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

25/01/1835

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Volume Number: XV    Issue Number: 737
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John Bull "For God, the King, and the People!"

Date of Article: 25/01/1835
Printer / Publisher:  
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Volume Number: XV    Issue Number: 737
No Pages: 8
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JOHN BULL. " FOR GOD, THE KING, AND THE PEOPLE V9 VOL. XV.— NO. 737. SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1835. Price Id. niHKATRE ROYAL, DRURY LANE.— To- morrow Evening 1 will be performed, the Tragic Play of P1ZARRO. After which ( and every Evening during the We<* k), the grand Chivalric Entertainment, entitled KING ARTHTR AND THE KNIGHTS OF THE ROUND TABLE.— On Tuesday, the new Comedy, entitled The Kins's Seal. After which, the new Interlude, ntitled The King's Word.— On Wednesday, the grand Opera of The Red Mask. — On Thursday, the Comedy of the King's Seal. After which, the King's Word. — On Friday ( being the anniversary of King Charles's Martyrdom) there will be no performance. raiHEATRE ROYAL, COVENT GARDfiN.- E_ _ Evening will be performed, THE BRIGAND. "" - To- morrow Allessandro Massaroni, Mr. Wallack. ~ After which, THE REVOLT OF THE HAREM. To conclude with ( and every Evening during the Week) the Comic Pantomime, called HAR- LEQUIN AND QUEEN MAB; or, The Three Glass Distaffs.— On Tuesday, Bellini's celebrated Opera of La Sonnambula. Principal characters hy Messrs. Segnin, Templeton, Webster, F. Cooke, Yarnold, Bartley, MissE. Romer, Mrs. C. Jon-*, and MissBetts.— On Wednesday, The Brigand. After which, the grand Ballet of The Revolt of the Harem. fBlHEATRE ROYAL, AD E LP HI.— Pompeii pre- eminently JL successful.— The new Pantomime received with roars of laughter. In consequence of the rapid advance of the season, and the immediate production of the most splendid Ballot Burletta Spectacle ever attempted in this Theatre, it must- be withdrawn after Thursday next.— To- morrow, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday, will be presented, THE LAST DAYS OF POMPEII'; or, Seven teen Hundred Years Ago. After which, the Comic Burletta called WAS I TO BLAME ? Principal characters by Messrs. Yates, Hemming, and Mrs. Yates. With a Burletta, called THE UNFINISHED GENTLEMAN. Principal charac- ters bv Messrs. John Reeve, Buckstone, Bennett, Hemming and Mrs. Iveeley. To conclude with the new Comic Pantomime, called ORANGES AND LEMONS ; or, Hailequin and the Bellsof St. Clements.— Box- office open from 10 till 5, where Places and Private Boxes may be had of Mr. Campbell. Private Boxes also of Mr. Srms, St. Jaines's- sfreet. kUEEN'S THEATRE, Tottenham- street, Fitzroy- sqnare, under the Sole Management of Mrs. Nisbett.— To morrow, Tuesday, and Wed- nesday, will be presented the Drama of CLART, THE MAID OF MILAN. Princ'pal characters by Mr. Elton, Mrs. Hooper, and Miss Vincent. After which, a new Farce, called THF. MOON'S AGE ; or, the Coroner's Inquest. Principal cha- racter- by Messrs. Tilbury, Ramett, Parry; Miss Mordaunt and Miss Vincent. To which will be added, THE MAID OF CASTILE. Principal characters by Messrs. S. Bennett, Parrv, Tilbury, Miss Mordaunt, and Mrs. Nisbett. To be followed by THE FARMER'S SON. Principal characters by Messrs. Elton, Anderson, S. Bennett, Miss Williams and Miss Forbes. To conclude with THREE WEEKS AFTER MARRIAGE. Principal characters by Mr. Wrench, Mrs. Nisbett, and Miss Mordaunt. ^^ ADLER'S WELLS.— To- morrow evening the performance to commence with the new and successful French Drama, called THE IDIOT QUEEN; or, The Chapel of Miracles. Characters by Messrs. Camp- bell, S. Johnson, Cullen, Rogers, Suter, Miss M'Carthy, and Mrs. Wilkinson. After which, and during the week, a new Local Burletta, called THE BARBER OF CLERKENWELL ; or, The Lady Killer. The Lady Killer, Mr. W. H. Williams ; Ladies, Mesdames Wilkinson, Langley, Arkill, L^ oni, & c. To con- clude with, on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday, REDMOND THE REBEL. — On Tuesday, The Murder of the'Black Rock.— On Thursday and Friday, The Italian Wife. SECOND MASQUERADE, by permission of the Ri^ ht Hon. ^ the Lord Chamberlain, at the new Theatre Royal, ENGLISH OPERA HOUSE, with extensive Stage, fitted up with Emblematic Devices, Banners, Tro- phies, ( fee., together with a new Supper Room, which will be opened this night to the public.— It is proposed to give a splendid Italian MASQUERADE and CARNIVAL, on WEDNESDAY, February 4, 1835; when will be presented, a SUpert) Mar- Wl EnW^ ifcnaont, or PoeU < H iloma I no © on< lUotoM in t. hA Pia- 77n di Spagna and Grand Corso, in the City of Rome. To conclude with ( second time in this countn ) the Sicilian amusement, entitled FARINAGHOLKA. TINGO, as played to the delight of the Nobility and Gentry of the Cities of Palermo and Messina. A Military and other efficient Bands will be stationed in various parts of the Theatre, to perform Country Dances, Waltzes, Reels, Gallopades, Qua- drilles, & c. The whole of the arrangements under the superintendance of Mr. David Brorner.— Masks, Dominoe*, Character and Fancy Dresses, and Tickets, to be had at Obbard's Masquerade Warehouse, No. 25, King William- street. An elegant Supper, with superior Wines, will be provided.— Proscenium, 31. 3s.; Dress Circle, 21. 12s. 6d.; Boxes, 5s.; Gallery, 2s. 6d. Tickets of Admission, 11. Is.; Character Ticket ® , 10s. 6d.; Supper Tickets, 6s. each. THE late EARL of DUDLEY'S favourite DOG, BASHAW, in Mosaic Sculpture, valued at 5,000 Guineas ; STATUES of HORSES, and other Works of Art, by MATTHEW COTES WYATT, are now EXHIBIT- ING at the GREAT ROOM, 21, OLD BOND- STREET. Admittance, Is. WILLIS'S ROYAL MUSICAL REPOSITORY, removed from St. James's- street, to No. 75, LOWER GROSVENOR- STREET, within a few doors of Bond- street. J. WILLIS takes this opportunity of returning his best thanks for the highly- distinguished patronage he has received during his residence in St. James's- street, where, having been much circumscribed in accommodation for Pianofortes, he has been induced to remove to more commodious premises, as above, which he is about to open with a splendid assortment of instruments of every description, by all the approved makers, and where purchasers will have the advantage of contrasting the relative merits of each, and obtaining them at Manufacturers' Prices for immediate payment.— J. W. particularly invites the attention of the Public to a most ingenious invention ( for which a patent has just been obtained), called the TRANSPOSING PIANOFORTE ; in which, by very simple me* chanism, the pitch can be raised or lowered five semitones at pleasure. An extensive MUSICAL CIRCULATING LIBRARY, to which every novelty of merit is regularly added. All the works of Mrs. Hemans and Sister are published by J. WILLIS, in- cludingtheir last composition, A CHRISTMAS CAROL, fortwo Soprano Voices; also, the popular Song, " Quit a quit et bono amis," the words from " The Princess," by Lady Morgan ; the music by Lady Whitmore; are now ready for delivery. T" HE BRIGHTON SAUCE, for Cutlets, Chops, Fish, Gravies, Hashes, Steaks, Savoury Dishes, Soups, Wild Fowl, and especially for Cola Meats. This Sauce will be found more useful than Pickles, and is the most de- licious auxiliary for palates accustomed to the Eastern Sauces.— Not any is genuine but that sold in Bottles, with labels signed in the hand- writing of one of the Proprietors, GEORGE CREASY, North- street, Brighton. To be had of Morell and Son, 210, Piccadilly ; Ball and Son, 81, Bond- street; Mrs. Cane, 78, Oxford- street; Dickson and Simmons, Covent- garden ; Edwards, King William- street ; Steney and Son, High- street, Borough. TRANSPARENT SPERM CANDLES.— A. CANE begs re- spectfully to inform the Nobility, Gentry, and Public, of a reduction in the price of Sperm Candles; viz. 2s. Id. per pound, first quality. Best Sperm Oil, 6s. per imperial gallon.— Foreign Warehouse, 73, Oxford- street, next door to the Queen's Bazaar. FRIGHTFUL CARRIAGE AND HORSE ACCIDENTS EFFECTUALLY PREVENTED.— This advertisement is not addressed to those who value a little money more than the loss of life, or the fracture of limbs; but it is respectfully submitted to the consideration of every rational member of society who eitner rides or drives: in a word, no Horse, under the controu 1 of the INFALLIBLE SAFETY BRIDLE and REINS, however viciously disposed, can have a will of his own; nor is the invention less orna- mental than useful. N. B. Made and sold exclusively by Messer, at his Carriage and Harness Factory, 9 Margaret- street, Cavendish- square. DR. JAMES'S FEVER POWDER and PILLS.— Mr. James thinks it necessary to inform the Public, that Messrs. Newberry, the late agents of his grandfather, his father, and himself, are now vending articles of their own composition, under the name of Dr. James's, and that he has, in con sequence, appointed in their stead, as sole wholesale Agent, Mr. Thomas Butler, Chemist, 4, Cheapside, corner of St. Paul's, London ; of whom, and of his coun- try agents, and indeed of most respectable Chemists and Druggists, the public may procure the genuine Powder and Pills, authenticated by the signature of Mr. R. G G. James on the label which is affixed to each package.— Dr. James's Fever Powder is universally approved by the Profession ana the Public, and is adminis- tered with equal success in fever, inflammatory diseases, measles, pleurisy, sore v throats, rheumatism, & c. When given in colds, catarrhs, & c., it is generally found to check their progress, or shorten their duration. In packets, 2s. 9d. and 24s.— DR. JAMES'S ANALEPTIC PILLS are well known as an excellent altera- tive remedy in chronic diseases of the stomach and bowels, and are applicable to bilious and dispeptic affections, gout, & c. In boxes at 4s. 6d. and 24s. THE PATENT; SELF- ADJUSTING GERMAN TRUSS, acting etrectually without pressure pr any complications, is recom- mended by the Faculty for the Cure and Relief of Hernia. The first members of the profession are convinced that pressure is not the merit of a good Truss, but a mechanical Resisting power, which cannot be applied to any Truss where straps are used, that have a pad behind, or where spiral springs and other complications are introduced. J. EGG and CO , the inventors, engage to cure any reducible Rupture, if left to to their management— Manufactory, No. 1 Piccadilly.— Published by the Inventors, A Treatise on the Cure of Hernia by Mechanical Power, price 2s. 6d. IT AW LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY, 20th Januarv, 1.835.— JLd NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that, in conformity with the Provisions of the Deed of Settlement, a GENERAL MEETING of the PROPRIETORS of the LAW LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY will take place at the Society s Office, Fleet- street, London, on MONDAY, the 2nd day of FEBRUARY next, at 11 o'clock for half- past 11 in the forenoon, precisely, to receive the Annual Report of the Auditors on the Society's Accounts up to i be 31st of December! ast, and for general purposes. By Order of the .^ rcctois, GEOIW KIR KPATRICK, Actuary. TH EATRES— COVENT GAR I ' EN, 1) RI R Y LANE, ADELPHT, and QUEEN'S.— W. SAMS/ llooksellertothe King, . James's- street, has to LET by the Night, the best PRIVATE BOXES, at the above Theatres ; also for the FRENCH PLAYS, in the best situations. A BoxatCovent Garden Let for lis. 6d. | Ditto, Drury Lane, lis. 6d. Each Box elicriblv situated, and holding Eight persons. Terms to SAMS'S Royal Subscription Library:— The Year .. .€ 5 5 0— Half Year .. ^ 3 3 0— Quarter .. .£\ 16 0 This Library is liberally supplied with all new Works, to insure Subscribers an immediate perusal. ALMACIv'S ROOMS, ST. JAM pS'S.— MISS S. PRINCE and MRS. J. RAE continue their Academy at 50 A, Berners- street, until Monday the 9th of Februarv— when it will be hat l at the above Rooms as former Seasons. PRIVATE INSTRUCTION given at their residence in Berners- street, on all the Continental Dances, and likewise the celebrated Scotch Reels, which are becoming so general at the Nobility's Balls. Ladies' Schools and Families attended. ' . WANTED, immediately, in a INDIES' SCHOOL of the highest respectability, an* ARTICLED PUPIL, who will be instructed in the English Language, Geography, and the use of the Globes, Writing and Arithmetic, Music, Drawing, and the French Language. The course of educa- tion pursued is strictly calculated to prepare the young Lady for a Governess or Teacher. Due attention is paid to useful and ornamental Needlework. Refer- ences given and required.— Address ( post- paid) to II. J. G., Post- office, Bedford.— Two ParlonrJBorders can be received. PRIVATE TUTOR.— A married dfcniyinan, for some years Tutor to a Nobleman, and subsequent reiving 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 health may require more than common attention.— Letters directed for the Rev. H F., Mr. Searle's, Bookbinder, No. 77, Lower Grosvenor- street, near Bond- street, London, will be forwarded to him in the Country. EDUCATION in FRANCE, at an Establishment in St. Omer, conducted by the Rev. JONATHAN WILKINSON, M. A., late Head Master of Aldenham Grammar School, Herts, and Mr. GEORGE BEVAN, who for many years conducted an extensive establishment in England, under the patro- nage of " his Honour the late Master of the Rolls, YOUNG GENTLEMEN are liberally BOARDED and EDUCATED in the different branches of a polite and useful education, which is varied according as the pupils are severally intended for the Universities, military colleges, public schools, learned professions, & c. French ( which is the language spoken in the hou « e), Italian and German are taught by resident masters. Able teachers are engaged for military and other drawing, music, fencing, dancing, Ac. The house, which has been fitted up at a considerable expense, is large and commodious, and situated in the most ele- vated and healthy part of the town. Numerous references can be given to gentle- men who have been educated under the care of the principals, and who have highly distinguished themselves at the Universities, and in other situations of life, as well as to several military officers of distinction, and others, whose sons are or have been under their tuition. Mr. Bevan will remain a+ the Percy Hotel, Rathbone- place, Oxford- street, until the 30th January, anil will be happy to take charge bf any gentlemen who may be intended for this establishment.— Prospec- tuses may be had, and further particulars known '. y application to the Rev. H. S. Knapp, M. A., Willesden ; Rev. Dr. Fancourt, O" ester : William Carter, Esq., East India House, London; Walter Hodsoll, Esq?, Bushy Heath, Herts; Mr. John Wells, Solicitor, 23, Percy- street, Bedford- square; Mr. E. Tomkins, 3, Bartholomew- lane; and Mr. Flight, Surgeon, St. John's street- road. TO WEST INDIA PROPRIETORS.— A Gentleman of long experience in West India business, who is at present Agent for several extensive Properties, offers at this critical moment to undertake the entire Management, in London, of Estates unencumbered, upon unusually advantageous and economical terms. Satisfactory references will be given.— Address by letter, post paid, A. B., care of Mr. Biggs, No. 53, Parliament- street, Westminster. In 3 vols, 8vo., N R U D D By the Author of " Waltzburg." Whittaker and Co. Ave Maria- lane. K - THE TWENTY- EIGHTH REGIMENT. In 1 vol. 8vo. price 9s., " MJARRATIVE of the SERVICES of the TWENTY- EIGHTH- Jj% REGIMENT, after their Return from Egypt, in 1802. By Lieut.- CoL CADELL, Formerly Major in the Corps. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane, London : and Robert Cad ell, Edinburgh. T Nearly ready, in 2 vols., HE EXI LE OF ERIN; or, the Sorrows of a Bashful Irishman. t( All men have their foibles ; mine is too much modesty."' Good- natured Man. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- lane. SKETCHES FROM REAL LIFE, No. 11., THE GREEN- ROOM, Will be published, together with other interesting - Papers, in the forthcoming Number, for February, of HE COURT MAGAZINE-. The Engravings given in this Number will consist of a Portrait of Tiie Right Hon. LADY RADSTOCK ; Engraved by H. Brett, from a Miniature by W. Barclay; and THREE COLOURED FIGURES OF FEMALE COSTUME. Edward Churton ( late Bull and Chnrfon). 26, Holies- street, Cavendish- square. T On the 1st of February will be published, No. I., price Is., to be continued Monthly until its completion in Eighteen Numbers, AIM A N U A L O F E N T OMOLOGY: From the German of HERMANN BURMEISTER. By W. E. SHUCKARD, M. E. S. Each Number will contain two steel Engravings, and 32 pages of letter- press. Edward Churton, Holies- street; and Charles Tilt, Fleet- street. On the 10th of February will be published, price 5s., THE FRENCII LANGUAGE ITS OWN TEACHER. RENE ALIVA, Author of the " Anti- Spelling Book." Edward Churton ( late Bull and Churton), 26, Holles- sfreet. By WESTALL and MARTIN'S ILLUSTRATIONS of the BIBLE. The Subscribers to this Work a re - respecfully informed that the publication of the Eleventh Part is unavoidably postponed until the 1st of March.— 26, Holies- street, Jan. 22, 1835 . BENT'S LIST of BOOKS and ENGRAVINGS published during the Year 1S34, with their Sizes and Prices, is ready for delivery, price One Shilling. London: published by Robert Bent ( Literary AdvertiserOffice), Aldine Cham- bers, 13, Paternoster- row, and sold by all Booksellers. ~ MR. LODGE'S^ NEW PEERAGE FOR 1835. " One Vol. bound, price 16s. T1HE PRESENT PEERAGE WITH EACH COLLATERAL, BRANCH, arranged and printed from the personal communications of the Nobility. By EDMUND LODGE, Esq., Norroy King of Arms, & c. This is the only work, of the kind, for which the entire type is kept standing, in order that all copies issued may be corrected throughout, instead of the former mode of inserting addenda. Saunders and Otley, Conduit- street, Hanover- square. H Just published, price 12s., OOD-' S COMIC ANNUAL A. H. Baily and Co., 83, Cornhill. for 1835.. MONEY to LEND.— To LEND, on personal and other security of the Nobility, Gentry, Clergy, Members of Parliament, and others, SEVERAL THOUSAND POUNDS, on reasonable terms, at a lower rate of per centage than Five per Cent, where the security offered is approved.— Apply by letter, in the first instance ( post- paid), to Mr. H. Clive, 19, Henrietta- street, Cavendish- square, London. jJTHEAP SILKS and LINENS.— Several hundred Pieces of rich black, checked, and coloured Gros de Naples, at Is. l| d., Is. 6d., and 2s. per yard, will be offered on Monday and following days, at the LONDON SILK ESTABLISHMENT, 137, OXFORD- STREET. Also a large Stock of Irish Linens, Sheetings, Table Linen, & c.; Russia Sheeting, 2.| yds wide, without a seam, 6s. 9d. a- pair, with every width and quality, and made equally cheap; Breakfast Cloths, yard and half square. Is. 6d. each ; Damask Dinner Cloths, 2| yds long, 3s. 9d. each ; Huckabacks, Glass- cloths, Dusters, and every article for domestic use, at Murray and Brown's, 137, Oxford street, between Holies and Old Cavendish- streets.— P. S. The wholesale discount of 2| per cent, is allowed on all parcels amounting to jf5 and upwards. THE CHILD'S OWN BOOK— NEW EDITION. Embellished with nearly 300 Cuts, in a square pocket volume, price 7s. 6d. in boards, or 8s. 6d. bound, gilt edges, ffflHE CHILD'S OWN BOOK: illustrated with nearly Three _ JL Hundred Engravings. A New Edition, with considerable Additions. London: printed for T. and T. Tegg, Cheapside. THE GIRL'S BOOK OF DIVERSIONS. In one volume, square duodecimo, embellished with Forty- eight Cuts by Thomp- son, price 4s. 6d. infancy boards, or 5s. 6d. bound, gilt edges, THE GIRL'S BOOK of DIVERSIONS; or, Occupation for Play Hours. By Miss LESLIE. London: printed for Thomas Tegg and Son, Cheapside ; and may be procured by order from all other Booksellers. • . . Just published, ONE HUNDRED and FIFTY WOODCUTS, selected from th © 4 Penny Magazine,' printed upon fine Drawing Paper, and handsomely bound, with gilt edges, price 14s. London: Charles Knight, 22, Lndgate- street. s Just published, FIRST STAGE OF ARITHMETIC. Arithmetic for Young Children, being a series of Exercises exemplifying the manner in which Arithmetic should be taught to young Children. Price Is. 6d. bound in cloth. London: Charles Knight, 22, Ludgate street. CAUTION.