of the Royal Laboratory at Woolwich ; the appointment of Major Dyneley to be Firemaster, at the same place, is vice Colonel Bingham", deceased. Sir Edward Blakeney, the Major- General Commanding in Ireland, has been appointed by the Lord Lieutenant as Master of the Royal Hospital, with the usual table allowance. Sir Richard Williams, Colonel Commandant of the Royal Marine Forces at Portsmouth, after many years of most creditable service, has been allowed to retire. SPAIN.— We learn from the seat of war in Spain, that the King has appointed Iturralde to be Commander- in- Chief of Navarre, in. lieu of Er& so, who has resigned, owing to the state of his health. The following letter, written by Iturralde to a friend, gives some particulars of an action which took place oil the 16tli. It is dated Muez, July 16:—" This morning, between the hours of eleven and twelve, we had an obstinate engagement with the enemy on the fields of Men - digorria. The strength of the Christines, commanded by Cordova and Orna, consisted of 16,000 infantry, 900 cavalry, besides artillery; whilst the whole of our force was_ not more than 6,000 infantry and 300 cavalry. The want of ammunition compelled us to abandon the positions we defended, but the loss of the enemy is very considerable. After retreating for about half an hour, we succeeded in giving ammunition to four of our battalions, who immediately formed them- selves in a position, and waited the approach of the enemy ; but the - Queenites, instead of advancing, marched in a contrary direction towards Puente and Mendigorria. We are now only two leagues distant from the enemy, and I feel certain we shall be obliged to insult them in order to induce them once more to attack us. At all events it will not be long ere we again meet. " FRANCISCO ITURRALDE." In the above action Moreno had a horse killed, and Cordova's horse was wounded. Don Carlos was in the thickest of the fight. The last accounts state the Carlists to have taken position at Zuniga. PORTUGAL.— Another change has taken place in the Cabinet; inasmuch as M. Da Sylva Carvalho lias been again appointed to the Finance Department and M. Freire to that ofthe Interior. The Duke of Palmella and the Marquess De Louie retain their places. Nothing had been decided upon respecting the auxiliary force for Spain, but it is said the Spanish Cabinet has expressed some disap- pointment in the delay of the arrangements. CAIRO, June 15.— Yesterday the deaths both here and at Bulak did not exceed 78, of which about 30 were caused by ordinary diseases. No new cases are mentioned. About 32,000 persons are said to have died, but above 60,000 are well known to have been destroyed by the plague. Seven medical men have died. Of the 40,000 still comprising the population of Alexandria previous to the departure of the fleet, court, and a large number of foreigners, 23,000 have died of the plague, 8,000 have recovered, so that only 9,000 persons have been exempted from the scourge. Next week Mehemet Ali will return to Alexandria. His first care will be to restore that depopulated city. Tuesday a ballot took place at the India House npon the following question:—" That a copy of all the proceedings of the Court of Di- rectors relating to the resignation of the Right Hon. Lord WILLIAM CAVENDISH BENTINCK of the office of Governor- General of India, and to the appointment of a successor to his Lordship, be laid before this Court." The ballot commenced at eleven o'clock, and was kept open until six. At seven, the scrutineers reported that they had examined the votes, and found that there were— For the motion 287 Against it 56 Majority 231 — Captain SHEPHERD, the presiding Director, declared the motion to have been carried in the affirmative, and the Court adjourned. Mr. Egerton, the actor, died at Chelsea on Thursday se'nnight, in his 64th year ; and Signor Paulo, the celebrated clown, after a pro- tracted illness, departed this life on Monday night last, in the 45th year of his age. Moncrieff, the dramatist, has been for some time past nearly blind, the consequence of a long debilitating illness. Some mischievous wag in this city, says the Salisbury Herald, has hoaxed our Devizes contemporary with a marvellous tale respecting a Mr. Gill, the mail- cart man between Warminster and Salisbury, who is represented as having married an Angel and a million of money. It is true, we hear, that the bride has some very distant expectations in reversion, but nothing like the enormous amount' above stated. On the evening of the 24th ult., a few minutes before 6 o'clock, a dreadful accident took place occasioned by the bursting of the boiler of the Earl Grey steamer, while she was lying at the steam boat quay, on her way from Dunooii to Glasgow, when an explosion happened of so dreadful a nature that the boiler was rent completely round, the roof forced up in a perpendicular position, the upper flues driven info the cabin, and the lower part of the boiler and under flues removed from their situation, blowing the deck completely off from the funnel to within eight or nine feet of the stern. It is impossible to state the precise number of sufferers by this dreadful occurrence* as it is believed some of those thrown into the water have not been found. The steward of the vessel informs us, that before the accident occurred he counted twenty- seven persons on the quarter deck, and considers that there were about forty persons on board at the time of the explosion. The following are the names, as far as has been ascertained, of the persons who have Jost their lives :— Miss Steven- son, George- street, Glasgow ; Angus Wilkie, one of the men of the vessel, befonging to Tarbert; Mr. Morrison, clothier, Greenock;; Mrs. Smith, Tradeston, Glasgow; Mr. Hugh Watsoa, shoemaker, Dunoon. A gentleman, apparently about forty- six years of age, who was taken on board the Clarence steamer, died on the passage to Glasgow.— Twenty- six persons were more or less injured by the - accident, some of them very seriously. At the Derby Assizes on Thursday, William Wild, aged 14, was. indicted for the wilful murders of Eliz. Smith, aged 3 years, and her- sister. It appeared by the evidence of the mother of the deceased,, that the prisoner was in her husband's employ, and that he was fre^- quently entrusted with her two children, the above- named Elizabeth, and with Martha, aged 1J years. Arising from some imaginary offence which he had received from the mother of the children, he decoyed them into a close which contained a pit half- filled with water, into which he threw them both, and they were consequently drowned. The Jury returned a verdict of guilty, and the Judge immediately passed on the prisoner the usual sentence of death. A melancholv suicide took place on Friday morning, in Gieat Queen- street, Long- acre— Mr. Pavne, a coach- lace manufacturer in that street, having shot himself through the head with a double- barrelled gun, which he had heavily loaded with swan shot. Misfor- tunes fn business are said to have been the cause of the lameatabte occurrence. August 2. JOHN BULL. 243 NEW NOVELS, Published by Longman, Rees, Orme, and Co., London. M ENGLAND Minister. EPHISTOPKILES Or, the Confessions of a Prime 3 vols. " The general satire has appeared to us to display such talent, and to embrace so many of the popular subjects of the day, that we have been induced to make longer extracts than usual.''— Lit. Gazette". 2. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY of an IRISH TRAVELLER. 3 vols. 3. THE GIPSY. 3 vols. By the Author of " Mary of Burgundy," " Life and Adventures of John Marston Hall," " Richelieu," " Damley," & c. & e. THE ENGLISH in INDIA. 2 vols. " The author has observed life, and studied the workings of the human heart." — Spectator. ^ New Novel, by the Authoress of " Constance," & e. R O- S A B E L. 3 vols. " An acnte appreciation of hitman nature, a sufficient knowledge of life, viva- city in description, and the power to combine the whole into an interesting nar- rative, are the sure recommendations of Rosabel."—- Literary Gazette. 6. 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A new edition, price 12s., A GREEK and ENGLISH SCHOOL LEXICON ; Containing all the Words that occur in the Books at School, and in the Under' Graduate Course of a Collegiate Education; to which is now added, a Vocabu* lary in English and Greek. By the Rev. D. Hincks. CORPORATION of the LONDON ASSURANCE.— Established by Royal Charter in the reign of George I., A. D. 1720, for Marine, Fire, and Life Assurances.— Offices, 19, Birchin lane, and 43, Pall- mall. JOHN C. POWELL, Esq., Governor. ABEL CHAPMAN, Esq., Sub- Governor. JOHN HILLKRSDON, EMJ., Deputy- Governor. Robert Allen, Esq. George Barnes, Esq. Henry Rlanshard, Esq. John W. Borradaile, Esqw Edward Burmester, Esq. Henry Cayltey, Esq. Aaron Chapman, Esq., M. P. Robert Cofesworth, Esq. Richard Drew, Esq. John Furze, Esq. Geo. H. Gibbs. Esq. Edwin Gower, Esq. Persons effecting Life Assurances with Edward Harnage. William Kinpr, Esq. John Ord, E^ q. John Plummer, Esq. George Prob\ n, Esq. John Rees, Esq. Jacob Syms, Esq. Daniel Stephenson, Esq. Thomas Weeding, Esq. James Williams, Esq. L. P. Wilson, Esq. Henry Wood fall, Esq. this Corporation have the choice of two scales, which are formed so as to- be particularly favourable to the best period of life. The one subject to annual abatement after five years' payment of premium, the assured having the advantage of entire exemption from all liability of part- nership, and from the charges of management, which are borne by the Corporation* The other at a low rate without abatement. In the Fire Department Assurances are effected at the lowest rates. Marine Assurances effected at the current premiums of the day. Attendance daily from ten till four at both Offices, where Prospectuses and every information maybe obtained. JOHN LAURENCE, Secretary. WATERPROOF BLACKING.— JARVIS'S INDIA RUB- BER POLISH, for Boots, Shoes, Harness, and Cab heads, is the only preparation that gives a beautiful polish that will not wash off, and preseveres the leather ( to be laid on with a sponge). The following is an extaact from a letter from a Colonel in the Army:—" I use your India Rubber Polish to my fishing boots, and itkeeps my feet dry. I find it fully answers every purpose for which it is intended."— It is cheaper than common blacking, and a set of harness may be po- lished in a few minutes to look like patent leather. Manufactory, 142, Totten- ham- court- road, and sold in Bottles, 2s. 6d. and 4s. 6d. each, by Barclay and Sons* 95, Faringdon- street; Sutton and Co., 10, Bow Church- yard; Edwards, 67, St. Paul's Chureh- vard; Hulse, 37, Leadenhall- street; Armstrong, 35, King- street. Snow- hill; Grant and Co., Chiswell- street; Bern, Knightsbridge; Clarke and Sons, Southampton; Clifford and Co., Dublin; tanner, Shrewsbury; Mauder, Weaver, and Co., Wolverhampton ; and by all respectable Druggets and Saddlers. TO the especial Notice of the Ladies.— C. and A. OLDRIDGE'S BALM OF COLUMBIA.— The peculiar virtues of this preparation com- pletely remove the difficulty experienced by Ladies in preserving their ringlets after exercise; its use so invigorates the hair, that tresses, previously the straight- est and most destitute of curl, rapidly acquire a vigor, which maintains in perma- nent ringlets the head- dress of the most persevering votary of the Ball- Room, the Ride, or the Promenade. After the Minerals and Vegetables of the Old World have been compounded in all imaginable ways in fruitless attempts to discover so important a desideratum, we are indebted to the Western Hemisphere for fur- nishing the basis of OLDRIDGE'S BALM of COLUMBIA, the efficacy of which in preserving, strengthening, and renewing the Hair, has become a matter of notoriety among all civilized nations. Its restorative virtues are indeed a pro- verb, and the most satisfactory attestations to its infallibility in reproducing hair upon persons otherwise hopelessly bald, may be examined at the Office of tho Proprietors, No. 1, Wellington- street, Strand, London, where the Balm is sold.-— Price 3s. 6d., 6s., and lis. per bottle. N. B.— The Public are requested to be on their guard against Counterfeits. Ask for OLDRIDGE'S BALM, 1, Wellington* street, Strand, London. ACOOLING SUMMER APERIENT.— BUTLER'S COOL- ING APERIENT POWDERS produce an extremely refr « - hing Effer- vescing Draught, which is at the same time a mild and cooling aperient, peculiarly adapted to promote the healthy action of the Stomach and Bowels, and thereby prevent the recurrence of constipation and indigestion, with all their train of con- sequences, as Flatulence, Acidity or Heartburn, Headache, Febrile Symptoms, Nervous Depression, Eruptions on the skin, & c. & c.; and their frequent use will generally obviate the necessity of having recourse to Calomel, Epsom Salts, and other Medicines which tend to debilitate the « ysfem. When taken after too much Wine the usual disagreeable effects are in a great degree prevented.— Prepared and Sold in 2s. 9d. boxes, and 20s. cases, by Thomas Butler, Chemist, 4 Cheapside. corner of St Paul's, London; and ( authenticated by the Preparer's name and address in the labels and stamps) may be obtained of Sanger, 150, Oxford street; at the Medical Hall. 54, Lower Sackville- street, Dublin ; of WT. Dennis and Son, York; Duncan, Flockhart and Co., Edinburgh; the Apothecaries Company, Virginia- street, Glasgow ; and of most respectable Druggists and Medicine Ven- ders throughout the United Kingdom. € l GENUINE EFFERVESCING LEAMINGTON SALTS.— This portable and convenient preparation is found by chemical analysis to contain all the medicinal and chemical properties of the Waters as drank at tho fountain head, and is so combined as to reproduce carbonic acid by the simple addition of water. These Salts are mild in their operation, and are as agreeable to the palate as a common saline draught. They are found particularly useful in cases of indigestion, bilious affections, general debility, and ( for which the waters of Leamington are so justly celebrated) they also correct acidity, give tone to the stomach, and carry off all those indigestible matters which occasion headache, sickness, loss of appetite, & c. Invalids and others at a distance, who have received benefit from the waters, will now, by the convenient form of this preparation, be enabled to possess the advantage of the Leamington Waters in the nearest state of perfection. Two tea- spoonsful of the Salts are equal to at tumbler of Spa water.— Prepared only by S. Stanley and Co., Chemists, Leamington. Sold also by W. Sutton and^ Co. ( sole Agents), Bow Church yard; and retail by all respec- table Medicine Venders in town and country, in bottles at 2s. 6d. and 4s. 6d. each. UBEBS with SARSAPARILLA, < fec.— STIRLING- REES* ESSENCE.— The great and increasing demand, from the recommendation of the highest Medical characters, as well as patients who have experienced its salubrious and beneficial effects, proves its great success and decided superiority over every other preparation yet discovered, in the speedy and effectual cure of all those diseases for which Balsam Capaiva and Mercurials have hitherto been so much in use. It contains all the efficacious parts of the Cubeb combined with Sarsaparilla, and other approved alteratives, which render it invaluable for eradi cating every disease arising from an impure state of the blood. It may be taken at any time without danger from cold, and has invariably been found to improve digestion, and invigorate the whole system. The most delicate female may take it with perfect safety.— Prepared only by J. W. STIRLING, 86, High- street, Whitechapel, from whom it can be sent to any part of the world, upon receiving a remittance, in Bottles at 4s. 6d.; 10s.; and 20s. each.— Agents, Barclay, Far- ringdom^ treet; Prout, 226, Strand; Sanger, 150, Oxford- street; Harvey, 68, Great Surrey street, Blackfriars; Hendebotnb, 226, Holborn; Willoughby, 61, Bishopsgatc- without: Johnstone, 68, Cornhill; Stradling, Royal Exchange- gate; Hamilton, Church- street, Hackney; Priest, Parliament- street, Westminster; and may be had of every Medicine Vender of eminence in the kindgdom. Be sure the name J. W. Stirling is on the Stamp. Ask for " Stirling- Rees' Essence." Just published, the Fifth Edition, price 4s. APOPULAR TREATISE on DISEASES of the GENERA- TIVE SYSTEM. With a concise Anatomical Review of its Organs, and a Physiological Account of their Functions. Together with Remarks on the more probable Causes of Local Debility, the Nature and Treatment of Syphi- lis, & c.; and Practical Observations on an approved Method for the Cure of Stric- tures of the Urethra, & c. By JOHN GUY, Member of the Royal College of Surgeons, 6, Robert- street, Adelphi.— Published by the Author, and sold by Burgess and Hill, 55, Great Windmill- street, Haymafrket; Simpkin and Mar- shall ; Onwhyn, 4, Catherine- street, Strand ; Marsh, 145, Oxford- street; Chappell, 97, Royal Exchange ; and by all Booksellers. " The anatomy, physiology, and pathology contained in this Treatise, must be interesting to all, but most particularly to that class of readers who are suffering from the various maladies on which it so ably treats."— London Medical and Sur- gical Journal ERVOUS DEBILITY, & c.— MEDICAL ETHICS.— The fol- lowing Works will serve as guides and monitors to all who may feel inte- rested in their perusal:— 1st. The / EGIS 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, & c.— 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 hopes 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; 16, Princes- street, Soho; 4, Catharine- street, Strand; Porter, 72, Grafton- street. Dublin; 86, Trongate, Glasgow; 12, Calton- street, Edinburgh ; and of all Booksellers. The 21st edition, price 5s. each. Messrs. Goss and Co. are to be consulted as usual, every day, at their house; and Patients in the remotest parts of the country, can be treated successfully, on describing minutely the ease* 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 be securely packed, and carefully protected from observation.