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

06/09/1835

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Volume Number: XV    Issue Number: 769
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John Bull "For God, the King, and the People!"

Date of Article: 06/09/1835
Printer / Publisher:  
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Volume Number: XV    Issue Number: 769
No Pages: 8
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JOHN BUIX. ( C FOR GOD, THE KING, AND THE PEOPLE!" COLOSSEUM. The PANORAMA of LONDON, new GRAND SCENERY, CONSERVATORIES, and the various other Exhi- bitions of this splendid Establishment, OPEN to the Public, as usual, from 10 in the morning till 6 in the evening.— Admission to the whole, 2s.; to each separate. Is. N. B. The Daily Exhibitions are ENTIRELY DISTINCT from the Evening. THEATRE ROYAL, HAYMARKET.— The new Comedy of " Hints for Husbands" continuing to be received throughout with unani- mous applause by brilliant and crowded audiences, will be repeated every even- ing until further notice.— To- morrow, HINTS FOR HUSBANDS. Principal Characters by Messrs. Vining, W. Farren, Warde, Brindal, Haynes, and Web- ster ; Mrs. Faucit, Miss Tavlor, Miss Faucit, Miss Turpin, and Mrs. Newcome. After which, THE GOLDSMITH; and JOHN OF PARIS.— Tuesday, Hints for Husbands; The Scholar ; and No Song No Supper.— Wednesday, Clari; Hints for Husbands; and Animal Magnetism.— Thursdav, Hints for Husbands; Sepa- ration and Reparation; and Lock and Key.— Friday, Hints for Husbands ; My Late Friend; and other Entertainments.— Saturday, Hints for Husbands; My Grandmother ; and other Entertainments. QUEEN'S THEATRE.— Under the Sole Management of Mrs. ^ qj Nisbett.— To morrow Evening, Tuesday, and Wednesday, will be performed a new and original Romantic Drama, called ZARAH; after which, the popular Farce of A ROLAND FOR AN OLIVER; to which will be added a Petite Comedy, entitled the MARRIED RAKE ; to conclude with ( he new Fairy Opefetta of THE GUARDIAN SYLPH.— On Thursday will be produced a n Tetite Comedy, called " Petticoatical Delusions."— An Operatic Drama, entit " The Spirit of the Rhine," is in rehearsal, and will be brought forward as speedily as possible.— Also in preparation, a new Interlude, entitled " Woman's Wit;" and a Comedy, called " It Never Rains but it Pours." M - until dusk. ADMISSION ONE SHILLING. ISS LIN WOOD'S GALLERIES of PICTURES, in Leicester- square, are OPEN EVERY DAY, from Ten in the morning NEW SONGS. MY GENTLE CHILD; written and dedicated to Miss Jane Anne Gray, by Mrs. Hemans; the music composed by M. Balfe .. 2 0 They bid me to the Festive Board. The words by Miss Sarah Stuclcney; the music by Miss Conroy 2 0 O cease that Song! The words by B. H. Galland, Esq.; composed by W. M. Herbert .. .. 2 0 ' La Stella d'Amore. Written by the Countess Guiccioli; the music com- posed by M'. Costa 16 Give that Wreath to me. Arranged with Guitar Accts. by C. M. Sola .. 16 Til be true to thee .. Ditto Ditto .. .. 16 Farewell, by thee forsaken ( 2d Edit.) Composed by Galland .. .. 16 • Willyou come to the Hazel Grove? .. .. Corri 2 0 The Gipsy's Song Duke of Marlborough.. 2 0 Alleyr. e More .. .. Words by Mrs. Milliard; music by C. Horn.. 2 0 A Bumper of Sparkling Wine ( new Edit.) Collard, Esq. .. J. C. Clifton 1 6 " Remember the Moment! .. .. Ditto .. .. T. Cooke.. 2 0 The Knightls Tomb ( Duet). Coleridge, Esq., the composer of the music to " The Captive Knight." 2 0 NEW WALTZES. Der Hofnung's Walzer. In the style of the celebrated Reichstadt's Valse. Composed and dedicated to her Grace the Duchess of Hamilton, by the Baroness Neydecker .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 16 :' Blumen Walzer. A Set of German Waltzes; composed, and dedicated to Lady Willoughby d'Eresby, by the Baroness Neydecker 2 6 • Remembrance of Scotland. Three Waltzes; composed, and dedicated to Lady Henderson Durham, by Vaucher, of Strubing, Esq. .. .. 2 0 The Duke of Roxburgh's Waltz. Com posed by Signor M. Costa, composer and Director of Music to the King's Theatre 16 Les Zephyrs. A Set of Quadrilles and a Waltz ; composed, and dedicated to the Misses Thompson Hankey, by Miss A. Cowell, as performed at A1 mack's by Weippert's Band 2 6 ' Souvenir de Tunbridge Wells. A Set of Galopps ; composed by Miss Conroy 2 0 ' Le Bouquet. A Selection of Waltzes; composed, and dedicated to Miss Elizabeth Hurt, by E. Schulz 2 0 " The Airs danced by Mdlle. Taglioni, & c., in the Ballet of LaSylphide. Composed, and dedicated to Miss Georgina Willis, by Adolphe Adam .. 4 0 Six Valses. Composed by Miss Gibbings 3 0 Published by J. WILLIS, Royal Musical Repository, 75, Lower Grosvenor street, and 7, Westmorland- street, Dublin, where may be found a splendid variety • of Pianofortes, Harps, & c., by the most eminent makers, at the lowest manufac- turers' prices for immediate payment. Mrs. WILLIS and DAUGHTERS; MUSICAL ACADEMY is NOW OPEN. Days of attendance, Tuesdays and Fridays, from 10 until 4. Terms may be had at their residence, No. 75, Lower Grosvenor- street. BRILLIANT- TONED UPRIGHT GRAND PIANOFORTE, Six- Octave F F, suberbly decorated with Buhl- work, price 70 guineas; .' original cost, 170 guineas ; lately the property of a Gentleman now resident abroad. This Instrument is worthy the attention of a Nobleman or Gentleman as a costly Siece of furniture, the exterior decorations of which, in splendour and magni- cence, if equalled, can certainly not be surpassed. This would be a noble present to make to a young Lady. Also, a good- toned CABINET PIANOFORTE, by Wilkinson and Wornum, 15 guineas. To be viewed at 130, Jermyn- street, . St. James's. . . . __ TEA WAREHOUSE. 32, Walbrook, London.— E. RICH begs respectfully to inform the Public, that he has now on Sale a well- selected ' Stock of TEAS, which he is .' enabled to offer at the undermentioned low prices, viz.:— Good Congou .. .. .. .. 3s. lOd. per lb. Strong ditto .. 4s. 4d. Fine ditto, of Pekoe Souchong flavour 5s. .. Fine Hyson 7s. 6d. .. Teas packed in lead, and sent to any part of the Kingdom. ATERPROOF BLACKING.— JARVIS'S INDIA RUB- BER POLISH, for Boots, Shoes, Harness, and Cab heads, is the only w 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 it keeps 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, D5, Faringdon- street; Sutton and Co., 10, Bow Church- yarcl; Edwards, 67, St. Paul's Church- yard; Hulse, 37, Leadenhall- street; Armstrong, 35, King- street, Snow- hill; Grant and Co., Chiswell- street; Berry, Knights^ ridge; Clarke and Sons, Southampton; Clifford and Co., Dublin; Tanner, Shrewsbury; Mauder, Weaver, and Co., Wolverhampton ; Groom and Co., Kingston and Spanish Town, Jamaica; and by all respectable Druggists and Saddlers. INVALID WHEEL CHAIRS and SPINAL CARRIAGES, on the best practical principles, for SALE or HIRE. Children's Airing Car- riages ; often of surprising benefit to them. Rustic, Swiss, Gothic, German, China, Turnover, and other Garden Seats, & c., and Flower- stands in great varieties. Numbers of the above, at very reduced prices, at INGRAM and SON'S Manufactory and Furniture Warehouse, 29, City- road, near Finsbury- square.— N. B. Omnibuses from the Bank pass the door almost every minute. MINERAL ADAMANTEAN for Filling Decayed Teeth.— Mons. DUMONT and SONS, SURGEON- DENTISTS, No. 1, FINS- BURY- PLACE SOUTH, facing Fore- street, City, and No. 20, SOUTH AMPTON- STREET, Holborn, continue to RESTORE DECAYED TEETH, however large the cavity, with their MINERAL ADAMANTEAN, applied in a few seconds with- out Pain or Pressure, instantly ALLAYING THE MOST EXCRUCIATING PAIN • and HARDENING INTO ENAMEL, makinar a stump into a whole Tooth equal in utility and beauty to a sound one, and PREVENTING EXTRACTION. They also FASTEN LOOSE TEETH caused by age or the use of calomel. NATURAL and TERRO-. METALLIC TEETH FIXED from one to a complete set, without - extracting therobts; warranted to ANSWER THE PURPOSE OF ARTICULA- TION and MASTICATION, and competent in every respect to supply the place of their predecessors. Charges as in Pans. At home from 10 till 6. VOL. XV.— No. 769. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1835. OLOSSEUM.— OPEN EVERY EVENING.— The Amuse- ments of this splendid Establishment do not depend upon the Weather.— On Monday, September 7th, and during the week, Mademoiselle Grandi ( from the Musical Academy of Bologna) will continue her admired performances, and will sing several favourite Airs and Duets with, and accompanied on the Pianoforte by, Sig. Giordani— First appearance of Miss and Master Walker ( pupils of Mr. Jolley), who will sing several admired Songs and Duets— Herr Werner's surprising Imitations and Zoological Concert— Mr. T. Thompson's admired Exhi- bition of the Antique Statues— Philosophical Recreations— Automaton Evolu- tionist— Mr. Williams, Mr. Sharpe ( Ventriloquism), Miss Taylor ( Glass Har- monica)— Mr. Watson's Gas Microscope— Mr. Lee's Eastern Exercises— Mr. Child's Dissolving Views and Fairy Dreams— Brilliantly Illuminated Salon des Nations— Indian Supper Room, with Waterfalls— Hall of Mirrors— Splendid Salon de Danse, Illuminated Terraces Conservatories, and Fountains— Splendid Display of Hydraulics— Philosophical Pyrotechnics— Glittering Halls of the Water Queen. On Monday, September 14th, and during the week, Mr. Bochsa and Pupils will perform his celebrated " Voyage Musicale." Doors open at Nine.— Admission, 3s. 6d.— Entrance in Albany- street. Price Id. REAT WESTERN RAILWAY COMPANY, incorporated „' by Act. of Parliament.— The Royal assent having been given to this Bill, the Directors will receive applications from landowners on the line and other persons, for the 5,000 reserved shares, until the 17th instant, in order to proceed forthwith with the execution of the powers conferred by the Act for making the said Railway between London and Bristol. Notice will be given on the 19th instant, to the persons to whom the Shares may be allotted, of the number of Shares which may have been severally appropriated to each, when payment of 51. per share will be " required. Applications to be made . tic? undersigned :— Offices Nc^ 17, Corn hill, London, CHARLES, A S • , XDBRS, f rf Com- street, Bristol, WILLIAM TG THILL, S Dated 3d Sept. 1835. iriUY'S HOSPITAL.— The AUTUMNAL COURSE of LEC ^ X TURES will commence on Thursday, October 1st. THEORY and PRACTICE of MEDICINE— Dr. Briiht and Dr. Addison. MATERIA MEDICA ami THERAPEUTICS— Dr. Addison. ANATOMY and PHYSIOLOGY.— Mr. Bransby Cooper and Mr. E. Cock. Mr. T. Bell will sive the LECTURES on the TEKTH. DEMONSTRATIONS, bv Mr. E. Cock and Air. Hilton. PRINCIPLES and PRACTICE of SURGERY— Mr. Key and Mr. Morgan. MID WIFE'! Y and DISEASES nf WOMEN and CHILDREN— Dr. Ashwell. COMPARATIVE ANATOMY and PHYSIOLOGY— Mr. T. Bell. CHEMISTRY— Mr. A. Aikin and Mr. A. Taylor. EXPERIMENTAL PHILOSOPHY— Mr. W. M. Higgins. LECTURES and DEMONSTRATION'S in MORBID ANATOMY— Dr. Hodgkin. CLINICAL LECTURES and INSTRUCTIONS will be given on Medical, Sur- gical, Ophthalmic, and Obstetric Cases. BOTANY— Mr. C. Johnson. MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE— Mr. A. Taylor. Pupils will be permitted to attend the Eye Infirmary and the Obstetric Charity., and will also have the Use of the Museum, Library, Reading Room, and Botanic Garden, subject to regulations. For particulars apply to Mr. Stocker, Apothecary, to the Hospital. The Physical Society is open to all tlie Pupils., The first meeting will be held on Saturday, the 3d of October at Eight o'Clock. Mi\ HILTON. Hon. Sec. WESTMINSTER MEDICAL SOHOQf,, Dean- street, West- minster.— The WINTER SESSION will ( rlMMEXCE on Thursday, October 1st, when Dr. BURNE will deliver the INTRODUCTORY ADDRESS at Half- past Two o'clock. ANATOMY and PHYSIOLOGY— Dr. Todd and Mr. Malyn. PRACTICAL ANATOMY— Mr. Malyn and Mr. H. Hancock. MEDICINE— J. Burne, M. D. SURGERY— G. J. Guthrie, F. R. S., and Mr. Hr le Thomson. CHEMISTRY— Mr. Crump. MATERIA MEDICA— G. H. Weatherhead, M. l). MIDWIFERY— J. North, F. L. S., and Mr. Griffith. FORENSIC MEDICINE— Hay Graham, M. D. BOTANY— Mr. D. O. Edwards. COMPARATIVE ANATOMY— Mr. Dobson an t Mr. Rush. For particulars apply at the School; or to Dr. Burne, at the Hospital, or 21 Spring- gardens, or to Dr. Todd, 26, Parliament- street. ROYAL DlSP ENMRY for DISEASES of the EAR, and the DEAF and DUMB, Dean- street, Soho- sqnare.— Mr. CURTIS, Aurist to his Majesty and their Royal Highnesses the Duchess of Kent and the Princess Victoria, andSnrgeon to this Institution, will commence his next Course of LECTURES on the ANATOMY, PHYSIOLOGY, and PATHOLOGY of the EAR, on Thurs- dav October 1. For particulars apply to Mr. Curtis, at ! iis house, 2, Soho- square. Sir. C.' s Man of the Anatomy of the Ear, and Chart of its various Diseases, with the modes of treatment employed at the Dispensary, may be had of all the Medical Booksellers. PREPARATION for the UNIVERSITIES Sc.— A CLERGY- MAN, for many vears accustomed to prepare PUPILS for the Universities, etc., wishes to add another to the Four or Fife now with him.— Any letters ad- dressed to the Rev. D. D., Mr. Striker's, Theological Bookseller, 443, West Strand, London, will reach him in the country. THE NOBILITY and GENTRY are most respectfully made acquainted that the EXTENSIVE WARE- ROOMS of Messrs. MILES and EDWARDS will present, during the season, the most effective Display of useful and elegant FURNITURE, suitable to every description of building, which has ever been exhibited at one Establishment in this metropolis. Their ECO- NOMICAL SYSTEM of FURNISHING, so generally known and approved, will be continued by them, and in no instance will they permit any but their own manufacture to'be sold on the premises. The singularly SPLENDID CHINTZES they are now introducing, they flatter themselves will meet with the approbation of the Public: at the same time they consider it necessary to say they are not responsible for any inferior imitations of their designs which are selling by other houses in London as t- he production of Miles and Edwards.— No. 134, Oxford- street, near Hanover- s< piare. ORIENTAL CARPETS.— A Select Assortment of these beauti- ful specimens of Eastern magnificence— one of unusually large dimensions and matchless- character. LAPWORTH and RILEY, Manufacturers to the King and H. R. H. the Duchess of Kent, have a most unique and splendid assortment of Royal Velvet, Saxony, and Edinburgh Carpets, with every other description of British fabrics, of first qualities. TOURN AY CARPETS— Being the Agents for this highly- estimated article, they are enabled to supply to any design and di- mensions Warehouse, 19 and 20, Old. Bond- street. iplREAT SALE on MONDAY next, and following days.— The m- immense stock of Silks, Linens, Shawls, Sheetings, Hainbro' Damasks, Merinos. Hose, Gloves, Lace, Ribbons, French Blondes, Haberdashery, and Fancy Goods, purchased by MURRAY and BROWN', will be sold off without reserve— the most decided bargains ever offered— at the LONDON SILK ESTA- BLISHMENT, 137, OXFORD- STREET. P. S. All the Summer Stock and Fancy Goods at less than half- price. TH E attention of the Public is most earnestly solicited to the following statement:— Bv the sudden death of AN OFFICER of HIGH RANK in the BRITISH NAVY, a few months, since, two Ladies ( sisters), who were connected with and formed a part of his family, were at once deprived of the home they had for many years enjoyed, and of their only means of support, and are at this moment destitute. The object of those who have come forward on their behalf with this appeal to the benevolence of the Public, is an endeavour to raise a fund to enable the younirer sister to obtain such employment as may be sufficient for her own and her elder sister's support, who has for some years been in a very infirm state of health. For the correctness of this statement, as well as the deserving character of the parties alluded to, Samuel Hicks. Esq., 7, Henrietta- street, Cavendish- square, has most kindly consented to be referred to. — Subscriptions received by Messrs. Ladbrokes, Kingscofe, and Gilhnan, bankers. Bank- buildings; . Messrs. Rivington, 3, Waterloo- place; Messrs. Hatchard and Son, 187, Piccadilly; Messrs. Hodgson. 9, Great Marylebone- street; Mr. Morti- mer, Wigmore- street; anil Mr. Hlint, 27, St. James's- street. The following sums have been reeeived:— Lord Boston .. .. 0 0 Two Friends, by Misses Irby jflO 0 0 Hon. Capt. Irby, R. N. .. 5 0 0 E., by ditto .. .. 5 0 0 Lady Lucy North .. .. 10 0 0 E., by ditto .. .. 2 0 0 Dowatrer Lady Selsey .. 10 0 Lient.- Colonel Eyre .. 3 0 0 Hon Mrs. Gosling .. 5 0 0 John Hall, Esq 3 0 0 Miss Gosling .. .. 2 0 0 Mrs. Johnson .. .. 10 0 Dowaaer Lady Langham .. 5 0 0 Lady Smith, .. .. 0 10 0 W. H. Irby, Esq 5 0 0 Lanizham Christie, Esq. .. 0 10 0 Hon. Charlotte Irby .. 10 0 Mrs. Christie .. .. 0 10 0 Hon. Albinia Irby .. .. 10 0 M. P. 0 10 0 Hon. Elizabeth Irby .. 1 0 0 Mrs. Browne .. .. 0 10 0 Hon. Augusta Irby .. 10 0 Miss Grenfell .. .. 0 10 0 Two Ladies, by the Misses Rev. L. Vernon Harcourt 2 0 0 Irby 5 0 0 Hon. Mrs. Vernon Harcourt 10 0 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 openins the ice- house except occasionally. Ice Paits, for iceing wine, water, butter, & 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 Xours with once filling. The above articles of scientific discovery may be seen only at the Manufactory, Jerinyn- street, six doorsfroin St. James's- street, London. MOST IMPORTANT DISCOVERY.- A Clergyman having discovered a method of curing himself of a NERVOUS or MENTAL COM- PLAINT, of fourteen years' standing, and within two years has had 400 patients in every variety of nervous or mental disease, many m^ aricholy, and some insane, all of whom he has cured, who followed his advif- e., except five, offers, from motives of benevolence, rather than gain, to cure, others. Low spirits, mental debility and exhaustion, determination of blood to the head, vertigo, ground- less fear, head- ache, failure of memory, restlessness, irresolution, indecision, melancholy, insanity, thoughts of self- destruction, & c., are a few of the nervous symptoms curable by this important, discovery.-^ Apply or write ( post- paid) to the Rev. Dr. Willis, Mr. Rowland's, Chemist, 260^ Tottenham- court- road, two doors from Great Russell- street, from four till five every Wednesday and Saturday. PORTRAIT OF TflK COUNTESS OF BLKSSISGTON. THE COURT MAGAZINE for SEPTEMBER is embellished by a splendid Portrait of the Right Hon. the Countess of Blessington— a Landscape View of Castle Howard — and two Figures of Female Costume. LITERARY CONTENTS. 1. Genealogical Memoir of the Countess of Blessington. 2. Personal RecoPections of the late Charles Mathews. 3. Howell and James's. A Sketch. 4. The Rival Demons. A Poem in Three Cantos. 5. Remarkable Escape* of a Predestinated Rogue. No. 14. 6. London Letters to Country Cousins. No. 3. 7. The Foster- Mother's Curse. By Mrs. Fairlie. Edward Churton, Public Library, 26, Holies- street. T HE The New Number of METROPOLITAN MAGAZINE, for SEPTEMBER 1, Contains, among others, the following interesting papers: Remarks on the English Navy, and the Necessity of a Naval Brevet. Japhetin Search of a Father. Tour of Mount ^ Etna. Diary of a Blase. Life of a Sub- Editor. Fiery Vault ( the) Memory. The Witch. The Complaint. Love in Adversity. The Sage's Advice. A Dream. To Beauty. Poems of Shelley. My Cousin. Dryburgh Abbey. The Ruined Fountain. Kathleen Mavourneen. Notices of New Books, Fine Arts, & e. Saunders and Otley, ConduiiMreet, Hanover- square. THE DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE, No. XXX11I.,. for SEPTEMBER, price 2 « . 6d., contain-— Scenes from the Life of Edward Lascelles, Gent. Chap. XVII. Homeward Bound; Chap. XVIII. An Affair of the Heart.— Coleridge. No. II.— Second Letter from an Old Orangeman.— Hibernian Nights' Entertainments. Tenth Night. Corby Mac Gilmore.— Six Sonnets.— The Fudges in England.— Fiorelli Ita^ iani. No. 1.— Leaves from the- Journal of a deceased Pluralist.— Statistical Survey of Ireland.— The Black Mon- day of the Glens.— Murders, Morals, and Monarchy in France. By Terence O'Ruark, A. M.— Anthony Poplars Note- book.— The British Association. Dublin: printed for William Curry, Jun., and Co.; Sirapkin, Marshall, and Co., London; sold by all Booksellers in the United Kingdom. Just published, price 5s. IR WALTER SCOTT'S PROSE WORKS, Vol. XVII. S ir i cjiv cuv i i o r ivuorj ' » wiiivn. . " i. Containing PERIODICAL CRITICISM, Vol. I. ( POETRY). Printed for Robert Cadell, Edinburgh ; and Whittaker and Co., London ; Of whom may be had the preceding Volumes of this Series :— The LIFE of NAPOLEON BONA- PARTE, in 9 vols. LIVES of DRYDEN and SWIFT, in 2 vols. LIVES of NOVELISTS, in 2 vols. PAUL'S LETTERS, in 1 vol. CHIVALRY, ROMANCE, THE DRAMA, in 1 vol. BORDER and PROVINCIAL AN- TIQUITIES, in 1 vol. Also, Price 3s. each, with Vignettes after Turner, Pocket Editions of The LAY of the LAST MINSTREL. MARMION. The LADY of the LAKE. With Sir Walter Scoit's Introduction of 1830, various reading, & e. Just published. Part IV., price Is. tjd., to be completed in ' t en Monthly Paris, ALKER'S CRITICAL PRONOUNCING DICTIONARY, w entirely re- modelled, and adapted to the present state of Literature and Science; to which will be added, Walker's Key to the Classical Pronuncia- tion of Greek, Latin, and Scripture Propei Names. By B. H. SMART. Printed for T. Cadell, Strand ; and the other Proprietors. MR. MITFORD'S HISTORY OF GKKEOK. Complete in Ten Volumes, to be published Monthly, confining tho Hiole of the Author's last Additions and Corrections. Just published, in foolscap 8vo., price 5s. in cloth boards, VOLUME the SECOND of THE HISTORY of GREECE, from the Earliest Period to tha Death of Alexander the Great. By WILLIAM MITFORD, Esq. To which is prefixed, A Brief Memoir of the Author, bv his Brother, Lord REDE^ DALE. 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. CIDER, ALE, STOUT. < tec.—\ V. G. FIELD and Co. beg to acquaint their Friends and the Public, that their genuine CIDER and PERRY, Burton, Edinburgh, and Prestonpans Ales, Pale Ale as prepared for India, Dorchester Beer, and London and Dublin Brown Stout, are in fine order for use, and as well as their FOREIGN WINES and SPIRITS, of a 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- street, Covent- garden. FINE WAX CANDLES, Is. 6d. per lb.; genuine Wax, 2s. Id.; superior transparent Sperm and Composition, 2s. Id.; best Kitchen and Office Candles, 5^ d.; extra fine Moulded Candles, with the improved Waxed Wicks, 7d.— Yellow Soap, 42s., 46s., 52s., and 56s. per 1121bs.; Mottled 52s. » 58s., and 62s.; Windsor and Palm, Is. 4d. per packet; Old Brown Windsor Is. 9d. ; Rose, 2s.; Camphor 2s.; superior Almond 2s. 6d.— Superfine Sealing- Wax 4s. 6d. per lb.— Refined Sperm Oil 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), Charing- cross. I" RON PARK and FIELD FENCE of a very superior descrip- tion, manufactured by Mr. PORTER, 82, Upper Thames- street, and Dow- gate Dock.— This fence, put together in lengths, is stronger, neater, and cheaper than the same scale in nurdles, as the connection of the bars is upon a new, simple, and exceedingly strong plan, and may be bent to any required form at the time of fixing, which cannot be done with hurdles. Considerable quantities of this fence have lately been put up in the neighbourhood of London, and never failed to give complete satisfaction. Hurdles made from 4s. each and upwards. Castings and Wire- work of all descriptions. fJlO the especial Notice of the Ladies.— C. and A. OLDRIDGE' 3 JL BALM of COLUMBIA.— The peculiar virtue* 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 vigour, which maintains in per-> manent 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 t'ie 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. MPERIAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Sun- court* Cornhill, and St. James's- street, London. SUBSCRIBED CAPITAL, ^ 750,000. In addition to the accumulating Capital arising from invested Premiums. DIRECTORS. GEORGE REID, Esq., Chairman. GEORGE HIBBERT, Jun., Esq., Deputy Chairman. Grant Allan, Esq. Michael Bland, Esq. John Henry Deffell, Esq. Samuel Drewe, Esq. Samuel Hibbert, Esq. Charles Porcher Lang, Esq. Richard Lee, Esq. Robert Barclay, Esq. Jeremiah Olive, Esq. John Horsley Palmer, Esq. James Pattison, Esq., M. P. Sir Charles Price, Bart. Joseph Reid, Esq. Sir James Shaw, Bart. John Smith, Esq. AUDITORS. James G. Murdoch, Esq. I William R. Robinson, Esq. CONSULTING PHYSICIAN. Archibald Billing, M. D., 5, Bedford- pl^ e, Russell- square. All kinds of Insurances may be effected with this Company, at a REDUCED RATE of PREMIUM, when persons do not participate in the profits. Persons may insure for the whole term of life, and participate periodically in TWO THIRDS of ALL PROFITS made bv the Company, and, at the same time, be protected by a Subscribed Capital, from the responsibility attached to Societies for mutual insurance. . . _ Tr, The Profits may be APPLIED in a VARIETY of WAYS, so as to suit the present, or future convenience of the Insured. A NEW PROSPECTUS, containing a Table of Additions already mad3 to Policies, and all other particulars, may be had at either of the Company's Office*, or. of any of the Agents in the principal towns throughout the Kingdom. ° Bv order of the Court of Directors, * - ; SAMUEL INGALL, Actuary Xz • S fcjwl 296 JOHN BULL. September 13. TUESDAYS GAZETTE, BANKRUPTS. S. EVANS, CaStle- srfwetjLeices « ; r square, victualler, Att. Dimrvnock, Pan- « cras- lane, Cheapside-— H. KERR, Woolwich, tailor. Att. Fisher, Walbrook— E. JONES, Hem el Hemp* te< k - saddler. Att. BaiW, Ely- place, London— T. [ MATTHEWS, B » shev, Hertfordshire, carpenter. Att. Turner, Clifford's Inn, lx) ndon— W. " WAKBHAM, Rv mouth, ro man cement manufacturer. Atts. Sole, Aldermanbuiy, London: Beuaeft, Plymouth— A. CR AIG, Neyicsstle- upon- Tvne, cabinet maker-. Atts. Swaia and Co.. Frederick" s- ptece, Old Jewry. London; Gibson, Newcsstle.