— EAU DE COLOGNE.— J. and E. ATKINSON beg respectfully to caution the Nobility and Gentry against the numerous Ar- ticles sold under this name. By a reference to the Import List, it appears that in last year ( 1834) only four houses in the City of London imported more than 500 dozen boxes; and it is computed that nine bottles out of ten are made in this country, where it is composed of strong alcohol, generally mixed with prussic- acid and hot essential oils, which, if used internally, are highly dangerous. The genuine Eau de Cologne owes its superiority to the grape spirit, from which it is distilled, with various salutary herbs indigenous to the borders of the Rhine.— They beg to add, they have always a large Stock on hand.— Also, NAPLES SOAP. This celebrated Shaving Soap they import from one of the first- Manufacturer's in Naples, and it is of a very choice kind. As nothing varies more in quality than Naples Soap, they respectfully solicit a comparison with others.— 24, Old Bond- street. ALE, STOUT, CIDER, < fec.— 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, as well as their FOREIGST WINES and SPIRITS, of a very superior class.— 22, Henrietta- street, Covent- garden. DAVIES'S CANDLES, 5| d. per lb.; Soap, Ud. * fine Wax- wick Moulds, 7d. ; Sperm and Composition, 2s. Id. ; Wax Candles, Is. 6d., Is. lid., and 2s. Id. ; Yellow Soap, 43s., 46s., 52s., and 56s. per 1121bs.; Mottled 52s;, 58s., and 62s.; Curd 72s.; Windsor and Palm Is. and Is. 4d. per packet ; Old Brown Windsor 4d. and Is. 9d. ; Rose 2s. ; Camphor 2s. ; Almond 2s. 6d., Sealing- Wax 4s. and 4s. 6d. per lb. ; Sperm Oil 5s. 6d. and 6s. per gallon ; Lamp Oils 3s. and 3s. 6d.— For Cash, at DAVIES'S Old Established Warehouse, 63, St. Martin's- lane, opposite New Slaughter's Coffee- house, who will meet the prices of any other house with the same qualify of articles. FOR Coughs, Shortness of Breath, Asthmas, & c.— POWELL'S BALSAM of ANISEED, under the immediate Patronage of several of the most distinguished Nobility and Gentryin 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, N<* 5|, Blackfriars- road, London. Sold also, by appointment, by J. Sanger, 150, Oxford- street, opposite Bond- street; Johnson, 68, Cornhill; Prout, 226, Strand : and m all th « rpsnpn+ nW « f! h » » mie+ « and wholesale and retail Patent Medicine by Wm. Jackson, New York. IMPORTANT CAUTION— Observe that the- wdrds " 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 the Government Stamp, pasted over the top of each bottle, without vVhich it cannot be genuine. N. B. Mr. Powell has no connexion with any pthir Cough Medicine. *** Removed from near the Magdalen to 5|, nearthe Bridge, three doors from the Rotunda. R. HENDERSON'S STOMACHIC KLIXIR is suited to the ; by the respectable Chemists, Venders ii the United Kingdom ; and Just published, THE PHILOSOPHY OF HEALTH; or, an Exposition of the Physical and Mental Constitution of Man, with a View to the Promotioa of Human Longevity and Happiness. By SOUTHWOOD SMITH, M. D., Phy- sician to the London Fever Hospital, to the Eastern Dispensary, and to the Jews' Hospital.— Vol I., illustrated with One Hundred and Twenty Wood- cuts. Price 7s. bound in cloth. London: Charles Knight, 22, Ludgate- street. ____ Just published, handsomely bound in cloth, Price 7s. jr EIGH HUNT'S LONDON JOURNAL, Vol. 1. MJ This Periodical work is published Weekly, in Numbers, price Three* halfpence, and contains Original Essays by the Editor, Analysis of and Extracts from New Books, Romances of Real Life, and a variety of interesting Communi- cations from Correspondents. Every Month a Part is issued, containing Five Numbers, sewed in a Wrapper, price Eightpence. The Supplementary Numbers in those Months which only contain four Wednesdays, being formed of a Work on the STREETS OF THE METROPOLIS, their Memoirs and Great Men, giving the historical, literary, and personal associations of the streets and houses in London, with the persons and events connected with them, and forming a History of the Manners and Customs, and the early and present state and appear* ance of the Metropolis. Commencing with the New Year, it is also intended to give in the weekly numbers, Notices of the Fine Arts and Music, Memoirs of Eminent Persons, Extracts from valuable Books of Travels, and Specimens of the best English Poets ; Hazlitt's Characters of Shakspeare, also, which are now out of print, will by permission of the Proprietor, appear weekly, till the Series is completed. *** The " London Journal" is published in London by H. Hooper, 13, Pall Mall East; but is supplied toAgentsin the country by C. KBight, 22, Ludgate- street. On Satufday, Jan. 24, was published, price 3d., THE PRINTING MACHINE; or, Companion to the Library and Register of Progressive Knowledge. No. XXXIII. CONTENTS:— The Library:— Three Years in the Pacific.— The Blind Traveller.— Lodge's Portraits of Illustrious Personages, ( second notice). The Reading Room:— « American Almanac,— The Mayor of Wind- Gap, and Canvassing. Education of the People:— Proceedings of Mechanics' Institutes, & c. Proceedings of Societies: — Transactions of the Entomological Society.— Royal Astronomical Societv.— Linneean Society.— Academy of the Arts and Sciences, Paris. Fine Arts:— Win- ter Exhibition of the Society of British Artists. Miscellany of Facts. London : Charles Knight, 22, Ludgate- street. I) most delicate palate, and will not offend iV most squeamish stomach. It is not only extensively patronized by the Nobil., but used by many of the Medical Profession in preference to all other aperients. Its excellent effects in removing stomach complaints of every description are too well known to re- quire farther notice.— Prepared only by hr. HendersonjPerth ; and sold by H. C. Baildon, 73, Princes- street, Edinburgh; Butlers, Cheapside, London, and Sackville- sfreet, Dublin : and R. Hazell, BrentfoiV : thjongh whom it may he had of all Medical Establishments in the United Kingdim, in bottles, at 2s. 9d. and 4s. 6d. A CURATE ON CHURCH REFORM. Just published, price Is., ALETTER addressed to His Grace the ARCHBTSHOP of CANTERBURY, upon certain. Questions now proposed to Incumbents by the Bishops. Together with Observations on some of the Abuses of the Estab- lishment, and their intended Reform By A CURATE, Magna est Veritas et Praevalebit. London : Effingham Wilson, 88, Royal Exchange. l% TO Medicine ever offered to the Public can be said to have re- J. ^ stored to Health so great a number of persons, in consumptive and Asth- matic complaints, as GODBOLD'S VEGETABLE BALSAM. Trials huve been made under the inspection of many eminent physicians, in obstinate cases, and they have declared that the cures performed by the Balsam, within their know- ledge, were sufficient for the establishment of'its reputation : it is patronized by many of the first Nobility in the kingdom. This medicine should be kept in all families, to administer upon the first symptom of cough or cold, as inattentioa and neglect are the causes of numbers losing their lives, especially in consumptive cases.— The Proprietor ( the Rev. G. Godbold, Rector of Greatham, Hants) has appointed Messrs. Barclay and Sons, 95. Farringdon- street, London, his Agents for the sale of the Vegetable Balsam, at lis. the pint, and 22s. the quart bottle.— The Signature of the Proprietor is written upon the Labels, and the name engraved on the Government StamfJ Li 90 j o h n b u l k January 18. TUESDAY'S GAZETTE. ^ Taster of the Horse's Office, Pimlico, Jan. 17.— His Majesty has been graciously pleased to appoint Lieut.- Colonel the Hon. H. F. C. Caventfish to be Equetry in Ordinary to his Majesty, vice the Lord de Lisle and Dudley, promoted; and " Col. W. Wemyssto be Equerry Extraordinary to his Majesty, vice Cavendish, prom. DECLARATIONS OF INSOLVENCY. M. A. PHILLIPS, Dorset- square, Marylebone, school mistress— T. HARTNEL, Cirencester, watch makei— R. STIRLING, High- street, Poplar, brewer. BANKRUPTS. T. LAYFIELD, and W. LAYFIELD, Silver- street, St. James's, tailors. Atts. Taylor, and Co., Great James's- street, Bedford- row—.). HARVEY, Dartford, timber merchant. Att. Blaclclow, Frith- street— T. JONES, Liverpool, broker. Atts. Jones, Liverpool ; Blackstoek and Co., Temple, London— I. MILLER, Liverpool, merchant. Atts. Brooke, Liverpool; Jones and Co., John's- street, Redford- row, London— J. GARSIDE, Portwood, within Brinuington, Cheshire, inaehine- maker. Atts. Gadsden, Furnival's Inn, London; Coppock and Co., Stockport— J. EDWARDS, Wanehelygen, Breconshire, draper. Atts. Blower and Co., Lincoln's Inn- fields, London; Gregory and Co., Bristol— E. BROWN, J. J. DAVY, and T. DAVY, Cullompton, Devonshire, woollen- manufacturers. . Atts. Bicknell and Co., Lincoln's Inn, London ; Geare and Co., Exeter. * FRIDAY'S GAZETTE. DECLARATIONS OF INSOLVENCY. J. WILKINS, Stamford- street, Blackfriars, printer— J. F. D. STEWART, River- street, Myddleton- square, coal merchant— G. TUCK, Cleveland- street, Kitzroy- square, grocer. BANKRUPTS. T. W. SHARLAND, Lime- street, City, tea ' broker Atts. Clowes and Co., Temple— A. L. WTGAN, Brighton, surgeon. Atts. Borrodaile and Ashmore, King's Arms- yard, Coleiuan- street— G. H. WATsKER, White Lion street, Spital- square, coach* maker. Att. Kipling, City- terrace, City- road— S. FFITCH, Cam. l> ridge- heath, Hackney, victualler. Att. Pamell, Church- street, Spitaltields— € r. MILES, Stroud, Gloucestershire, clothier. Atts. Crowderand Maynard, Man- sion House- place— J. T. REEVE, Red Lion, Whitechapel High- street, victualler. Att. Keene, Gray's Inn- square— W. KEY. London- wall, City, cheesemonger. Atts. Jacques and Co., Barnard's Inn, Holborn— G. GIDLEY, Wood- street, Cheapside, button manufacturer. Atts. Bowden and Co., Aldermanbury— N. J. LYONS, South Lambeth, master mariner. Att. Jacobs— D. JAMES, Dartford. banker. Atts. Kirkman and Rutherford, Cannon- street— E. JOHNSTON, Dover- street, Piccadilly, milliner. Att. Richardson, Ironmonger- lane— J. WAKE- FIELD, Hallow, Worcestershire, machine maker. Atts. White and Whit, more, Bedford- row; and Holdsworth and Finch, Worcester— H. W. KING, Bristol, attorney- at- law. Atts. Greville, Bristol; and Hicks and Co., Bartlett's- buildings, Holborn— A. HARVEY, Penzance, Cornwall, watch maker. Att; Coode, Guildford- street; and Richards and Co., Penzance— J. PERRY and J. RAYMENT, Manchester, paper dealers. Atts. Swain and Co., London ; and Harding, Manchester— J. PARK, Wortley, Leeds, woollen cloth manufacturer. Atts. Makinson and Sanders, Middle Temple ; and Foden, Leeds— M. SCHOLEY, Kingston- upon- Hull, draper. Atts. Johnson and Co., King's Bench- walk, Tem- ple ; and Wood, Manchester— J. B. BILLAM, Wakefield, Yorkshire, manufac- turer. Atts. Scott, Lincoln's Inn- fields ; and Taylor, Wakefield. THE NEW SERIES or THE O'HAEA TALES.—" We are glad to see Mr. Banim in the field again, and occupying ground which is quite lis own. No man understands better how to open the sources of joy and grief, and how to create a world which shall not. outrage nature, and yet one with which the far greater number of his readers can never have any acquaintance: a strange mysterious world full of passion, crime, and sorrow, yet lighted up by the most beau- tiful personations of virtue and innocence. The story which arrests the reader's breath in the Mayor of fVind- gap, will not yield to any former conception of this author's fervent spirit."— Court Journal. LITERARY NOVELTIES OF 1835.— Among the useful, as well as en- tertaining, Literary Novelties of the new year, we observe tlie new and cheap edition of Mr. Bulwer's Pelham, which seems to be ex- citing as much interest as if it had only now, for the first time, issued from the press. Its new attractions are certainly great when we consider, first, its extreme cheapness, its embellishments, combining a portrait of the author, and its interesting preface, in which the • writer explains the objects he proposed to himself in writing his tale, namely, to show in what manner we might redeem and brighten the common- places of life— to prove that the lessons of society do not necessarily corrupt, and that we may be both men of the world, and • even, to a certain degree, men of pleasure, and yet be something • wiser, nobler, better. The next work entitled to our notice, and of peculiar interest at the present moment, is the second volume of IVIr. Burke's History of the Commoners, in which, as in the former volume, will be found a number of curious and interesting personal notices of Candidates and Members for the new Parliament, show- ing their property, connexions, interests, and other characteristics. Another publication also of great importance at the present moment, is the cheap monthly republication, in six parts, at 8s. each, of Sir Jonah Harrington's very interesting Memoirs of Ireland, with all the 40 portraits and other embellishments of the oririnal expensive pub- lication. This work may now, therefore, stand a good chance of being found in every private and public library in the kingdom, where it will deserve a prominent place. As a proof of the efficacy of POWELL'S BALSAM OF ANISEED in the cure of Coughs, & c. we insert the following extract of a letter for- warded by Jas. Fair, Esq., of Lustruther, Roxburghshire, to Mr. Renwick, of Jedburgh, who forwarded it to Mr. Powell:— " Lustruther, 18th of January, 1830. <£ Dear Sir— You know that I was sceptical with regard to the wonders per- formed by the administration of patent medicines to the numerous complaints of * afflicted patients.' I havefnow altered my opinion, at least in so farac to the effect produced on me by two doses of ' Powell's Balsam of Aniseed.' In fact it was quite magical! Having'been for some time afflicted and tormented with what is termed a ' stomach cough,' I took one tea- spoonful of the bottle sent me, mixed • with a wine- glassful of cold water, in the evening on stepping into bed; and although prevented from sleeping the whole of the previous night, I found myself entirely cured, not having even coughed from that time to this, a period of at least a week ! Had one of the ' Seraphic Choir' descended from Heaven and said, * be ye whole,' the effect produced could not. have been more immediate or effectual.— You are at full liberty to make what use you may incline of this letter, for its contents are no less true than wonderful."— Vide Advertisement headed, *' For Coughs, & c.— Powell's Balsam of Aniseed." COURT OF COMMON COUNCIL.— A Court was held on Thursday at Guildhall; and it being the first since the election of the Common Councilmen, it was most fully attended.— The first business brought forward was the usual motion for placing the name of the Lord Mayor upon the list of the City Lands Committee; on which Mr. E. Wilson objected to the proposition on the ground that his Lordship had for- feited a solemn pledge, in refusing to call Common Halls and Com- mon Councils at the requisition of his fellow- citizens, though previ- ously to his election to the Chair of Chief Magistrate he had- unhesi- tatingly consented to do so. Mr. Wilson concluded with proposing that Mr. Alderman Scholey be substituted for the Lord Mayor.— His Lordship defended his refusal, and was perfectly satisfied that what he had done was perfectly in unison with all that he had promised. ' Hehad told the gentlemen who waited upon him., that he should not hesitate to call C'curts of Common Council and Common Halls upon every legitimate and proper subject; but surely the Court could not suppose that he would consent to compromise'his right to judge of the legitimacy and propriety of the manner on which he was to sanc- tion a meeting of either body. He fead considered that the object of the requisition of the Deputation was to call in question the King's Prerogative, and his determination was never to sanction a discussion on such matter : and : ae had come to this resolution from respect to the King and to his fellow- citizens. He would never be dictated to ; and as to whether the Court should think proper to put his name on the Committee or not, he did not at a31 care : he was Lord Mayor still, notwithstanding.— Mr. Williams having seconded the resolu- tion, a long discussion ensued, and on the Court dividing, the ram- iiers were, for the motion 85, against it 59— majority 2b'.— 1The Lord Mayor then rose and said-; Gentlemen, Hie vote you have just come to has given me the proudest satisfaction- I consider that I have tlone what any honest man ought to have done: at the same time that I speak of the satisfaction f feel, I am ready to do suit and ser- vice. You have excluded me from the Committee upon political grounds. I shall steadily pursue the course which I think I am bound • to follow, whatever votes you may fancy to ; eome to respecting my conduct; and as I have met with your disapproval in mv attempt to support the prerogative, which I shall endeavour to uphold, I repeat that I am proud, most proud, of your vote for my expulsion.— The Committees were then appointed, and the Court adjourned. A fire broke out on Saturday in Sussex- place, New North- road, Islington, and on forcing the door the flames were found to envelope the staircase and the first floor landing- place. They were speedily put out by the exertions of the police and neighbours, but at the arawing- room floor a horrible spectacle presented itself in the muti- lated remains of an elderly woman burnt almost to a cinder. The deceased was upwards of 80 years of age, and had occupied the house about two years in the name of Davenport, and the neighbours reported that she was 110 other than the celebrated retired actress Mrs. Devonport, formerly of Covent Garden Theatre. This, how- ever, on an investigation before a Coroner's Jurv on Monday, ' tamed « fut to be erroneous. The sister of the deceased stated that she Jiad 3001. a- year, which she spent in low company, and that she never • sras an actress. FOREIGN AFFAIRS. The Paris Journals of Wednesday are chiefly taken up with dis- cussions of the American Claims Treaty. From the language of the Ministerial organs it would appear that their employers entertain apprehensions of another majority declaring against the Bill in the Deputies. The semi- official Journal de Paris enters into a long vindication of the negotiations carried on with the United States, and of the course adopted since the reception of the President's Message, and declares that the question is one of peace or war. The Journal des Debats states that no question more momentous has arisen since the Revolution of July, and accuses the Opposition of viewing it but as a means of subverting the Administration. The question it says is whether France owes or not 25,000,000f. to the United States, and whether she be interested or not in going to war with those States— a war, of all possible and praticable ones, the most silly, awkward, and impolitic— the one which would most afflict the friends of liberty in Europe, and most elate those who are striving to revive the party of the Holy Alliance. The Debats beseeches moderate men on both sides of the Atlantic to set aside all passion, andJin spite of clamour, to unite in securing the pacific triumph of the commercial interests of two nations that nave reason to love and none whatever to hate and • combat each other. The hostility of the Opposition prints have been aggravated by a letter from M. Hyde de Neuville, published in the Echo Francois, in which he declares that the treaty is prejudicial to both France and America, and advantageous only to England ; that it never was agitated either under the Empire or tlie Restoration; that he will publish documents on the subject; and that his corres- pondence as Minister at Washington, published in that ci. ty, and submitted to the Senate, must be laid before the House of Deputies. In reply, the Debats announces that all the documents promised by Ministers will be furnished to the House on Wednesday, and that they will not only refute M. Hyde de Neuville's statements, but also make him repent the publication he has ventured in the interest of the Royalist party. The Journal de Paris has the following semi- official article:— " According to the Carlist bulletin we mentioned yesterday the provincial battalion of Grenada has much suffered; its Colonel, the Marquess de Campo Verde, has been able to save but few of his men. It is evident that in this bulletin, as in all those issued by the Carlists, there is much exaggeration. Nevertheless it appears certain that the Grenada battalion has been surprised by Eraso, and has sus- tained considerable loss. Mina has just organised 19 battalions to form an active army. It is still hoped that he will soon be able to assume the command of it. Letters from Madrid, dated the lltli, announce that the fear of a change of Ministry has imparted a new strength in public opinion to MM. Martinez de'la Rosa and Toreno." The National, whose advices from Pampeluna of the 13th confirm the destruction of the said battalion, and state that Mina was on that day to march against the Carlists, observes—" Unfortunately, we believe we are certain that telegraphic despatches of a later date have informed Government of Mina's having experienced a relapse, and of his being in a more alarming state than ever." By other accounts Eraso is stated to have formed and armed two more batta- lions in Castille, and Don Carlos to have ordered a levy of 8,000 men to be effected in the Basque, Alava, and Guipuzcoa provinces by the 1st of February. BAYONNE, JAN. 18.