— Ni. 7. Lancaster- place, Strand, London. , BALLAD. Air- In the wildness of a glade, Where the playful zephyrs reign, One bright lovely eve I stray'd O'er the dewy- spangled plain. Deep the twilight sunk in night; Dreary darkness ' gan to lour; But I saw a distant light, Beauteous as the noon- day's power1.. See! it approaches— nearer still! See! the radiant object come: Anxious doubts my bosom thrill-— " Cottage in the VV oo. l. . , See— myself— my form is there Every feature's bright displav d ; Glorious vision !—< why appear ? Why in splendour thus array'd? Nearer yet !- a gentle tongue Calls my fluttering senses backl} Then I found the vision sprung But from Warren's Jetty Black; ' Twas a stranger, whose bright shoe# Warren's Blacking shone so bright, Beam'd those superhuman glows, Terror binds iny'soul in gloom. Through the gloomy tint of nightf THIS Easy shining and Brilliant BLACKING, prepared by ROBERT WARREN 30 STRAND. London; and sold in every town in the Kinpaom Liquia in oott. es, and Paste Blacking in pots at « a., 12d., and18d. ewh& pSticulw to inquire for Warren'e, 30, Strand. All others are counterfeit. 262 ' JOHN BULL. August 16. A MONDAY EDITION ( for the Country) is published at Three o'clock in the afternoon, containing the Markets and Latest News. 3 OHltf BULL. LONDON, AUCUST 2. ON Monday their MAJESTIES and the Duke of CAM- BRIDGE, with a numerous suite, proceeded to Eton, where their MAJESTIES were received with clieerings loud and long; they proceeded to the Upper School- room, where they heard the speeches. An admirably written address was excellently delivered by the Hon. Mr. SMYTHE, son of Lord STRANG- FORD. After the speeches were over, the Royal Party proceeded to Virginia Water to pass the afternoon. The KING paid a visit to Latly ERROL at Richmond. On Wednesday their MAJE'STIES came to town. On Thursday their MAJESTIES visited Kew. On Friday the KING held a Levee, and in the evening gave a splendid dinner to the Brethren of the Trinity House. Several of the Ministers, the Chairman and Deputy- Chairman of the Customs and Excise, and of the Bank, were present. Yesterday being the anniversary of the memorable battle of the Nile, their MAJESTIES accepted the invitation of SirT. HARDY, the Governor of Greenwich Hospital, to a dejedne a la fonrchette on the « ccasion. At 10 o'clock a guard of honour of the Grenadier Guards • was drawn up on the Parade in St. James's- park, after which they marched to Whitehall- stairs, the place of embarkation. At 11 o'clock their MAJESTIES the KING and QUEEN, their Royal Highnesses the Duke and Duchess of CAMBRIDGE, Prince GEORGE of CAMBRIDGE, the Duke of CUMBERLAND, Sir H. VIVIAN, Lord HILL, and a numerous cortege of military officers, left the Palace in eight of the Royal car- riages, escorted by a strong guard of honour of the 2d Life Guards. As their MAJEETIES passed through the Horse Guards, they were most enthusiastically cheered, and on their arrival at Whitehall- stairs, the band of the Grenadier Guards struck up the national anthem. Their MAJESTIES then entered the Navy- barge, with the Royal Standard flying, and their suite went on bqard the Admiralty and other Government barges, which were moored oft'. On the Royal procession arriving at Waterloo- bridge they were joined by the city barge, in which were the LORD MAYOR and the different members of the Corporation, Vice- Admiral the Hon. E. FLEMING, Commander- in- Chief in the Medway, Capt. Sir W. DILLON, Capt. WARREN, and many naval officers. As the procession passed, their MAJESTIES were most enthusiastically cheered by the numerous spec- tators on the bridges and the seamen on board the vessels in the river, all of which had their colours flying. Notwithstanding the immense number of craft on the River, such excellent regulations had been made under the direction of the LORD MAYOR, that there was no obstruction to the Royal party. About one o'clock the Royal party and the other distinguished in- dividuals arrived at Greenwich. Their arrival was announced by a Royal salute, and the assembly greeted their MAJESTIES with loud and continued acclamations. The Admiral's boat put off, and the Admiral ( Sir THOMAS HARDY) steered it ashore. The way leading from the north- west wing of the Hospital had been previously covered with crimson carpeting, over which the Royal party walked. The Lords of the Admiralty and a select circle breakfasted with the Royal personages. The old pensioners were dressed in their holiday attire, and seemed highly delighted at the idea of a visit from their KING. A dinner and some extra good cheer had been provided them for the occasion. The KING, who was attired in an Admiral's uniform, looked re- markably well, and repeatedly acknowledged the cheers with which he was greeted. " The town of Greenwich was a scene of great gaiety and animation throughout the morning; the bells were rung and cannon fired, and other tokens of rejoicing were exhibited. WE are highly gratified to perceive that the House of Lords have adopted the just and constitutional course with regard to the Municipal Corporations Reform Bill, which, a week or two since, we ventured to suggest— we mean that of hear- ing Counsel at their Lordships' bar in vindication of those individuals who have been calumniated and libelled by the report of the questionably legal Commissioners, and who, without this most reasonable interposition of their Lordships, were doomed to be handed down loaded with abuse, martyrs to faction, and victims of misrepresentation. Lord FALMOUTH, on Tuesday, in vindicating the Corpora- tion of Truro froin the sweeping allegations of the Commis- sioners, trusted that the calumniated parties might be heard by Counsel; and Lord STRANGFORD, in presenting a similar petiton against the Bill from the Corporation of Coventry, exposed in the clearest manner the injuries to which the indi- viduals composing it were to be subjected, without having, by any act whatever, deserved to be deprived of their rights, and despoiled of their property. His Lordship subsequently moved that the Corporations should be heard by Counsel at the Bar. Lord MELBOURNE opposed the motion, for one of the strangest possible reasons— not because he denied the justice of hearing Counsel— but bccause if one Corporation was heard by Counsel, another must be heard, and that at last even individuals must be heard, so that nobody could guess when the hearings would be over. Such an argument against the doing of justice, and hearing the remonstrances of the freemen of England against the deprivation of their rights, never was perhaps started; and yet his Lordship, in the course of his speech, said something even more startling than that, as particularly applying to the Bill in question, for he assured the House, that the present measure was one of general policy, and not founded upon the Report of the Commissioners. Now, really, Lord MELBOURNE'S respectability, great as it has been, cannot stand these frequently repeated blows. Here we have the Prime Minister, in order to prevent discus- sion, stating seriously that the Bill, which is unquestionably founded upon the report of a most expensive and almost illegal Commission, has nothing to do with that report. Whv, then, were Commissioners appointed ?— why were they paid?— why were they sent all over the country to domineer and bluster under an equivocal authority?— why did they drag before them, men, books, papers, and records, ' but to make a report, upon which the Government should be able to bring in a measure, which might have the effect of depriving freemen of their lights and privileges to an extent far more oppressive on the one hand, than the enactments of their favourite Reform Bill were liberal on the other? Lord BROUGHAM, having made a show of opposition to hearing Counsel, and amused himself with abusing the Bar, and making a whimsical computation of the number of speeches their Lordships would have to hear, if they heard Counsel on all the cases, settled the question, and overset poor Lord MELBOURNE by suggesting, as a middle course, that all the Corporations who felt themselves aggrieved should enlist under one banner, and employ two Counsel only, to plead their cause conjointly and in a body. Lord MELBOURNE, who was scarcely prepared for this " too friendly" proposi- tion, turned pale'at the idea; but what other effect was pro- duced upon his Lordship when the Noble and Learned Baron followed up his suggestion by recommending Sir CHARLES WETHERELL and Mr.' KNIGHT as the two fittest men to conduct the case, inasmuch as " they were gentlemen of great learning and ability, and had the confidence of their country- men," we do not presume to guess. Lord RIPON felt it just that the freemen should be heard on the subject of their financial rather then their political rights : and Lord FALMOUTH, referring to the extraordinary denial that the Bill was founded upon the Commission, most pertinently inquired what the use of the Commission had been, or what the necessity for libelling and calumniating persons innumerable, if it were not to justify— supposing the allega- tions could be substantiated— the confiscation of their rights, which the very principle and preamble itself ofthe Bill declared to be taken from them only because they had been misused, perverted, and prostituted. Lord WHARNCLIFFE vindicated the Corporations, and the Duke of NEWCASTLE advocated the cause of hearing them by Counsel; and the Duke of CUMBERLAND, taking the highest and fairest, and most constitutional ground, distinctly declared that although he might be disposed to admit the proposition of hearing Counsel in fhe present stage of the measure, he wished distinctly to stato that it was against the principle of the Bill his Royal Highness stood, and that his opposition to that, was neither to be qualified nor compromised by ad- mitting arguments against the details. Lord LYNDHURST showed that the Corporations did not claim to touch the principle of the Bill, and that their being heard by Counsel would not affect it— they sought to defend themselves against the allegations contained in the report, and if the Bill were not founded upon that report, still the preamble of the Bill itself contained matter which called for defence and refutation. The preamble says, " Whereas, partly by defects in the charters by which the said bodies corporate have been constituted, partly by neglect, and abuse of the privileges by such charters granted and confirmed to the said cities, towns, and boroughs, and partly by change of circum- stances since the said charters were granted, the said bodies corporate for the most part have not of long time been, and are not now, useful and efficient instruments of local govern- ment." Lord LYNDHURST stated that no less than 240 Corporations were dealt with by this Bill, and that as he sup- posed no Noble Lord would deny that if one Corporation had been attacked, Counsel would have been heard in its defence, so he could not conceive that the increase to 240 could in any degree lessen that claim. The Duke of WELLINGTON, disclaiming any wish to delay the Bill, was ready to agree to hearing two Counsel, without pledging himself to any ulterior proceeding. After an attempt to be at once dignified and familiar upon the part of Lord MELBOURNE, Lord MANSFIELD declared his conviction that Counsel ought to be heard agaiust the prin- ciple as well as the details of the Bill. His Lordship was followed by Lord PLUNKETT, who, in the purest sense of the word, twaddled himself into a dilemma, in which Lord FITZ GERALD tied him up and pummelled him in the most masterly manner, showing as clearly as light that the precedent which his Lordship adduced from the Union did not in the slightest degree apply to the case in point. After a desultory conversation the Bill was read a second time, and Counsel ordered to be heard on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. On Thursday Lord BROUGHAM made a very unnecessary speech, in which he defended himself from the imputations of the Government newspapers, which stated that he had influ- enced the House of Lords to hear Counsel. Lord BROUGHAM very candidly admitted that he had no influence, but that, seeing the majority of the House was resolved to hear Coun- sel, he thought it was as well to seem to suggest something, and so he recommended Sir CHARLES WETHERELL and Mr. KNIGHT. Lord CLANRICARDE scolded the Noble and Learned Lord, and eventually Sir CHARLES WETHERELL was called in, and addressed their Lordships in a most elo- quent and elaborate speech. After he had concluded, the House adjourned until five o'clock on Friday, when Sir CHARLES WETHERELL resumed, and spoke at great length. One. of the most striking passages of his address appears to us to be that, in which he notices the absolute irresponsibility of anybody for the conduct of the measure. Sir CHARLES says:— " By whom was the present Bill produced? He, for one, did not know. He did not know the prosecutor of these Corpora- tions. There was no law officer of the Crown in the House— no keeper of the King's conscience— no Lord Chancellor— a thing unheard of before. But, perhaps, we were making strange strides to democracy, and that state of things that would dispense with Chancellors and Lords ? ( Laughter.) Who was the sponsor of this spoliating— this pillaging— Bill ? No one acknowledged it— every member of the Government was anxious that it should not be affiliated on him. It wasa strange Bill, and a dangerous one, and no wonder that it should be disowned. By it the King could not act a regal part. He was only to discharge vice- regal functions, at the beck of the town council and the democracy. He could not appoint a Magistrate for any town— he was merely to sanction the appoint- ments made by the council, who were not to be appointed by him, but were to be appointed in spite of him, and for the diminution of his authority. It the Woolsack were occupied, these questions would be asked—" Did you advise the King to abandon his ancient rights and his constitutional privileges ? Did you advise him to resign to utter destruction communities of men possessing unquestionable rights, to relinquish the appointment of officers and magistrates, to swamp his prerogatives ?" But as there was in the House no legal adviser of his Majesty, and as it cruld not be ascertained what was the real opinion of the King, he ( Sir C. Wetherell) would propose to their Lordships, as the advisors of the King, that a copy of the Bill be served on every Chief Magistrate of every corporation impeached, that each corporation may have an opportunity of meeting the charges made, and each of them be tried atthebaroftheHouse, like every other delinquent arraigned under a Hill of pains and penalties. If the repre- sentative for this anonymous Bill, in the shape of the Attorney- General — and right happy would he be to meet Mr. attorney at the bar— should appear, then he ( Sir C. Wetherell) would make his appearance also, and claim the privilege, as a matter of right, to disprove the falsehoods, to blow up the humbugs, and expose the fallacies, the quirks, the trickery, the juggle, and the imposture of this roguish Bill. He would appear to resist spoilation, disfranchisement, and the first step to revolution. He would appear for liberty, property, and the monarchy. He would claim a right that was often claimed before, and not refused. The course he meant to pursue was this:— When his Honourable Friend closed his case then he would apply to have his witnesses produced: he would have the whole case pumped out; he would have the town clerks and books pro- duced ; and he should also require to seo the accuser appear at the bar. If this be a Government measure, then the Attorney- General must appear. He would not retire from the bar till their Lordships decided whether he have or not a right to be heard in defence of his clients; if they do decide that he has, then will he proceed with his evidence ; if they decide he has not, that will be enough to regu- late his conduct. If they say he is to be debarred from rebutting calumnies and disproving falsehoods; if they say they, as a judicial body, will not act on the usual principles acted on in all other Court* of .1 udicature, and will abandon, nay, trample on, the acknowledged and usual rnles of evidence, then will he adopt other expedients to support his case. Whether their Lordships grant him the opportu- nity of defending the Corporations as a right, or a privilege, it will be all the same to him— though he claimed it as a right— it will fur- nish him with the means of bringing evidence, triumphant evidence^ to insure him a verdict of acquittal. They cannot ao anything else unless they abandon all pretensions to justice and fair dealing, and run counter to every rule of policy and prudence that has hitherto guided them. The country had viewed with great regret the state of things which existed at present, whereby the King was deprived of his legal and responsible adviser in this House, in the capacity of Lord High Chancellor, an office now left vacant. Without this adviser to tell his Majesty what was going on in his Parliament they might go on from step to step, with newly- created Republics, until they came to a state of things it would be impossible to control or arrest. But there was another view of the case in which he would put it to their Lordships. This question was one, in his opinion, very closely affecting the rights and privileges of their Lordships' House; for the authority by which their Lordships held their seats and their powers in that House was of a nature precisely the same