- upon- Tyne— H. DODD, Ambleside, Westmorland, innkeeper. Atts. Wilsonand Harrison, Kendal; Michael, Bed Lion- square, London— G. W. SAWYER, Brighton, bunder. Atts. Bennett, Brighton ; Dax and Bicknell, Lin- coln's Inn- fields, London— K. BRITTAIN, Hessle, Ivingston- upon- Hull, inn- keeper. Atts. Hicks anfi Marris, Gray's fnn- square, London; Holden and Gallo- way, Httfl— W. MATHEWS, Staverton, Devonshire, miller. Atts. Froude and Edwards, Lincoln's Inn- fields, London.; Michelmoie, Totnes— J. POWER, * en., ? nd J. POWER, juo., Ather* tone, Warwickshire, hat manufacturers. Atts. Baxter, Lincoln's Inn fields, London; Baxter, Atherstone— J. TAYLOR, Cheet- wood, Lancashiie, brushmaker. Atts. Adlingtonand Co., Bedford- row, London; Law, Manchester. FRIDAY'S GAZETTE. Crown Office, Sept. 4.— Member returned to serve in the present Parliament— " Borough of Belfast: George Dunbar, of Belfast, in tae county of Antrim, Esq., in the room of John M'Cance, Esq., deceased. Commission siened by the Lord Lieutenant of the County of Bedford.— George RobertOsborn, Esq., to be Deputv Lieutenant. BANKRUPTCIES SUPERSEDED. J. MACKNIGHT, Dawley, Shropshire, draper— F. and W. COUPEES, Luton, Bedfordshire, straw hat manufacturers. BANKRUPTS. T. PULVERTOFT, Wisbeach, Cambridgshire, ironmaster. Atts. Willis and Co., Tokenhonse- yard, Lothbury — J. RAVEN, Suffolk- lane, Cannon- street, grocer. Atts. Templer and Co., Great Tower- street— G. HEATHER, St. Ann's- place, Limehouse, and E. ARGLES, Brunswick- terrace, Commercial- road East, wahoganv merchants. Atts. Kearsey and Co., Leadenhall- street— T. TUBER- TILLE, Worcester, grocer. Atts. Cardales and Ilitfe, Bedford- row ; Gillam and Son, Worcester— J. A. SMITH, Bilston, Staffordshire, grocer. Atts. Philpot and Son, Southampton- street, Bloom sbury; Phillips, Wolverhampton — W. HINDELL, Brayton, Yorkshire, victualler. Atts. Battle, Selby; Farrar, Cle- ment's Inn. PARLIAMENTARY ANALYSIS. HOUSE OF LORDS. MONDAY. The Royal assent was given, hy Commission, to the Great Western Railway Bill, the Woods Duties Bill, the Peace Preservation ( Ireland) Bill, the Highways Bill, the Exchequer Bills Bill, the Slave Owners' Compensation Bill, the Clerk of the Crown Bill, the Colonial Pas- sengers' Bill, the Insolvent Debtors' Court ( Ireland) Bill, the Exchequer Com- t^ Scotland) Bill, the Turnpike Roads Bill, the Port of Dundee Bill, and the Nelson Estate Bill.— The Islington Market Bill, with the Lords' Amendments agreed to, and the Stamps and Assessed Taxes Bill, were brought up from the Commons.— The Tonnage Duties Bill and the Tithes on Turnips Bill were read a third time. The Dublin Police Bill was read a second time, after considerable discussion, during which the Marquess of LONDONDERRY observed that it was important to consider the consequences of passing a Bill by which considerable patronage would be left during the vacation to tfie uncontrolled exercise of acertain party. Viscount D UNCANNON— The Noble Marquess only repeats what he said on the Constabulary Force Bill: he opposes it because it is supported by Mr. O'Connell. The Marquessof LONDONDERRY— No. Viscount DUNCANNON— What does the Noble Lord mean by his reference to a certain party ? The Marquess of LONDONDERRY— I believe that Mr. O'Connell will have the patronage of the greatest part of the offices in Ireland. I have no hesitation in stating such to be my opinion. In presenting a petition in favour of the Imprisonment for Debt Bill Lord LYJTDHURST dexterously extracted from Lord Brougham a severe censure of the conduct of his Majesty's Attorney- General with reference to this measure.— The Weights and Measures Bill was read a third time and passed.— The Cruelty to Animals Bill was read a third time.— The Bill for abolishing capital punishment in cases of letter stealing was committed. TUESDAY. The Tithes Recovery Bill was read a third time and passed.— The Cruelty to Animals Bill passed through a Committee, and was ordered to be reprinted.— The Music License Bill was read a second time, and ordered to be committed on Thursday. The Commons' amendments to the Patents Bill were agreed to, except that which deprived the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council of the power of adjudicating in such cases. Mr. BERNAL and others from the Commons brought up the Customs Amendment Acts Bill, the Abolition of Oaths Amendment Act Bill, and the Workhouse Regulation Bill. The Marquess of LONDONDERRY, in reference to some former pro- ceedings of the House, reproached his Majesty's Government with their dependence on and subserviency to Mr. O'Connell, to which Lord DUNCANNON and Lord HATHERTON very feebly replied. .. On the motion of the Duke of RICHMOND the Commons' amend- ments to the Oaths Abolition Bill were agreed to. WEDNESDAY. The Slave Trade ( Sardinia), and the Slave Trade ( Denmark) Bills " were respectively read a third time, and passed; as were the Capital Punishments Abolition, and the Arrestment for Wages ( Scotland), Bills. The Report of the Select Committee 011 Prison Discipline in England and W ales was brought up by the Duke of RICHMOND. Lord PLUNKET alluded to a newspaper report of statements attributed to his Royal Highness the Duke of Cumberland, at an Orange lodge, at which the Duke presided. If such statements were made, he regretted that the Noble Duke had not made them in that House. _ However great the difference of their respective ranks might foe, he did not admit the right to state that he had been actuated by • violent er malignant feelings— that his conduct was ungentlemanly, or that he was authorised to treat him with contempt.— The Duke of CUMBERLAND denied having used such language towards the Noble Lord. He had never said anything of any man behind his back which he would not be ready to say to his face." What he had stated had no reference te the Noble Lord, but was a general statement with Tespeet to his Royal Highness's determined adherence to those princi- ples which he believed to be the salvation of the country and the support of the Protestant religion.— Lord PLUNKET expressed him- self satisfied with the statement made by the Illustrious Duke. Lord DUNCAKNON moved that the Registration of Voters ( Ireland) Bill be read a second time. He entered into some details of the measure, and observed that it- would tend to- assimilate the Irish to the present English system of registration.— The Earl of LIMERICK opposed further proceeding with a Bill so full of novel legislation and difficulties at so late aperiodof the Session.— Lord PLUNKET defended the Bill, and urged the propriety of allowing it to g& into Committee, • unless their Lordships wished to" reject italtogether.— The Bill led to an animated discussion, and strong opposition ; andit was eventually thrown out by contents 27, non- contents 81; majority against, 54. THURSDAY. On the motion that the Music and Dancing Bill ' be read a third time, the Marquess of SALISBURY moved that it be read a third time that day three months, which amendment was carried. Lord LYSNACFTST expressed his surprise that the Ministers had adopted no further proceedings on the " Irish Church BilL" In not proceeding irith it, and returningit to the other House, great calami- ties wou ldfall on the whole of the Protestant Clergy of Ireland, and consequently a heavy responsibility w* ould rest on the Government. •^- Lord MELBOURNE admitted the evil that must result to the Clergy from the failure of this Bill, but denied that the responsibility rested with the Ministers; it attached to their Lordships for their vote upon that Bill.— The Duke of WELLINGTSN observed that the Bill consisted of two parts. One part related te tithes, and had recei ved their Lordships'support; the other proposed the confiscation of. 038 t benefices, and had been opposed by a large majority of their Lord- ships. If the Ministers wished to destroy the Protestant establish- ment in Ireland, let that be declared in a distinct Bill, but do not destroy the Church under the cover of promoting a tithe measure.— The Marquess of LANSDOWNE submitted that the Bill was calculated to sustain and advance, and not to confiscate and destroy the Irish Church; but that after the vote, rejecting a most important portion ofthe Bill, the Ministers could not consent to proceed with it.— The Earl of RODEX condemned the stoppingof the Bill, because it had not been passed exactly as it was presented by the Ministers.— Lord BROUGHAM maintained, after the vote to which their Lordships had come, rejecting a portion of the Bill, the Ministers liadnoother alter- native left them than to abandon the Bill. . THE coversation on this subject having terminated, Lord BROUGHAM introduced a Bill te consolidate the Law of Marriage in Scotland. In the course of his observations a message from the Commons prayed their Lordships' assent to a conference with the Commons on the subject of certain amendments in the Municipal Reform Bill. Lord MELBOURNE, the Lord Privy Seal, the President of the I Council, Lords SHAFTESBUJIY, FALMOUTH, HATHEHTO. N, the Duke ' of RICHMOND, and others were appointed managers of the conference, the Duke of WELLINGTON and Lord LYNDHURST declining to attend. On their return the reasons for the dissent of the other House were read, and ordered to be printed and taken into consideration on Friday. Lord BROUGHAM then continued his observations, and the Bill was read a first time and ordered to be printed. FRIDAY. Lord BROUGHAM called the attention of the House to certain returns, showing the effects ofthe Chancery Reform Bill, which, on the motion of Lord LYNDHURST, were ordered to be printed.— Lord BROUGHAM eulogised the conduct of the Law Commissioners, ADD gave notice that next session he should bring the subject of their report under the consideration of their Lordships. The Dublin Police Bill, after some discussion, was ordered to be committed that day three months.— The Charities Commission Bill was read a third time.— The Workhouses Bill was read a third time. — The report on the Bribery Indemnity Bill was, after some discus- sion, ordered to be brought up that day three months.— The Shannon Navigation Bill passed through Committee.— The Tithes Instalment Suspension Bill was read a first time. In the debate which followed upon the Commons' amendments in the Municipal Reform Bill, the only three propositions which did not meet with their Lordships' assent were, that which vests the nomination of the justices of the peace ir. the hands of the town councils instead of the Crown, upon which a division took place, when the numbers were 144 in favour of their Lordships' original amendment, and 82 against it; that which relates to the division into wards, upon which the numbers were 79 to 33; and that which re- inserts Alnwick and Yeovil in the Bill, which was negatived with- out a division. Several Bills were advanced a stage, and the House adjourned. HOUSE OF COMMONS. MONDAY A considerable number of petitions were presented, the greater part of them being on the subject of the Municipal Corporations Bill.— Lord J. RUSSELL then rose to explain the course which Ministers intended to pursue in reference to that measure. He declared his intention to arqueisce in all the amendments their Lordships had introduced with one or two exceptions. To the election of aldermen and town clerks for life he could not consent, although he had no objection to having them elected for six years. The same thing he might say with respect to the corporation justices, whom the amend- ments of the other House would convert into justices for life. He should recommend also that the boroughs to be divided into wards should be those that had 9,000 instead of6,000 inhabitants. He would also reject the amendment which gave the nomination of justices to the Crown instead of the town councils. The division of boroughs into wards, and the settling of boundaries, he should entrust to the Revising Barristers, subject to the approbation of the Privy Council. His Lordship could not accede to the qualification for town councillors, introduced in the motion of Lord Lyndhurst, but submitted to that of the EarlofDevon. He could not concur in the amendment by which it was proposed that Hone of the governing body of Municipal Corpo- rations who were not members of the Established Church should present to livings belonging to that Church. Sir R. PEEL in an admirable speech expressed his intention to sup- port the Noble Lord in some of his objections to the amendments of the Lords. With respect to one of these objections, he thought, however, that if the exception from tolls were'taken away from the freemen of corporations, for the sake of establishing equality in trade, injustice would be done, unless adequate compensation we^- e made for this deprivation. There was another objection of the Noble Lord, from which he entirely dissented— " I now come," said the Right Hon. Baronet, " to the proposition of the Noble Lord, which is to alter that clause in the amen ded Bill, as sent from the House of Lords, which declares ' that no member of the council of any of the said bodies corporate, unless he be a mem- ber of the United'Church of England and Ireland as bylaw established, shall vote or otherwise take part in presenting to any vacant benefice, or in nominating or appointing to a lectureship or other ecclesiastical preferment, which shall be in the gift, nomination, or appointment of such body corporate.' Now, with the proposition of the Noble Lord to alter this clause, and admit Dissenters to partake in the presenta- tion of benefices, I entirely differ. The Lords did right in recognizing no distinction in secular and civil emoluments, butthey felt differently when the rights of the Clergy of the Church of " England were a ttacked. I cannot see on what grounds this exclusion of Dissenters should be looked upon as a disqualification. You talk of toleration as if there were any toleration in preventing the members of one Church to appoint the ministers of another. This talk of toleration j is unilateral. What would be thought of my daring to nominate a minister to an Unitarian congregation ? Why, it would be at once denounced as intolerant."— The Right Hon. Beronet concluded by again urging the House, as they valued their own independence as a branch of the Legislature, not to loose the opportunity of obtaining an amicable settlement of this great and important measure. Mr. HUME declared with much emphasis that he would never con- sent to the qualification clause in the amended Bill.— Mr. GROTE, Mr. EWART, and Mr. ROEBUCK called on the House to reject the Bill altogether.— After a lengthened discussion the Lords' amend- ments were read from the Chair. The question being put that the words " for life" be left out of the clause as amended by the Lords, Mr. SCARLETT opposed it.— Mr. LAW objected to this alteration, butsaid afterwhat fell from his Right Hon. Friend ( Sir R. Peel) he could not disguise the utter hopelessness of opposing the proposition of the Noble Lord.— The words " for life" were then left out of the clause, and words substituted, the effect of which is to continue aldermen in office for six years, half to be elected every three years.— The amendment of the Lords which made aldermen members of the council for life was rejected.— Several verbal amendments were then agreed to in the 24th and several fol- lowing clauses, in order to carry out the principle of the amendment agreed upon in respect to the duration of the aldermen's office.— Mr. WARB URTON moved the omission of the amendment of the Lords which empowered the Revising Barristers to divide the boroughsinto wards. — Lord J. RUSSELL opposed the amendment, which was negatived.— The further consideration of the Lords' amendments was then adiourned. The Collection of Tithes ( Ireland) Bill was read a second time. TUESDAY. After the presentation of several petitions, Mr. SINCLAIR animad- verted in forcible terms on the Scotch Church Commission, the members of which Lord J. RUSSELL attempted to defend. The House then resumed the consideration of the Municipal Cor- porations Bill.— On the amendment embracing the question of " qualification," there was agood deal of discussion, Lord J. RUSSELL adhering to his disapproval of the change.— Sir R. PEEL suggested that for town councillors, tfec., there should be added the qualifica- tion 011 rating, namely, in large towns, where there are four or more wards, being rated at 301., in the smaller towns at 151. This addition to the Lords' qualification was carried on a division, by a majority of 234.— On the clause regarding town clerfcs, Lord J. RUSSELL moved as an amendment, on the Lords' amendment, that those officers be appointed" during pleasure."— Sir R. PEEL proposed that they should retain their offices during their good behaviour;" but after consi- derable discussion it was withdrawn, and Lord J. RUSSELL'S amend- ment adopted.— Lord J.' RUSSELL then proposed to reject the Lords' clause providing that members of the Church only exercise the patronage of Corporations regarding benefices, < fec. This led to some discussion, the CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER giving notice that if this amendment were retained, he would move to introduce a clause directing the Corporations to sell their Church property. The clause was postponed, and the Chairman of the Committee was then ordered to report progress. Mr. BERNAL broHght up the report of the Committee on the Conso- lidated Fund ( Appropriation) Bill.— Mr. TOOK brought up the re- port of the Select Committee appointed to inquire into the charges which had been alleged against Gen. Darling, from which it appeared that the Committee acquitted Gen. Darling of having done any act that was either inconsistent with his duty, or unworthy the character of a man of honour, an officer, or a gentleman. The report added that in support of some of the allegations made against Gen. Darling no evidence whatever had been adduced before them, although they had called for it. It was then ordered that the report be printed. WEDNESDAY. Several petitions were presented against adopting the Lords' amend- ments to the Municipal Corporations Bill. Mr. SINCLAIR observed that as much was said abont " reform of the House of Lords," he should like t » know what was thereby meant?— Mr. ROEBUCK said that he proposed to take away the veto now enjoyed by the House of Lords; and to provide that, in the event of a" Bill having passed this House and being rejected by the Lords, that if such Bill again pass the Commons, it should become law. He afterwards gave notice that next Session he should move for a Bill to carry this principle into effect. . Mr. HUME observed that he viewed the Lords as an irresponsible body, and therefore as being now in the way of good legislation ; and that, therefore, next Session, he should move the appointment of a Select Committee to inquire into the number of the House of Lords — the qualifications and privileges of that House— the constitution of the House, and how far it had fulfilled the duties of legislation ; also into the mode of conducting the conferences : the present mode he considered as degrading to the Commons, for while they were obliged to stand with hats off, the Lords were seated, and with hats on. Mr. CUTHBERT RIPPON gave notice that next Session he should move for leave to bring in a Bill to relieve the Archbishops and Bishops from their attendance in the House of Lords ; also for a measure providing that where Deans and Chapters had not the cure of souls, the profits thereof should be placed in the hands of Com- missioners of the Crown, regard being had to existing interests. The discussion on the Lords' amendments to the Municipal Corporations Bill produced the following results;— The amendments of the Lords for the preservation of the rights of freemen were agreed to, with the exception of the exemption from toll. The words " during his continuance in office" were added to the amendments made upon clause 47 ( the qualification clause), after a division of 155 to 66. The amendment of the Lords regarding the Cinque Ports was adopted. On the subject of Church patronage, the proposition of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, to the effect that all the Church patronage belonging to Corporations should be forthwith sold, was assented to : as was another empowering the Bishop of the diocese to appoint to any livings becoming vacant between the passing of the Act and the sale. A population of 9,000 was agreed upon, on the motion of Lord JOHN RUSSELL, as the minimum which should require that a borough be diiided into wards. It was also resolved that boroughs of 48,000 inhabitants and upwards be divided into six wards. Lord JOHN RUSSELL moved the appointment of a Committee to draw up the resolutions stating the reasons of the House for their dissent from the amendments of the Lords. Agreed to. The usual sessional addresses were proposed and adopted. THURSDAY. The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER moved the third reading of the Consolidated Fund Bill with the appropriation clause.— Sir. HUME wished it to be deferred till Monday, in order that they might have the opportunity of expressing their opinions in the event of the alterations in the Municipal Corporations Bill being rejected by the other House.— The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER entreated the Hon. Member not to press this postponement, as it would show angry feeling and distrust, after having proceeded so far in a con- ciliatory course.— Mr. HUME, on the ground of confidence in the Ministers, eventually withdrewhis request for postponement, and the Bill was then read a third time, and passed. The Report of the Committee for drawing up the reasons of the House on their conduct on the Municipal Bill having been agreed to, Lord J. RUSSELL and several other Members then left the House to attend at the bar of the House of Lords to pray their Lordships to agree to a conference, of which the managers were appointed, on the subject of certain amendments in the Municipal Corporations Reform Bill. Mr. HUME presented a petition, praying the House not to appro- priate any portion of the 20,000,0001. ( awarded as compensation to slave- owners) to the Mauritius, until inquiring into the alleged introduction of slaves there.— Sir G. GREY- said the facts were known previously to the grant, and that no slaves had been introduced since 1820.— The House was soon afterwards counted out. FRIDAY. Mr. F. MAULE movedfor a new writ forthe borough ofDungarvan, in the room of Mr. Sergeant O'LOGHLEN, who had accepted the office of Attorney- General for Ireland. The Tithes Instalment Suspension Bill, and the Instruments of Sasine ( Scotland) Bill were reada third timeand passed.— The Lords' amendments to the Civil Debts ( Scotland) Bill were agreed to. Mr. HUME moved certain resolutions in reference to the loan of 15,000,0001. lately contracted, to show how a great saving to the country might have been effected. For the details of the Hon- Gentleman's plan we refer to his resolutions, which appear in another part of the paper.— The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, after de- fending his conduct, moved, as an amendment, " that the terms of the- loan of fifteen millions as compensation to the owners of slaves in the West Indies was such as to afford a satisfactory proof that the public credit had been regarded with proper attention."— After a discussion the amendment was agreed to without a division. Several petitions were presented, and the House then adjourned. THE PASHA OF MANY TALES, ( Captain Marryat's last fFork.)— These manv- complexioned stories meet the reader with their good- humoured countenances under a profusion of pleasing varieties. In them almost every foible incident to human nature is exquisitely satirised, and they are connected with each other by one oft! be most humorous inventions that ever provoked risibility. The two princi- pal characters, the Pasha and his wily Minister, are felicitously gro- tesque, without the least, mixture of absurdity. It is a production worthy of the author of Peter Simple. MY NEIGHBOURHOOD, BY THE AUTHOR OF " THE COLLEGIANS."— No writer ever better understood his subjects, or made more of them,, than the author of The Collegians. His characters are not idealities, he draws from the actual man, aud thus his delineations are instinct with life. But in working out some important moral, great as are his other excellences, he seems to succeed most in giving an absorb- ing interest to his narrative. As wit and humour are the natural characteristics of Ireland, both these amusing qualities shine con- spicuously in these admirably told tales. THE COLOSSEUM.