— Zumalacarregui went on the 13th instant from San Vmcente de Alva towards Castile. On that day he occu- pied Trebino, Burguette, and La Puebla, three leagues beyond Vit- tona on the high road to Madrid. This General has under his orders six battalions of Navarre, two of Alava, one of Guipuzcoa, and 200 cavalry MISCELLANEOUS.— The Muha Raja of Burdwan has most liberally subscribed 1,000 rupees to the English school about to be erected at Midnapore. His Highness last year subscribed 1,500 rupees to the English school at Burdwan. He also supports from his own funds a small English school, besides one for the instruction of youth in Sungskmtt, Persian, and Bengalee.— In an Act of Parliament passed last Session for regulating chimney sweeping, there is a clause not generally known, which refers to the building and rebuilding of chimneys, and, under a penalty of 1001., requires them to be so con- structed as to facilitate the use of sweeping machines. — The 21st and 22d sections of the Weights and Measures Act give power to the Ma- gistrates to inflict and recover penalties. A corn- factor ar Bidcford was fined for buying by the old bushel last Wednesday.— The manu- script memoirs of the Duchess of Pesth are stated in a French paper, to have been sold in London for 3,0001. sterling.— The spirit oflitiga- tion was, perhaps, never carried to a greater extent titan in a cause between two eminent potters, of Hanley- green, Staffordshire, for a sum of 21. 9s. Id. After being in Chancery for 11 years, it was put an end to by John Moretown and Randle Wilbraham, Esqrs., to whom it was referred, when they determined that the complainant filed his bill without any cause, and that he was indebted to the defendant at the same time the sum for which he had brought this action. This they awarded him to pay, with one thousand guineas costs.— By the 47th section of the New Poor Law Act, overseers are obliged to pass their accounts before the Magistrates quarterly, instead of annually. Overseers who have not so passed their accounts have incurred a penalty.— The Viceroy of Egypt has written a flatter- ing letter to Mr. Brunei, inviting him to Egypt, to examine the banks of the Nile, and to forward the works now in progress for clearing its course, by his counsel and experience.— The Moniteur publishes officially a list of all the savings' banks in the king- dom of France, which amount to 79 already established?: There are also 52 more under consideration, mak'iug a total of 131. — At the quarterly meeting of the Yorkshire and Derbyshire iron masters, held on Wednesday at Sheffield, although it was reported that the demand for metal was uniformly brisk it was resolved that no advance should take place. Considerable quantities of Scotch metal still continue to arrive for consumption in this district.— On Monday evening the house of Mr. Butcher, pawnbroker, Brentford, was discovered to be on fire. The flames soon extended to three adjoining houses, which, with that of Mr. Butcher's, were entirely destroyed, including a great part of the property they contained. In one of the houses destroyed, occupied by Mr. Pearse, of the Red Lion, the body of Mrs. Pearse, who had died a few days previously, was lying, and in the midst of the flames the coffin was brought out of the house. The thieves collected in great numbers, and were very daring in their search of plunder. Some of them entered one of the houses whilst on fire, and got possession of a considerable sum of money.— The' warehouses of Mr. J. Hargraves, tobacconist, Mr. Marcus, woolstapler, and Messrs. Moss and Sons, cloth manufac- turers, Leeds, were destroyed by fire Wednesday week— 100 bags of wool consumed, with other property to estimated value of 30,0001.— Thehousesof T. Barstow and E. I'rest, Esqs., near Nunnery without Micklebar- gate, York, were burnt down Thursday night— part of Convent Priory, to the amount of t$ 500]., also destroyed.— Friday morning a fire broke out in the lower part of the immense premises of Mr. Dsan, hosier, corner of Duncannon- street, and opposite Hungerford- market, Strand, which consumed nearly the whole of the stock and premises.— Tuesday morning a lady named Bude, residing at Lower Chelsea, was driving a couple of ponies in a four- wheeled chaise along the Uxbridge- road, accompanied by her two daughters, when the animals became restive, commenced kicking and plunging in a violent manner, and at length set off in a furious gallop: they proceeded in their impetuous career for several hun- dred yards ; when at last the chaise came full in contact with the off- wheel of a cart with such tremendous violence that the cart was forced completely round, and the horse thrown down in the shafts, whilst the chaise was literally smashed to pieces, the shafts and chain- breeching being torn away from the under carriage, and the body part completely destroyed. Mrs. Bude and her daughters were thrown out into the road with fearful violence, and Mrs. B. sustained such severe injury that her life is despaired of. Her skull at the base of the brain is extensively and dangerously fractured, and her left arm breken in two places. The eldest Miss Bude was thrown forcibly on her face, and received a violent contusion of the mouth by which tw © of her front teeth were knocked out, and her under lip cut through. Two of the fingers of her right hand were so dreadfully smashed that the splinters of the bone protruded through the flesh. The youngest daughter escaped with but trifling injury. One of the ponies had its leg broken, ard was otherwise much" injured. The annual meeting of the Northamptonshire Association for the Pro- tection of Agriculture took placelast Saturday at Northampton, Sir R. Gunning in the Chair. It was stated that the Earl of Westmoreland and W. R. Cartwright, Esq., M. P., had accepted the offices of President and Permanent Chairman of the Association. A letter was then read from Lord Milton, in which he offered to become a member of the Association, but several gentlemen objected to his Lordship's admission, because of th, » opinions he entertained in regard to the Corn Laws. The questiok that his Lordship should be excluded was then put to the rote and earned, THEATRICALS. A new interlude, said to be from the. pen of Captain Addison, was produced at Drury Lane, on Tuesday, entitled The King's Word. It professes to be an historical incident in the life of Charles II., the- annals of whose reign have already been very productive to dramatic authors. The incidents of this piece, if not very striking, are, at least, agreeable; but its success was mainly attributable to the exertions of Miss E. Tree, Warde, Cooper, anil Harley. The house was exceedingly crowded, which may perhaps be accounted for by the circumstance of each of the three pieces performed on this evening having Royalty for its foundation— namely, The King's Seal, The King's JVord, and King Arthur.— On the same evening a new three- act Comedy, called Off to the Continent— an abridged version of Farquhar's Constant Couple— was produced at Covent' Garden, with very questionablesuccess. The principal characters of the comedy are retained in this new version— but its cast was not of a description to make up for the defects of such an extravagant dramatic hash. The reception of the piece will probably prevent its repetition. A splendid entertainment has been given by Mr. Bunn to Mr. Ducrow, on his return to town, for the purpose of presenting him with a superb silver vase, surmounted by a knight in full armour, chased in gold, and bearing an inscription acknowledging the taste and indefatigable exertions of the unrivalled equestrian m the pro- duction of the grand spectacle of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. QUEEN'S THEATRE.— This little theatre, having again changed its name, was opened on Monday under the management of Mrs. NES- BITT. This lady has omitted nothing to ensure a successful season— everything which ingenuity and taste could devise or suggest has been put in requisition— the house has been thoroughly rep- aired and embellished, from the floor to the roof, and the whole interior pre- sents such an appearance of lightness and beauty as at once grati fies the sense and captivates the fancy of the spectator. In the selec- tion of a company too, Mrs. Nesbitt has shown equal good sense— and the arrangements are altogether such as to ensure the favour of the play- going public. Four pieces, two of them entirely new, formed the bill of fare for the evening. The first of the former was an operetta called The Farmers Son, by the author of Quite at Home, the music by Mr. T. Cooke. Mr. Elton played in his usual style of dealing with characters containing, in reality, nothing. Mr. Ander- son had a character, in the course of which he sung nearly half- a- dozen songs, in which he was encored. The Maid of Castile the se- cond of the new pieces, followed, and introduced, for the first time, a younger sister of Mrs. Nesbitt's, Miss Mordaunt. The debutante is an interesting and rather handsome girl; and got through the slender part allotted to her with considerable ease and self- possession. The Station House ( in which the old favourite Wrench was himself again) and Is He Jealous? closed the performances. The house was crowded to the ceiling, and the announcement of the entertainments for repetition was greeted with loud plaudits. The following were amongst the number of fashionables who honoured this theatre with their presence in the course of the week:—• Count D'Orsay, Lord and Lady Dudley Stuart, Harrington Stanley, Sir St. Vincent Cottin, Lord Harley, Lord Langford, Colonel Lyster, Countess Mortara, Lady Nesbitt, ' Sir John Philapart. The French Companv'commenced their series of performances on Saturday at the English Opera House, which has been very tastefully fitted up' for the purpose, and has now a complete semblance to a Theatre Francaise. The artistes are of a superior class. The favourites at present are M. Le Maitre, and Mdlle. Petit. An ac- cession of some very distinguished names is expected shortly, and altogether the auspices of the season are very promising. THE KING'S THEATRE.— The assignees ofMr. Chambers have closed with M. Laporte, and on terms which, although highly favourable to the latter, are not likely to prove acceptable to the creditors of the estate. The rent will be 8,0001. only, with the usual privilege of having concerts, < fec., to wlii^ h the assignees had, in the first instance, objected. The theatre cannot be opened till the first week in March, so that the season will fall several nights short of the customary number. M. Laporte's company will be very strong, he having already engaged Lablache, Tnmburini, Rubini, Ivanhoff, Grisi, Taglioni, Duvernay, the Elslers, Perrot, Albert ( as Ballet Master), & c. A report is current of an attempt- to assassinate Madame Malibran in Italy, but wlu.' l. or V'y "- pi- ov;' i. l rival, or from it despanng amant is not stated. It is said that in returning from the perform- ance of Olello she was wounded by a stiletto in the throat, in a man- ner to prevent her ever again exercising her talents, if even her life be saved. The conduct of the Lord Mayor of Dublin in challenging Mr. RUTHVEN, one of the candidates, calls to our mind a circumstance which occurred about thirty years ago at a Norwich election. The late Mr. WINDHAM, who was one of the candidates, was much annoyed by the mob, the leader of which addressed him in very insulting language, and having had a ring formed, after various antics, put himself in a boxing attitude, and challenged Mr. WINDHAM to fight. Mr. W. was very fond of athletic sports, in which he excelled,, and being highly provoked, he sprung from the hustings, rushed into the ring, set- to with the mob champion, and soon laid him at his feet, and after punishing him severely, returned to his friends. The Government, says the Medical Gazette, does not seem disposed to wait for Mr. WARBURTON'S scheme of reform, at least as regards the College of Physicians, but has already had communication with the magnates of Pall- mall East., in reference to some plan of their own. A Committee is now sitting to consider the expediency of certain changes in the College. The first and greatest grievance is the separation of physicians into two sets or orders— viz., Fellows and Licentiates; and the first and most popular change would be its abolition. The license ought not to be granted to any one who cannot show that he has had the highest medical education, and attained the highest standard of professional acquirement; and if he does, no one has a right, as a physician, to rank above him. Old Neptune appears to have resented the encroachments lately made on his domain in the erection of the sea wall or esplanade, connecting Hastings and St. Leonards, by driving his breakers further inland at the latter place, where considerable damage has lately been done by the sea. A short time ago, several cottages were rendered uninhabitable, and on the 16th inst. during a storm, the tide accomplished the destruction of eleven others, by washing the foundation of the back part of them away, the inhabitants of which were obliged to make a very abrupt exit. At the ebb of the tide the scene, though desolate, was novel; in some instances only the front walls remained— in others, the upper floors of the rear of the houses were suspended by the joists in the air. Had not the wind veered a little to the N. W., the devastation, it is thought, would have been much more serious in its consequences. AN AMERICAN LOCK.— The Americans have been having their fancy fairs, or as they term them, " institute" fairs. A recent- New York paper occupies four of its lengthy colums in describing the contents of one of these exhibitions ; it more resembled our annual exhibition of the Society of Arts, bat on an enlarged scale ; proceeding upon the utilitarian system, admitting specimens of im- provements in botany, < ftc., as well as in the arts and sciences, trades, < fcc. The following is an extract from the descriptions :—" Among the splendid specimens of hardware, we observed a great variety of locks. A remarkable door lock and key, for banks and stores attracted much attention. It. is of very simple construction, and yet a false key cannot be made to it. It has 16,382 combinations, or different ways of adjusting and using the key, so that a mail might lock up up his premises differently every day during the period of forty- five years." By accounts from Canton we learn that, up to the time of the expi- ration of the Company's Charter, which took place on the 22d of April, Lord Napier had not arrived, so that the English were in a, « interregnum. The Chinese were totally unable to compre- hend the new order of things, or what was meant by opening the trade, and some imagined the British were about to set up an inde- pendent Government in Canton. The Orders in Council had caused much speculation among our merchants at Canton, and, in many in- stances, it was deemed impossible that thev could be acted upon. The attempt to establish Courts of Justice, Courts Martial, < frc., in China, it was known would not be tolerated by the native Govern- ment ; while, in other instances, the Orders placed the British trade upon a worse footing than that of other foreign nations trading with China, January 25. j o h n b u l l. 27 NAVAL AND MILITARY. WAR- OFFICE, Jan. 23. 4th Dragoon Guards.— W. A. Rose, Gent., to be Cornet, by pur., vice Dickson, whose appointment has not taken place. 5th Dragoon Guards.— W. B. Knipe, Gent., to be Cornet, by pur., vice Mosley, promoted. 4th Light Dragoons.— Cornet J. E. Geils to be Lieut., by pur., vice Fawkes, promoted ; D. Halkett, Gent., to be Cornet, by pur., vice Geils. 22nd Foot.— Kris. G. J. Wheatstone to l) e Lieut., without pur'., vice Mackrell, dec.; C. C. Macdonald, Gent., to be Ens., without pur., vice Wheatstone. 38th Foot.— Cornet T. Mosley, from the 5th Drag. Guards, to be Lieut., by pur., vice Martin, who ret. 77th Foot.— Ens. J. E. Lewis to be Lieut., without pur., vice Hope, dec.; It. Travers, Gent., to be Ens., without pur., vice Lewis. 86th Foot.— Ens. H. C. Cobbe to be Lieut., by pur., vice Theobald, who ret.; G. Rideout, Gent., to be Ens., by pur., vice Cobbe. S8' h Foot.— Ens. C. Granet to be Lieut., by pur., vice Wallis, who ret.; F. A. Whimper, Gent., to be Ens., bv pur., vice Granet. 2nd West India Regiment.— Lieut. T. G. Egerton to be Capt., by pur., vice Graham, who ret. Cape Mounted Riflemen.— F. T. Le Tonzel, Gent., to be Ens. by pur., vice Barkley, who ret. Unattached.— Brev. Lieut.- Col. G. Couper, Sec. to the late Mast.- Gen. of the Ord., to be Lieut.- Col., without pur. OFFICE OF ORDNANCE, Jan. 22. Roval Regiment of Artillery. — First Lieut. B. O'Neil Lyster to be Second Capt., vice ijys, dec.; Second Lieut. C. J. Wright to be First Lieut., vice Lyster. Commission by Lord Lieutenant— Surrey Regiment of Yeomanry Cavalry.— Lieut. A. Francis to be Capt., vice Ravenhill, res. NAVAL APPOINTMENTS, PROMOTIONS, & o. Captain— R. Smart ( acting) to the Blonde. Commanders.— G. W. C. Lydiard ( acting) to the Satelite; Mr. Hamilton. Flag Lieutenant.— Lieut. Willis, to Sir G. Cockburn. Acting Lieutenant.— A. Kennedy, tothe Blonde. Lieutenants. — J. R. Ward ; Mr. Wellington ; Mr. CadweU. Masters.— G. Wilson ; — Sadler, to the Butfalo. Second Master and Pilot.— Mr. D. Craigie, to the Curlew. Mates.— Mr. C. R. Connor, to the Curlew; Mr. C. Austin, to the Actason. Mid- shipmen.— Messrs. C. VV. Plummer and T. B. Girdlestone, to the Rattlesnake ; H. S. Jackson, to the Victor; B. H. Paget, to the Pique. Acting Surgeon.— Mr. J. Dunn, of the Lame. Surgeon.— C. Maybery, to Portsmouth Ordinary ; C. L. Fuller, J. Gordon, J. Robertson. Assistant- Surgeons.— Mr. W. Dunbar, to the Speedy cutter ; Mr. J. H. Martin, of the Curlew. Hospital Mate.— Mr. J. Selleck, atHaslar. Pursers.— J. F. Dring ( acting), to the Beagle, vice G. Rowlett, dec.; Mr. J. M. J (' fiery ( acting), of the Racer. Clerk and Purser.— Mr. D. May, to the Cameleon. College Mate.— Mr. F. Holland, to the Victory. Secretary.— B. Soden, to Commodore Mason. COAST GUARD.