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

21/02/1836

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Volume Number: XVI    Issue Number: 793
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John Bull "For God, the King, and the People!"

Date of Article: 21/02/1836
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Volume Number: XVI    Issue Number: 793
No Pages: 8
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JOHN BULL. " FOR GOD, THE KING, AND THE PEOPLE!" VOL. XYI.— NO. 793. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1836. Price Id. nriHEATRE ROYAL, DRURY LANE.— To- morrow, The Tra- B gedy of THE PROVOST OF BRUGES. With THE BRONZE HORSE. — Tuesday, The Provost of Bruges. With The Jewess.— Wednesday, The Novel Entertainment of the History of Music, embracing all the Principal Talent in the Kingdom.— Thursday ( by special desire) the Siege of Rochelle. And The Jewess. — Friday, The Novel Entertainment of the History of Music.— The Provost of Bruges continuing to attract brilliant and overflowing audiences, and to rivet the attention of those audiences throughout its entire performance, will be acted every evening until further notice.— The splendid Spectacle of The Bronze Horse will be repeated three times every week, and The Jewess every alternate evening. HEATRE ROYAL, COVENT GARDEN.— To- morrow, The Opera of GUY MANNERING. Principal Characters by Messrs. Collins, Rayner, iTilbury, Pritchard, Miss Tnrpin, Miss Romer, and Mrs. W. West. To conclude with QUASIMODO.— Tuesday, Paul Clifford. After which will be . produced. a New Comedietta, entitled Marie : a Tale of the Pont Neuf. To con clude with Quasimodo,— Wednesday, no performance.— Thursday, never acted. Miss Joanna Baillie's new Tragedy, called The Separation. Principal Characters by Messrs. Chas. Kemble, G. Bennett, Pritchard, Tilbury, J. Webster, Miss Wynd- ham, and Miss H. Faucit.— Agent for Private Boxes, Mr. Sams, St. James's- st. HE ST. JAMES'S THEATRE, King- street, St. James's- square.— To- morrow Evening will be presented Auber's grand Operatic Melo- drama of FRA DIAVOLO. Principal Characters by Messrs. Braham, Barker, Barnett, G. StansbuTv, Stretton, Miss Hope, and Miss P. Horton. After which, MONSIEUR JAQUES. Principal Characters by Messrs. Strickland, Barnett, Selby, Hollingsworth, and Miss P. Horton. To conclude with the po- pular Vaudeville of THE ROMP. Principal Characters by Messrs. Gardner, Hollingsworth, Selby, Strickland, Miss Allison, Miss Grove, and Miss Garrick.— Doors open at Half- past Six; Performances begin at Seven.— Private Boxes may be had of Mr. Sams, Royal Library, St. James's- street. M~ ATHEWS and YATES'S THEATRE ROYAL, ADELPHI. — Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, will be presented a new grand Historical Drama, entitled RIENZI, the Last of the Tribunes. Principal . Characters by Messrs. Elton, Vining, Buckstone, O. Smith, Wilkinson, Webster, . Hemming, Gallot, Mrs. Stirling, Miss E. Clifford, and Mrs. Gallot. After which ( first time) a New Farce, entitled THE BALANCE OF COMFORT. Principal Characters by Messrs. Williams, Vining, Buckstone, Wilkinson, Webster, W. Bennett, Mrs. Daly, Miss Pitt, Miss Ayres, Miss Daly, and Miss E. Clifford. To conclude with a new grand Melo- Drama, entitled LUKE SOMERTON. Principal Characters by Messrs. O. Smith, Webster, Williams, Mrs. Stirling, and Miss Daly. In Act 2 will be the Grand Entree of Queen Anne.— Wednesdays and Fridays during Lent, Mrs. Fitzwilliam's New Monopologue, assisted by Messrs. • Elton, Webster, & c.— Agent for Private Boxes, Mr. Sams, St. James's- st. STRAND THEATRE.- The RAVEL FAMILY having taken the above Theatre for a limited number of Nights, will commence their astonishing Performances on MONDAY, Feb. 22, which will be repeated every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday until further notice ; consisting of their wonderful Evolutions on the TIGHT ROPE. After which the Divertisement of LA FETE CHAMPETRE. The THREE GLADIATORS, succeeded by LE VOLU- A- VENT, grand Ballet Pantomime performed by them 160 times at Pari?, and recently at the Theatre Royal Drury- Lane.— Lower Boxes, 4s. ; 2d Price, 2s. Upper Boxes and Pit, 2s.; 2d Price, Is. Doors open at Half- past Six— commence at Seven precisely. MORI and LAVENU'S NEW PUBLICATIONS, by MOSCHELES.— The admired Barcarole, in Marino Faliero, arranged as a Fantaisie ; the celebrated Bolero, " Ouvrez, Ouvrez," sung by Madame Stock- hausen, as a Rondo; Operatic Reminiscences, a Fantaisie, containing Airs from Bellini's Norma ; Hommage A Handel, a grand Duet for the pianoforte ; Men- delsohn's Overture to the Isles of Eingal, and his new Overture, entitled '' The Happy Voyage and The Calm of the Sea ;" two new songs, composed by Balfe, Dear England, thou art mine again," and " They told me thou hadst slighted me ;" Donizetti's last new grand Opera, " Lucia de Lammermoor," as per- formed with the most brilliant success at the Theatre San Carlos, Naples, con- taining eight Arias and two Duets. New Harp and Pianoforfe Music, by Boclisa. — M& ri and Lavenu's Musical Subscription Library, 28, New Bond- street. WHAT FAIRY- LIKE MUSIC ?— QUADRILLES by WEIP- PERT, containing the following highly popular Melodies:—" What gives Life to Love ;" " O open the Door ;" " Awake ! awake ! Mine own T » ove •*' Joy ! joy ! joy !" The favourite Air of the Keel- row as a Finale, and the cele- brated Duetto " What Fairy- like Music" as a Waltz.-- Popularity has never been more deservedly bestowed than on these delightful Quadrilles, for, whether we look to the beauty of their melodies, their richness in imagination, or the vigour and animation of the adaptation, the author has never been surpassed. Published by KEITH, PROWSE, and Co., City Royal Musical Repository, 48, Cheapside, where may he found every variety of Accordions, from 8s. to 15 guineas. EW MUSIC published by R. MILLS ( late BirchaU and Co.), at his Original Musical Circulating Library, 140, New Bond- street.— For the Harp, by Bochsa, " Ma Norinandie," romance Francaise, 2s. 6d.; Marche Golgondoise, 2s. 6d.; three Airs in " I Puritani," 3s.; Grand March in " I Pu- ritani," 3s. Duets for the Harp and Pianoforte, with Accompaniments, ad lib., by Bochsa, Nos. I., n., and IV. of six Italian Airs, viz., No. I., " Come lieto a Suesto seno," sung by Signor Ivanoff. No. II., " Ah ! quando in regio," sung by fadame Pasta. No. IV., " Che accenti; Ah iin&!" sung by Signor Ivanoff. Airs in " I Puritani," in two books, each 8s. Also, a variety of new Italian Songs, Duets, & c., by Bellini, Donizetti, Mercadante, Pacini, Rossini, Vaccai, & c. & c. B~ " RITISHTINSTITUTION, PALL MALL.— The GALLERY for the EXHIBITION and SALE of the WORKS of BRITISH ARTISTS, is OPEN DAILY, from Ten in the morning till Five in the evening. Admission, Is. Catalogue, Is. WILLIAM BARNARD. Keeper. 1" RISH POPLINS, ( fec.— GRIFFfTHSlmd CRICK ( late Robarts and Plowman), Silk Mercers to the Royal Family, beg to acquaint the No- bility and Gentry they have just imported a great variety of the above much ad- mired and fashionable article, both figured and plain, in every shade of colour, which, in addition to their extensive assortment of Velvets, French and British Merinos, Australians, Silks, and Shawls of every description adapted to the season, are now on show at their Warerooms, 1, Chandos- street, Covent- garden. SCOTCH MARMALADE, SHORT- BREAD, BUNS, < fcc.— T. LITTLEJOHN and SON, of Leifh street, Edinburgh, beg most respect- fully to announce, that they have opened a Shop in King William- street, City ( opposite Nicholas- lane), where a supply of the above Articles may always be had fresh, and of very superior quality. Also Cottage Bread, and every variety of Rusks, Biscuits, Pastry, Confectionery, Soups, Patties, & c. Soda, Magnesia, Champagne, and Brandy Waters. Agents for Baildon's celebrated Kali Water. Bride and Birth- day Cakes, plain and ornamented. ELKINGTON'S PATENT PANTOSCOPIC SPECTACLES- Having obtained the patronage of the most eminent of the Faculty, to- gether with the flattering testimony of numerous individuals who have proved their superiority, the Patentee has great confidence in recommending them to the notice of all persons who require the aid of spectacles, whether for long or short sight, feeling assured that in all instances ( and particularly in the more difficult cases, where those made on the common principle have failed) the Pantoscopic Spectacles ( skilfully applied) will be found to render full and satisfactory assistance. Establishment, ll, Berner's- street, Oxford- street. W. H. TAYLOR, Agent. NEW PERFUMES.— J. and E. ATKINSON beg respectfully to inform the Nobility and Gentry that they have now received their New STOCK of PERFUMERY from Nice and Grasse, made expressly for their esta- blishment. It consists of Essence of Cedrat, Verveine, Violet Marechale, Jas- min, Tubereuse, Orange, Heliotrope, Rezeda, & c. Huiles and Pommades of si- milar fragrance. Flowers, various, for sachets. The season of 1835 having been unusually favourable, they are of a very superior quality. They have also re- ceived from Lubin, Houbigant, Gervais, & c., of Paris, all the New Perfumes to the present period. They beg to recommend a variety of New Perfumes of their own distillation, samples of which are always kept open for inspection.— N. B. Ge- nuine Naples Soap, Eau de Cologne, Arquebusade, & c.; Windsor, Almond, Otto of Rose, Camphor, Musk, and all other Fancy Soaps made on the basement of their extensive Premises. Lavender, Rose, Elder, and all other distilled Waters. Brushes, Combs, & c. from the best makers, and all other articles in Perfumery, for exportation or home consumption, at reasonable prices.— N. B. Great allowance is made for exportation.— Perfumery Warehouse, 24, Old Bond- street, Feb. 1st. THE TEETH.— GREIG THOMSON, Surgeon- Dentist, 25, New Bond Street, begs to call the attention of the public to the improvement he has recently made in gold stopping, for filling decayed teeth. The advantages arising from this improvement are, that it admits of the cavity being filled with- out pain, effectually arrests the progress of decay, and resembles the teeth in point of colour, much more than any other invention now in use. Gold, from its being the only ductile metal that can resist the action of the acids of the mouth, has long been deservedly considered the only material with which decayed teeth can be filled with any certainty of a permanently beneficial result, this fact must be evident to those who have had the misfortune to have their teeth filled with any of those cements to which so many attractive names are given, and to which so many miracles have been attributed; these cements being amalgams of mercury with silver, tin, or lead, are quickly acted upon by the acids of the mouth, which, in a short tme, convert the tooth and the stoppiug into one black mass, and ultimately dissolve both ; in addition to this evil tne deleterious effects of mercury upon the mouth are too well known to require further comment. G. Thomson continues to perform all the operations of Dental Surgery, and to fix natural and artificial teeth . on the most improved principles combined with the utmost moderation of terms. T T E R N S.— Ci E R M A N PA lT Ladies are most respectfully invited to inspect the splend id and unrivalled Assortment of GERMAN DESIGNS, just imported, at HART'S REPOSITORY, 33, New Boa4- street. Also a most extensive variety of every kind of FANCY NEEDLE- WORK, with German and English Materials of e' en- description. N. B. ZEPHYR WOOL of the most brilliant colours. LASSICAL CHAMBER CONCERTS.— Inconsequence of the great and increasing approbation bestowed on these Concert.-, Messrs. MORI, WATTS, MORALT, and LlNDLEY, incompliance with the wishes of numerous Subscribers, have the honour to announce a SECOND SERIES, to take place at WILLIS'S ROOMS, on the THURSDAY EVENINGS of Feb. 25, March 3 and 10. Instrumental Peformers— Messrs. Mori, Watts. MWralt, Lindley, aud Dragonetti, and Madame Dulcken. Vocal Peformers— Mrs. A. Shaw, Mrs. Seguin, and Mr. Balfe. Programme— Quintet in C, Op. . 5, Onslow; Aria, Mozart; Quartet, No. 3, Beethoven; Aria, Winter; Trio, Handel; Quintet ( piano obligatojSophr; Scena, Mozart; Quartet, Haydn ; Air, Mozart; Ottetto, Mendelssohn.— Transfer- able Subscription Tickets, One Guinea each, and S& gle Tickets, 10s. 6d. each, to be had of Mori and Lavenu, 28, New B'a d Retis, Royal Exchange. PRIVATE " TUTOR.— A Married CLEUGYM AX, for some years Tutor to a Nobleman, and subsequently receiving Six Pupils into his House, a moderate distance from London, would be glad to fill a VACANCY with a GENTLEMAN'S SON, whose education or healtjfmay require more than com- mon attention.— Letters addressed to the Rev. J. C.* C , to tne care of Mr. Searle, Bookbinder, 77, Lower Grosvenor- street, near Bond- street, London, will b, e for- ward ed to him in the Country. O NOBLEMEN, or LANDED PROPRIETORS.— A Gentle- man, residing in a south midland county, who is sole Agent to a consider- able landed property, wishes to add another AGEN£>' to the one he now holds. He will be able to produce from his present employer, and other persons of the highest respectability, the most satisfactory testimonials of his integrity, ability, and competency for such a situation.— Applications lo R. B., 36, Coleman- street, London. ANTED, an acting PARTNER, in an enterprize in America, of the highest prospects, connected with the acquisition and SALE of LAND, Surveying it, the cutting of Mahogany and Logwood, and Tropical Agri- culture. Any Gentleman desirous of emigrating, with J6j3,000 or more, at imme- diate disposal, and requiring information on the subject, may apply by letter, post paid, addressed to A. B., to the care of Mr. Back, Solicitor, Verulam buildings, Gray's Inn. __ T' HE great Superiority ofMILES and EDWARDS'S CHINTZES over the common imitations now selling by upholsterers, & c., was never more apparent than at the present time. 3f. and E. beg to inform the Nobility and Gentry that for the approaching Season their Designs will be found to surpass any of their former productions, and that they can be seen only at their W are- rooms, No. 134, Oxford- street, near Holies- street. M. and E. are reluctantly compelled to state they have not the j> Lghtest connexion with another house assuming their name. ™ AXMINSTER CARPETS.— LA?, WORTH and RILEY, Ma- nufacturers to the King and H. R. H. t! je Duchess of Kent, beg to acquaint the Nobility and Gentry that they have mad* arrangements to manufacture this Article of superior fabric, which can be made to any design, form, or dimensions. An exclusive assortment of the Royal Velvet, Edinburgh, Saxony, and Brussels Carpets, of the first qualities, with'every ether description of Carpeting.— Ware- house, 19 and 20. Old Bond- street. C1REAT BARGAINS in LINEN- DRAPERY, SILK MER- Jf CERY, HOSIERY, & c.— WILSON and SWALE, 9 and 10, Hanway- street, Oxford- street, respectfully beg to inform the Nobility, Gentry, and their numerous Friends they are SELLING OFF the whole of their present valuable STOCK at very reduced prices, their Premises undergoing extensive alterations. The Stock consists of damask and diaper Table Lin ms and Napkins, Scotch Hol- and, Irish and Russia Sheetings, and Household Linen of every description, Indian and British Muslins, & c.— W. and S. avail themselves of this opportunity to return their thanks for the liberal support they have for many years received, and state when the alterations are completed, they will submit an entirely new and fashion- able assortment of Goods for the Spring, which they mean to offer on the most rea- sonable terms. N. B. A variety of Evening Drestes considerably under the usual prices. URNITURE, UPHOLSTERY, BEDDING.— WALKER and Co., 109, High Holborn, near Day and Martin's, respectfully solicit atten- tion to their splendid STOCK, from which persons furnishing may be supplied with every requisite ; every Article is warranted. Window Curtains fixed in the newest style. Satin stripe Tabarets, 3s. 8d. a- yd,; Damasks, 2s. a- yd.; Chintzes and Moreens in great variety; Loo Tables from 41.; Card do., from 50s.; Side- boards, from 51.; Dining Tables, from 31; Mahoganv Chairs, from 14s. ; Rose- wood, from 25s,; Cheffoniers, from 31. ; Sofas and Couches, from 31.; Window Curtains, from 21.; Four- post Bed Furnitures, from 51. ; Tent ditto, from 25s.; Lounging Chairs from 42s.; Marble Washstands, from 50s.; Mahogany and Painted ditto, from 7s.; Mahogany and Painted Drawers, from 30s. ; Pembroke Tables, from 25s.; Chimney Glasses, Work Tables, Music Stands and Stools, Floor Cloths, & c., & c. SJTADDLERY, HARNESS, < fcc. < fec.— The largest Assortment of Saddlery, Harness, Horse- clothing, Stable Utensils, & c., in London, is constantly on Sale, at the HORSE BAZAAR, KING STREET, PORTMAN- SQUARE ; the whole being Manufactured on the Premises, the Proprietor is enabled to gurantee the workmanship and materials of every article.— Prices at 20 per cent, less than the usual trade charges. LE, STOUTrCIDER, & c.— FIELD, WARDELL, and Co. ( late W. G. Field and Co.), beg to acquaint their Friends and the Public, that their genuine BURTON, EDINBURGH, and PRESTONPANS Ales, Pale Ale as prepared for India, Dorchester Beer, London and Dublin Brown Stout, and Cider and Perry, are in fine order for use, and a* 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 prepared for India, in casks of 18 gallons.— 22, Henrietta- street, Covent- garden. s FILTER TEA SERVICES.— a. B. SAVORY and SONS have the pleasure to submit the prices of the two following PATTERNS of SILVER TEA and COFFEE SERVICES which have been generally approved. The form of either is new and elegant, and the workmanship such as no cost can excel. COTTAGE PATTERN. £ 12 0 6 16 4 10 15 0 Tea Pot ( strong) 23| Sugar Basin, gilt 12| Cream Ewer, gilt 8J CoffeePot 29 Complete ^ 38 6 0 * Complete ^ 39 12 6 A. B. SAVORY and SONS, Goldsmiths, 14, Cornhill, London, opposite the Bank of England. MELON PATTERN. oz. £ s. d. Tea Pot ( strong) 24 12 6 0 Sugar Basin ... 12 7 2 0 Cream Ewer 8| 4 18 0 CoffeePot.., 29 15 6 6 HOLBORN LEVEL COMPANY, to be incorporated by Act of Parliament, for which a Petition has been presented. Capital, vi350,000, in Shares of J^ 25 each. Deposit £ 1 per Share. __ The object of this Company is to construct a level Litfe of Road, by means of a Viaduct, from Hatton- garden to the upper part of Skinner- street, bv which the steep and dangerous ascent and descent at the Hill may be avoided. The expense of the undertaking, and the probable revenue to be derived have been carefully estimated, and shows a very profitable return on the required capital. A Model may be seen, and Prospectuses obtained at the Company's Offices, 39, Lothburv- ^ ASTERN COUNTIES RAILWAY; 7rbm~ London to Romford, A Chelmsford, Colchester, Ipswich, Norwich, and Yarmouth; the only line both to Norwich and Yarmouth. Capital, 1,500,000, in Shares of ^ 25 each ; deposit £\.— The Petition for leave to bring in the Bill for this Railway has been p/ esented to the House of Commons and referred to Committee. Persons intending to make application for the residue* of Shares offered to the public by the resolutions of the Provisional CoinmittcHf the 4th of February, should do so immediately, as the list must now be soon closed. Holders of deposit receipts mar exchange the same for scrip certificates on ap- plying at the Office, and signing " the usual Parliamentar » engagement and Sub- scribers' agreement. Agents in the Country.— Romford, Wasey Sterry, Esq.; Chelmsford, Messrs. Copland and Sons; Colchester, Wm. Sparling, Esq.; Brentwood, Samuel T. Hesingham, Esq.; Coggeshall, John Mayhew, Esq.; Ipswich, John Chevalier Cobbold, ESQ.; Eye, Thomas French, Esq.; Harleston, Messrs. Carthew and Son; Norwich, Messrs. Sewell, Blake, Keith; and Blake; Yarmouth, Messrs. Savers and Wood; Manchester, Messrs. Thomas Leeds and Son ; Wimborne, Isaac Fryer, Esq. J. C. ROBERTSON, Sec. Office, 18, Austin- friars, Feb. 1836. DAVIES'S FINE WAX CANDLE6, 1*. 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. perll21bs.; 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. 6d. per gallon ; Lamp Oil, 4s.— For Cash, at DAVIES'S Old Established Warehouse, 63, St, Martin's- lane ( opposite New Slaughter's Coffee- house), Charing- cross. Just published, THE QUARTERLY REVIEW, NO. ex. Contents:— I. The POPES of the 16th and 17th Centuries, n. PROVINCIAL DIALECTS of ENGLAND. IH. RCEDERER on the TENTH of AUGUST. IV. LORD BROUGHAM on NATURAL THEOLOGY. V. REVOLUTION of JULY— Mr. SECRETARY BONNELLIER. VI. The ORIGINAL— CLUBS and DINNERS in LONDON. VII. AGASSIZ on FOSSIL FISH. VIII. JOANNA BAILLIE'S DRAMAS. IX. A TWELVEMONTH S CAMPAIGN with ZUMALACARREGTTI. X. CHAPTERS of CONTEMPORARY HISTORY— The PORTFOLIO. ' NOTE on WHEWELL'S " NEWTON and FLAMSTEED." John Murray, Albemarle- street. TO THE SUBSCRIBERS OF THE ORIGINAL PLATES OF HOGARTH. On the 18th inst. was published, No. 17, price only 5s., of THE WORKS OF H O G A R T H, the Plates perfectly restored, and beautifully printed. Contents of No. 17 :— RAKE'S PROGRESS, Plate 4. The DISTRESSED POET; and Fourth Sheet of Description. On the 28th will be published No. 18. Contents:— The POOL of BE THESDA. The COMPANY of UNDERTAKERS. The LECTURE. A Number is published once a fortnight, and this great work will be completed in 52 Numbers. * » * Valuable Impressions of the Plates can still be procured by new Subscribers. London : Baldwin and Cradock, Paternoster- row, Proprietors of Hogarth's Original Plates, THE SECOND VOLUME OF SOUTHEY'S COWPER. Just published, the Second Volume, and the Work to be continued Monthly until completed, in Five Shilling Volumes, of the size and appearance of the Edi- tions of Scott, Byron, Edgeworth, Crabbe, & c. COWPER'S WORKS, including his TRANSLATIONS and CORRESPONDENCE, carefully revised, collated, and edited Bv ROBERT SOUTHEY, Esq., LL. D., Poet Laureate, & c. The Second Volume contains a further portion of the LIFE of COWPER,. illustrated with a superbly engraved Frontispiece, by Goodyear, of Fop's Monu- ment at Weston Underwood, with full- length Portraits introduced of the late Sir John and Lady Throckmorton. A Vignette View of Cowper's House, at Olney, richly engraved by Goodall. A full length Portrait of Mrs. Unwin, from a fin © original by Davis, in the possession of John Unwin, Esq., engraved by H. Robin- son ; and a Profile Likeness of Lady Hesketh, from an original in the family of Sir Thomas Hesketh. Volume I. contains the first portion of the LIFE of the POET, by the EDITOR- illustrated with a richly- engraved Portrait of COWPER by Stocks, an exquisite Vignette by Goodall, and a Portrait of the Poet's Mother, beautifully engraved by H. Robinson. The Drawings to illustrate this Edition are by William Harvey, Esq., the Por- traits being faithfully copied from the best Originals, and the Scenery taken on the spot- %* The Publishers have great pleasure in stating that this Work will contain much more original matter than was expected when the Edition was begun. The admirers of Cow per will not then regret a little delay, when they find the time has been so profitably employed upon ( what the Publishers do not hesitate ' to call) THE ONLY EDITION OF THE GREAT POET WORTHY OF HIS FAME ; Messrs. B. and C. hope the Subscribers will estimate their forbearance, in not precipitately hurrying on the Work, though other editions, professing the same object, have been hastily brought out, merely to secure immediate sale. The temporary inconvenience of a few weeks' delay becomes immaterial in com- parison with the ultimate advantage— the diligent finish and completeness they are anxious to give to their Edition of Cowper. The Third Volume, containing the remainder of the Life, and a Portion of the Correspondence, will be published on the 1st of April. London: Baldwin and Cradock, Paternoster- row. E BTOTT T'S CO MP LE 1 E PEERAGE. Improved by W. COURTHOPE, Esq. A New Edition ( being the 21st) will be published in a few days, including the NEW PEERS, with their Arms. , Printing for ltivingtons, Longman and Co., Baldwin and Co., and other Pro- prietors. Lately published, by the same Editor, DEBRETT'S BARONETAGE of ENGLAND, price 11. 5s. SIR EGERTON BltYDGES' EDITION OF MILTON. """"' Now completed, in 6 vols, foolscap 8vo., exquisitely illustrated by Turner, and richly bound, price 30s. THE LIFE and POEMS of MILTON, with Standard Critical and Historical Notes, original and selected, by Sir EGERTON BRYDGES, Bart. " We Tecommend this work, with an unstretched conscience, as the best, a well as the prettiest, that could adorn the boudoir and drawing room table."— Athenaeum. " It would be scarcely possible to produce a more beautiful series of volumes." — Examiner. " Here, indeed, is an appropriate Christmas present! Six magnificent volumes at a price daily squandered on the glittering ephmjera of the day."