— This spacious place of splendour appears rather to increase in itspower of attraction than otherwise. It is unques- tionably a magnificent and extensive bagatelle, and the patronage ought to be vast to be commensurate with the profuse expenditure which the proprietors have lavished on the place, in the comple- tion of the labyrinth of fairy scenery. A deputation of the Council of the Institute of British Architects, headed by Earl de Grey, President of the Institution, waited upon Lord Melbourne on Thursday with a memorial, praying that apart- ments might be assigned to this important Society in some public building. Lord Melbourne informed the deputation that their re- quest should meet every consideration on the part of the G overn- ment. A meeting of the creditors under the fiat of bankruptcy issued against Mr. R. M. Raikes, late Governor of the Bank of England, was held on Saturday. The debts proved amount to 200,0001. The decla- ration of the dividend was deferred on the ground that there had not been sufficient time for the Calcutta creditors to prove their debts. On Wednesday night between ten and eleven o'clock, as the groom of the Marquess of Bute was riding a very valuable horse, belonging to the Marquess, along the Edgware- roau, near Maida- hill, the ani- mal suddenly took fright, being quite unmanageable, and plunged headlong into an excavation in the road intended for a sewer, which was about 15 feet deep. The groom escaped with but trifling injury,. but the horse was killed on the spot. Friday the inhabitants of the Edgware- road were thrown into a state of great consternation and excitement, in consequence of a re- port having been rapidly circulated that Mr. Henry Staninought, the proprietor of an extensive public library and newspaper office, at No. 84, in the above road, had murdered his son, and afterwards- made a most determined and desperate attempt upon his own life. It appears that the shopman, who had been engaged some hours in the business was suddenly struck with horror and alarm at be- holding his master running down stairs in a state of frenzy, with blood streaming from a frightful wound in his chest, at the same time grasping in his right hand a large clasp knife, exclaiming,, " Oh, God ! what have I done ?" and sank, exhausted, 011 a chair. At this moment Mr. Finch, an old friend and neighbour, arrived,, and on his interrogating Mr. Staninought, who seemed almost exhausted and incapable of sitting in his chair, the latter in broken accents, said, " My poor dear boy ; good God, I've murdered him up stairs, and stabbed myself " here" ( pointing to his chest>_ Mr. Finch, having quickly sent'for medical assistance, proceeded up stairs, and found the lifeless body of the poor boy lying extended in bed, the skull having been frightfully beaten in by blows from a large bootjack, which was picked up from the floor, covered with blood. A surgeon, who promptly attended, examined and dressed Mr. S.' s wound, which, although of a serious nature, is not likely to termi- nate fatally, intelligence of the sad and distressing event was without loss of time communicated to Mrs. Staninought, who is un- happily on the eve of her confinement. The perpetrator of . the murder is of course in custody, but in all probability will not be suf « licientiy recovered to undergo an examination for several days. September JOHN BULL. NAVAL AN1) MILITARY. OFFICE OF ORDNANCE, August 31. Corps of Royal Engineers— Second Lieut. F. A. Yorke to be First Lieut., vice A. F. Campbell, resigned; Second Capt. L. A. Hall to be Captain, vice Reid, placed on temporary half- pav; First Lieut. G. Dalton to bo Second Captain, vice Hall; Second Lieut. C. F. Skyring to be First Lieut., vice Dalton. Royal Regt. of Artillery— Fi rst Lieut. F. A. Griffiths to be Second Captain, vice Colquhoun, placed on'temporary half pay ; Second Lieut. W. W. Jones to be First Lieut., vice Griffiths. Commission bv Lord Lieutenant. Lymingtrm Troop of Yeoinanrv Cavalry— Cornet C. St. Barbe to be Lieut., vice Hyde, resigned; A. Mackinnon,' jun., Ge* nt., to be Cornet, vice St. Barbe, prom. WAR OFFICE, Sept. i. 4th Drag. Gds.— Lieut. L. Place, to be Captain, by pur. vice Annit, who ret. ; Cornet W. A. Rose, to be Lieut, by pur. vice Place ; T. W. Vokes, Gent., to be Cornet, bv pur. rice Rose. 1st Drags.— Lieut. J. Dalton, to be Captain, by pur. vice Curteis, who ret. ; Cornet R. M. Croft to be Lieut, bv pur. vice Dalton ; E. H. Llovd, Gent., to be Cornet, by pur. vice Croft. 17th Light Drags.— C. F. Davidson, Gent , to be Cornet, by pur. vice Thompson, whose appointment has not taken place. 8th Foot— Ensign S. Browne to be Lieut, by pur. vice Bewes, whose promotion has not taken place , Ensign C. Harte, from h. p. Dillon's Re- giment, to be Ensign, withont pur. vice Srowne. 9th— Lieut. S. Brownrigg, to tie Adjutant, vice Donnelly, prom. 10th— Capt. G. Power, to be Major, by pur. vice Waller, who ret.; Lieut. H. Onslow, to be Capt. by pur. vice Power; Ensign C. Harford, to be Lieut., bv pur. viceOnslow ; J. Garvock, Gent., to be Ensign, by pur., vice Harford. 14th— Staff- Assist.- Stir. J. T. Telfer, to be Assist.- Sur. 39th— Sergt.- Major J. Brannan, from the 28th, to be Ensign, without pur., vice Deacon, appointed to the Hist. 45th— Lieut G. H. Clarke, to be Capt. by pur., vice Lan- don, who ret.; Ensign H. A. Cuinberlege, to be Lieut by pur., vice Clarke ; G. A. L. Blenltinsopp, Gent., to be Ens., by pur., vice Cumberlege. 48th— H. Brom- ley, Gent., to be Ens., by pur., vice Dalrymple. 61th— Lieut. C. O. Leinan to be Capt., by pur., vice Strongitharm, who ret.; Second Lieut. R. B. Levett to be First Lieut., by pur., vice Bayly, who ret.; Second Lieut. J. J. O'Neill Power, to be First Lieut., by pur., vice Leinan; Hon. J. E. H. Thurlow, to be Second Lieut., by pur., vice Levett; R. I. Dansey, Gent., to be Second Lieut., by pur., vice Power. 61st— Lieut. K. Mac Donnell to be Capt., without pur., vice Harris, deceased : Ens W. F. Hoey to be Lieut., vice Mac Donnell; Ens. C. C. Deacon, from the 39th Ft., to be Ens., vice Hoey. 67th— Lieut. F. F. L. Dayrolles, from h.- p., 18th Light Drags., to be Lieut., without pur., vice Bolton, prom.; Ensign W. Gomin to be Lieut., by pur., vice Davrolles, who ret.; Kris, and Adjt. W. Fisher to have the rank of Lieut.; Ens. J. Foott, from h.- p. 96th Ft. to be Ens. vice Dacres, deceased ; C. B. Hague, Gent , to be Ens. by pur. vice Gomm. 21st— Lieut. Sir H. Dalrymple, Bt., from h.- p. unattached, to be Lieut., vice J. Lawson, who exch., recieving the difference; W. Hope, Gent., to be Ens., by pur., vice Strangways, who ret. 76th— C. Fenwick, Gent., to be Ens., by pur., vice Warden, who ret. 80th— Lieut. G. Denshire to be Capt., bv pur., vice Fal- - conar, who ret.; Ens. W. F. Christie to be Lieut., by pur., vice Denshire. 82d— Lieut. C. S. Eustace to be Capt., by pur., vice Elliott, who ret; Ens. T. W. Hornby to be Lieut., by pur., vice Eustace ; J. C. Maelachlan, Gent., to be Ens., by pur , vice Hornby. 89th— Lieut. Col. R. Doherty, from the 1st West India Regt., to he Lieut. Col., vice H. R. Hartley, who ret. upon h.- p. unatt. ; Staff Assist.- Surg. J. Gillice to be Assist.- Surg. 99th— Ens. H. A. Ouvry to be Lieut., by pur., vice Werge, who ret.; A. W. Reed, Gent., to be Ens., by pur., vice Ouvry. 1st West India Regiment— Lieut.- Col. W. Bush, from h.- p. unatt., to be Lieut.- Col., vice Doherty, app. to the 89th Ft. Unattached— Lieut. J. Bolton, from the 67th Ft., to be Capt., without pur.; Ens. Sir H. Dalrymple, Bt., to be Lieut., by pur. Memoranda— Lieut. R. Browne, h.- p. 21st Ft., has been allowed to retire from the service by the sale of an unattached commission, he having become a settler in Upper Canada. NAVAL PROMOTIONS, APPOINTMENTS, i- c. Captain— Hyde Parker, C. B., to the Rodn£ y. Lieutenants— E. F. Stopford, to the Cleopatra;' R Byron, I. F. Fletcher, and Hon. D. W. Pelham, to the Jupi- ier; E. Norcott, to command the Curlew; C. Lavie, to the Excellent; C. Wise, G. K. Wilson, C. F. Brown, H. K Edgell, H. Coode, and W. Pain, to to the Rodney. Master— S. Northcote, to the Jupiter. Second Master— W. Par- dons, to the Jupiter; W. Ledstone, to the Rodney. Surgeons— G. Birnie, to the Layton convict ship ; C. M'Arthur, to the Rodney. Assistant- Surgeons— W. Wright and J. Steven, to the Rodney. Mates— E. ' Codd and T. Lewis, to the Britannia; H. T. Laye, to the Jupiter; F. Fanshawe, to be Lieutenant; P. B. Stagg, to the African. Pursers— W. Knapinan, to the Rodney ; G. Miller, to the Caledonia, vice Goldin dec.; J. Jones, to the Jupiter. Midshipman— Carter, - to the Rodney. Chaplain— Rev. J. Cooper, to the Russell. Master's Assistant— J. Purches, to the Jupiter; Colwell, to the Rodney. Royal Marines.— Major— Parry, of Portsmouth division, is placed on the re- tired list, vice Ball, dec.; Brevet Sir F. G. G. Lee, to be Major of Portsmouth division, vice Parry. Captaine— Joliffe, from unatt. h.- p., to Woolwich divi- sion, vice Sir F. Lee. GRAND REVIEW IN HYDE PARK.— Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock the two regiments of Life Guards, the 8th regiment of hussars, two troops of horse artillery, accompanied by four guns, with the two. bat- talions of Coldstream Guards, and the 1st regiment of Fusileer Guards, marched from their respective barracks into Hyde Park, where they arrived at the above- mentioned hour. The ground was kept by part of the 2d battalion of Scotch Fusileer Guards from the Tower, and the3d battalion of the 1st regiment of Grenadier Guards. At eleven o'clock, the arrival of the Royal visitors was announced by firing a Royal Salute from the artillery. The Grand Staff of Officers and Foreign visitors, consisted of the Duke of Nemours, his Royal High- ness the Duke of Cambridge, Prince George of Cambridge, the Duke of Wellington, Lord Hill, and a numerous retinue of Military Offi- cers. They immediately proceeded along the front and rear of the lines. The firing, which continued for a length of time, was per- formed with astonishing precision. Some accidents occurred during the day. A Life Guardsman was thrown from his horse against a tree with great violence, but was afterwards removed home to the hospital. Two boys fell a considerable height from a tree, and were dreadfully injured. The review continued until half- past one o'clock. The cavalry were commanded by General Sir Charles Dalbiac ; the infantry, by Colonel Woodford, of the Guards. GENERAL ORDER. Horse Guards, Aug. 31, 1835. Lord Hill has reason to apprehend, that the orders prohibiting the introduction of Orange Lodges into the army have not been duly communicated to the non- commissioned officers and privates, or, if communicated, that they have not been sufficiently explained and understood. His Lordship now refers commanding officers of regiments to the confidential circular letters of the 1st of July, 1822, and 14th of November, 1829, upon the foregoing subject; and declares that any officer, non- commissioned officer or soldier, who shall hereafter in- stitute or countenance an Orange Lodge, or any other meeting or society whatsoever, for party purposes, in barracks, quarters, or camp, shall be brought to trial before a general court- martial for dis- obedience of orders. His Lordship, moreover, peremptorily forbids the attendance of - either officer or soldier at Orange Lodges", by whomsoever, or where- soever held. The present order is to be read to the troops periodically on the parade with the articles of war. By command of the Right Honourable GEN. LORD HILL, Commander- in- Chief, JOHN MACDONALD, Adjutant- General. An accident which might have been attended with serious conse- quences occurred as the Duke of Wellington was returning to town on Sunday morning, after being present at the ceremony of an investiture of the Hon. Military Order of the Bath at Windsor Castle. When the Duke's carriage arrived at Knightsbridge, a cab which was going in the contrary direction, and on the wrong side of the road, came in collision with one of the horses belonging to his • Grace's carriage, one of the shafts of the cab striking the leader which the postillion rode with such force in the chest as to enter into the body of the poor animal to a considerable depth. The horse was immediately unharnessed by the Duke of Wellington's orders and taken into the barracks, where he died in a short time afterwards. The cabdriver alighted and rendered all the assistance in his power. A policeman was present on the occasion, but as the Duke of Wel- lington did not give charge of the cabman he was permitted to pro- ceed on, and his Grace was driven to Apsley House. On Wednesday the Recorder made his report to his Majesty of prisoners under sentence of death, who were convicted at the last sessions of the Central Criminal Court— all of whom his Majesty has been graciously pleased to respite during pleasure. The Be/ fast Chronicle states, that a mob of 300 or 400 persons Earaded the streets of Ballycastle on Tuesday night, calling out" To ell with Protestant! and Orangemen," < fcc. They stopped a number of people, several of whom they beat, after inquiring whether they were Protestants or Catholics. As the police were at the Belfast election, these marauders continued their system of outrage until morning, when a magistrate, Mr. M'Neile, accompanied by a large body of respectable inhabitants of the town interfered, and the ruffians immediately fled. HORRID DEATH.— On Thursday, an accident of a frightful nature occurred in Broomward Mill, at the east end of Calton. A young female, one of the workers in the mill, when making some diversion in the lobby, leaned her back on the door of one of the rooms, which, being off the latch, flew open, and she fell among some of the machi- nery, where she met with instant death. Her mutilated remains • were gathered up and placed in a coffin which was immediately pro- cured ; the head was severed from the body, and she was otherwise dreadfully mangled.— Scots Times, FOREIGN AFFAIRS. FRANCE.— The Jury Law Bill was discussed in the Chamber of Peers on Tuesday, and it was debated, voted, and passed in one day There were 99 Peers present. Of these 74 voted the law without changing a syllable, and 25 only voted against it. These 25, how- ever, were the lawyers, judges, aud practical men in the Peerage. The Marquess de Dreux Breze in vain required that the law under discussion should be adjourned. M. Dubonchage in vain de- manded that a prisoner should: not be condemned to prison, banish- ment, and even death, by a majority merely of seven against five jurymen, and the Baron Mounier demanded in vain that the jury- men should not vote secretly and by ballot. All this was in vain. M. Persil spoke: he declared that in France justice was better administered than any where else, and that there were no innocent persons in a French prison! The secrecy of votes, the necessity of condemning by a majority of seven against frve, < fec. & c. < fec., were all advocated by M. Persil, who concluded by requiring that the law should be adopted, in order to give force to the Government. After this declaration, the articles of the law were voted one by one, and that without any amendment. The Chamber then proceeded with the Bill for granting pensions to the victims of the 28th July, and finished by adopting it by a large majority.— A Commission has been appointed to examine the project of law relative to the press, but no day has been fixed upon for the debate on that obnoxious measure. SPAIN.— Deputations, it is said, have waited on Don Carlos from almost all parts of Spain, urging him to declare in favour of a federal union of the kingdoms, preservingto each its peculiar privileges, with a promise of effective support if he would consent. According to the same report he refused. In Catalonia and Arragon democratic prin- ciples are rapidly spreading, and many towns render but a nominal allegiance to the'Queen.— The Messager states that Don Carlos has decreed that the ancient Fueros of the Crown of Arragon shall be established such as they were in the reign of Philip II. This was intended to embarrass the Queen's Government still further, and may, probably, have that effect. Advices from the frontiers of Spain to the 27th ult. state that Don Carlos was then actually making preparations for marching forward. ing that Colonel , France in the district of Lampurdan, part of which had declared in favour of a Republic, and the other for Don Carlos. The Bishop of Solsonawas at the head of5,000 men, and the entire force of the Carlists in Catalonia, exclusive of the Navarrese, was said to amount to 16,000 well- armed men.— The English have not as yet left the walls of St. Sebastian. Ge- neral Gomez has formed a double line of blockade, and is determined to prevent the English from penetrating into Guipuzcoa. The road between Saint Sebastian and H ernani has been cut up in three places to prevent the passage of artillery. Two battalions have been sent to reinforce the Carlist outposts near the fortress. A strong column of Carlists is stationed in the mountains between Saint Sebastian and Irun, and another on the defile of Loyola; thus it is impossible, without a determined attack, that the English can either enter Iron or Hernani. General Gomez had his head- quarters at Urnieta; the report that he had retreated on Arana is false. The intelligence from Constantinople comes down to the 12th ult. Another frigate, escorting 15 transports, with troops on board, had sailed for Salonica on the 7th. The Sultan seemed to be determined to relieve the Pasha of Scutari, and to put a speedy end to the Albanian insurrection. It is understood that the Earl of Durham, our Ambassador to Russia, will not be allowed to pass the Dardanelles in a ship of war. Mr. Ellis, our Ambassador to Persia, was allowed to go through in the Pluto, on condition that he converted it into a yacht, but that is impossible with the Barham. Advices from Aleppo of the 24th of July state that Mehemet Ali had reinforced his army in Syria, and that Ibrahim Pasha was at Adana. A letter from Trieste of the 17th mentions an important victory gained by the Albanian insurgents over the troops of the Porte, and the probability that it would lead to the concession of their demands. A letter from Smyrna, dated the 10th instant, states that it was reported that two Egyptian transports had been sunk at Suda, in Candia, by English men- of- war, in consequence of an attack made on the crews of some of our boats, which went ashore to take water, in which several of the English were killed or wounded.— Morning Herald. Letters from Genoa to the 25th ult., give amost fearful detail of the progress of ( he cholera there. The deaths reported were upwards of 100 per day, and among the victims were numbered two Noblemen, three physicians, three merchants, and four bankers. The people were quitting the place in great alarm. A religious procession had taken place with great solemnity. At the date of the letters leaving, however, anortherly windhad setin, andgteathopes were entertained that by this the contagion would be arrested. A statue of his late MAJESTY now ornaments the apex of the building called King's Cross, erected at the point of intersection of the Hampstead and the new roads. It is of compo, and has been formed by the artist in a manner quite novel, and which has excited much curiosity during the few days he has been completing it. Having formed the platform for his figure, be had the compo brought to him an unshapen mass, and without any mould, and with very few tools, he proceeded on the spot to work and curve it into the requisite shape. In this way he kept progressively, as it were, building the statue, till at last he completed a figure ten feet high, representing his late MAJESTY in his coronation robes, over which hangs the insignia of the Order of the Garter; in the right hand is the sceptre, arid in the left the orb. The right foot is slightly ad- vanced, and the head uncovered. SOCIETY- OF BRITISH MUSICIANS.— There was a trial on Thursday of vocal music composed by the members of this Society, consisting of songs and duets, by Dr. Essex, Messrs. Calkin, Parry, Blockley, Nelson, Purday, Rede, Macfarren, Smith, < fcc., sung by Miss Bruce, Miss Birch, Miss Hawes, Miss Turpin, and Messrs. Smith, Chapman, and Parry, jun. Also a madrigal composed by Miss I'yne, sung by Miss Woodyatt, Miss Hawes, and Messrs. Jolly, Pyne, and C. Purday. The band was an efficient one, considering that many of the members have left town for York. ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY.— The number of visitors to the Gardens of this Society in July was 44,440, and the income derived therefrom 1,6721. 9s. ; and in August, 26,334, and the sum received, 9921.16s. Several interesting presents have been received during the last two months, the most valuable of which are from his Majesty, consisting of a pair of crown cranes from Sierra Leone, and a female elephant from Oude, the same that was lately received from the King of that country. Advices have been received from Sir Thomas Reid, British Consul at Tunis, a valuable corresponding member of the society, that some rare specimens of camels and ostriches have been shipped by himself and Admiral Sir Thomas Briggs, commanding on the Malta station, which the council are in the daily expectation of receiving. HALLEY'S COMET.— A report from the Royal Observatory, Green- i. l, o„ Priilnv iio'nnifflit » n vs. '' lit1 17m mown time. wich, on Friday se'nniglit, says, " At 14h. 17m. 35.6s. mean time, the right ascension of the comet was observed by the five feet equa- torial to be 5h. 47m. 42.1s., and declination, 24 deg. 25m. 33s. north. It appeared very faint." On the first of last month, the comet was about 250 millions of miles distant from the earth; at present it is within 125 millions. It rises about midnight in the N. E. and is visible till the dawn of day in the eastern heavens, between the constellations Auriga and Gemini. Towards the end of the present month it is expected that the comet may be seen with the naked eye. A nebulous spot, supposed to be Halley's comet, was discovered at Leipaic on the 23d of August, at three o'clock, from the Observatory. It was also seen at Vienna on the 23d at day- break, from the Obser- vatory, by Mr. Charles Littrow; and on the 24th, in themorning, by Professor Kaisen, at Leyden. Wednesday morning the works of the London and Greenwich rail- road between Deptford High- street and Greenwich were com- menced. Several millions of bricks are landing on the banks of the Ravensbourne, and the line is nearly cleared for active operations, in order to complete, if possible, the whole line, according to the contractor's engagement, by Christmas next. In Boston market, on Saturday last, a farmer sold to a dealer 18 stone of new wheat at the unexampled price of 30s. Mr. Thomas Berry, who was for many years an army quarter- master, and lately accepted the commutation, was killed by being thrown out of, and run over by, one of the trains on the Leeds and Selby railway. He was found between two waggons which had been thrown on end, his head immersed in a bottle of oil of vitriol. ACOOLING SUMMER APERIENT— BUTLiUt'S COOL- ING APERIENT POWDERS produce an ewtremelv refreshing Effer- vescing Draught, which is Eftthesame time a mild and cooling .- perient, pecu- liarly adapted to promote the healthy action of the Stomach ana Bowels, ami thereby prevent the recurrenceof constipation and indigestion, with fi t their train of consequences, as Flatulence. Acidify or Heartburn, Htvlaohe, Febrile Symp- toms, Nervous depression, Eruptions on the skin, Ac. & c. ; and their frequent use- will generally obviate the necessity of having recourse to Calomel, Epsom Salts, and other Medicines which tendto debilitate the system. When taken aftertoo ented.— Pre- Chemist, 1, the Preparer7* name and' address in the labels and stamps) may be obtained of Sanger, 15*>< Oxford street; at the Medical Hall, ii. Lower Sackvilie- street, Dublin : of W. . Dennis and Son, York ; Dnncan, Flockhitrc andCo., Edinburgh ; the Apothecaries Company, Virvinia- street, Glasgow ; ami of most respectable Druggists and Medi- cine Vender throughout the United Kingdom. JUST arrived " from America, MRS. MOTT, the celebrated FEMALE PHYSICIAN of Boston, and has brought with her, her VEGE- TABLE MKDrCATED CHAMPOO antf LUXURY BATHS, so vrell known to the Faculty of Europe and Asia, and considered in the Oriental Empires one of the greatest luxuries they enjoy, being a preventive as well as Cure for all Conta- gious Diseases; and she how introduces them into England on a new and' improved Plan, together with her SYSTEMATIC VEGETABLE MEDICINES, and pro- fesses to cure or relieve the following diseases ;— Rheumatism, of however long- standing, Gont, Tic Douloreux, Tooth ache. Scrofula, Decline, Consumption, Asthma, Dropwv, White Swelling, Contractions in every stage, Hemorrhoids, Diseases of the Head and Eyes, Coughs and Colds, Sprains and Bruises, Palsied or Paralysed Limbs ; and particularly recommends them to delicate or sickly females, and pays the greatest attention to all the complaints incident to childhood. The various Baths are medicated with Herbs and Essential Oils, as the case may require, and are now open to the public, at her residence, No. 32, BURY- STREET, ST. JAMES'S. They are medicated, and solely under the direction of Mrs. Mott. To those acquainted ' with their efficacy, nothing need be said in their praise ; to those who are not, one trial wilt convince them of their utility. Medicines are- only to be had of Mrs. M. T no agents having yet been appointed. Attendance fron Ten till Six. No Minerals are used. Letters'from the country strictly attended to. DEFORMITY of the HANDS and FEET arising from Painful CORNS, BUff- NIONS, WARTS, CHILBLAINS, and DEFECTIVE NAILS. MESSRS. R. and L. PERRY, Surgeons Chiropodists, No. 20, Southampton- street, Bloomsbury- square; and No. 1, Finsbury- place South, opposite Fore- street, City, respectfully acquaint the Nobility, Gentry, and the Public, that thev entirely'remove andcureall PAINFUL AFFLICTION'S of the FEET and HANDS, Hard and Soft. CORNS, BUNNIONS, CALLOSITIES, EX- CRESCENCES of the EPIDERMIS, and defective or distorted NAILS, on a new and successful principle that scarcely in any instance fails of giving immediate and permanent relief, without the least pain or inconvenience. At home from. Tenrill Six. CUBEBS with SARSAPARILLA, < fcc.