— Chief Officers— Lieuts. A. Graves, L. Deneky, R. M. Jack- son, C. G. Clarke, N. Newnhain. On Wednesday the Staff of the Sussex Militia was inspected by His Majesty at the Pavilion. His Grace the Duke of Richmond, Colonel of the regiment, who came from Goodwood at the express desire of the King, was present, together with Colonel Willara and Major Paine. His Majesty, who, it will be recollected, has con- ferred the title of " Royal" upon this regiment, expressed high gra- tification, and ordered a gratuity to be given to the serjeants and buglers attached to the Staff. Xii the evening the Duke of Rich- mond and other officers of the Sussex Militia had the honour of dining with their Majesties. Lord Fitzroy Somerset's list of visitors on Tuesday morning were — Major- General Mawby, Colonel Parker, Colonel Dickson, Colonel Tovey, Major- General Bradford, Major Taylor, and about thirty other officers. Major Foster, Assistant Adjutant- General, has left Dublin for England, on leave of absence. Lieutenant.- Colonel Cuyler will perform the duties of Assistant Adjutant- General of the eastern district during Major Foster's absence. FIRST DRAGOON GUARDS.— The head quarters of this regiment marched into Dublin on Sunday last from Bristol; after disembark- ing they proceeded to Portobello barracks. His Majesty has conferred on Major William F. Williams, half- pay unattached ( late 85th regiment), the honour of the third class of the Royal Hanoverian Guelphic Order of Knighthood. CHATHAM, Jan. 20.— A General Court- Martial assembled at the Royal Marine Barracks, this day, Major George Peebles, Royal Ma- rines, President; for the trial of private James Abraham, Royal Ma- rines, on the following charges, viz.:—- 1. For having absented himself without leave from the Royal Marine Corps stationed at Chatham, on or about the evening of the 11th day of January, 1835, and not re- turning until on or about the morning of the 12th day of Jan., 1835.— 2. For having at Chatham, on or about the 12th and 13th days of Jan., 1835, disobeyed the lawful commands of Lieut.- Colonel Elias Law- rence, C. B., and others, his superior officers of the Royal Marines, while in the execution of their duty, in having refused to perform ge- neral extra duty ( as a punishment for his irregularities), although repeatedly ordered so_ to_ do, such conduct being subversive of good order and military discipline.— The Court- closed its proceedings on Wednesday, but the sentence will not be known for a few days. WOOLWICH DOCK- YARD.— On Monday, Earl de Grey, the First Lord of the Admiralty, accompanied by the Lords Commissioners, visited this Dock- yard ; after a minute inspection, their Lordships ex- pressedmuch gratification at its present state.— A report is current m the naval circles here, that the United Kingdom steam- ship, which sailed from the Thames last autumn, and respecting whose move- ments so much mystery has prevailed, has sailed from Helvoetsluj's loaded with arms and ammunition for Don Carlos.— The following ve. ssels are at present lying here:— the Phoenix, Firebrand, and Light- ning, steamers; also the Fairy and Investigator. The Meteor, 2, Lieut.- Com. C. A. Barlow, arrived in Hamoaze, on Monday from Woolwich, having on board 30,000 sovereigns. Her ship's company were paid advance of wages on Tuesday. She is fitted with boilers of a new construction, which promise considerable ELECTIONS. advantages in steam navigation; they occupy less space than those of the old construction— 13 feet of the vessel s hold in the direction of its length being saved. The boiler is not traversed by internal titles, the bottom being made of a zigzag form so as to detain the caloric emitted by the fire, and to present as much surface as possible to receive and conduct it. The steam is got up in about half the time of the old system, or in about 45 minutes instead of 1 hour and 20 minutes, and the heated water is continually being displaced by a cooler fluid, which constant circulation, it is expected by the pro jector, will prevent any deposit of salt in the boiler. The Officers of the Meteor, speak in high terms of the invention. The Meteor sailed on Wednesday for Falmouth and Lisbon, to take out a King's messenger and the mail. The Samarang, 28, Captain C. H. Paget, arrived at Portsmouth from the South American station, has brought home 590,000 dollars, and a number of specimens of natural history, collected during the Beagle's late survey, and two Mexican deer, a Mexican dog, a Mexi- can squirrel, a vacuna from the Cordilleras of Peru, and a horse from Chili. During the Samarang's service, three years and eight months, her crew have been particularly healthy, only one man hav- ing died from sickness, and three by casualties. She has been twice round Cape Horn, and run, since her leaving Portsmouth, in July, 1831, 62,000 miles, which is nearly three times the circumference of the globe. In consequence of the alteration in the route of the Falmouth packets going to Mexico, great convenience will be afforded to the public, as they now can go to Havannah direct, via the Bahama Islands, sailing the 15tli of every month. SHOCKING SUFFERINGS.— The Elizabeth, Rashleigh, of Plymouth, from Quebec, for Padstow, experienced a violent gale of wind from W. S. W. on the 4th ult. in lat. 48 N., long. 27 VV., and became water- logged. During the storm six of the crew were washed overboard; the master, two mates and three seamen took to the long- boat, and • were picked up by the Caroline, Broad, after having been nine days in that perilous state, during which time one of the unfortunate suf- ferers died insane. As the only means of saving their own lives, the survivors were obliged to have recourse to the horrible expedient o drinkin* the blood and eating the flesh of their deceased shipmate' invert to the entrails. Previously, their only sustenance had been a • few raw potatoes, which had been exhausted for some days, though only a single potatoe was served out to each man per diem. The • captain, Rashleigh, still lies at Plymouth in a dangerous state. Colonel Cadell relates an anecdote of one of the grenadiers of the 28th, Dan Fitsgibbon, which is worth recording:—" He was placed • at a bank, which he was to fire over; but was told on no account to show himself. Poor Dan, not taking this advice jumped upon the bank every round he fired, to see if he had hit any one. At last, a Frenchman shot him through the back of the left hand. It was seen that something had happened, and he was asked what was the matter ? Dan, very quietly looking at his bleeding fist, and scratch- ing his head with the other, said, " I wish I knew who did this!" STOPPING THE SUPPLIES.— Cobbett, who " has a great personal respect for Sir John Campbell," hopes that gentleman has not been talking of stopping the supplies, " because he ( Cobbett) would be sorry to learn that Sir John Campbell had said anything the uttering of which would prove him to be a fool. What, independent of the insolence of the proposition towards the King, does Sir John Camp- bell expect the supplies to be stopped by a faction, a very great majority of whom must go without dinners and clean shirts if the supplies are stopped for one moment? What! men fall out with their bread and butter and their washerwomen! Oh, no i this is the madness of desperation." MEMBERS RETURNED. Antrim ( County)— General O'Neil and Lord Belfast. Armagh— L. Dobbin, Esq. Armagh ( County)— Colonel Verner and Lord Acheson. Ayrshire— R. A. Oswald, Esq. Berwickshire— Sir H. P. H. Campbell. Buteshire— Sir William Rae. Caithness— George Sinclair, Esq. Cambridgeshire— Hon C. P. Vorke, R. J. Eaton, and R. G. Town' ley, Esqs. Carmarthen— Hon. C. R. Trevor, and Sir J. Williams. Carlow ( Borough)— F. Bruen, Esq. Cashel— Seijeant Perrin. Cheshire ( South)— George Wilbraham, Esq. and Sir P. G . Egerton, Clackmannan and Kinross— Admiral Adam. Clare ( County)— C. O'Brien, Esq. and Major Macnamara, Clonmel— D. Ronayne, Esq. Cupar ( Burghs)— Andrew Johnston, Esq. Cumberland ( West)— SIr. Irton and Mr. Stanley. Denbighshire— Sir W. W. Wynn and Mr. Bagot. Derbyshire ( South)— Sir George Crewe and Sir R. Gresley. Derry ( County)— Sir R. Bateson and T. Jones, Esq. Down ( County)— Lord A. Hill and Lord Castlereagh. Dublin ( City)— D. O'Connell and E. S. Ruthven, Esqs. Dumbartonshire— Mr. Denniston. Dumfries ( Burghs)— General Sharp and. Mr. Hannay. Dumfriesshire— J. J. H. Johnstone, Esq. Dunbar, SfC.— R. Stewart, Esq. Dundalk— S. Crawford. Esq. Dundee— Sir H. Parnell. , Edinburgh ( City)— 3. Abercromby, Esq. and Sir J. Campbell. Edinburgh ( County)— Sir George Clerk. Elgin and Nairn— Hon. F. W. Grant. Elgin ( District)— Colonel Leith Hay. Funis ( Borough)— H. Bridgeman, Esq. Falkirk ( District), Linlithgow, ^ c.- Mr. Gillon. Forfarshire— Hon. D. G. Hallyburton. Galway ( County)— Bodkin and Martin. Glasgow— J. Oswald and C. Dunlop, Esqs. Glamorgan— C. R. M. Talbot and L. W. Dillwyn, Esqs. Herefordshire— Hoskins, Price and Foley. Kilkenny— Hon. P. Butler and W. F. Finn, Esq. Kddare— R. M. O'Ferrall and E. Ruthven, Esqs. Kincardineshire— Hon. Hugh Arbuthnot. King's County— Hon. Colonel Westenra and N. Fitzsimon, Esq. Kinsale— Colonel Thomas. Kirkaldy— John Fergus, Esq. Lancashire ( South)— Lord F. Egerton and R. B. Wilbraham, Esq. Leitrim ( County)— Lord Clements and S. White, Esq. Limerick ( County)— Hon. R. Fitzribbon and W. S. O'Brien, Esq. Lincolnshire— Pelliam and Corbett. Longford ( County)— Lord Forbes and Anthony Lefroy, Esq. Londonderry ( County)— Sir Robert Bateson and Captain T. Jones. Monaghan— E. Lucas, Esq. and Hon. H. R. Westenra. Montrose ( Burghs)— P. Chalmers, Esq. Newrv ( Borough)— Bradv and Staples. Norfolk ( East)— E. Wodehouse, Esq. and Lord Walpole. Paisley— Mr. Speirs. Perthshire— Hon. F. Maule. Queen's County— Sir C. Coote and Mr. Vesey. Renfrew ( County)— Mr. Stewart and Mr. Houstoun. Boss— J. H. Talbot, Esq. Roscommon— B. Ffrench and O'Connor Don, Esqs. Selkirk ( County)— Mr. Pringle. Somersetshire ( West)— E. A. Sonford and C. B. Tynte, Esq. Stirling ( County)—\ Villiam Forbes, Esq. Suffolk ( West)— Wilson and Rushbrooke. Tipperury ( County)— L. Sheil and Otway Cave, Esqs. Tyrone ( County)— Hon. H. Corry and Lord C. Hamilton. Warwickshire ( North)— Sir E. Wilmot and W. S. Dugdale, Esq. Waterford ( City)— H. W. Barron and Thomas Wise, Esqs. Waterford ( County)— Sir R. Musgrave and P. Power, Esq. West Meath ( County)— Sir R. Na « le and M. L. Chapman, Esq. Wick ( District), Kirkwall, fyc— James Loch, Esq. Wicklow— J. Grattan and R. Howard, Esqs. Wigtonshire— Sir A. Agnew. Worcestershire ( West)— Hon. Col. Lygon and Mr. Wmmngton. Worcestershire ( East)— F. H. Cookes andE. Holland, Esqs. York ( North Riding)— Hon. W. Duncombe and E. S. Cayley, Esq. York ( West Riding)— Lord Morpeth and Sir G. Strickland. Youghal— John O'Connell, Esq. STATE OF POLLS. Fifeshire, Jan. 21—( First day)— Captain Wemyss, 999; Colonel Lindsay, 518. Meath County, Jan. 22— Grattan, 495; O'Connell, 494; Plunkett, 322; Lambert, 315. Mayo County, Jan. 22— Brabazon, 87; J. Browne, 78; D. Browne. 71; Ellard, 26. „ „ „ Louth County, Jan. 22— P. Bellew, 236; R. M. Bellew, 229; Foster, 89. Cork County, Jan. 21— O'Connor, 675 ; Barry, 662; Longheld, 589; Bernard, 579. At one of the poll booths of the City, at the late election, a worthy Conservative was about to tender his vote, when he overheard the following dialogue, sotto voce, between the Radical and Conservative check- clerks, the latter of whom were regaling themselves on sandwiches, cold tongue, bottled porter, & c. & c.:—" Where did you get that capital luncheon ?" said one of the clerks, with a hungry look. —" From our Committee, of course," replied the Conservative. " Committee!" said the Radical; " why our's has just sent us two shillings between fourteen I" " Shabby dogs," said the Tory. " Shabby, indeed," echoed the other, " if you knew all; we have been up all night in their service, and have had no breakfast!" " Well, help yourselves," said the Conservatives, " there's plenty for all." The following curious caution was last week posted up in a con- spicuous place in the little village of Peckham, Surrey:—" Whereas several idle and disorderly persons have lately made a practice of riding on an ass belonging to a gentleman of this place. Now, lest any accident should happen, notice is hereby given, that he has determined to shoot the said ass, and cautions any person who may be riding on it at the same time to take special care of themselves, lest by some unfortunate mistake he should shoot the wrong animal." The Western Luminary says:— Lord J. RUSSELL had a dinner party at Sidmouth, last week; the number present amounted to seventeen ! including himself; and on Saturday another dinner was given him, at the Golden Lion Inn, Honiton, where, although printed hand- bills were distributed, and every other publication was given, the party did not exceed thirty! !! He entered and departed without a single cheer !!! Here's goodly work. The editor of an American newspaper apologises for the non- appearance of his publicaton at the regnlar time, by saying that he was engaged, during that day, in cow- hiding a fellow who had slandered him, and didn't get through early enough to go on with his paper. The following instances of the blessings and humanity of that great masterpiece of Whig Legislation, the Poor Laws AmendmentBill, have occurred at Birmingham:— On Thursday last LOUISA ALLPORT was charged at the public- office, before RICHARD SPOONER and FRANCIS LLOYD, Esqrs., with deserting her infant illegitimate child, by leaving it at the house of the man who she said was the father of it. Mr. SPOONER told her she was liable to be indicted for the offence, but the parish officers having declared their unwillingness to punish her if she promised to protect the child, it was delivered to her, and after an admonition from the Magistrates, she was discharged.— JOHN EMANUEL was charged, together with his wife, for deserting an infant illegitimate child, by leaving it at the house of an aged and infirm widow, where, it is sup- posed, the mother of the child lodged, and who had absconded. 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In order to gratify the numerous friends who have written to us upon the subject, three octavo volumes will be speedily published, in which the most po- pular contributions to BULL will appear, con ziected by notes, remarks, and illustrations from the pen of the Editor. ET^^ The TITLE and INDEX to tlie last year's volume will be ready for delivery with the Paper on Sunday next, and may be had at the fiice, or of any Newsvender. J OHM BULL. LONDON, JANUARY 25. THEIR MAJESTIES continue at Brighton. Her Royal Highness the Landgravine of HESSE HO. MBOURG will, it appears, remain on a visit to her illustrious brother for some months. By the lists of persons calling at the Palace, which are published in the Brighton Gazette, it strikes us that a vast number of persons very needlessly take the trouble of writing their names down. ALTHOUGH in our commentary on the entertaining old Chronicle we have necessarily given a certain quantity of elec- tion information, we are yet unable to resist the pleasure of recording here the triumphant efforts of the Conservatives in the English Counties. The returns which appear in our Paper of to- day will, we should think, for ever set at rest all doubts of tile great and important re- action which, we admit, we our- selves hesitated to believe, until such irresistible evidence as that which we adduce to- day had been exhibited. We justly anticipated the defeat of Lord PALMERSTON in South Hampshire— how could it be otherwise ? The Tory who had for twenty years, from 1807 to 1827, voted against every motion for Reform, under the Duke of PORTLAND'S, Mr. PERCEVAL'S, and Lord LIVERPOOL'S Governments, and the apostate and Radical Reformer who changed his principles to qualify for a Destructive placeman, and voted for every reform for four years, from 1830 to 1834. Those who have watched the long career of this official veteran, could ex- pect nothing but a signal overthrow; and as for his di- plomatic colleague, his compulsory KOO- TOO to FLEMING and CRO. MPTON was equally anticipated, although we believe, rather than have been ousted, he would readily have per- formed the ceremony to either of them, which, had BUONA- PARTE been his master, he would have been commanded to perform to the Illustrious High and Mighty JONG FONG TONG WHONG when he was in China. Lord FRANCIS EGERTON and Mr. WILBRAHAM are re- turned for South Lancashire— in opposition to Mr. WOOD and the urbane Lord MOLVNEUX— where, in 1832, Sir THO- MAS IIESKETH was easily beaten by the now defeated candi- dates. In South Derbyshire, Sir ROGER GRESLEY and Sir GEORGE CREWE have defeated Mr. G. VERNON and Lord WATERPARK; tile latter of whom, speaking of an attempt to oppose him before, actually laughed at the idea of his antagonist's success. In Norfolk, Lord WALPOLE and Mr. WODEHOUSE have displaced Colonel WYNDIIAM and Mr. GURNEY. Colonel RUSHBROOK, a Conservative, and Mr. WILSON, an unpledged man ( and who was thought of as the Tory candidate), have displaced Mr. TYRELL—( Sir HYDE PARKER has withdrawn) and against Mr. HALES, the Whig candidate. Mr. STANLEY and Mr. IRTON, in Cumberland, against Major AGLIONBY. Mr. BAGOT against Mr. BIDDULPH in Denbigh. Sir WILLIAM GEARY lias defeated Mr. RIDER in East Kent; Captain ALSAGER has driven Mr. BRISCOE out of East Surrey; Mr. RICE TREVOR holds his ground in Car- marthenshire, Mr. DUNCOMBE his ground in the North Riding, and Mr. CORBETT has ousted Sir WILLIAM IN- GILBY from Lincolnshire. The last mentioned return deserves particular notice, as proving the low estimate the Conservatives of the Empire have taken of their ov « li power, and the probability that many more Whigs would have experienced signal defeat ( in Cam- bridgeshire for example, where three Tories would have been returned had there been three Candidates of ( hose principles) had they shown more courage. In 1832, Sir ROBERT SHEFFIELD was in a minority of 1500 against Mr. PELHAM and Sir W. INGILBY. The Con- servatives thought it quite impossible to bring in a candidate upon the present occasion— and, in the absence of one of their own party, had ( with a few exceptions) offered to support Mr. G. HENEAGE against Sir W. INGLIBY, as being the more respectable Representative. The nomination for the county was fixed to take place on the 15th inst. On the 6th Sir ALEXANDER CRAY GRANT was unexpectedly beaten at Grimsby by Mr. E. HENEAGE. On the 7th. in their despair at being left to the Whigs, some leading Conservatives suggested him as candidate for the county. He resisted their kindness: but on the 8th a Depu- tation waited upon him with a requisition. He reluctantly acquiesced, in case no gentleman of the county would come forward, and then Mr. G. HENEAGE retired; and, that done, Mr. COKBETT, " a staunch Conservative, and no mistake," consented to be put in nomination. Of course, Sir ALEX- ANDER, not being a county man, was then out of the question. But ten days afterwards Mr. CORBETT, no preliminary arrangements having been taken, was returned, beating Sir W. INGILBY by 466, and being only 39 below Mr. PELHAM ( the representative of Lord YARBOROUGH'S immense influ- ence), whose majority too was the result of Tory votes given to liim for the purpose of keeping out Sir W. INGILBY. If all this does not prove re- action, WHAT DOES ? English and partly German, have been engaged for the amusement of the Court— for three months certain. of SOME absurd rumours were afloat yesterday in the City as to the dissolution of the present Ministry, borrowed, as we believe, from a York newspaper. We cannot discover the slightest foundation for the report. It is no longer doubtful that an extensive measure Church Reform is now under discussion. We have very strong opinions upon the subject, and upon the characters and qualifications of some individuals who must necessarily be engaged in the deliberations upon the vital question. Wi shall abstain from any further observations to- day: but wi do ( trnst that NO CONSIDERATION will induce the Govern ment to weaken the faith and confidence which the member of the Established Church have in the declaration of the SOVEREIGN. Liberality, in the fullest measure consistent with the safety of the Establishment, may be meted to the Dissenters, and some alterations in the extent of dioceses, so as to equalize in some measure the revenues of the Bishops, may be made but we confess we hear with fear and trembling of the pro- positions now debating. We will not go further now— we earnestly hope that the Government will not lend too ready an ear to insidious advisers, but assure itself that the en- lightened, respectable, and loyal portion of the People of England, however desirous they may be for the abolition of abuses, are as firmly attached to their CHURCH, ITS RIGHTS AND PRIVILEGES, as ever they were. It will be necessary for us to recur to this subject shortly in the mean time we have only to say, that we believe the rumour of a division of the Cabinet upon this particular sub- ject to be groundless, and at all events premature. THE Duke of LEUCHTENBURG, performing the character of Prince AUGUSTUS of PORTUGAL, has steamed himself off to Donna MARIA DA GLORIA in Lisbon, in order to fulfil the conditions of the Treaty, and become her husband. He will find the country and the capital in a most agreeable posi- tion, and the Throne of his Consort as ricketty as need be. The parties most interested seem tolerably aware that the chances of a permanent reign are not very great, for in all the arrange- ments made for carrying on the performance, due regard has been had to making what the stock- brokers call Time- bargains. From the details of these arrangements we may gather the value which is set upon the duration of the reign. Amongst otlieis, we find that a very superior band of musicians, partly THE Ultra- Oppositionists have opened a heavy fire from all their columns upon Sir CHARLES MANNERS SUTTON, whose re- election to the Speakership they consider highly dangerous and improper, for reasons, which, if not particu- larly good, are extremely whimsical. Everybody admits the unequalled fitness for the high office of its late occupant; and, considering that the new Parliament will open, with all the records of former Parliaments destroyed, without the possibility of making references or consulting pre- cedents, and under circumstances of the greatest difficulty and embarrassment, it might be imagined that the ability and expe- rience, which nobody denies to the late Speaker, would be more than ever valuable and important to the House of Com- mons and the country. But no : his faults are too flagrant to admit of palliation— and his conduct, since the close of the last Session, has justified, and will secure, his rejection by the House of Commons. Let us see what this conduct is, and what these faults are.