with the grants whereby the Municipal Corporations were endowed with their rights and powers. The hereditary judicial character of their Lordsliips was* of precisely an analogous origin with that of these Municipal Corpo- rations. Sow if, in the philosophical language of the preamble of the Bill, " a change of circumstances" should render it necessary to efface this principle of hereditary and durable judicial character from the Constitution, he could see no reason why the share which their Lordships held in the operation of that principle should be ex- cepted. Good fortune, he would say, attend their Lordships, and. he said it most heartily, good fortune' attend their Lordships if, in the wholesale changes and political convulsions which now threat- ened the institutions of the country, their Lordships' House and the Crowii of the Sovereign should be spared. With this hope he would retire from their Lordships' bar. After Sir CH ARLES had concluded, Mr. KNIGHT appeared at the bar and commenced his address to their Lordships upon the folly and injustice of the proposed measure, when the Learned Gentleman having stated that he was about to commence a fresh argument, their Lordships, who had been sitting thirteen hours, adjourned until yesterday at one o'clock, when Mr. KNIGHT resumed his arguments against the Bill. THERE have been no movements of any consequence in Spain since our last, the death of ZUMALACARREGUY has, it is clear, very considerably affected the unanimity of the* Chiefs. We nevertheless think that many of the accounts which we are in the habit of receiving are properly prepared for the Stock Exchange and the Isle of Dogs. General ALAVA, it appears, is about to quit England, but only for a short period. No further resistance is now to be made to the Irish Church Bill in the House of Commons; but we really and seriously believe that the country looks with hope ana confidence to the House of Lords to preserve it from the infliction of a measure which, by admitting a principle, cannot fail to un~ dermine, and eventually overthrow, the Protestant Estar blished Church. It is singular, but true, that the interposition of the here- ditary Legislators is called for to protect, not, as the levellers would insinuate, to weaken, the rights of the PEOPLE ; and we are convinced that the rejection of the Church Bill will be as welcome to those who are attached to the interests of religion as the defeat of the Municipal Reform Bill will be to those who, conscious of never having misused the privileges which they possess, see no reason for being deprived of them merely for the sake of rendering the MONARCH secondary to his subjects, and of altering the state and condition of up- wards of two millions of Englishmen. MR. SERJEANT PERRIN, on Friday, brought in his Irish Municipal Reform Bill. His speech was long and tame, and met the negative praise of Mr. GOULBURN, who compli- mented the Learned Gentleman upon having abstained from any irritating topics in his address to the House. Both Mr. GOULBURN and Mr. SHAW expressed a hope and belief that the Bill brought forward now would not be pressed through Parliament this Session ; but Lord JOHN RUSSELL, who en- deavoured to be amiable, defended the course of carrying it forward immediately, assured that if the English Bill upon the same subject escaped the heavy fire of the House of Lords, the Irish Bill would be equally secure. Mr. O'CONNELL gave some new specimens of his good taste and good feeling in a description of Sir CHARLES WE- THF. RELL'S speech in the House of Lords, which he felt sure could have no effect; but " if it had, and the Bill was thrown out this year, they would triumph the next." Who does Mr. O'CONNELL mean by " they?"— themselves— the Mi- nisters ? Sir R. PEEL inquired when the Chancellor of the Exchequer intended to bring forward his Budget? The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER was not able to answer, in consequence of an Estimate ( what Estimate we did not hear) not being complete. Sir R. PEEL thought that scarcely a sufficient reason for delaying the financial statement. The House, on a former occasion, had not been so patient with him. ( Cheers.) The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER was then understood to say the delay arose from the circumstance of the loan of 15,000,0001., for the compensation of the West India slave owners, not being com- plete. Sir R. PEEL thought that a better reason for the delay. After a remark from Colonel SIBTHORPE, Sir R. PEEL said about that period of the session the Noble Lord ( Lord Althorp) the predecessor ofthe present Noble Lord ( Lord J. Russell) used to put his sickle to the harvest of Bills and mow them down. ( Laughter.) Some Bills it was morally certain would not pass, and others might. And this was about the day the leader of the House of Commons generally expressed his intention as to what Bills he should persevere in. Lord J. RUSSELL was understood to express his assent to the course proposed, but deferred making any statement. IT was with no small surprise and regret we perceived that Mr. M. O'CONNELL'S motion for a Select Committee to- inquire into the conduct of General DARLING, in the case of Mr. ROBISON, has been carried— not because we are of opinion that the closest investigation of the facts will be any- thing but highly advantageous to the Gallant General, but because the fact of constituting the House of Commons a. Court of Appeal from the decisions of Courts- Martial, is of itself a serious infraction of the Royal prerogative, and a vir- tual transfer of the army from the service of the KING to that of his Parliament. Setting aside for a moment the principle generally, it cer- tainly does not appear that the case of Mr. ROBISON, who has been found guilty in courts of civil as well as military law, whenever he has appeared in tl. em; is one calculated to August 2. JOHN BULL. 243 induce the adoption of so extraordinary a course as that, which tats now been pursued. In a statement of facts published by General DARLING, that officer says :— " It cannot but appear extraordinary, after Mr. ROBISON'S trial by a Court- Martial, and having been adjudged by a jury of his brother officers to be unworthy to be continued in the service— after the opi- nion of the Court of King's Bench, with reference to the said Court- Martial— and after a full discussion on his case in the House of Commons in the month of July 1833, when his petition was rejected by a mnj'ority of nearly two to one, and the appeal which he subse- quently made to Lord A i. THOttp, as the chief Minister of the Crown in the House of Commons, was stated by his Lordship to lia\ e failed in removing the impression made on his mind by the debate, that Mr. ROBISON should have the hardihood— the effrontery to intrude himself again on the House of Commons, without having any fresh or new matter to bring forward ( unless, indeed, he considers his conviction of having published a gross and scandalous libel, in addi- tion to his other offences, as giving him more than ordinary claim to attention) praying that Me House will inquire into his ease, and pro- fessing his ardent desire for an examination into it, and his witting' iless to stand the decision of the House ( in the event only, it may be presumed, of its proving favourable to him), as if his case had not been already inquired into and disposed of by his Majesty's Govern- ment— by the House of Commons, and, lastly, by the Court of King's Bench!" We have no space to- day for the further observations which General DARLING makes upon a letter which we find Mr. ROBISON has published since his confinement for the libel. We have already expressed our opinion upon the general character of the proceeding, and repeat our conviction that the more it is sifted and examined, the more clearly General DARLING will be exculpated from charges of tyranny and oppression. What we now lament is, the success'of the mo- tion totally disconnected from the merits of the case; aud we cannot express our regret upon this point without again recurring to the scant attendance in the House of Commons of those to whom we look as the defenders of our rights, and the supporters of principles upon which alone the constitu- tion can prosper or endure. The motion for this Select Committee was carried by a majority of 57 to 49. Since writing the above, we have seen Lord JOHN RUS- SELL'S announcement of his intention to move to- morrow an instruction to the Committee, not to take into its considera- tion any of the proceedings connected with the Court- Martial held upon Mr. ROBISON. His Lordship acts in this instance wisely, justly, and constitutionally, ON Friday Lord MORPETH brought in his 11 Peace- preservation" Bill for Ireland; in introducing which his Lordship gravely stated that Ireland was in such an improved state of tranquillity as not to require a renewal of the Coercion Bill, and that the principal cause of anything like insubordi- nation in that country arose from the immoderate use of whiskey ! A reference to the Irish newspapers will prove the correct- ness of his Lordship's information— for we conclude his Lord- ship believes what he says. Colonel PERCIVAL reminded his Lordship that there were four baronies in King's County still under the operation of the Coercion Bill. This fact his Lord- ship admitted. Colonel PERCIVAL also inquired whether the Orangemen who were tried at Monaghan were acquitted or not ? to which his Lordship replied he did not know. Mr. FINN declared he would not allow a siugle Orange yeoman to be a Magistrate. The Bill was brought in. THE scenes which are nightly performed in the House of Commons cease to be amusing— they have assumed a more important character. In Committee on the Irish Bill, on Wednesday evening, the violence of Mr. O'CONNELL and his adherents was of so extraordinary a character, that at one moment it appeared as if a considerable number of Members were simultaneously about to cross the House, for the purpose of surrounding Mr. SHAW, one of whose observations had given offence to the Irish Members, who vociferated, in all sorts of tones, the most offensive expressions. Whether Mr. BBIRNAL has taken fire at our observation upon what we considered his adoption of ABERCROMRYISM in the Chair, and a passive submission or careless sufferance in the midst of disorder aud confusion, we know not; but, certainly, nobody could have fulfilled an arduous duty better, with greater calmness or more determined resolution, than that Honourable Gentleman in the affair to which we allude. He declared that if the uproar and tumult continued, he would take upon himself the responsibility of quitting the Chair and breaking up the Committee. The avowal of this determination had its effect, and order, or what is now consi- dered order, was restored. In order that the Ladies may be prepared for the enjoyment of scenes and circumstances similar to this, we beg to sub- join the Report of the Committee for settling the admission of female visitors into the House of Commons. The machinery is somewhat complicated, aud we suspect, even if the report could possibly be received, the ladies whom it is intended to favour would rarely, if ever, avail themselves of the oppor- tunity. Resolved, that a portion of the Strangers' Gallery, at the north end of the House, not exceeding a quarter of the whole, and capable of containing 24 ladies, be set apart for their accommodation, divided by a partition from the rest of the gallery, and screened in front by aii open trellis- work. That the plan and estimate submitted to the Committee by Sir ROBERT S. MIKKE be adopted. That a book should be kept in the custody of some person ap- pointed by the Sergeant- at- Arms, in a place made for that purpose, at the door of the entrance of the proposed gallery. That no Member be allowed to introduce more than two ladies in the course ot one week, unless the gallery should not be fully occu- pied, as specified hereafter. That the names of the ladies be written down in the said book on the day previous to their admission, or, in the event of the adjourn- ment of the House, on the last day ot sitting, previous to its next meeting; aud that the signature of the Member be attached to the names of the ladies so written down by him, and that he do state • whether he proposed that they should be admitted at the morning or afternoon sitting. That two printed tickets be issued to each Member so entitled, which tickets are to be presented by the ladies at the door of the gallery, without which they cannot be admitted, and that such tickets shall not be transferable. That, in case it should happen that the said gallery should not be fully occupied within one hour after the meeting of the House, any Member may, on writing down the names, and receiving the tickets as aforesaid, introduce two ladies during the sitting of the House, until the gallery shall be full. _ That the said book be kept open for the entry of names for admis- sion on the following day, from half- past eleven o'clock in the morn- ing till three' o'clock in the afternoon; aud that the same shall not be re- opened unless the gallery shall not be filled at the hour specified in the foregoing resolution. That the gallery so proposed to be set apart be called the Ladies' Gallery, and be kept exclusively for their accommodation. That the alterations necessary in order to provide for the accomo- dation therein contemplated in the Strangers Gallery, be proceeded with without delay, in order that the same may be completed lor the reception of ladies previously to the commencement of the next Session of Parliament. That, in the new House of Commons, a gallery should be con- structed capable of accommodating not less than forty ladies. We seldom have heard of such confused arrangements; besides, without further accommodation, what is to happen to the ladies in a division— are they to remain in their cage ? IN noticing last week the Report, and the conclusive evi- dence of Sir ROBERT SMIRKE in favour of the efficacy of Mr. KYAN'S process for extinction of Dry Rot, our printers, whose accuracy has become almost proverbial, stated that the expenditure in wear and tear in the Naval Departments of England amounted to no less a sum than one thousand pounds per annum. It should have been one thousand pounds per diem,— a consideration which, accompanied by all others connected with the subject, seems to us to call for the imme- diate adoption of the process by Government. It is impossible to do justice to the merits of this disco- very, without going into details far beyond the prescribed limits of a newspaper ; nor do we think it would be fair to the patentee to publish a mere copy of the report, without the evidence upon which it is founded, or without notes and re- marks upou some part of its contents. It appears to us that the efficacy of the system is fully established. Of the numerous comparative experiments which have been made with prepared and unprepared materials, not one has failed to afford the most convincing evidence of entire success. The only question which could not be so promptly decided is that of its salubrity, and upon this, after Mr. FA- RADAY'S lecture upon it at the Royal Institution, little doubt can remain. Mr. FARADAY, before the Commissioners, re- peated his conviction that the process is not prejudicial to health, and evidence was given to the fact, which, as far as it goes, or can at present go, is equally conclusive in favour of its salubrity as the numerous experiments which have been made have been proofs of its success in other respects. Mr. CHARLES ENDERBY having been called in, stated that he had a ship called the Samlet Enderby, which was built by Mr. WHITE of Cowes, last year, the whole of the timber, spars, blocks, and standing rigging of which had been prepared with Mr. KYAN'S process. She sailed in Oclober last for the South Sea Whale Fishery; had seen three letters from her since she sailed, all from apprentices; he produced one, dated in lat. 3 deg. S., 24 deg. 30 m. W., crew reported to be in good health ; was told that no ill effect had been experienced on the health of the workmen in building the vessel, and in regard to wounds, they thought the pro- cess of preparing the timber a cure for them. ' Bilge- water had been pumped out in the river and at Cowes, and was perfectly sweet. He had seen some prepared and unprepared canvas put into a cellar, the former was in a good state, the latter rotten. Anaccounthad been received a fortnight ago, by the Mary Ann, ot the Samuel Enderby ; she was then round Cape Horn, crew all well. The Samuel Enderby was 420 tons; the additional expense of the prepared timber, < Src. was 2401.; the timber had been prepared after it was converted. When it is recollected that the Samuel Enderby was the first ship ever built with the prepared timber, it will, we think, be admitted that the accounts of the health of the crew are as satisfactory as anything well can be. There are, besides, accounts of another vessel which has been extensively repaired with the prepared timber; of which the " Report" says :— " Another ship, the John Palmer, was extensively repaired in the autumn of 1833, with new timbers and new topsides from the light- water mark ; the interior was also new from the lower deck upwards ; and the whole of the timbers used for these works, as also the plank for the men's fitted sleeping berths, were prepared on Mr. KYAN'S plan. Two accounts received from the master since she sailed, one dated on the Line, and the other from the Straits of Timor, state that the crew were all well." These two cases appear nearly conclusive. From the first day that Mr. KYAN'S system came under our notice, we felt assured of its eventual entire success; and we have supported it upon ( he conviction that the advan- tages derivable to the country from