— Bell's Mess. Printed for John Macrone, St. James's- square. THE SAFETY CABRIOLETandTWO- WHEEL CARRIAGE COMPANY. Capital, ^ 100,000, in 5,000 Shares of £ 20 each. Deposit, £ 2 per Share. Tnis Company has been formed principally for the purpose of introducing a Patent Street- Cab, which is so constructed as to insure perfect security against upsetting— comfoit and absolute safety to the passengers— access as easy as that of a sedan- chair— lightness of draught— great smoothness of motion, and the total absence of that injurious pressure upon the horse in ascending and descending hills common to all other two- wheel carriages. These striking advantages are obtained by bringing the centre of gravity below the centre of the wheel, and by the employment of very high wheels, while at the same time the floor of the car- riage is within ten inches of the ground. The great superiority of this carriage, and the security afforded by the patent, cannot fail to render the returns to the shareholder unusually large, while the public will have the advantage of those rules and regulations to ensure the good conduct of drivers, which a Company alone appear to have the power to enforce. Two- fifths of the shares are taken by the patentee's friends, and the remaining Shares will be allotted immediately by the Directors. Applications for the remaining Shares to be made by letter, post- paid, at the London and Westminster Bank and all its branches; Messrs. Attwood, Spooner, and Co., Bankers, Birmingham; Messrs. Heming and Needham, Bankers, Hinckley; and at the Offices of the Company, No. 23, Leicester- square, where prospectus and any further information may be obtained from Mr. John Chapman, the Secretary to the Company^ AY TTE^ rMI^ TlN G, STREAMING, and AGRICULTURAL COMPANY. Capital ^' 100,000, divided into 5,000 Shares of ^' 20 each. Deposit £ 1 per Share. TRUSTEES. John Wright, Es< i., and Edmund F. Green, Esq. COMMITTEE OF MANAGEMENT. E. F. Green, Esq. I William Wildey, Esq. J. B. Rayner, Esq. GeorgeiKeele, Esq. P. Anichini, Esq. | With power to add to their number. Bankers— Messrs. Stone, Martins, Stones, and Messrs. Wright and Co. Solicitors— Nind and Cotterell. The objects for which this Company is formed are, to work the Mines of Cop- per, Gold, Silver, or other Metals in the Island of St. Domingo, and to carry on Streaming Works on the Banks of the Rivers which flow through the mining districts, and also to cultivate Coffee, Cotton, Tobacco, Sugar, Indigo, & c. The Committee do not intend to follow the example of those persons who have directed the affairs of several Foreign Mining Companies, by expending large sums of money before it was ascertained where would be the" most fit place to commence operations. They intend to send proper experienced persons to make selection frpju^ Ke various Mines included in the general grant on which they are actina-. / ^ C^ r , x , - - , v--* Arrangements are made for the Cultivation of some of the best Pli the Island of St. Domingo. To accomplish these points, the Committee do not intend to call f( £ 1 per Share, payable in three months, in addition to the first dejl soon as a report is obtained from the Island, a Meeting of the Shar] be called, and the Committee will then be guided by the Resolution: be entered into at that Meeting on all matters in reference to the C< the meantime the Subscribers will not be called upon to sign any Deeu Two thousand Shares are already subscribed for. Applications for mainder may be made, if by letter, post paid, addressed to the Committee,• f^ ww- Bankers', the Solicitors', or at the temporary Offices of the Companv, No. 2, Copthall Chambers ; at which places Prospectuses may be had, detailing various matters relating to the Company. than ; and so eh may • oo; 584 JOHN BULL. February 28, TUESDAY'S GAZETTE. BANKRUPTS. G. COOPER, Barbican, victualler. Att. Smith, King's Arras- yards, Coleman- gtreet— P. F. LAPORTE, Havmarket, bookseller. Att. Smllthorpe, South- square, Gray's Inn— J. HAMILTON, Kine- street, St. James's, wine merchant. Att. Temple, Furnival's Inn— T. BROWN, Watling- street, merchant. Att. Hudson, Buckleisbnry— J. ALSOP, Glossop, Derbyshire, shopkeeper. Atts. Brundrett and Co., Inner Temple; Thomson, Oldham— E. L. IRELAND, Birmingham, factor. Atts Swaine and Co. Frederick's- plaee, Old Jury; Whately, Birmingham— J. HADLEY, Cradley, Worcestershire, crocer. A tts. Gough, East- street, Red Lion- square ; Fellowes, jun., Dudley— C. JOHNSON, Northwich, Chester, boot dealer. Atts. Taylor and Co., Bedford- row; Holland, Northwich— J. COLLING, jun., Newcastle- upon- Tyne, hatter. Atts. Watson, Newcastle upon- Tyne: Preston, Sandhill, Newcastle- upon- Tyne ; Shield and Co., Poultry, London— R. . MILLER, Newcastle- upon- Tyne, watchmaker. Atts. Chartres, Neweastle- apon- Tyne; Shield and Co., Poultry, London. FRIDAY'S GAZETTE. Crown Office, Feb. 19.— Members returned to serve in thispresent Parliament.— Borough of Stoke- upon- Trent— Lieutenant- Colonel the Hon. George Anson, in the room of Richard Edensor Heathcote, Esq., who has accepted the Chiltern Hundreds. Borough of Malton— John Walbanke Childers, of Cantley, in the county, of York, Esq., in the room of the Right Hon. Sir Christopher Pepys, now Baron Cottenham. Borough of Cokermouth— Edward Horsman, of the city of Edinburgh, Esq., in the room of Fretchville Lawson Ballantine Dykes, Esq., who has accepted the Chiltern Hundreds. DECLARATION OF INSOLVENCY. J. WORRALL, Ratcllff Highway, eatinghouse keeper. BANKRUPTS. J. GOLDWORTHY, Great St. Helen's, Bishopsgate- street, coal merchant. Att. Dods, Northumberland- street, Strand— W. HODGKINSON, . Margaret street, Cavendish- square, furniture printer. Att. Leigh, George- street, Mansion House — G. COXE, Dark House lane, Lower Thames- street, victualler. Att. Gude, jun., George- yard, Lombard- street— M. CATLIX, Blackman- street, Southwark, horse dealer. Att. Ware, Blackman- street, Southwark— C. KEEXAN, Berwick- upon- Tweed, linendraper. Att. Davidson, Lawrence- lane, Cheapside— E. WIL- SON, Lower Thames- street, cheesemonger. Att. Dods, Northumberland- street, Strand— F. RAMBLE, Gracechurch- street, provision merchant. Att. Miller, Ely- place, Holborn— E. M. and A. M. CADDICK, Manor Hall, Little Chelsea, boardina- hoiise keepers. Att. Lane, Argyle- street, Regent- street— G. SAFFERY, Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, scrivener. Atts. Dvneley and Co., Field- court, Gray's Inn, London ; Roades, Market Rasen— J. TETLOW, Manchester, house painter. Atts. Hampton, Manchester; Adlington and Co., Bedford row, London — J. UGLOW, Cheltenham, music seller. Atts. Packwood, Cheltenham ; Shir- reff, Lincoln's Inn- fields, London— T. C. WEBB, Ilminster, Somersetshire, tea dealer. Atts. Cary and Co., Albion Chambers, Bristol; Adlington and Co., Bed ford- row, London. At the head of the periodical literature of England we, of course, place Fraser's Magazine— it being, sooth to say, the very place where Regina of right belongs, and in the maintenance of her proper station and dignity we take an especial interest. Often has it been said and sung " how hard to clime the steep where Fame's proud temple shines afar!"— but Regina made but one bolt of it, and there she stood— and there shall stand— to lead English literature and politics to the day of doom— unless, which we cannot expect from her decorum and innate morality, she commit some fatal faux- pas. The number for this month is sterling— no mine ever turned up a richer vein of ore than Regina presents through her pages in this stirring month. We are delighted to perceive from the advertisements that the publisher has reprinted the Januarv number to enable the new subscribers to com- mence the volume which began with the year 1836. THE LAST OF THE ROMANS.— It would not be easy to discover, in the whole range of ancient or of modern histoiy, a time or a subject embracing nobler materials for the historical novel, than the final struggle for liberty in Rome, the miraculous revolution of Rienzi. Mr. Bulwer's portraiture of him— carried through the rapid but absorbing incidents of his extraordinary career with admirable con- sistency— brings the man before us in his living lineaments. The plot includes a variety of striking figures and actions— of memorable events and remarkable persons, which, without doing any violence to strict chronological accuracy, are rendered subservient to the main action. The work is conceived and accomplished with great skill, and will, it must be admitted, add even to Mr. Bulwer's brilliant reputation. CLASSICAL CHAMBER CONCERTS.— The musical world will be de ligh'ed to learn that it is the intention of Messrs. Mori, Watts, Moralt, and Lindley, to give a second series of these excellent Con- certs. The first of the new series is to take place on Thursday even- next, at Willis's rooms, King- street, St. James's. The programme comprises the works of Beethoven, Mozart, Haydn, Handel, Men- delssohn, Spohr, Onslow, ( fee. ( fee. It will thus be seen that the prin- ciple which secured the most complete success to the first series, is to be acted upon in the new. The vocalists are, Mrs. Alfred Shaw, Mrs. E. Seguin, and Mr. Balfe. It is to be sincerely hoped that these truly classical re- unions will meet with encouragement commen- surate with their claims on the public support. The Earl Howe will preside at the approaching Anniversary Festi- val of the Royal Society of Muscians, being the ninety- eighth. MR. WEST'S NEW WORKS— Intellectual Toys, and Key to the Study of Astronomy.— We find the author has been honouredby the Queen's approval and patronage of the above little works. This we are not surprised at, knowing as we do, the great desire manifested at all times by her Majesty for the cultivation of the youthful mind and spread of education. We have no doubt Mr. West will meet the reward he so justly merits, by an extensive sale among the nollility and gentry for the junior classes. [ ADVERTISEMENT.]— Are the consciences of the Doctors clear? Have they no doubts? Many things are now doing, which never before were thought of. The Law has given ia monopoly to Doctors to treat us when sick. It considers them as incapable of doing wrong. Will they, will any one amongst them, lay their hands on their breast, and declare that they think themselves worthy of this great trust reposed in them ? They would shrink from such a declaration, and own their incapacity. Witness the examples of several in the same family earned off by inflammations, measles, small- pox, fevers, ( fee., and the miserable objects, the martyrs of chronic di- seases, who every where present themselves to us. Knowing ( as they certainly do) that tbe Hygeian treatment cures these diseases, and perfects the liumau body, and may be said to be infallible, are they not guilty of wilful and interested murder, by pursuing their old mistaken treatment? Certainly, unless their consciences are perfectly clear on this point, their are guilty of the worst of murders. Mankind will no longer be satisfied with their pretensions to a know- ledge which they are found not to possess.— British College of Health, Feb. 20th. NAPLES SOAP.— J. and E. Atkinson, perfumers, beg respectfully to recommend to gentlemen who use Naples Soap, a very choice article just imported, perfumed with the flowers of the rose, and will be sold at a very small advance on the usual prices. They have also some equally fine perfumed a l'Orange, au Cedrat, and various other perfumes. As Naples soap, when fine and genuine, is beyond com- parison the best of all articles for shaving, they can with confidence recommend that which they import, it being procured from the best mannfacturer in Naples, without limit to price.— N. B. Superior shaving brushes, warranted.— Perfumery warehouse, 24, Old Bond- street, February 1st. We seldom do notice any of the various articles advertised in our columns,- butit is with much satisfaction we can attest the singularly happy effects of Mrs. Vincent's Gowland's Lotion. In so versatile a climate as ours, where the four seasons not unfrequently revolve in the same day, it is most important that the skin' should be protected against its " injurious effects; and so many, otherwise beautiful countenances, as may be seen clothed in a coarse, harsh skin, and disfigured by eruptions and other imperfections, which would, by the nse of this lady's Lotion, become beautifully clear and transparent, and rendered impervious to future innovation, has induced us, con- trary to our mode, to make this particular mention of it— we should say, all who value a fine complexion and skin, will not fail to use it. To gentlemen, Vincent's Gowland's Lotion is also valuable for the ease it gives after shaving. To Messrs. Rowland and Son, 20, Hatton- garden, London :— " Gentlemen,— Justice requires me to transmit to you the following account, showing the great use of your Macassar Oil, so well known to the public. In the course of this year I was troubled with a long and lingering fever, which terminated in the total disappearance of the hair of my head ; I remained some time totally bald and not the least appearance of my hair returning, until, most fortunately for lire, a bottle of your valuable Oil was put in my hands by a friend; and, to my - utter astonishment, in less than a month my hair required cutting, so fast was the vegetation. I feel mueh satisfaction in having my hair ( one of the greatest ornaments of man) once more established to its natural strength, by your valuable composition. I am, Gentlemen, your obedient servant, " JAMES EXMOUTH BLACK. " Sierra Leone, Coast of Africa, 21st Sept., 1833." Rowland's Macassar Oil prevents hair from falling off, or turning grey; changes grey hair to its orininal colour; frees it from scurf and dandritt, and makes it beautifully soft and curly. Caution.— Ask for " Rowland's Macassar Oil.''— The lowest price is 3s. 6d., the next price price is 7s., 10s. 6d., and 21s. per bottle.— Impostors call their trash the genuine, offering it for sale under the lure of being cheap. PARLIAMENTARY ANALYSIS. HOUSE OF LORDS. MONDAY. A conference was held with the Commons on the manner of engrossing Bills before Parliament; and the Earl of SH AFTESB OB Y, who managed the conference oil the part- of the Lords, gave notice that he would shortly move that the subject be referred to a Select Committee. Lord WHARNCLIFFE presented two petitions complaining of agri- cultural distress; and postponed till Monday next his motion relative to the recently- appointed Magistrates for boroughs.— Adjourned. TUESDAY. Petitions were presented by the Earl of LIVERPOOL, praying an inquiry into thecauses of agricultural distress ; bv Earl FITZWILLIAM, for the equalization of duties on East and West India Sugar; and by Lord DENMAN, in favour of the claims of Mr. Buckingham.— Ad- journed to Thursday. THURSDAY. Lord WYNFORD moved for a Committee to inquire into the causes of the distressed state of agriculture, adopting for the terms of his motion the language of the Commons' resolution on that subject.-— Lord MELBOURNE said that he should not oppose the motion, but he begged to state that he could take no part in the management of the Committee, and that the Government could be no party to any measure which would propose to tamper with the currency, either by a greater issue of paper, or by depreciating the standard.— After some discussion the motion was agreed to, and the Committee ap- pointed. The Marquess of LONDONDERRY reverted to the case of 27 English- men who had been seized in Spain, and, contrary to the law of na- tions, sent on board ship. His Lordship gave notice that, on Friday, he should move for papers on the subject.— Lord MELBOURNE replied that he should not oDject to the production of the papers. FRIDAY. The Earl of RODEN explained that he had been obliged to return, to receive some verbal Corrections, a petition of which he had given notice from the Clergy of Tuam. The Marquess of LONDONDERRY then moved for the correspondence that had taken place between our Government and that of Madrid relative to the liberation of the twenty- seven Carlist officers so long imprisoned, and still remaining, in the castle ofCorunna.— The motion was agreed to ; and, after the appointment of a Select Committee on the proposed alteration in the mode of engrossing acts of Parliament, their Lordships adjourned till Monday. HOUSE OF COMMONS. MONDAY Mr. ROEBUCK moved for a copy of the instructions given to Lord Gosford and the other Commissioners for inquiring into the state of Lower Canada.— Sir GEORGE GREY objected to the motion. He felt a delicacy at furnishing such information here, when it had not yet been communicated to the Canadian House of Assembly.— Mr. ROEBUCK, after having, in a few words, attributed the conduct of the Legislature of Canada to the " moral influence" of Mr. O'Connell, consented to withdraw his motion. A motion by Mr. HUME, on the subject of surcharges on the assessed taxes, was withdrawn by that Gentleman, on an assurance from the Chancellor of the Exchequer that he had it in contemplation to bring forward a measure relating to those taxes. Mr. C. BULLER then presented a petition from Mr. Vigors, praying for inquiry into the late election proceedings in the county of Carlow. It was received, and ordered to be printed.— Adjourned. TUESDAY. Mr. HARDY on renewing the discussion upon the petitions relating to the Carlow election, contended that the transaction of Mr. O'Con- nell with Mr. Raphael was distinctly in its character a bargain, and he challenged the Attorney- General to say whether he had ever witnessed a more complete bargain than this appeared to be. [ The Hon. and Learned Member's speech, and motion, will be found reported at length in another part of the paper.]— Mr. O'CONNELL declared that the resolution was an exceedingly paltry one, and did not extend to the inquiry which he demanded. It was not, he said, the bribery of the Carlow election, but his increasing exertions to put down Toryism that constituted his real crime. He then entered into a long history of the state of Ireland under the Tories, and detailed the history of his connexion and proceedings with Mr. Raphael, and concluded by declaring that if he agreed to the Committee it would be in order to hear the evidence of Mr. Vigors, and to ascertain whether the allegations contained in his petition were or were not well founded.— Mr. WAIIBURTON moved, as an amendment, that the Committee proposed by Mr. Hardy should inquire into the manner in which the 2,0001. paid to Mr. O'Connell had actually been expended.— Mr. HARDY would not be thought responsible for the amendment, but disclaimed any wish to oppose it.— The motion was eventually carried, amended as proposed by Mr. Warburton; and the names, previously selected by conference by parties on each side of the House, were adopted. It was also arranged that Sir F. Pollock and Seijeant Wilde should be on the Committee, without a vote, but for the purpose of cross- examining the witnesses. Mr. Serjeant O'LOUGHLIN obtained leave to bring in the Munici- pal Corporations ( Ireland) Bill, Sir R. PEEL suggesting that the details of the measure be postponed till the second reading.— Some other motions were agreed to, and the House adjourned. WEDNESDAY. Mr. EWART moved the second reading of the Prisoners' Defence by Counsel Bill, stating that the grounds on which he had urged the Bill last Session induced him to press it forward this Session.— Sir E. WILMOT moved as an amendment, that the Bill be read a second time that day six months.— After some discussion, there was a divi- sion on it. The numbers were— for the second reading, 179; against it, 35; majority in its favour, 144.— It was then ordered to be referred to a Select Committe. Mr. POULTER obtained leave to bring in a Bill to prevent the use of threats and intimidation in the election of Members to serve in Par- liament. Mr. BLACKBURNE moved for a Select Committee to inquire into the circumstances attending the late election of the Municipal Council for Poole. His object was not only to set aside the election, but to prevent similar frauds.— After some discussion the - Hon. Member consented to withdraw his motion, upon which he presented the petition and gave notice that he would move for its consideration on Monday.— Sir F. POLLOCK having, in the course of the conversa- tion, expressed an intention not to take any further part in the question on the ground of his being professionally engaged in legal proceedings about to arise out of it, Mr. HUME reprobated such a determination, and Mr. C. W. WYNN spoke in justification of the delicacy of the Hon. Member for Huntingdon ( Sir F. Pollock). Returns of the sums issuedfor public works in Ireland were ordered to be laid before the House.— Adjourned. THURSDAY. Mr. WAKLEY presented a petition complaining that the proposed Charter for a Metropolitan University was to limit degrees to those educated in the London University and the King's College. This would only be creating another monopoly. Mr. OAKLEY condemned the principle of preparing the Charter in secret. It was a Star Chamber practice that ought to be abolished.— Mr. TOOKE said that there was considerable misapprehension on this subj ect. The powers granted by the Charter would not be limited to the two schools. The Examiners would have authority of including other schools. Lord MORPETH moved for leave to bring in a Bill to amend the law regarding the appointment, ( fee., of the constabulary force in Ireland. It was nearly similar to the measure proposed by him last Session on this subject. After an extended conversation, in which Sir R. PEEL, Sir R. BATESON, Mr. FINN, ( fee., took part, the motion was agreed to. Mr. WARD called attention to the report of last Session on the mode of taking the divisions of the House, and moved resolutions in some degree in accordance with its recommendations, to have clerks to note the names while the tellers were counting, ( fee. After an extended conversation, in the course of which Sir R. PEEL said he had no objection to the proposition by way of experiment, the reso- lutions were agreed to. Mr. SHEIL brought forward his motion respecting the Lay Asso ciation for the protection of Church property in Ireland, and, after entering into mmute details connected with the conduct of that As- sociation, moved for a Select Committee to inquire into certain par- ticulars of their conduct while endeavouring to enforce the payment of tithe.— Mr. Serjeant JACKSON and Mr. SHAW complained that the law had not been observed; that the Judges' authority had been set at naught, and that the Lay Association had only sought to protect the Clergy of Ireland, if not against conspiracy, at least against re- sistance, that had been connived at for five years.— Mr. Serjeant O'hovoaus, the CHANCELLOB of the EXCHESUEB, and Lord MOB- I PETH contended that they had obeyed the law, and followed the pre- cedents of their predecessors in office.— After an extended discussion the motion was conceded. Lord MORPETH, in the course of the evening, gave notice that, on the 25th inst., he would move for leave to bring in the Tithes ( Ireland) Bill. FRIDAY. The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER moved for a copy of th& Treasury minute, recording the recent resignation by Viscount Sidmouth of the pension enjoyed by his Lordship for his public ser- vices. The motion was agreed to amidst loud cheers. The Turnpike Roads Consolidation Bill was read a second time, and referred to a Select Committee. Lord DUDLEY STUART then rose to move for copies of the treaty of Constantinople, the treaty of Unkiar Skelessi, and the treaty of St » Petersburgh, distinguishing their dates; and also for copies of any correspondence between this Government and the Government of Russia relative to those treaties, and of any remonstrance against the conduct of the Russian Government in reference to her treatment of Poland. His Lordship spoke for nearly two hours and a half on almost every topic that could by possibility be mixed up with the general politics of Europe, and concluded by stating that, as a Whig, he felt ashamed of his party for their apathy to the alleged encroach- ments of Russia and the sufferings of Poland.— Mr. T. ATTWOOII seconded the motion.— Lord POLLINGTON having spoken for the motion and Mr. BARLOW HOY in refutation of the statements of Lord D. Stuart, Lord PALMERSTON addressed the House. The Noble Lord repeated his attachment to a specific policy, and ex- pressed his conviction that the peace of Europe would continue inviolate. He was himself willing to lay before theHouse acopy of the treaty of Unkiar Skelessi, but declined to produce the other docu- ments moved by Lord D. Stuart.— After an extended debate, the granting of the first two papers was adopted, and the motion as regarded the others was negatived.— Adjourned. NAVAL AND MILITARY. WAR OFFICE, Feb. 19, ( 1836. 13th Light Dragoons— Capt. H. Stones to be Major, by pur., vice Savage, who ret.; Lieut. T. T. Magan to be Capt., by pur., vice Jones; Cornet T. B. Jackson to be Lieut., by pur., vice Magan ; C. H. D. Donovan, Gent., to be Cornet, by pur., vice Jackson. 2d Foot— Capt. R. Carruthers to be Maj., by pur., vice Powell, prom, in the 40th Foot; Lieut. O. Robinson to be Capt., by pur., vice Carruthers Ens. S. W. Jephson, from the 58th Foot, to be Lieut., bv pur., vice Robinson. 7th Foot— Ens. F. Whittingham, from the 83d Foot, to lie Lieut., by pur., vice Beresford, prom. 9th Foot— W. D. Hilton, Gent., to be Ens., by pur., vice Carey, app. to the 83d Foot. 12th Foot— Ens. R. Hely, from the h.- p. of the 83d Foot, to be Ens., without pur. 39th Foot— Quarterm.- Seij. J. O'Brien, from the 89th Regt., to be Quarterm., vice Hale, dec. 40th Foot— Maj. T. Powell, from the 2d Regt., to be Lieut.- Col., by pur., vice Dickson. 58th Foot— Lieut. J. Guthrie, from the h.- p. of the ChasseursBrittaniques, To be Lieut., without pur., vice Pack, prom.; C. Dresing, Gent., to be Ens., by pur., vice Jephson, prom, in the2d Foot. 69th Foot— Staff Assist.- Surg. C. Flyter to be Assist.- Surg., vice Callender, dec. 75th Foot — Ens. J. Brabazon to be Lieut., by pur., vice Stewart, who ret. ; Gent. Cadet W. V. Guise, from the R. M. C., to be Ens., by pur., vice Brabazon. 77th Foot— J. S. Prendergast, Gent., to be Assist.. Surg., vice Munro, who resigns. 83d Foot— Ens. S. A. F. Cary, from the 9tli, to be Ens., vice Whittingham, prom, ill 7th Foot. Unattached— Brevet Maj. A. Mackenzie, from the Royal Newfound- land Veteran Companies, to be Maj. without pur.; Lieut G. De la Poer Beres- ford, from the 7th, to be Capt., by pur., vice H. Eccles, who rets. Brevet.— Lieut.- Col. J. Salinond, of the Hon. East India Company's Service, to have the rank of Col., in the East Indies only. Hospital Staff.— A. Stewart, Gent., to be Staff- Assist.- Surg., vi£ e Flyter, appointed to the 69th. Staff.— Paymaster C. Grimes, from a Recruitiug District, to be Paymaster of the Invalid Depot at Chatham, vice Cuyler. retired ; Capt. W. Castl'e ( Pavinaster of the 79th) to bo Paymaster of the Cavalry Depot at Maidstone ; Capt. H. B. Adams ( Paymaster of the 71st) to be Paymaster of a Recruiting District, vice Grimes, appointed to the Invalid Depot. Memoranda.— His Majesty has been graciously pleased to permit the 36th Regi- ment to bear on its colours and appointments, in addition to any other badges and devices heretofore granted to the regiment, the word " Orthes," in comme- moration of the distinguished conduct of th § regiment on that memorable occa- sion on the 27th of February. 1814. The half- pay of Lieut. T. Shiliingford, 1st Prov. Baft, of Militia, has been can- celled from the 19th inst., inclusive, he having accepted a commuted allowance for his half- pay. Surg. W. Newton, of the 17th Foot, has been allowed to retire from the service, receiving a commutation for his commission. OFFICE OF ORDNANCE, Feb. 1.5. Corps of Royal Engineers.— Second Capt. C. J. Selwyn to be Capt., vice Peake, deceased ; First Lieut. G. Du Plat to be Second Capt., vide Selwyn; Second Lieut. W. C. Hadden to be First Lieut., vice Du Plat. Commission signed by the Lord Lieutenant of the County of Wilts.— Wilts Regular Militia— W. C. Grove, Esq., to be Major, vice Vilett, promoted. NAVAL PROMOTIONS, APPOINTMENTS. & c. Lieutenants— E. Codd, to the Caledonia ; W. F. Blair, to the Excellent; E. G. Fanshawe, supernumerary of the Hastings, to the Magicienne. Mates— J. Fel- lowes. to the Melville ; W. C. Forsyth, late Mate of the Lapwing, to be Chief of the Sylvia; W. T. Stanbridge, of the Sylvia, to the Harpy. Clerk— J. Mallard, late of the Spartiate, in charge of the Terror. Midshipman— A. Gumming, to the Melville. First Class Volunteer- G. J. Lock, from the Scout, to the Britannia. College Volunteers— G. Kingsley and J. Moore, to the Melville. COAST GUARD.— Commanders— Morgan, of the Newhaven station, to be Capt.; D. Mague, to the Newhaven station, vice Morgan. PORTSMOUTH, Feb. 16.