— First— Happening to be in London the Speaker was sum- moned to attend the KING in Council, after the removal of the lute Ministers, together with the other Privy Councillors then in town.— This inevitable act of duty is represented as a violent interference iii the Councils of His MAJESTY. Secondly— That he has had various audiences of the KING.— When it is recollected that the destruction of both Houses of Parliament had occurred, and that His MAJESTY, solicitous for the advantage and welfare of his people, M as ready, if ne- cessary, to give up his own residence for the use of Parlia- ment, it does not appear very extraordinary that the Speaker of the House of Commons should have been honoured by the commands and suggestions of the Sovereign. Yet these sim- ple acts of positive obedience are construed into violent par- tisanship, and, coupled with his presence at the Council when the dissolution of Parliament was decided upon ( at which Council, par parentheses, he was not present), render Sir CHARLES MANNERS SUTTON suddenly unfit to resume the Chair, which every human being admits lie has filled for seven- teen years with honour to himself and advantage to the country. It is not fit, the Destructives say, that a Conservative should be Speaker. One would naturally ask, why ?— since, as it is the province of a Speaker to observe strict impartiality in the regulation of the House and its proceedings, it can matter little what his personal politics may be. It is true, that Sir CHARLES MANNERS SUTTON is a Conservative; but, he has always been a Conservative. He was a Conservative when he first took the Chair; and he was a Conservative when he took it last, for the purpose of presiding over the Reformed House of Commons, at the earnest solicitation of the Reform Ministry, and upon the motion and seconding of Lord MOR- PETH and Sir FRANCIS BURDETT. If, during the existence of that Parliament, a whisper of imputation had been raised against his conduct as Speaker—• if, instead of hearing from all sides, from the new Members as well as the old, the strongest testimonies to his impar- tiality, patience, amenity, and firmness, we had heard that he had shown favour and affection to one party which he did not exhibit to another— or, in short, that he had done any of those things which he did not do, we could have under- stood a clamour and a cry for change. But no— throughout the two Sessions he maintained his well- established character in the chair, and the House of Commons separated as perfectly satisfied with their Speaker as ever. But now, all at once, he is disqualified from a return to his high office, by having attended the Sovereign to receive his commands upon a point, with which he was specially, offici- ally, and personally concerned; and because he sat at the Council Board according to a summons which he could not refuse. The consistency of these malcontents, who would embarrass the country, impede the public business, and do a gross in- justice by raising a cry against an unimpeachable character, is admirable. Sir CHARLES SUTTON is a political partisan, and therefore ought not to be Speaker; but let us have Mr. LIT- TLETON, the committed of O'CONNELL, or Mr. SPRING RICE, the late Secretary for the Colonies, because— what ? because they are not political partisans ? No ; but because they are Radical Whigs, and because, if any advantage is to be derived by their adherents from either of them being in the Chair, it must be derived from the exercise of partiality. One thing does not appear to have occurred to these violent opponents of Sir CHARLES MANNERS SUTTON— we mean, the possibility that he may not choose to be put in nomination for Speaker. The length of the Right Hon. Gentleman's services, as well as their arduous character, would fully justify him in retiring again ; for, be it recollected, he was entreated back to the Speakership by the Whig- Radical Ministry, out of his retirement, before. He had quitted the chair with the highest possible testimonials of public approbation, and only returned to it at the pressing solicitations of the last Mi- nistry, who, in the strongest terms, represented the vital importance of his compliance with their request. If similar feelings and opinions actuate the present Ministry, Sir CHARLES MANNERS SUTTON will, we have no doubt, again incur the fatigue and responsibility which he undertook for the Whig- Radical Government; but it is no matter of cer- tainty ; and therefore all the battle of the windmills which the Destructives are fighting about the Chair, is as premature as it must be ineffective. One thing alone it serves to show— their total disregard of high principle, long service, and strict neutrality, and their admiration of duplicity and meanness, mingled with the hopes and expectations of favouritism and partiality* if they succeed in electing one of their own parti- sans as Speaker. THE NEW NORFOLK TRAGEDY. SCENE— THE STATUE GALLERY IN IIOLKHAM HALL. [ The Dictator- General of the County of Norfolk is seated in an easy Chair, looking very sour, reading the Courier newspaper— the- History of the American Jl'ar is lying beside him.] Enter MESSEXGER. DICTATOR. How now— what news from Norwich ? MESSEXGER. Alas! dread Sir ! the Gunton youth, And BETTY MARTIN, his adopted friend, Are beaten into fits!— STORMOXT and SCARLET reign triumphant there; While thousands of their friends, with loud acclaim, Bid the responsive echo sound their praise! DICTATOR. Disastrous news !— but what of Yarmouth ? tell— . Doubtless my valued kinsman conquers there. MESSENGER. Ill- fated wretch am I, still to be doomed To bring sad tidings to my master's ear.—(/ Feeps.) DICTATOR. Speak out, nor keep us thus in dire suspense. MESSENGER. ANSON and RUMBOLD, with the earliest dawn This morning, left the scene of their defeat.—( Both weep.}> DICTATOR. Hast thou no word of comfort to impart, To sooth the throbbings of the tortured breast— Heard'st thou not aught from Ipswich? MESSENGER. Press me not, Sir; I've said already more Than might suffice to bid Destructives quail, And bring old CARTWRIGHT back to earth again. DICTATOR. And is it so indeed? Does Suffolk's capital in truth return Two loyal men to guard King WILLIAM'S throne? Ah! cursed loyalty— from earliest youth I've toil'd to whelm thee in dark falsehood's mire, And now thou risest brighter than of yore, To heap new sorrows on this aged head!—( Weeps and groans'. 1^ MESSENGER. All must bejtold— why do 1 then coneeal That foul defeat has also been our lot At Colchester and Harwich.— Bury, and East Suffolk, Have spurn'd the Radicals who elaim'd their loye. DICTATOR ( in a rage). Enough— begone— tell me no more of this! Enter Second MESSENGER. DICTATOR. Thou, like an angel, com'st to calm my woe, And tell me LILLIE is return'd for Lynn. MESSENGER. Would that thy thoughts, most mighty Sir, Like some prophetic vision, told thee truth. DICTATOR. What can'st thou mean ? Has Lynn, the faithful, the devoted Lynn, Renounc'd our rule, and join'd the rebel throng,. That venture to dispute our sovereign will ? MESSENGER. Alas! ' tis even so ! CANNING has gain'd a mighty triumph there, And, writ in pocket, town ward has return'd; Moreover, Sir, as hitherward I sped. To bring these tidings to your noble ear, A mighty troop came pricking o'er the plain, Mrith loud huzzah, and banners waving high— WODEHOUSE and WALPOLE, a determined band. Believe me, Sir, the east will soon be up— The gathering oall has echoed through the land, And thousands wait the signal to advance. DICTATOR ( in a phrenzy). Have all my slaves rebell'd? What spirit, foul, has whisper'd in their ear The long- forgotten name of Liberty!! I'll crush these villains to the earth again— I'll shew them how to raise their rebel voice Against the mighty name of Ilolkham's Lord. [ Door opens— in rush Archdeacon BRAZENNOSE, the Hon. G. KETPEL, G. ANSON, Mr. C. E. RUMBOLD, the boy HARBORD, followed by ANTONY and others, all in the deepest mourning, with hand- kerchiefs to their faces.] Here, in mercy to the compassionate reader, the curtain drops. AMONGST the absurdities and ignorance of the Chronicle, in which, out of kindness, we are inclined to rank the follow- ing, that Paper gave the subjoined article on the 14t. h instant— as it has given all its authentic election reports— from its " own Correspondent." We submit it as we find it:— SIR ROBERT PEEL AT ROME. ( From a Correspondent.) During the interregnum of above three weeks, during which the- Duke of WELLINGTON concentrated in his own person all.' the powers of the State and all the responsibilities which the Constitution had divided between several Ministers, Sir ROBERT PEEL shared with " His High- ness" the attention of Europe, because it was professedly on account of the Right Hon. Baronet that the constitutional government of so many millions of people was suspended, and a Dictator named by the KING. Itisknownin every part of Europe that SIR ROBERT PEEL was found by the Dictator's messenger at Rome; and the great empire which he has been called upon to govern WILL BE STARTLED, THOUGH PERHAPS NOT SURPRISED, ON LEARNING HOW THE RLGHT HONOURABLE GENTLEMAN WAS EMPLOYED DURING HIS SOJOURN IN THE ETERNAL CITY. Even before the eyes of the nations were turned towards him by the alarming events in England, THAT EMPLOYMENT WAS THE SUBJECT OF GENERAL CONVERSATION IX ALL THE POLITICAL CIRCLES AT RONE, AND THROUGHOUT ITALY; and of course it has since become much more worthy of observation. A GREAT I- ORTION OF January 25 j o h n b u l l 29 HIS 1 I. U1. WAS SPENT IN THE SOCIETY OF THE NOTORIOUS PRINCE CANOSA WITH WHOM, IT IS SAID HE FORMED THE CLOSEST POLITICAL RELATIONS, FOR THE PURPOSE, NO DOUBT, OF RECEIVING LESSONS OF POLITICAL MODERATION AND LIBERALITY. YES, CANOSA, WHOSE NAME IS WRITTEN IN THE BLOOD OF SO MANY UNFORTUNATE NEA- POLITANS, AND WHOSE EXECRABLE PRINCIPLES EVEN THE HATED TYRANT OF THE LITTLE DUCHY OF MODENA HIMSELF WAS UNABLE TO ENDURE, SH4RED MORE OF THE CONFIDENCE AND SOCIETY OF SIRROBERT PEEL THAN ANY OTHER POLITICAL PERSONAGE AT HOME. Noscitur a sociis, is an old adage; and I apprehend this fact is not much calculated to diminish the distrust with which the people of Great Britain regard the accession of the Right Hon. Baronet to office. You will find in " La Storm del generate di Genio Pietro Cottetta dulViSO a/ 1825," a brief history of the life of the monster CANOSA, the political friend and associate of your Minister. You will there see, that after a series of the most horrible intrigues and machinations, he was appointed Minister of Police in Naples in 1816. In that capacity he put arms secretly into the hands of the Calderari, a set of fiends composed principally of convicted murderers and as- j| j - ' ig the Car- der of that has been enjoying blessings never exceeded by any people upon earthy What more is wanted, then ? If the English people are already happier and more blessed than any other people upon eartli, why should they trouble themselves to pull things to pieces, in order to try whether they cannot be a little less comfortable and a little less happy ? To be better than the best, may be a consummation devoutly to be wished, at Wrotham— but to our comprehension, it is nonsense. d set U1 1ICLUS uilllljuacu 11 ill M J i 11 Hi 1 Ui CI HI V 11. ICT'- l 1 [ 111111 '. I I - 1 sassins, liberated for the express purpose of assassinating 1 bonari, or Liberals. He became the chief and commaudei POETRY. " One fool makes many," says a homely proverb: we may venture to predicate the same of poets. The immortality which his Glasgow Canzonette conferred on IKEY PIG has roused the emulation of a kindred spirit— FROSTY- FACEDFOGO ! The last- named gentleman has just favoured us with the following Cantata, of his own composition, as chaunted by him with unbounded applause at " Coger's Hall, diabolical sect, for whom there is no parallel to be found in ancient j in the course of their last " Free and Easy," Coger Galloway in the ormodern times, and by their agency filled the kingdom of Naples i chair. We need hardly say that it is a faithful as well as highly poetical ^ tl, b!?-° landCan^ 1S tThe K^ sMmselIf, alarmed by the fury of j v6rsion of Colmt Carbonaro's spirited address when he last carried his Minister, was obliged to remove him from the kingdom. Here- ' , tired to Pisa until the fall of the Constitution of 1820, when he was j 1118 coals to Newcastle. Sincerely do we congratulate his Lordship again recalled, andreinstated as Minister of Police. The King was : that two such bards should join to celebrate his sayings and doings, IOSC< NJLGAIS'VBY ^ INDJSNA, TIO11 THE.. PE° P1^ T0 EIXRELICVAX, 0SAJIL? and to snatch him from the crowd of illustrious Small- coal Men 1822, although he was such a tavounte with the despot that he loaded him with riches. He again repaired to Pisa; but, says the historian, " the hatred and the curses ol the Neapolitan people following him thither, he was obliged to remove to Genoa. _ From this period"( con- tinues Pietro Coletta) nothing is known of his life, but certain in- trigues too base and degrading to be reported. Shortly after he went into the Duchy of Modena, and becoming the favourite of that Prince, lived some time at. his Court, and was the principal spring of the intrigues and cruelty that oppressed this State.' 7 He has since re- tired to Rome. The historian concludes his notice of the monster in these words:—" CANOSA is the most detested man in Italy, He is hated even by his partisans for his cruelty and Janissary prin- ciples." Such is the man chosen by Sir ROBERT PEEL as his political friend and associate! The picture is not coloured. It is drawn by one • who was entirely dependent on the friend and master of CANOSA. But when a Neopolitan wrote so much, you may easily form an es- timate of the monster's real character. * [ can state from personal observation, that his very name excites a feeling of horror in Naples. The moment this history was published, it was denied authoritatively by the Morning Post, and other newspapers. The denial had no effect upon the Chronicle, which persisted in upholding the veracity of its own correspondent at ROME ! with so much of qualification as this— that // it found itself de- ceived it would not hesitate, & c.— and all the rest of the trash, which might lead people to suppose it really had correspond- ents everywhere. This shuffling would not do, and the Chronicle was forced, of course, without reference to its foreign correspondent, to insert the following article on Friday:— We have now received from an authority which is unquestion- able, and conveyed to us in much more convincing and befitting terms than those employed by the Morning Post, an assurance that Sir ROBERT PEEL NEVER SAW PRINCE CANOSA IN HIS LIFE, NEVER HAD THE SLIGHTEST COMMUNICATION WITH HIM, DIRECT OR INDIRECT, AND INDEED NEVER HEARD OF THE EXISTENCE OF SUCH A PRINCE UNTIL HE READ OUR CORRESPONDENT'S LETTER IN THE Chronicle OF THE 14th. With this assurance which we have now before us, we can have no hesitation in expressing our firm belief that our corres- pondent from whom we derived the communication has been imposed upon. Whatever political difference may exist between us and the party chiefly interested, we feel pleasure in giving this contradiction to an unjust imputation, and in expressing our unqualified regret that we were made the instrument of circulating it. This shews the character of the party, its tact, and the course of its proceedings ; and yet, forced into this abject re- tractation of a falsehood, the Chronicle is complimented by our excellent contemporary the Standard of Friday, as having made a handsome amende. The thing was a falsehood from beginning to end— a gratuitous falsehood, and one without the slightest foundation. The Chronicle is exposed, and makes a }' coo- too;— why praise it for its compulsory prostration? Had the indifference to the workings of the public Press, so characteristic of Conservatism, been observed upon this occasion, and no authorised refutation given to the calumny propagated by the Chronicle— upon which indifference no doubt that Paper reckoned— it would have gone forth to the country that the English Premier had been the constant associate of a person whose name he had never heard, and of whose existence he was not even conscious. We confess we see no great praise due to the Chronicle for its peccavi— to us, it appears that its admission is absolute destruction. One of several things must occur— either the correspondent of the Chronicle is a wilful libeller, or an ignorant fool; or, if that be not the case, the Chronicle has no correspondent at Rome, and has fabri- cated the communication itself. We cannot, under any of these circumstances, consider the Chronicle in a position to be commended : enough for us, however, that its falsehood is detected. For the respectability of the Chronicle, we should think it necessary that the name of its correspondent should be given to its readers. We trust it is not BRYDONE ? the Duke of WE extract the following observation upon WELLINGTON, from Friday's Chronicle:— u As a successful soldier, and well deserving tliatsuccess, he stands almost unrivalled. History records no other instance of a single Commander defeating in detail such a phalanx of talent as he had to encounter. From the roll of . his first drum in Portugal, to the echo of his last cannon at Waterloo, his course was a continued march of victories. In vain did France confront to him, one by one, the chosen of her heroes— in vain did she breast hiin with the young blood of her revolution— in vain did she bristle before him the veteran bayonets of 1 taly and the Rhine— his mighty genius overcame them all, inscribing his science on the lines of Torres Vedras, and flinging the gauntlet, to NAPOLEON from the summit of the Pyrenees. Nothing but detraction, and that the basest or the blindest, can attribute this to chance. A series of such triumphs, won, too, from warriors who had cast antiquity into the shade, resulted from talents which con- vert chance into certainty. In his great judgment, his imperturbable self- possession, his deep secrecy, and his military skill, is to be found the secret of his successes." MR. BYNG, our Representative in this county, has just put forth an address of thanks to his constituents, which some- body has written for him in a somewhat hasty manner. The address begins, and goes on, to a certain extent, abusing the Tories, and praising theWhigs, which is natural enough ; and as long as the wholesale store of epithets and expletives is drawn upon, everything goes well. But we come at last to this passage:— " I am equally confident that your efforts to supply defects, and to remove blemishes or abuses will be always confined within the limits of that constitution of King, Lords, and Commons, under which both poor and rich HAVE so LONG ENJOYED BLESSINGS NEVER EXCEEDED BT ANY PEOPLE UPON EARTH." Mr. BYNG here has done what the ancient writers call" let- ting the cat out of the bag;" for, after having denounced the long reign of Tory misrule, the consequent wretchedness of the country, and the absolute necessity of altering and reforming everything, the venerable master of Wrotham tells his consti- tuents, that up to this time the whole nation, " rich and poor, whose merits will never go down to posterity.