— 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 tnay 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 onfy by J. W. STIRLING, 86, High- street, W hi techs pel, from whom it can be sent to anv part of the world, upon receiving- a remittance, in Bottles at 4s. ( jd.; 10s.; and 20s. each.— Agents, Barclay, Far- ringdoin- .- treet; Prout, 226, Strand ; Sanger, 150, Oxford- street; Harvey, 68, Great Surrey street, Blackfriars ; Hendebourk, 226, Holbom ; Willoughby, 61, Bishopsgate- without: Johnstone, 68, Cornhill; Stradling, Royal Exchange gate; Hamilton, Church- street, Hackney; Priest, Parliament- street, Westminster ; and may be had of eveTy Medicine Vender of eminence in the kindgdoin. Be snre the name J. W. Stirling is on the Stamp. Ask for " Stirling- Rees' Essence." MRS. VINCENT'S GOWLAND'S LOTION.— Established nearly a Century.— This delightful Lotion pleasantly extracts the morbid mucous from the Skin, effectually eradicating all Cutaneous Eruptions, and in- fuses a richness of bloom to the Complexion, and a purity of Skin constituting both Beauty and Health. Sold, in quart bottles 8s. 6d., pints 5s. 6d., half- pints 2s. 9d., byall respectable Druggists, Perfumers, and Medicine Venders in Europe and America. Observe the Signature, M. E. Vincent, on the label on every bottfe, without which it is not genuine. RELIEF FROM PAIN.— LEFAY'S GRANDE POMMADE cures, by two or three external applications, Tic Douloreux, Gout, Rheumatism, Lumbago, and Head- ache, giving instantaneous relief in the most painful paroxysms. This extraordinary preparation has lately been exten- sively employed in the public and private practice of several eminent French Phy- sicians, who have declared that in no case havethey found itto fail incuring those formidable and tormenting maladies. Patients who had for many years drawn on a miserable existence have, by a few applications, been restored to health and com- fort. Its astonishing and almost miraculous effects have also been experienced in the speedy cure of paralytic affections, contracted and stiff joints, glandular swellings, pains of the chest and bones, chronic rheumatism, palpitation of the heart, and dropsy. The way of using it is by friction. It requires no internal medicitie or restraint of anv kind.— Sold by appointment of J. Lefay, by Stirling, 86, High- street, W hitechapel, in pots at 4s. 6d. each ; and may be had of Sanger, 150, Oxford- street; Butler, St. Paul's; Barclay, Farringdon- street; and most of the principal Medicine Venders.— Observe, the gennine has the name of J. W. Stirling engraved on the stamp, who will attend to any com- munications or inquiries respecting the Pommade.— All letters must be post paid- RE- ISSUE OF THE BLACK BOOK. Just published, New Edition, brought down to the present time, complete in one large 8vo. volume, with Portraits of the King and Reform Ministry, and an Appendix, bound in black cloth, 21s., THE BLACK BOOK of Abuses in Corporations, Public Com- panies, the English and Irish Churches, State, Law, Army,. Navy, Pensions, 4c. " No man who desires to know how grossly the resources of the country have been misapplied ought to be without this work." The APPENDIX, coinprisingtheprinciples of the Reform Ministry, importance of Agriculture and Manufactures, working of the Excise Laws and Poor- law Amendment Bill, Catastrophe of the House of Lords, Ecclesiastical and Parlia- mentary Statistics, & c., with corrections of former Editions of " The Black Book,'* is sold separately, price 3s. 6d. London : Eftinghatn Wilson, 88, Royal Exchange; and all Booksellers. NEW POPULAR WORK ON DISEASES OF THE GENERATIVE SYSTEM.— Price 4s. AN HISTORICAL and PRACTICAL TREATISE on SYPHILIS and its CONSEQUENCES. Together with Observations on the Nature and Treatment of certain other Diseases of the Generative System ; on Nervous, Local, and General Debility, which, if not timely remedied, termi- nates in a distressing state of impotence, alike destructive to the best energies of the mind and body, for the Cure of which a superior mode of Treatment is adopted by the Author, with concluding Remarks on the Evils resulting from, attempts at self- cure. ByC. B. COURTENAY, M. D., 42, GreatMarlborough- street. Printed for the Author, and sold by Simpkin and Marshall, Stationers'- court; Onwhyn, Catherine- street, Strand; also at. 145, Oxford- street; 59, Pall- mall; 98, Royal Exchange; 248, Regent- street: and all Booksellers in town and country. " The luminous views taken of these diseases, together with the important warnings against excesses, entitle this work to great praise ; and we may add, as a further recommendation, that it is written with much delicacy and morality."' — Inspetorand Literary Review. Third Edition, 5s., with Plates, PILES, Hemorrhoids, and Prolapsus Recti; Practical Treatise, illustrated with Plates and additional Cases. By S. MACKENZIE, Sur- geon, 173, Lamb's Conduit- street. Showing a safe and efficient cure, without Jain, and avoiding the dangerous operation by excision or ligature.— Sold by . Churchill, 16, Princes- street, Soho; and Thomas Hurst, 65, St. Paul's Chnrch- yard. WHEN Men of Education and Professional Skill use perse- vering endeavours to discover the most safe and certain method of treating a few prevailing Diseases, the successful result of their experience is the best proof of therr superiority.— Messrs. GOSS and- Co., Surgeons, have been induced to make the cure of the following the object of their particular study, viz.— Disorders frequently contracted in moments of intoxication, which, by an improved plan, are speedily and effectually cured ; as also debility, whether arising from Bac- chanalian indulgences, long residence in warm climates, or vice, too often pur- sued by youth. In that distressing state of debility, whether the consequence of such baneful habits, or arising from any other cause,, by which the powers of the constitution become enfeebled, as regular educated Surgeons of London, they offer a firm, safe, and speedy restoration to perfect health. Patients in the country are requested to send th3 particulars of their case, age, and manner of living, inclosing a Bank- note for advice and medicine, and the same will be forwarded to any part of the kingdom.— To be consulted at their house daily ( personally, or by letter) by patients, with secresy and attention.— GOSS and CO., Surgeons, 7, Lancaster- place, Strand, London. 1. The / EOIS of LIFE ( twenty- first edition), a familiar Commentary on the above Diseases— 2. The SYPHILIST— and 3. HYGEIANA ( on Female Com- plaints), by Goss and Co., may be had of Sherwood, 23, Paternoster- ruw, London, and all Booksellers. Price 5s. each. Air- BALLAD, 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 power. See! it approaches— nearer still! See! the radiant object come: Anxious doubts my bosom thriU— Terror binds my soul in gloom. " Cottage in the W jod. . See— myself— my form is there Every feature's bright displav'd J Glorious vision !— why appear ? Why in splendour thus array'd? Nearer yet !- a gentle tongue Calls my fluttering senses back; Then I found the vision sprung But from Warren's Jetty Black; ' Twas a stranger, whose bright shoes Warren's Blacking shone so bright^ Beam'd those superhuman glows, Through the gloomy tint of night! THIS Easv- shinina and Brilliant BLACKING, prepared by ROBERT WARREN 3t> STRAN D, London; and sold in every town in the Kingaoin. Llqina in oott- es, and PasteBlacking in pots, at6d., 12d., and 18d., each. Be particular to inquire for Warren's, 30, Stiwid. Allotkeisare « , uttt*" elt » ^ 284 JOHN BULL, September 6. a . uuahav £< i> iiiuA ^ iur Uic v^ uitimy ) ^ uuiisiieil. til l ui'ee ••' clock in the afternoon, containing the Markets and Latest News. JOHN BULL. LONDON, SEPTEMBER 6. THEIR MAJESTIES continue in excellent liealth. The KING came to town on Wednesday, accompanied by Sir HERBERT TAYLOR, and held a Levee at St. James's. His MAJESTY was pleased to invest General DARLING, late Governor of New South Wales, with the insignia of a Knight < irand Cross of the Guelphic Order. His MAJESTY returned to Windsor in the evening. His Royal Highness the Duke of CUMBERLAND has left Xondon for the Continent. His Royal Highness proceeds immediately to the reviews at Kalisch. THE Morning Chronicle of Monday— and the daily papers get five clear davs start of us— is very angry, very angry indeed, because we said that Ministers would take back the Municipal Corporations Bill and be thankful, rather than give up their places: and this the Chronicle calls defamation— an odd word for a Whig newspaper, whose most eminent contributor in that way has just been put upon the pension list. Well, the Chronicle is dreadfully angry, and so is Lord MELBOURNE, not only because he knows w hat we said is the truth, but be- cause, poor man— the PROMETHEUS v'inctus of the political world— bound as he is, to Captain ROCK, whatever bis perso- nal feelings may be, he cannot give up; he knows he is tram- melled by the necessities of the craving creatures with whom • he has consented to associate himself, and that, although their nominal head, he is, iu fact, their humble servant. And what has happened ?— why precisely what we said. The Ministers have taken the Bill as they could get it, and are thankful; and if Sir ROBERT PEEL, whose compassion must, » e should think, be as galling to them as the contempt of most other people, had not come to their aid, and— because he thought it right— permitted one or two of the Lords' amend- ments to be rejected, they would have taken it exactly as it came from the Lords ; but Sir ROBERT feeling conscientiously, as he said iu his speech at Tainworth on Thursday, that it was his duty to work out the principle of the Reform Bill, gave the Government the benefit of his mediation, and therefore one or two of their Lordships' amendments have been rejected. The Lords have acceded to all— except three— of the al- terations made by the House of Commons; and thus, under the wing of Sir ROBERT PEEL, the MELBOURNE ( SO called) Ministry still exists, and will 110 doubt exist, as we foretold, till next February, during which period Lord MELBOURNE and his colleagues will, of course, exercise the patronage • which belongs to them; so that after all the violence of the Morning Chronicle out of the House of Lords, aud Lord MELBOURNE'S foaming and frowning, and starting and ( shaking in the House of Lords, matters appear to stand very Uiucli as we anticipated. It appears that the House of Commons even now are dis- inclined to accept of the modifications of the Bill as now re- mcdified by the House of Lords, and, like our friend Major DOWNI'NG'S grandmother's old hen, are " rumpled, ruffled, and ready for a fight." If, after all the shufflings, and eon- cessions, and tergiversations of our hopeful Ministers, they should be slain, scorpion- like, by their own Tail, their subse- quent conduct will afford ample matter lor political specu- lation. by O'CoNNfcLL, up i. ets the nice spick- and- span new Lord HATHERTON, who, by way ofcorroborating his Noble Friend, admits that the Government of Ireland cannot be justly or properly carried on without the approbation of this very Mr. O'CONNELL. Poor Lord HOLLAND sang out something about Mr. O'CON NELL'S talents; aud when LordsSTRANGFORD, FITZGERALD, and LONDONDERRY opened upon him as to the absurdity of an individual Member of Parliament controlling the ad- ministration of public affairs, his Lordship " shouldered his crutch," and, with a face as grave as an owl, observed that the whole conversation teas very irregular.' Poor Lord HATHERTON ! ON Thursday a grand dinner was given at Tamworth to Sir ROBERT PEEL, who was received in his own neighbour- hood with every demonstration of affection and regard. Alter the usual toasts, Sir ROBERT'S health was given in the most cordial manner. We regret that we have not space to give even an outline of the Right Hon. Baronet's speech on re- turning thanks. It contained an exposition of his views and sentiments; aud although there are parts of it which we can- didly admit savour much more of liberalism than is quite agreeable to our taste and feelings, yet we have that con- fidence and reliance 111 the integrity and purity of intention which have so generally characterised the career of one of the most emineut and independent statesmen the country ever possessed, we are inclined to mistrust our weaker judgment, and to suppose that the master- mind of such a man perceives advantages in the course he is pursuing which we humbly but honestly confess we of ourselves cannot discover. WHEN Mr. LITTLETON was Mr. LITTLETON, lie was a very w eak person, and it is quite clear that the process of pitchforking has not had the effect of elevating his mind or ennobling his abilities. Before LORD HATHERTON became LORD HATHERTON, it may be recollected that, in one of those shuffling affairs, a series of which forms the history of the proceedings of the present most ridiculous Ministry— for really ridiculous it is— Mr. LITTLETON was told by his master, " not to commit himself." Of what avail— and, be it recollected, O'CONNELL was the subject then— this necessary caution has been, the reader may judge by the awful exhi- bition of absurdity which the Nolle Baron made on Tuesday night in the House of Lords. LI rd LONDONDERRY made some powerful and pertinent • observations upon the gross and glaring influence which © ' CONNELL possesses in— or rather over— the Government, and substantiated the allegations he made by a reference to facts, statements, and circumstances. Lord DUNCANNON, the old original friend of O'CONNELL, the supporter of his claims and the echo of his threats, rose and indignantly denied that Mr. - O'CONNELL possessed any such influence, or held any such sway ; aud above all. to prove this to be the case, his Lord- ship said that so far from the Constabulary Bill ( the Bill then under debate) being a measure favourably regarded by Mr. O'CONNELL, he distinctly stated that the LIILL had never been submitted to Mr. O'CONNELL, and that although some part « f the Bill might be approved by Mr. O'CONNELL, he had had no hand in arranging the Bill, and anybody that said he had, was totally mistaken. Having advanced this, poor Lord DUNCANNON sat down— having most triumphantly vindicated the Government from the charge of being under the thumb and tail of the great Agitator, and people were quite assured that so respectable a nobleman— whose excess of genius is not likely to lead him into any of those flourishes in which some of ( he friends of the pre- sent Government sometimes are in the habit of indulging— had given a true state ofthe case, and that poor Prometheus and his colleagues were as free as air, aud did not care a thirteefler for DANIEL and the whole of his den of Lions. When, lo and behold! up got the Right Honourable Barren HATHERTON, and in order to corroborate his Right Honourable Friend's statement that Mr. O'CONNELL had no share in the Hill, did himself, his Majesty's Ministers, and the country, the favour to inform the House of Lords, that, so far from Mr. O'CONNELL'S having any iufluence— as Lord DUNCANNON had clearly shown— in urging this measure, or, indeed, any other, He ( Lord HATHERTON) said that " lie was in a situ- ation to confirm the statement which his Right Honourable Friend had made. At the period he ( Lord HATHERTON) held the office of Secretary for Ireland, he had a Constabu- lary Bill, similar to the present, ready prepared for introduc- tion, lying upon his table; but— HE FEARED TO BRING IT FORWARD, LEST IT SHOULD ENCOUNTER THE OPPOSI- TION OF MR. O'CONNELL !! !" What a blessing it is to have a friend— a wise aud discreet friend— a friend who, if he be amiable enough to " commit himself," is not quite so " good- natured" as to commit all his party. After Lord DUNCANNON'S disavowal of the in- terference of the Tail— after the dignified sit down of content, - feeling that he hid repudiated the notion of being governed ing. What! exhibit the bones of a man as a public show, So long as people simply make fools of themselves, with- out outraging the feelings of their fellow creatures and violating the decencies of society, it is just as w ell to permit them to enjoy their conceits and absurdities— but there are limits even to folly. Amongst the extensive humbugs which so eminently dis- tinguish this very extraordinarily enlightened age, none, perhaps, is more glaring than the meeting of what is called the British Association for the Advancement of Science, now held annually in different parts of the empire, at which a crowd of people, anxious only to get their names printed in tbe newspapers, assist ( as they call it) gentlemen who are con- siderably glorified by being members of the Council of a gar- dening club, called the Horticultural Society, or cardinals of a conclave of Pidcockians, dignified as a Zoological Society; the merits of one body being tested by the cultivation of those invaluable necessaries of life, dahlias and daffy down dillies, the laudable exertions of the other being devoted to the pious and Christian- like purposes of attracting all the well- bred female Sabbath- breakers of the metropolis to see monkeys flirt and elephants wash on Sundays. Then comes a Statistical Society, with Lord LANSDOWNE at its head— a body which assembles to receive interesting details of how many small draggle- tailed girls walk through the Strand in a given time, and how many middle- aged Mar- quesses toddle after them. Then we have the Geological So- ciety, who devote their time and minds to ascertaining what Primrose- hill is made of; and print w hole volumes of " Trans- actions" to gratify the world with the exact proportions of trap, wacke, and sandstone, which form the substratum of the Macadamized road from Whitechapel- bars to Bow Church. Then there's the Geographical Society, who, in a course of lectures delivered at their rooms, " demonstrate to what may be considered almost a certainty, that Paris is the capi- tal of France, and that Ireland is not in Africa. Then comes the Linen— we beg pardon— the Linnean Society, who have a fine collection of Hay, preserved in what they call Herbaria. There are several other equally useful Corporations of a simi- lar nature in the empire, in virtue of belonging to which, in addition to the Royal Society, the Antiquarian Society, and the Society of Arts, one highly- beatified individual, at the trifling charge of about nineteen pounds nineteen shillings per annum, may append to his name all this— M. H. S., F. G. S., F. S. S., F. Geo. S., F. R. S., F. S. A., and A. S. S.; and certainly in the world of letters these make a figure. In order, however, to spread the renown which cannot fail to attach to such a combination as this— all these F. G. S. es and A. doubleS. es make a great annual movement; and, as we have already observed, they this year swarmed and settled in Dub- lin, where, with the aid of concerts and balls, beautiful women, sound claret and strong whiskey, the sages made it out remark- ably well— all of them, however, except the residents in Dublin, wishing they had never gone, and the residents with equal sincerity wishing they had never come. This, however, is simple,. folly, and they might have danced about in their caps and bells every day of their stay there, and nobody would have noticed them. What we are coming to, savours of brutality, and that so strongly, that we will not, because, in fact, we cannot believe it to be true until it is vouched for upon something better than newspaper authority. We last week referred to the monstrous crime— what else can it be called— of lecturing upon the head of Dean SWIFT. The skull of tbe Dean of ST. PATRICK'S, torn from the grave in which, iu his own Cathedral, his bones have been resting for ninety years. We can scarcely credit the fact; and yet we are told that it not only is the case, but that the lecturer, having been questioned as to the identity of the skull, pro- ceeded, for the satisfaction of some of the company, to the grave, and fitted it to the vertebrae whence it had been removed. Gracious Heaven! is it possible— can it be, if the farce of craniologv is to be kept up— that the present Dean of ST. PATRICK'S permitted the mouldering remains of his illus- trious predecessor to be hauled out of their resting- place, to be mutilated and pawed about for the edification of the tag- rag and bob- tail of a modern scientific lecture- room !— We will not credit it, and we think We only do our duty to the Church and its exemplary Ministers, in calling upon the Very Reve- rend Dean to whom we have alluded, to know whether the case is or is not, as it has been stated to us. But, if this be false— as we hope it is— what are we to say to the following, which we find in Monday's Standard, quoted from a weekly paper:— On Tuesday, the 18th inst., at the meeting of the British Associa- tion in Dublin, among other exhibitions there was one by Mr. SNOW HARRIS, of Plymouth, of the bones ofthe lame hip- joint of the late Charles Mathers, the celebrated comedian. The object was to as- certain, if possible, whether the shortening of his limb was caused by fracture, or bv the rare disease called morbus cowce senilis, induced by the fall from his gig. The general opinion was, that Mathews's sufferings for so long a period were caused by the above disease. If this be true, we have no language strong enough to express our feelings of horror and detestation of the proceed- whose body, scarce cold, was but even as yesterday deposited, as one would suppose, in its last resting- place! We do hope aud trust— and even that would have been a most indelicate proceeding— that it was a drawing of the object lectured upon which was shown. If the real bones of CHARLES MA- THEWS were exhibited by Mr. SNOW HARRIS, whoever he may be, for such a purpose, at such a time, and in such a place, we do hope that there exists some law which may reach and punish him for the offence, and that the law, if it do exist, will be put in force at the instance of the widow and sou of the talented and eminent man whose grave has been violated, aud whose limbs have been stolen to gratify the gapiug curiosity of a section, as it is called, of holiday - making pretenders. Too happy shall we be to receive an authenticated contra- diction of both these allegations, made through the medium of the public press. If they remain uncontroverted and un- denied, we have only one word to utter upon the whole trans- action. SHAME! SHAME! SHAME! THE freeholders of Middlesex who are inclined to support the present Government, and yet who love Mr. JOSEPH HUME, and admire his wonderful abilities, will, we think, be rather puzzled by what happened on Friday in the House of Commons, upon which ill- omened day— " Friday, too, the day I dread"— the illustrious JOSEPH exhibited one of those mare's- nests, iir the discovery of which he is proverbially successful. We think justice cannot be done to the merits of his motion, nor to the exposure of his stupidity by the CHANCELLOR of the EX- CHEQUER, whom he has been fool enough to support, in any other way than giving an extract from the report of the de- bate:-— Mr. HUME, in pursuance to notice moved the following resolu- tions :— " 1. That the loan of 15,000,0001. has been borrowed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer at the rate of 861. 9s. 5d. money, for every 1001. in Consols, as follows, viz.:— He has given 751. Stock. Consols, 251. Reduced, being 1001. of Three perCent. Stock for every 1001. money. Also, 13s. 7d. of Long Anuities, terminable iu 18( 30, equal in cash to 161.14s. 4d. for 11...£ 11 And three months' interest due on Reduced, viz. from 5th April to 5th July on 251. .. 0 Add a discount for prompt payment of the 901., remaining instalments, afterpayment of the deposits 1 19 9 £ 13 10 7 Leaving .. £ 86 9 5 in money, as tbe price of every 1001. of Consols, which is equal to a rate of iiitere3t of 31. 9s. 5d. per cent., or 31. 9s. 4 67- 100d. " 2. Which appears by the following statement of the amount of stock, and the price of such stock given for every 1001. cash, viz.: — For 751. Consols, at 8( 51. 9s. 5d £ 64 17 0i For 251. Reduced, at 871. 4s. 5d 21 16 1{ For 13s. 7d. of Long Annuities, at 161. 14s 4d. per 11. .. 11 7 1 And discount for prompt payment I 19 9 £ 100 0 0 " 3. That the following charges on the Consolidated Fund have been incurred for the said loan of fifteen millions of money, as wilL appear on tbe books of the Bank of England, viz.:— For 11,250,0001. of Consols, payable from 5tli July, at 3 per cent £ 337,500 For 3,750,0001. of Reduced, payable from 5th of April, at 3 per cent 112,500 7 1 3 9 Making a perpetual charge of .. .. £ 450,000 And 101,8751. of Long Annuities, payable from 5th April, 1835, to January, 1860 £ 101,875 yearly. " 4. That if the whole of the loan had been raised in one Stock, and that Stock had been Three per Cent. Consols, at the price above- stated of 861. 