— Several additional labourers and artificers have been entered for duty at the dock- yard, and much bustle has been occasioned, owing to the several line- of- battle ships ordered to be brought forward for commission. Among the number are the Benbow, 74, and Pembroke, 74, which are both in dock. The Van- guard, 84, is also ready for hoisting her pendant, and still remains in the basin. The Caledonia, 120, flag- ship in the Mediterranean, is ordered home to be paid off, her time having expired. It is ru- moured that the Britannia, 120, at this port, will be forthwith de- spatched to supply her place, the latter being in every respect ready. Orders were received this morning from the Admiralty for the cor- vette Scout, 20, Commander CRAIGIE, to proceed into harbour im- mediately to be docked, and her defects made good. This ship has only arrived a few days from Sheerness, where she was fitted out, and now proves leaky. She came into harbour this afternoon, and as soon as repaired will proceed to her destination, the West African and Cape of Good Hope stations. His Majesty's Government, persuaded of the fitness of the Mission- aries to carry on the work of educating the West India Negroes, has offered to place 10,0001. at the disposal of the London Missionary So- ciety, to be employedin the education of the Negroes, on the sole con- dition that the additional sum of 5,0001. be subscribed by the friends of the Society for the same purpose. The Directors have gladly em- braced the proposal; and the Rev. Mr. ELLIS, Foreign Secretary of the London Missionary Society, has been on a journey to several of the principal towns of England, with a view to raise the sum required. IRISH TITHE— IRISH PROPERTY— IRISH LAW. — These headings form a pretty string of contradictions to formerly received notions. Irish Tithes were once property, they are no longer such; Irish pro- perty was once secure as Irish Tithes, it is likely very soon to be of as little worth ; Irish law was once that noble thing which controlled the KING in his own Courts, and which, happily for the people, was paramount of all other authority. Irish law, now, according to the London Correspondent of the Morning Register, is " the prerogative of the Irish Executive," that thing of MULGRAVE creation, heretofore unknown to British law or Constitution, and for which we hope he will be made to answer with his head— a very worthless atonement, we confess. The following is a specimen of this new construction of Irish Executive prerogative law. Ah! JEMMY the SECOND, your days are come upon us again. TITHES— THE ARMY. " Adjutant- General's Office, Dublin, 1st Feb., 1836. " GENERAL ORDER. " In consequence of a communication from Government, the Ge- neral Orders of 19th October, and 17th November, 1835, are cancelled, and officers commanding corps and detachments are desired to refer all applications for military assistance in the collection of tithes or rent, or in the serving of or executing civil process or decrees in original to the Military Secretary, in order that the Maior- General commanding may submit them for the consideration of Government before the aid required is granted; the usual duplicate to be trans- mitted at the same time to the Major- General of the district; The- officer in his application will state his opinion, grounded on his local knowledge and information, as to the extent of force it would be necessary to employ. " There are, however, two cases in which military assistance may be immediately granted for the above purposes without any previous reference; the one is, when the requisition for aid proceeds from the sheriff or sub- sheriff of the county; the other is, when any competent civil authority calls for military assistance to suppress a riot, which may have arisen in the execution of tithes or rent, or in the serving or executing of civil processes or decrees, and which riot is actually- going on at the time. " By command of the Major- General commanding, " GEORGE D'AGUILAR, " Deputy Adjutant- General." This is not only the law of the Executive prerogative, but it is mar « tial law, for it is issued by an Adjutant- General,— Warder, January 24. ' JOHN BULL. 31 Just published, a New Edition, fcap. 8vo , 6s. CONSOLATIONS in TRAVEL; or, the LAST DAYS PHILOSOPHER. By SIR HUMPHRY DAVY. By the same Author, SALJIONIA ; or. Days of FLY FISHIN'G. Third Edition, with plates and woodcuts, 12s. John Murray, Albemarle- street. of a Just published, a Fourth Edition, printed uniformly with the Family Library, in 3 vols. 12s. DEATH- BED SCENES, AND PASTORAL CONVERSATIONS. ... The above Work has been included in the list of publications recom- mended by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. John Murray, Albemarle- street. Just published. Sixth Edition, 3 vols. 8vo. 36s. VIEW of the STATE of EUROPE during the MIDDLE AGES. By HENRY HALLAM, Esq. John Murray, Albemarle- street. Just published, printed uniformly with the Bridgewater Treatises, 10s. 6d. 8vo. AN ARGUMENT to PROVE the TRUTH of the CHRIS- TIAN REVELATION. By the EARL of ROSSE. Joha Murray, Albemarle- street. THE V E R AC IT Y' 0 F THE B I B L E, Argued from undesigned Coincidences to be found in it, when compared in its several parts. By the Rev. J. J. BLUNT. I. VERACITY of the FIVE BOOKS of Moses. Post 8vo., 5s. 6d. II. VERACITY of the OLD TESTAMENT, from the conclusion of the Pen- tateuch to the opening of the Prophets. Post 8vo., 6s. 6d. III. VERACITY of the GOSPEL and ACTS. PostSvo., 5s. 6d. IV. PRINCIPLES for the PROPER UNDERSTANDING of the MOSAIC WRITINGS STATED and APPLIED. PostSvo., 6s. 6d. John Murray, Albeinarle- street. A M By the 8vo., 10s. 6d. NEW Volume, being the THIRD, of SERMONS. Rev. CHARLES WEBB LE BAS, M. A. Also, New Editions of Vols. I. and II. John Murray, Albemarle- street. In the Press, 3 vols. 8vo., with a Portrait, EMOIRS of ROBERT LORD CLIVE. Collected from the Family Papers, communicated by the Earl of Powis. By Major- General Sir JOHN MALCOLM, G. C. B., F. R. S., & c. John Murray, Albemarle- street. Nearly ready, 3 vols, post 8vo., ADESCRIPTION of that part of DEVONSHIRE bordering on the Tamar and the Tavy ; its Natural History, Manners, and Customs, Superstitions, Scenery, Antiquities, Biography of Eminent Persons, & c. & c. In a Series of Letters to R. Southey, Esq. By Mrs. BRAY, Author of " Travels in Normandy," " Fitz of Fitzford," " The Talba," and " DeFoix." John Murray, Albemarle- street. In a few days, 2 vols, post 8vo., ENGLAND in 1S35. Being a SERIES of LETTERS written to Friends in Germany during a Residence in London, and Excursions into the Provinces. By FREDERICK VON RAUMER. Translated from the German, by SARAH AUSTIN. John Murray, Albemarle- street. In the Press, beautifully printed in 1 vol. 8vo., with nearly 70 Plates and Maps, OUTLINES of a JOURNEY through ARABIA- PETRJJA, to MOUNT SINAI, and the excavated City of PETRA— the Edom of the Prophecies. By M. LEON DE LABORDE. ' The price of this book will be about one- twelfth of the original French work. John Murray, Albeinarle- street. Just published, 1 vol. 8vo., BUTTMAN'S LEX1LOGUS; or, a Critical Examination of the Meaning and Etymology of various Greek Words and Passages in Homer, Hesiod, and other Greek Writers. Translated from the German, and edited with Notes and copious Indexes. By the Rev. J. R. FISHLAKE, A. M., late Fellow of Wadham College, Oxford. John Murray, Albemarle- street. NEW WORKS, Just published by Longman, Rees, Orme, and Co., London. MEMOIRS of SIR william TF. MPLE. BytheRt. Hon. THOMAS PEREGRINE COURTENAY. 2 vols. 8vo. with Portrait, 28s. 2. NEW DRAMAS, bv Joanna Baillie. 3 vols. 8vo. 36s. 3. / MEMOIRS ot SIR HUMPHRY DAVY. By his Brother, John Davy, M. D. F. R. S. 2 vols. 8vo. with Portrait, 28s. 4. ANNUAL BIOGRAPHY and OBITUARY, , Vol. XX. for 1835- 6. Containing Memoirs of Charles Lamb, James Hogg, Charles Mathews, 4c. 8vo. 15s. 5. NATURAL EVIDENCE of a FUTURE LIFE. By F. C. Bakewell, Author of " Philosophical Conversations." 8vo. 12s. 6. THE DOCTOR, & c. Second Edition of Vols. I and II. 21s. *,* Vol. III. has been lately published, 10s 6d. A" P. T/ mV of the WRECK of His Majesty's Ship CHALLENGER, in May, 1835; With an Account of the subsequent Encampment of the Officers and Crew, during a period of Seven Weeks, on the South Coast of Chili. 8vo. with Plates, 10s. 6d. 8. SIR ]. E. SMITH'S ENGLISH FLORA. Continued by W. J. Hooker, LL. D.. and Rev. M. J. Berkeley, F. L. S. Ac. Vol. V. Part 2. 12s. This volume completes Smith's English Flora, and forms a Second Volume of Dr. Hooker's British Flora, completing also that Work. SELECTIONS from the EDINBURGH REVIEW; Comprising the best Articles in that Journal. With a Preliminary Dissertation and Notes. Edited by Maurice Cross, Esq., Secretary to the Belfast Historical Society. 4 large vols. 8ro., 31. 3s. 10. ENCYCLOPAEDIA of GEOGRAPHY. By Hugh Murray, F. R. S. E. With 82 Maps, and upwards of 1,000 other Engiavings on Wood. One thick vol 8vo. ( pp. 1567), 31. half- bound vellum. JNCR EASE of INCOME.— Tables for the Purchase of Life An- nuities, under the 59th Geo. in., cap. 128, the 10th Geo. IV., and 4th and 5th William IV., by which incomes may in many cases be nearly trebled, may be had on application at the Office, 5, Lancaster- place, Strand, from ten till three daily.— Letters must be post paid. PROVIDENT LIFE OFFICE, REGENT- STREET.— The Public are insufficiently acquainted with the vast difference which there is in the various Offices for Life Insurance. The professions of all are pretty nearly equal, but their disparity in performance is immense. Nearly all now offer a participation in profits, in terms more or less vague ; but as few " of them make any profits, uncertainty in that respect is of little consequence. A more material question is, When the claim arises, will it be paid ? or, if inconveniently large, will objections be sought for, and expensive litigations raised to defeat it? Or else, if, after the contributions have been continued for a long series of years, and the Policy is drawing towards a claim, if, from any accident or necessity, the an- nual payment be omitted on the precise day, will the Managers take advantage of the omission, refuse to renew, annul the policy, and seize on all the deposit as a clear gain? Recent disclosures have shown that the risk of the loss of contribu- tions in this way is greater than the risk insured against. It is therefore" important to know, that the security and convenience of the public in keeping up their policies are amply provided for in the following condi- tion, which is peculiar to the PROVIDENT LIFE OFFICE :—" If, from any accident or necessity, parties do not renew at the stated periods, they are entitled to repair the omission at any time within a year, on the payment of a fine of 10s. per cent., and proof of health." The profits in the Provident are divided at the end of every seven years among the members, in proportion to their respective contributions. These have gone on increasing since 1806 to 40 per cent. Only an eighteenth part of the profits is taken by the Shareholders, in consideration of their advance and guarantee of a Quarter of a Million sterling, and their exonera- tion of the other members from any loss. As the effect of these divisions of profits, in addition to the policies, may be better understood by a few examples, the following are extracted from the list of claims paid during tV Inst year :— No. of Number of Sums Additions or Amounts Policy. Payments. Insured. Profit. Paid. jt J! s. d. j€ s. d. 3,622 15 1.500 640 8 9 2,140 8 9 393 29 200 70 1 1 270 1 1 2,302 20 3,000 614 17 11 3,644 17 11 3,585 16 500 166 9 3 666 9 3 973 26 300 84 14 6 384 14 6 1,637 23 3,000 738 19 4 3,738 19 4 3.937 14 500 136 2 9 636 2 9 2,930 17 600 174 7 9 774 7 9 5,962 9 1,500 247 12 5 1,747 12 5 3,175 16 330 105 5 6 435 5 6 HISTORY. Just published, 8vo. 5s., Second Edition. CHAPTERS of COTEMPORARY By Sir JOHN WALSH, Bart. Contents :— 1. On the Administration of Lord Grey. 2. On the Composition and Character of the first Reformed Parliament. 3. On the Conservative Party. 4. The House of Lords. 5. On the Objects of the Movement or Radical Party. ( 5. On the State of Ireland. John Murray, Albemarle- street. THE WELLESLEY PAPERS. In a few days, 8vo., with a Portrait, THE DISPATCHES, MINUTES, and CORRESPONDENCE of the Most Noble the MARQUESS WELLESLEY, K. G., now first col- lected and arranged, and revised by his Lordship. John Murray, Albemarle- street. In a few days, 2 small vols., with a Map of the Seat of the War in Spain, and a Portrait of Zumalacarregui, APERSONAL ACCOUNT of some of the MOST STRIKING EVENTS of a TWELVE MONTHS' CAMPAIGN with ZULMACAR- REGUI, during the War in Navarre and the Basque Provinces. By an ENGLISH OFFICER in the Service of DON CARLOS. John Murray, Albemarle- street. In a few days, 1 vol. 8vo., with a Map of the New Discoveries in Northern Geo- graphy, and very numerous Illustrative Engravings from the Author's Drawings, JOURNAL of the ARCTIC LAND EXPEDITION, to the Mouth of the Great Fish River, and along the Shores of the Arctic Ocean, - in the Years 1833, 4, and 5. By Captain BACK, R. N., Commander of the Expedition. John Murray, Albemarle- street. In a few days will be published, post 8vo., with several illustrative Engravings, TOUR ROUND IRELAND ( through the Counties on the - u*. Sea- Coast), in the Autumn of 1835, in a Series of Letters to his Family, By JOHN BARROW, Esq., Author of " Excursions in the North of Europe," and a '* Visit to Iceland." John Murray, Albemarle- street. NEW BOOKS Nearly ready for Publication, by Mr. Murray. CAPTAIN' BACK'S JOURNAL of the ARCTIC LAND EXPEDITION of 1833- 4 and 1835. Plates and Maps. 1 vol. 8vo. n. JOHN BARROW, Esq. A TOUR round IRELAND, in 1835. With Illustrations, post 8vo. III. BERTHA'S JOURNAL, While on a VISIT to her UNCLE. Third Edition, 1 voL 12mo. IV. MRS. BRAY'S DESCRIPTION of the Borders of the TAMAR and TAVY, in Devonshire. 3 vols, ^ ost 8vo. M. LEON DE'LABORDE. MOUNT SINAI and PETRA ( the Edom of fhe Prophecies.). With Seventy Plates and Map, 8vo. VI. GENERAL SIR JOHN MALCOLM'S LIFE of the GREAT LORD CLIVE. 3 vols 8vo. VII. PROFESSOR VON RAUMER'S ENGLAND in 1835. In a Series ot Letters. Translated by Sarah Austin. 2 vols, post 8vo. VIH. RUSSIA'S PROGRESS and PRESENT POSITION. 8vo. IX. A XIIMONTH'S CAMPAIGN with ZUMALACARREGUI, and Narrative of the War in Navarre. By Captain Henningsen. 2 vols, post 8vo. Portrait and Map. LIEUTENANT SMYTH'S JOURNEY from LIMA to PARA, across the Andes and down the Amazon. Map and Plates. 8vo. XI. MARY SOMERVILLE. The CONNEXION of the PHYSICAL SCIENCES. Third Edition. Foolscap. XII. MARQUESS WELLESLEY, DISPATCHES anil CORRESPONDENCE of. With Portrait, Map, & c. 8vo. John Murray, Albemarie- street. BURGESS'S ESSENCE OF ANCHOVIES. Warehouse, 107, Strand, corner of the Savoy- steps, London. JOHN BURGESS and SON, being apposed of the numerous endeavours made by many persons to impose a spurious article for their make eel 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, J. B. and Son submit the following Can- tions; some are in appearance at first sight " The Genuine," but without anv 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 even'sentiment of respect toward the Public, and earnestly solicit them to inspect the labels previous to purchasing what they con- ceive to be of their make, which they hope will prevent many disappointment*.. BUP. GESS'S NEW SAUCE, for general purposes, having given such great satis- faction, continues to be prepared by them, and is recommended as a most useful and convenient Sauce— will keep good in all climates. Warehouse, No. 107, Strand ( corner of Savoy- steps), London. The original Fish Sauce Warehouse. T OPRESTPS DUKE OF GLOUCESTER'S SAUCE.— The JLi increasing demand for LOPRESTI'S SAUCES and EPICUREAN CON- DIMENTS, for improving appetite and promoting digestion, and for imparting those choice flavours and Wholesome piquancy, so much admired in superior cookery, has occasioned his REMOVAL to more central and commodious Pre- mises, 199, PICCADILLY, where maybe had, in addition to his genuine articles, Economical Receipts and Directions for Flavouring and Dressing Fish, Game, Poultry, Meat, ana various Dishes, & c., so as to economise both time and money in every family.— C. W. Lopresti was many years Chief Cook to his late Royal Highness the Duke of, Gloucester, under whose approbation " Lopresti's Cele- brated Sauces," & c. were first introduced, and C. W. L. confidently declares them to be without parallel, as regards quality and flavour, and real" economy and convenience, either for table or culinary use. — Venders liberally supplied. " MTIOR Coughs, Shortness of Breath, Asthmas, < fcc.— POWELL'S IP BALSAM of ANISEED, under the immediate Patronage of several of the most distinguished Nobility and Gentry in the Kingdom ; in Bottles at Is. l| d. and 2s. 3d. each.— This invaluable Medicine is universally acknowledged to be one of the most efficacious remedies ever discovered for alleviating the miseries incidental to the above distressing maladies. Prepared and sold by THOMAS POWELL, No. 5|, Blackfriars- road, London. Sold also, by appointment, by J. Sanger, 150, Oxford- street, opposite Bond- street; Johnson, 68, Cornhill; Prout, 236, Strand; and by all the respectable Chemists, and wholesale and retail Patent Medicine Venders in the United Kingdom ; and by Win. Jackson, New York. IMPORTANT CAUTION.— Observe that the words " Thomas Powell, Black- friars- road, London," are ( by permission of his Majesty's Honourable Commis- sioners of Stamps) engraved in white letters upon a red ground in tbe Government Stamp, pasted over the top of each bottle, without which it cannot be genuine. N. B. Mr. Powell has no connection with any other Cough Medicine. %* Removed from near the Magdalen to 5J, near the Bridge, three doors from he Rotunda. WEAK LEGS, KNEES, and ANKLES.— J. SPARKS, 28, Conduit- street, removed from Bond- street, begs to announce his newly- invented ELASTIC STOCKINGS, KNEE CAPS, ANKLE SOCKS, WRIST BANDS, BELTS, ROLLING BANDAGES, & c., which he has now brought to • the greatest perfection, for the cure and support of varicose or enlarged veins, weak, swollen, rheumatic, and gouty affections of the legs, knees, ankles, wrists, or in any part where from weakness in the part support may be necessary. They are strongly recommended by some of the most eminent of the Faculty for their I elasticity, lightness, and cleanliness, being washable, and not producing that fre- quently injurious heat so much complained of in most other bandages. J. S. also solicits particular attention to his improved spring crutches, trusses, artificial legs and hands, and every kind of instrument for the relief and cure of weakness or I deformity in the human frame. Printed particulars will be forwarded for taking measures, & c., by application, postpaid.— No. 28, Conduit- street, London. I> If any person who has insured his own life in this Office die by suicide, duelling, or the hands of justice, his Representatives may receive the full value which his policy bore on the day previous to the time of his death. ______ BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION AND FAIR SKIN.— MRS. VIN- CENT'S GOWLAND'S LOTION.— This truly innocent and delightful Lotion produces and sustains a beautiful complexion, and a clear, fair, soft skin. It realizes a delicate white neck, hand, and arm. It pleasingly eradicates pimoles, sallowness, spots, redness, and all cutaneous eruptions, whilst it imparts the bloom of early beau » y. It preserves the skin from the casualties of weather and influence of the seasons. Gentlemen, after using the razor, will find it allay all irritation, and render the skin delightfully pleasant. Sold by all respectable Medicine Venders, Druggists, and Perfumers. Hslf- pints 2s. 9d., pints 5s. 6d., quarts 8s. 6d. Caution— Observe the signature, " M. E. Vincent," on the label, without which none is genuine. Fresh issues bear an engraved outside wrapper, and in addition to the signature " M. E. Vincent" on the label, " Robert Shaw, 33, Queen- street,, Cheapside," is engraved on the Government stamp. Ask for Vincent's Gowland's Lotion. 7R. JAMES'S FEVER POWDER.— This celebrated Medicine ^^ 1 is invariably adopted by Physicians; and for those who cannot obtain me- dical advice, with each packet are enclosed full directions for its use. Its efficacy is most certain, if freely given on the attack of Fever, Influenza, Measles, Sore Throat, recent Cold with Cough, and other Inflammatory Disorders. In Rheu- matism and Chronic complaints it has performed the most extraordinary cures, when used with perseverance. Dr. James's Powder continues to be prepared by Messrs. Newbery, from the only Copy of the Process left by Dr. James in his own hand- writing, which was deposited with their Grandfather in 1746, as joint Pro- prietor. In Dackets 2s. 9d. and 24s. DR. JAMES'S ANALEPTIC PILLS afford constant relief in Indigestion, Bi- lious and Stomach complaints, Gounty symptoms, recent Rheumatism, and Cold with slight Fever, and are so mild in their effects as not to require confinement. Dr. James's Analeptic Pills are prepared by Messrs. Newbery, - from the only Re- cipe existing under Dr. James's hand, and are sold by them in boxes at 2s. 9d., 4s. 6d., and 24s., at 45, St. Paul's Church- yard; J. Sanger, 150, Oxford- street f and by most Country Venders. The name " F. Newbery" is engraved in each Government Stamp. ... ELIEF 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 have they found it to fail in curing those form id cable 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 medicine or restraint of any kind. — Sold by appointment of J. Lefay, by Stirling, 86, High- street, Whitechapel, 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 genuine 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. Just published, the 23d Edition, with additional Cases, illustratinitthe Danger and Absurdity of relying on Internal Medicines as the Sole meansof Cure, price 3s. PRACTICAL OBSERVATIONS on STRICTURES of the Urethra and Rectum ; recommending an improved System for their Treat- ment and Cure; illustrating its efficacy by numerous remarkable and highly im- portant. Cases, in some of which, Strictures of from 10 to 20 years' duration have been totally removed in a few weeks. By C. B. COURTENAY, M D., 42 Great Marlborough- street.— Printed for the Author, and sold by Onwhyn, Catherine- street, Strand; Simpkin and Marshall, Stationers'- court; Maish, 145, Oxford- street; Slatter, High- street, Oxford; at 9, Carlton- street, Edinburgh; M'Phun, Glasgow ; and by all Booksellers in town and country. " We entertain the highest opinion of Dr. Courtenay's professional skill, and congratulate him on his successful and judicious application to these severe and often fatal diseases."— European Magazine. R£ Wf SELWAY'S PREPARED ESSENCE of SENNA.— The obvious and acknowledged utility of the Infusion Senna as a domestic Purgative renders any further recommendation unnecessary: at the same time it must be confessed, that considerable inconvenience attends the form in which it is Hsually prepared, and if not immediately used, is liable to undergo a chemical change, by which it not only loses its purgative quality, but acquires that of an opposite tendency, and is in consequence found to excite violent griping of the bowels.— In this preparation, the Senna is so combined, that the usual inconveni- ence is at once obviated, for it will be found to undergo no change whatever by keeping, and require no other preparation for immediate use than simple dilution with cold or warm water, or if preferred tea or coffee may be substituted. The increased use of Senna since the first introduction of the above induces the f) resent Proprietor to make it more generally known.— Prepared only by Simkin, ate Selway, Chemist to his Majesty, 2, New Cavendish- street, Portland- place. Sold by him, and by Sanger, 150, Oxford street; Willoughbyand Co., 61, Bishops- gate Without; Winstanley and Son, Poultry; and all respectable Patent Medi- cine " Venders, in bottles at Is. 9d., 3s. 6d., and 7s. each, ana upwards. HOMER'S ILIAD, with ENGLISH NOTES, by the REV. W. TROLLOPE. Just published, the Second Edition, improved, in 1 vol. 8vo. Price 18s. boards, or 19s. bound, " OMHPOT ' IAIAS. THE ILIAD of HOMER, chiefly from the Text of Heyne, with copious ENGLISH NOTES, illustrating the Grammatical Construc- tion; the Manners and Customs, the Mythology and Antiquities of the Heroic Ages; and Preliminary Observations on " Points of Classical Interest and Im- portance connected with Homer and his Writings. By the Rev. WILLIAM TROLLOPE, M. A. Of Pembroke College, Cambridge; and formerly one of the Masters of Christ's Hospital. London : printed for J. G. and F. Rivington; Longman and Co.; E. Williams; Hamilton and Co.; J. Duncan; Whittaker and Co.; Simpkin and Co.; and B. Fellowes. 1 FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMAS, HOARSENESS, DIFFICULTY OF BREATHING, HOOPING COUGH, & c. COLLIS'S ESSENCE OF HONEY.— This valuable Essence possesses all the medicinal properties of HONEY in the highest perfec- tion, which renders it agreeable to the most delicate stomach, and from its salu- brious properties it preserves the lungs from the effects of damp and putrid air in this variable climate; it stills the most tormenting Cough, procures rest, and quickly produces a free and gentle expectoration. It constantly takes off the fever, clears all obstructions of the breast and lungs of ever so long standing, recruits the strength, raises and refreshes the spirits, and removes the effect of a common cold in a few hours. If it be in the power of medicine to stop the ravages of that cruel disease Consumption, Collis's Essence of Honey will effect it. Prepared and Sold Wholesale ( only) and Retail by R. JOHNSTON, Chemist, 68, Cornhill, London, at Is. l| d. per bottle, or 3 in one 2s. 9d.; sold also by T. Prout, 229, Strand; J. Sanger, 150, and Hannay and Co., 63, Oxford- street, Willoughby, 61, Bishopsgate- street, Without; Stirling, 86, Whitechapel; and most Medicine Venders. ALL'S ANTIBILIOUS PILLS.— Their composition is purely Vegetable, and may be taken by the most delicate constitution without restraint. Travellers too, and residents in the East and West Indies, will find them a valuable appendage, being eminently adapted to repel the serious bilious attacks to which Europeans are subject in those climates. The Proprietors have just received a letter from an Officer resident at Calcutta, confirmatory of the above recommendation, dated 1st May, 1835, of which the following is an extract:— Sir,— Prior to my leaving England in July last, I was recommended to apply to you for a supply of your Antibilious Pills, having for a long time suffered severely from bilious attacks; I am happy to say, I have found so much benefit from them that I must request you to prepare for me afresh supply of two or three thousand, which I will thank you to have carefully packed up in a tin case, so that no damage may happen to them, and forward to me by the first vessel coming out. I am, Sir, your obedient servant, W. H. KEMM, Lieut.- Colonel, 31st N. I. To Mr. Benjamin Gall, Druggist, & c., Woodbridge. Sold in Family Boxes at 21s. each ( to be had only of the Proprietors at Wood- bridge and Bury St. Edmund's), and in smaller Boxes at Is, l£ d. and2s. 9d, each, by all Venders of Medicine, GA HEN Men of Education and Professional Skill use perse- „ . feting 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 their 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 burgeons of London, they offer a firm, safe, and speedy restoration to perfect health. Patients in the country are requested to send the 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.— boss and'CO., Surgeons, 7, Lancaster- place, Strand, London. 