— Carent quia vate sacro. COUNT CARBONARO'S ORATION. AIR.—" Duncan Grey." I. ' I ' Twas at fair Newcastle's feast,- Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O ! When the clang of jaws had ceas'd, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0! Proudly shone the concourse gay, Wearing all clean shirts that day, When Count JOHNNY deign'd to say " Tag, Rag, and Robtail, O! II. " Thanks my trusty volunteers, ' Tag," Rag, and Bogtail, 0! I accept your grateful cheers, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, OI Praise is sweetest when'tis due ! Much I've done, and more would do, To oblige the State and you, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0 f III. " Worshipp'd still where'er I roam, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O! I can find no place like home, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0! W ith a Monarch's sympathy, Hundreds at this board I see, Most of whom owe bread to me, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0 ! IV. " Sweet, I said, is unbought praise, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0 ! From good folks who know my ways, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0! Men of independent soul, Whom I keep to vending coal, Or indulge with ven'son dole, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0! V. " Peevish I am call'd, and high, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0 ! Here I am to prove the lie, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0 ! I permit your plaudits loud, Mix with smiles among your crowd, Now, who'll dare to call me proud ? Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0! VI. " Ask ye, why I seldom seek, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0! In the House of Lords to speak ? Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0! Contradiction is a thorn Has gulled me since 1 first was born; BROUGHAM annoys me with his scorn, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O! VII. " Though your working suits are mean, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O! And your shirts not over clean, * Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O! Tho' in books you seldom peep, I hold you statesmen just as deep As the Lords who hold me cheap, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O ! VIII. " Some dare doubt my loyalty, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0 ! No man loves his KING like me, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O! Give me but the KING I ask, One beneath my smile to bask, And be ta'en by me to task, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0 ! IX. " Bishops yet may win my grace, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O 1 When they know their proper place, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O ! I'm their friend in deed and thought, Only let them work for nought, Gospel truth should be unbought, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O! X. " I'll vouchsafe to owe to you, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, 0! That high place I deem my due Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O ! Force the KING to do me right, Or let's have a stand- up tight- Just draw blood, to shew your might, Tag ! Rag ! and Bobtail, O! XI. " Freely then my nod shall grant, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O! Ballot, or what e'er you want, Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, O! You'll restore the Golden Age, / shall shine in History's page, As your gracious Chief and Sage, Tag! Rag ! and Bobtail, O I" THERE is a candour and innocence about the Chronicle which is sometimes very agreeable; on Tuesday it says :— " The dependent state of' the tenantry- at- will ' in the English counties is now felt in the elections. Men will once or twice, perhaps, make sacrifices for their principles ; but the demands on them in this way must not be too frequent.'' This is so truly and purely Whig, that we could not resist the opportunity of recording it in our columns. AVE very readily insert the following letter from Mr. ROMILLY, the late Member for Bridport:—- TO JOHN BULL. SIR— I request, on the part of Mr. FLIGHT and myself, that yon will insert the following contradiction to the charge contained in your paper last Sunday respecting the late election at Bridport. Mr. FLIGHT authorises me to say, on his part, that he never offered 301., 401., or 501., or any other sum of money to JOHN NEW- MAN, or made him any offer to a like effect, or held out any personal advantage to him on condition of his voting for me, or of abstaining from voting at the late election. As to myself, till I became acquainted with the charge by read- ing it in your paper, I never heard of such an offer, or of any offer of I similar nature, being made to JOHN NEWMAN, or to any other per- son; and I never mentioned or alluded to any thing of the kind in anv conversation I ever had with him.— I am, Sir, your obedient servant, JOHN ROMILLY. Torrington- square, Jan. lX, 1835. We beg leave to observe upon this letter, that we of our- selves know nothing of Mr. NEWMAN, nor of the facts stated by him. What we inserted last week, and which Mr. Ro- MILLY seems to think originates with us, was a printed placard, signed, as our readers must see, by Mr. NEWMAN himself, and widely circulated by him in Bridport and its neighbourhood. We are glad that, by publishing Mr. NEWMAN'S placard, we have afforded Mr. ROMILLY the opportunity of contra- dicting it, because if he had not done so, he might have re- mained in ignorance of its existence; but we regret that Mr. ROMILLY, in the contradiction he has transmitted to the daily papers, should speak of it as a statement of ours. It is the statement of Mr. JOHN NEWMAN, of the Leopard Inn, Bridport. A CORRESPONDENT wishes to know whether the Saturday Magazine is or is not conducted on principles friendly to the Church of England ? The question is more easily asked than, answered. The Magazine was started by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, which used to be, and we hope still is, a Church Society; but we are certainly asto- nished to find anti- church principles occasionally broached in the Magazine itself, while there is at all times a carelessness on the subject much to be regretted. An instance at once occurs to us:— In the Supplement to Part XXX. the Presby- terian form of administering the Lord's Supper is said to differ from the Episcopalian— among other things, in its pris- tine simplicity. It is insinuated rather than affirmed that the Presbyterian, which is an extempore form, is the primitive one. If it be so, then of course the Church of England is in error in retaining her Liturgy; and the Liturgy, so far as this Sacrament is concerned, ought to be rejected. This is the fair inference from the premises supplied by the Magazine. Other examples may be easily found. We allude to the subject, because knowing, as we do, that the conductors of this Magazine are men the soundness of whose Church principles we should be slow to admit, we wish to warn them that the eye of the public is on them, and that it will not be tolerated that, for the sake of winning the pence of Dissenters, they should advocate Latitudinarian principles, under the assumed sanction of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. * Aliquando bonus dormitat Homerus— why not, Frosty- faced Fogo ?— We thought he must be wrong about the linen, but the error in the first verse is his own: " We'll take the Count's word for a thousand pounds." WE regret very much that there are not contested elections always in progress. It affords us considerable amusement, and we hope amusement and even edification to our readers, to analyze the wisdom and information of the great Destruc- tive organ, the Chronicle, the value of which, like DRYDEN'S love, is— " Great, because it is so small." — So long as the contests last, and opinions are to be ex- pressed, the Rump Paper is admirable— cut and come again every week ; and so it would last for the whole fifty- two, if we could but get up annual Parliaments— having now, never more Parliaments than one in two years. We believe that this number will nearly exhaust the pro- phecies of the venerable Chronicle upon the present occasion. This we regret; however, we must do our best to get the last slice, and then wait in expectation of another round some other day. The " flowers" of the Chronicle are " so rich and rare," and so abundant, that we cannot pledge ourselves to give them in chronological order; we take them as they come, and we think, as a termination of our commentary, they will not be unacceptable. We will first take South Essex:—- ESSEX ( SOUTH). ( From our own Correspondent.) CHELMSFORD, Thursday Night.— Thepolliiig commenced. this morn- ing at nine o'clock, and has Deen continued through the day. The Conservatives are using their utmost exertions to swell their numbers on this day's poll, in expectation that the friends of Mr. Branfil], tho Reformer, will decline th e contest, but I am well aware the idea is fallacious. The Reformers know too well the s'^ ngth which they have in reserve, and what is due to their own cause, to strike their colours till the last moment. Mr. Bramston resides near this town, and there- fore has, of course, great influence in the neighbourhood, so that Mr. Branfil] never expected much success in this district; he trusts to his friends in his own neighbourhood, and at Brentwood and Romford, for that ma jority which is to show the Conservatives that the people of Essex will not submit, to have two Representatives of that body forced upon them. We have only to observe, that Mr. BRAMSTON and Mr. HALL DARE were returned over the head of Mr. BIIANFILII in these proportions :—• Dare 2220 Bramston .. .. •• •• -} J{ BranfiU 991 Majority .. -— 1126 — So much for " our own correspondent" in South Essex. Of Cork, " our own correspondent" says :— CORK ( CITY), JAN. 15,— At three o'clock to- day, the Cork mrdj so j o h n b u l l. January 25 brought the following gratifying account of the election there:— Baldwin, 551; gross, 1046. Callaghan, 454: gross, 952. Leycester, 381; gross, 1114. Clintterton, 380 ; gross. 1112. The majority for the Conservative Candidates on the first day was secured by the* facility with which the freemen ( who were all early at the hustings) voted. The Reformers, however, will be ultimately returned. The number of freemen in Cork is 1236; of householders, 2152, and a vast majority of the latter are Reformers. — The result of this election has been this— LEYCESTER .. .. .. 1658 CHATTERTON .. .. .. 1643 CALLAGHAN .. .. .. 1603 BALDWIN 1580 Thus, instead of the DESTRUCTIVES ( miscalled Reformers by the Chronicle), both Conservatives were " ultimately returned." We next proceed to show the extraordinary consistency of the Chronicle in the line which it takes. We find, speaking of the West Kent election, the following observations in large type— they are full of earnestness, truth, and persuasion:— The polling for West Kent commences this dar. The Tories have been moving heaven and earth in behalf of Sir William Geary ; and there has been a prodigious consumption of paper, in the placards • which meet the eye in every direction, in which the merits of this favourite of the parsons are blazoned forth. Bribery and intimida- tion have, as usual, been largely resorted to. Yet the hearts of the electors, we know, are with Messrs. Hodges and. Rydert the Reform candidates, and we trust they will not shrink at this . crisis. We call particularly on the electors who reside in the metropolis to hasten to their different polling places. The facilities of conveyance to Black- heath,_ where the hustings are erected for the district nearest the me- tropolis, are so great, that electors are without excuse if they do not poll in time. W e must urge electors, therefore, to lose no ' time in polling. It is of immense importance to poll as soon as possible. What is delayed may always be defeated by accident. We trust that West Kent will not be disgraced by the return of a Tory. Tlxe result of the election we leave the Chronicle itself to tell:— KENT ( WEST). This election has terminated in the return of Sir Win. Geary, Tory, and the old Reform member, Mr. Law Hodges. The abrupt resignation on Monday evening of the other Reform candidate, Mr. Ryder, appears to have excited considerable surprise, and some resentment on the part of many of the Reform electors of this di% ision, a number of whom, in order to show the extent of the Reform interest, still continued to vote for him until two o'clock, when the poll- books were finally closed, at which time the state of the poll was as follows :— Sir W. Geary .. .. .. 2545 Hodges 20/ 7 Ryder .. .. .. .. 2004 The Tory expenditure of money in this county has been immense. The parsons, as elsewhere, have distinguished themselves by their alacrity in the bad cause. It must be highly gratifying to their feel- ings to have succeeded in getting a return for it. Sir Wm. Geary is a young man, of about three- and- twenty. It is to be hoped that he " will improve as he grows older! Nothing can of course be more shameful than that Parsons should have opinions of their own ; which, if they were really classed as the Destructives would class them, monastically, perhaps they might not. But is it not strange, that the vene- rable Chronicle, the principal objection ofwhich to Sir WILLIAM GEARY is his youth, and which hopes an improvement as he grows older— most certainly not justified by its own example— should shower down its vindictiveness upon the Parsons for their alacrity in West Kent, while attending to the interests of a Conservative, and praise them to the skies in North War- wick, for dancing attendance upon GREGORY the Radical. See!— here we have it—'•'• from our own correspondent" :— WARWICKSHIRE ( NORTH). ( From onr own Correspondent.) On Saturday, Captain Gregory, the Liberal candidate, attended at Rugby, and addressed the electors in the assembly- rooms at the Spread Eagle. The meeting was the largest ever remembered. It • was attended by Jolm Shuckburgh, Esq., of Bourton; Henry Grimes, Esq., of Coton; William Ashetton, Esq., of Brandon; John Calde- cott, Esq., of Holbrooke, & c. & c.; the Rev. Mr. Roberts, the Rev. Mr. Moore, AND A LARGE BODY OF THE CLERGY, and the principal agriculturalists and tradesmen of that part of the county. Air. Shuckburgh took the chair ; and Captain Gregory made a most, lucid and explanatory statement of his sentiments upon all the principal points at present agitating the public mind; and then Mr. Dugdale's agent, and afterwards THE REV. MR. BIRD, put a series of questions, which were answered so_ satisfactorily to all parties, as well Church- men as Dissenters, agriculturists as tradesmen, that the cheering became quite enthusiastic. CAPTAIN GREGORY'S RETURN IS CERTAIN. To this eulogy upon the Clergy of its own faction, for meddling so conspicuously in the contest, we have to add a few political remarks upon the state of the county:— In our last number we were unable to give more than the proceed- ings on the day of nomination, as the polling did not commence until the morning of the day after our publication. On Friday morning the polling commenced at the live stations fixed by the Reform Act: — Coleshill, Coventry, Dunchurch, Nuneaton, and Birmingham, and continued with unabated spirit during the whole day. At the ter- mination of the poll on Friday, the numbers stood as follow :— For Sir E. E. Witmot, Hart. .. .. 1862 W. S. Dugdale, Esq 1747 Captain Gregory .. .. .. 1291 Leaving a majority in favour of Mr. Dugdale? over Captain Gregory, of $ The announcement of this astoundingmajority created the greatest jov among the supporters of Mr. Dugdale, and judging from their efforts the following day, caused the greatest consternation among the friends of Captain Gregory. On Saturday morning the polling was renewed, but every succeeding hour brought fresh intelligence, clearly showing that Captain Gregory had not the most remote chance of success. About lialf- past eight o'clock in the evening, the final state of the poll was declared by Mr. Dugdale's Committee, to be as follows:— For Sir E. E. Wilmot, Bart. .. 2600 W. S. Dugdale, Esq. .. 2521 Captain Gregory .. .. 1844 Leaving a majority for Sir Eardley over Captain > ,..„ Gregory of .. .. .. S And in favour of Mr. Dugdale of .. 677 That affair is settled— but not yet our account with the Chronicle. The Chronicle deprecates Clerical interference with the Conservatives, and glories in it for the Destructives. Just let us see what the Chronicle says of the election in CLARE:— " CLARE.— Dr. M'Mahon, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Killaloe, has addressed an excellent letter to the Clergy of this county, in which his diocese is situated, exhorting them to lecture their flocks in the most earnest manner upon the crime of receiving a bribe, and the proper use of the elective franchise. The voice of the Priest with the Irish Catholic will, generally speaking, outweigh the most profuse expenditure of Conservative gold." Is not this capital. The letter is one denouncing the Con- servative candidates, and will, we have no doubt, outweigh, to a vast extent, all the Conservative respectability. Yet here is no interference of PARSONS— No: these are PRIESTS. But we see a thing recorded which even exceeds this sort of partial affection and dislike. We find at the poll for West Suffolk, where Mr. IIUSHBROOK, a Conservative, was triumphantly returned, his Grace the Duke of NOR- FOLK, premier Duke of England, and Earl Marshal, came down from London to vote for WILSON and HALES. If we had not seen this statement in that most excellent paper the Bury and Suffolk Herald, we could not have believed that the very head' of the party who have been loudest in crying down the interference of Peers at elections, would have had the temerity or the folly to present himself at the hustings as a voter. Djd the Conservative partisans ever go that length ? LINCOLNSHIRE, NORTHERN DISTRICT.— The nomination takes place to morrow. Mr. Corbett has been brought forward by the Conserva- tives, on the retirement of Mr. Heneage. He will, 1 apprehend, have not the smallest chance. Mr. Pelhnrn, who has been astrenuous sup- porter of the late Administration, of the great principles of Reform, of the claims of the Dissenters, and of every other measure of civil and religious liberty that was brought forward bona fide, is impregnable. He was at the head of the poll last election by many thousands; and the other candidate, Sir William Ingilby, is only objected to on the ground of the extreme Radicalism of his politics, and the singular speech he delivered on the malt- tux. The " many thousands" we melted down last week. Be it now our task to exhibit the results of this Chronicle- pro- phecy.