its adoption will be immense. We have already shown, by extracts from Parlia- mentary Reports and other official papers, the effect it would naturally produce upon the Navy Estimates, and the charges of wear and tear in the Naval Departments of the country, if brought into immediate use. THE British public are by this time pretty generally in- formed of the manner in which our lively and intelligent neighbours, the French, have been celebrating the merits of their last revolution, and the peculiar method which they have adopted in proclaiming to the world the happiness and satisfaction which have resulted from the victories of the " three glorious days," by selecting the anniversary of the second, for the murder of the SOVEREIGN, who was by those very victories foisted upon the people, and hoisted upou the throne. It has long been evident that the Citizen KING, who began his liberal career by walking about the streets and inviting the market- women to his soirees at ( he Palace, discovered the necessity either of discontinuing his free and easy associ- ation with tile people, or of changing his memorable brown silk umbrella for a sword- stick. Elevated to the throne by the force of barricades, his Citizen MAJESTY decrees the punishment of death to those who make barricades again— he finds it necessary to check ( he liberty of the press, to build batteries to command the capital, to strengthen his army, and to visit with the severest punishment the perpetrators of crimes, which, when committed in his own cause, were extolled to the skies as virtues. His MAJESTY is no doubt satisfied of the justice of the precautions he has adopted, and the neces- sity for the severity he has exercised ; but the corroboration of his fears and the justification of his rigour have exhibited themselves in a catastrophe which, although it failed in its extreme result, has caused the death of one of the least cul- pablfe adherents to the present order of things, besides those of several unoffending and inoffensive spectators of the splendid commemoration of the triumph of freedom. ' The best account of the detestable scheme and its fatal success was given by the correspondent of the Times, from which paper we select the detail:— PARIS, TUESDAY EVENING, 8 p. m. You have doubtless already presented your readers with the pro- gramme and itinerary of the great review ol the National Guards of the capital and its neighbourhood, to which this, the second day of the July anniversary, was to have been in a great measure devoted. At an early hour this morning it was observed that the muster of the legions was stronger than on any former occasion since the first great review in the month of August, 1830, immediately after the revolu- tion, when the citizens of Paris, flushed with recent victory, were full of the enthusiasm inspired by the presence of the King of their choice, and by the fresh guarantees to public liberty they had achieved in the renewal of their charter. In terms of the prescribed itinerary, the King left the Tnileries at nine o'clock, accompanied by the Duke of Orleans, who had returned from Switzerland expressly for the purpose of assisting in the celebration ofthepresent anniversary, and followed by a numerous and brilliant staff, consisting of all the lield- marshals and general officers at present in Paris. On issuing from the Place du Carrousal the royal cortege proceeded by the Rue Rivoli and the Place Vendome, and on reaching the boulevard at the head of tlieiiue de la Paix, took the direction of the Madeline, for the pur- pose of inspecting in the first instance those legions which were stationed to the_ left stretching quite through the Champs Elysees, as far as the Barriere de l'Etoile. The troops were formed in line along both sides of the boulevard, so that after the King had turned to the left at the head of the Rue de la Paix, the inspection began with the line on his Majesty's right as he advanced; that is, with the line which was stationed on that side of the boulevard the farthest from the centre of the city. It was about eleven o'clock when the King returned to the starting point at the junction of the Rue de la Paix with the boulevard, and from thence he proceeded with the inspection, still keeping to the right side of the road as far as the other extremity of the line near the Bastile. It must have been after the royal cortege had passed the scene of the intended massacre, in proceeding towards the Bastile, that the infernal battery was adjusted; and his Majesty's providential escape may fairly be ascribed to the circum- stance of the diabolical engineers having neglected to make allowance for the King's not riding in the centre of the road, but keeping con- siderably nearer that side of it in which the line was stationed which, happened to be under his immediate inspection. Sly despatches of this morning were closed at twelve o'clock, and as soon as they were gone I mounted my horse and rode over to the boulevard to see the sight of the day. Finding that the royal cortege was in its progress towards the right extremity of the line at the Bastile, I pushed on in the direction, but as it was not easy to pass or penetrate the guard of honour, selected from the 13th or mounted legion, which clcs^ d in the royal train both in front and rear, I re- turned and took a station near the Porte St. Martin. I state these particulars to show that although not . an eye- witness of this tragedy, 1 was so near the spot as to have caught the first impulse produced by it, and to have been in a position to collect the facts before they were distorted, as they have since been, in the process of circulation. When the royal cortege arrived at the Porte St. Martin, I observed that although not exactly at a regular trot, they were moving more rapidly than is usual on such occasions, the King all the while making demonstrations with his hand, as if directing the attention of the National Guards and the crowd to his sons, who rode beside him, This was not intelligible at the moment, but was in some degree explained by the action of one of the roval aides- de- camp in attend- ance, who displayed the hat of a Marshal of France, all defaced and trod upon, and stained with blood. On pressing forward to the point where the bloody scene had taken place, immediately in front of the Jardin Turc, on the Boulevard du Temple, two doors beyond the ruins of the Theatre de la Gaiete, the utmost confusion prevailed. The body of Marshal Mortier, Due de Treviso, had been carried into rtie garden, but his horse still lay on the ground. Two other general officers, in attendance on his Majesty's person, General Aymes, one of the King's aides- de- camp, ana formerly aide- de- camp to Marshal Ney, and General Blan, were also killed by this fatal discharge, as was also Colonel Rieussec, a distinguished sporting character, who happened to be on the spot in his capacity of lieutenant- colonel of the 8th legion of the National Guard, who received his death- blow while in the act of saluting the King as he passed. Among the wounded is General Colbert; and three unclaimed bodies, two men and a woman of humble rank, who had evidently been mere spec- tators of the review, remained exposed on the boulevard at the mo- ment of myarrival. To provide against exaggeration, I may mention that at the neighbouring corps de garde the number cf killed and wounded was stated at fifteen, including among the latter three per- sons of one family, a gentleman, his wife, and their daughter, more or less severely. It was the 8th legion that was stationed at this part of the boule- vard, but although one horse was killed and two others wounded, including that of the King, it was remarked as extraordinary that the line itself was not touched. The military men who heard the explo- sion describe it as that of a feu de peloton. Itproceededfrom a small window in the second story, about twenty feet from the ground, over a wine- shop of the lowest order, just opposite the public garden 1 have mentioned, which is situate, as you know, in the midst of the theatres, which on such an occasion as " this becomes the most crowded part of the boulevard. The instrument employee is not unknown, I believe, among ~ a certain class of privateers, who give it the name of an organ, on account of the number of barrels of which it is com- posed all radiating from one point and capable of being discharged by the application of a single match. Had the angle of this battery been inclined a single point lower, it must have killed both the King and the Duke of Orleans ; or had the royal cortege been as far beyond the centre of the road in returning as tliey were within it in going to the Bastile, the massacre- must have been much more general. It is said that the person who actually applied the match was a little gamin, not more than ten or twelve years of age ; but among the persons arrested, amounting already to ten or twelve, several of whom are probably innocent, is a mail himself dreadfully wounded in the face, who appears to have suffered from the bursting of one of the barrels, all loaded with slugs, and so heavily charged that three out of the thirty of which the machine was composed did not stand the shock. As soon as the fact became known, the cry along the line was " I'ivele Roi, a bus les assassins," and mutually between the troops reviewed and those who kept the ground, " five la Ligne,"~ and " l ive la Garde Nationale." The wounded man is a mechanic who has long occupied the room over the wine dealer's shop, from whence the discharge took place. It is said that his jaw had been broken by the bursting of the barrels, and some even say that he is not likely to live through the night. Two hats were found in the room, neither of them his, and he him- self was arrested in the wine- shop below. As soon as the agitation of the moment would permit, the Prefect of the Seine hurried forward to the Chancellerie in the Place Ven- dome, where it was known that the Queen and Princesses were to be in waiting to receive the King on his arrival. Having broken the matter to her Majesty as gently as possible, the whole family re- solved to remain in the balcony during the long period required for the passing of the 17 legions in review. His Majesty's dress was observed to be stained in several places with blood. ( From the Messager.) To- day ( Tuesday) as soon as the King had passed along the whole of the line of the Boulevards, on the side on which the National Guards were drawn up, his Majesty returned on the opposite side, on which the troops of the line - were stationed. About a quarter- past twelve, at the moment that the royal cavalcade arrived at the rising ground on the Boulevard du Temple, near the theatre of the Fon- nambules, a tremendous explosion took place, like the fire from a whole company. Several persons were killed on the spot. The effect of this unexpected event is indescribable, and a general panic aud stupor seized upon all those present. As soon as the first symptoms ot surorise had ceased, the principal object of attention was to ascer- tain if the person of the King had escaped. His Majesty was on horseback ; neither he himself or any of the Princes were wounded; but, unfortunately, we have to record the loss of human blood of a number of persons dear to the State, fallen amidst the cries of universal horror and detestation. This scene took place in the presence of the King; death surrounded his Majesty with its victims. Marshal Mortier, the Lieutenant- Colonel of the 8th legion of the National Guards, Colonel Rieussec, and several general officers were killed on the spot, and on the opposite side several inoffensive citizens; some of the National Guards, and even women and children, fell victims to this flagitious act. The boulevard was streaming in blood, and several horses lay dead on the scene of carnage The svmpathy of the people seemed excited to the highest degree ; the King, who was greatly cheered before this unfortunate event, was ten times more cheered after its occurrence, and there was a universal burst of indignation at the dastardly work of assas- sination which had been perpetrated. The following circumstance, related in the Standard of Thursday, is remarkable— the event described having oc- curred on the day before the attempted assassination of the King:— Yesterday in the Champ de Mars, at the Rue Froidmenteau, at the Place du Louvre, and Marche des Innocens, there were funeral services for those who died in July, 1830. One of the porters of the market delivered an oration in which he pronounced an eulogium on the martyrs of liberty who died ill the glorious davs, and concluded as follows: " La posterite en lisant votre liistoire, se dira— Ces faits se passaient aux temps on il v avait encore des rois!. ! 1 his was pro- claimed and spoken in Paris in July, 1835! The following additional particulars, which we collect from fhe Standard, are from GalignanCs Messenger, aud other Journals of Wednesday :— At the moment his Majesty, when he had reached the Boulevard du Temple, a little before the Theatres des Fnnambules, a tremen- dous explosion, resembling irregular platoon firing, was heard. At first it was supposed to be a discharge of fire works, but the falling and cries of the victims soon revealed the reality, and excessive con <? 4 ^ JOHN BULL. August fusion ensued— an internal machine liaii just poured forth a shower of balls upon the cortege that surrounded the King! Marshal Mortier, Duke de Treviso, fell and expired without uttering a word. Several other officers and some of the National Guards were also killed, and a considerable number of persons wounded. The falling of some horses, among which was that of Marshal Mortier, and the rearing of others, added, to the tumult, which it would be difficult to de- crioe. During this scene the King, whose arm had been grazed by a bullet, aud whose horse had received a wound in the neck, maintained the calmness by which he is distinguished, and displayed remarkable courage by riding up in the direction of the house from which the explosion came. Numbers of the National Guard quitted their ranks, and mingling among the staff officers in the cortege, surrounded the King with anxious inquiries as to his safety, the fears on this head having been greatly increased by his horse " plunging at the moment of the ex- plosion. His Majesty replied, " No, I am not hurt, mv horse only is hurt, but my poor comrade has been less fortunate." In saving these words, his ' Majesty pointed with visible emotion to the " brave old Marshal, extended on the earth and breathing his last. An officer who had received him in his arms was covered with his blood. The animal on which the King rode was in fact wounded in the neck and on the ear, and his Majesty received a bruise in the left arm, which he felt with his right hand," and turning to Colonel Delarne said, " It is nothing." The three Princes also displayed'remarkable presence of mind. Marshal Molitor had his horse wounded under him, and was obliged to return home on foot. Gen. Pelet's wound is an inch and a half wide, and down to the bone. Speedy bleeding has had a beneficial effect, and he is doing well. The form and dimensions of the wound show that the barrels of the infernal machine weje not only loaded with bullets, but also with slugs. General Blin had two fingers amputated at the Cafe de la Gaite. Two gendarmes, named Roussel ana Royer, were wounded and had their horses killed under them. Colonel Raffe, who belonged to the gendarmery of the Seine, received a ball in his left side, but was able to keep his seat in the saddle for some time, when he fainted, and fell from his horse. He • was taken into the restaurant of the Cadran Bleu. The following are the persons whose lives have been ascertained to have been sacrificed:— Marshal Mortier, Duke de Treviso, struck in the heart by a ball; General de Lachasse de Verigny, struck on the forehead by a ball; Captain Villate, aide- de- camp to Marshal Maison; Lieutenant Colonel Rieussec, of the 8th Legion, struck by three balls; Messrs. Prudhomme, Ricard, Leger, and Benetter, Grenadiers of the 8th Legion; a Colonel in the army, two citizens, a woman, and a child, whose names we were unable to learn. The following are those v. ho have been ascertained to have been wounded: — General Heymez, whose clothes were perforated by four balls, and who was wounded in the face by a fifth, which carried away his nose: Generals Colbert, slightly in the head; Pelet, wounded in the back of the neck, and Blin; Colonel Raffe, who received one of the balls in the left side ; Capt. Marion, of the 8th Legion of the National Guards. The child of M. Goret, a turner in the Rue Folie- Meri- court; Vidal, a young man of the Rue Montague- Sainte- Genevieve, whose jaw is fractured; Rose Alison, female servant of M. Brocard, No. 17, Rne Neuve de Nazareth, dangerously; Madame Lederne Sadler, No. 20, RueBergere, itrthe head and left arm, and her sister- in- law, of Meri, near Beauvais, in the leg; Leclerc, a boy aged 13, of No. 21, Rue de la Cote, whose leg is broken in several places; Clari.