1. The^ SGISof 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 row, London, and all Booksellers. Price 5s. each. | FRANKS'S'SPECIFIC SOLUTION of COPAIBA— a certain and most speedy CURE for all URETHRAL DISCHARGES, Gleets, Spasmodic Strictures, Irritation of the Kidneys, Bladder, Urethra, and Prostate Gland. TESTIMONIALS. From Joseph Henry Green, Esq., F. R. S., one of the Council of the Royal College of Surgeons, Surgeon to St. Thomas's Hospital, and Professor of Surgery in King's College, London. " I have made trial of Mr. Franks's Solution of Copaiba, at St. Thomas's Hos- pital, in a variety of cases of discharges in the male and female, and the results warrant my stating, that it is an efficacious remedy, and one which does not pro- duce the usual unpleasant effertsof Copaiba. „ JogE; pH HENfty GRKEN-. " 46, Lincoln's Inn- fields, April 25, 1835." From Bransby Cooper, Esq., F. R. S., Surgeon to Guy's Hospital, and Lecturer on Anatomy, & c. & c. " Mr. Bransby Cooper presents his compliments to Mr. George Franks, and has great pleasure in bearing testimony to tbe efficacy of his Solution of Copaiba in Gonorrhoea, for which disease Mr. Cooper has prescribed the Solution in ten or twelve cases with perfect success. " New- street, Spring- gardens, April 13,1835.' From William Hentsch, Esq., House Surgeon to the Free Hospital, Grevilte- street, Hatton- garden. " My dear Sir,— I have given your medicine in very many cases of Gonorrhoea and Gleets, some of which had been many months under other treatment, and can bear testimony to its great efficacy. I have found it to cure in a much shorter time, and with more benefit to the general health, than any other mode ot treat- ment I know of: the generality of cases have been cured within a week troin the commencement of taking the medicine, and some of them in less time than tnat. Have the goodness to send lne another supply.— I am, dear Sir, TOU£, ver\ truly, ( Signed) i. WILLIAM HUN 1 SOU. « Grevillestreet, Hatton- garden, April 15, 1835." , , , , . Prepared only by George Franks, SuVgeon, 90, Blackfnars- road. and may be had of his agents, Barclay and Sons, Farringdon- street; Sanger, 150 Oxford- street Johnston, 68, Cornhill; Bowling, St. George's Circus, Surrey Theatre; W atts, 106, Edgewaie- road, London; at the Medical Hall, 54, Lower Sackville street, Dublin; of J. and R. Raimes, Leith- walk, Edinburgh; and of aU wholesale and retail Patent Medicine Venders in the United Kingdom. Sold in bottles at 2s. 9d., 4s. 6d.. and lis. each. Duty included, . . CAUTION.— To prevent imposition, the Honourable Commissioners of Stamps have directed the name of « George Franks, Blackfnars- road," to be engraved on th^ Gov^ rnment^ tamp^ ^^ Medical Charities, supplied as usual from the Proprietor, *.* Mi. Franks may be consulted every day, as usual, until 2o cloc*. 60 JOHN BULL. February 28, TO CORRESPONDENTS. 1/ ie letter of G. S. appears to require no answer. The invention which he praises seems to be entirely obsolete— any discussion of its merits, whatever thev might have been, would therefore be superflmus. ! Ve have destroyed the first letter of" The Conservative Protestant," which renders the insertion of his second impracticable. ( Ve are convinced of the truth of the Bath, L. E. L., and think- as well of her verses as ever; but the person in whose favour they are written is not sufficiently known to render them interesting *> the public. Many interesting articles have been delayed to make room, for Mr. HARDY'S admirable speech. Our well- beloved " Kenelm " js to us inexplicable- *,• THE TITLE- PAGE and INDEX to the last year's volume are ready for delivery, and may be had at the Office, or of any Newsman. IOI1 BULL. ~ eve?> that, like that of Lord Sidmouth, the example was a very good OH."-, and he sincerely hoped to see it very generally followed. ( He hear.) An Hon. MEMBER thought it ought to be known that Mr. Marsden, late Secretary to the Admiralty, had surrendered, on his return to good health, a pension of 1,5001. a year, granted to him in consequence of his being obliged to resign his situation from ill health. Mr. . Mars- den was butillable to afford this sacrifice, but it was made voluntarily and cheerfnlly. ( Hear.) LONDON, FEBRUARY 21. THE KING and QUEEN have arrived in town, and on Wed- nesday there will be a Drawing Room at St. James's, that being the day ou which the anniversary of her Gracious MA- JESTY'S birth is celebrated. WE have felt it our duty, in order to convey to our country readers a clear and distinct view of Mr. O'CONNELL'S proceedings in the Carlow affair, to print the admirable speech of Mr. HARDY, in which all the particulars are em- bodied, entire. We have only to refer to it, in order to show the conduct of the Honourable Gentleman, who is its hero, in a plain, clear light. We have no room for his blustering attempt at a reply ; but whenever the Committee ( which has most judi- ciously elected a Constitutional Whig and a gentleman of high character and principle, Mr. RIDLEY COLBORNE, its Chair- man) makes its report, we will do Mr. O'CONNELL that, which if he had received it seven years since, the Committee itself never would have sat— we mean JUSTICE. ALL our prognostications with regard to Spain, are in rapid course of fulfilment, and we cannot but feel a pang of regret to think that, amongst other most deplorable evidence of the downfal of the cause of the de facto Queen, the utter dis- comfiture of our misled countrymen is, perhaps, the most striking. Lieutenant- Colonel EVANS, it seems, is himself satisfied of liis own inefficiency as the Commander- in- Chief of a force like that, of which he is the head; his brief regimental service in the English army was confined to the duties of a subaltern of cavalry; and however active, however gallant, and however zealous he might have been, and we believe was, in that posi- tion, his mind and habits are not calculated for movements on a great scale, or for the provision of means to form and main- tain an army. His marches have been disastrous— the men, decorated with smart- looking chacos, were left unprovided with camp- kettles or the commonest necessaries of life— their hacks loaded with needless accoutrements-— their feet cut and worn by the wild and rugged sheep- tracks through which they were marched, sometimes thirty- six miles in a day, labouring under dysenteries and other complaints induced by the bad- ness and awful scarcity of food, and the absence of means of cooking it properly, drove them into a state of insubordination, for which a cure was attempted by the incessant application of the cat- o'- nine- tails. The consequences are evident— desertions innumerable have been the consequence— no fewer than forty of the English cavalry have surrendered themselves to punishment in that character, preferring to suffer death to remaining longer in the service; while one of the last acts of the British Legion has been the seizing and selling a waggon- load of gunpowder, for the sake of getting provisions. Gun- powder they could only sell to those who, in vindication of their KING and his rights, are their enemies; thus, through starvation, they barter the means of their own destruction by the bullet, iu order to avoid the more protracted sufferings of starvation. We hear too, and hear it with sincere regret, that Colonel EVANS is in ill- health, mental and bodily: he has arrived at a consciousness of his own false position— he finds not only the desertion of his men, but the retirement of his officers, daily increasing— and yet, with the natural energy of a brave man, he clings to the cause which he so unadvisedly has adopted. We, for our own parts, wish he were well out of the scrape, and back in Westminster, where we should be glad to hear him again making eloquent and patriotic speeches, such as he was wont to favour us with before he departed ; hoping, how- ever, that when the day of his re- appearance shall arrive, he will sedulously avoid two topics, which were in other times rather favourites with him— one, " the horrid barbarity of flogging in the army and the other, " the want of military genius and ability in the Duke of WELLINGTON." It is confidently reported that more than two or three of the Continental Sovereigns have announced the resolution to acknowledge and maintain the cause of CHARLES the FIFTH ; and it is also confidently reported that Mr. ROTHSCHILD 5s engaged in raising a loan for the QUEENS, upon the faith of a joint guaranty by England and France. Is this true? Is there no Member of the House of Commons who will take the trouble to ask the question ? THE rapacity of the Tories has ever been one of the most fruitful topics of Whig and Radical exultation. A new in- stance of this grasping propensity will be found in the follow- ing extract from the proceedings in the House of Commons on . Friday: The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER said he had to move for the copy of a Treasury minute under the following circumstances:— It " was, he supposed, generally known that a predecessor of his in the office he now held, Lord Siamouth, had been placed by his late Ma- jesty upon the pension list for a pension of 3,0001. per annum. Within the last few days the Noble Lord at the head of the Treasury received from him the following letter :— " My Lord— I request the favour of your Lordship to lay before lis Majesty my resignation of the pension of 3,0001. per annum granted to me by the late King. ( Signed) SIDMOUTH. ( Lond cheers from all parts of the House.) It was unnecessary for him to dwell upon this act. ( Hear.) It spoke for itself. ( Cheers.) He had only to move that there be laid before the House a copy of the Treasury minute consequent upon the communication he had just received. Mr. HUME said, that the information just received was satisfactory —(" Hear," and laughter)— and he only hoped that every other indi- vidual receiving a pension which he did not require would follow Lord Sidmouth's example. He could not allow the present opportu- nity to pass without calling the attention of the House to the noble conduct of the Marquis of Camden in respect to a claim he had upon the public purse. Lord Camden, by one of the most disinterested acts known in public life, had surrendered a claim of no less than 250,0001. ( Loud cheers.) He thought the Noble Lord for this deserved the marked thanks of the House and the public. It was said that Lord Camden had by this surrender set a bad example, He thought, how- LETTERS and papers from the West Indies have been received, which represent the effects of Lord SLIGO'S misrule to be extremely dangerous to the tranquillity of the colonies— at least to Jamaica, which is the very head and front of those settlements. As far as the emancipated blacks are concerned, it appears that, although they will not work for hire, they are contented to keep holiday without any great show of insubordination. Christinas passed off extremely well, and they idled, played, sang, danced and got drunk with the most gratifying activity, " The apprentices," says the Jamaica Dispatch, " will not work for hire, except in a very few instances; and the lingering and slovenly manner in which they perform the little work required from them, gives us a fine sample'of what may be expected for the future. We have often given it as our opinion, " and repeat the belief, that our sta- ples will cease to be an article of export after the year 1840, although JOHN BULL has paid twenty millions for the purpose of effecting our ruin ! Emigration may save the colony, as a valuable appendage to the British Crown ; but without it our beautiful Isle must be- come a dreary waste, anil its inhabitants revert to what they were in their native wilds in Africa I The shipment of seven ' tons of Bibles' for the negroes, may sound very well for saintly ears ill England ; but before the volume of Sacred law was so profaned ( if we may use suoh a term), it is a pity the same weight in Spelling Books was not forwarded, as none bnt the kind- hearted people of England, who have no paupers or ignoramuses among thein, could imagine for a moment that the soul of a negro man can be sa ved, by merely placing a Bible in his hand, before he can com prehend a " word of it! Why do not BUXTON and a few of his crew take a trip across the Atlantic, and judge from what they may see, instead of being guided by the opinions of those who are paid for ma- nufacturing mis- statements ?" The manufacturing of mis- statements, whether from igno- rance or design, has, we must admit, been carried on by wholesale during the last year. On the 16th of December, Lord SLIGO sent the following Message to the House of Assembly. Those of our readers who have made themselves conversant with the subject, will in a moment perceive its importance. " Mr. Speaker, " 1 am commanded by his Excellency the Governor to express to the Assembly his deep regret and disappointnent, that all his efforts to induce them to pass a Bill, to render the establishment of a police force equal in duration with the apprenticeship should have become ineffectual. " His Excellency is instructed to draw the particular attention of the Assembly to the series of liberal and conciliatory measures which have marked the demeanour of the British Government to- wards this colony during the last four years, the loan of 500,0001. sterling— the dispensation from the pledge, first, for one year, and subsequently continued to the present time, as to the military sap- plies ; the acceptance of a very imperfect Abolition Bill, and the declaration, that it was adequate and satisfactory, in the reliance that the Legislature would make the necessary amendments, and as a consequence of that declaration, the immediate recognition of the title on the part of the colony to share in the compensation fund, which is at this moment in course of payment. " If all these sacrifices, demonstrating as they do the anxious desire of Government to deal with the Assembly upon terms jqf libe- rality and mutual confidence, are to be met by a continued resistance to the adoption of the important measures so earnestly urged upon them as connected with the abolition of slavery : if the question of a Police Bill is to be annually revived as long as the apprenticeship continues, his Excellency cannot admit the policy of foregoing ano- ther year's military supplies, nor would his Majesty's Ministers be able to assign to the Lords of the Treasury or Parliament any satis- factory ground for continuing an indulgence on this point, the repe- tition of which has failed to produce a corresponding disposition on the part of the Assembly, to conciliate and co- operate in giving effect to tne great objects which Parliament and the British people have so much at heart. " His Excellency in obedience therefore to the instructions he has received, intimates to the House the expectation of his MAJESTY'S Government that provision should be made during the present year for the resumption of these payments on account of the troops, according to the existing stipulations on that head, and for which a fixed sum was in November, 1831, pledged to be provided annually by the colony,— the considerate measures of Government have induced them only temporarily to forbear calling for the fulfilment of this compact, from which they never, in the most remote degree, consi- dered the colony to be absolved. They now expect that in all subse- quent years, the usual military supplies will be provided, and his Excellency sincerely laments the necessity he is under to make a communication which he has by every argument and means in his Eower endeavoured to avoid, but which he is not warranted under is instructions in delaying any longer." This Message was, as a matter of course, taken into consi- deration by the House. But the public papers, not finding it necessary to deliberate so long as their worthy representatives furnish us on the next morning with the following remarks:— The Governor's Message to the Assembly on Wednesday, as a composition, is the most clumsy and inelegant we have ever read, such as would disgrace a school- boy ! We shall not at present dwell upon its blunders, but proceed at once to expose the numerous devia- tions from truth, with which it notoriously abounds : His Excellency is instructed to draw " the particular attention of the Assembly to the series of liberal and conciliatory measures, which have marked the demeanor of the British Government towards this colony during the last four years— the loan of 500,0001. sterling— the dispensation from the pledge, first, for one year, and subsequently continued to the present| tiine, as to the military supplies— the accept- ance of a very imperfect Abolition Bill, and the declaration, that it was adequate and satisfactory, in the reliance that the Legislature would make the necessary amendments, and as a consequence of that declaration, the immediate recognition of the title on the part of the colony to share in the compensationfund, which is at this moment in course of payment. This passage is altogether a tissue of misrepresentation. In the first place, the amount of the loan advanced to this colony was 200,0001., AND NOT 500,000/.! !! In the next, the Abolition Act was never offi- cially declared imperfect. It was a mere transcript of the British Statute, with the exception of a few details, which the Assembly were permitted to introduce. So well pleased were the Government with the act, that the conduct of our Assembly was held up as a model to other colonies | in official documents, sent down to the several Co- lonial Assemblies by the respective Governors. So well pleased were the Government, that the provision was officially gazetted as " ade- quate and satisfactory, and as entitling Jamaica'to bear full share of the compensation; and further, in a variety of documents, it was re- peatedly declared that Jamaica had done more than they hud a right to expect." The writer goes on to show that the island of Jamaica is under no obligations to the mother country, but that the in- fatuation of the Government at home, in countenancing the proceedings of the Anti- Slavery Society in London, caused that bloody rebellion which terminated in a vast destruction of property, and rendered the loan necessary, without which the Assembly w ould have disdained to request of the Government to relieve the island from the payment of the troops. The Assembly, says the writer, can, with greaterjustice, complain of the " sacrifices" to which they have submitted, and the " libe- rality " with which they have met the views of his Majesty's Govern- ment. Their property, in slaves alone, was valued at upwards of thirteen millions. Government have contributed six millions for the redemption of the negroes from a state of bondage, whilst the Colo- nists of Jamaica ( although limited in number, compared with the people of Great Britain,) contributed upwards of seven millions, besides incurring an inevitable risk ; for it is questionable whether the cultivation of their properties can be continued. Government desire " a mutual confidence." The Assembly of Jamaica, unfortunately for the island, has too often placed a mistaken confidence in Government,— the roinous results are too generally known to require a comment. But we deny that Government has placed " any" confidence in Jamaica. Almost every measure of a salutary nature, which her representatives have recommended, has been rejected with scorn and contumely. Her constitutional rights have been daily invaded. Upon the last paragraph of the Message the writer observes:— We trust the Assembly will never assent to so extravagant a de- mand. If Jamaica is worth the possession, Great Britain is bound' to provide for her protection. The naval force is of as much im- portance to protect the commercial interests of the colony, as a mili- tary force to preserve internal peace. If, therefore, we are not called upon to pay the fonner, we have no right to pay for the latter. The numerous advantages which Great Britain derives— the large revenue which is annually poured into her coffers, arising from colonial indus- try, demands reciprocal assistance; and in return for those benefits the least the mother country can do, is to extend her protection to an ancient and valuable colony. The island was pledged to meet the- military expenditure, so long as slavery endured, but no longer; and as that system has been abolished at a sacrifice to the colony treble in amount to that sustained by the British nation, all the expenses de- pendent upon so vast a change, or in the words of Lord BROUGHAM, SO1 frightful an experiment," ought to devolve upon the Government by whom it was brought about. We have ouly to add to these manifestations of popular feeling, the fact, that upon a question as to an allowance for postage in the Secretary's office, the House of Assembly sent up the following message to his Excellency the Governor- General :— " May it please your Excellency, " We are ordered by the House to wait on your Excellency, and to acquaint you that, in compliance with your Excellency's " fourth Message of the 17th of November last, the' House have ordered the payment of the postage incurred by your Excellency's Secretary from the 1st of July to the 15th of" N ovember last, amounting to 3081. Is. 3d. " The House have had under their consideration the Message of your Excellency of the 1st instant, with the documents annexed thereto. By these documents it appears that a considerable internal tax is levied on the island under the authority of the English Post- office, of which tax the English Government refuse to relieve us. " We humbly represent to your Excellency that the proceeds of the said tax is abundantly sufficient to cover the charge for postage of all your Excellency's official correspondence, as well as the postage of the other public functionaries of the colonies. " ' I he House cannot, therefore, in justice to their constituents, make any further appropriation for the purpose of keeping up or enlarging a revenue which they hold to be unconstitutionally raised and ap- plied." These are, we think, sufficient indications of the state in. which our West India colonies are at present placed, espe- cially at a period when our American friends are concen- trating their whole naval force, and preparing all sorts of newly invented engines, steam and others, for the purposes of war. What the success of Lord GOSFORD'S conciliatory pro- ceedings in Canada may do for our " worthy friends of the stripes and stars, we do not pretend to foretell; but when revolt is in its ripeness— especially revolt excited, fermented, and fed by a neglect of the loyal and constitutional, and a support of the base and revolutionary—- it may produce, even though the causes are distinct, an anxiety for change and separation, which the Americans themselves may by example advocate, and which those who find themselves really op- pressed may feel — however reluctantly—- a not altogether unnatural desire to follow. LORD JOHN RUSSELL on Thursday night paid Mr. WARD, the Member for St. Alban's, a personal compliment; and gave the country generally a specimen of the deep interest which, as Secretary of State for the Home Department, he feels upon public matters in general. Mr. WARD, anxious to distinguish himself for something for which his friends imagine him competent, has been labour- ing incessantly for two years to arrange the divisions of the House of Commons, which divisions for two hundred years before be was born, were conducted without the slightest difficulty, trouble, or confusion ; and in which divisions his highly- gifted father's name— like those of all his connections by whose valuable services in the cause of Conservatism, he is himself enabled to be a Radical Member of Parliament— may be found ; but which lie thinks ought to be better reported to the newspapers, by building new expensive lobbies, appoint- ing permanent additional clerks, and by the combination of a mass of machinery, such as BRAMAH would for 50,0001. undertake to construct, for the purpose of drawing the cork of a bottle of soda- water, which, as the enigma says, would, if let alone, come out of itself. Mr. WARD has a perfect right to do all this, and whether he is right or wrong, we do not much care— Mr. WARD may build lobbies, and get clerks appointed, or do anything he likes, so long as this Parliament— his last— lasts. The point to which we beg to call the attention of the independent Hartford and Russell- street voters, is the observation of Lord JOHN RUSSELL, who, in order to set down Mr. WARD •— an aspirant Under- Secretary of State— observed, that what- ever might be the merit of Mr. WARD'S plan ( under which, be it observed, in consequence of a decision of the House of Commons, a new lobby has been built experimentally), " he," Lord JOHN, " was not even aware that an additional lobby had been built, until he found it there."''' This is at once, as we have already said, personally compli- mentary to Mr. WARD, and highly gratifying to the country. The Home Secretary, the leader of the House of Commons, the imaginary friend of Mr. WARD, cares so little about Mr. WARD, his motion, the House of Commons, its divisions, or the country which has to pay for it, that he does not know such a lobby has been built, until he finds it there. If it be really so desirable that the Radicals should be speedily furnished with the names of their representatives and the votes they give, there is a mode so clear, so simple^ and so expeditious, by which divisions might be recorded, that we wonder it has not struck even Mr. WARD himself. As we do not appreciate the necessity, we shall keep our secret to ourselves, permitting only our admiration for Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S solicitude for the public welfare to transpire. THE Morning Post of Friday states that General PALMER had an interview with Lord MELBOURNE on Thursday. We hope that the Gallant Officer did not mention to the" Noble Viscount the assiduity with which he has been for some weeks assailing Mr. RAPHAEL, to be reconciled to Mr. O'CONNELL. We think the Gallant General would not venture to offend his Lordship with any allusion to the subject, after his Lordship's distinct declaration, upon the honour of a Peer, that he had never " touched pitch." To be sure, the Governor of Jamaica, the most Noble the Marquess of SLIGO, did use some strong expression, of a si- milar nature, with regard to the smuggled sailors in his yacht but then, he was tried, convicted, and seut to Newgate. We are sure Lord MELBOURNE— in spite of the Ministerial February £ 1. JOHN BULL 6t cheerings ofO'CFTNNELL— in spiteof the offer of the Baronetcy, and in spite of at least half- a- dozen other things we know- is not, cannot be, a party personally to what has been and is going on, MIDDLESEX MAGISTRACY. The following report of the proceedings of the Middlesex Magistrates, as far as they regard the election of a Chairman, We borrow from Friday's Standard. It speaks volumes, and, as we think, shows beyond a doubt that Lord JOHN RUS- SELL'S proposition of establishing a sort of Puisne Judge on the part of the Crown, as perpetual President of this im- portant metropolitan county tribunal, is but fair and rea- sonable. We have no doubt that Lord JOHN'S proposition has been made with a view, in the' first instance, of providing for some pauper Whigling, or else rejected briefless barrister; but that matters little. The man first appointed will in time