— Mr. CORBETT was returned by a majority of 466 over Sir WILLIAM INGILBY, and being only 39 below Mr. PELHAM, the son of the omnipotent Lord YARBOROUGH. Of East Surrey, the Chronicle says :—- SURREY ( EAST). ( From our own Correspondent.) The friends of the Tory candidate, Captain Alsager, of Surrey, are busily bestirring themselves to save him, if possible, from the fate which has befallen the gallant Captain Burton, of the Tower Hamlets, and the no less gallant Colonel / food, of Middlesex—[ who did not stand.] The defeatofthe latter gentleman liasinfusedno small degree of con- fidence and courage among the Reformers of this county, who will strain every nerve to secure the triumphant return of the late members, Mesrrs. Beauclerk and Briscoe. The Tories, with the hope of sow- ing dissension among the Reformers have been making a prodigious fuss about the pretended interference of Mr. Briscoe to prevent the Epsom races ; but the clear and straightforward explanation by that gentleman, of all the circumstances connected with the case, has luckily prevented them from gaining the advantages which they ex- pected to reap from it. Captain Alsager, however, is strongly sup- ported, and the struggle between him and Mr. Briscoe will no doubt be a hard one. Clever Chronicle'.— the struggle, between Mr. BRISCOE and Captain ALSAGER!!! Mr. BRISCOE was beaten by Major BEAUCLERK, which is natural enough— but do only look at the poll where the Reformers strained every nerve. The result of their efforts, is thus recorded at the final close of the poll— ALSAGER .. .. .. 1578 BEAUCLERK .. .. .. 1324 BRISCOE .. .. .. 1200 Majority over BEAUCLERK .. 254 Over BRISCOE .. —— 378 — So much for Destructive nervousness. Of South Derbyshire we somehow have lost sight, as re- gards the Chronicle, but we have little doubt but that a little hunting would produce a choice morceau upon the powerful influence of Radicalism there. We cannot, at this moment, lay our hand upon it, and therefore content ourselves by merely contrasting the poll on the present occasion with that which was taken in 1832 :— Lord CAVENDISH .. .. .. 3388 Lord WATERPARK .. .. 2823 Sir ROGER GRESLET .. .. 1183 The poll just closed, gives the following numbers:— Sir J. CREWE > .. ... 2517 Sir ROGER GRESLEY T .. .. 2495 Hon. G. VERNON > .. .. 1951 Lord WATERPARK 5 .. .. 1910 Here every nerve was strained by the Destructives, and yet two Conservatives are returned. Of Bedfordshire, we find, in the Chronicle, the following:— TO THE EDITOR OF THE MORNING CHRONICLE. SIR— My attention has been called to the error made in many of the lists of Members returned to Parliament, in representing the election of Lord Alford in the room of Mr. Stuart, the late Member for Bedfordshire, as a new advantage to the Conserva tive interest. I beg to remind you that Lord Alford came forward for the county on the public recommendation to the electors of Mr. Stuart himself, and that his Lordship declared his political opinions to be altogether in accordance with those upon which Mr. Stuart acted whilstMember for the county. I am, Sir, your obedient servant, London, Jan. 21,1835. R. G. We have merely to observe, that Lord ALFORD is the eldest son of Earl BROWN LOW, and firmly and distinctly adheres to the constitutional principles of his noble father. But now, what of South Lancashire — what does the Chronicle predict of that *— Nothing. What of East Nor- folk?— Nothing. Its own correspondents begin at last to be doubted, and we believe the ubiquitarian gentleman in the second floor in the Strand, left off writing expresses from the English counties the very day that he ceased forwarding despatches from Rome. In South Lancashire, Lord MOLYNEUX and Mr. WOOD are defeated and expelled by Lord FRANCIS EGERTON and Mr. WILBRAHAM. Mr. WOOD is the person who moved the Dissenters' Admission Bill, and Lord MOLYNEUX is the po- pular son of the Earl of SEFTON. In Norfolk, Mr. GURNEY and Col. WYNDHAM have been beaten off by Lord WALPOLE and Mr. WODEHOUSE ; and nothing could have saved the Chronicle from more exposures of the sort in which we have been rejoicing, but its sudden wariness, and begining to find that being too sure was only a mode of making itself too ridiculous. It is a pity it had not begun upon this principle before the close of the poll in South Hampshire— we yet have its account of that contest:— HANTS, SOUTH. ( From our own Correspondent.) Public anxiety here is rising to an almost painful degree. The return of Lord Palmerston will be hailed by the Reformers as a glorious omen, and his defeat will be looked upon by the Conservatives as the greatest triumph they have yet achieved. As the struggle ap- proaches, both parties appear to work on with double ardour and energy. They seem as if they had set their political lives on this cast, and were determined intrepidly to stand the hazard of the die. But Palmerston shall go coute qui coute, say the Tories. " OUT I WILL NOT GO," SAYS HIS LORDSHIP. HIS FRIENDS BACK HIM WELL, FEELING THAT HE DESERVES THEIR SUPPORT. It will be all they can do, however, to pull him in; for a more detestable system of " forcing" support was never yet heard of. Landlord influence is constantly appealed to; and when this fails of effect, hints of a most ungene- rous character, but such as can very well be understood, are very freely dropped. Decency and propriety, fair dealing and honest prin- ciple, seem to be completely abondoned. The intimidation which has been practised in this district, not merely with reference to the county, but in regard also to the borough elections, must, I think, of necessity, come before Parliament. It has been of the most flagrant descrip- tion. Still, I think we have strength enough to put Palmerston and Staunton at the head of the poll— a consummation devoutly wished by all those who, in these parts, are rash enough to give utterance to their honest sentiments. Of CUPID, and his flexible colleague, we spoke last week. We are perfectly aware of BUONAPARTE'S idea of the Koo- too, and we have no doubt that the Viscount and the Baronet would have performed the cereipony even to the extent which the ex- E. MPEROR prescribed, to any elector who would have voted for them; however, all efforts were vain, and the result has been— as the Chronicle somewhat injudiciously admits— one of the greatest triumphs the Conservatives have achieved. Of Roxburghshire, the Chronicle says :— Captain Elliot ( R) is opposed by Lord John Scott ( T), It will b » a close run. The result is doubtful, though the Reformer's chance considered the better. , — Lord JOHN SCOTT was returned. The Chronicle says:— EDINBURGHSHIRE.— This county is contested by Sir James Gibson Craig'sson ( R), and Sir George Clerk ( ultra- T), and member of the Peel- Wellington Government. It is now ascertained that Sir Ueorge will be defeated, though by a small majority. — Sir GEORGE was returned by a large majority. The Chronicle says :— BERWICKSHIRE.— Our intelligent correspondent in this district states, that Sir Francis Blake is considered, by those best acquainted with the state of matters in the county, to have every prospect of success. — Sir FRANCIS BLAKE was beaten by Sir H. P. H. CAMPBELL. So we might go on, and go on. The Chronicle is universally wrong; even in matters in which its eaves- droppers might listen themselves right, they are wrong; here, for instance:— " It is understood that Serjeant Spankie is to be rewarded for his seasonable conversion to Toryism and his sophistical addresses, and consoled for his defeat at Finsburv, by an elevation to the seat on the Bench vacant by the death of Mr. Justice Taunton." No such thing was ever understood: Mr. Seijeant COLE- RIDGE is appointed. We are very sorry to think that this is, probably, the last occasion we shall have to criticise the accuracy of the leading Journal of the Destructives— it is rather good sport; however, everything, pleasant and unpleasant, must have an end— and so we conclude. TO JOHN BULL. SIR— Various statements having appeared in the Morning Papers relative to Lord CHARLES TOWNSEND'S having coerced his tenantry in respect to their votes at the late election for the Western division of the county of Norfolk, I shall feel obliged by your inserting the following statement, which I trust, through the medium of your columns, will rectify the erroneous impressions formed on this subject. I am, Sir, your obedient servant, CHARLES LOFTUS. Little Dunham, 19th January, 1835. It having been falsely circulated that the Raynham tenantry were coerced in their votes, and that on Monday last, before the hustings, at Swaffham, they acknowleged the fact, we, the undersigned, do hereby publicly declare, that when we were appealed to by Captain LOFTUS, we then stated the very contrary, and again declare that the charge is utterly false. We, the undersigned, consider our landlord to have acted towards us a noble and honourable part, leaving us entirely to do as we pleased with our votes; and whoever states that we were coerced, is guilty of a deliberate falsehood. ( Signed) CHARLES STEDMAN, JOHN SCALES, GEORGE BRETT, JENNIS DIGINGS. Raynham, Jan. loth, 1885. CHARLES LOFTUS, ?„, JOSH. POTTER, Clerk. $ " itnesses. The two Houses of Parliament are nearly finished. The walls of the House of Commons are lined throughout with canvas, covered with varnished crimson paper, handsomely ornamented. The paper of the House of Peers is a striped pattern and has also a very elegant appearance. The stoves for warming both with steam have been finished and tried, and answer all the purposes intended, as do also the ventilators.— Thursday Lord GRANVILLE SOMERSET, Sir CHARLES MANNERS SUTTON, Sir BENJAMIN STEPHENSON, and other official persons, made a general and particular inspection of the works going on, and the capabilities which the buildings forming the debris of the late Parliamentary offices afford, that can be made available for Committee- rooms and offices. The residence of Sir GEORGE ROSE was amongst those inspected for this purpose. Sir R. SMIRKE was in attendance on the Committee. It is fully understood that the tem- porary buildings now preparing for the Parliamentary Session will be completed by the 19th of February, on which day the writs are re- turnable. Amongst the earliest business, it is said a Committee will be appointed to inquire into the cause of the conflagration. Though the writs for the new Parliament are returnable on the 19th of February, the speech from the Throne cannot be delivered till nearly a week after, by which time the circuits will have commenced, and many Members attending them unavoidably absent. The Right Hon. Sir ROBERT PEEL appeared at the polling booth, at Coleshill, on Saturday last, and voted for Sir EARDLEY WILMOT and Mr. DUGDALE, as Members for the Northern Division of the county of Warwick. An impudent attempt was made by an attorney's clerk to dispute Sir ROBERT'S right of voting; but the Under- Sheriff, without hesitation, over- ruled the objection. The Right Hon. Ba- ronet was loudly cheered on his retiring from the polling- booth. He was accompanied by his brother, Mr. EDMUND PEEL, the newly- elected Member for Newcastle- under- Lyne. It is with regret we record the decease of Lady SUSAN LYGOW, which took place on Thursday week, at Port Elliot, in Cornwall. Her Ladyship had long been in a declining state of health, but no serious apprehension of danger was entertained. The first intelligence that Colonel LYGON received of the dangerous state of his Lady was con- veyed in a letter, which was awaiting him on Friday at the Hop- pole Inn, Worcester, on his return from the hustings. So alarming was the intelligence conveyed in the letter that the Honourable Gentle- man instantly quitted the city, in the hope, which we lament has proved a vain hope, of yet seeing his amiable Lady alive. We regret to announce the death of the Right Hon. THOMAS CHARLES Earl of PORTMORE, which event took place on Sunday last, at Hyde Park- place. His Lordship was in the 62d year of his age.— The Colonelcy of the North Lincoln Militia becomes vacant by the death of this Noble Lord, who was the fourth Earl PORTMORE. His Lordship married Lady MARY BERTIE, only child of BIIOWNLOW, fifth and last Duke of ANCASTER, by which lady he had an only son, the Hon BROWNLOW COLYEAR, who succeeded to the vast personal wealth of the Duke of ANCASTER in 1809. Mr. COLYEAR unfortu- nately died at Rome in 1819, from wounds received in an encounter with banditti. ARMI BET, and ACHMET EFFENDI, the Ottoman Nobles arrived at BATT'S Hotel, Dover- street, from Constantinople, are understood to have been entrusted by the SULTAN on amission to acquire the in- formation which may enable him to establish a military school for the education and improvement of young officers, for which purpose they will visit' Woolwich, Sandhurst, Addiscombe, & c. They both hold high rank in the Turkish army, and travelled through Germany and part of France, on their way to England. The new Paymaster- General, Sir EDWARD KNATCHBULL, has resigned the Chairmanship of the East Kent Quarter Sessions. Sir HENRY FANE goes out as Commander- in- Chief to India, and Sir ROBERT WILSON succeeds to the Command in the Ionian Islands. The following appointments have been made by his Excellency the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland :— Private Secretary, Capt. W. A. B. Hamilton, R. N.; State Steward, Col. C. H. Hastings; Comptroller, the Right Hon. Lord Lovaine} Gentleman Usher and Master of the Ceremonies, Sir Stuart Bruce; Master of the Iiorse, Col. Hon. W. Gore; First Chaplain, Rex. C. Vignolles, D. D. Aides- de- Camp— Capt. Chas. Bagot, Greaadier Guards; Capt. S. II. Paget, 52d iignt Infantry; Lieut, Robert Baillie, 72d Highlanders; Lieut. Denis Daly, 7th Hnssars^ The last January 95. j o h n b u l l1 31 mentioned individual is son of JAMES DALY, Esq., of Dunsandle, Galway, its late representative. BERLIN, Jan. 8.—' The Baron Von BULOW will return to his post as Ambassador at London. His Lady, a daughter of Baron WILLIAM Von HUMBOLDT, is honoured with the friendship of her Majesty the QUEEN, and is said to be not without influence in political affairs. We learn from the Hague that his Royal Highness the Prince of ORANGE is labouring under very serious, if not alarming illness. We hear, says the Brighton Gazette, that Sir CHARLES ROWLEY is expected to be Member for Portsmouth after all, it being ascertained that a scrutiny will strike off a sufficient number of bad votes to give a majority in his favour. Mr. Sergeant COLERIDGE has been appointed successor to Mr. Justice TAUNTON. The Duke of NEWCASTLE has once more been " doing what he likes with his own:" his Grace, on Saturday se'nniglit, caused to be distributed blankets, rugs, and wearing apparel, to upwards of 200 poor families, residing upon his Grace's estate in the county of Not- tingham. Mr. COBBETT, accompanied by Sir CHARLES WOLSELEY, was at Oldham on Friday evening, addressing a number of his party, in the large room of the Albion Inn, principally in condemnation of the policy of the Whigs. It is reported that Mr. FIELDEN, COBBETT'S colleague, is about to accept the Chiltern Hundreds; and that the Radicals will then propose Sir CHARLES WOLSELEY as a candidate in Mr. FIELDEN's room. Mr. JOSEPH HUME was dragged about on Monday in a hired coach with four horses, having five hackney coaches in his train, and a pedestrian rabble which made some noise. The mummery passed off without any manifestation— there was not the slightest appear- ance of welcome or even notice of Mr. HUME at the windows, to which he anxiously looked up as he passed along. The mischief arising from Mr. HUME'S favourite measure of throwing open the hackney coach trade, appears to be working its own remedy. We understand that such is the state of depression to which the business is reduced under the free trade system, that warrants of distress have this month been issued at the Stamp- office for the collection of the duty upon one hundred numbers, and that there are, notwithstanding, more carriages now than there were at this period last year. The ruin which has been brought upon so many individuals appears, indeed, to have no effect in deterring others from embarking in the same losing concern. Mr. ROTCH, Chairman of the Middlesex Sessions, has suddenly lost his sight— his affliction is similar to that of Mr. BYNG'S. The Court of Aldermen it appears is to be immediately thrown open. Amongst other advantages to be produced by opening the Court is that of putting a period to the facility with which a member can contradict the assertions he makes. In a recent instance the accuracy of the account of the proceedings of the Court was denied by an Alderman to the astonishment of the rest of the Court, and particularly of the Lord Mayor, who was the subject of the observa- tions. HOT WORK FOR THE AGITATOR.— Mr. O'CONNELL will have to defend the following petitions on the meeting of Parliament:— From the city of Dublin, against his own return; from the borough of Tralee, against the return of his son MAURICE ; and from Youghal, against the return of his son JOHN. A new tribute is already spoken of.