- se Brieux, of No. 20, Rue des Vertus, who received a ball in the lowerpart of her stomach. The greater part of the above wounds are so serious that little hopes are entertained of saving the lives of the unfortunate sufferers. M. Roger, of the National Guards, a cabinet- maker, in the Rue du Fauborg St. Antoine, and M. Francois, baker, in the Rue de la Roquette, also of the National Guards, were slightly wounded. This evening, at six, the King and Queen, in a private carriage and without any escort, withdrew from tne zeal of the numerous visitors who flocked to the Tuileries, and went to condole with the Duchess of Treviso on her loss. This afternoon, while the troops were filing off before his Majesty, the Ministers met in council, and met again this evening at eight. The Debats announces that the mayors, adjorats, & c., in tliearron- dissement of Sceaux, instantly met and addressed a short memorial to the King, expressive of their joy that the person of his Majesty had been untouched. The salons of the Tuileries were full. All the Ambassadors and Ministers of Paris hastened to congratulate the Monarch. Two Cabinet Councils were assembled last night. The King signed an address to the French people. The Chamber of Peers is convoked to- day at one o'clock, to receive a communica- tion from the Government. The wretched assassin is to be tried im- mediately by the Court of Peers— if possible, before he may die of the wounds he has received. There are so few Deputies at Paris, that there are not enough to form ahouse; but those who are in the capi- tal are to assemble in the Salon of Conferences, in order to decide " what is best to be done. The Constitutional says, that the assassin, when asked if he meant to kill the King, replied by an affirmative shake of the head that such was his intention, but that he had not any accomplices. At the moment when the Duke of Treviso fell, M. Thiers was next him, and was covered with the blood of the illustrious Marshal. The King returned to M. Thiers, and extending his hand to him said, " I am n t wounded." General Pajal has not been wounded. The King has visited General Heymes as well as the Duchess of Treviso. It is stated that to- morrow there will be one general public funeral for all the unfortunate individuals who were yesterday so cruelly and deplorably assassinated. The Journal du Commerce, whilst it laments in the strongest terms the deplorable events of yesterday, adds, " that this feet alone proves that in France a real representative Government has not been established; for that, instead of the Ministers of the King being re- sponsible, the King is made so. The event of to- day shows clearly that the system is bad, and must be chunged, and instead of having a political system of the King, we must have one of a Government constitutionally established and maintained." Last night the Chamber of Peers, in a body, and all the Deputies present at Paris, proceeded to the Tuileries. It is said that his Ma- jesty exhibited great calmness in the replies, he made to the speeches addressed to him ; and deplored in touching terms the death of the brave Marshal Mortier and of the other individuals who so unhap- pily perished around him. The officers of the National Guards are convoked to- day to ad- dress the King. General Klein has not been killed, nor Colonel Raffe, as was at first stated ; but Colonel Raffe has been wounded, as well as General Blin. The Duke de Broglie had a ball pass through the collar of his coat. A very extraordinary circumstance has been related to me. The family of the Duke de Treviso fearingthat the heatof the day would too much fatigue him, endeavoured to prevail on him not to go to the review; but the Marshal, who was very tall, replied to his family, " They talk of an attack on the King. No, no ; I will go— perhaps, as I am tall, I may protect the King." It is reported that Colonel Raffe has died of the wound he received yesterday. An hour after the events which happened on the Boule- vards, Colonel Feisthamel went to see him. Colonel Raffe said to him—" You come to see a man, who in two hours will be dead— but five me your word of honour that the King and the Princes have not een wounded." " I swear they have not been," replied M. Fiesthamel. " Then Vive le Roi— and so much the worse for me that I have been wounded," replied the gallant officer, and soon after died. The Gazette de trance implores the Government to have no more of these obnoxious fetes:— / " We hope that this event will put an end to this fatal commemo- ration, which fills the air with a vapour more pestilential than the cholera." The Quotidienne says, that it is assured that Girard was not alone in the apartment where the infernal machine was placed, but that there were the clothes of two other individuals who escaped. It adds that Girard has died at the prefecture of police. The fete3 have all been postponed— the lamps are all being taken down— the flags are all being dismantled— the unfortunate booth- keepers of the Champ Elysees are ruined— the thousands and tens of thousands of peasants, & c., < S'C., pouring into Paris to. see the fetes are all disappointed— all the theatres ( which were to have been opened gratis) are closed— Paris is as sad as a burial ground, and you hear nothing but predictions that trade and commerce will be wholly ruined. The King has addressed the following proclamation to the French people:— " PROCLAMATION. LOUIS PHILIPPE, KING OP THE FRENCH. "; To all whom these presents concern, greeting, " Frenchmen .'— The National Guard and array are raournirig. French families are distressed— a horrible sight has rent my heart— an old warrior, and old friend, whom the fire of a hundred battles had spared, has fallen at my side under the shafts which assassins destined for me. They have not feared, in order to reach my heart, ? o immolate the glory) honour, the patriotism of peaceful citizens, women and children", and Paris has beheld the blood of the best Frenchmen flow at the same place and on the same day that it flowed, five years ago, for the maintenance of the laws of the land. " Frenchmen !— They whom we this- day regret have fallen in the same cause. It is still the constitutional monarchy— lawful liberty— it is the national honour— the safety of families— the security of all— that vour and my enemies threaten ; but public sorrow, which re- sponds to mine, is, at the same time, a tribute of respect offered to noble victims, and a conspicuous testimony to the union between France and her King. My Government knows its duties, and will fulfil them. Yet let the festivities which were to signalise the last of these days make room for a pomp more conformable to the senti- ment that animates us; let just honours be rendered to the memory of those whom the country has just lost, and the veils of mourning that yesterday shaded the three colours, be again thrown over that banuer which is the faithful emblem of all the sentiments of the country. " Signed at the Palace of the Taileries, 28th of Jnlv, 1835." " Louis PHILIPPE." An ordinance of the King follows, which ordains that the fetes announced for the celebration of the Revolution of 1830 shall not take place, and that a funeral and solemn service shall be celebrated in honour of the victims of yesterday. The Minister of the Interior is charged with the execution of that order. Tortoni's, three o'clock. There is no Bourse to- day. The funds have fallen, but not much. The Three per Cents, are at 78f. 75c.; they have been at this price all the morning. A communication of the facts of the case has been made to the Chamber of Peers. It is charged with the trial of the offenders. Some say that Girard is dead, but others declare that such is not the case. He is not, however, by any one expected to survive his wounds. The general opinion seems to be, that this fatal affair is only the end of a beginning— at all events, the strongest coercive measures have already been taken. If the reports now so general, of the assassination having been threatened, and spoken of, and written of, dnring the last few days, be true, it is but reasonable to suppose many persons are concerned in the conspiracy. The accounts of the arrests aud imprisonments which have followed the explosion, give us but small hopes of long- continued tranquillity in France. One paper, the Gazette des Tribunaux, gives a list of fifty- nine persons apprehended since the publication of its last number. M. CARREL, the editor of the National, was arrested on Wednesday, and placed in solitary confinement until ten o'clock at night, when he was examined and sent to the prison of St. Pelagie. The editors of the Corsaire and Charmari had also been seized, and their offices searched. MM. RASPAIL and GALLOIS, the editors of the Reformateur, had been arrested ; and M. DE LISLE, the editor of the paper called La France, has shared the same fatfe. It is stated that hackney- coaches, filled with persons recently apprehended, are driving to the Prefecture of Police, and that the cells and vaults of that place, and of the prison adjoining, are crowded to suffocation. This is a feverish state of tilings. Abhorring and detesting as we do the crime and the criminal by which last Tuesday was distinguished in the annals of history, we cannot but regard as a great political lesson the fact, that the anniversary of the glorious event which, as we have elsewhere said, forced Louis PHILIPPE upon the throne of his uncle, by popular acclamation, should have been selected to evince the popular feeling of hostility towards his Government and person. It is a lesson for Revolutionists which ought not to be thrown away. The Princess VICTORIA was confirmed on Thursday morning at the Chapel Royal, St. James's. The KING, the QUEEN, the Duchess of KENT, the Duke of CUM- BERLAND, the Duke and Duchess of CAMBRIDGE, the Princess SOPHIA, and the Duchess of SAXE WEIMAR were present at the ceremony, which was performed by his Grace the Archbishop of CANTERBURY, assisted by the Bishop of LONDON, Dean of the Chapel. The prayers were read by the Rev. Mr. HADEW, and the lessons by the Rev. C. WESLEY. The service was Arnold's in F. Sir. G. SMART, who presided at the organ, played a voluntary at the conclusion of the morning service, and their MAJESTIES, the Duchess of KENT, and the Princess VICTORIA descended from the Royal Closet to the altar. The Duchess of KENT remained during the ceremony on the right of the Princess, and the KING on the left. At the side of the altar were the QUEEN, the members of the Royal family, and the Duchess of SAXE WEIMAR. The ceremony was concluded by the Archbishop of CANTERBURY delivering an impressive and appropriate address. In attendance on their MAJESTIES and the Royal party were— The Countess Brownlow and Miss Hope Johnstone, the Lady and Maid of Honour to the Queen ; the Lord Chamberlain to the King; Lord Elphinstone and Colonel Armstrong, the Lord and Groom in Waiting ; Hon. Mr. Ashley, Vice- Chamberlain to the Queen ; the Dean of Hereford, Deputy- Clerk of the Closet in Waiting; the Duchess of Northumberland, Governess of the Princess Victoria; Sir Frederick Wetherall, Sir John Conroy, Sir Edward Cust, the Hon. General Upton, and the Dean of Chester in attendance on the Duchess of Kent and the Princess Victoria, and Baroness Ahlefeldt, Lady in Waiting on the Duchess of Cambridge. We have to- day to announce the death of the Right Hon. JOHN JAMES, Earl WALDEBRAVE, which took place on Thursday, at his house, Strawberry Hill, Middlesex. His Lordship was born on the 30th of July, 1785, and had, consequently, on the day of his death, attained his fiftieth year. His Lordship's father, GEORGE, the fourth Earl, was born on the 22d of November, 1751, and married, on the 5th of May, 1782, Lady ELIZABETH LAURA WALDEGRAVE, eldest daughter of his uncle JAMES, second Earl, by MARIA, afterwards Duchess of GLOUCESTER. Lord WALDEC RAVE'S honourable conduct in resigning his office at Court in preference to compromising his Conservative principles, is of itself a sufficient evidence to the uprightness and independence of his public life. In private society there never existed a kinder, a more amiable, or a higher- minded man than his Lordship. Lord WALDEGRAVE is succeeded in his titles and estates by his son, Viscount CHEWTON, who was born February 8,1816. It is said that Lord AUCKLAND is to go to India, if things go on smoothly. Our readers will be glad to see that the East India pro- prietors have resolved to have out the whole of the proceedings with regard to Lord HEYTESBURY'S removal from the Governor- General- ship. Thus all the shufflings and intriguings of Government are baffled and defeated. The following hints are to be kept in mind by all those who think the country worth saving:— The Elections are only to be gained by a vigilant attention to the Registration of Voters. SEE THAT ALL GOOD VOTES ARE ON THE LIST. Every occupier, as owner or tenant of a house, warehouse, count- ing- house, shop, or other building, separately or jointly, with land, within the borough, occupied as owner, or as tenant under the same landlord, of the clear yearly value of 101., provided he has occupied the premises for twelve calendar months before the last day of July, and during that time been rated in respect of such premises to all rates for the relief of the poor, and paid before the 20th of July all poor rates and assessed taxes due before the sijeth of April previous, and resides within the borough, or within seven miles thereof, IS A GOOD VOTE ! Joint occupiers, when the yearly value of the premises is of an amount which, when divided by the number of occupiers, gives a sum of not less than 101. for each, provided they have duly occupied and been rated, and paid the rates and resided within the distance as above mentioned, ARE GOOD VOTES ! Occupiers of different premises in succession, provided they have complied with the above conditions, ARE GOOD VOTES! All freemen admitted before the 1st of March, 1831, or since that time, if admitted in respect of birth or servitude, provided they reside within the borough, or within seven miles from the Guildhall, for six calendar mouths Defore the last day of Julv, ARE GOOD VOTES! And if omitted from the lists, claims must be sent in before the 25th of August. REFORMERS! See that no BAD VOTES are on the LIST!! Occupiers where the value is less than 101., Occupiers as tenants of houses, tfrc., and land under different landlords, where neither is of the value of 101., Joint occupiers, where the value when divided is less than 101., Occupiers for less than twelve calendar months, before the last day of July, Occupiers not rated, Occupiers who have not paid all rates and taxes due on the 6th of April, before the 20th of July, Occupiers not resident within the borough, or within seven miles thereof, for six calendar months, Occupiers who have received relief at any time within twelve ca- lendar months, Freemen admitted since March, 1831, except by birth or servitude, Freemen not resident for six months within the borough, or within seven miles of the Guildhall, Freemen who have received parochial relief at any time within twelve months, And must be objected to before the 25th of August, ARE BAD VOTES. A clause in the Municipal Reform Bill provides that the mode of voting for the Town Councillors shall be by the voter delivering in a paper containing the names of the persons for whom he votes, snch paper being also signed with the name of such voter. Now as many, if not a large proportion, of such voters will be unable to read or write, some curious mistakes will not be unlikely to be made— to say nothing of the difficulties which will probably be experienced by the Returning Officer in deciphering the polling papers of those who may attempt a scrawl. Another clause, we believe, enacts that if the Mayor of any place dies, he must signify the same by letter to the Councillors, or whatever they may be. Sir WILLIAM GOSSETT officiated as Sergeant- at- Arms for the first time on Thursday in the House of Commons. We hope Mr. PEMBERTON has not abandoned his motion upon the subject of the great Seal and the Commissioners— the job is getting too ludicrous for endurance. The state of Ireland is most dreadful— Protestants are murdered night after night; and, as we see, no steps are taken for the appre- hension of the perpetrators of the iniquities which are committed. REMARKABLE COINCIDENT OF THE DAYS OF THE MONTH.— On the 21st day of July, 1683, Lord WILLIAM RUSSELL was executed in Lin- coln's Inn- fields, for the stand which he made in supporting the Protestant religion against the intrigues of the Court in the reign of CHARLES II., formed by Catholic interest in favour of the Popish Duke of YORK ; as also died SYDNEY :— hence the glorious revolu- tion of 1688.—( See the biography of the two illustrious martyrs.) On the 21st day of July, 1835, Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S Bill for the appropriation of the revenues of the Irish Protestant Church, in aid of Catholic education, went into a Committee of the Commons' House of Parliament; the effect of which is in direct opposition to his noble ancestor's and SYDNEY'S glorious struggles, for which they gave up their precious lives. Lord WILLIAM RUSSELL was the son of the first Duke: Lord JOHN RUSSELL is the son of the seventh Duke. The Dublin Evening Mail says:— We can state upon the most unquestionable authority that on the occasion of the KING investing the Hon. FRANCIS STANHOPE with the riband, badge, and black rod of the Order of St. Patrick, his MAJESTY addressed that gentleman in nearly the following words, and in the most emphatic manner:— " Sir— It affords me great pleasure to confer the honour of knight- hood upon you, as I nave known you from a child, and had the greatest regard for your father, poor Lord HARRINGTON : but I am bound to tell you that the manner in which your appointment was proposed— mark— proposed— to me by my VICEROY— WAS AS OUT- RAGEOUS AN INSULT AS EVER WAS OFFERED TO A MONARCH." WHAT WILL LORD MULGRAVE DO ? Deny the truth of this, of course; for, admitting the accuracy of the statement, he could not, with any pretension to the character nf a gentleman, continue to hold office for half an hour. But will his denial answer the purpose We refer him for the truth to the Earl of ALBEMARLE, to Lord CORK, to Lord COMBERMERE, and to the other noblemen who were in the immediate vicinage of the KING when he used these extraordinary expressions:— we refer him to an officer of his own household— one over whom he exercises control to a certain extent, and to whom his Lordship can have no delicacy in propound- ing the question— the very best witness save one who could be produced to affirm or negative the fact:— we refer him to the Hon. Sir FRANCIS STANHOPE himself— will he dare to deny it? Several versions of this story have appeared in the London jour- nals. We have reason to know that the foregoing is accurately correct. The West India Loan, which was thought to be a remarkably fine speculation, seems suddenly out of favour. The great houses have all backed out of it, and, as it appears to us, leave Mr. SPRING RICE rather at the mercy of Mr. ROTHSCHILD. The Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty have forwarded to LLOYDS' the copies of two letters which they had received from Mr. CHARNAUD, the acting British Consul at Salonica. The first, dated April 8, states, " That Ibrahim Pacha, the governor of the city, has been the means of destroying thirty- seven Greek pirates, which in- fested this Gulf, within the last fortnight; their heads were brought into this town and exposed publicly,— I regret, however, to have to mention that the notorious robber, CARAMITSO, captured by Captain COPELAND, and afterwards set at liberty by the Greek Government, has re- appeared in this Gulf, with seven boats of different sizes, and 200 men, with a determination to take vengeance against the Cassan- droits, who were the cause of their comrades' destruction by Ibrahim Pacha's troops."