die, after having received a certain number of thousand Jiounds per annum for a certain number of years; or per- laps retire, after an uncertain number of years, on a pension of not more than half the pay. The principle is, neverthe- less, good. Middlesex is not to be put upon a par, as relates to Magisterial jurisdiction, with any other county in Great Britain; and it is quite painful to reflect that any blunder- headed dunder- headed donkey, who, either because lie has wealth, or impudence, or Radical influence to operate in his favour, may be placed in the situation of President of a Court competent as this is, to the trial of large offences, and in the duty of charging an intelligent Jury upon a question in- volving a sentence of seven years' confinement or fourteen years' transportation, who would with difficulty discover, with- out a bit of straw stuck in his shoe to distinguish one from the other, which was his right foot and which his left. It will be seen that Mr. ROTCH, the late Chairman, was proposed for re- election by a Mr. BARLOW, but that the motion found no seconder. Mr. ROTCH may now set to work to build his Normal School without fear of interrup- tion :— A very numerous Court was holden on Thursday, at the Sessions House, Clerkenwell- green, Sir WILLIAM CURTIS in the chair. Mr. C. P. ALLEN acquainted the Court that he had received a letterfrom Mr. ROTCH, which he would read. Mr. ALLEN then read the letter, which was as follows:— Nolans, dan. 18, 1836. " Dear Sir,— I have to acknowledge the receipt of your letter, in- closing a copy of the very handsome vote of thanks passed on last county day. I beg you will express to the Court how sincerely grateful I feel for this honourable mark oftlieir kindly feeling towards me, which ever will form a pleasing counterbalance to the calumnies and misrepresentations by which I have been harassed in my course of public duty ever since 1 had the honour of serving them as their Chairman. I am, < fcc. " BENJAMIN ROTCH, Jun. " C. P. Allen, Esq. Deputy Clerk ofthe Peace." Mr. MACWILLIAM gave notice of his intention to move the next county day, that a resolution, proposed by Col. James Clitherow, on the 1st of November last, that Mr. Rotch was unanimously called to the chair, be rescinded. ( Hear, hear.) SALARY TO THE CHAIRMAN. The DEAN of CARLISLE, in the absence of Colonel Wood, brought forward the following motion:—" That a Committee of the Magis- trates be appointed to communicate with his Majesty's Ministers on the subject of a salary to be paid to the Chairman of the Middlesex Sessions of the Peace." The object of Colonel Wood's notice was to ascertain from Government before a new Chairman was appointed, whether the Government would grant a salary to their future Chair- man. Surely it was not right that learned gentlemen who might be called to that chair should give their valuable time in discharging the onerous, important, and arduous duties of Chairman of the Middlesex Sessions, without being duly remunerated. ( Hear.) Mr. GIBBON seconded the motion. Sir PETER LAURIE said that at the death of Mr. Marriott, who suc- ceeded Mr. Const as Chairman, Government had expressly stated to the Court that they could give no salary to any future Chairman. How could a deputation of Magistrates now go to the Government npon the same question ? Of all the counties in England, Lancashire was the only one which paid a Chairman. He trusted the Rev. Dean would withdraw the motion. Mr. WILKS, M. P., supported the motion. Mr. BROUGHTON followed on the same side. Sir CHARLES FORBES hoped the Court would not agree to the mo- tion. ^ There were three learned gentlemen, Mr. Seipeant Andrews, Mr. Serjeant Adams, and Mr. Halcomb, who were willing to take the chair gratuitously ; why, then, should the Court wish to force a salary npon either of them ? He would never consent to attend the Middle- sex Sessions if the Government appointed a Chairman with a salary. ( Hear.) Mr. FYLER remarked, that when Mr. Rotch consented to take the chair, no doubt he entertained an opinion that his services would ultimatelybe compensated. ( Hear.) Mr. HOPE said Mr. Rotch at first sought 2,0001. per annum, then 1,5001., next 1,2001., and, lastly, 1,0001. HaditnotbeenforMr. Rotch's own imprudence he would very probably have obtained a salary. Mr. ELWIN suggested, that instead of a deputation a letter should be sent to the Government. Mr. MACWILLIAM said, if the deputation conducted themselves in a proper manner before Government ( loud laughter) it was very likely a salary would be yielded. ( Roars of laughter.) TheM agistrates having divided, the resolution was agreed to, and the following Magistrates were appointed as the deputation; namely, the Dean of Carlisle, Colonel Wood, Colonel Clitherow, Mr. Wilks, M. P., and Sir William Cnrtis. NOMINATION OF CHAIRMAN. Mr. BALLANTINE proposed Mr. Serjeant Adams as their future Chairman. Sir J. SCOTT LILLIE seconded the motion. Mr. HOPE proposed Mr. Serjeant Andrews, which was seconded by Mr. ORME. Mr. DYER jun., proposed Mr. Halcomb, which was supported by Mr. Wix. Mr. BARLOW proposed Mr. Rotch, the ex- Chairman; BUT THERE WAS NO SECONDER. Mr. ORME asked Mr. Barlow whether he was sanctioned by Mr. Rotch in proposing that gentleman ? Mr. BARLOW answered in the negative, adding that he was induced to propose him, because he thoughttliat, Benjamin Rotch, Esq., TAKE HIM FOR ALL AND ALL, THE CO'JRT WOULD NEVER LOOK UPON HIS XIKE AGAIN. ( Roars of laughter.) After the blunders of Mr. ROTCH and his Court— putting aside all private considerations with regard to him— we must say we think the time for Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S interference lias most clearly arrived. and all other jobs, pensions, and dirtinesses of their pseudo friends, who now despise them and cast them off, are not brilliant. At the meeting described below, seven hundred would have dined, had there been adequate accommodation previously arranged— as it was, the demand for tickets even at the door was great, but was necessarily rejected. The assemblage of members of the Finsbury Conservative Association, for whom provision had been made, exceeded four hundred. Lord MAHON was in the Chair— Lord WLN- CHILSEA on his right— Lord BROWNLOW on his left. Among other distinguished persons were Lords MAIDSTONE and ALPOIID, Mr. GROVE PRICE, M. P., Mr. CLITHEROE, M. P., Mr. PROTHEROE, M. P., Mr. MACKINNON, M. P. ; and among those gentlemen well known in the Borough, were Messrs. ADOLPHUS, RAMSDEN, CLAY, PORTER, CLF. PT, CREWE, PARKINSON, & c. After the cloth was removed, and the customary loyal toasts duly honoured, the Noble Chairman proposed " Prosperity to the Conservative Asso- ciation of Finsbury," and precluded his toast by stating that tliey had now arrived at a great crisis in the history of England. The contest was every day becoming more decided between those who would and would not preserve the institutions of the country. It behoved all who were friendly to a mixed Monarchy, the existence of the House of Lords, and the preservation of the Established Church — it behoved them, whilst detesting the principles of then- opponents, to imitate their zeal and union of purpose. All Conservatives should unite hand and heart in support of the Constitution; and he would assure those who dis- sented from the Church Establishment— and he understood there were many present— that the party had every dis- position to concur in whatever measures might be proposed for redressing their grievances, and giving them entire liberty of conscience; trusting that they would, on the other hand, assist in upholding the Church Establishment, which all must admit to be the great bulwark against the inroads of in- fidelity. The Noble Lord's speech was vehemently cheered, and the toast drunk with enthusiasm.— After some others, the Chairman proposed the health of the greatest man in Eng- land, or of any other country of the world, " Sir ROBERT PEEL ;" adding, that the illustrious man late at the head of the Government, would soon be reinstated in the Premier- ship, and in that capacity would prove the " Pilot who weathered the storm." The company all rose and waved their hands for a considerable time, and on resuming their seats again and again rose and renewed their cheers with the greatest vehemence. After silence was obtained, a song, the burden of which was " PEP. L and Old England for ever!" was sung, and enthusiastically applauded, the whole room joining in chorus.— Mr. GROVE PRICE, in proposing the health of their Chairman, pronounced a high eulogium on the public and private character of the Noble Lord.— The Noble Chairman returned thanks ; and then proposed " The Vice- Presidents and Committee of the Association," which was drunk with applause.— Mr. CLIFTON returned thanks, and in doing so, said the Association had raised a spirit in the Borough which was sure speedily to triumph.— Lord MAHON then proposed that distinguished Nobleman, " The Earl of WINCHILSEA," on whom he passed a high eulogium.— The Noble Earl expressed himself highly grateful for the honour, and called upon all true friends of the country to rally round its Institutions, which Mere in the present moment in a most critical state. There was a conspiracy, an abominable conspiracy, in existence to subvert one branch of the Constitution, and to render that branch dependent on the Commons ; the inevitable consequence of which would be the destruction of the Monarchy, and the establishment of the sovereignty of the people. Should that Constitution ever be established, property, morality, and religion, and all good government, would cease in England. The Noble Earl sat down amid loud cheers.— Several other toasts were given, and speeches made, after which the meeting separated. » ' British Rifles' in check ! The fear of our axe- handled Irish patriots rising at the same time completely nullified the intent; and no volti— geurs assembled. " The British Rifles, in number 600, made a display in town thp- night before last; but not a Canadian was bold enough to become a spectator. This demonstration is enough to show Jean Baptiste that the Britons here will determinately maintain British connexion and . British rights. It will also show Lord Gosford and his Whig- Radical colleagues, that though he has flattered the enemies of the best in- terests of the country, and has gulped down or ' cheerfully' granted f every thing the House of Assembly has demanded contrary to law viz. Contingencies without the consent of the Legislative Council— Members'Indemnity Bill, which pays our members three times as much as their time and labour at home is worth— and other matters without ceasing— he will fail in bullying into slavish submission tb& true sons of Britain." " 18ih January, 183K. " A proclamation has just been issued by the Governor, suppressing: the British Rifle Corps " !! The ' beginnings" the end' has yet t& come— nous verrons. Extract of a Letterfrom Montreal, 19M Jan. 1836. " The proclamation of the Governor to suppress sixteen ' Britislr Rifle Corps,' which I noticed yesterdav, will hardly have the in- tended effect, as the conduct of Lord Gosford has put us into so- singular a position, viz:— British subjects and colonists taking np arms to insure the continuance^ of their own duties as subjects, nnrj to preserve their connexion with the parent state. The address o£ the British party in this province to their brethren in the other pro- vinces to appoint a place of meeting for British delegates will appear- a singular proceeding at home; but we have been goaded into it by the anti- national and illegal proceedings of Lord Gosford. The Canadian people should be separated from their leader; they are a sober, quiet, bonhommie' race. I hardly think that the ' British Rifles' will dissolve, though they inform the Governor that if the name of British displeases him, he may recommend another. Tbe- colonial newspapers show evidently that our British brethren are ready to assist us against this miserable system and anti- national party,— although Papineau has boasted at the Governor's table that America, instead of receiving Governors from Europe, would send Viceroys to Europe— or some such stuff. You shall soon hear frons. me again. It certainly looks like a civil war." EXTRACT of a letter from the West Indies, dated 16th of December, 1835:— " Amongst a variety of grievances the coloured people complain that they do not get their share of employment under Government. I shall only instance one department to convince yon of the falsehood of such an assertion. The engineer department have here an over- seer of works, a black man, receiving eight shillings sterling per day, with rations and lodging money as a subaltern. A coloured clerk of the works at ten shillings, lodging money as a subaltern, rations, & c. for himself and family, and a master carpenter at six shillings per day. But the most inconsistent and extraordinary thing is, that the two former, although natives of the West Indies, are in the receipt, and have been for years, of two shillings sterling per day, under the head of Climate Money; keeping their town and country bouses, horses, & c., whilst the brave and deserving officer who has served his country can barely make both ends meet. Surely if this was known it would not be permitted." In every part of the country Conservative Associations are increasing, and while the counties and county towns are vieing with each other in promulgating those principles which . alone can save us, we rejoice to find that the metropolitan tioroughs themselves are evincing their feelings— feelings already recorded upon the registries of Middlesex and Westminster, and which manifestation— of which the fol- lowing is an abridged acceouut— leads us to imagine will be found equally marked and decided in the metropolitan boroughs; for although Marylebone has not yet made so public a display of recantation as Finsbury, we know that if Mr. II. LYTTON BULWER were compelled to do the duties of the office into which he has been jobbed, and give up his seat, Lord TEIGNMOUTH would be sure of his return. We think the prospects of the Radicals of Finsbury, who still remain firm to Popery— the New Poor Laws— the rule of Commissioners— the payment of twenty millions to the slave owners— the in- . raise of the Navy— a war of intervention in the Peninsula, THE Brighton Gazette publishes the following article, and extracts of letters from Canada. Things are progressing in those parts: — The following extracts of letters received from Canada, by a gen- tleman in this town, are calculated to suggest no very consoling re- flections as to the state of affairs in that important colony. Not content with the mischief they have done at home, our Whig- Radi- cal Ministers seem resolved to play the game of Mr. HUME, and alienate from the British Crown one of its brightest jewels— the co- onial possessions of the empire. How lamentable and mortifying s it to think that while Russia, Prussia, and other continental na- tions are silently, but steadily and surely, augmenting their internal strength, and extending their influence abroad, Great Britain is weakened by intestine dissensions, and prevented by party intrigue from assuming the position which she had hitherto occupied, and which she ought still to occupy, in European affairs. But while Lord JOHN RUSSELL feels himself compelled to devote all his time and all his talent ( such as it is) to the worthy and honourable task of forming a rope of sand, which the breath of an Irish agitator may— and will— in a moment destroy; while Lord PALMERSTON sends our ships ( and would, if he dared, send our soldiers also), to prop the tottering throne of " the babe of Spain" and its virtuous mother, we must not hope to see a change of this anti- national and fatal policy. The following are the letters from Canada; and we leave our readers, ofter perusing them, to determine how far they afford the " fair prospect,'' which Sir GEORGE GREY tells us is entertained of settling the troubled affairs of Canada:— Extract of a better from Montreal, of 9th Jan., 1836. " My last acquainted you with the spontaneous addition to our almost skeleton regiment of British Rifles, formerly nearly l, 000men of British origin and British feeling, desirous of upholding the national interests, and the connexion of her colonial children with the mother country. " Mr. Walker, our Constitutional Agent, has reached La Braye, on his return. 1,500 sleighs went out to meet him, and he was drawn into Montreal, and through the streets, accompanied by about 3,000 Eersons,— the horses Laving been taken from his sleigh. It was a eart- stirring scene. " Yesterday printed notices in French were circulated by the clique, calling upon the French Canadians to meet at Kauntze's Hotel, to organize ' Foltigeurs Volontaires Corps Franfaise' to keep the It appears— how, it would be difficult to understand— that the im- proper and disgraceful appointment on the part of Ministers of Doctor HAMPDEN, to the Regius Professorship of Divinity at Oxford, has entangled the most exemplary and amiable, as well as brave and. talented, Mr. GLEIG— for he has been all these in the course of- his honourable career— in an attack from the Ministerial papers, because he has ventured . to write fairly and conscientiously his opinions— not political, and certainly not party— in his admirable Chronicles of IValtham. Mr. GLEIG can speak for himself— and so, as far as we are concerned^ he shall. He addresses the editor of the Times, in the following: letter :— Royal Hospital, Chelsea, Feb. 17, 1836. Sir,— I have great reluctance to obtrude'myself or my concerns upo ® your notice ; but the Globe of yesterday has just been put into my hands, and I do not see how I can avoid, as a Clergyman and a man of honour, to reply to one of its leading articles, concerning which I shall say no more, than that both in tone and matter it is as unfair as> it was on my part unexpected. I do not know what right the author of the article in question ha? to institute a parallel between me and a gentleman with whom 1 never came into personal collision, with whose opinions I have no- concern, and who, from our relative positions, will probably run to the end of his course in a line quite distinct from mine. I have no wish to say anything unkind of Dr. Hampden, and I trust that he will not so understand it; but if he be objected to on theological grounds,. as unfit to fill the chair of the Divinity Professorship at Oxford, hii case surely is and must be widely different from mine, who stand accused, no doubt, in this passage of the Globe, of the crime of ultra- Toryism ; but who has not been placed in a situation where it con- stitutes the whole of my official duty to inculcate my own views— in a matter infinitely less important than religion— on those who are to be the instructors of others throughout the length and breadth of the- land. If the writer of the Globe be not entirely blinded by prejudice, he must, I think, perceive that he is not acting justly towards Dr.. Hampden or me; though, indeed, it is very evident, as far as I am concerned, that to act justly is not his object. In the face of my peremptory denial that I ever was the editor of 3 newspaper in Kent or elsewhere, this old charge is repeated, because, forsooth, there appeared in the Kentish Gazette not long ago an ex- pression, which must have been used either through inadvertence to the meaning which it conveyed, or in total ignorance of the facts. When the Liberal party raised so fierce an outcry against my ap- pointment, solely on political grounds, I did not deny that during the agitation of the Reform Bill I wrote both in the Kentish Gazette and elsewhere, as my conscience dictated: the extraordinary ex- citement of that period having made of me, as it did of others, what I never was before— a politician. But I denied here, and I here repeat the denial, that I ever edited the Kentish Gazette or any other newspaper. I had no control whatever over the Kentish Gazette, which was edited by Mr. Smithson, the brother of the gentleman who, I believe, now conducts it. I never corrected the proofs even of my own contributions: I did not write all, nor nearly all, the leading articles. Many of those which 1 did write- were very much altered after they were sent by me to the office; and some never appeared at all. In one word, I had no more official connec- tion with the Kentish Gazette than Mr. Buller, or any other member^ of the House of Commons, may have with the Globe— that is, sup- posing Mr. Buller to contribute an occasional article gratuitously, and to incur considerable personal expense, in the endeavour tct- insure for the newspaper, whichhe thus enricnes, an enlarged circu- lation. But the principal ground of accusation against me is, that after ac cepting a professional appointment from Lord John Russell, I have^ written a book of party politics ; and my political views being dif- - ferent from those ofthe present Government, thatl am therefore very- much to blame. In the first place, if this charge were true to the letter, wouldit justify the attack in the Globe f Did Lord John Rus- sell, in nominating me to the Chaplaincy of Chelsea Hospital, stipulate that I should either abjure my former principles, or come under an engagement never to broach them in public ? It might just as rea- sonably be inferred that Professor Airy, in consideration ofthe pen- sion which Sir Robert Peel awarded him, should renounce opinions-• which I do not doubt that he conscientiously holds. But really this is wretched work. I profess thatthe " Chronicles of Waltham" neither' is, nor was meant to be, a party book. Whatever of politics pervades- it belongs to history. The allusions are all to things gone by ; not one word is said about either the present or the future. And as to the object which I had in view when I began to write, it was this:— I had spent many years of my life in a rural district. I had seen with deep regret the demoralized and fallen state of the labouring poor. I entertained my own notions; whether correct or incorrect, both as to the causes which led to this deterioration, and the system of acting which was best calculated to remove the evil; and above all, having personally witnessed the avidity with which a discon- tented populace listens to the promptings of men whose objects are not good, I desired to impress upon the minds of the landed gentry of England, that their best security against the return of disturb- ances, such as those which distracted them six years ago, will be found in a well- regulated endeavour to ameliorate both the moral and physical condition of the peasantry. If to teach these great lessons subject me to the charge of being a party politician, I am not only willing to bear all the odium which attaches to the name, but mv constant prayer is that I may never lose it. . There is one more point on wliich I beg leave to touch, rhe intro- duction of Lord Palmerston's name into one of the tales has been condemned as impertinent and unwarrantable. I beg to state thus publicly that my error, if such it be, has been one of judgment only. I never wished to cast the slightest ridicule or censure on the Noble Lord; and, if he feel that I have done him wrong, 1 trust that he will accept this apology. I had an impostor to deal with, who wished to represent himself as a public man engaged in the management of foreign diplomacy. What could be more natural than that such a one— an educated man, be it observed— should assume the title of the Foreign Secretary of State ? And such Lord Palmerston was at the supposed date of the action of the story. Still, if in taking this step I have transgressed the bounds of recognised usage, or m the mo » f 51 j o h n b u l l ; February 14. 1 lament it rcii. ut.- aegree jarrea against Lord Faimerston's feeling: with all my heart. 