9s. 5d., the gross amount of Three per Cent, capital Stock added to the debt of the country, would be 17,346,8901., and a perpetual annual charge for the same'of 520,4061.14s., payable from the 3th of July, 1835. ' 5. That if the whole had been raised in Reduced Three per Cents, at the price of 871. 4s. 5d., being the difference of 15s. of inte- rest added to the price of Consols, the amount of Three per Cent. Reduced Capital Stock added to the debt of the country would be- 17,197,7261., and a perpetual annuity of 515,9311.15s., payable from, the 5th of April, 1835. " 6. That if the whole loan had been contracted in Long Annu- ities, payable from the 5th of April, 1835, and terminating in Janu- ary, 1860, the annuity during that period would have been 897,3081. " 7- That, if the loan of fifteen millions had been raised in the New Three- and- a- Half per Cent. Stock, at the price of 971 • in money for every 1001. stock, and that the same discountliad been allowed for prompt payment as 011 the present loan, this would have given a net price, after deducting discount of 951. Is. 7d. in money for every 1001. stock ; and, thereby, the capital added to the debt of tbe country would have been 15,776,3271-, and the perpetual annuity 552,1711. 9s., payable from the 5th of July, 1835; being at the rate of 31.13s. 8d- per cent, for money, or 31. ] 3s. 7 47- 100d. " 8. That the capital stock, created by the present loan of 15,000,0001. of money, when estimated in Consols, being equal to 17,346,8901., and the" capital if raised in a Three- and- a- Half per Cent. Stock being only 15,776,3271., the increase in the capital of the debt by the present loan, as compared with a loan in the New Three- and- a- Half per Cent. Stock, is 1,670,5631. '* 9. That if the loan had been contracted in the New Three- and- a- Half per Cent. Stock, at the price of 971., with a gaurantee against the reduction of interest for fifteen years; and that at the end ofi that term the Three- and- a- Half per Cent. Stock were reduced to a Three per Cent. Stock, the comparison with the present contract would be as follows:— To borrow in a Three- and- a- Half per Cent. Stock at the price of 971., reduced by discount to 951. Is. 7d., is to pay in- terest at the rate of £ 3 13 8 The present loan is contracted for at the rate of interest of £ 3 9 5 Showing a greater rate of interest of .. £ 0 4 3 paid on the 3j per . Cent. Loan. which difference of 4s. 3d. in the rate of interest is an annuity; and an annuity of 4s. 3d. interest being reckoned at 3i per cent, will increase in fifteen years to a sum of 41. 2s. 0d.; which sum again, interest being reckoned at 3 per cent., is equivalent to a perpetual annuity of 2s. 5jd.; and therefore supposing the 3} per Cents, to bo reduced to 3 per cents, after fifteen years, the amount will stand thus:— The rate of interest at which the present loan is contracted for is The rate of interest on a 31 per Cent Stock, reduced to a 3 per Cent. Stock, is, at the end of fifteen years Add the perpetual annuity arising from the loss of 41. 2s. being the accumulation of the ex- cess of interest of 4 s. 3d. paid during fifteen years .£ 395 £ 3 0 0 0 2 5} 3 2 5J Showing a difference of £° 6 11 j per cent., payable for ever after, on the whole fifteen millions, as at present contracted for, more than would have been payable, if the loan had been raised as a 3} per cent, loan, as stated m resolution 7. " 10. That the difference of 6s. Hid. percent, upon fifteen millions* constitutes a permanent annuity of 52,1871. 10s.; but this annuity, though jpermanent, after it has once begun, is a reversion, the pay- ment of which commences at the end of fifteen years, and the present value of which, interest being reckoned at three and a half per cent, during fifteen years, and at three per cent, for ever after, is 1,038,3411. " 11. That, besides the above loss to the public of 1,038,3411. 12s. arising from the difference of charge for tbe annuity, there will be an September 6. JOHN BULL. 285 additional loss to the public of 1,670,5631. by the increase of capital of the national debt, as shown in the 8lh resolution. " 12. From these facts it appears that if the Chancellor of the Ex- chequer had raised the fifteen millions in a Three- and- a- Half per Cent. Stock at 9/ 1., reducible in fifteen years to a Three per Cent. Stock, this would have been equivalent to a net price of 921. 9s. Id. for 1001. Consols, instead of the net price ofSfil. 9s. 5d. which he receives by the present contract, being a loss of 51. 19s. 8d. per cent., com- mencing from the present time, and exclusive also of the increased amount ol the capital of the debt." The Hon. Member concluded by moving the first resolution, and stating that he should propose that the whole of them be entered upon the Journals of the House. The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER did not complain of the sub- ject being brought before the consideration of the House, for, if the subject were of the magnitude his Hon. Friend ( Mr. Hume) consi- dered it, the Executive Government were bound to pay it attention. If anything had been done wrong, the House was bound to notice it, and the motion of his Hon. Friend ought to receive its sanction. The foundation of the . resolutions, however, was not true; but if, contrary to his belief, they should prove to be true, he should invite his Hon. Friend to move" an address to his Majesty, praying for his ( Mr. Rice's) removal from office. The most singular calculations of the Hon. Member for Middlesex he would demonstrate to the House and the public, and he did not despair of demonstrating even to the conviction of the Hon. Gentleman himself, that they were a tissue of fallacies and false principle, based upon ignorance, not worth the tper on which they were printed. ( Hear, hear, hear.) The onourable Gentleman had said that a better bargain for the loan might have been made in the Three- aud- a- Halt per Cents., but he had forgotten, or was unacquainted with the fact that he was forbidden by the words of the Act of Parliament authorizing that loan, positively prohibited, from taking such a course. If he could have adopted the plan suggested by the Hon. Member he should have actually lost more that he could have gained. Supposing the strange fallacy propounded was correct, and capable of realization, such a course would not only have been unusual, but subversive of the law of all contracts, and no Member of Parliament would tole- rate its adoption. But the Hon. Member's resolutions proceeded altogether on prophecy, and on what might be done if sucn prophe- cies were fulfilled. He should advise that none but prophets vote on the question. ( A laugh.) Had be gone into the City with a proposition for a loan such as advised by the Honourable Gentle- man, he should not have been able to find any one simple enough to lend him half- a- crown. The ' Right Honourable Gentleman then referred to some documents, the results of calculations by Mr. Finlayson, tending to establish the superiority of the plan adopted, and pointing out the disadvantages of raising the loan upon any other securities. Until then he had not heard a question raised as to the fact that the loan was contracted for on the most eligible terms for the public. At the period the contract was effected he had to contend with the high rate of foreign securities. France yielded an interest of 51. Is. per cent., Russia 51. 4s. per cent., and Prussia 51. 0s. Id. per cent., yet the loan of the fifteen millions was effected at a per centage of 31. 9s. ( id. ( Hear, hear.) He mistrusted his Hon. Friend as a calculator. His Hon. Friend must be more per- fect than usual if he were accurate in all he undertook. The multi- plicity of his avocations rendered it impossible. Like the elephant, he was equal to any feat of strength with liis trunk, while with the same power he could display his dexterity in picking up a farthing. ( Hear.) From the launching of a ship to the West Indian loan, and from that to music and dancing, were to him but simple transitions. He remembered that in 1833, when his Hon. Friend was engaged in a task something similar to the present, in a calculation of six millions his Hon. Friend made an error of three, taking the gross for the net in one instance, and the net for the gross in another. The House of Commons, he was sure, would not tolerate such a convicted plunderer, as he must be if the statements of the Hon. Gent, were true. But by the Act of Parliament he could not have acted differently than he did without creating a new stock. In conclusion he would say that he would send a statement with the documents to Mr. Finlayson, and bring the matter before Parliament next session, wlienj if his Hon. Friend then thought fit to move for a vote of censure, he should not oppose it. The Right Hon. Gentleman then said he should move, as an amendment, that the terms of the loan of fifteen millions, as compensation to the owners of slaves in the West Indies, were such as to afford a satisfactory proof that the public credit had been regarded with proper attention. Sir J. R. REID said that, of all the extraordinary statements he had ever heard, the most extraordinary was that of " the Honourable Member for Middlesex, which he considered had been completely answered by the Chancellor of the Exchequer. Mr. WAIIBURTON thought that both the statement of the Honour- able Member for Middlesex and that of the Chancellor of the Ex- chequer should be submitted to Mr. Finlayson. (" Hear, hear," from Mr. Hume.) He also thought that if tlie Chancellor of the Ex- chequer had not powerto create anew stock, the House would have passed a Bill for the purpose. lie hoped the amendment would be withdrawn. The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER said that he should have thought it very unjust to have adopted any other course than that suggested with regard to the document- on each side. Sir. P. STEWART was of opinion that the loan was as good a one for the public as ever was contracted. He could not support the hypo- thetical notions of so preposterous a financier as the Hon. Gentleman, who speculated on a state of things that were to be fifteen years hence. Mr. CHAPMAN never knew of a more beneficial or fair loan, and recommended the Hon. Member for Middlesex to withdraw his re- solutions. Mr. IIAWES thought the public interests better attended to with regard to that loan than they had been on any former occasion. Air. PEASE considered that a good bargain had been made lor the country, and there was every reason for congratulation. Mr. POTTER hoped that there would be no more loans, and that the next subject demanding attention would be that of reduction. Mr. HUME briefly replied. The amendment was then put and carried. This, we think, lias settled our Honourable Friend forever. Tlie ( lolts of Middlesex, who have returned this poor hard working man, fancied heretofore that HOME was the victim of Toryism, and that everybody except the bigotted Tories admired him. Here they see him chopped aud cut into mince- meat by a Whig, and more— CHANCELLOR of the EX- CHEQUER. This must open their eyes ; but to hear Mr. SPRING RICE, during the operation of cutting poor JOSEPH lip— as JOSEPH cut up his brother— calling him, his Honour- able Friend— Friend! Risum teneatis. Talk of cutting- up, this is what we call serving- up, and that too in the shape of a French novelty, worthy of UDE himself— Oie au Riz. Sauce a la Financiere. To such of our readers as recollect the opinion we have always expressed with regard to the conduct of Sir RALPH DARLING iu LIis government of New South Wales, it will be needless to say how truly and sincerely we rejoice in the result of the inquiry which has taken place into his adminis- tration of ( he affairs of that colony, by a Committee of the House of Commons— a result the more strikingly satisfactory to himself, and all those who have given attention to the sub- ject, from the fact of that Committee having been granted by the Government as a sop for the Tail and its adherents ( fol- low as a Tail may be, there are yet still lower things which hang on by it) to an avowed enemy— in fact, a declared prosecutor, Mr. MAURICE O'CONNELL. The principle upon which this Committee was empowered to try General DARLING, is one as yet unheard of in the annals of the Constitution since the days of the Star Chamber, to which Sir HENRY HARDINGE most justly likened it: it was a tribunal before whom a mass of unsworn evidence was to be received, touching a mass of events stretching over a series of years, during which the Governor of New South Wales had exercised his authority there. It is true that Lord JOHN RUSSELL— because we believe he found he could not, as a servant of the Crown, avoid it— forbad by a majority of tiie House of Commons any interference on the part of the Com- mittee with the decision of tlie Court Martial which expelled Mr. ROBISON the army; but still that prohibition did not extend to a refusal to hear everything that Mr. ROBISON could say in order to set himself right, and put Governor DARLING in the wrong— and Mr. ROBISON was tendered by Mr. MAURICE O'CONNELL as his most important witness against the gallant General. We repeat, that such a tribunal lias not in modern times been heard of— the prosecutor was in constant communica- tion with his witnesses, the accused had no notice of the course of proceedings, and if it had not been that the bungling way of doing business by the present inefficient Ministers had protracted the session of Parliament to an unusually late period, General DARLING, as we have already said, might have had to remain until next year, labouring under the stigma of er parte evidence brought against him by Mr. ROBISON, and the representatives of Messrs. SUDDS and THOMPSON, two other much injured individuals. Fortunate indeed was this delay for the General— it afforded the members of this most unprecedented Court of Star Chamber time to decide upon the case which, in point of fact, they had no right to try. Every Court of Law, every Court Max- tial in which the matters with which General DARLING'S name or office have been connected, touching his government, have decided in favour of his conduct, and the line he pursued; and now— greater still is his triumph— subjected to this extraordinary tribunal, he comes out of the fire lighted by his avowed enemies, with his character purer and brighter than ever. Here is the Report :— The Select Committee appointed to inquire info the conduct of General DARLING, while Governor of New South Wales, particularly with reference to the grants of Crown lands made by him, his treat- ment of the public press, the case of Captain Robison, and the New South Wales Veteran Companies, and the alleged instances of cruelty towards the soldiers Sudds and Thompson, and other persons, and who were empowered to report their observations thereupon to the House, together with the minutes of the evidence taken before them, have agreed to the following Report:— " Your Committee have inquired into the cases of the soldiers Sudds and Thompson, and in support of the charges preferred against General Darling in reference to those individuals examined; Captain Robison, Norman M'Lean, and Dr. Douglass, being the only wit- nesses tendered to your Committee. They also had recourse to the several papers on the subject laid upon the table of the House ; but they did not deem it necessatr to call for any witnesses in explanation or defence of the conduct of General Darling. " Under these circumstances, your Committee, without entering into any detailed statement of the evidence, or of the grounds on which they have arrived at that conclusion, beg to report to the House their opinion, that the conduct of General Darling, with re- spect to the punishment inflicted on Sudds and Thompson, was, under the peculiar circumstances of the Colony, especially at that period, and of repeated instances on the part of the soldiery of mis- conduct similar to that for which the individuals in question were punished, entirely free from blame; and that there appears to have been nothing in General Darling's subsequentconduct, in relation to the case of the two soldiers, or in the reports thereof which he for- warded to the Government at home, inconsistent with his duty as a public functionary, or with his honour as an officer and a gentleman. " Your Committee having read the petition of Mr. Robert Daw- son, which has been referred to them, are of opinion that it contains matter which cannot be investigated by this Committee with ad- vantage, the subject being more properly cognizable by the Colonial- office. " No evidence was tendered to your Committee in support of the remaining charges comprised in the order of reference. " September 1, 1835." In order to appreciate Sir RALPH DARLING'S entire exone. ration from all the . allegations and aspersions cast upon him, it is necessary to give the names of the Committee moved for and obtained, under the good- natured acquiescence of Mr. SPRING RICE, by Mr. MAURICE O'CONNELL. We have marked some of the names of the Members in italics, in order to point out the mixed character of the tribunal upon whom, the evidence brought before them has had the effect of producing the Report we have just given. . Jovis, 30" die Julii, 1835. Ordered,— That a Select Committee be appointed to inquire into the conduct of General Darling, while Governor of New South Wales, particularly with reference to the grants of Crown lands made by him, his treatment of the public press, the case of Captain Robi- son, and the New South Wales Veteran Companies, and the alleged instances of cruelty towards the soldiers Sudds and Thompson, and other persons, and to report thereon to the House. Veneris, 7° die Augnsti, 1835. Ordered,— That the Committee do consist of— Mr. Maurice O'Connell. Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer. Lord Stanley. Lord Viscount Howick. Sir George Grey. Sir John Hothouse. Dr. Lushington. Mr. Hume. Sir Henry Hardinge. Mr. O'Connell. Sir Harry I'erney. Lord Dudley Stuart. Mr. Nicholl. Mr. Bonham. Colonel Leith Hay. Mr. IVarburton. Ordered,— That the Committee papers, and records. Ordered,— That five be the quorum of the Committee. Ordered,— That it be an instruction to the Committee, that they do not include in their inquiry, or take cognizance of the proceedings, finding, or sentence of the Court Martial held on Captain Robisou, at Sydney Barrack, in the year 1828. Mar lis. 11° die Augusti. 1835. Ordered,— That Lord Stanley and Lord Viscount Howick be dis- charged from any further attendance on the Committee; and that Sir Rufane Doiikin, Mr. William Henry Ord, and Mr. Freshfield be added to the Committee. Martis, 1° die Septembris, 1835. Ordered,— That the Committee have power to report their obser- vations, and the minutes of evidence taken before them, to the House. The public can have little doubt now, of the utter groundless- ness of the attacks made upon Governor DARLING. What the opinion of our Gracious SOVEREIGN is, there can be none. On the day following the presentation of the Report of the Committee, His MAJESTY was pleased to invest General, now Sir RALPH DARLING, with the Grand Cross of the Guelphic Order— an act which at once displays to the world the true estimation in which that gallant Officer's services are held, and the generous, high- spirited kindness of the MONARCH, who, at the instant when it must be most highly appreciated, conferred upon a deserving and persecuted servant one of the highest marks of Royal favour and approbation which His MAJESTY lias1 it in lli « personal power to bestow. THERE was a meeting of the Grand Orange Institution at Lord KENYON'S house, in Portman- square, on Tuesday last, his Royal Highness the Duke of CUMBERLAND, Grand'Mas- ter in the Chair; at which the most satisfactory proofs were afforded that his Royal Highness had in no way or manner exceeded the rules and regulations of that loval and constitu- tional body, as acted upon by his Royal Ilignness's two illus- trious brothers, his late MAJESTY and his Royal Highness the Duke of YORK; that so far from contravening any pub- lished order of ( he Commander- in- Chief by granting warrants Mr. William Gladstone. Mr. Sheil. Major Fancourt. Dr. Bowrhtg. Mr. Aglionby. Colonel Thompson. Mr. Horace Twiss. Mr. Tooke. Mr. H'akley. Mr. Henry Lytton Bulwer. Mr. Tulk. Mr. Harvey. Mr. Buckingh'tm. Major Beauclerk. Captain Boldero. Mr. James Oswald. have power to send for persons, to lodges in regiments, no such order ever was generally promulgated; that a confidential communication had been made by the Duke of YORK to some person or persons, but so confidential was that communication that no military officer of authority was acquainted with it; that even had it been a public and general order, his Royal Highness was not aware of the issuing such warrants, which, as has already appeared, arose from the want of due circumspection in the subordi- nate authorities of the Institution. Lord WYNPORD left his bed to attend the meeting, and moved a series of resolutions highly honourable and compli- mentary to the illustrious Duke in the Chair; nor did his Lordship overlook the Star Chamber discipline of the present free, liberal, and enlightened House of Commons— a House of Commons which, par parenthese, we beg to observe have imprisoned by their new Speaker's warrants, twelve indi- viduals since May last— eight others only having been taken into custody between that day and the 1st of January, 1S25, a period of ten years— aud dwelt most eloquently upon the case of Colonel FAIRMAN, a case like that of Sir RALPH DARLING, unprecedented in modern days. Of Colonel FAIRMAN, the Duke of CUMBERLAND is reported to have said what follows; and it is so characteristic of the firm and unshaken courage by which every action of his Royal Highness's life is distinguished, that we extract the speech as we find it. His Royal Highness said:— That in going abroad to join his family he was not for a moment separating himself from that, institution in which he had the honour to hold so proud a station. On the contrary, the call of a single individual of that body would bring him back to his post, the honour of which was that he most valued, would ever maintain, and which no power nor inducement should ever lead him to forsake. He would mention a circumstance, which he could do without the slightest breach of confidence, for a breach of confidence, he con- sidered, perhaps, the blackest offence amongst men of honour. At the recent Chapter of the Garter, at which there were present twenty- four Knights, when the KING addressed his nephew, Prince GEORGE of CAMBRIDGE, His Majesty said, " Young man, you are now of an age to know right from wrong; you have recently been confirmed, you must understand those principles which have been inculcated into your mind. Remember that our family is a Protestant one; remember, also, that you are called upon to defend the Established Church, to maintain inviolate the rights, pro- perties, and privileges of the people." " These injunctions," conti- nued the Illustrious Duke, " delivered at a Chapter of the Garter by King William IV., were repeated the same day at table, at which there were one hundred and fort*' guests, on the occasion of Prince GEORGE'S health being drank. The Illustrious Duke then al- luded to the case of Colonel FAIRMAN. His Royal Highness gave that Gentleman the highest credit for never having, either directly or indirectly, communicated with him subsequent to the formation of the Orange Lodge Committee of the House of Commons; and the first knowledge he ( the Duke of CUMBERLAND) had of what Whs going on was from reading a newspaper, which contained Colonel FAIRMAN'S examination at the bar ot the House of Commons. In refusing his private papers, Colonel FAIRMAN was, according to his notions, right; but he held that he ought to have given up tlie official documents contained in the book alluded to, or any, and indeed all, documents of the institution demanded by Parliament. But, his Royal Highness said, and he said in the faces of Honourable Members of the House of Commons, neither he nor any other Englishman would permit the Sergeant- at- Arms of the House of Commons, or any other party acting under its orders, to break into his house, ransack his papers, apd carry off what he might please, although it might be " the pleasure of the Honourable House." The Noble Duke then said he had only one thing to find fault with in Colouel FAIRMAN'S conduct in this affair beyond that of his not giving up the official mat- ter in the book in question, and that was his running away, and not allowing himself to be carried to Newgate by the Sergeant- at- Arms. " For my part," said the Illustrious Duke, " had I been in Colonel FAIRMAN'S situation 1 would have gone to Newgate, and 1 would at any time go thither under similar circumstances— that is, of refusing to give up my own papers to the demand of the House of Commons." This manly declaration of the Duke's was received with the highest approbation, and after thanks voted to his Royal Highness, and Lords KENYON and WYNPORD, the Lotige separated. Here, however, the discussion of the subject did not termi- nate, for on Wednesday Lord PLUNKET thought proper to make some allusion to the proceedings, with a view to charge upon the Duke of CUMBERLAND some allegations which his Royal Highness had been reported to have made upon the character of that highly respectable and estimable, and very learned Nobleman— upon which the Duke made the fol lowing reply, which Lord PLUNKET said was quite satis- factory to him, and which, whether it were so or not, will be perfectly satisfactory to everybody else:—- The Duke of CUMBERLAND rose, but we regret to say that owing to liis occupying a place on one of the back benches, and from the low tone ot voice in which his observations were delivered, he was imperfectly heard in the gallery. He was understood to say that having been called upon to explain a statement attributed to him, he could solemnly declare to their Lordships that he knew no more of the publication to which the Noble and Learned Lord alluded than he aid of what would appear in the newspapers to- morrow- morning. He had not seen the Report alluded tb, nor did he know that any- thing was to arise from it until he was told by a Noble Friend of his oil his entrance that the Noble and Learned Lord intended to put some question to him, but what that question was he was in utter ignorance of, until it, was stated by the Noble and Learned Lord himself. Ile did not mean to complain of any want of courtesy on the part of the Noble and Learned Lord, although he believe!! it was usual before questions of this sort were brought forward to give some intimation of them, in order that the party to whom they were intended to be put might be prepared to answer them. Now, he should state what the object of the Orange lodge meeting adverted to was. He had deemed it necessary to call a special meeting in order to rectify some mistakes that had occurred, and he could assure the Noble aud Learned Lord that this was not a hostile, but an amicable meeting. He stated that he had received a letter, in which he was informed that the Noble and Learned Lord had made an attack upon him in consequence of a petition which he had presented, under the idea that it proceeded rom the University of Dublin. That petition was not, however, from the University of Dublin, but merely from sixteen of the senior and junior fellows, and forty- eight of the scholars of that Univer- sity. As such he received'it, and as such he presented it; but the Noble and Learned Lord thought fit to say that he ( the Duke of CUMBERLAND) was not informed of the means by which this petition had been produced, giving it as his opinion that neither the University of Dublin nor any other seminary of learning should meddle with political questions, and adding that an Orange lodge existed in the Dublin University, called the Trinity College Lodge. ( Hear, hear, from the Ministerial benches.) In reply to the state- ment he ( the Duke of CUMBERLAND) declared to the House that all he knew of the petition was, that it had been put into his hands by a Right Hon. Friend of his, whom he had no objection to name, he meant the Recorder for tlie city of Dublin, and that as he received it so he presented it, without making any representation connected with it that was not borne out by the fact. ( Hear, hear.) As to the existence of an Orange | lodge in the University of Dublin, what he said was, that he did not. know of his own knowledge whether the , fact was so or not. There might or there might not, for aught he knew, be an Orange lodge in that University; but if there were it was without his sanction. ( Hear, hear.) He would now go even far- ther, and declare, that he so far deprecated political societies, either m Universities, or seats of learning, or regiments, that if he were in- formed that an Orange lodge existed in either he would be the very first to take measures for cancelling the warrants under which they had been formed. ( Cheers.) 