— The second letter, under the date of May 19, states, " That the formidable robber, CARAMITZO, was surprised by a gale of wind, near Cassandra, which forced him to run on the coast of Platamona, and on landing there he was attacked by the troops of Imin Pacha, of Larissa, and killed, together with seven robbers who accompanied him. Since the destruction of tbis CARAMITZO there is no further report of pirates in this neighbourhood." We see that Mr. BENTLEY is proceeding in the publication of the Standard Novels, in a manner certain of securing success. Extreme neatness in the typographical part, and good taste blended with good execution in the illustrations, combined with excessive cheapness, render this series of the best modern works of fiction highly popular and attractive. We are glad to perceive that the Attorney- General hesitates about the Charter for the London University, and that he has prepared a August 30. JOHN BULL. 425 Bill to charter a College, to which, of course, the power of granting Degrees will not be given. In all probability the affair will slumber till next Session. We understand that the CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER has so far given way to those members of the Radical faction, who are anxious to speculate in newspaper property, as to have promised them that he will reduce the newspaper stamp duty to twopence, without discount. This change will, we believe, be announced in the Budget speech, if, which seems to be still doubtful, such a production should ever follow the long aud tedious gestation of Mr. SPRING RICE. We believe the country would have been benefitted in a much greater degree by the reduction either of the window tax or the malt duty. But these are not taxes upon knowledge, and knowledge, as all the world must agree, is a desideratum with the present Ministers of the Crown.— Post. We are glad to perceive that the LORP MAYOR, by a strenuous and highly honourable resistance to the attempts to question the rights and privileges of the high office which he holds, has at length put an end to the factious folly of some of the sapient body over whom it is his Lordship's duty to preside. Finding the present LORD MAYOR inflexible, the great projectors of the enterprize against the powers of the Chief Magistrate in council, have postponed their attack until some less firm and zealous gentleman may he in office. A greater compliment to steadiness of purpose and constitutional consistency was never paid. The Morning Post says:— Some time since the Honourable Member for Middlesex had been called upon by several members of the Maryiebone Board of Vestry to explain what part he had taken, and whether it had not been an active one, in assisting to pass a Bill lately rt- iected by the House of Lords, which was intended to extend in a most unreason- able manner the powers of the Grand Junction Water Company, to the injury of that parish. They understood he had not only intro- duced the Bill to the House of Commons, through which' it had passed in a very rapid ana silent manner, but that he ( Mr. HUME) had also sat as'Chairman of the Committee. In answer to these charges Mr. Hume distinctly stated he had neither introduced the Bill nor sat in the Committee. Here the matter ended until Satur- day last, when Mr. Foulger, a member of the vestry, again called the attention of that Board to the subject. He felt it was one of 9, most serious nature, as reflecting upon the character of the Hon. Member for Middlesex. He ( Mr. Foulger) had inquired into the facts of the case, and he was sorry to have it in his power to prove ( by a reference to the Parliamentary Journals) that the Hon. Member had both introduced the Bill and sat upon the Committee as Chairman. ( Hear, hear.) He could not help stating that it was as foul a job as was ever introduced into the House of Commons. The Bill was intended to extend the powers of the Grand Junction Water Company, to the injury of the inhabitants and householders of Maryiebone parish; and so secretly was it intro- duced that they did not hear a word of it until it had passed a second reading in the House of Lords. He regretted the Hon. Member for Middlesex was not present to defend himself from so serious a charge. ( Hear, hear.) Several other members of the Board spoke to the same effect, and seemed to feel that the charge was one of a most serious character. Here the matter rests for the present. The Hon. Colonel FINCH was united on Tuesday to Miss ELLICE, niece of Earl GREY. After the review of the Royal Artillery and Marines at Woolwich, last week, his MAJESTY intimated to Colonel M'CLEVEIITY, the veteran Commandant of the Royal Marines, that he had given directions that his son ( who was dismissed from the Castor in con- sequence of that ship coming in contact with a revenue vessel at the time Lieutenant M'CLEVERTY was officer of the watch) should be restored to his rank. Her MAJESTY, in a very kind and affable manner, congratulated the Colonel upon the event, as did also the Noble and Gallant Officers present. Sir ROBERT ADAIR has been appointed on a special mission to the Court of Prussia. , We regret to learn that the Earl of MUNSTER, with his lady and family, being on their way from Basle to Neufch& tel, met with an accident, between Montier and Conet, which might have been attended with serious consequences. Upon reaching the second turning of the road the carriage, in which were the Earl and Countess, with their son and daughter, was, through the negligence of the postillion, thrown down a precipice of more than twenty feet; and if it had not been stopped by two trees would have fallen into the Birse. Two of the horses went down with the carriage, and three others were left on the road from the traces breaking. Happily none of the party received further injury than contusions. The postillion was so alarmed that he immediately took to flight. Wednesday a deputation of the leading tradesmen in the city of Westminster, waited upon Sir FREDERICK POLLOCK upon the subject of the Imprisonment for Debt Bill. The same parties afterwards waited upon Sir WILLIAM FOLLETT. They retired with the under- standing that they must make an opposition to the Bill in the House of Lords if they wished to succeed in procuring its abandonment, the Ministers being determined to carry it through the Commons. The Commissioners of Woods and Forests have issued a circular, for the purpose of obtaining the best architectural plan for building the intended Houses of Lords and Commons. The necessary instructions are given with respect to the dimensions of the buildings, the number of apartments, offices, and details. The site is to be the bank of the Thames, extending from Westminster Hall along the south side of Abingdon- street, with an embankment and terrace. In addition to a premium offered for the approved plan the fortunate projector is to have the superintendence of the works. The meeting of the British Association for the advancement of Science will commence in Dublin 011 the 10th inst. The Provost of Trinity College is the President elect. The Vice- Presidents elect are Lord OXMANTOWN and the Rev. WILLIAM WHEWELL, F. T. C. D. The Secretaries are W. R. HAMILTON, M. R. I. A., Astronomer Royal of Ireland, and the Rev. HUMPHREY LLOYD, F. T. C. D. Dr T. H. ORPEN is Treasurer. We learn from Lisbon that Prince CARRIGNANO, of the Royal family of Sardinia, is the happy man fixed upon as the young QUEEN'S second husband. This Prince, whose age is 22, has been educated at Paris, and passes for a great Liberal, 011 which account he remained aloof from the Court of Turin. His pslitical sentiments and moral character are described as coming as near as possible to those of the late Prince AUGUSTUS of Leuchtenberg. The marriage is to take place forthwith. The QUEEN and EMPRESS have not yet thrown aside their mourning. It appears from the Augsburgh Gazette, that the reports respect- ing the illness of the Duke of BORDEAUX are unfounded. We can affirm, says that journal, that th> Prince has not even had a tem- porary indisposition. All the statements respecting his illness were but inventions. It would be a hard task to refute all the false reports propagated in these days of falsehood. The Hull election inquiry was terminated on Tuesday, by Mr. WRANGHAM, the Counsel for the petitioner, declining to proceed further with the scrutiny. The Committee consequently came to a resolution declaring the sitting Member, Colonel THOMPSON, duly elected,, and that the petition against the said return and the oppo- sition to it were neither frivolous nor vexatious. XIIS Salisbury Herald, states that Sir THOMAS CHAMMJETS, Bart., and his steward, Mr. ROBERT WHITE, both described as late of Orchardleigh- park, in the county of Somerset, and of Hayling Island, near Portsmouth, are among the persons claiming their discharge from the Insolvent Court during the ensuing Circuit at Winchester. The Basingstoke correspondent of the same paper write as follows : Our veteran townsman, WILLIAM SHAW, in despite of three score years and ten, and the exertion still attending a traverse of 300 miles per week, has within these few days past, taken to himself a rib, being the third hymeneal contract in which he has adventurously engaged. It is an ascertained fact, that during the last lialf- century, the above- named active Jehu has driven an average distance of 50 miles per day, amounting, in total, to the surprising number of 912,500 miles. A French paper mentions that the Sylph brig, not having arrived in time with the crown and sceptre, for the coronation of King OTHO, of Greece, his Majesty went through the ceremony with a pasteboard crown. The French papers draw a most frightful picture of the ravages of the plague and the cholera in Syria and Egypt. In an article dated Cairo, May 13, it is stated that of the latter disease, 1- 1,000 Musslemen pilgrims perished in a single day at Mecca. There is a Bill before Parliament to transfer the regulation and appointments of the prisons throughout the country from the hands of those in the Commission of the Peace to the Home Secretary. On Monday the Hon. M: s. YORKE was thrown from a car in which she was returning to Rudhall, from Ross, and so much injured, that she died immediately. The deceased was the sister of Earl Somers. — Worcester Journal. The wheat harvest, which is now commenced very generally throughout the south and south- western counties, promises a most . abundant crop, in some places even more so than last year. The barley crop, both from the effects of some sharp frosts late in tha spring, and the long continued dry weather lately, is not likely to be so good. The Conservatives of the county of Essex had an important dinner meeting at Maldon on Monday last. There were present the Right Hon. Lord Asliburton, Sir J.' J. Tyrrell, Bart. M. P.; W. H. Dare, Esq., M. P.; T. W. Bramston, Esq., M. P.; J. P. Elwes, Esq., M. P.; Q. Dick, Esq., M. P.; J. S. f/ auce, Esq., the Mayor; J. J. Tuffhell, Esq.; J. F. Fortescne, Esq.; Rev. C. Matthew, Rev. J. Mildmay, Rev. C. Tyrrell, and between one and two hundred oth<> r Gentlemen of the county. The company sat down to dinner at the Blue Boar Inn, and Lord ASHBURTON took the Chair.— The Noble CHAIRMAN on rising to give the first toast, " Church and King," said it required no preface from him to recommend it* They must know, as Englishmen, that the Established Church was the best stay of the country, and that to the Kingly power they were indebted for the free liberty which they enjoyed, and which had made the country the envy of surrounding nations. ( Cheers, amidst which the toast was drank with three times three.)— The NobleCHAiRMAN next proposed " The health of the first Lady of the kingdom, who, since her elevation to the Throne, had endeared herself to all classes of society." ( The toast was drunk with great cheering.)— Those which followed were, " The Princess Victoria, and the rest of the Royal Family," " The Navy," " Lord Hill and the Army," which were" drunk with all due honours.— The Noble CHAIRMAN then proposed " The health of the Duke of Wellington," and observed that having acted under that distinguished Nobleman in the Government of the country it was impossible not to see that the feelings and energies of that great man, whether in the field or in the Cabinet, were pointed at the welfare and happiness of his country. ( Great cheering, and the toast was drunk with three times three.)— Among the other toasts were—" The health of the High Sheriff," " The Lord Lieutenant of the county," " Mr. Hall Dare and Mr. Bramston,'; aud " Sir J. J. Tyrrell and Mr. Elwes," which were drunk with great enthusiasm.— The speeches delivered on the occasion were truly loyal and constitutional, and the meetiug passed off with the greatest harmony. MARYLEBONE CONSTITUTIONAL SOCIETY.— The first dinner of this highly- respectable and influential Association tookplace 011 Wednes- day, at the Yorkshire Stingo Tavern, New- road. It was originally proposed that the guests should be limited to sixty or seventy, but the applications were so numerous that the Committee were in some degree compelled to extend the invitations to upwards of 125. Among the company, which certainly included a large portion of the respectable and valuable constituency of the borough, we ob- served Sir Henry Martin, W. A. Mackinnon', Esq., M. P., Henry M. Dyer, jun., Esq., George Palmer, Rusjell, Plowden, Pope, Gilby,' Esqs., Captain Staveley, & c. Wm. Painter, Esq., presided. After a very excellent dinner a number of loyal and constitutional toasts were given from the Chair, all of which were received with singular enthusiasm. In particular, when the toasts of" The King" ana " The Queen" were announced, the plaudits were for some time prolonged ; and, in the songs which followed the toasts, those verses which in the remotest manner bore upon loyal feelings called forth repeated manifestations of satisfaction. In the early part of the evening, when these liberal feelings peculiar to an assembly of real English Conservatives were excited, it was incidentally remarked that a number of persons had assembled at the windows, with the view of catching a glimpse of what was passing in the room. Im- mediately this circumstance was discovered a liberal subscription w as set 011 foot, and in a short space of time a sum was collected, which was handed to the landlord, with instructions to furnish the amount in ale to the spectators, in order to afford them an oppor- tunity of drinking the health of their Sovereign. This unex- pected bounty called forth from the parties who partook of it the most vociferous manifestations of their satisfaction, and " The health of the King" was quaffed amidst an uproarious exhibition of loyalty. The toast of " Church and State" elicited much applause. The Chairman, W. A. Mackinnon, Esq., Col. Broughton, W. Scaddin, Dr. Pope, and several other talented gentlemen, addressed the com- pany with great eloquence and at considerable length. The Post of Friday, in reference to this dinner, has the following: The Committee, for some reasons which we cannot understand, had determined that in the list of toasts no individual name other than those of the Royal Family should be included. This whimsical and in- comprehensible regulation the managers of the feast found them- selves wholly unable to maintain. In the course of the evening the company rose simultaneously, and with one loud and spontaneous voice demanded that the health of Sir Robert Peel should be given from the Chair, a demand much too reasonable and too congenial with the principles upon which the institution is founded to admit of any opposition. The toast, we need scarcely say, was drunk with a degree of enthusiasm seldom equalled and never surpassed. The great body of the Conservative Association of Marylebpne clearly showed upon this occasion how incapable they are of any sympathy with the spirit or the principles of a timid or cunning neutrality, in regard to the character of Statesmen, or the great questions which the Statesmen of the present day have to decide. HAMPSTEAD.