1 entreat you, Sir, to bear with me patiently in having thus occu- pied so large a space in your columns w ith a communication which, but for the masked line of the Globe, would have been sent to the journal which has called it forth. Hut I could not flatter myself that any letter of mine would be noticed in a paper, the editor of which doe'not seem to feel, that it is neither a manly nor a just part, to drag into controversy with an anonymous assailant, and to charge • with moral turpitude of the basest kind, a Clergyman who is striving so to do his duty, as that he may give an account of his stewardship whenever it shall be required, prove useful to those among whom he is placed, and not disgrace the choice of the patrons, to whatever party they may belong, to whom he is indebted for his preferment. I am, Sir, your most obedient servant, G. R. GLEIG. MR. HARDY'S SPEECH. THE following is Mr. HARDY'S speech on moving for a Select Com- mittee to inquire into the Carlow affair:— Mr. HARDY having been called upon by the Speaker, moved tha the standing order relating to bribery and corruption at elections be read by the clerk. The clerk read the following order:—" That if it shall appear that any person hath been elected or returned a Member of thisHouse, or endeavoured so to be, by bribery, or any other corrupt practices, this House will proceed with the utmost severity against all such persons as shall have been wilfully concerned in such bribery or other corrupt practices." The reading of the resolution was attended with laughter from the ministerial benches. Mr. HARDYsaid, that whetherthe risibility of Hon. Gentlemen op- posite had been excited by the reading of this order he did not know, but he thought that the case which he had now to lay before the House for its consideration came within, if not the words," the very principle of the order; and'snch being his opinion, it was a great relief to his mind to know that the matter came before the House at a time and under circumstances fixed and appointed by the Hon. and Learned Member himself who was most interested in the result. H e was rejoiced at that, because he did not fear that the Hon. and Learned Member might have sustained some inconvenience in consequence of an omission on his part, in not communicating to him the petition which he had to present on the subject, but which he had since learned was in the Hon. and Learned Gentleman's hands ( at least a copy of it) before it was in his. ( Loud and protracted cheering from the Opposition.) There was one circumstance which he knew might have created inconvenience to the Hon. and Learned Gentleman, and that was the late hour at which the _ discussion of the case was likely to come on, in consequence of his notice of motion standing ninth on the Eaper for Thursday evening. Accordingly, as soon as he had satisfied imself, which he was not able to do till late on Wednesday night, that lie had a right to bring on his motion in precedence of others, by way of a breach of privilege, he wrote a note early on the following morn- ing, acquainting the Hon. and Learned Member that he did mean to claim precedence for his motion respecting the Carlow Election, and he would read the note to the House. ( Much cheering and laughter.) " Mr. Hardy presents his compliments to Mr. O'Connell, and begs leave to inform him that it is his intention to claim precedence for bis motion of this evening, respecting the Carlow Election, as in- volving a breach of privilege." ( Loud cheering.) " 7, Portland- place, February 11." ( Renewed cheers and laughter.) The answer to that was a verbal one— that the Hon. and Learned Member was not up ( laughter), and would not be for an hour; butin thecourse of the morning he received this note :—" If any act of Mr. Hardy could create surprise in the mind of any impartial person, it would be, that after neglecting all the ordinary courtesies between Members, he should have had the almost incredible presumption ( great laughter) to address his first communication to Mr. O'Connell, who, however, canot but feel flattered that Mr. Hardy should send him his compli- ments." ( Renewed and long continued laughter.) If he was to judge at all by the confidence the Hon. and Learned Gentleman had displayed 011 the occasion, he trusted that the Hon. Member would have cause to be glad that hehadsentliim his compliments ( laughter); but he trusted that on this evening the objection of Thursday would not be again made by the Hon. and Learned Member, that this was " a mock solemnity "( cheering)— a designation given to the proceed- ing by the Hon. Gentleman, not in perfect consistency with another of his statements, when he declared that he thought this a case for inquiry ( cheers and laughter); for how a case of mock solemnity should occupy the attention of the House, or be a subject of grave in- quiry, he knew not— it was for the Hon. and Learned Member to ex- plain. ( Loud laughter.) But if it was then a case of mock solemnity, something bad transpired since Thursday which had at last rescued it from that imputation. No longer ago than last night steps had been taken by two Hon. Members, which had given this question a solem- nity that it never had before. ( Cheers.) He had an opportunity of conversing with the Hon. and Learned Member for Ipswich, who had made one of the motions referred to a few nights ago, and the Honourable and Learned Gentleman then treated the matter as one of the most trifling description, and showed him a resolution which, to evince his feeling on the subject, the Honourable Member said it was his intention to move, calling for an account of all the agreements and transactions between all the Members of the House, and their agents and constituents. ( Greatlaughter in all parts of the House.) Whe- ther, on more mature consideration, the Hon. and Learned Gentle- man found that such an inquiry would not exactly suit all his purposes, fee knew not ( laughter from the Opposition), but from considering this a case of no importance, it became in his mind of such extraordi- nary magnitude, that the Hon. and Learned Member had given no- tice of a motion for hearing it at the bar of the House. ( Loud cheer- ing.) Another Hon. and Learned Member presented a most extra- ordinary petition last night, which, not being in the House at the time, he hud only an opportunity of seeing in the votes that morning. The petition appeared to him to proceed 011 grounds most irrelevant and extraneous as regarded this matter. ( Cheers.) It was presented in the name of a gentleman named Vigors, one of the individuals elected for the county of Carlow in June last, but afterwards unseated, mid it complained of imputations against him in the petitions recently laid on the table, when the fact was, that his name was never men- tioned in the Bath petition ( cheers from the Opposition), and in that from Carlow it was merely introduced in two places ( cheers from the Ministerial Benches), but without the slightest imputation ( cheers from the Opposition renewed), the petition only setting forth that Mr. Vigors was a candidate for the county, and had been returned to serve in Parliament. ( Cheering.) And jret that petition was presented by the Hon. and Learned Member for Liskeard, complaining of . al- leged imputations against the petitioner for illegal, unconstitutional, and corrupt conduct, although he did not know of anything in either petition in the way of a complaint against Mr. Vigors, imputing to him ^ constitutional or corrupt conduct; nor, indeed, could he see that this gentleman's petition had anything to do with the case. It appeared that the bringing forward of this case, or at least his motion, trifling as it was deemedoriginally, had become of great interest and import- ance, and would be attended with some good effect, since the presen- tation of this petition, because it appeared that unless his motion had been made, and this inquiry called for, 249 families, amounting to 1383 individuals, and including 316 widows and orphans, would never have had their wrongs brought before the House. ( Great cheering and laughter from the opposition.) These unfortunate widows and orphans ( hear, hear, from Mr. O'Connell),— ay, the Hon. and Learn- ed Member might call " hear, hear," but he asked the Hon. Gentle- man where he was when the circumstances stated to have taken place within the last few years had occurred ( cheers from the oppo- sition benches), and why he did not bring the case before the House? ( Renewed cheering.) The circumstances of these poor persecuted families— the injuries and wrongs of the widows and orphans— were they so closely connected with this case of his, that wheresoever there appeared to have been a traffic in seats, there appeared immediately, in juxta- postion with it, these lamentable wrongs? ( Cheers.) Hav- ing got. over these preliminary observations, he now proceeded to the case which he had to lay before the House, and which appeared to him to lie within a very narrow compass. It appeared, as most Gentlemen in the House would recollect, that on the 27th of Slav last, a Committee then sitting on the Carlow Election Petition, declared the Election of Messrs. Bruen and Kavanaeh void. On the 9fttk . fll 1.. .1 —.* J i .1 /• ° 2Sth of May— only the very next day, and therefore ° at a time when the freeholders of Carlow could not well have been consulted in the matter— the Hon. and Learned Member for Dublin called upon Mr. Raphael, and proposed to him to become a Candidate for the Represen- tation ot the County, recommending the attempt to him particularly, as the expense could not amount to more than 2,0001. It appeared that on the day after Mr. O'Connell and Mr. Raphael were to have a meeting 011 the subject, at. the Hon. and Learned Gentleman's house, but that, in consequence of a mistake as to the hour, the meet- ing did not take place. On this day, the 28th of May, two days after the seats had been declared void, the Hon. and Learned Gentleman wrote the following note to Mr. Raphael:— " 9, Clarges- street, May 29,1835. " My dear Sir,— 1 remained at home, at some inconvenience, until after the hourl mentioned. 1 was sorry 1 did not remain longer, as you called shortly after; but as you left no letter or other indication of acceding to my proposal, I take for granted that you decline my offer— be it so. I only add my belief that you will never again meet so safe a speculation ( great laughter and cheering)— I am quite jure I never shall hear of one. ( Laughter and cheers renewed.) " I have the honour to be, my dear Sir, your very faithful, " DANIEL O'CONNELL. " Alexander Raphael, Esq." Now, it was very quaintly said by one of our poets ( oh, oh! andlaugh- ter from the Ministerial Benches)— by one of our early poets— " The thing for sale calls forth the seller's praise," ( laughter from the Opposition), and certainly if anything could re- commend, or in plain terms puff off, one of the seats' for Carlow, no- thing could be better adapted for the purpose of securing a purchaser, than this expression of the Hon. and Learned Gentleman, when he assured his friend that it was " so safe a speculation," and that he was quite sure he should never hear of such another, or have so good a one to offer again. ( Cheers and laughter.) This showed that the Hon. and Learned Gentleman was most anxious that the county of Carlow should be represented by Mr. Raphael. Inconsequence of that note, a meeting took place between Mr. Raphaeland Mr. O'Con- nell, at the house of the Hon. and Learned Member, on Sunday, the lst of Jnne, on which occasion a note was written by Mr. O'Connell, and delivered, at the same time, to Mr. Raphael, which note he would now read to the House:— " 9, Clarges- street, June 1. " My Dear Sir,— You have acceded to the terms proposed to you for the election of the County of Carlow ; viz. you are to pay before nomination 1000/.; say 1000/., and a like sum after being returned— the first to be paid absolutely and entirely for being nominated ( loud cheers and laughter); the second to be paid only in the event of your being returned. I hereby undertake to guarantee and save you harmless from any and every other expense whatsoever, whether of agents, carriages, counsel, petition against the return, or of any other description; and 1 make this guarantee in the fullest sense of the honourable engagement ( loud cheers), that you should not possibly be required to pay one shilling more in any event, or upon any con- tingency whatsoever." ( Renewed cheers and laughter). " I am, my dear Sir, your very faithful, " A. Raphael, Esq." " DANIEL O'CONNELL. Such, then, was the bargain entered into between the Honourable and Learned Member and Mr. Raphael; and he would ask his Majesty's Attorney- General to have the goodness to state to the House if he ever witnessed a more complete bargain and sale? ( Hear, hear.) What was the subject matter of it ? A seat in Par- liament.. ( Hear, hear.) If it had been for a horse, instead of a seat in that House of Parliament, no one could for a moment doubt that it would have been enforceable in a Court of Law ; and it was merely not enforceable in a Court of Law because the subject of it was a seat in Parliament. ( Hear, hear.) Would any man pretend that Mr. Raphael would have his seat in that House as the Representative for the County of Carlow if it had not been for that 1,000/. ? ( Cheers.) Or that he would have been recommended by the Hon. and Learned Member but for that sum? ( Cheers.) What more could be wanted to constitute a bargain ? ( Cheers.) And if it were pretended that money could not have been ail object with the Hon. and Learned Member— if that were thought a consideration of no importance, he would beg tbe attention of the House to the notes subsequently written by the Hon. and Learned Member to Mr. Raphael, in which he asked over and over again for tbe 1000/. He wrote to him on the 4th of June the following letter:— " 9, Clarges- street, June 4. " My dear Sir,— I have heard from Mr. Vigors this day that our prospects are quite bright." ( Cheers.) Now, inasmuch as the bar- gain was only made on the lst of June, that letter being written on the 4tli, what could Mr. Raphael's prospects be at that time? ( Hear.) Why, his recommendation had not even arrived in Carlow, and there- fore it was somewhat difficult to divine whose " our " prospects could well be at that time. " I will arrange your address tor to- morrow's post ( loud cheers from the opposition), and my own for immediate publication." ( Renewedcheers.) " 1 at present entertain 110doubt of success; you will hear again from me to- morrow. Who is Mr. Hamilton, with whom you have deposited the 1,000/. ? ( Loud cheers and laughter.) I do not know any person of that name in London. I hope I shall soon have the pleasure of sitting by your side in the House." ( Loud and continued cheers.) On tbe 8th of June the Hon. and Learned Member wrote again:—" My dear Sir,— I sent off yesterday, my letter to the electors of Carlow on your behalf; all my accounts confirm my opinion of an easy victory. I doubt whether there will be more than the show ofa contest ( loudcheers), but I am assured in any event, of success. I send you a slip of a Carlow news- paper, showing that you are already nominated under the most fa- vourable auspices. ( Cheers.) I also send you the draught of an address. ( Cheers.) I beg of you to peruse it, and to return it to me ( cheers) with any corrections you may deem inecessary; or, if you approve it, then with your signature. ( Cheers.) My wish is that you should alter it as little as you possibly can. ( Cheers.) I also send you a sealed letter from Mr. Vigors. I beg of you to return the ad- dress as near to four o'clock this day as you can, that I may transmit it to the Dublin Pilot, for publication on Wednesday next." All the good men of Carlow see that paper. ( Loud cheers and laughter.) Let me knw who the Mr. Hamilton is with whom you deposited the 1,000/. ( Renewed cheers and laughter.) I expected you would have lodged this at Mr. Wright's. It is time this were done. Faithfully yours, DANIEL O'CONNELL. " A. Raphael, Esq." That was the bargain which he had to bring under the attention of the House; and when he was beginning to state the case, as he fan- cied he was entitled to do the other evening, but was called to order, the only question then before the House being that the petitions do lie on the table— when he stated that he did not draw from those cir- cumstances the inference that sheer money came ultimately into the pocket of the Hon. and Learned Gentleman, the House must have observed the importance which was attached to that declaration. Though he was but a little man, as he confessed he was when he came forward to accuse, yet when he ventured to acquit, he indeed seemed a most important personage. ( Cheers.) But he was then going on to state, if he had not been called to order, that although, in consequence ofa contest, and a petition succeeding that bargain, there might not have remained any sheer money in the pocket of the Hon. and Learned Member, yet that fact actually signified nothing. ( Cheers.) It was a matter of much more importance to soihe men that their ambition should be gratified than that they should receive a certain sum of money; and if that money went for the purpose of increasing the political influence and Importance of the Hon. and Learned Member in Ireland, it answered that purpose which was dearest to his heart, and accounted, at the same time, for the anxiety with which he inquired after Mr. Hamilton. ( Loud cheers.) Butwhen he recollected that the petition had itself been abandoned by the Hon. and Learned Gentleman, as appeared by the statement of his brother contractor, on the second or third day after the Committee sat, he could notnnderstand howthe whole ofthatmoney could have been expended. ( Cheers.) Even if there had been a contest in Carlow, it was to be recol- lected, that being only a small county, with scarcely as many voters as that borough ( Bradford) which he had the honour to represent in that House, a large sum of money couldnot be necessary for the legitimate expenses of the election; but what would have been the case if there had been no contest? ( Loud cheers.) Had there been no contest, of course there would have been no petition, and yet the 1,0001. was to be paid on nomination, which was likely, according to the Learned Member's own estimate,, to be followed, not by an easy victory, but by the shadow of a contest; what, then, would have become " of the difference between the actual cost of the nomination, supposing the rival candidates had given up their opposition on the very first day, and the 2,0001.? ( Loud cheers.) He found it was part ofthe bargain that Mr. Raphael should not be called on for one shilling more in any contingency whatsoever; but he did not find a provision that he should in any case have any part of what he advanced re- turned. ( Cheers.) Those were the circumstances of the case; they lay in a very narrow compass. He had seen no defence and that in the present instance Mr. Vigors had the reputation and popularity in the benefit of which Mr. Raphael was to parti- cipate. ( Cheers.) Now he had yet to learn that any Hon. Member in that House, who offered himself as a candidate to a constitu- ency, had any right to sell one- half of the popularity he might happen to possess; and not having a very plentiful purse, could fo to a friend and say, " You pay all the expenses, and enjoy alf my popularity and reputation." ( Hear, hear.) If such a transaction were to be considered legal, it was the first time he had ever heard the proposition.) ( Hear, hear.) He could not under- stand how any person calling himself an agent in such a bargain, especially if he were a Member of that House, could for a moment attempt to vindicate such a transaction. But he could not consider the Hon. and Learned Member a mere agent ( hear, hear,) he wondered why he had condescended so to designate himself— he never heard of an agent undertaking to be responsible to such an extent as this^" I hereby undertake to guarantee and save you harmless from any and every other expense, whatsoever, whether of agents, carriages, counsel, petition against the return, or of any other description." e repeated he did not know how such a person could well be called an agent. ( Hear, hear.) He was inclined to think that Mr. Vigors, the petitioner of last night, was the agent of the Hon. and Learned Member at Carlow, rather than that the Hon. and Learned Member was the agent of Mr. Vigors iu London. ( Hear, hear.) At all events, the consequence of the bargain was that the Hon. and Learned, Member, whether as agent or principal, put in two Mem- bers for Carlow— Mr. Vigors, his old friend ex animo, and Mr. Raphael, his friend ex contractu. ( Cheers and laughter.) But while the Hon. and Learned Member 011 the one hand gained this the great object of his ambition, it was, on the other, of very little consequence what set of representatives the people of Carlow obtained. ( Hear, hear.) They never saw Mr. Raphael,— they never heard him— they had 110 occular demonstration of either his physical or intellectual abilities; all they knew about him was, his address, and there was nothing of him even in that but his name. ( Loud cheers and laugh- ter.) It had been said, that on the present occasion the Hon. and Learned Member had exercised nothing but his moral influence; he humbly contended, however, and he was in the hearing of a great many able lawyers who could set him right if he were mistaken, that if a man possessed moral influence in a borough, he had no right to dispose of it for money. (" Loud cheers.) A new writ had lately been moved for a particular borough in consequence of the eleva- tion to the other House of one who, from having been one- third of a Lord Chancellor; had now become a whole one ( a laugh); such a vacancy having occurred in a borough where it was well known a Noble Lord of the highest respectability ( hear, hear), and whom no one esteemed more than he ( Mr. Hardy) did, of them, except in a public newspaper, in the estimation of whose editor the Hon. and Learned Member seemed to stand very high, and in the petition which had been presented to the House last night. It was stated, in the defence to which he alluded, that nothing was more common than arrangements of this kind; that what had happened, the money transactions to which the petitions adverted, were strictly legal, constitutional, and honourable ( cheers); that, the great majority of that House were accustomed to make similar arrangements with respect to their seats ( loud cheers) ; that nothing was more common than for one candidate to pay all the expenses; ... Pos- sessed a great deal of personal and moral influence, what would be said of him if he attempted to make such a bargain as that? ( Hear, hear.) He would put a case still more analogous— he believed there were some constituencies in the country who would be glad to receive a recommendation from the Right Hon. Baronet ( Sir R. Peel) who sat under him, and he would suppose a case in which he said to any candidate, " I know that in such a borough, or in such a county, if I recommended you, you are sure to be returned ; but you must give me 1,0001. for being nominated ( hear, hear), and another 1,0001. for being returned ( hear, hear); then 1 will send a laudatory letter, introducing you to the constituents of the place, and make you sure of your election, at least as far as moral certainty can go." ( Hear, hear.) He should be glad to know, if such a circumstance had ever transpired in the history of the Right Hon. Baronet, whether those walls could have stood the vibration of those cheers with which the Honourable and Learned Member himself would have been saluted, while he shot forth those straws of invective his quiverso abundantly supplied against the Right Hon. Baronet. ( Cheers.) He had now stated what the bargain was, and that appeared to him to be all that was necessary for his present purpose. How the money was expended was not of the least importance to that House. The question was, how the Hon. and Learned Member had the power of spending it ( cheers)— how this bargain enabled him to deal with it. Nothing at all prevented him from applying every farthing which was not spent at the nomination, if there had been no contest, to purposes of his own personal aggrandisment. ( Loud cheers.) It appeared' therefore unnecessary for him to enter upon the circumstances sub- sequently stated, and which were well known to the different Mem- bers of that, House. When he first read the case, he acknowledged it struck him with surprise that it was necessary to recommend Mr. Raphael to the electors of Carlow. Was there no Irish patriot who could have presented himself to the freemen and undertaken to fight their battles in that House ? ( Cheers.) Was there no one who could spend, if necessary, the trifling sum of2,0001. in legal expenses for the purpose of vindicating theirrights and doing justice to Ireland ? Yet, it was perfectly true that an Irish gentleman, whose manly straight- forwardness he very much admired ( Mr. Fergus O'Connor) had made application for the honour, because the Hon. and Learned Member wrote this to Mr. Raphael:—" 11 is not my my fault that Mr. Fergus O'Connor called upon you; refer him and every body else to me. ( Loud laughter and cheering.) I want part ofthe 1,0001. to send over (' Continued laughter.) How shall I communicate with Mr. Hamil- ton? ( Renewed laughter.) All quite well at Carlow." ( Continued laughter.) And on the same day the Hon. and Learned Member wrote the following note to Mr. Hamilton:— " Sir,— I beg you will hand my son, Mr. John O'Connell, the 1,0001., placed with you by Mr. Raphael for my use. ( Cheers.) My son will give you a voucher at foot. " I have the honour to be, Sir, your obedient, servant, " DANIEL O'CONNELL." It was on that ground he made his observations the other night with respect to the Hon. Member for Youghall ( Mr. J. O'Connell); it did not follow because he had gone for the money that he must have known for what purposes it was received. But if the inquiry pro- ceeded, it would be for the Committee to consider all the circum- stances. ( Hear, hear.) He did not know that it was necessary for him to make any further observations with respect to the facts of this case. He had laid them before the House simply and plainly as he had felt it his duty to do; and if the Hon. and Learned Member could get rid of them either by argument or by evidence, he ( Mr. Hardy) should rejoice that he had afforded him the opportunity; and the Hon. and Learned Member himself should be grateful tofiim for having done so. ( Hear, hear.) Before sitting down he had a single observation to make in reference to what had fallen the other night from the Honourable and Learned Member for Tipperary ( Mr. Sheilj, when the case was first brought forward. That Hon. and Learned Member, for the evident purpose of exciting a prejudice against the motion, chose to represent him ( Mr. Hardy) as put forward by the Conservatives. ( Loud cheers from the Ministerial benches.) There was a gentleman sitting at that moment behind the Treasury bench, to whom he ( Mr. Hardy) had mentioned his intention of introducing the subject to the attention of the House more than two months ago ; and if any one gentleman on the Oppo- sition side of the House could say that he had mentioned the subject to him within one month, he might come forward and stamp him as a vftlain. ( Loud cheers.) The Hon. and Learned Member for Tipperary, ironically no doubt, represented him as a leader of the. Conservatives— he did not pretend to be a leader, he was not of the Monboddo school of politicians ( cheers); he knew nothing of joints in tails either anatomically or politically ( cheers); but he had come into that House as an independent man, and such, please God, he should continue. ( Cheers.) He came in on those principles so eloquently expressed by the noble Lord ( Russell) when introducing the Reform Bill, and w'hen he said he would take his: stand on that ground which would enable him to reform abuses and to avert commotion. ( Cheers.) That was the ground on which he was anxious to take his stand. If that were to be a Conservative, he was prepared at once to avow himself a Conservative ( loud cheers); for such was the course of policy he was determined to pursue as long as he had a seat in that House. ( Cheers.) With respect to bribery and corruption, he could appeal with confidence to the Hon. and Learned Member for Tipperary, or any of his friends on the other ( the ministerial) side of the House, to say whether they had_ ever found him flinching from his duty when inquiries were being insti- tuted into the case of Warwick, Stafford, or Ipswich? ( Hear, hear.) But he wished to be consistent. ( Loud cheers.) He could not understand the principles of those gentlemen who, having hunted out with a keen scent every petty detail of corruption, immediately lost all their eagerness, and found all their energies pa- ralysed, when thev approached a wholesale dealer in seats. ( Cheers.) He had been startled at the policy of those gentlemeu who, calling themselves Radicals, monopolised the name of Liberals. Libe- rality indeed! ( Cheers.) It was not so the other mglit ( loud cheers); he then saw a specimen of it which determined him never to belong to that sect of political Pharisees who could strain at a gnat and swallow a camel. ( Loud and continued cheers.) The Hon. and Learned Gentleman concluded bv moving, " That a Select Commit- tee be appointed to inquire into the circumstances attending the January 24. ' JOHN BULL. 31 traffic and agreement alleged to have taken place between Mr. Daniel O'Connell and Mr. Alexander Raphael, touching the nomi- aation and return of Mr. Alexander Raphael as one of the represen- tatives for the county of Carlow at the last election, and to report the minutes of evidence taken before them, with their observations thereon." ( Hear. hearJ A ballot was taken aTtSTEasOndia House on Wednesday, on the following question, viz. :— " That, in the opinon of this Court, the case of every Commander and Officer heretofore employed by or under the Company in their Maritime Service, who will make a declaration that he had not abandoned the service, or relinquished it for the purpose of engaging in business, and that his interest has been affected by the discontinu- ance of the Company's trade ( agreeably to the 7th section of the Act of the 3d and 4th of ' William the Fourth, cap. 85), is such a special case as entitles a Commander or Officer to a pension or gratuity, notwithstanding he may not have been actually in the service of the Company within five years antecedent to the 28th of August, 1833. And that the Court of Directors be requested to grant pensions or gratuities to special cases, in conformity with the foregoing declara- tion, according to the scale, and from the period, heretofore granted • to other Commanders and Officers, their widows and children, subject to a reduction of one- fourth of the amount thereof." At six o'clock the glasses were closed and delivered to the scruti- neers, who reported the question to be decided in the negative. A Conservative club has been formed at Totnes, composed of several respectable and influential individuals. At the andience with which the Earl of COVENTRY was lately honoured by his MAJESTY at Brighton the Noble Earl presented the address from the agriculturnl interests of Worcestershire, which had been entrusted to him by that county, complaining of the unredressed grievances under which the landed interestis still labouring, although twice recommended in speeches from the Throne to Parliament for protection. The Noble Earl, at his MAJESTY'S desire, read the address to the KING, who paid the most marked and gracious atten- tion to the subject, manifesting the strongest wish to aid in any way in which it might be in his power those who form so extensive a class of his MAJESTY'S most loyal and deserving subjects. The Earl BEAUCHAMP also accompanied the Noble Earl. BISHOPRICKS OF BRISTOL AND LANDAFF.