11 e might have used such expressions as were attributed to him in the paper read by the Noble and Learned Lord, but if he did he could assure the Noble and Learned Lord that he was not speaking of him— that he was speaking gene- rally, and not with reference to any particular individual. ( Hear.) Every man of either feeling, honour, or character, must experience 296 JOHN BULL. September 13. annoyance when unjustly attacked, and their Lordships must be aware that few persons had been treated in a more cruel or unjustifi- able way by certain portions of the press than he had been, and all for what ? Why, . because he adhered to his opinions, and man- fully and boldly avowed the principles which he entertained. ( Cheers.) He would again fearlessly repeat that no man should bully him out of that course whch he deemed necessary to the salvation of his country and the maintenance of his religion. ( Loud cheers.) A run had been made upon him because he acted in accordance with his conscience and that which he considered right, but he knew that any man who stood forward in this coantry as a public man, and who felt it his duty to deprecate certain opinions, must possess no ordinary nerves. He, however, was the last man to shrink from the performance of his duty, or to abstain from doing that which in honour he was bound to do. ( Hear, hear, hear.) He never had said— indeed he was satisfied their Lordships would believe Mm when he asserted that he was incapable of saying— that behind a man's back which he wonld not tell him to his face. ( Great cheer- ing.) He was fully aware that he did not possess either the great talents or the splendid eloquence of the Noble and Learned Lord ; but still so long as truth was on his side he did not fear the Noble and Learned Lord's tongue, because he knew he should have every right- thinking man in the country to stand by him. ( Hear, hear, hear.) As much malignity had been written and spoken against him as had evey been levelled at any man, but for this he did not care, because he knew the time would come when justice would be done by the people of England to the motives by which his conduct had been actuated. ( Cheers.) He hoped their Lordships would now allow him to state what the lodge was of which the Noble and Learned Lord had spoken. On the authority of letters which he ( the Duke of CUMBERLAND) had received from a dis- tinguished friend of his, who was one of the Fellows of the Uni- versity of Dublin, he was enabled to state that no Orange lodge had existed in that seminary of learning for the last thirty years. At the commencement of those societies a lodge certainly did exist in that University, of which several of the young men or students were members ; but. these young men had been subsequently com- pelled to withdraw their names from the society, on pain of expulsion. This he was as ready as any man to admit was highly proper, and if the Noble and Learned Lord supposed that an Orange Lodge now existed in the Dublin University, he was mistaken. Lord PLUNKET was very glad that his Royal Highness had entered into this explanation— so are we. AVe find in the Morning Papers the following intelligence from Spain :— MADRID, Aug. 26. Tranquillity is now restored in this capital. The Military Com- mission is actively preceding with its task, but the police has not yet succeeded in apprehending the Deputies CABALLERO, ITURIZ, and LAS NARAS. It has even suffered Deputy LOPES to escape. HE has found his way to Valencia. Although the Military Commission is proceeding with great severity it is not thought that it will award capital punishment to the accused. The principal Chiefs have ab- sconded, and there is every reason to believe that Madrid will be spared the sight of a scaffold erected on the public square for the punishment of political offences. The outlawry of the Deputies im- plicated in the movement is the more certain because they evince no disposition to run the risks of a trial. Intelligence has been received of M. MENDIZABAL'S arrival at Santander, whence he has proceeded to Lisbon. He has himself written to Count de TORENO that he will be at Madrid between the lst. and 4th of September. The movement at Barcelona, which the appointment of a Provi- sional Junta has in some measure regulated, continues to alarm the Government. Several members of that Junta had hastened to tender their allegiance, and promised to comply with the orders of the Ministry ; but other less conciliatory _ members have entered into communication with the Valencia Junta, strongly ad- vising it to continue firm until the Government has answered their re- monstrances by the concessionof more liberal institutions. On this communication reaching Valencia the new Captain- General, Count D'ALMODOVAR, issued a proclamation to the people, reminding them of the services he had rendered the national cause whilst President of the Chamber of Procuradores, and adding that he was ready to serve the same cause in his new station— that he had wholly sanc- tioned the views of the Barcelona Junta, and hoped that the people Would uphold him in the course which he had deemed it proper to pursue in their interest. Unluckily, at the very moment that this document was promulgated, Deputy LOPES, escaping the grasp of the metropolitan police, entered Valencia. The Government has much reason to dread the propagation of Federalism in the provinces ; it would prove its ruin. It is to be hoped that the measures adopted with regard to the towns which have raised the standard of Federal- ism will crush the evil at its root. The Saint Louis fete was yesterday celebrated with great pomp at La Grania; rejoicings took place in honour of the sister of her Majesty ISABELLA II. Our intelligence from the Provinces is interesting. MERINO'S band has been almost wholly destroyed by ASFIP. OZ, PEON, and ALBICEN, and it would be difficult for the Curate to retrieve the con- sequences of the defeat which he has just sustained. Brigadier GURREA and General MONTES have so ably combined their operations that they have succeeded in dispersing the six Car- list battalions, which hail penetrated into Upper Arragon and de- signed entering Catalonia. A despatch, received by the Duke D'AHUMEDA, states that the wrecks of that division of the enemy have been compelled to retreat towards Navarre. The only unto- ward result that the movements of the enemy may have in a part of Arragon will be the interruption of the communications. Already have despatches from France been intercepted. At our Bourse the report has circulated of the Tuileries' Cabinet having granted an intervention on the renewed application of our Government. The rumour is not a new one. THE following is from an excellent provincial paper, called the I- Iull Packet;— we must say that the language is rather strong:— The most atrocious attempts against freedom, in modern times, are as nothing, compared with that which was made in the British House of Commons, on Wednesday, the 19th of August, 1835. Two or three ruffians, who call themselves legislators, and whomportions of a " free people" have sent as their representatives to Parliament, to degrade their country, and dishonour her once glorious name, must not be, indeed, taken as samples of the whole; thank God we are not yet so utterly " put to shame," as to find many with brutal looks, and more brutal language, supporting a proposition to send an armed officer into the dwelling- house ( the Englishman's man's castle) of a British subject " TO SEIZE HIS PRIVATE PAPERS." We have read of such doings in England— but the practice of the Star Chamber cost a Sovereign his head, and deluged the country in her own rich and valuable blood. We have heard such acts recorded in later times— but they were recorded of France— of France, where liberty is a mere sound; or, of Russia, where the will of a despot is law! Bad as we considered the Radical abettors of O'CONNELL and his band— we could not have believed it possible that among them there would be found one wicked enough to hint even at such a monstrous proposition. Yet good may come outof evil— we have thus aproofnot to be mistaken of the tender mercies of the Ultra Radicals— of the trust we are to put in their professions of regard for public and private rights— of the value they attach to the- high and proudly boasted pri- vilege of an Englishman— the right to consider his house as his castle, better guarded by the laws than if it were surrounded by bat- lements; more safe from invasion than if a hundred armed men stood ready at its gate. Let the people of England take warning in time— let them know what they must expect, if they place the power to suppress freedom in the hands of such men as those, who, in the House of Commons, on the 19th of August, 1835, obtained for themselves an infamous immortality. An abstract ot the debate should beat once printed and circulated throughout the country— printed without note or comment, the good sense and honest principles of Englishmen will supply both ;— and circulated wherever such Englishmen can be found to read or hear. If the ultra Radicals have given the poison, they have supplied the antidote. How true is it that those whom GOD permits to be wicked, he generally ordains to be fools— that so vile purposes may be defeated, and intended victims be but for a while within their grasp. We care not who or what this Colonel FAIRMAN may be. From what we hear of him, indeed, we consider he would do but little credit to any cause. This does not, however, change the posi- tion in which the democratic leaders of the House of Commons have placed themselves. Our view of the case would be precisely ! the same, if either Mr. WARBURTON, Mr. WALLACE, Mr. HUME, or Mr. ROEBUCK, had been the aggrieved party; if against them, or either of them, an " order," had been issued to break open doors and seize papers, before such " order" had received the sanction of the three estates of the realm. We therefore, look upon the circumstance as of very vital impor- tance—- as the first distinct and not- to- be- mistaken avowal of princi- ples hostile to British liberty on the part of those who already determine the balance of parties— and who seek to rule England, as well as Ireland, according to their own base and un- English notions. We trust it will be borne in mind by the electors throughout the country— and by those of Middlesex in particular— until the day of reckoning arrives. KING'S PLACE THEATRE. The following is a copy of the petition presented to His MAJESTY against the intended theatre, together with His MAJESTY'S decision thereupon:— " TO THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY. " The humble petition of the undersigned lessees under the Crown, in the parish of St. James's, Westminster, " Showeth— That we, yourpetitioners, have taken leases foralong series of years of Crown land, in this parish, and have expended very large sums of raoneyin erecting houses thereon, in the full confidence that the subsisting'order of things wish regard to Crown property would be scrupulously maintained, and that your Majesty's petition- ers would continue to enjoy quietly and comfortably the possession of the premises so held of the Crown ; but we have learned with the utmost alarm and astonishment that the Lord Chamberlain of your Majesty's Household has granted to John Braham a license for a new theatre which heis about to build on the vacant ground formerly known as Nerot's Hotel, in King- street, St. James's, and we humbly beg leave to represent to your Majesty that the erection of a theatre oil this spot must, tend most materially to the individual injury of us, the tenants of the Crown, and to the general injury of the other Crown property in this district, inasmuch as it would deteriorate the property which we acquired in the confidence that no grant of such a nature could be made in the immediate neighbourhood of your Majesty's Court, causing in this quiet and orderly situation a daily and nightly assemblage of the abandoned and dangerous characters who are accustomed to resort to the approaches of theatres, and tend- ing, not only, as above stated, to injure our property, but also to destroy our " comfort and repose. We do not presume" to determine whether there be not already a sufficient number of theatres in the city of Westminster ( most of which, however, we are informed, are in a state of difficulty or ruin), but we humbly beg to represent that the erection of a new one close to your Majesty's royal residence, and to that appointed for the QueenJ should she survive you, would be a degradation to Royalty, and also tend to the encouragement of vice and immorality in this parish. We are fully persuaded that your Majesty, in your just and benevolent feelings, will never permit that we, your tenants, should be injured by the act of their superior land- lord, and that the grievance we complain of would never have oc- curred had the appeal made to the Lord Chamberlain, on June 13, been duly delivered to his Lordship, that he might have taken your Majesty's pleasure on the subject; we therefore earnestly implore your Majesty to give immediate orders that the said license may be revoked, which your Majesty has the power to do, as set forth in the annexed extract" from the report made to your Majesty in 1831, by your Majesty's Chancellor, Vice- Chancellor, Mr. Justice Tindal, and Mr. Justice " James Parke,* when the opinion of the Judges was formed, after taking info full consideration the relative position of the parties, the claims of individuals connected with the patent theatres, the sums of money invested on the concerns of all the theatres, and the interests of the public; and your petitioners shall ever pray. " Th. H. Farquhar, King- street, St. James's- street, and Ryder- street ; W. Crockford, King- street, and St. James's- street; Hemes, Farquhar, and Co., 16 and 17, St.. James's- street; David Sevecke, 12, King- street; Mtyer and Miller, 9, King street,; Wrn. liaison, 6, King- street; W. J. Gibbins, 9, King- street; T. J. Mitchel, 2, Bury- street; George Greenhill, 7, Bury- street; Ant. Clark, 12, Bury- street; John Martin, 38, Bury- street; Rausch and Coppe, 15, " King- street; Caroline Wilkie, 37, Bury- street; John C. Davies, 3 and 4, Great Ryder- street; Frederick O. Thompson, 5, Great Ryder- street; Thomas Park, 41, Bury- street; J. Nicholls, 35, Bury- street; Lewis Inkson, 10, Ryder- street; P. Ruckham, 36, Bury- street; Thomas Simscock, 4, Ryder- street; William Williams, 3, Ryder- street; Jones and Garrell, Bury- street; J. F. Gray, 1, Ryder- street; Christie and Manson, 8, Kiug- street; C. Lewis, 35, Duke- street; Charles Flight, 19 and 14, King- street; E. Say, 14, Bury- street; E. E. O'Brien, 25, Bury- street; Thos. Edmonds, 36, Bury- street; J. Johnson, 28, Burv- street; Mary Turner, 29, Bury- street; B. L. Vulliamy, 68, Pall- mall; Pavne and Foss, 8.1, Pall- mall ; J. Kirkland, 80, Pall- mall ; Gale, Caterer, and Co., 89, Pall- mall; Stewart Ray, 43, Duke- street ; Batey and Finley, 40, Duke- street; James fisher and Co., 37, Duke- street,; J. Maiflet, 9, Ryder- street; Nicholls and Housley, 21, St. James's- street; Win. Cousens, 45, Duke- street; Wm. Almond, 49, Duke- street; F. Bursill, 9, Bury- street; W. Skinner, 34, Bury- street; E. Lake, 30, Bury- street; B. Blake, 19, Bury- street; W. Bridges, 32, Bury- street, and 52, Jermyn- street; H. G. Gotteman, 46, Duke- street; Thomas Brumbv, 19, St. . lames's- street; Philip Davy Scott, 5, Ryder- street; George Williams, 7, Ryder- street; Mary Evans, 3, Ryder- street; H. Williams, 15, Great Ryder- street; E. Fisher, i6, Great. Rvder- street; Wm. Deighton, 19, St. James's- street; Elizabeth Bitting, 11, Bury- street ; William Robinson, Crown tenant, 21, Bury- street; Henry Page, 20, Bury- street; Henry Moss, 15, St. James's- street: John Lanman, 36, Duke- street; Edward Jenkins, 33, Duke- ' street; George Ragget, 59, Jermyn- street; Wainwright and Halpin, 73, St. James's- street; W. Mimpriss, 79, Pt. James's- street; James and W. Willis, St. James's- street; W. Green, 39, Bury- street; Francis Nusse, 20, St. James's- street; George Baiubridge, 15, King- street; G. and F. Cary, St. James's- street. " Aug. 10,1835." ( Copy.) " 18, King- street, St. James's, Aug. 10, 1835. " My Lord,— I have the honour fo send your Lordship herewith a petition to his Majesty, signed by sundry of the lessees of the Crown in this parish, respecting the nuisance with which they are threa- tened by the erection of a new theatre in King street, and I request you will have the goodness to deliver the same into his Majesty's hands at your earliest convenience. ( Signed) " T. H. FARQUHAR. " To the Right Hon. Lord John Russell, tfec., his Majesty's Principal Secretary of State for the Home Department.' ( Copy.) " Whitehall^ Aug. 20,1835. " Sir— I have laid before the King the petition of sundry of the lessees of the Crown transmitted to me by you, with a letter dated the 10th inst., and I am to inform you that " the license in question has been granted to Mr. Braham, after full communication with the Lord Chamberlain and Lord Duncannon, and that his Majesty had already signified to the Lord Chamberlain that he did not see any sufficient ground for revoking it. ( Signed) " JOHN RUSSELL. " To Sir T. H. Farquhar, Bart, King- street, St. James's." * " It was not denied at the hearing by any of the parties, that a license from the Crown is necessary in order to authorise the opening of a theatre within the precincts in question. Whatever doubts may have been entertained upon this point, had it been urged, no question was inade of it by any one. The question how far the patents already granted preclude any new grants, whether by way of patent or license, was argued. But the Chancellor has no doubt whatever on this point, nor had any of the Learned Judges; and it may be taken as quite clear, nor, indeed, in the end was it much disputed, on the part of the patent theatres, that your Majesty has the entire power by law to make whatever changes your Majesty inay think tit in the rights already granted to those theatres, or to revoke those grants altogether, or to grant to either parties rights inconsistent with those granted to the patent theatres in former times. After taking into full consideration the relative position of the parties, the claims of individuals connected with the patent theatres, the sums of money invested in the concerns of all the theatres, and the interests of^ the public, the Chancellor humbly submits to your Majesty, with the concurrence of the Learned Judges, that it may be desirable to grant Mr. Arnold an extension of his license, so as to include the whole of the months of May and October ; all which is humbly submitted to your Majesty for your Royal consideration. ( Signed) ," BROUGHAM, C. N. TINDAL. " SHADWELL. JAMES PARKE," TO JOHN BULL. Oxford, Id September, 1835. SIR,— It is only yesterday my attention was called to an article in your journal, apparently copied from the Standard, in which I figure at the head of what yon are pleased to call A MUSTER OF THE OXFORB RADICALS. 1 must confess that I cannot see the propriety of fixing this epithet upon a body of men for having signed a petition in favour of a Bill, the leading principles of which have been adopted, almost unanimously, by both Houses of Parliament, and the more especially, as there is not a word in that petition which would restrain the Lords from the right of amending or modifying the said Bill. But whatever, Sir, may be your opinion of the propriety of this epithet, justice to my own character compels me to state, that so far as I am concerned it is totally misapplied, for, although I hold what are usually termed moderate liberal opinions, I have always been opposed to, and have written and publicly spoken against vote by ballot, extension of the suffrage, and any deterioration of the national Church Establishment. Feeling then, Sir, I have been exhibited in the columns of your respectable and widely- circulated journal in a false and almost libellous position, I cannot doubt but you will do me the justice to give the same publicity to this letter.— I am, Sir, your obedient servant, D. A. TALBOYS. We have to congratulate the proprietors of the Haymarket Theatre and the public upon the production of a five- act comedy, called Hints for Husbands, from the pen of Mr. BEAZELV. We must say, that after the trashy nonsense with which the town has been inun- dated, it is quite refreshing, as theCocknies say, to see such a play as this. It is perhaps not so well suited to tastes perverted by tha ordinary run of ribaldry with which the theatrical portion of the public have been treated usque ad nauseam, but for genuine dramatic effect, exciting incident, and a plot well developed, iD language such as we have not been recently accustomed to hear, we have not for some time seen its equal. We suspect the treasury of our favourite Haymarket begins already to feel the solid advantages of Hints to Husbands. The Countess of AIRLY expired at the family town residence. Park- crescent, on Monday evening, after a painful and lingering illness of several years' duration. The appointments of Deputy Assistant General at Mauritius, at present held by Lieut.- Col. HUNTER, and at Ceylon, held by Col. WALKER, are ordered to be discontinued, together with several staff appointments, & c., in the Mediterranean. Lord MORPETH, says the Chronicle, has conferred the post of Chief Clerk of the Irish Office at Dublin on Mr. M'DONNELL, son of the physician of that name at Belfast, and himself creditably knowa for his liberal opinions and high attainments. The Dublin Evening Mail publishes the following:— Mr. HUME, as Chairman of the Committee on Orange lodges, having written to his Royal Highness to request that he would attend the Committee to give evidence, received the following reply:— " St. James's Palace, August 26, 1835. " The Duke of Cumberland presents his compliments to Mr. Hume, and begs to acknowledge the receipt of his letter of yesterday, enclosing a resolution of the Select Committee on Orange lodges. The Duke of Cumberland desires to inform Mr. H ume, as Chairman of the Committee, that he has no statement to make to the Com- mittee." We have been informed that Sir THOMAS CLAVERING, the head of one of the most ancient families in the county of Durham, and who has hitherto supported the Whigs, having become justly alarmed at the inroads made upon our institutions, has resolved to go over to the IConstitutional cause, with all his interest and influence.