— The following is a copy of a petition against the Irish Church Bill in the course of signature by the inhabitants of this place, and which has already been signed by all the leading gentry of the parish:— To the Honourable the Commons of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in Parliament assembled. The humble petition of the undersigned inhabitants of the parish of St. John, Hampstead, in the county of Middlesex— Showeth— That your petitioners have heard with dismay that a Bill is depending before vour Honourable House, entitled " A Bill for the better regulation of Ecclesiastical revenues and the promotion of religious and moral instruction in Ireland," in which is contained clauses for suspending Ecclesiastical benefices in Ireland not con- taining fifty members of the Established Church, diminishing the income in other parishes, and appropriating the revenues so obtained to other than Ecclesiastical purposes. Your petitioners have always looked upon a Protestant Establish- ment as one of the most distinguished blessings of the United King- dom. They are willing at all times to concur in any measures which shall seem calculated to improve the efficiency, to enforce the duties, or to correct any proved abuses of our Ecclesiastical system. They are desirous to press no objection which may be entertained to ainy commutation of the revenues appropriated to it, provided those changes contemplate tile continued application of those revenues to the uses of the National Church: they abstain from urging any doubts they feet as to the propriety of many clauses in the present Hill, and. even from deprecating at the present moment the particular destination which is proposed for the revenues now intended to be withdrawn from the support of a minister of the established religion ; but they earnestly implore your Honourable House not to pass into a law a Bill which will remove Protestant doctrines, and Protestant instruction, and Protestant example from those districts of Ireland where those advantages are most needed, because they are most rarely to be found. A similar petition is also to be presented to the House of Lords. ECCLESIASTICAL INTELLIGENCE. PREFERMENTS, APPOINTMENTS, 4c. The Rev. THEOPHILUS BIDDULFH, M. A., to the perpetual Curacy of St. Matthew's, Kingsdown, near Bristol. The Rev. J. W. WHITESIDE, M. A., Curate of Crosthwaite, Keswick, to the Incumbencv of Trinity Church, Ripon. The Rev. W. DARBY, to the peiyetual Curacy of St. Benedict's, Norwich, the appointment to which is in the hands of the parishitmers. The Rev. CEO. MABERLY, A. M., late Fellow of Baliol College, Oxford, to the Head Mastership of Winchester School, in the room of the Rev. Dr. WILLIAMS, resigned.— The Rev. CHARLES WORDS- WORTH, A. M., student and tutor of Christchurcli, Oxford, to be the Second Master, in the room of the Rev. Charles Ridding, now Vicar of Andover. The Rev. J. R. BLOXAM, Second Master of Bromssrove School, has been elected Probationary Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford. OBITUARY. The Rev. John Torr, incumbent of Westleiph, near Buieford. ORDINATION. At an ordination held by the Lord Bishop of Worcester, on the 25th ult. ( St. James's day), the following gentlemen were ordained:— Priests: W. J. Morrish, M. A., Magdalen hall, Oxford; T. Jackson, B. A., Worcester coll., Oxford; A. H. Price, B. A., V/ adham coll., Oxford.— Deacons: T. Taylor, B. A., Magdalen hall, Oxford; J. Hetherington, M. A., Queen's coll., Oxford; O. Fox, B. A., Lincoln coll., Oxford ; F. A. Crow. B. A., Christ's coll., Cambridge; J. W. Dolphin, B. A., Magdalen hall, 0* f> rd ; B. Faussett, B. A., Christ coll., Oxford; F. P. G. Dineley, B. A., Worcester coll., Oxford; H. B. Whiting, B. A., Christ's . coll., Cambridge. , MISCELLANEOUS. ST. MARTIN'S CHURCH.— At, a vestry meeting held for the purposo on Friday morning, the Vicar in the chair, resolutions were adopted that the Church should be repaired and beautified as soon as the necessary funds shall have been raised by subscription. A com- mittee was appointed to obtain estimates of expense, and solicit sub- scriptions. The Duke of NORTHUMBERLAND'S name was placed on the list of the committee. The Rev. CHARLEsCATORhas recently relinquished both his livings of Beckenham, Kent, and Carshalton, Surrey, and was lately in- ducted to the Rectory of Stokesley, in the North Killing of Yorkshire; the Rev. L. VERNON HARCOURT, who lately held that preferment, having exchanged to the Rectory of Beckenham, and the Rev. W. H. VERNON, late Curate of Beckenham, being appointed to the Rectory of Carshalton. This arrangement is highly creditable to the Rev. CHARLES CATOR, who thus makes a sacrifice that he may cease hold- ing a plurality of benefices ; and is equally honourable to the patron of both livings, JOHN CATOR, Esq., of Woodbastwick, Norfolk, whose entire knowledge of Mr. W. H. VERNON ( SO handsomely presented to Carshalton), arises from the zealous and exemplary manner in which Mr. VERNON'S ministerial duties as Curate were fulfilled gaining him universal esteem. The Lord Bishop of SALISBURY being too unwell to attend the Triennial Visitation of the Diocese ( which commenced on Tuesday last, at the Cathedral), or to receive the Clergy as his guests as usual, at the Palace, his accustomed hospitality was this year dispensed at the White Hart Inn. His Lordship did not deliver a cliaree to the Clergy has heretofore; but addressed to them a circular letter, on the duty of commemorating the blessing of our Reformation from Popery, in conformity with the Canons and Liturgy of the Church of England. The Rev. Chancellor MARSH ( in the absence of his Lordship) performed the duties connected with the occasion. ^ The attendance of the Clergy was very numerous, and a most admirable sermon was preached by the Rev. W. E. HONY, Rector of Baver- stock.— Salisbury Herald. On Monday se'nnight, the Very Rev. Archdeacon HAMILTON held his Visitation in the Church of St. Mary Magdalene, Taunton, when he delivered an impressive and appropriate charge to the Clergy of the Archdeaconry of Taunton, 111 which he adverted to some im- portant topics connected with the present state of the Church. After the charge, the Archdeacon preached an admirable sermon, and the duties and business of the visitation being concluded, a highly respectable company of Clergymen dined with the Archdeacon. On Friday se'nnight, the Very Rev. the Archdeacon of TAUNTON held his Visitation at Crewkerne, when he delivered a most impressive and most appropriate yliarge to the Clergy, in the course of which he adverted to several important topics relative to the Church, and particularly recommended the attention of the Churchwardens to the state of the public charities existing in the different parishes in the district, urging them to see the same duly administered. On Tuesday se'nnight the anniversary of the Newbury District Committee of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge was held in that town, when most of the families in the neighbourhood partook of a breakfast, at the Mansion- house and then proeeeded to Church, when a most eloquent and impressive sermon was preached upon the occasion by the Rev. JAMES S. M. ANDERSON, M. A., Chaplain in Ordinary to her MAJESTY, and Minister of St.. George's Chapel, Brighton ; after which a collection was made at the Church doors, amounting to the sum of 701., in aid of the funds of the above Society. BRIGHTON.— On Sunday morning sermons were preached at the following places of worship connected with the Establishment, in aid of the funds of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. The subjoined sums were collected after the service:— St. Nicholas' Church, 121. Gs. 6d.; St. Peter's, 241. 7s. 5d.; All Souls Chapel, 81. 5s. 5d.; St. Mary's, 131. 12s. 2d. ; Trinity, 281. 15s. lOd. ; St. Margaret's, 151. 13s. od.; Chapel Royal, 81. 17s. 9d.; St. Andrew's, 151. 0s. 2d.; St. James's, 171. 17s. 6d.; St. George's, 431. Is. 7d.— Total, 1871. 17s. 9d. WELLS CATHEDRAL.— Considerable progress has lately been made in restoring the west front of this beautiful structure to its primitive elegance. The present Dean and Chapter have been by no means sparing of expense in accomplishing this very desirable object, which has consequently been effected to some extent, with great taste and discretion, under the superintendence of Mr. WAINRIGHT, their surveyor. During the past spring the beautiful columns, with their chastelv carved capitals, supporting the niches of the imagery on the lower buttresses, have been wholly restored, so that the decorations of this series of buttrei- ses are now complete, and enable the beholder to form a just conception of the grandeur and beauty of this venera- ble edifice, ere the hand of time had spread over it the desolating effects which are yet too visible. A deputation lately waited upon the Rev. Gi S. BULL, at Byerley Parsonage, Yorkshire, and presented him with a very handsome silver inkstand, with taper, stand, < fcc., bearingthe following inscrip- tion :—" Presented to the Rev. G. S. Bull, Incumbent, of Byerley, Yorkshire, by the Operatives of Bradford, as a token of their sincere esteem and gratitude for his able, disinterested, and indefatigable exertions, to " ameliorate the condition of the Factory Children, in promoting such a legislative restriction of their hours of labour as would place within their reach the blessings of a moral and religious education. June 15th, 1835." WINCHESTER, July 20.— On Tuesday afternoon the Rev. Dr. SHUTTLEWORTH, Warden of New College, accompanied by the Rev. J. T. GIFFARD, and the Rev. J. EKINS, Posers, was received, ac- cording to annual custom with a Latin speech, delivered under the middle gate of the College by Mr. DARNELL, one of the senior scholars. On Wednesday morning, after divine service in the chapel, the compositions and speeches to which his MAJESTY'S medals had been adjudged were recited in the school, before a numerous audi- ence, including the Lord Bishop of JAMAICA, formerly a Fellow of New College, by the under- mentioned gentlemen, scholars of the College:— . Gold Medal.— Latin Essay.— Mr. G. B. LEE, " Decipit exemplar vitiis imitabile." English Verse.— Mr. N. DARNELL, " St. Paul at Athens." Silver Medal.— Latin Speech.— Mr. F. C. PENROSE. English Speech.— Mr. BATHURST, " From Mr. Burke's speech on conciliation with America." .. , „ „ , __ The election then commenced for Winchester College and New College, and the examinations were concluded on Thursday evening. Yesterday evening a verv numerous party of the principal gentrv of the city and neighbourhood were present at the College, when Donmn'i was celebrated in the usual' manner. The hall was deco- rated with flags and banners, and on no occasion did the interesting ceremony pass off with greater eclat. 248 JOHN BULL, August % STOCK EXCHANGE.— SAIURDAY. r The chief attention of the Money Market has been occupied by the West India Compensation Loan, the amonnt of which will be £ 15,000,000, the Chancellor of the Exchequer reserving to himself the risht of contracting the additional £ 5,000,000, i. e. £ 3,300,000 for the Mauritius, and £ 1,700,000 for Barbados, which sums will not yet be required. When the Capitalists waited upon him on Monday, they were informed that the above amount would be required, and that for every £ 100 money subscribed, £ 75 Stock in Consols, and £ 25 in Three per Cent. Reduced would be given, and that those parties offering to take the lowest amount of Long Annuities in addition, would have the contract. The payments are to be made as follows :— 10 per cent, on Wednesday next. 10 " „ on the 16th ot October. 7i „ ,, 13th of November. 7t ,, i, 11 th of December. 10 „ „ 13th of January, 1836. 9 „ ,, 9th of February. 9 „ „ 11th of March. 9 „ „ 12th of April. 6 „ „ 10th of May. 5 ,. „ 14th of June. 8 „ „ 12th of July. 5 „ ,, 16th of August. 4 ,, ,, 13th of September. The interest on the Consols will commence from the 15th instant, and the reduced from the 1st October. Two per cent, discount will be made for all payments made in full. It was understood that lists for the bidding were making by Messrs. Rothschild and Co., Messrs. Baring and Co., Messrs. Reid, Irving, and Co., and Messrs. Ricardo and Co.; but the three last have since declared their intention of not bidding, and Mr. Roths • child remains alone in the field. The large amount required, which exceeded what was expected, caused some heaviness in Consols at first, and they fell to 89%. But the Market has since rallied, and they closed this afternoon very firm at 90%. Exchequer Bills have, however, given way considerably, the premium being at IT, and India Bonds have fallen to 7 to 5. * In the Foreign Market, the Settlement of the Account took place Portuguese at 91 In other Securities there is nothing to notice. Columbian Bonds are 35% 36, Mexican 36, Russian 109%, Danish 77, aud Belgian 100%. 3 per Cent. Consols, Ditto for Account, 3 per Cent. Reduced, S^ perCt. Reduced, New 3% per Cent., 90% 90% 90M X 9m % 98 < 4 % Bank Long Annuities, 16 9- 16 % Bank Stock, Ditto for Account, India Stock, 255 Ditto for Account, India Bonds, 7 5 ptn Exchequer Bills, 22 23 17 pm. The attempt to assassinate Louis Philippe continues to occupy the French journals. It is said that some expressions have fallen " from Girard which lead to the belief that more persons than himself were implicated in the attempt, though he strenuously denies that he had any accomplices. The surgeons charged with the care of his wounds are more inclined tobelievein the possibility of his recovery than they were at first. Great agitation prevails m Paris, and the Government is taking the most anxious precaution for the preservation of tranquillity. A general impression appears to prevail that a society exists, each member of which is pledged to attempt the life of the King. It is expected that as soon as a sufficient number of Deputies shall have arrived in Paris, some measures will be proposed for putting a stop to the " licentiousness" of the press, or, in other words, for preventing any journals from discussing the origin of the present Government, or promulgating any legitimist or republican opinions. At the Court of Peers on Thursday, 112 members were present, and appointed a Commission of eight to examine, cite, and conduct the prosecution. ( From Galignani's Messenger of Thursday.) We understand that several days ago General Baron Athalin was warned, by anonymous letters, that an attempt was to be made, during the review, upon the life of the King, and on Tuesday morn- ing one was sent to the Baron, stating that his Majesty would be fired upon with musketry from the roofs of the houses but as no point was indicated, it was too late to make the necessary examina- tions, and yet the vigilant eye of the General was upon the window at the moment when the explosion took place. It was generally stated yesterday that Girard had taken a nearer aim at the King and his sons than was at first supposed; this is cor- roborated by the following paragraph in the Temps of this morning:— <( The ministers, presided by the King, assembled in council twice yesterday. After the first council, which broke up at ten o'clock, his Majesty felt rather an acute pain in the head, and aid not dine with the familyas usual. The second council, however, washeldateighto'clock. One of the Ministers remarked an ecchymosis in the forehead of the King, who then admitted he had received a contusion from a ball which he had been desirous of keeping secret. It appears that bleed- ing was deemed advisable. The Duke of Orleans has also a contu- sion in the left thigh near the knee, of the Prince of Joinville's horse." A ball struck the hind quarter HOUSE OF LORDS.—( SATURDAY.) Their Lordships met to day at one o'clock. The Dundee Water Works Bill was read a third time. Earl FALMOUTH presented a petition from Penryn against the Corporation Bill. The Noble Earl, at some length, supported the petition. After a few observations from Lord BROUGHAM, who vindicated the Report of the Corporation Commissioners, Earl FALMOUTH rose to make some observations, but did not proceed, in consequence of Lord MELBOURNE moving the Order of the Day for hearing Counsel at the Bar. Lord GRANTLEY presented a petition from Guilford, against the Corporation Reform Bill. Mr. KMGH'rappeared at the Bar and resumed his argument against various clauses in the Corporation Bill. The Learned Counsel said the Bill would indict the greatest injustice on most of the Corpora- tions in the kingdom. It is with deep regret we announce the death of Michael Thomas Sadler, Esq., which took place on Wednesday morning last, at Belfast. Just published, embellished with a splendid Portrait of Lady Trevelyan, and Three Coloured Figures of Female Fashions, No. 38 of THE COUR T MAGAZINE, and LA BELLE ASSEMBLEE. Contents: 1. Genealogical Memoir of Lady Trevelyan. 2. Personal Recollections of the late Charles Mathews. 3. The Betrothed, or the Last of the Antonij, by Dr. W. Beattie. 4. Miss Kelly. 5. Morad the Hunchback, by W. C. Taylor, LL. D. 6. Fashion and Fanaticism at Cheltenham. 7. Remarkable Escapes of a Predestinated Rogue. 8. London Letters to Country Cousins— Greenwich Fair. The COURT- REVIEWS— FASHIONS, & c. & c. Edward Churton, Public Library, 26, Holies- street. NEW PUBLICATIONS FOR AUGUST. CHEAP NEW LIBRARY OF ENTERTAINMENT. • Just published, Vol. I., price 5s. ( to be completed in 2 vols.) handsomely bound in morocco cloth, and embellished by Finden, THE DISOWNED. ByE. L. BULWER, Esq., Author of " Pelham," Ac. Forming the August Volume of COL BURN'S MODERN NOVELISTS. 2. Price 7s. 6d , Part X. of MR. BURKE'S HISTORY OF THE BRITISH LANDED GENTRY. 3. THE COMIC SKETCH- BOOK. By the Author of " Paul Pry." With Portrait. 2 vols. 4. THE VISCOUNT DE CHATEAUBRIAND'S TRAVELS TO JERUSALEM AND THE HOLY LAND. New and cheaper Edition, 2 vols., price only 16s. SIR JONAH BARRINGTON'S MEMOIRS OF IRELAND AND THE UNION. New and cheaper Edition, complete in 2 vols. 4to., with all the original Forty Portraits and other Embellishments; price 21. 8s. bound— originally published at GAR RICK'S PRIVATE' CORRESPONDENCE with the most Eminent Persons of his Time. Comprising upwards of 2,000 Letters, with a new Life, Jfcc. New and cheaper Edition, in two thick quarto volumes, comprising the quantity of six octavos, price only 21. 