— On dit, that the Minis- ters have abandoned certain parts of their plan of last year for a new arrangement of the episcopal sees, and that it is their present inten- tion to suppress the Bishopricks of Bristol and Llandaff by turning over the Deanery of Bristol to the diocese of Bath and Wells, and the see of Llandaff to Gloucester. Who will say what thimble the pea will be under at the next shift?— Bristol Journal. The Pope held a consistory on the lst, at which he appointed three Cardinals and 25 Bishops. He was so good as to give away a Pallium for a patriarch of Antiocb, and to favour with prelates several districts which have no particular affection for his Holiness. Among the creations is that of Prince FREDERICK VON SCHWART-- ZENBURG, who is made Archbishop of Salzburg, though but in Ilia 26th year. He has obtained a dispensation for this irregularity, and, we doubt not, for sufficient reason. Last week Sir ROBERT GRAHAM, ex- Baron of the Court of Ex- chequer, who is now in his 91st year, but hale and hearty, and in full enjoyment of all his faculties, took the oaths in the Court of King's Bench before Lord DESMAN, required by the Act lately passed, empowering retired Judges to assist in trying prisoners at the Central Court of the Old Bailey. If is said that one of the contemplated alterations in the manage- ment of business in the Post Office is to appoint three Commissioners to perform the duties now executed by the Postmaster- General.— More Commissioners.' More jobs !! Another large portion of the Regent's Park is shortly to be thrown open to the puDlic. At an adjourned meeting of the subscribers to Sir WALTER SCOTT'S monument, PRINCIPAL MACFARLANE in the Chair, held yesterday in the Montieth Rooms, Buchanan- street, it was, after considerable discussion, agreed, by a large majority, that the monument to the memory of the great man should be erected in St. George's- square.— Glasgow Courier of Saturday. The mother of NAPOLEON BONAPARTE is dead. A correspondent of the Augsburgh Gazette announces the event as follows:— ROME, Feb. 2.— Madame MARIE L^ TITIA BONAPARTE, mother of NAPOLEON, died at one o'clock this morning. She was born at Ajaccio on the 24th of August, 1750, and has resided here ever since 1814. TheMarquess ofCHANDOs was recalled fromhis Parliamentary duties to Stowe, in consequence of the indisposition of the Duke of BUCKINGHAM. His Grace, however, is somewhat better. CONVICTION OF TWO TOWN COUNCILLORS OF WIGAM.— On Wed- nesday last, Messrs. GEORGE and RICHARD TENNANT, millers and malsters, of Wigan, were convicted in two penalties of 251. and 5C1. for a violation of the excise laws in having more barley under pro- . cess then they accounted for to the excise.— Manchester Courier. It is said that the dignity of a Baronet of Great Britain is about to be conferred on Lieutenant- Colonel Henry Fairfax, the only son of the late Admiral Sir William G. Fairfax, Knight Banneret, Captain of the flag- ship in the memorable battle of Camperdown; on Sir T. Brisbane, of Mackerstoun, Roxburghshire; Sir Henry Bethune, ol Kilconquar, Fifeshire; Donald Campbell, Esq., of Dunstaffnage, Argyleshire; Colin Mackenzie, Esq., of Kilcoy, Ross- shire ; R. W. Newman, Esq., of Mamhead, Devonshire ; John Graves Sawter, Esq.; Rev. John Barber Mill, Sir Frederic Adair Roe, and James A. Carnac, Esq., Deputy Chairman of the Hon. East India Company. A Norwich paper asserts that in the late high wind, a man belong- ing to a neighbouring village had his breath completely blown out of his body. This sounds marvellous: the man of course did not sur- vive the " blow." The Dublin Evening Post mentions the death of Mr. JESSOP, of Mount Jessop, who had lately been sworn in High Sheriff for Long- ford. It appears that the unfortunate gentleman committed suicide by shooting himself. On Saturday, at the^ Paris Assizes, the responsible editor of the Royalist journal La France was condemned to an imprisonment of six months, and a fine of 4,000 francs, for having denounced the po- litical principles upon which Louis PHILIPPE'S Government is founded as the cause of the attempt of the 28th of July. It is stated to be the intention of Ministers to bring forward a measure for the purpose of incorporating every borough which sends two Members to Parliament; and that i t will not be left to the option of boroughs whether they participate in its provisions or not. The Earl of COVENTRY was, at a meeting of the Council, on Tues- day last, on the motion of Dr. B. COOPER, re- elected to the honorary office of Lord High Steward of the borough of Evesham. The Kidderminster Town Conncil have passed resolutions, depre- cating the interference of Lord JOHN RUSSELL in the appointment of Magistrates for that borough.— The resolutions have been commu- nicated to the Noble Lord. DEATH OF A FAMOUS WATERLOO HERO.— On the 12th of February died at Strathfieldsaye, of old age, Copenhagen, the horse which carried the Duke of WELLINGTON SO nobly on the field of Waterloo. He was foaled about the time of the battle of Copenhagen, from which he got his name, and was remarkable for gentleness and spirit united. He lost an eye some years before his death, and has not been used by the noble owner for any purpose during the last ten years. By the order of his Grace a salute was fired over his grave, and thus he was buried as he lived, with military honours. This horse has long been a great attraction to strangers, who were ac- customed to feed him over the rails with bread, and the Duke himself preserved an especial regard for him, which cannot be wondered at upon considering that he bore him for sixteen hours safe through the grandest battle that has occurred in the history of the world. The late amiable Duchess was likewise particularly attached to him, and wore a bracelet made of his hair.— Times. The case of the alleged sale of the representation of Carlow county was referred to the following Select Committee:— Mr. Ridley Colborne— Whig; Mr. Bannerman— Radical; Mr. W. Ord— Whig- Radical ; Sir R. Ferguson— Whig; Mr. H. G. Ward— Radical; Mr. H. Warburton— Radical; Lord Francis Egerton— Conservative; Sir C. B. Vere— Conservative; Sir John Yarde Buller - Conservative; Mr. Barneby— Conservative ; Sir Eardley Wilmot— Conservative. Ax IRISH BRIEF.—- The brief in Mr. O'CONNELL'S case for the Dublin Election Committee, which is to be sent to London, consists of 22 reams of paper— only 11,000 sheets !!— Dublin Post. A Mr. HORSMAN has been returned for Cockermouth in the room of Mr. DYKES— Captain DUNDAS for Devizes— and Colonel ANSON for Stoke- upon- Trent. A worthy functionary of a parish church in Worcestershire, who prides himself in belli;* called " the knobbler- up at the Church," having recently to officiate as locum tenens for the parish clerk, it fell to his lot to give notice respecting sermons to be preached in aid o the Society for Propagating the Gospel, & c.; which he did as fol- lows :—" I'hereby give notice, that sermons will be preached in this Church on Sunday next, in aid of the Society for profligating the Gos- pel in foreign parts." The following mysterious paragraph is from the Birmingham paper:— A court mourning will, it is expected, be gazetted for her late Majesty the Queen of NAPLES, whose premature death has overcast with gloom the gaieties of the Tuilleries, the young Duke Queen being niece of the Consul of King Louis PHILIPPE. The Jamaica Standard has the subjoined:— CARD TRACTS FOR THE YOUNG.— The Devil, it is said, could quote Scripture to answer his own ends ; and here, in like manner ( though for different purposes), the " Devil's books," Cards, are pressed into the service of the friends of religious instruction at " Sabbath Schools." We have two specimen cards before us, which, instead of the Ace of Spades or the Knave of Clubs, are covered with pious articles in prose and verse, tending to inspire youth with a sense of religious and moral duties. Surely dice and backgammon will next be " improved." A letter, dated Pittsfield, Massachusetts, 17th Sept., says—" Last evening a very handsome streak of lightning came slick down the con- ducting rod into our lecture room, where there were assembled about three hundred persons. Some were stunn'd; some were stagger'd; some were struck staring; some were all but struck blind; some were scorch'd; and some were topsy- turvy'd:— one had his sleeve slit from shoulder to hand— one had his head and face singed bald— and one had the sole of his boot handsomely cut off!" A Russian writer has recently published a view of all known lan- guages and their dialects ; according to which there are 937 Asiatic, 587 European, 226 African, and 1,264 American languages and dia- lects. The following notice has been issued by the Admiralty, dated Ad- miralty, Feb. 10:—" Notice is hereby given, that all ships engaged from this date to convey convicts to Australia will be required" ( and without any extra charge to the Crown) to call for fresh provisions, either at the Cape de Verd Islands, or the Cape of Good Hope, if re- quired so to do by the Surgeon Superintendent." The following important letter has been received by a gentleman connected with the tobacco trade from the Secretary of the Chan- cellor of the Exchequer:— " Sir— I am directed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer to acknowledge the receipt ofyour letter of the 2d inst., and to acquaint you, for the information of'theCommitteeof Tobacco Manufacturers of the port of London, that it is not the intention of his Majesty's Government to propose any alteration in the tobacco laws or duties this Session.— I have the honour to be, Sir, your obedient servant, " Downing- street, Feb. 4. " S. E. SPRING RICE." A great deal has been said about the cordial reception which Mr. O'CONNELL met with from , his MAJESTY on going up with the Com- mons Address. The truth, however, we are credibly informed is, that the parties on that occasion never so much as came near each other— Mr. O'CONNELL, with more than his usual diffidence, keeping the whole time cautiously in the rear of the deputation which attend- ed the SPEAKER upon that occasion.— Morning Paper. The new Assistant- Secretary to the Treasury, A. G. SPEARMAN, Esq., is about to enter on his functions as Assistant- Secretary, < fcc., in the room of the Hon. JAMES HENRY KEITH STEWART, uncle to the Earl of GALLOWAY, who retires on a pension. Colonel DICKSON, who has recently left the head- quarters of the British Auxiliary Legion, and returned home dissatisfied, was, two days ago, closetted for an hour or two, at the Horse Guards with the Military Secretary ofthe Adjutant- General. Mr. THOMPSON, son of Sir EDWARD D. THOMPSON, is ap- pointed Secretary in New South Wales, on the resignation of Mr. MACLEAF. Y. ECCLESIASTICAL INTELLIGENCE. PREFERMENTS, APPOINTMENTS, < fcc. Friday's Gazette notifies that the King has been pleased to grant unto the Rev. RENN DICKSON HAMPDEN, D. D., the office and place of Regius Professor of Divinity in the University of Oxford, together with the place and dignity of a Canon of the Cathedral Church of Christ, in the said University, properly belonging to the Regius Pro- fessor of Divinitv in the said University, being void by the death of Doctor Edward Burton. The King has been pleased to flirect letters patent to pass the Great Seal of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, nominating the Ven. GEORGE JEHOSAPHAT MOUNTAIN, D. D., Archdeacon of Quebec, to be Bishop of Montreal, in the province of Lower Canada. The Rev. THOMAS FARLEY, B. D., to the Rectory of Ducklington- cum- Hardwick Chapelry, vacant by the resignation of the Rev, James Hawkins, B. D. The Rev. THOMASDEALTRT, B. C. L., to be Archdeacon ofCalcutta, in the room of Archdeacon Currie, resigned. Patron, the Bishop of Calcutta. The Rev. JOHN BIRKBECK, to the Perpetual Curacy of Denton, Durham, vacant by resignation. The Rev. R. MAUNSELL, to the Rectory of Castleislandj Limerick, The Rev. THOMAS HERBERT, to the Rectories of Killotiernan and Dysart. The Rev. W. BOWMAN, Perpetual Curate of Queenborough, Kent, to the Chaplaincy ofthe Union Poor House, Minster, Isle of Sheppy. The Rev. CHARLES WOODWARD, B. C. L., of Queen's college, Cambridge, to the Curacy of the parish of Gravesend. The Rev. WILLIAM HIGGIN, Rector of Roscrea, to be Vicar- Gene- ral to the Diocese of Killaloe, in the room of the deceased Dr. Gabtett. The Rev. PATRICK POUNDEN, Rector of Ballinasloe, to the Parish of Westport, Ireland. The Rev. TRAVERS JONES, Curate of Clonbrony, Longford, to the Rectory of Ballinasloe, Ireland. The Rev. S. B. MAUGHAN, of Clare Hall, Cambridge, to the Per petual Curacy of Hebburn, Northumberland. The Rev. WILLIAM HERBERT, Curate of Glasbury, to the Perpetual Curacy of Rhydybryw, Breconshire, vacant by the death of the Rev. David Herbert, upon the nomination of the Rev. David Parry, Vicar of Llywell. OBITUARY. At Broadgate. near Barnstaple, the Rev. Charles Davie, Rector of Heanton Punehardon, and Prebendary of the Cathedral of Exeter, in the 71st year of his age At Bmshford, Devon, aged 68, the Rev. John Lnxton, of Withendge. At Summer Town, Oxford, in the 22d year of his age, Arthur William Badcock, B. A., and Scholar of Pembroke College, Oxford. At Bath, on the 11th, the Rev. Richard Harvey, aged 68, Vicar of St. Lawrence, Isle of Thanet, Kent. At Skethrige Rectory, near Brecon, the Rev. William Rowland. UNIVERSITY INTELLIGENCE OXFORD, Feb. 18.— This day the following degrees were conferred: — Masters of Arts: R. Williams, Oriel, Grand Compounder; Rev. J. Hodgson, Queen's; Rev. R. Wood, Fellow of St, John's; Rev. M. W. Mayow, Student of Christ Chnrch.— Bachelors of Arts : Fitz Roy Blackford, Brasennose, Grand Compounder; W. N. R. Colborne, Christ Church; J. Swaine, Wadham; Havilland de Sausmarez, Fellow of Pembroke, incorporated from Caius, Cambridge. CAMBRIDGE, Feb. 19.— At a congregation on Wednesday last the following degrees were conferred:— Honorary Masters of Arts : Lord C. A. Hervey, Trin. coll., filth son of the Marquess of Bristol; the Hon. T. R. Keppel, Downing coll., fifth son of the Earl of Albemarle ; the Hon. P. Y. Savile, Trin. coll., third son of the Earl of Mex- borongh.— Bachelors of Arts: W. H. Herring, R. L. Surtees, Trin. coll.; E. J. Walmesley, F. E. Tuson, St. John's coll.; T. Chapman, F. Halhed, St. Peter's coll.; J. W. Chaloner, W. L. A. Parker, W. F. Smithe, Magd. coll.; M. Hutton, Cath. hall; J. Bluett, T. Sedger, Queen's coll.; E. W. Foottil, A. Fullerton, Emmanuel coll. At the same congregation the following graces passed the senate;— | To authorise the late Vice- Chancellor to employ a part ( viz. 5,0001.) of the balance due to the FitzwiEiam Fund in the purchase of Ex- chequer Bills. To appoint Sir W. Follett one ot the University Counsel in the room of Lord Langdale, now Master of the Rolls. To allow Mr. Crool ( Hebrew teacher) S01. out of the University Chest in addition to his annnal salary. To confer the degree of M. A. on the Rev. H. Cotterill, of St. John's coll., by Royal mandate. MISCELLANEOUS. CI. ERGY ORPHAN SOCIETY.— A_ meeting of the friends and sup- porters of this excellent institution was held at the Freemasons' Tavern, Great Queen- street, on Tuesday. There are now about sixty boys and seventy girls educated and supported at the school of the society, Lisson- arove. The total amount of expense in 1834 was 6,0061.; in 1835, 5,4031. 0s. 6d.; and in 18S5, the receipts were 5,4191. 7s. 2d., leaving at present a balance in the hands of the treasurer of 161. 6s. 8d. PIROCHIAL SCHOOLS.— Nearly 1,0001 is now subscribed for this noble charity in the parish of St. George the Martyr, Southwark. A series of lectures on the Church Catechism will be delivered at Lambeth church every Sundav evening by the Rev. J. H. PINDER, Curate, and at St. Mary's parochial Chapel every Wednesday evening, by the Rev. II. S. PLUMPTRE, M. A., on the history of Nehemiah. The performances in St. Paul's for the benefit if the Sons of the Clergy, will take place this year on the ,17th and 19th of May. The Archbishop of YORK has sent 101. towards the Church proposed at Brearton, in the parish of Knaresborough ; an act ofliberality the more exemplary, as the place, being in the diocese of Chester, has no claim upon his Grace's attention, except as a private individual. The ladies of Mirfield, Yorkshire, have presented the Rev. E. N. CARTER, curate of the parish, with a handsome set of robes, in token of respect for his faithful services and kind attention to his parochial duties, j On Monday last, a deputation, forming part of the congregation of St. Thomas's Chapel, Heaton Norris, presented to the Rev. W. J. BORDMAN, Curate ofthe above place, a purse, containing 50 guineas, as a substantial token of esteem. A beautiful silver vase tea- urn, and a very elegant silver inkstand of the value of upwards of 100 guineas, were lately presented by hi* parishioners to the Rev. C. E. KENNA WAY, Vicar of Chipping Cami>- den, Gloucestershire. The parishioners of Ellesmere, in Shropshire, presented on Mon- day to their Vicar, the Rev. J. A. COTTON, a service of plate, com- prising a splendid salver and other articles, weighing 400 ouHcds. On the loth inst., the Rev. G. A. BROWNE, late Vicar of Chester- ton, npon taking leave of his parishioners, was presente< Vbv them with a handsome silver tea- kettle and lamp, in testimony of their approbation of his services. The consecration of Dr. BROCGHTON and Dr. MOUXTAIN, the Bishops of Australia and Montreal, took place on Sunday in the private chapel of his Grace the Lord Primate, at Lambeih Palace, with the usual solemnities. The Court of Common Council, after a good deal of opposition from the Dissenting members of that body, aereed to a motion on Wednes- day for n. grant of 200 guineas to the distressed Irish Clergy. Just published, price 2s. 6d. Hatchard and Son, Piccadilly. DISSENT EXPLODED ; or, THE BUBBLE BURST. BY PARRHESIASTES. " A pithy exposureof the fallacy and theoretical principles of dissent, introduced in the form nf a dialogue between a Dissenter and a Churchman. The author is a sound theologian, his arguments clear and concise, and he completely triumphs over the quackery and sophisms of the bitterest opponents of the Church."— Leicester Conservative Standard. " A remarkably curious, and likely to he an eminently useful work. It contains conversations between Churchmen and Dissenters, in which the fallacy of the posi- tion taken up by the latter is clearly proved— by areference to facts, those arguments which no special pleading can get the betterof. Itsmashesthevoluntarysystem, and Dissenters would profit by attending to it.''— Chesterfield Courier. rfflHE largest and most extensive GENERAL FURNISHING 1_ WARF. HOUSE is WELSFORD and Co.' s, 139. Oxford- street and 1, Odj Cavendish- Street, New Bond- street. The Stock, consisting of 20,000 yards of Brussells, 30,000 yards of Kidderminster and Venetian Carpetings, and a most splendid assortment of Merino Damasks, Moreens, Chintz Furnitures, and every other article requisite for Furnishing, which are selling by them at such prices as cannot fail to be of importance to Families and others Furnishing.— N. B. The article of Mohair Damask, for curtains, is particularly splendid, nearly equal to silk, and at one- fourth the price. , TOUPEES SUPERSEDING PERUKES.— Gentlemen's Tou- pees, the coinpletest and most natural articles of taste, attended with the lenst trouble to the wearer, ever otiered to the public; and as the weight chiefly consists in the quantity of hair, the Toupee can be made to any lightness, the spring and frame work weighing only drachms. COLLKY'S CELEBRATED HAIR DYE.— The only article extant that will effectually change Red or Grey Hair to a beautiful brown or black, by one appli- cation, without soiling the skin oi the finest linen.— J. DICK, No. 11, KING STREET, midway between the Guildhall and Cheapside. FOR Coughs.— PECTORAL ESSENCE of COLTSFOOT.— The herb Coltsfoot has long been distinguished for its excellent properties in the cure of Coughs, and other Pulmonary Complaints; and this Essence has, in the course of a long practice, been found the most safe and effectual remedy for Coughs, and all disordersof the lungs. It gently opens the breast, and imine- dietely gives liberty of breathing, without any danger of taking cold, and thus it affords great relief in Asthmatic complaints. It allays the tickling which pro- vokes frequent coughing, cleanses the small glands, relaxes the fibres, and thereby enlarges the cavities of the vessels. Thus it will prevent Consumptions, if taken before the lungs are ulcerated. It softens husky and dry Coughs, and heals raw- ness and soreness of the chest.— This Pectoral Essence is prepared by James Ryan, Surgeon in Bristol; and sold in Bottles at 2s. 9d. and 3s. 6d. each, by F. Newberyand Sons. 45, St. Paul's Church- yard; J, Sanger, 150. Oxford- street; and in most coun- try towns.— Observe, the name F. Newberv, 45, St. Paul's, is engraved in the Stamp. ( SJIGHT RESTORED, Nervous Head- ache Cured. Under the Pa- tronage of his late Majesty and the Lords of the Treasury. Dr. Abernethy nsed it, and by that gentleman it was termed the faculty's friend and nuTse's vade mecum. Dr. Andrews says its herbaceous quality renovates thecoatsof the stomach, strengthens the nerves of the head, caused by the tenacious sympathy of the membrane of the nose with the nervous system. Doctors of eminence and oculists recommend its universal adoption. Lists of testimonials of cataract, gutta serena, ophthalmia,& c., and nervous head- ache cured, with addresses, given gratis, by the inventor, W. GRIMSTONE, 39, Broad- street, Blonmsbtny, whose signature is on each canister, with the above Roval Patronage. This odoriferous snuff is sold in canisters, at Is. 3d., 2s. 4d., 4s. 4( 1., 8s., and 15s. 6d. cach. It may be obtained in every town in the world. All orders must be made payable in Lon- don. A liberal allowance to all venders of Grimstone's Eye Snuff. Foreign and British Snuff of the first quality, Cigars, & c CHILBLAINS, Sores. Burns, Scalds, Wounds, Ulcers, Whitlows. Ringworms, & c.— MARSHALL'S UNIVERSAL CERATE will be found most efficacious in every kind of wound, sore, burn, bruise, eruption, ulcers of every denomination, especially sore and ulcerated legs ( if of 20 years'standing), which have been healed in so rapid a manner, that a new method of cure has been established by this useful preparation. It is also recommended for sore breasts, inflammation of the eyes, chaps, scorbutic humours, St. Anthony's fire, and par- ticularly for broken chilblains, and applied to them whilst unbroken it imme- diately removes the attendant irritation.— Sold in boxes at Is. ljd. and 2s. 9d., by the Proprietor's Agent, Thomas Butler, Chemist, 4, Cheapside, corner of St. Paul's, London: also by Sanger, 150, Oxford- street; Duncan, Flockhart and Co., Edinburgh; at 54, Lower Sackville- street, Dublin ; and all Medicine Venders and Druggists, in Town and Country. Ask for " Marshall's Cerate," and observe the name of Thomas Butler in the Government Stamp. GOUT and RHEUMATISM.— Another proof the efficacy of BLAIR'S GOUT and RHEUMATIC PILLS. " This is to certify, that I, Edward Harsant, of Northampton- street, Islington, in the county of Middlesex, carpenter, was afflicted with the Gout in both my legs, which swelled to a most extraordinary size, and, in addition to the always very painful suffering produced by that disease, mine was much increased by having for twenty- five years suf- fered much from sore less, the effect of the Gont, which induced my friends to think I could not survive my deplorable state, when I was prevailed upon to make a trial of BLAIR'S GOUT and'RHEUMATIC PILLS, which, to the astonishment of all who knew me, so completely effected their purpose, that, in less than a week, I was able to go out, and in a few days more to resume my busi- ness. Feeling it my duty to do all I can to induce others to avail themselves of so desirable a reinedv, I make this voluntary certificate of my case, and hereby au- thorise the Proprietor to publish the same in any way he may think proper. Wit- ness my hand, this 18th day nf March, 1835. " EDW. HARSANT." Sold by Thomas Prout. 229, Strand, London ; and by his appointment, by all respectable Medicine- venders. Price 2s. 2d. per Box. DIXON'S ANTIBILIOUS PILLS.— BILIOUS and LIVER COMPLAINTS.— As a mild and effectual Remedy for those Disorders which originate in a morbid action of the Liver and Biliary Organs, namely indi- gestion, Loss of Appetite, Headache, Heartburn, Flatulencies, Spasms, Costive- ness, Affections of the Liver, & c., < fcc., DIXON'S . ANTIBILIOUS PILLS ("• hich do not contain Mercury in any shape) have met with more general approval than any other Medicine whatsoever. They unite every recommendation of mild operation with successful effect; and require no restraint or confinement during their use. In tropical climates, where the consequences of redundant and vitiated bile are so prevalent and alarming, they are an invaluable and efficient protection. They are likewise peculiarly calculated to correct disorders arising from excesses of the table, to reitore the tone of the stomach, and to remove most complaints occasioned by irregularity of the bowels. Sold in boxes, at 2s. 9d., 4s. bd., lis., and 22s.; each box being sealed with the arms of the Proprietor ; and none are genuine which have not " George Dixon" engraved on the Government btamp; by Messrs. Barclay Farringdon- street; Butler, Chemist, Cheapside ( corner of bt. Paul's), London, Sackville- street, Dublin; Sutton, Bow Church- yard, Newbeiy, 45, Edwards, 67, St Paul's; and the principal Dealers in Patent Medicines. 56 JOHN BULL February 14. STOCK EXCHANGE.