— Durham Advertiser. Sir WILLIAM BLIZARD, who was for many years senior surgeon to the London Hospital, died on Saturday last at his residence at Brixton, aged 93. A Court of Directors was held at the East India House on Wed- nesday, when Lord AUCKLAND took the usual oaths as Governor- General of India. Earl MINTO is named as his Lordship's successor at the Admiralty. Lord SUFFIELD was on Tuesday united to the Hon. CHARLOTTE SUSANNA GARDNER, only daughter of the late, and sister to tha present, Lord GARDNER. THE CRISIS.— The meetings of the Radicals, upon stopping the supplies, are at end. A great assemblage of the democrats of Crip- plegate ward was to have been witnessed on Wednesday: it was deemed prudent to keep up the farce no longer, and the meeting waa accordingly postponed until further notice. Nearly all the meetings in the metropolis in favour of the Municipal Spoliation Bill have been got up by a few Radical parochial politicians, and the four and five thousands of persons assembled on these occasions have consisted chiefly of the Radical Committee- men, who are looking with affec- tion towards the offices of clerk, sexton, grave- digger, bell- toller, fire- kindler, & c. The Crisis!— Morning Post. The Revising Barristers will have an arduous duty to perform in the borough of Maryiebone. The Radicals possessing a large ma- jority in the vestries of St. Maryiebone and St. Pancras, no means have been left untried in those parishes to register votes for their own party. The Conservative Association have need of all their vigilance to defeat the tricks of their opponents. The 42 freeholders are not the only persons whose names have been smuggled into tha registry. This may be seen from the fact that a respectable trades- man of St. Pancras has, of his own knowledge, objected to nearly 300 names placed on the borough list for that parish alone. The Conservatives of Middlesex have done their duty— the state of the new registration leaves Mr. HUME not the slightest chance of representing that county beyond the duration of the present Parlia- ment. The Radicals of the parish of St. James's met at Willis's Rooms, Brewer- street, on Tuesday, for the purpose of getting up a petition to the House of Commons, requesting them not to pass the Municipal Corporations Amendment Bill. Never was there a more sorry display. Except a few who formed the Committee, we scarcely saw a respect able resident of the parish amid the 150 assembled.— A petition of the loyal and constitutional parishioners of St. James's to the House of Commons on the Municipal Corporations Bill was in course of signature on the same day, having for its object to counteract tha Whig- Radical petition on the same subject. The Sun newspaper of Wednesday has the following:— What, we ask, must the country think when it sees the Honse of Commons, after so lately declaring its solemn determination that there should be no qualification, now submitting to the degradation of having its own words crammed down its throat by the " Upper" House ? But not the least edifying part of this spectacle was the interference of Sir ROBERT PEEL in behalf of the people. When Lord JOHN RUSSELL proposed that the qualification should be agreed to, the Right Hon. Baronet suggested that there should be another qualification dependent on rating, a thought which seems never to have occured to the conductors of- the Bill. " Oh, by all means," savs Lord JOHN, " let HS have a rating of 401. in the large towns, and 201. in the smaller ones." " No," replies Sir ROBERT, " that September 457. JOHN BULL. 302 • won't tJo, that's too high, let it be 301. and 151." " Agreed," replied the protector of the popular interest. This is an improvement, and we are indebted lor it solely to the Right Hon. Baronet. The following are candidates for the American Presidency:— Mr. Webster, of Massachusetts; Mr. Van Buren, of New York; Mr. M'Lane, of Ohio; Mr. Clay, of Kentucky ; Mr. Harrison of Indiana; and Mr. White, of Tenessee. Mr. DAVID EWART, who, until within the last month, filled the " humble situation of seijeant in the K division of the Metropolitan Police force, has been appointed a Stipendiary Magistrate of Kings- ton, in Jamaica, an office worth < 3001. a year ( West India currency). Mr. EWART is a native of Jamaica, and is stated to be related to the first families in the West Indies. The return match of cricket between eleven gentlemen of the county of Hants, selected by T. CHAMBERLAINE, Esq., and eleven of the county of Wilts, chosen by Sir FREDERICK BATHURST, came off at Stonehenge on the 21st ult., when the Wiltshire cricketers were defeated in one innings by 88 runs. The Leeds correspondent of the Standard says that the Whig- Radicals of the Wes^ Riding had a show off on Monday for the purpose of dictating to the House of Lords, but the thing has proved a miserable failure. The steam could not be got up— the machine would not work— the people, in short, care not a straw about the Whigs or their projects, for they have found out the hollowness of the one and the worthlessness of the other. It will be recollected that a few weeks ago we gave an account of the death of a Roman Catholic Priest named WALSH, inconsequence of his being thrown from his horse. A great outcry was raised at the time by the Papists that Mr. WALSH had been mnrdered, and we now find in the Carlow Sentinel the following account of the defeat of a most malignant and foul conspiracy to fix the alleged . crime on three innocent and unoffending Protestants:— On Tuesday last, the inhabitants of this town and county were in the highest degree excited, owing to the arrest of three respectable 1 Protestants, named Sly, Styles, and Wynne, and charged on the evidence of a notorious vagabond, with the murder of the Rev. Jon. v WALSH. A woman, named Ann Rooney, had previously given in- formation of the alleged murder to ' Mr. MALONY, C. M., and he, very properly, reported the circumstance to Government, when Mr. TICK EI,, King's Counsel, was sent down to Bagnalstown, to make the necessary inquiries. There were several Magistrates in attend- ance, among whom were Messrs. HAUGHTON and MOORE, well • known as ( what is termed) the liberal Magistrates of the county.— During the entire of Tuesday, the road leading from this town to Bagnalstown was crowded with dense masses of the populace, in expectation of the arrival of the prisoners, whom they entertained no doubt would be fully committed for the murder, and by way of preparation for their reception, some frantic women were seen col- lecting stones, and supplying their friends with ammunition for the occasion. At five o'clock there could not be less than 3,000 people con- gregated on the road to Bagnalstown— but much to their disappoint- ment the inquiry terminated in the conviction of the vagrant, Anne Rooney, of Wilful perjury, and who was no doubt instigated to the foul deed hy some of the desperadoes who are anxious to keep up excite- ment for political purposes, by inducing a belief that the deceased had been murdered by Protestants. This unfortunate victim of . ignorance and blind superstition swore that she had slept on the night of Mr. WALSH'S death in the house of a herdsman named Hawley, in the employment of EDWARD BUTLER, Esq.— that she and the family were alarmed by a noise on the road— that she proceeded to the bridge of Kilgreauy accompanied by the daughters of the deceased, and stood under the arcli, anil that they saw the prisoners knock de- ceased downand break his skull with a hammer. The herdsman and his daughters on being examined declared " that they never saw Anne Rooney before— that she never slept in their house ; and finally that the whole story was a fabrication, for that the daughters were neither out on that night, nor were ever under the bridge!! ! These facts were corroborated by several witnesses. When asked to identify Arcli- bold Sly, whom she said she saw give the blow, she hesitated for some time, and placed the rod on the head of the brother to the Priest of Bagnalstown!! to the astonishment of the whole court. Oil being questioned as to her place of residence she stated that she was born in James's- street, Carlow, that her father lived there, and on being actually brought to this town, ac- companied by the police and Mr. MOORE, they discovered that no such street was ever in Carlow, and on being brought to the place which she described as the residence of her father, she altered her ' tack, and declared he lived in the Queen's County! On being asked whether she knew any person in Carlow, she stated she was ac- quainted with a woman from Graigue, whose name she mentioned. ' This woman on being sent for declared she had never seen Anne Rooney before ; she then turned round and stated she was not ac- quainted with the woman, " but with her husband !" The woman quickly replied that she had stated a falsehood, for that" her husband was dead upwards of two years!' The whole plot was now fully de- veloped, and it was clear that the wretch had been the dupe of some designing knaves, who were anxious to stigmatise the character of the Protestants of the county, and to make it appear that a death which was purely accidental, was the result of a murderous conspi- racy against the deceased, who, in fact, had on the night of his death drunk freely, and, as given in evidence, rode an ungovernable horse ( that had frequently thrown him before), at a furious pace, from Bagenalstown. It is unnecessary to observe, from a perusal of the foregoing facts, that the prisoners were honourably acquitted, and that their abandoned accuser was detained in custody to await the pleasure of his Majesty's Government whether she would be committed to stand her trial for deliberate and gross perjury. But still the wretch has succeeded in holding up three innocent men to the notice of a blind, bigoted, and blood- thirsty populace, who are ever ready to credit any story, no matter how lalse or infamous the base fabricator. ECCL ESIAST1CAL INTELLIGENCE. PREFERMENTS, APPOINTMENTS, Ac. The Rev. KENELM HENRY DIGBY, B. A., to the Rectory of Tittles- hall, with Godwick and Wellingham annexed, in Norfolk, on the presentation of T. W. Coke, Esq., of Holkliain Hall. The Rev. ABRAHAM CHARLES REEVE, to the perpetual Curacy of Higham, Suffolk, on the nomination of Sir Robert Pocklington, Knt., of Chellesworth, and others. The Rev. R. C. TRENCH, late of Trinity College, Cambridge, to the new Chapel upon Curdridge- common, near Bishop's Waltham, in the county of Hants. The Rev. SAMUEL D'OYI. EY PESHALL, M. A., Rector of Morton Bagot, Warwickshire, on his own petition, to the Rectory of Old- berrow, in the county of Worcester, void by the decease of the Rev. Samuel Peshall, the late incumbent and patron. The Rev. THOMAS llowcs, to the Vicarage of Lower Guiting, with Fanncot Chapel annexed, in the diocese of Gloucester, vacant Dy the death of the Rev. Charles Whatley. Patron, Mrs. Walker. The Rev. J. PUNNETT, Vicar of St. Erth, has been appointed Sur- rogate for granting marriage licenses by the Worshipful the Chan- cellor of Exeter. The Rev. JOHN GILDERDALE, M. A., of Egerton, near Hudders- field, to the afternoon Lectureship in the parish Church of Halifax, vacant by the death of the Rev. Richard Hudson; on the nomination of the Rev. Charles Musgrave, Vicar of Halifax. The Rev. ALEXANDER MELVILLE, to the Church and Parish of Fal- kirk, in the Presbytery of Linlithgow and shire of Stirling, vacant by the death of the Rev. John Brown Patterson ; on the presentation of the King. OBITUARY. At Bridgford Hill, Notts, aged 81, the Rev. Thomas Beamont, II. A., for many years an active Magistrate for that county. ORDINATION. The Bishop of Chester held an Ordination in the Cathedral of Durham, on Sunday se'nnight, when the following gentlemen were ordained:— Priests: E. B. Allen, B. A., and W. Helsop, B. A., Queen's . coll., Camb.; J. S. Hodgson, M. A., Caius coll., Camb.; R. W. Dibdin, B. A., N. Milne, M. A., and W. P. Mellersh, B. A., St. John's coll., Camb.; W. H. Molineux, M. A., Clare hall, Camb.; G. A. Walker, B. A., Christ's coll., Camb. ; G. D. Haughton, B. A., Worcester coll., Oxford; J. L. Ross, B. A., Oriel coll., Oxford ; C. J. Daniel, B. A., ('•• T. Terry, B. A., G. Simpson, B. A., and H. Sirce, B. A>, Trinity coll., Dublin; W. J. Kidd and H. Scambler, St. Bees'; ; P. Stubbs. Durham University.— Deacons: II. IV. Bellairs, Exd. Student, New inn hall, Oxford'; J. W. Edwards, B. A., and H. Leigh, B. A., Brasennose coll., Oxford ; G. Slade, B. A., St. Edmund's hall, Oxford ; P. Jackson, B. A., and R. Davies, B. A., Corpus Christi coll., Oxford; T. C. Makinson, B. A., St. John's coll., Camb.; 15. A. Mar- shall, B. A., St. Peter's coll., Camb.; G. Nightingale, B. A., Cathe- rine hall, Camb.; T. R. Beutley, B. A., T. Bowman, B. A., and T. Hathorntliwaile, B. A., Trinity coll., Dublin; J. Graves and D. Campbell, St. Bees"; H. Nussey, B. A., Magdalene coll., Camb.; T. Atkinson, and B. Milne, St. Bees'; J. W. D. Dundas, B. A., Mag- dalene coll., Camb. MISCELLANEOUS. The Lord Bishop of EXETER arrived at his Palace on Monday last,- from attending his Parliamentary duties in London, and the Cathedral bells rang on the occasion. CANTERBURY.— His Grace the Archbishop of CANTERBURY arrived in this city on Saturday. On Sunday, he preached a t the Cathedral to a crowded congregation, among whom were the Right Hon. S. R. LUSHINGTON, the Mayor, and several members of the Corporation. On Monday, his Grace held a confirmation for the various parishes in this city ; 462 persons were confirmed. At two o'clock the same day, he proceeded to Barham, where 261 underwent the ceremony. On Tuesday his Grace went to Whitstable. Wednesday he returned to Canterbury, to hold a confirmation for the neighbourhood of this city, and on Thursday his Grace proceeded to Faversham and Sit- tingbourne. The anniversary meeting of the Ashby- de- la- Zouch Societies for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge, and for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, was held on Monday last, being the day appoined by the Bishop of the Diocese for holding his con- firmation at that place. After the Bishop had administered the solemn rite to nearly 500 young people, the Clergy, with his Lord- ship at their head, proceeded in procession to the large Assembly Room, in the Hastings Hotel, to hold a public meeting of the friends of the two Societies. Here a numerous assemblage awaited them, among whom were Sir GEORGE BEAUMONT ( who, in the unavoidable absence of Lord HOWE, acted as Lay Steward), C. W. Packe, Esq., of Ravenstone; Capt. Madan; R. Smith, Esq.; Lieut. Blenliame, R. N ; — Hall, Esq., of Tempe ; W. Dews, E. Green, E. Fisher, J. Fearnhead, J. Mammatt, J. Eames, J. Boyer, and J. Pountney, Esqs. of Laity; and of the Clergy :— the Archdeacon of Leicester, Dr. Lloyd, the Hon. and Rev. C. Dundas; P. evds. P. Fraser, W. Holme, F. Merewether, J. M- Echalaz, Nigel Greisley, Pratt, Morse, of Baxterley, John Piddocke, C. J. W. Boyer, of Swepstone, Babiugton, of Thringstone, George Madan, J. Taylor. W. II. and T. 1- 1. Kelk, Carson, Mitchell, Webb, Poole, Moore, E. Hall, J. Dar- wall, < fcc., tfec. After the business of the meetiDg had been disposed of, a very large proportion of the company sat down to dinner— Sir GEO. BEAUMONT in the chair. Several appropriate and loyal toasts were afterwards proposed, and drunk with the warmest enthusiasm, which elicited from the Laity present the most cordial and unanimous expressions of attachment towards the Church and its Ministers. The Kehtish Observer publishes the following from a correspondent: — The Rev. Mr. BATTY, a Wesleyan Minister, preaching last Sunday evening in this city ( Canterbury), made thefollowing observations :— " There has been," said the Rev. Gent., " much noise of late about the Church being in danger— but surely such expressions are foolish and vain. Only reflect for one moment upon tie great persecutions through which she has been brought, and the violent opposition over which she has prevailed, and remember that the power and protec- tion by which she hath conquered, and rode safely through every storm," is still promised for her defence. Though dark and mysteri- ous clouds may for a time hover around her, let but her members be faithful to their own eternal interests, and God will be faithful to his promise. £ The Church,' said one of old, ' may justly be compared to a bed of camomiles, the more she be pressed, the more she will send forth her sweet perfume, and the wider will she spread.' " The first stone of a new Church at Sheerness, to be dedicated to the Holy Trinity, was laid on Thursday, the 27th ult., by DELAMARK BANKS, Esq., in the presence of an immense concourse of spectators. Wednesday se'nnight, the Bishop of GLOUCESTER commenced his visitation and. confirmation at Campden. His Lordship's charge to the Clergy embraced most of the topics of a subject very rife and anxiously looked for by all classes— Church Reform; and withoiit exposing the particular views of the Church Commissioners, it indi- cated their determination not to unsettle the essential landmarks of Church property. Whatever changes are contemplated, it is pro- posed that such changes shall only be effected with a view not to spoliation', but to insure a due performance of Church duties— resi- dence— and consequent improvement. On Thursday, a vestry meeting was held in the parish Church of St. Pancras, Chichester, when the minister, the Rev. J. DAVIES, brought forward a proposition to enlarge the building, as the con- gregation had increased beyond the means provided for its accom- modation. The expense was proposed to be defrayed by voluntary contributions, and a guarantee to be given that no Church- rateshould be made for the occasion. The proposition was, however, opposed; ed, " That the parishioners do consider such WATER IN THE BRAIN. Just published, price 3s. 6.1. cloth boards, ATREATISE 011 WATER in the BRAIN, with the most Successful Modesof Treatment. By WILLIAM GRIFFITH, one of the Lecturers on Midwifery . and the Diseases of Women and Children at the West- minster School of Medicine, & e. London : Longman, Rees. Orme and Co. Just published, in l2mo., price Is. 6d. sewed, ATREATISE on the CAUSES and CURE of STUTTERING, witli references to certain modern theories. Bv JAMES WRIGHT, Esq. Late of Magdalen Hall, Oxford, Author of " The School Orator," etc. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. ' " CHEAP WINES AND SPIRITS^ AND ECONOMISTS:— SHERRIES. Per Do*. 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In consequence of the immeuse quantity of ordinary Teas lately imported, the inferior qualities have sold cheaper, while the middling and tine qualities have sold so reasonable as to enable them to reduce their prices Sd., Is. to 2s. per lb. below former prices, and FgTIO PRIVATE FAMILIES PORTS. 1' erDoz. Stout Wine from the Wood 24s Fine old ditto, ditto 30s Good Crusted ditto .. 28s Very curious, of the most cele- brated vintages .. 40s.. 46s Fine old ditto, in Pints and Half- pints. CAPES. Very good Wine .. 14s Ditto, Sherry flavour .. 17s Superior ditto, very fine 20s Genuine Pontac .. 20s now particularly recommend*— s. d. * s. d. s. d. s. d. Good Congou ' .. ... 4 0 and 4 4 which was 4 8 and 5 0 Fine strong ditto .. .. 5 8 .. 5 0 .. 5 4 .. 6 t) Strong Pene flavour .. 5 0 .. 5 4 .. 6 0 .. 7 0 Finest Souchong and Pekoe .. 70.. 80 .. 80.. 10 0 Good Common Green .. 4 0 .. 4 4 .. 4 8 .. 5 0 Fine lSloom ditto .. .. 4 8 .. 5 0 .. 5 4 .. 6 0 Fine Hyson .. .. 6 0 .. 7 0 .. 7 0 .. 8 0 Superfine and Gunpowder .. 80.. 100 .. 10 0 .. 12 0 Fine Roasted Coffee, 2s.— Bourbon, 2s. 6d.— Mocha and Turkey, 2s. 6d., 3s. These Teas will he found much stronger and better flavoured than any of the Free Trade. Country dealers, families, and large establishments, may have chests or boxes cleared direct from the East India Company's warehouses, if required, or any quantities weighed from the Chests and packed in lead, free of expense ; and in order to accommodate those country friends who wish to drink that delicious beverage, Good Tea, in its pure and unadulterated state, another Agent will be apppointed in every country town, upon applications addressed to F. and R. Sparrow and Co., 8, Ludgate- hill. gg^ A Quantity of Superior Foreign Wines at moderate prices. No connexion with any other House in the Trade. and an amendment mov Church quite large enouglrfor the saicl parishioners." A poll was demanded by Mr. PAULL, the seconder of the proposition, when the result was, for the resolution 33; for the amendment. 65. Here are dissenters from the voluntary system as well as from the Church- rates. What next?— Brighton Gazette. The voluntary contributions in aid of the parish Church of Hull, amount to upwards of 2001., a sum fully adequate for the necessities of the current year, and much larger than has been realised by any of the late Church- rates. So much for the unpopularity of the Church.' Thursday se'nnight the Archbishop of York confirmed one thou- sand young persons at St. Mary's Church, Nottingham, and after- wards consecrated a new burying- ground in presence of a great num- ber of individuals. The Bishop of LONDON is gone over to Holland to hold a confir- mation in the Episcopal Church of Rotterdam. The inhabitants of Ripon have determined to erect a bust in Trinity Church, Ripon, of the Rev. EDWARD KILVINGTON, M. A., founder and first Incumbent of that Church, as a mark of affectionate remembrance of his Ministerial character, and grateful memento of his munificence in erecting, at his own cost, that Church. At a meeting of the Wilts Bible Society, held at Devizes, on Tues- day, Mr. JOHN SHEPPARD, of Frome, related the following anecdote of a member of the Society of Friends :— Being asked for a contribu- tion for building a Church, he replied, " Thou knowest we are not friends to thy steeple- houses ; but I suppose before thou wilt build another thou wilt pull down the oldone?" " Yes," was the answer. " Well, then," said he, " I'll give thee 501. to pull down the old one." On Sunday last, the sum of 141.5s. 8d. was collected at the parish Church of Areley Kings, in behalf of the Society for Propagating the Gospel, and the Church Missionary Society, after two impressive sermons by the Hon. and Rev. J. SOMERS COCKS, M. A., Prebendary of Worcester. The committee for the complete restoration of St. Saviour's Church Southwark, have determined to apply to Parliament for a grant of money for this object, which may, they imagine, be considered almost a national one. The parish have already expended nearly 30,0001. ill the general repairs, and as much as 5,0001. has been raised by volun- tary subscription for the preservation of the Ladye Chapel and altar- screen. • , • MONUMENT TO WICKLIFJE. 1— The inhabitants of Lutterworth, where this great man lived and died, and where he carried on the important work of his translation of the Holy Scriptures, have long been alive to the duty and propriety of raising some memorial to their former illustrious Rector; and a few gentlemen of that place having formed themselves into a committee to carry the design into effect, 3001. have been already subscribed. It is proposed to erect a monument in the chancel of the Church, the estimated expense of which is at least 5001. or 6001. Several bankers consented to receive subscriptions, and among others Messrs. Clarke and Philips, of Leicester. IRELAND. On Tuesday his Grace the Archbishop of CASHEL held his triennial visitation of the diocese of Lismore, at the Cathedral of that town, and 011 Thursday his visitation of the diocese of Waterford, at the ^ Cathedralin that city. TheArclibishop of CASHEL having transferred his domestic establish- ment to Waterford, the See- house, offices, and demesne lands at Cashel, comprising 263 Irish acres, are to be let out under the Eccle- siastical Board. The Rectory of Killorglin, Kerry, in the diocese of Ardfert, is vacant by the death of the " Rev. CONNOLLY O'NEIL, a Clergyman who has been the subject of much persecution by the systematic hostility raised to the payment of his tithes. The parishioners of Oldcastle and Kilbridge, in the diocese of Meath, have presented their late Curate, the Rev. NICHOLAS J. H ALPIN, a splendid tea and breakfast service of plate. nniJE BRIGHTON SAUCE, for Cutlets, Chops, Fish, Gravies, M_ Hashes, Steaks, Savoury Dishes, Soups, Wild Fowl, and especially for Cold Meats. This Sauce will be found more useful than Pickles, and is the most de- licious auxiliary for palates accustomed to the Eastern Sauces.