10s. Published for Henry Colburn, by R, Bentley. Sold by all Booksellers. O L I T A N, The New Number of THE METROP For AUGUST, Will contain among others, the following interesting papers from the pens of the most distinguished writers of the day:— Tour of Mount ^ Etna. Le Roi d' Yvetol. Reform Deformed. False Glitter. Retrospect of an old Physician. Japhet in Search of a Father. Vesper Hymn. Letter from a Female Friend in Pur- gatory. The Diary of a Blase. Saunders and Otley, Conduit- street, Hanover- square. The Poems of Percy Bysshe Shelley. The Library. La Bonne Vicille. Meleager. Life of a Sub- Editor. Paulus Silentiarius. Lays of the Hebrews. Critical Notices of New Works, The Drama, & c. & c. Price Half- a- Crown, THE RUGBY MAG A Z I N E, NO. i.- Juiv ist. Pickering, Chancery- lane ; T. Combe, jun., Leicester; Rowell and Son, Rugby. Just published, price 2d., or 15s. per hundred, the corrected and only authorised Edition of SIR ROBERT PEEL'S SPEECH on the IRISH CHURCH BILL. Roake and Varty, 31, Strand. An Octavo Edition is published to correspond with his former published Speeches. MR. MITFORD'S HISTORY OF GREECE. Complete in Ten Volumes, to be published Monthly, containing the whole of the Author's last Additions and Corrections. Just published, in foolscap Svo , price 5s. in cloth boards, with a Portrait, VOLUME the FIRST of THE HISTORY of GREECE, from the Earliest Period to the Death of Alexander the Great. By WILLIAM MITFORD, Esq. To which is prefixed, a brief Memoir of the Author, by his Brother, Lord Redesdale. Printed for T. Cadell, Strand ; and W. Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh. Of whom may be had, the same Work, elegantly printed in Eight Volumes, demy 8vo., price 41.4s. in boards. M 3, St. James's- square, July 31. ILTON. The THIRD VOLUME of SIR EGERTON BRYDGES' EDITION of MILTON, exquisitely illustrated by J. M. W. Turner, R. A., and Richard Westall, R. A., is this day published, price only 5s. *** This Edition will positively be limited to Six Monthly Volumes".- first volume contains an Original Life of the Poet, by Sir Egerton Brydges. Printed for John Macrone, St. James's- s< square. NEW COMPANION TO THE CONTINENT. Just published, in one handsome pocket volume, post 8vo. ITALY and SWITZERLAN D. By WM. THOMSON, Esq., Assistant Commissar)- General to the Forces. " The Author of this pleasing Guide carries us along with him so completely that we see and enjoy the sights as if we were his companion, not his reader. For the traveller a more excellent pocket friend cannot be adopted."— Literary Gazette. John Macrone, 3, St. James's square. DR. WALLACE ON BROUGHAM S THEOLOGY. Four Shillings, cloth, OBSERVATIONS on the DISCOURSE of NATURAL THEO- LOGY by HENRY LORD BROUGHAM ; chiefly relating to his Lord ship's Doctrine of the Immateriality of the Human Mind, as proved by psycho- loe- ical nhpnnmena r thp flnnlicahilitv r » f flip irwlnrtivo mpfhntl nf iir « nf + r « Vs. logical phenomena; the applicability of the inductive method of proof to Na- tural Theology, so far as relates to psychological Facts, Dreams, etc., and the bearing of the Discourse on Divine Revelation, & c., & c. By THOMAS WAL- T ffP " E>„„ T T T"\ „ f 1.. l T T 1 I <• f> LACE, Esq., LL. D., one of his Majesty's Counsel- at- Law in Ireland, & c., & c.- James Ridgway and Sons, London; Millikens, Dublin; Bell and Bradfute, and Tait, Edinburgh. NORTHERN TOURS. Just published, a Second Edition, with Nine Characteristic Sketches, and two Maps, post 8vo., 12s. EXCURSIONS in the NORTH of EUROPE, through parts of RUSSIA, FINLAND, SWEDEN, DENMARK, and NORWAY. By JOHN BARROW, Jun., Anthorof " A Visit to Iceland." John Murray, Albemarle- street. Lately published, a New Edition ( being the Eleventh), 12mo., 3s. half- bound, ^ TORIES from the HISTORY of ENGLAND. Nearly ready, Third Edition, 12mo., mice 2s. half- bound, 2. PROGRESSIVE GEOGRAPHY for CHILDREN. By the Author of Stories from the History of England." John Murray, Albemarle- street. Just published, price 3s. 6d. bound, THE ILLUSTRATED FRENCH GRAMMAR for CON- VERSATION, with easy Exercises, and perspicuous Examples. Second Edition, corrected, and augmented by many useful Remarks in Exercises, and a Treatise on the Gender of Nouns. Alphabetically arranged. By C. L. LASEGUE. London : W. Edwards ( late Scatcherd and. Letterinan), 12, Ave Maria lane. Just published, price Is. sewed, ATABLE of the DUTIES of CUSTOMS on Articles usually imported by Passengers, with sundry miscellaneous Information for the u> e of Persons arriving from the Continent; with the Prohibitions and Restrictions on certain Articles, and an Abstract of the Revenue and other Regulations in force appertaining thereto ; together with the Duties on similar Articles imported into France and Belgium. By ROBERT COX, Searcher, Landing and Coast Waiter, to his Majesty's Customs, and Principal Inspecting Officer of the Steam- Packet Baggage Department in London. London: Charles Knight, 22, Ludgate- street. COLONEL ARTHUR ON TRANSPORTATION. Just received from Hobart Town, price 6s. boards, DEFENCE of TRANSPORTATION: in Reply to the Remarks of the Archbishop of Dublin, in his Second Letter to Earl Grey. By Col. GEORGE ARTHUR, Lieutenant- Governor » f Van Dieman's Land. Also, price 5s. sewed, by the same Author, OBSERVATIONS on SECONDARY PUNISHMENTS. To which is added, a Letter upon the same Subject, by the Archdeacon of New South Wales. Sold by Geo. Cowieand Co., 31, Poultry ; of whom may be had, ROSS'S HOBART TOWN ALMANAC, and Van Dieman's Land Annual, for 1835, price 8s. cloth, containing the best and most authentic account of the Colony.. Just published, in 3 vols. post8vo., price 27s. SCENES AND CHARACTERISTICS OF HINDOSTAN, with Sketches of Anglo- Indian Society. By EMMA ROBERTS, Author of " Memoirs of the Rival Houses of York and Lancaster," " Oriental Scenes," & c. & c. " We do not know when our attention has been more forcibly attracted than by a series of sketches, published by Miss Roberts, in that excellent miscellany the Asiatic Journal. Light, animated, and graphic, they describe manners and people with spirit, and scenery with a tone of poetical feeling which alone can do justice to the magnificence of the Eastern World. We hope she will be induced to collect them in a volume, and a delightful one it will be."— Calcutta Literary Gazette. W'rn. H. Allen and Co., No. 7, Leadenhall- street. NEW WORKS Just published by Richard Bentley, 8, New Burlington- street, Publisher in Ordinary to his Majesty. " " ' " —• • | g> 24s. In 2 vols. 8vo., with Plates SUMMER'S RAMBLE With a Tartar Trip from ALEPPO TO STAMBOUL. By the Rev. Vere Monro. IN SYRIA, TALES OF THE RAMAD'HAN. By A. J. St. John, Esc. Author of " Egypt and Mohammed Ali," & c. 3 vols. A STEAM VOYAGE DOWN THE DANUBE, With Sketches of HUNGARY, WALLACHIA, SERVIA, AND TURKEY; By Michael J. Quin, Author of " A Visit to Spain," & c. 2 vols, post 8vo., with Plates. 21s. IV. New Work Edited by Lady Dacre. In 3 vols, post Svo. TALES OF THE PEERAGE AND THE PEASANTRY. By the Author of " The Chaperon." " Whilst perusing these tales, we feel as if we were reading no fiction, but a chronicle of real life."— Athenaeum. V. In 1 vol. 8vo., price 10s. 6d., with a Portrait of Mr. Beckford, from a Painting by Sir Joshua Reynolds, AN EXCURSION TO THE MONASTERIES OF ALCOBACA AND BATALHA. By William Beckford, Esq., Author of " Vathek ;" " Italy; with Sketches of Spain and Portugal," & c. " Every class and order of society in Portugal is here placed vividly before us, quite as amusingly as they could have been in a novel of manners."— Quarterly Review, July 1835. VI. THE MONIKINS. By J. Fenimore Cooper, Esq. Author of " The Spy," " The Pilot," & c. 3 vols. VII. A PILGRIMAGE TO THE HOLY LAND, & c. By A. De Lamartine. In 3 vols, small 8vo., with Portrait of the Author. " Lamarfine's European reputation will be infinitely heightened by these delightful volumes."— Quarterly Reviews July 1835. Complete in 1 vol. price 6s., with two Engravings, P AUL CLIFFORD. ByE. L. Bulwer, Esq. Forming the New Volume of ' THE STANDARD NOVELS AND ROMANCES, THE ORIGINAL PLATES OF HOGARTH. Published on Saturday, the 1st of August, No. IV., price 5s., to be completed in Fifty- two Numbers, published every alternate week, THE WORKS of HOGARTH: The GENUINE PLATES, Thoroughly repaired, and carefully restored by eminent Engravers. Printed on superfine Imperial Drawing- paper, with " Explanations of the Plates, and a Biographical Essay. By JOHN NICHOLS, Esq., F. S. A. Contents of Number Four-:— KING HENRY the EIGHTH and ANNA BULLEYN. PORTRAIT of HOGARTH and his DOG TRUMP. FIRST SHEET of DESCRIPTIVE LETTER- PRESS. London : Baldwin and Cradock, Proprietors of the Original Plates of Hogarth. NEW " WORKS, Just published by Longman, Rees, Orme, and Co., London. 1. THE EDINBURGH REVIEW, No. 124. CONTENTS :— 1. Sir James Mackintosh on the Revolution, 1688. 2. Aristophanes and the Athenians. 3. Boteler's Voyage of Discovery to Africa and Arabia. 4. Bentham's Deontology, or Science of Morality. 5. Mrs. Butler's American Journal. 6. Dalgarno's Works— Education of the Deaf and Dumb. 7. Ross's Second Voyage to the Arctic Regions. 8. The Philosophy of Manufactures. 9. Monteomery's Poet's Portfolio, or Minor Poems. 10. State of the Irish Church. Note to the Article in No. 123 on Lighthouses. 2. THE LIFE and TIMES of WILLTAM III. King of Eneland, and Siadtholder of Holland. By the Hon. A. Trevor, M P., M. A. F. A S., < frc., of Christ Church, Oxford. Vol. 1. 8vo., with Portrait, & c., price 12s. The concluding volume is in a state of great forwardness. THE F U D G E S ' in ENGLAND; Being a Sequel to the Fudge Family in Paris. By Thomas Brown the Younger, Author of " The Twopenny Post Bag," & c. & c. THE DOCTOR,' & 0. Vol. HI. Post 8vo., 10s. 6d. Also, the Two previous Volumes. " That singular production called ' The Doctor, & c.' is rich beyond almost an- other of the time, in the best knowledge and the most beautiful literature."—• Quarterly Review. THE MORAL of FLOWERS. With 24 beautifully coloured Plates. Svo. 2d edition, with additions, 30s. hf.- bd. *** This Edition contains some Additional Poems. " Full of exquisite poetry.''— Blackwood's Mag. SACRED HISTORY of the WORLD, Philosophically considered, in a Series of Letters to a Son. By Sharon Turner, F. S. A. and R. A. S. L. ' Vol. II. Svo. 14s. bds.- - Also, The Fifth Edition of the First volume. 8vo. 14s. A POET'S PORTFOLIO. By James Montgomery, Esq. Fcap. Svo. 8s. Now ready, dedicated to his tfons, price 6s., in one volume foolscap 8vo. ( illustrated with a Portrait and Vignette), THE LIFE OF WILLIAM COBBETT, containing Biography, Auto- biography, and a Philosophical Criticism on his Writings and- Public Career. *** The above work is by a literary gentleman, who has had it in course of pre- paration for the last fifteen months, little anticipating that he would have to close it with an account of the Death of that remarkable man, whose life it illustrates. London : F. J. Mason, 444, Strand. SALE BY AUCTION. The Courier Evening Newspaper.— Five Shares in this valuable Paper, which has been established upwards of 40 years.— By Messrs. FAREBROTHER and Co. r at Garraway's. on FRIDAY next, at Twelve ( unless an acceptable offer is pre- viously made by Private Contract), FIVE TWENTY- FOURTH SHARES in the COURIER EVENING NEWSPAPER, offering a secure investment, which is almost certain of considerable increase, from the patronage of the public and the high connections and great influence of the principal Shareholders.— Particulars of the average Dividend, the names of the different Shareholders, and the Shares pos- sessed by each of them, with the heads of the articles of agreement subscribed by the Proprietors, and the Conditions of Sale, may be had at the Office of Messrs. Sweet and Sutton, Solicitors, Basinghall- street; at Garraway's ; and at Messrs. Farebrother and Co.' s Offices, 2, Lancaster- place, Strand. _ LrtSN BjK. A1j AVKiiAWft i^ itiUJiiS ijf CUK. N, per Qr.— J uly 30. Wheat— Average 4 Is 4d— Duty on Foreign 45s 8d— from BritishPossessions 5s Rye 31s 5d 22s 9( 1 3s Barley, Maize,& c. 28s 9d 19s lOd 2s 6d Oats 23s lid 12s 3d 2s Beans 40s 3d 9s 6d 3s Pease 39s 8d lis Od 3s STOCKS. Bank Stock India Stock 3 per cent. Consols 3 per cent. Red 3£ per cent. 1818 3£ per cent. Reduced ... New 3| per cent Bank Long Annuities ... India Bonds Exchequer Bills Consols for Account.... Mon. Tu. Wed. Thur. Friday 215 215| — 214} 214} — — 255 255 255} 90 901 891 89} 89? 90| 91 90$ 90} 90J 98| 99 98j 99 99* 98 98} 97| 98! 98} 17 16j 16| 16| 16} — P 10 p 9 p 8 p ' P 29 p 28 p 27 p 26 p 25 p 90| 90J 89? 89f 89J Sat. 255 90| 905- 984 16 § 5 17 90| On the 25th ult., the lady of the Right Hon. Sir Stratford Canning, of a daugh r— On the 29th ult., at Aston Hall, in the county of Derby, the lady of Edward A. Holden, Esq., of a daughter— On the 25th ult., the lady of the Rev. J. H. Sparke, of a son— On the 24th ult., the lady of Edward Bullock, Esq., of Woburn- ~ uare, of a son— On the 23d ult., at Kelmarsh, Northamptonshire, the lady of T .* 11 ' IT L " C -, r ^ A « 4- Urt Oi' » U ,,' U .. * O ; 1, • > 1 k'onf illiam Hanbury, Esq., of a son— On the 26th ult., at Sibton House, Kent, the * . Finch, Esq., R. N., of a son, still- born— On the 28th nit., at • J.- c;. T .. I.. O. I. n. 1. l>.. . t f a il. iinli^ ar On 1 ll O 97 I I. lilt Wi lady of John Win , , , Earl's- court, the lady of Sir John Osborn, Bart., of a daughter— On the 27th ult., at Convamore, in the county of Cork, the Viscountess Ennismore, of a daughter— On the 30th ult., at Blyth- hall, Warwickshire, the lady o{ William Stratford Dugdale, Esq., M. P., of a son MARRIED. On the30th ult., at St. George's, Hanover- square, Edw. St. John Mildmay, Esq., son of the late Sir Henry Mildmay, Bart., to Frances, daughter of the late Edward Loclcwood, Perclval, Esq.— On the 28th ult., at Chipstead, Surrey, Sir Thomas Buchan Hepburn, Bart., of Smeaton, Haddingtonshire, to Helen, youngest daugh- ter of Archibald Little, Esq., of Shabden Park, Surrey— On the 30th ult., at Tri- nity Church, Marylebone, Henry Newcome Esq., of Upper Wiinpole street, to Cecilia, third daughter of Sir William Wake, Hart., of Conrteen Hall, North- amptonshire— On the 30th ult., at Trinity Church, Marylebone, the Rev. W ll- liam Bannerman, of North Bank, Regent's Park, to Felicia, second daughter of John Rawlinson, Esq., of Wimpole- street— On the 28th ult., at St. George's, Hanover- square, Lieut. Col. the Hon. John Finch, brother to the Earl of Ayles- ford, to Katharine, daughter of the late Alexander Ellice, Esq.— On the 28th ult., at St. George's, Hanover- square, John Gurdon, Esq,, second son of T. T. Gurdon, Esq., of Letton, Norfolk, to Lady Ormsby Rebow, widow of the late Sir Thomas Ormsliy, Bart.— On the 28th ult., at Sudbury, Sidney, third surviving son of the- late John Billing, Esq., of Stoke Newington, to Isabella, second daughter of the Rev. J. W. Fowke, Vicar of All Saints, Sudbnry, Sutfolk.— On the 29th ult., at Hanwell Church, George, son of John Clarke, Esq., of Brentford, to Mary Car- rington, niece of the late Rev. D. C. Lewis, Vicar of Ruislip— On the 28th ult., at the Cathedral, Lichfield, the Rev. George Hamilton, A. M., Fellow of Krng's College, Cambridge, and Minister of Christ Church, Bloomsbnry, to Lucy, daugh- ter of Henry Chinn, Esq , of Lichfield Close— On the 25th nit., at Marylebone Church, the Rev. Edward Fanshawe Glanville, Fellow of Exeter College, to Mary Ann, daughter of the late Sir Scrope Bernard Morland, Bart., M. P., and widow of the Rev. Frederick Charles Spencer, of Wheatfield, Oxon— On the 30th ult., at the Church of St. Alphage, Greenwich, Major James Wood, to Fanny Anne, eldest daughter of the Rev. Dr. Burney. DIm On the 25th ult., Frances Annabella, wife of William Assheton, of Downham Hall, in the county of Lancaster, Esq., and daughter of the late Hon. Wlllrain Cockayne, of Rushton Hall, Northamptonshire— On the 23d ult., at Cambridge, aged 73, Sophia, widow of the Rev. Mr. Kenich, late Principal Librarian to ' hat University— On the 28th ult., aged 26, the Hon. Frances Leslie, daughter of Lord Lorten, and wife of t he Rev. Charles Leslie, son of the Lord Bishop of fclphin— On the 27th ult., at Rudhall, near Ross, from an injury received from berng thrown out of a carriage, the Hon. Mrs. Philip Yorlie, widow of the Rev. Philip V orke, of Great Horkesley, in the county of Essex, and daughter of the late Lord bomers — On the 29th ult., at his apartments in the State Paper Office, Robert Lemon, Esq., F. S. A., Deputy Keeper of State Papers, in the 57th year of his age, having completed his 40th year in the public service- On the 27th ult., at his house at. Aston Tin- old, Berks, Joseph Harris, Esq., late of Broadwall, Blackirlars, Surrey, in the 63d year of his ace- At Cottrell, Glamorganshire, Margaret, wife ot Admi- ral Sir Charles Tyler, G. C. B., aged 76— At St. Gennains- en- Laye, on the 20th ult., in the 61st year of her age, Mary Dorothy, the only daughter or the Rev. Dr. Torkington, of Stukelev, Huntingdonshire- On the 25thi ult., at Ridgway Castle, near Southampton, Frederick Stretton, Esq., in Ihe 26th J^ ar of his age- On the 27th ult., at the Royal Arsenal, Woolwich, deeply regretted, Mward Bundle, Esq., late Captain in the 49th Regiment- On the 30th ult., at Strawherry- hlU, Twickenham, John James Earl of Waldegrave, in the 56th year of his age^ LONDON : Printed by EDWARDSHACKELL Printer, of No. 14 Amwell- rtreet Pentonville in the County of Middlesex ; and of No. 40, Fleet- street, m the City of London^' ami published by the said EDWARD SHACKELL, at hisPrinting- office, No. 40, Fleet- Street, aforesaid, at which last place alone, communications to the Editor ( post- paid) are received.
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