— SATURDAY. " The tendency of Consols lias been upward since' our last report, until this morning, when the Market became heavy. At one period of the week the price for the Account was 91%, but it was early to- < lay at 91 % 11, closing, however, at 91 % %• Exchequer Bills, during the week, have advanced 1, the price being 19 to 21. India Bonds are 3 to 5 pm. In the Foreign Market there is much depression in Spanish Secu- rities, and it is evident from the Madrid accounts that Senor Men- jfizabal finds it as difficult to manage the finances, as Cordova does tfceCarKsts. Spanish Stock closed this afternoon at 46 K X, with a very depressed appearance, after having been as high, in the course • of the week, as Portuguese Bonds are at 83J£ for the Five per Cents., and 53K for the Three per Cents. Little has been done in the Transatlantic Stocks. Chilian Bonds are 49¥ 50% ; Columbian _ 32Jf 3, and Mexican 36& 7Va- All the Northern Bonds have ad- vanced, but the business done in them has been chiefly for invest- ment. Dutch Five per Cents, are 104)^, the Russian 110%, 111, and the Belgian 103!*. In the Share Market the speculation has been on a scale of great magnitude, and there has been a general improvement in price. London and Birmingham are 124 ; Gravesend have advanced to 1 % ym., as it has been understood that Government has given its sanc- tion to the junction of this Railway with that of Greenwich, condi- tionally that the engines shall not work by night while passing the ' Observatory at the period of observations being taken; Calcutta and Saugor Shares are at % to 1 pm.; in Preston and Wyre Shares there has been great activity, and the price is about 7>/; Dover Shares care in great request to- day, and the pm. is % ; Great Western are 31 per Share; Southampton at 24; Deptford Pier are % ; and Steven- son's Brighton 17H 18; since our last Rennie's Brighton Shares 1mve been issued, and are at 2% pm. 3 perCenf. Consols, 91% % Ditto for Account, 91 ^ % 3 per Cent. Reduced, 91% 2 per Ct. Reduced. 100J « ^ New 3% per Cent., 100 99% v Oainnim, Bank Long Annuities, 16 7- 16 1 Bank Stock, 21S% India Stock, 257 6 Ditto for Account, Exchequer Bills, 21 19 India Bonds, 3 The trial of the individuals implicated in the attempt to destroy the King of the French has at length terminated. Fieschi was condemned to suffer the punishment decreed against parricides, i. e. to be con- veyed to the place of execution in a white shroud, with a black veil over his head, and there beheaded ; Pepin and Morey are to be exe- cuted in the usual manner ; Boireau to De imprisoned twenty years ; And Bescher is acquitted and discharged. The execution had not taken jflace on Thursday, but no doubt existed that pardon was out of the question ; the King had, however, countermanded the order about the shroud, etc., in the case of Fieschi. Some revelations were expected from Pepin. Louis Philippe had not, up to Thursday, succeeded in organising A Ministry. The Journal aes Debats says:— u At last it appears certain that the ministerial crisis is nearly ter- minated, and the following is the general report:— M. Guizot, the Due de Broglie, M. Duchatel, M. Persil, and Admiral Duperre, will . retire. M. Thiers passes over from the post of Minister of the Inte- rior to that of President of the Council and Minister of Foreign Affairs. The Count d'Argout remains Minister of Finance; Marshal Maison remains Minister of War ; the Count de Montalivet is named Minis- ter of the Interior ; the Duke de Montebello, Minister of Public Instruction; M. Sanzet, Minister of Justice and of Religion ; M. Passy, Minister of Commerce and Public Works; and Admiral Rosa- mel," Minister of the Marine."— This list is flatly contradicted in the Journal tie Paris, and the Debats replies, that " it will be very soon seen which paper is the better informed. C. W. Packe, Esq., a Conservative, was returned, on Thursday last, for the southern division of Leicestershire, in the place of T. Frewen Turner, Esq. Mr. Packe was nominated by Sir A. G. Hazelrigge, and seconded by J. A. Arnold, Esq. There " was no opposition. We regret to learn that upwards of forty vessels ( according to Lloyd's books) have been driven on shore or totally lost, principally • on the east coast, during the gales which have prevailed for the last three or four days. One richly- laden vessel, called the Roscoe Cas- He, from London to Constantinople, was on shore on Friday near Dover. On Thursday morning a breach took place in the eastern fetnks of the great river Ouze, at Magdalen, near Lynn, Norfolk, - which conveys the high- land waters of Huntingdon, Cambridge, Bed- ford, and Buckinghamshires, as well as the waters of the Bedford Level, to the sea. The catastrophe was caused by the swell of the vraters, the result of the continued gales. A great number of acres •. of land have been laid under water bv the accident, which has caused - great consternation in the vicinity, frreat devastation has been occa- * rioned on the Yarmouth coast. Many houses have been thrown down, and furniture is seen floating about in all directions. THE MUNICIPAL CORFOBATIOX OF THE CITY OF LOXDON.— Friday the Committee of the whole Court of Common Council met - for the purpose of discussing certain propositions for the reform of the • Corporation of London, when it was agreed that the constituency - should be of one uniform description, and to consist of freemen householders; that the number of wards should be 25 ; and that there should be two days for nomination and one for election ( one day for nomination in Common Hall, and another for nomination in ward- mote.) O Just published, in 1 vol. 8vo., with Plates, 10s. bds. N I N S A N I T Its NATURE, CAUSES, and CURE. By W. B. NEVILLE, Esq. Of Earl's Court House, Brompton. London : Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman. Just published, in 8vo. price 21s. ACOMPLETE LATIN- ENGLISH DICTIONARY; compiled from the best Sources, chiefly German, and adapted to the Use • of Colleges and Schools. By the Rev. J. E. RIDDLEVM. A. The Compiler of this Dictionary is the Translator and Editor of Scheller's large JLatin Lexicon, whieh has recently appeared in its Latin- English form, from the ^ Oxford University Press. It has been his object to produce a correct, complete, ; a. nd systematic Dictionary of the Latin langunge, precisely adapted to the wants aad use of Colleges and Schools— a work which, up to this time, English Litera- Jkuie does not possess. *** The English- Latin will form a separate Volume. Printed for Longman and Co. ; and John Murray. PETER PARLEY'S TALES ABOUT THE SEA. " In one handsome volume, duodecimo, embellished with Sixty Cuts, price 4s. 6d. in boards, TJETER PARLEY'S TALES ABOUT THE SEA. » London : Printed for Thomas Tetrg and Son, Cheapside; where may be had, by the same Author, PETER PARLEY'S TALES ABOUT EUROPE, price 6d.; also, PETER PARLEY'S TALKS ABOUT ANIMALS, price 5s. DR. CHANNING.— Lately published in 1 vol. 8vo., price 7s. 6d. boards, BISCOURSES on VARIOUS SUBJECTS. By WILLIAM ELLERY CHANNING, D. D. ii Dr. Channing is as much respected in England as in America. These Dis- - courses are astonishing productions, and deserve a high place in the library of every divine throughout the world, whether of the Established or sectarian • Church. America may well be proud of such a man."— NewMon. Mag., No. 128. A few copies of the Author's last Sermon " The MINISTRY for the POOR," gjreached before the Benevolent Fraternity of Churches at Boston, may be had rssparate, price Is. 6d. sewed. Richard James Kennett, American Reading- Room and Library, No. 14, York- • sfcreet, Covent- garden ; of whom may be had, gratis, a Catalogue of recently im- - . ported American Books, in the various branches of Literature, at affixed prices. - First of March, In 8vo., price 10s. 6d., Vol. I. of the HISTORY OF ENGLAND, From the Accession of George III., in 1760, to 1835. By the Rev. T. S. HUGHES, B. D., Prebendary of Peterborough, and late Christian Advocate at Cambridge. This Work will make seven volumes in Octavo, to range with the regular edi- tions of Hume and Smollett, to which it is a Continuation to the present time. A Volume will be published Monthly till completed, price 10s. 6d. each, in bds. <£ c It has been our opinion that this Continuation has been impartially done— • . even well done. It is the best History of England extant."— Metropolitan Mag. " Mr. Hughes's work is one of rare impartiality, and that too on many points where one might have very naturally supposed his own opinions would have : pwayed his j udgment; and this gives a great value to his labours."— Constitu- tional Magazine. M The Preliminary Essay is most useful as an introduction to a perfect compre- hension of what is to follow : it is written in a tone of impartiality and fairness as to statements and deductions, and with elegance and condensation as to style." — Times. " The author appears moderate and impartial as regards opinions: he seems to iiave sought after his facts and information with pains- taking industry, and to Jiave combined his materials with sufficient skill; whilst his narrative carries us smoothly and quietly along, without excitement, without weariness."— Spectator. Printed and published by A. J. Valpy, M. A., Red Lion- court, Fleet- street; and . sold by all Booksellers. At the same time will be published the 19th Vol. of HUME, SMOLLETT, and HUGHES'S uniform complete HISTORY of ENGLAND. With Illustrations. - 5s. each vol. in cloth. In size the same as the Waverley Novels and Shakspeare. This Edition will form 21 Vols. HUGHES'S Continuation may be bought sepa- ' XXbelj In 8 Vols. On February 1st was published, No. 2 of Volume the Second, of the If EICESTER CONSERVATIVE STANDARD, and Midland M- A Counties Monthly Magazine. London : Roake and Vartv, 31, Strand; Groombridge, Panyer- alley; and J, G. Brown, Market- place, Leicester. Just published ( and continued Monthly), price Is. 6d. THE MAGAZINE of POPULAR SCIENCE, and JOURNAL of the USEFUL ARTS. Edited under the direction of the Society for the Illustration and Encourage- ment of Practical Science, at the Adelaide- street Gallery, London. London: John W. Parker, West Strand. In foolscap octavo, price 6s. ARTISANS and MACHINERY; the Moral and Physical Con- dition of the Manufacturing Population considered, with reference to Mechanical Substitutes for Human Labour. By PETER GASKELL, Esq., Surgeon. This work is the result of a series of long- continued observations, carried on by the Author whilst professionally occupied amongst the classes of which it treats. London : John W. Parker, West Strand. Just published, price Is. NEWTON and FLAMSTEED.— REMARKS on an ARTICLE in No. CIX of the QUARTERLY REVIEW. The Second Edition ; to which is added, a LETTER to the EDITOR of the REVIEW, on a Note in No. CX. By the Rev. W. WHEWELL, M. A., Fellow and Tutor of Trinity College, Cambridge. London: John W. Parker, West Strand. Cambridge: J. and J. J. Deighton. Just published, price 2s. THOUGHTS on the STUDY of the MATHEMATICS, as a part of a Liberal Education. The Second Edition ; to which is now added, a LETTER to the EDITOR of the EDINBURGH REVIEW, occasioned by the Review of the First Edition. By the Rev. W. WHEWELL, M. A., Fellow and Tutor of Trinity College, Cambridge. London : John W. Parker, West Strand." Cambridge : J. and . T. J. Deighton, In a few days, NATURAL THEOLOGY considered with Reference to LORD BROUGHAM'S DISCOURSE on that Subject. By THOMAS TURTON, D. D., Regius Professor of Divinity in the University of Cambridge, and Dean of Peterborough. London: John W. Parker, West. Strand. T In a pocket volume, 5s. PALEY'S EVIDENCES of CHRISTIANITY EPITOMIZED; intended to exhibit his Argument in as small a compass as is possible, with- out omitting or weakening any of its component points. To which is subjoined a BRIEF SUMMARY of the Evidences contained in the First Two Parts of the same Work. London : John W. Parker, West Strand. Just published, price 2s. 6d. HE TABLE of ABYDOS, correctly interpreted, corroborative of the Chronology derived from the Sacred Writings. By JOHN LAMB, D. D., Master of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. London: John W. Parker, West Strand. In the Press, AN ANALYSIS of the ROxMAN CIVIL LAW, in which a Comparison is occasionally made between the Roman Laws and those of England. By the late SAMUEL H ALLIFAX, LL. D., Lord Bishop of St. Asaph. A New Edition, with Additions, in the Text and Notes. By JAMES WILLIAM GELDART, D C. L., And Regius Professor of Civil Law in the University of Cambridge. London ; John W. Parker, West Strand ; and T. Stevenson, Cambridge. Just published, foolscap octavo, 3s. CHRISTIAN RESPONSIBILITIES; arising out of the Recent Change in our West India Colonies. In Five Discourses. By EDWARD ELIOT, B. D., Archdeacon of Barbadoes, and late Fellow and Tutor of Exeter College, Oxford. London : John W. Parker, West Strand. In a few days, one volume, foolscap octavo, THE HISTORY of the CHRISTIAN CHURCH, from the Ascension of Jesus Christ to the Conversion of Constantine. By the late Rev. E. BURTON, D. D., Regius Professor of Divinity, Oxford. Printed under the Direction of the Committee of General Literature and Educa- tion, appointed by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. London: John W. Parker, West Strand. In a few days, small octavo, with may Cuts, WILD ANIMALS; their Nature, Habits, and Instincts ; with incidental Accounts of the Regions they Inhabit. Uniformly with DOMESTICATED ANIMALS, Third Edition, 3s. 6d., and STANLEY'S FAMILIAR HISTORY of BIRDS, two vols, with Cuts, 7s. London : John W. Parker, West Strand. Just published, in two volumes, with many Wood- Cuts, 7s. FAMILIAR HISTORY of BIRDS ; their NATURE, HABITS, and INSTINCTS. By the Rev. EDWARD STANLEY, M. A., F. L. S., Rector of Alderly, Cheshire. Printed under the Direction of the Committee of General Literature and Educa- tion, appointed by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. London : John W. Parker, West Strand. Just published, 3s. 6d., with OneTlundred Wood- Cuts, FABLES, and MORAL MAXIMS, in Prose and Verse. Selected by ANNE PARKER. London: John W. Parker, West Strand. Just published, price 7s., two volumes, with many Engravings, T1A L E S and STORIES from HISTORY. By AGNES STRICKLAND. London : John W. Parker, Saturday Magazine Office, West Strand. Will be published on the 23d instant, in 2 vols, post 8vo. cloth, price 11. Is. rgf^ HE TIN TRUMPET ; or, Heads and Tales for the Wise and ft Waggish. Bv the late PAUL CHATFIELD, M. D. Edited by JEFFER- SON SAUNDERS, Esq. With a Portrait of the Author. Whittaker and Co., xlve Maria- lane. In a few days, THE PARSONAGE, a Tale; and ELIZA and WIDMER, a Tale. The merit of these two Tales may be be judged of from their great popularity in Geneva, in which place they were originally published. The Parsonage ap- peared first, and owing to the high moral tone which pervades it, edition followed edition, when the interest excited by the appearance of Eliza and Widmer, by the same Author, renewed the demand for its predecessor. Cookes and Ollivier, 59, Pall- mall. Lately published, in8vo., price 12s., Volume the first ( with a Map) of ORIGINES BIBLICiE; or RESEARCHES in PRIMEVAL HISTORY. By CHARLES T. BEKE. This Work is an attempt, from the direct evidence of the Scriptures themselves, to determine the positions of the Couutries and Places mentioned in the Old Testament, and the order in which they were peopled; and to explain the Origin and Filiation of the various Races of Mankind, and of the Languages spoken by them. Win. H. Allen, and Co., Leadenhall- street. Just published, Third Edition, price 2s. THE SPREAD of the GOSPEL, the SAFEGUARD of ENGLAND; a Sermon, preached in the Parish Church of St. Stephen, Walbrook, on Sunday, October 4, 1835, commemorative of the Third Centenary of the Translation of the Holy Scriptures complete in the English Language. By the Rev. GEORGE CROLY, LL. D., Rector of the United Parishes of St. Stephen, Walbrook, and St, Benet's. Also, by the same Author, lately published, DIVJNE PROVIDENCE ; or, the Three Cycles of Revelation ; showing the perfect Parallelism, civil and religious, of the Patriarchal, Jewish, and Christian Eras ; the whole forming a new evidence of the Divine Origin of Christianity. In 8vo. 15s. boards. London: James Duncan, 37, Paternoster- row. Oxford, February, 1836. D. A. TALBOYS has just published AN EPITOME of NIEBUHR'S HISTORY of ROME, with Chronological Tables and an Appendix. By TRAVERS TWISS, B. C. L., Fellow of University College, Oxford. 8vo. cloth bds. 12s. " Mr. Twiss has, with great skill and with excellent taste, condensed all of what we may call Niebuhr's Historical Discoveries, and arranged them with a care and method that render the perusal of the work, in connexion with any other Roman History, a matter not merely of ease, but of gratification. To the merit of admirable arrangement Mr. Twiss adds the advantages of a clear, graceful, un- affected style."— Standard. 2. A MANUAL of ANCIENT GEOGRAPHY. For the use of Schools and Private Tuition. Compiled from the Works of A. H. L. HEEREN, Professor of History in the University of Gftttingen, & c. & c. & c. Foolscap 8vo. 2s. 6d. " Teeming with exact information in every line. Its object is to give a con- tinuous geographical description of the countries which were the theatres of the principal events in ancient history."— Spectator. " An excellent and most useful little volume, and admirably adapted for the use of schools and private instruction."— Literary Gazette. 3. CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES of ANCIENT HISTORY, synchronistically and ethnographically arranged. Folio, cloth back, 9s., coloured 10s. 6d. " This is a most useful work ; it contains twelve synchronistic tables of ancient history, than which nothing can be more serviceable either to the student or to those in more advanced life, who look at history philosophically, and wish to see the progress and condition of various nations at the same epochs."— British Mag. 4. ELEGANT EXTRACTS, for Translation, adapted for the use of Students in Latin composition. Foolscap 8vo. 4s. 6d. " Made from the very best books given to students to translate from at their public? examination in the Schools at Oxford. London : sold by Whittaker and Co.; Simpkin and Marshall; and always to be had of Francis Macpherson, Holborn. Jusr published, in 2 tols. post 8m, SKETCHES BY " B O Z With numerous Illustrations by & EORGE CRUIKSHANK. " Evidently the work of a person of variotk and extraordinary intellectual gifts. He is a close observer of character and manners, with a strong sense of the ridi- culous and a graphic faculty of placing in the most whimsical and amusing lights the follies and absurdities of human nature. He has the power too, of producing * tears as well as laughter. His pictures of the vices and wretchedness which abound in this vast city, are sufficient to strike to the heart of the most careless and insensible reader. The book is richly illustrated by the modern Hogarth, George Cruikshank, who has evidently surpassed any of his previous efforts."— Morning Chronicle. John Macrone, St. James's- square. In crown 8vo. price 4s. THE SCHOOL BOY; A Poem. By THOMAS MAUDE, M. A. " It is replete with the best feelings, expressed in very harmonious metre.— It is divided into two parts, the country and the town schools, both of which are treated with that mild enthusiasm that is to us so pleasing. The frequent allusion of the author to the members of his family and to his personal friends is very graceful, and gives a stamp and locality to his poem which we greatly admire."— Metropolitan Magazine, Feb. 1. " We have read this poem with unmixed pleasure. It reflects the feelings natural to the subject, and carries on the interest of the season it describes with truth and pathos. The verse is very uuaffected, and often recals the melodious flow of Cowper and Thomson."— Atlas, Feb. 14,1836. London: Longman, Rees, Orme, and Co. NEW WORKS Just published by Richard Bentley, 8, New Burlington- street, Publisher in Ordinary to his Majestv. NEW HISTORICAL ROMANCE OF THE SEA. In 3 vols, post Svo. BEN BRACE. The last of Nelson's Agamemnons. By Captain Chamier, R. N., Author of " The Life of a Sailor," & c. THE MONARCHY OF THE MIDDLE CLASSES. By Henry L. Bulwer, Es< j., M. P. 2 vols. post8vo. CHRONICLES OF WALTHAM. By the Author of " The Subaltern," & c. 3 vols. " Full of deep and almost Crabbe- like interest,"— Quarterly Review. IV. In 2 vols. 8vo., with 14 Characteristic Illustrations, bound in cloth, PARIS AND THE PARISIANS IN 1835. By Frances Trollope, Author of " Domestic Manners of the Americans," & c. V. THE OUTLAW. By the Author of " The Buccaneer," & c. 3 vols. " A novel of a very superior order."— Morning Chronicle. MEMOIRS OF THE PRINCE OF THE PEACE, ( DON MANUEL GODOY,) Written by himself. Translated under the superintendence of his Highness from the Original Manuscript. By Lieut.- Col. J. G. D'Esinenard. VII. MRS. CLEVELAND AND THE ST. C L A I R S. By Lady Isabella St. John. 3 vols. " Possesses great merit, and reminds us of the writings of Miss Austen."— Spec. VIII. In 2 vols. 8vo., with Plates, IMPRESSIONS OF AMERICA, During the years 1833, 1934, and 1835. By Tyrone Power, Esq. New Work edited by Lady Dacre. Second Edition, in 3 vols, post 8vo. TALES OF THE PEERAGE AND THE PEASANTRY. By the Author of" The Chaperon," & c. " These volumes will procure for the accomplished authoress a just and high reputation."— Examiner. ^ Second Edition, revised, with Additions. In 2 vols. 8vo., with Portrait, MEMOIRS OF LIEUT. GENERAL SIR THOMAS PICTON, G. C. B. Including his Correspondence, From the Originals in the possession of the Family, & c. By H. B. Robinson, Esq. Fourth Edition, revised and corrected, ENGLAND AND THE ENGLISH. By E. L. Bulwer, Esq., M. P. 2 vols, post 8vo. PRIVATE CELLAR of WINES.— Mr. COLLINS will SELL by AUCTION, at Mr. Smith's Cellars, 14, Angel- court, Throgmorton- street, on TUESDAY, February the 23d, at twelve o'clock, a Cellar of very Choice Wine, the property of a private Gentleman, removed from his residence in Kent, and to be sold without the least reserve.— May be tasted, and sample bottles and catalogues had, on the Premises, and of the Auctioneer, 49, Penton- place, Pentonville. STOCKS. Bank Stock India Stock 3 per cent. Consols.... 3 per cent. Red 3i per cent. 1818 3J per cent. Reduced . New 3£ per cent Bank Long Annuities. India Bonds Exchequer Bills Consols for Account.., Mon. Tn. Wed. Thur. Friday 215| 216} 217 216} 217 — 255} — 256} 256 91} 915 91? 91} 91} 91} 92 92} 921 92 1003 100} — — 100} 100 lOOj 100| 100$ 99j 100| 100} 100} 1003 163 16} lb} 16} 163 5 p 5 p 5 p 3 p 5 p 20 p IS p 20 p 20 p 21 p 91} 911 91} 91} 913 Sat. 218* 256 9ii 92 100 § 99f 16| 3 p 19 p 91* BIRTHS. On the 19th inst., at 24, Park- crescent, the Lady of Neill Malcolm, jun., Esq., of a daughter. On the 14th inst., at Kingston House, Dorset, the lady of the late Lord Suffield, of a son— On the 14th inst., at Warter Priory, near Pocklington, Yorkshire, the Right Hon. Lady Muncaster, of a daughter— On the 13th inst., the lady of Charles Tracey Leigh, Esq., of a daughter— On the 15th inst., at Stoke College, the lady of T. P. Elwes, Esq., M. P., of a daughter— In Chapel- street, Grosvenor- place, on the 16th inst., the lady of Captain Henry Bowden, Scots Fusileer Guards, of a son-. ~ 0\ i the 12th inst., at Bognor Parsonage, Sussex, Mis. Charles Lane, of a daughter — On the 15th inst., in London, the Right Hon. Viscountess Forbes, of a son— At Kew, on the 13th, the lady of George Tyrrel, Esq., of a son. " MARRIED. " On the 18th inst., at St. Mary's, Bryanston- square, the Rev. John Bafhurst Schomberg, Chaplain in Ordinary to the King, and Rector of Belton, in the county of Suffolk, to Margaret Mary, youngest daughter of Robert Ashworth, Esq., of Bryanston- square— On the' 18th inst., at Brixton Church, William Spencer, Esq., of the Inner Temple, Barrister at Law, to Georgiana Madelina, only child of the late Lieut.- Colonel Hugh Sutherland, of Stockwell, Surrey— Lately, at Rome, in the Protestant Chapel of the Prussian Embassy, Lieut.- Col. Wedderburn, of the Coldstream Guards, to Elizabeth Julia, third daughter of the late John Stiatton, Esq., of Farthinghoe Lodge, in the county of Northampton— On the 15th at St. Peter's Church, Dublin, Thomas Alexander, Esq., of Buncrana, in the county of Donegal, to Jane, eldest daughter of the late William Haigh, Esq., of Westfield House, Doncaster, Yorkshire— On the 22d of December, by special license, at The Lodge, St. Dorothy, Jamaica, Henry Mark Lynch, Esq., to Theodora Elizabeth, only surviving daughter of Arthur Foulks, of The Lodge and Mullett Hall, in the Island of Jamaica, and of Clifton, Gloucestershire— On the 13th inst., at St. Mary's, Fulham, John Chippendale, Esq., of Old Cavendish- street, Cavendish square, M. R. C. S., late of the University of London, to Mary, eldest daughter of Mr. William Loat, of Kensington.— On the 18th inst., at Little Cheverel, Wilts, George Nicholas, Esq., of Upper Montagu- street, Montagu- square, to Elizabeth, third daughter of the Rev. E. S. Davenport, of Davenport House, Salop. DIED. At Penzance, on the 11th inst., Susannah, relict of the late Admiral John Peyton. On the 14th of January, in the Island of Nevis, of a malignant fever, which ter- minated his existence in three days, Philip Protheroe Claxton, youngest son of the late Robert Claxton, Esq., of Bristol. On the 19th inst., in Upper Harley- street, John Cunningham, Esq., in his 28th year, of the Middle Temple, Barrister- at- Law, eldest son of Samuel Cun- ningham, Esq., of Jamaica. At Sevenoaks Vine, on the 14th inst., Mrs. Randolph, aged 81, relict of John Lord Bishop of London, whom she survived 23 years— On the 9th inst., Elizabeth Catherine, eldest daughter of the late Rev. Charles Yonge, Lower Master of Eaton School, aired 21— At Calcutta, on the 27th of Julv last, William BLzard, third son of the late Henry Smith, Esq., of Peckham House, Surrey— On the 15th inst., in Great James- street, Bedford- row, William James King, only . brother ot G. H. King, of Tokenhouse. yard, soliciior, aged 49— On the 17th inst., in Cado- gan- place, Caroline Christiana, wife of Major Goldsmid, and daughter of the late Daniel Birkett, of Ralhead House, Middlesex, Esq., in the 37th year of her age- On the 15th inst., Emma Neufville, daughter of G. L. Taylor, Esq., of Lee, Kent, aged three years and five months— On the 15th inst., William Strange, bsq., of Upton, Essex, aged 70— On the 15th inst., at Clapham, in his 90th year, John Gillies, LL. D., F. R. S., & c. & c. & c. Historiographer to his Majesty for Scotland — On the 14th inst., at his house in Grosvenor- place, William Hollond, Esq., m the 86th year of his age— At Hackney, on the 14th inst., Thomasarburton, Esq., in his 79th year/ much beloved and respected- On the 8th of December, in his 59th year, William Thomson, Esq., of the Island of St. Christopher, many years Registrar of Slaves in that island, and much regretted by alt who knew him LONDON : Printed by EDWARD SH ACKELL> rinter, of No. 14, Amwell- sfreet, Pentonville, in the County of Middlesex ; and of No. 3 Fleet- street, m the City of London; and published bv the said EDWARD SHACKELL, at his Punting- office, No. 40, Fleet- street, aforesaid, at which last place alone, communications to the Editor ( post- paid) are received.
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