— Not any is genuine but that sold in Bottles, with labels signed in the hand- writing of one of the Proprietors, GEORGE CREASY, North- street, Brighton. To be had of Morell and Son. 210, Piccadilly ; Ball and Son, 81, Bond- street: Mrs. Cane, 76, Oxford- street; Dickson and Simmons, Covent- garden; Edwards, King William- street ; and at the Depot, 29, Watbrook, London. BURGKSS'SKSSRNCE" OF ANCHOVIES Warehouse, 107, Straud, corner of the Savoy- steps, London. ' • JOHN BURGESS and SON, being apprised of the numerous endeavours made by many persons to impose a spurious article for their make eet it incumbent upon them to request the attention of the Public, in purchasing, what they conceive to be the original, to observe the Name and Address correspond with the above. The general appearance of the spurious descriptions will deceive the unguarded, and for their detection, .1. B. and Son submit tile following Cau- tions: some are in appearance at first sight " The Genuine," but without any name or address— some ' Burgess's Essence of Anchovies"— others " Burgess," aud many more without address. JOHN BURGESS and SON having been many years honoured with such dis- tinguished approbation, feel every sentiment of respect toward the Public, and earnestly soli- it them to inspect the labels previous to purchasing what they con- ceive to be of their make, which they hope will prevent many disappointments. BURGESS'S NEW SAUCE, for general purposes, having given such great satis- faction , continues to be prepared by thein, and is recommended as a most useful and convenient Sauce— will keep good in all climates. Warehouse, No. 107, Strand ( corner of Savoy- steps), London. The original Fish Sauce Warehouse. £ T< ENUINE NAPLF. S SOAI'.— 7). and E. ATKINSON respect- full recommend to Gentlemen who use this, by for the best of all Shaving Soaps, to compare the article imported by them with what is generally sold under the same name. It is from the first Manufacturer in the Kingdom of Naples, made expressly f jr their Establishment, of the best materials, regardle ss of expense, and well matured by age. They beg particularly to solicit attention to a Stock now 011 sale, which is upwards of 20 yearsold, and of a quality rarely to be met with.— N. B. Shaving Brushes, prepared from the best Badger Hair, and warranted, in great variety.— EAU I) E COLOGNE, from Jean Marie Farina, Place Juliers, a Cologne.— 24', Old Bond- street, Slay 1. For INDIGESTION, & c. € 0 C K L E ' S ANTIBILIOUS PILLS.. Patronised by The Dukes of Grafton and Manchester; the Earls of Guildford, Oxford, Scar- borough, Thanet, Athlone, and Roscommon ; Lords Torrington, Bentinck, Fitz- roy, Middleton, Barham, Hartland, and Western; the Lord Bishops of Durham, Bath and Wells, Gloucester, Chichester, Worcester, Norwich, Peterborough, Ely, St. Asaph, Bangor, and Calcutta; Rev. Archdeacon of Colchester; Sir Gerard Noel, Sir Robert Grant, Sir Henry Biake, Sir Samuel FIndyer, Sir Robert Buxton, Sir John Forbes, and Sir Henry Smyth, Baronets ; Thomas W. Coke, Esq., J. B. Wildman, Esq.; Alderman Wood, M. P.; Reverends Dr. Benson, Dr. Burney, Dr. Birch, Dr. Miller, & c. Prepared by Mr. Cockle, Apothecary, 18, New Ormond- street, London ; and sold in boxes at Is. ljd., 2s. £ ld., and 4s. 6d., by all respectable Medicine Venders. %* The superior efficacy of Mr. Cockle's Pills, in cases of Indigestion, Bilious and Liver Complaints, and as a Family Aperient, is too well known to require any comment.— Ask particularly for " Cockle's Pills." TRAVELLING, & C.— ROWLAND'S KALYDOR PROTECTS THE Face and Skin from the baneful effects of the sun and dust— such as sun- burns, tanned skin, parched lips, freckles, harsh and rough skin, and an unpleasant heat of the face; it also completely eradicates pimples, spots, redness, ano all cutaneous eruptions ; transforms the most sallow complexion into radiant white- ness, imparts a beautiful juvenile bloom, and renders the skin delicately clear and soft. In stings of insects. & c., it immediately allays the most violent inflamma- tion, and renders the skin delightfully cool and refreshing. Gentlemen will find if allay the smarting pain after shaving, and make the skin smooth and pleasant. Price 4s. 6d. and 8s. 6d. per bottle, duty included. OBSERVE— Each bottle has the Name and Address of the Proprietors, .„„„„„ A. ROWLAND and SON, 20, IIATTON- GARDEN, LONDON, engraved 011 the Government Stamp, which is pasted on each, also printed in red on the wrapuer in which each is enclosed. Sold by them, and by respeelable Perfumers RTIFICIAL TEETH.— Addressed to those who value the Use, Ornament, and Comfort r i serviceable Teeth.— It is well known that these are indispensable assistants toourease, and often chief auxiliaries in exertions for fameor fortune. Impressed with this conviction, Messrs. A. and J. JONES, Den- tists to their Royal H ighnesses the Princess Augusta and the Duchess of Gloucester, fa-.& c., after devoting much time to the practice of Dental Surgery, both ill England and on the Continent, can conscientiously pledge themselves to afford relief under most cases affecting the health, use, or ease Of these imperatively ne- cessary- appendages of the mouth. They have recently been eminently successful in restoring defective articulation and mastication, by the substitution of their newly- improved Teeth for those unavoidably removed. Messrs. Jones solicit the personal attention of members of the faculty to these really effective inventions, and parti- cularly recommend them to Gentlemen engaged in public speaking. Carious and tender Teeth wholly preserved from the progress of decay, and rendered useful by Jones's unequalled" Anodyne Cement. Every operation pertaining to Dental Sur- gery. At home from Ten to Five, 64, Lower Grosvenor- street, Bond- street. - m/ l" INERAL MARMORATUM for FILLING DECAY ED ITJS. TEETH, and INCORRODIBLE „„,-,.,._. ARTIFICIAL TEETH FITTED WITHOUT WIRES orpother LIGAT! RES. MONSIEUR LE DRAY and CO., SURGEON- DENTIsTN No. 60 NEW- MAN- STREET, OXFORD STREET, continue to RESTORE DECAYED TEETH, with their CELEBRATED MINERAL MARMORA! I'M, applied without PAIN, HEAT, or PRESSURE, which in a few seconds HARDE\ a INTO ENAMEL, allaying in one minute the'most^ excruciating PAIN ; and ren- dering the OPERATION of EXTRACTION UNNECESSARY. They also FASTEN LOOSE TEETH, whelher arising from neglect the use of calomel, or disease of the Gums. ARTIFICIAL 01 NATURAL TEETH of SURPAS- SING BEAUTY, FIXED from ONE to a COMPLETE SET, withrHil extracting the roots or giving any pain, and in every case restoring perfect ARTICbLAllON and . MASTICATION.— Charges as in Pans.— At Home from 10 till b. ^ 454 JOHN BULL, September 6. STOCK EXCHANGE— SATURDAY. . On Monday last the settlement of the Account in the Foreign Market produced one failure, that of an old and much respected Member of the House. The general tendency of the Money Market has been in favour of an advance, the Consols for Account having been ashighas90& ; and the Omnium at 356. The closing price this afternoon was 90 W buyers, and the Omnium 3%. Some heavy sales have been made in ' Exchequer Bills to- day, by which the premium of 19 to 21 was reduced to 15 to 18. Indian Bonds also, which were at 4 to 6 pm., have receded to par, but closed at 3 pm. In the Foreign Market, there has been some re- action in the Spanish Bonds and Scrip, the former have been at 42% , and the Scrip 17X % dis.; the price was not so good at the close to- day, 41H being the last price of the Bonds, and 18 dis. that of the Scrip! The dividends are now in course of payment on Russian Bonds, which are 10" ex- dividend ; the various Northern Bonds are very firm, Dutch Fiveper Cents, are 10214 ; the Two- and- a- Half per Cents. 54 Vs ; and the Belgi an Bonds 101%. There has been some re- action in the Transatlan tic Bonds; 31 is the price of Columbian, which have been as high as 32% ; and Brazilian Bonds are 87&. Bank Stock, Three per Cent. Reduced, the Three- and- a- Half per Cents. Reduced, and Long Annuities of 1860 are now closed for the dividend. In the Share Market there is nothing to notice. 3 per Cent. Consols, 90V %% ~ ' ' Ditto for Account, 90% % % % 3 per Cent. Reduced, 3% per Ct. Reduced, New 3^ per Cent., 98% % 9 Bank Long Annuities, REPLY TO COLONEL NAPIER'S COT'NTER- REMARKS. Just published, price 2s. 6d. REMARKS on the CHARACTER ascribed by COLONEL NAPIER to the late RIGHT HON. SPENCER PERCEVAL. Second Edition. With a POSTSCRIPT in REPLY to Colonel Napier's COUNTER- REMARKS. By D. M. PERCEVAL. Esq. " We have never read a more temperate, manly, able, and honourable produc- tion."— Literary Gazette. " A very able argument, truly admirable fortone'and temper."— Athena- urn. " A triumphant vindication of calumniated worth."— Morning Post. " A pamphlet stamped with no common interest.*'— United Ser- vice Journal. " Well worth perusal."— Times. "" A very able and temperate pamphlet— refuting every charge on evidence which it is impossible to question." — United Service Gazette. James Fraser, 215, Regent street. Just published, in demy 8vo. price 14s. boards, with a Portrait and other Plates - HE • ' Tf VISCOUNT E X M O U T H Drawn up from Official and other Authentic Documents, supplied bv his Family and Friends. By E. OSI. ER, Esq. ' gmith. Elder, and Co.. Cornhill. E LIFE of ADMIRAL N T E X M Bank Stock, Ditto for Account, India Stock, 255% Ditto for Account, Jmlia Bonds, 3 pin. Exchequer Bills, 20 15 18 The Paris papers of Thursday contain very little news of interest. The Peers were to meet ou Saturday, for the purpose of receiving the Report of the Committee on the Bill respecting the Press. The po- pular feeling against the measure is represented as daily growing stronger, but little doubt exists as to its speedily becoming the law of France. The Cumberland steamer arrived on Thnrsday at Falmouth from Santander, which port she left on Monday last. She had taken out 450 Scotch mercenaries to the army of Colonel Evans. About 5,000 men are now under his command. It was supposed that the cavalry • would march on Vittoria, and the infantry on Burgos, there to be organised as soon as the whole number was completed. They are strictly watched by Generals Maroto and Iturralde. No movements of any importanc 1 had as yet taken place. Advices from Madrid to the 26th ult. represent that city as being extremely disturbed, and the authorities set at defiance. The Go- vernment has not dared to act against any of the conspirators in the ridiculous affair of the Urbanos, and General Quesada, who is strongly suspected of having tolerated the movement, and who makes no secret of his contempt for the " thief Toreno,'' and the " fool Las Amarillas," as he calls them, has been reinstated in his com- mand of the Guards, and appointed Captain General of Catalonia.— The military commission appointed on the 18th to try the offences committed on the 16th, had declared itself incompetent, on the ground that it could have no retrospective operation.— Standard. Yesterday morning the Hon. Charlotte Stuart, daughter of Lord Stuart de Rothesay, was led to the hymeneal altar by the Hon. Chas. John Canning, youngest son of the late Right Hon. George Canning. The ceremony was performed in the Church of St. Martin's- in- the- Fields, by the Dean of Windsor. The House of Lords yesterday affirmed the judgments of the Courts below in the three following cases :— The Hon. R. King v. Hamlet, the Earl of Bandontr. Beefier, and Burke v. Locke. Covent- Garden Theatre is to be opened at the usual time, the terms for the lease having been finally agreed upon on Friday. Mr. Trotter, of the Soho Bazaar, and Captain Forbes are associated with twn other gentlemen in the speculation as lessees. Lord Adolphus Vane Stewart, son of Lord Londonderry, was nearly killed on Saturday, at Thirsk, by a post- boy driving up to" the 1 nil in a f" rious manner. The young gentleman is little more than ten years old. ihe military hand at Kalisch musters 1,000 drummers, horn- blowers, and trumpeters, and 600 musicians of other kinds. The Emperor of Russia arrived there on the 19th ult. It is expected that the reviews will terminate by the 18th inst. Iceland is said to be in a deplorable condition; the last winter having been unusually severe, had ruined the fishery and destroyed the flocks. Lieutenant Rocloffe, who, it will be recollected, was charged with an attempt upon the life of the Duke of Saxe- Weimar, at the camp of Ryen, some weeks ago, has been pronounced insane by the Dutch Court, and ordered to be kept in confinement. Some of the large importers of silver have been subjected to great inconvenience by the discovery that a serious adulteration has taken place in some of the Mexican dollars sent to this country, in respect to which, up to this time, uniform good faith has been preserved. Herr Werner, a blind minstrel, who exhibits his extraordinary imitative powers at the Colosseum every evening, can actually whistle two distinct notes at once. HOLBORN HILL.— The project of a viaduct from Fetter- lane to the top of Snow- hill is revived. The annual traffic along this line is computed to be upwards of 20,000,000 of pedestrians, 87,640 eques- trians, 372,470 carts and waggons, 78,876 stages, 157,752 hackney coaches, 82,258 carriages, 135,842 omnibuses, 460,110 chaises and taxed carts, and 354,942 cabriolets. An inquest was held at St. Bartholomew's Hospital on Friday, on Elizabeth Harrison, aged 39, who was found at a house in Smithfield, on Wednesday evening, in such a state of debility from want, that she died soon after being brought to the Hospital. She had come to Lon- don from Somerset, to procure a situation as servant. In8vo., neatly half- bound, coloured outline, 12s.; full coloured, 15s.; in 4to. 18s. and 21s. WHITTAKER'S MODERN GENERAL ATLAS; com- prehending all the Empires, Kingdoms, States, & c., in the World, con- structed from the most correct Authorities, and containing all the recent Disco- veries. To which are added, three Maps of Ancient Geography, the whole coin- prising 36 plates. Whittakerand Co., Ave Maria- lane. Just published, in 2 vols. post, Svo., 14s. INDIAN SKETCHES. Taken during an EXPEDITION amonirthe PAWNEES and other TRIBES of AMERICAN INDIANS. By JOHN T. IRVING, Jun. John Murray, Albeinarle- street. BROCKEDON'S ROAD BOOK. Now readv, in 8vo., price24s., stronglv hound in cloth. THE ROAD BOOK from LONDON to NAPLES. By W. BROCKEDON, Esq., F. R. S. Illustrated with twenty- five highly finished Engravings, by W. and E. Finden. The Traveller to Naples will find in this volume all the necessary information for his journey, by Paris, Lyons, Turin, Genoa, Pisa, Florence, and Rome, with views of the striking objects and beautiful scenes on his route, and five useful maps. A few proofs, imperial Svo., 31s. 6tl; India proofs, 42s.; proofs before letters, 4to., 63s. Subscribers to the work in parts have now the opportunity of completing their sets. John Murray, Albemarle- street; sold also by C. Tilt, Fleet- street; and J. Rod- well, New Bond- street. New Edition, in 18mo., Is. bound, ORTHOGRAPHICAL EXERCISES, in a SERIES of MORAL LETTERS. To which is added, a Selection of Essays, & c., taken from the best English Writers. By the late JAMES ALDERS'ON ; and carefully revised, by the Rev. THOMAS SMITH. London : printed for Longman, Rees, and Co.; J. Richardson ; Baldwin and Cradock; Darton and Harvey; Hamilton, Adams, and Co.; Whittaker and Co. ; Sherwood and Co.; J. Duncan ; Simpkin and Co. ; J. Souter ; and Honlston and Son. On the I5th will be published, a new and enlarged Edition in post 8vo., with a beautiful wood- cut vignette, by Baxter, in cloth, and also handsomely bound in Turkey morocco, with gilt edges, by Messrs. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria, lane, THE BOOK of FAMILY WORSHIP; consisting of a Four Weeks' Course of Prayer, and Prayers suitable to the Festivals of the Church, and other solemn occasions; together with general Prayers for the Church, King, Clergy, Wives, Husbands, Children, Friends, & e., and General Benedictions. By the Editor of the " Sacred Harp," & c. To which are added, Jeremy Taylor's " Sacramental Meditations and Prayers." Just published, in 1 vol. post Svo.. 10s. 6d., the THIRD and LAST SERIES of /^ LEANINGS in NATURAL HISTORY. With Notices and Anecdotes of the Royal Residences of Kew, Richmond, Hampton Court, and Windsor. By EDWARD JESSE, Esq., Surveyor of His Majesty's Parks and Palaces. Also, price 10s. 6d. A THIRD EDITION of JESSE'S GLEANINGS, Volume I., is nearly ready. John Murray, Albemarle- street. ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNIC A. Vol. XI., Part 2, price 18s., and Part LXV., price 6s., are just published. Adam and Charles Black, Edinburgh; Simpkin, Marshall, and Co.; Whittaker, Treacher, and Co.; and Hamilton, Adams, and Co., London. In a thick volume 8vo., price 14s., the Fourth Edition of LDICTIONARY of MEDICINE for POPULAR USE. By ALEXANDER MACAULAY, M. D., Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, and Physician- Accoucheur to the New Town Dispensary. A. and C. Black, Edinburgh ; Longman and Co., London. T NEW WORK BY MISS SEDGWICK. HE LIN WOOD By the Author of " Hope Leslie," & c. & c. Edward Churton, Public Library, 26, Holies- street. T IDA S' Dedicated to, and Superintended by Washington Irving, HE CONQUEST of FLOR by HERNANDO DE SOTO. By THEODORE IRVING, Esq. " The book before us is a delightful one."— Athena- urn. Edward Chnrton, Public Library, 26, Holies- street. In 8vo. price 10s. 6d boards, with plates, the Third Edition of IR CHARLES BELL'S BRIDGEWATER TREATISE— The Hand, its Mechanism, and Vital Endowments, as evincing Design. William Pickering, Chancery- lane. Just published, in 3 vols. fc. 8vo. price 15s., a new Edition of THE POETICAL WORKS of S. T. COLERIDGE, Esq. This edition contains not less than a foorth of the whole more than any former edition, the greater part of which has never been printed before. William Pickering, Chancery- lane, London. Of whom may be had, COLERIDGE'S FRIEND: a Series of Essays. 3 vols, crown 8vo, price 11. Is. ' COLERIDGE'S LAY SERMONS; Two'Parts in 1 vol, 8vo. price 8s. New Edition, with English Biographical Notices, 18mo., 3s. bound, FLORILEGIUM POETICUM; a Selection of Elegiac Extracts from the Works of Ovid, Tibullus, Propertius, Martial, and Ausonius. By the late Rev. GEORGE WHITTAKER, M. A. For the Use of Schools. Wbittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. New Edition, square ISmo., 3s. 6d. bound, AGENERAL PRONOUNCING and EXPLANATORY DICTIONARY of the ENGLISH LANGUAGE, lor the use of Schools, & c., on the plan of Mr. Sheridan. By STEPHEN JONES. London : printed for Longman, Rees, and Co.; J. Richardson ; J. M. Richard- son ; J. G. and F. Rivington ; A. K. Newman and Co. ; Hamilton. Adams, and Co. ; Whittaker and Co.; Simpkin, Marshall, and Co. ; W. H. Allen, and Co.; Houlsfon and Son; Holdsworth and Ball; J. Jackson; and G. and J. Robinson, Liverpool. T NEW WORKS, Just published by Longman, Rees, Orme, and Co., London. HE FUDGES IN ENGLAND Being a Sequel to the Fudge Family in Paris. By Thomas Brown the Younger, & c. & c. Fcap. 8vo., 8s. bds. 2. THE GIPSY. By the Author of " Darnlev," " Mary of Burgundy," & c. 3 vols. 11. lis. 6d. 3. A TOUR in GREECE and the LEVANT. By the Rev. R. Burgess, B. D.. Author of " The Topography and Antiquities of Rome." 2 vols. fcap. 8vo., 14s. 4. A POET'S PORTFOLIO. By James Montgomery, Esq. Fcap. 8vo., 8s. YARROW REVISITED, and other POEMS. By William Wordsworth, Esq. Fcap. 8vo., 9s. 6. THE LIFE and TIMES of WILLIAM III., King of England, and Stadtholder of Holland. By the Hon. A. Trevor, M. 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New 34 per cent Bank Long Annuities. India Bonds Exchequer Bills Consols for Account.. Mon. Tu. Wed. Thur. Friday Sat. 214} 214} 215 215 — — — 253} 254} 254} — 255| 89| 90} 90} 90} 90| 90} 903 901 90? 903, — 99} 99f 99} 99| — 99} 99f 99 100 99| — 98i> 99j 99 99} 99- 9 16} 16g 16j 16} — — 6 p 6 p 6 p 4 p 6 p 6 p 22 p 22 p 22 p 21 p 20 p 18 90 » 903 90} m 90g 90J Omnium, 3 § premium. BIRTHS. On the 29th ult., at Dowlais, Lady Charlotte Guest, of a son— At Holyrood Pa- lace, on the 30th ult., the Lady Sarah Campbell, of a son— On the 29th ult., at Shapwick, Somersetshire, the lady of H. B. Strangways, Esq., of a son— On the 3d inst., at Peckham, Mrs. Charles William Willoughby, of a son— At Balham, on the 3d inst , the lady of George Borradaile, Esq., of a son— On the 2d inst., in Albion- street, Hyde- park, the wife of the Rev. Matthew Kinsey, of a son— On the 28th ult., at Aid wick, near Bognor, the Hon. Mrs. Osborne, of a son— On the 31st nit., at Pimlico- lodge, Mrs. Elliot, of a son— On the 2d inst., at Claverton- park, the lady of Peter Borthwick, Esq., M. P., of a daughter, still- born. MARRIED. On Saturday, the 5th Sept., by special license, at Gorhambury, the seat of the Earl of Verulam, by the very Rev. the Dean of Carlisle, the Earl of Craven, to the LadyEmilv Mary Grim ston, second daughter of the Earl and Countessof Verulam. On the 3d inst., at St. George's, Hanover- square, John Frederick Isaacson, of Norfolk- street, Esq., to Emma, eldest daughter of Thomas Pritchard, of High- row, Knightsbridge, Esq. At the house of the British Minister at Berne, on the 28th' of July, the Rev. Charles Lushington, son of Sir Henry Lushington, Bart., to Susan Rose, daughter of Captain James Tweedale, late of Ihe Hon. East India Company's Service— On the 29th ult., at Liskeard, Cornwall, Owen Flintoff, Esq., B. A., of Trinity Col- lege, Cambridge, to Ann, eldest daughter of D. Alder, Esq., Middlesex— In the Church of Leerdam, in Holland, on the 28th ult., by the Rev. W. Steven, M. A., G. Aekerinann, Esq., of the Strand, London, to Jeannette, only child of James Haefkins, Esq., Chief Magistrate of Leerdam— On the lstinst., at Culham, Mayow Short, Esq., of Lincoln's Inn and Middle Temple, Barrister- at- Law, to Mrs. Phil- lips, of Culham- house, Oxfordshire— On the 31st ult., at Dublin, George Morant,' Esq., lateof the Grenadier Guards, eldest son of G. Morant, Esq., of Farnborough- place, Hampshire, to Lydia, youngest daughter of the late Dr. Hemphill, of Castel, in the county of Tipperary— On the 1st inst., atOddington, Ihe Rev. Alex. Cameron, youngest son of the late Donald Cameron, Esq., of Lochiel, to Charlotte, eldest danghter of the Hon. and Very Rev. the Dean of Gloucester— On the 3d inst., at St. George's, Hanover- square, Captain George Mason, 4th King's Own Regi- ment, to Emily, youngest daughter of Rear- Admiral Stuart— On the 3d inst., at Marylebone Church, Theodore Bogsku, Esq., M. D., to Elizabeth Eleanor, daugh- ter of Arthur Seguin, Esq.— At. St. Bride's, Fleet- street, on the 3d inst,, Mr. W. N. Devey, of Shoe- lane, to Miss Hansard, daughter of the late T. C. Hansard, Esq., of Chatham- place— On the lstinst., at St. Mary's Church, Bryanston- souare, John MacLeod, Esq., of Rasay, Inverness- shire, to Mary, only daughter of Colonel Do- nald MacLeod, C. B., East India Company's Service— At the Chapel at Erthig, on the 2d inst., Charles, eldest son of Lieut.- General Birch Reynardson, of Holywell, Lincolnshire, to Anne, eldest daughter of the late Simon Yorke, Esq., of Erthig, Denbighshire— On the 3d inst., at Blendworth, Spencer Smith, Esq., of Portl^ nd- ilace, to Frances Anne, second daughter of the late Admiral Sir M. Seymour, Bart., £. L. B.— On the 2d inst., at the Parish Church of Deane, James Ormrod, Esq , of Chamber- hall, Lancashire, to Cordelia Jane, the youngest daughter of James Cross, Esq., of Mort- tield, same county— On the 2d inst., at St. Andrew's, Holborn, Edward Boyce Templeton, Esq., to Augusta Elizabeth Venn, second daughter of Edward Beaumont Venn, Esq., of Cole Arber- lane, Camberwell. 8vo. 6s. rs. 6d. DIED. At East Sheen, on Saturday the 29ih of August, after a long and painful illness, which he bore with unexampled fortitude and resignation, Nathaniel William Peach, Esq., of Saville- row, London, Ketteringham- hall, Norfolk, and Hyde, in the county of Dorset. On the 31st of August, at Great Bowden, Leicestershire, in the 81st year of his age, Henry Shuttleworth, Esq. On the 24th ult., at Bury Saint Edmunds, after three days' illness, Anne Rebecca, the beloved wife of Henry Collins, Esq., of North Court Lodge, Brandon, Suffolk, aged 29. With much regret we have to announce the death of Charles Rattray, Esq., M. D., of Daventry, who, after an illness of only four days, expired on the 26th of August, at the age of 56, to the irreparable loss of a numerous family, and the regret of his friends. At Dulwich, on the2d inst., after afew days' illness, in the 21st year of his ase, John William, only child of Charles Ranken, Esq., of Gray's Inn— On the 28th ult., at Hammersmith, John Gotf, Esq., in his 59th year— On the 30th ult., of apoplexy, Francis Goodwin, Esq., of King- street, Portman square— On the 30th ult., Eleanor, the wife of the Rev. Francis G. Le Mann, aged 28— On the 2d inst., at Leamington Spa, in the 76th year of her age, Mary, relict of the late Rev. John Cundall, of Kingston- upon- Thames— On the 2d inst., in his 80th year, John Nesham, Esq., of Spencer- place, Brixton- road— On the 28th ult., at Heslington West, near Malton, Yorkshire, Miss Dolly Baldwin, eldest daughter of Dr. Bald- win, M. D., late of Preston, Lancashire, deceased— On the 31st ult., at Calston Basset, Notts, Urith Amelia, only surviving daughter ofthe late Francis Edmunds, Esq., of Worsbrough, in the county of York— On the 3d nit., at Chester- street, Grosvenor- place, Eleanor Jane, daughter of Robert King, Esq., aged one month- Aged 78, the Hon. George Walpole, second son of Horatio, fourth Lord Walpole, who was created Earl of Orford in 1806. LONDON : Printed by EDWARD SHACKELL, Printer, of No. 14, Am well- street, Pentonville, in the County of Middlesex ; and of No. 40, Fleet- srreet, in the City of London; and published by the said EDWARD SHACKELL, at his Printing- office, No. 40, Fleet- street, aforesaid, at which last place alone, communications to the Editor ( post- paid) are received. it
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