— Dublin Evening Mai/. We find the following in the Dtiblin Evening Mail with reference to the conduct of Lord PLUNKET at the election for Dublin:— " His Lordship ordered his brother- in- law, the celebrated Mr. M'CAUSLAND, of place- holding notoriety, to proceed to the poll, and vote for Messrs. O'CONNELL and RUTHVEN. This he did; and to show is zeal in the good cause, actually had his son removed from the bed of sickness, which, from the effort, may prove to be that of death, and conveyed in the arms of porters to the booth appropriated to his letter, and there polled in favour of the revolution candidates. This may appear at first view to be a mere electioneering anecdote. It is of more value, for it shows the animus with which the affairs of Ire- land have been for the last twelve years ministered; and being so governedis it to be wondered at that she presents the spectacle that she does? It may not be amiss to state, that the majority of the offi- cers belonging to the Court of Chancery, appointed, of course, by the ] late exemplary Keeper of the Seals, including one Master, the Six I Clerks, and several subordinates, refused to vote at all." ' A Radical Member for a large town has been at some pains to have it made known that, at the termination of his election, he pre- sented one guinea to the Mechanics' Institute. By the last accounts from Ilobart Town the price of wheat had reached 16s. a bushel, and, in consequence of the high pric ' and scarcity of that description of grain, the Governor had authorized settlers to supply to their assigned servants one- third of barley meal In proportion to two- thirds of wheaten flour. The will of JONATHAN PEEL ( uncle to the Premier), of Accrington, in the county of Lancaster, Esq., was lodged in the Archbishop of CANTERBURY'S Court on Saturday. The personal property of this gentleman ( within the province of Canterbury alone) was sworn to be under the value of 600,0001., and a stamp duty of 7,5001. paid upon the probate. By the will he has left his real estate at Accring- ton to his eldest son. He has left behind him seven sons and eight daughters. He leaves to his wife an annuity of 1,0001., and to each of his daughters and to a son- in- law ( the husband of a deceased daughter) the sum of 15,0001. each. To his sons the residue of his property- There are a few trifling annuities, of amounts from 51. to 101., and a sum of 3001. to be divided amongst different charitable institutions. M. LATONTAIKE, the painter, has just died suddenly in Paris, at the age of 79. This artist, who was well known for his pleasing interiors of churches, in the manner of STENWICK and PETER NEER, had relinquished painting for the last twenty years, and conducted only the business of a picture dealer. It was he who discovered in a small town of Belgium the famous picture by REMBRANDT, " The Woman taken in Adulter}'," which is now in the National Gallery in London. LAFONTAINE purchase- d itfor 20,000 francs ( 8001.), andsold it again in England for 140,000 ( 5,6001.) BONAFARTE, when First • Consul, offered him 90,000 francs, which he refused. The picture is now estimated at 300,000 franes ( 12,0001.) It is the chef d'mivre o REMBRANDT. IRISH DISSENTERS. ( From the Dublin IVarder.) \ ri'uii lie; u/ iunn n araer. j To the Right Honourable Sir Robert Peel, Bart., First Lord of the Treasury of Great Britain, and Chancellor of the Exchequer, & ie. dec. < fcc. We, the Minister, Elders, Deacons, and Managers of the Congre- gation of Orthodox Presbyterian Dissenters, worshipping in Union Chapel, Dublin; and in connexion with the " Presbyterian Synod of Ireland, distinguished by the name Seceders," in our own names, and on behalf of the congregation we represent, Beg to return for benevolent or those of the great, body of orthodox Dissenters in Ireland; on the contrary, we utterly disclaim all participation in the spirit of these resolutions— and declare our conviction that so far from affording proof of " the clothing of virtue and sparkling intelligence," of which they ostentatiously boast, they are from the iynorance and turbulent spirit they display, calculated to bring discredit upon all Dissenters who are not careful to repudiate such proceedings. We farther beg leave to express our confident hope that his Majesty's Government may not be moved, by such vain ebullitions, to depart'from the course they may have proposed to themselves for correcting such abuses as, in the lapse of time, may have crept into the establishments of the empire, while they take measures to resist the alarming " pressure from without," of such persons as, forgetting the privileges they have long enjoyed under the constitution of these realms, and unmindful of the obligations so solemnly enjoined by the Word of God, of submission to rulers, and peace and charity towards fellow subjects, assume an attitude of arrogant defiance towards Government, and clamour for the destruction of the Established Churches of Great Britain and Ireland. We, therefore, without awaiting for any public expression of the mind of the Synod with which we are connected— though fully assured that the sentiments of the great mass of Ministers, elders, and people, are in unison with our own— avail ourselves of the occa- sion afforded us of expressing our decided disapprobation of these Birmingham deputies, and our thankful admiration of the just and dignified rebuke administered in your reply. In conclusion, we beg to state that, unaccustomed to intermeddle in political affairs, though far from being unconcernedor uninterested spectators of passing events, so deeply affecting the religious as well as civil weal of the empire, we should not probably have felt called upon to give public declaration to the high satisfaction we feel at your being called upon at such an eventful crisis, to preside in his Majesty's councils and Government, and our hearty approval of the principles upon which that Government is to be conducted— so admirably expressed in your address to the electors of Tamwortli— had not the proceedings and resolutions we- have referred to seemed to us to leave us no alternative, between tacitly sanctioning what we utterly abhor, or openly declaring our sentiments. May He who reigns— who has all hearts in His hand— and who controuls all events, overrule all things for the advancement of His glory, and the spiritual and temporal prosperity of the empire. ECCLESIASTICAL INTELLIGENCE. PREFERMENTS AND APPOINTMENTS. The Rev. WILLIAM FLETCHER, M. A., of Brazenose College, Oxford, to the Mastership of the Grammar School, Derby. The Rev. JOHN GAITSKELL, B. A., to the consolidated Rectories of North and South Leverton, in the county of Lincoln, vacant by the death of the Rev. John Caparn, M. A. The Rev. WM. GODFREY has been appointed a Minor Canon of Worcester Cathedral, in the room of the Rev. Thomas Heynes, resigned. The Rev. GEORGE OWSLEY FENWICKE, M. A., Vicar of Aston, near Birmingham, has been appointed by the Chancellor of the Diocese a Surrogate for the purpose of granting Marriage Licenses, & c. & c. The Rev. HENRY LOVELACE HOULDITCH, B. A., of Christ's College, Cambridge, to the Vicarage of Holcombe Burnell, Devon ; on the presentation of the Rev. Wm. Prockter Thomas, Prebendary of Bath and Wells. The Rev. WM. BORLASE, A. M., Fellow of Queen's College, Oxford, has been appointed Master of the Free Grammar School, Totnes. The Rev. PLUMPTON WILSON, LLB., to the Rectory of New- market St. Mary's, with Wood Dylton. Patron, the Duke of Rutland. The Rev. WM. SCOTT, M. A., St. Peter's College, Cambridge, to the Vicarage of Shapwick, Dorsetshire; on the presentation of the late Henry Bankes Esq., of Kingston Hall, Dorset. OBITUARY. At the Vicarage, Lnughton- en- le- Morthen^ jn the county of York, theRev James Crabtree, in ( lie 80th year of his ape, deeply and universally regretted. 1 • - At his residence, Stoekford, Dorset, the Rev. E. De Witt, M. A., late Viear of East Lulworth, Coomb Keynes, and Wool, and Domestic Chaplain to the. Eari of Coventry. ( flff/. At St. Thomas, near Exeter, the Rev. Thomas Land, of Trinity College,. late* of Tiverton, aged 68. At Ashley Magna, Leicestershire, where he had gone for the benefit of his health, in his 57ih year, the Rev. R. Kenney, Minister of St. Peter's Church, Preston. At Ely, the Rev. Benjamin Parke, Prebendary of that Cathedral, and Vicar of Tilnev, Norfolk. The Vicarage is in the gift of Pembroke College, Cambridge, of which Mr. P. was formerly Fellow and Tutor. He proceeded to the degree of B. A. 17^ 2, M. A. 1785. At Friar Lodge, Saddleworth, the Rev. John Buckley, in the 77th year of his age. UNIVERSITY INTELLIGENCE. OXFORD, Jan. 22.— This day the following degrees were conferred: — Master of Arts : Rev. W. Bray, Exeter coll.'— Bachelor of Arts'. W. T. Maunsell, Christ Church. Yesterday Mr. George William Huntingford, Scholar of New College, was admitted an Actual Fellow of that Society. CAMBRIDGE, Jan. 23.— The following are the subjects of Examina- tion in the last week of the Lent term, 1836:— 1. The Acts of the Apostles.— 2. Paley's Evidences of Christianity.— 3. The Menexenus of Plato.— 4. The Seventh and Eighth Satires of Juvenal. BACHELORS' COMMENCEMENT. Moderators:— John Harrison Evans, M. A., St. John's College; Thomas Gaskin, M. A., Jesus College. Examiners:— Edwin Steventon, M. A., Corpus Christi College; Francis Martin, M. A. Trinity College. Wranglers:— 1 Cotterill, Joh.; 2 Goulburn, Trin.; 3 Rawle, Trin.; 4Greatheed, Trin.: 5 Dickinson, Trin.; 6 Cross, Joh.; 7 Askby, Pemb.; 8 Blackburn, Trin.; 9 Scudamore, Joh.; 10 Gibbs, Caius;" ll Johnson, Caius ; 12 Ross de Bladensburgh, Trin.; 13 Le Mottee, Trin.; 14 Smith, Chr.; 15 Abbott, Pemb.; 16 Acland, Caius; 17 Skelton, Chr.; 18 White, Trin.; 19 Girdlestone, Trin.; 20 H. W. Smith, Joh.; 21 De Saumarez, Caius; 22 Gipps, Joh. ; 23 Lambert, Joh.; 24 Leefe, Trin.; 25 Howes, Trin; 26 Hall, Clare; 27Rigg, Chr.; 28 Dunn, Trin.; 29 Heicsh, Trin.; 30 Procter, Cath.; 31 Helps, Trin.; 32 Merivaie, Trin.; 33 Cooper, Trin.; 34 Davis, Chr.; 35 Allen, Trin.; 36 Davies, COITIUS ; 37 Budd, Pemb. Senior Optimes:— 1 Musgrave, Trin.; 2 Gibbons, Joh., 3 Grote, Trin.; 4 Wackerbarth, Corpus; 5 Hilditch, Joh.; 6 Rudd, Job.; 7 Nichols, Caius; 8 Coape, Chr.; 9 Watson, Trin.; 10 Merriman, Caius; 11 Garvey, Emm.; 12 Jeremie, Trin.; 13 James, Corpus; 14 Lowe, Trin.; 15 Drake, Joh.; 16 Burnett, Trin.; 17 Courte- nay, Jesus; J8 Seager, Trin.; 19 Hoste, Caius; 20 Shortland, Pemb.; 21 Curtis, John., 22 Davidson; Cla.; 23 James, Jesus; 24 Walker, Jesus; 25 Morris, Joh.; 26 Johnstone, Emm.; 27 Dixon, Sidney; 28 Tillard, Joh.; 29 Beadon, Joh.; 30 Hall, Chr.; 31 Bishop, Joh.; 32 Scott, Clare; 33 Jowett, Caius; 34 Pritchard, Joh.; 35 Ward, Pet.; 36 Eyre, Cth, 37 Forrest, Qu.; 38 Howes, Tr. H.; 39 Blunt, Caius; 40 Barber, Joh.; 41 Harris, Trin. Junior Optimes.— 1 White, Joh.; 2 Legrew, Joh.; 3 Berkley, Jes., 4 Wilson, Cla.; 5 Rogers, Joh., 6 Spiller, Cat.; 7 A. Smith, Joh., 8 Thomas, Pet.; 9 Whltham, Joh.; 10 Williams, Magd.; 11 Brad- street, Em., 12 Gilbert, Ma. ; 13 Scrivener, Trin.; 14 Richardson, Joh.; 15 Ramsey, Pemb.; 16 Etty, Joh., 17 Nightingale, Cat.; 18 X> eg IO reiurn our cordial thanks lor the Benevolent dispositions of his Majesty's Government towards Dissenters, in your reply to the resolutions of certain persons . styling themselves Dissenting Deputies, and bearing the signature of Timothy East, passed at a meeting, uKm tte 26,11 December, 183*, in Ebenezer Chapel, Birmingham. With these deputies, we beg to assure Sir Robert Peel we have no connexion; nor do they represent either our sentiments and feeling*, Joh.; 29 Fox, Qu.; 30 Morgan, Tr., 31 Reid, Joh.; 32 Williamson; Caius; 33 Manners Sutton, Trin.; 34 Harrison, Trin.; 35 Paton, On., 36 Phillips, Mag. ; 37 Meade, Caius; 38 Claydon, Trin. ; 39 flue, Trin. Cooper, Qu.; Coventry, Emm. ; Darwall, Trin.; Gregory, Trin.; Gresham, Joh.; Hart, Trin.; Herring, Trin.; Hogg, Chr.; Kempe, Joh.; Macaulay, Jesus; Mitford, Jesus; Thompson, Qu.; Willott, Joh. 1 Murray, Trin.; 2 Bensted, Joh.; 3 Hardman, Joh.; 4 Knight, Pet.; 5 Smith, F. O., Chr.; 6 Blyth, Caius; 7 Taynton, Caius ; 8 Brown, Cath., 9 Lee, Joh.; 10 Sutton, Trin.; 11 Palmer, Chr.; 12 Jones, Caius ; 13 Windeatt, Pet.; 14 Strickland, Qu., 15 Watkins, Pet.; 16 Mackinson, Joh.; 17 Taylor, Qu. ; .18 Davies, Trin.; 19 Quarrell, Qu.; 20 Bourdillon, Corpus; 21 Jollands, Emm.; 22Cum- berlfige, Chr.; 23 Livesey, Trin.; 24 Gnrtit, Joh.; 25 Mewzies, Qu.; 26 Allott, Joh. ; 27 Inman, Sidney ; 28 Hall, Trin.; 29 Merewether, Trin.; 30 Smith, G., Trin.; 31 Preston, Qu. ; 32 Thomas, Cath.; 33 Watson, Trin.; 34Carver, Cat., 35Gillson, TH., 36 Sims, Em.; 37 O'Grady, Trin.; 38 Potchett, Joh.; 39 Burrows, Trin.; 40 Simpson, Joh.; 41 Elmhirst, Tr. ; 42 Granby, Marq. of, Tr.; 43 Packer, Tr.; 44 Kenrick, Trin.; 45 Lidsum, Joh.; 46 Savage, Joh.; 47 Durnford, Joh., 48 Mackintosh, Cor., 49 Parker, Caius, 50 Reynardson, Trin. j 51 Rashdall, Corpus; 52 Bradshaw, J oh,; 53 Wanton, Christs; oi Cooke, Corpus ; 55 Hodgson, Trin., 56, Jeffels, Qu.; 57Lawence, Trip, 58 Pid- cock. Qn.; 59 Yard, Trin.; 60 Beresford, Joh., 61 Lister, Trin.; 62 Tyron, Trin.; 63Buckley, Magd.; 64Ellis, Trin.; 650rme, Jes., 66 Sabine, Joh.; 67 Curry, Trin.; 68 Mason, Trin.; 69 Jackson, Corp., 73 Troughtou, Corp.; 71 Sims, Pemb.; 72 Barclay, Emm.; 73 Simons, Chr.; 74 James, Trm.; 75 Clark, Cai., 76 Huff, Qu.; 77 Ready, Joh.; 78 Hughes, W., Joh.; 79 Beresford, Lord J., Trin.; 80 Johnson, Cath., 81 Jukes, Joh.; 82 I- Iart, Qu.; 83 Micklethwait, Magd.; 84 Rawlins, Trm.; S5 Melville, Pet.; 86 Mayon, Trin.; 87 Hayes, Joh.; 88 Blackley, Joli.; 89 Vizard,' Trin.; 90 Cumine, Trin., 91 Maitland, Trin.; 92 Lis- ter, Trin.; 93 Dearsley, Sidney; 84 Blake, Cains: 95 Moore, E„ Joh.; 96 Hill, H., Joh. ; 97 Asker, Corpus; 98 Smart, Pet.; 99 Denman Hon. R., Tr., 100 Pinkett, Tr. H.; 101 Cobb, Qu.; 102 Rodwell, Chr.; 103 Freuer, Chr.; 104 Pigott, Pet., 105 Prescott, Trin.; 106 Gough, Corpus; 107 Herbert, J., Joh.; 108 Walker, Pet.; 109 Curwen, Trin.; 110 Creyke, Trin.; Ill Lascelles, Cath.; 112 Maltby, Caius; 113 Thompson, Corpus; 114 Gaussen, Trin.; 115 Howard, Cath.: 116 Packord, Caius ; 117 Alington, Joh.; 118 Clarke, C., Trin.; 119Taddy, Clare; 120 Hartley, Qu.; 121 Royle, Trin.; 122 Waters, Corpus; 123 Edwards, Joh.; 124 Arkwright, Trin.; 125 Gilium, Pet.; 126 Hollingsworth, Sid.; 127 Ferguson, Trin. Addison, Joh.; Biomhead, Jesus; Clarke, E. Trin.; Laurie, Trin.; Oldacres, Joh.; Williams, Qu. ^ Egrotat.— Denison, Trin.; Forester, Hon. O. W. W., Tnn.; Thompson, Sidney. ORDINATIONS. On Sunday the 18th inst., the following gentlemen were admitted into Holy Orders by the Lord Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry:— Priests:' H. Cary, M. A., Worcester coll., Oxford; W. Corfield, H. A., Christ coll., Cambridge; R. H. Frizell, B. A., G. Gallagher, B. A., Trinity coll., Dublin ; T. Hirst, B. A., Pembroke coll., Camb. i R. Hollings, B. A., St. John's, W. Hooker, B. A., Pembroke coll., Oxford ; , T. O. Hopkins, B. A., Magdalene coll., Camb.; W. Hutch- inson, B. A., New Inn hall, Oxford; R. M. Jones, M. A., Pembroke coll., Oxford; R. Leieh, B. A., Queen s coll., Camb.; C. Locke, B. A., Trinity coll., Dublin; J. F. Maurice, B. A., Exeter coll., Oxford; J. B. Owen, B. A., St. John's coll., Camb.; C. M. l'rovund, B. A., Magdalene hall, Oxford; F. Salt, M. A., Christ Church, Oxford ; W. B. Smith, B. A., Trinity coll., Dublin ; C. Smith, B. A., Trinity coll., Comb.; G. Stable, B, A., Trinity coll., Dublin; H. Whittington, B. A., Pembroke coll., Camb.— Deacons: H. Bosfield, B. A., Worcester coll., Oxford; W. S. Buchaill, B. A., Trinity coll., Camb.; J. K. Charlton, B. A., Christ Church, Oxford; J. W. Hill- yard, M. A., Trinity coll., W. F. Sanders, B. A., St. John's, T. Smithett, M. A., Queen's, J. W. Willets, Emmanuel coll., Camb. The Lord Bishop of Exeter intends holding an ordination, in the Cathedral in that city, on Sunday the 22d of February next. Candi- dates are requested to transmit their papers to the Bishop before the 2d of February. MISCELLANEOUS. The annual meeting of the Worcester Association in aid of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts is fixed for Wednesday next, 28th inst., when the Lord Bishop of the Diocese will take the Cliair. We cannot ( says the Worcester Journal) but strongly feel that this Society has a two- fold claim to attention and support,— first, from its increased exertions, and next, from increased necessity the consequence of these exertions, which necessity has been of course aggravated by the withdrawal of so large a portion of the Parlia- mentary grant. A quarterly meeting of the Worcester Deanery District Committee of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, was held at the Episcopal Palace, on Wednesday last, at which the Right Rev. the Bishop of the Diocese presided. It. appeared from the statement made by the Secretary, that the issue of books and tracts from the depository at Mr. Lloyd's during the quarter ending at. Christmas, 1834, exceeded that of the corresponding quarter in 1833, by 1,495. This result of the exertions of the committee in disseminating the Holy Scriptures, together with the excellent liturgy of our Church, is peculiarly gratifying. At this meeting a committee was formed for the purpose of adopting means to aid the f inds of the National Society for building and repairing Churches. In these eventful times we trust that the united endeavours of the Clergy and Laity of the Es- tablished Church will, under the blessing of Divine Providence, ena- ble her to advance daily in strength, and m her hold on the affections of the people. The restoration of the parish Church of the Holy Trinity, Cam- bridge, with the exception of a new pulpit which is in a state of forward- ness, is now complete. The whole work does great credit to the active exertions of the Rev. WILLIAM CARUS, of Trinity College. It is with sincere pleasure that we hear the parishioners have presented to that gentleman a handsome piece of plate, as a testimony of their grati-, tude and affection, bearing the following inscription:—" Presented by the parishioners and congregation of Trinity Church, Cambridge, to the Rev. WILLIAM CARUS, M. A. of Trinity College, as a small token of their affection for his zeal and faithful discharge of his sacred duties, as Lecturer of the parish ; and in gratitude for his indefatigable and disinterested exertions in carrying into effect the complete re- storation and enlargement of the Church.— J an. 17,1835." The annual meeting of the Nottingham District Committee of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge was held in St. Peter's vestry," on Wednesday last .( the Venerable Archdeacon BROWNE in theChair. It appears'from the report, that the affairs of the Society are in a prosperous state, and that the sphere of its usefulness is gra- dually enlarging. During the year ending January 1, the Notting- ham Committee had the satisfaction of issuing from theii- depository the following books :— Bibles, 413; Testaments, 877; Prayer Books, I, 164; bound books and tracts, 6,952. At the recent tithe audit of the Rev. Mr. FISHER, Vicar of Linton, Cambridgeshire, that gentleman returned 10 per cent, upon his tithes. The Rev. HENRY BROWNE, of Earnley, near Chichester, at his tithe audit last week, without even an application, reduced the amount 10 per cent., and regretted he could not allow more, from having expended during the past year upwards of 501. in repairing the Church; but, shoulil the prices'of agricultural produce continue at so low a price as at present, next year he would be prepared to make to his parishioners a larger reduction. The Rev. HENRY LEGG, of Lavant, at his tithe audit voluntarily deducted 10 per cent, from the respective amounts, with an assurance that if the state of the corn market did not improve, it should be followed by a further reduction. The Rev. JOHNGARBETT, M. A., Rector ofSt. George's, Birming- ham, and JOHN JOHNSTONE, Esq., M. D. and F. R. S., have been elected Governors of the Free Grammar School of King Edward the Sixth, in Birmingham. The Bishop of ST. DAVID'S has, according to his annual custom, distributed through the hands of the Rev. J. JONES, Vicar of Aberg- willy, a large and seasonable supply of clothing, blanketing, < S'C., among the poor of that parish. They are also regularly supplied twice a Week with soup, over winter, from the Palace, which contri- butes not a little to their comfort at this inclement season. His Lordship gave, likewise, to the debtors in the county gaol, a barrel of coal and 71bs. of mutton each. MR. HEDWORTH LAMBTON AND THE CHUUCH REVENUE.— On re- ference to our report of the North Durham election proceedings, our readers will see that Mr. II. LAMBTON ( now our Representative) as- serted that the income of the Dean of Durham was 12,0001. per an- num, and of the Prebendaries 4,0001. We learn from an authority better acquainted than any other individual with the Chapter reve- nues, that a more gross misrepresentation was never before palmed upon the credulity of the public; with what views and with what fairness towards our respected_ but much calumniated neighbours our readers will best judge. With " the bane," however, came " the antidote." We further refer our readers to the counter- statement of the H igh Sheriff, a statement which has since been corroborated to us by the authority to which we have above alluded. Where was Mr. H. LAMBTON'S authority ? Dare he produce it ? We challenge him to meet our authority.— Durham Advertiser. The Archbishop of CANTERBURY, the Bishop of LONDON, and some other distinguished ecclesiastics, have been engaged much recently with Sir R. PEEL, at his official residence in Downing- street. I he interviews between these Prelates and the Premier have latterly been very frequent, and it is supposed thev relate to the measure of Church Reform which it is contemplate!! by Ministers to propose at the commencement of the ensuing Session o'f Parliament. The elegant new Church, St. Dunstan's in the West, fleet- street, which derives much of its internal beauty from the munificence of HUGH HOARE, Esq., has just received another addition to its attrac- tions by the erection of a new organ, the gift of the late pr. GOSLING. The instrument was built by Messrs. ROBSON, and IS placed in nu elegant case which harmonizes with the beautiful gothic altar- f iece> presented by Mr. HOARE. j o t i n b u l l. January STOCK EXCHANGE— SATURDAY EVENING. In tlie Consol Market the chief matter of interest has been the settlement of the Account, which took place 011 Wednesday, and it proved a Bear Account. Money was so scarce on the day of settle- ment, that we had what is termed a " backwardation," the price for Money beinsr higher than for the new Account. Consols for ISth . February Account are at the close this afternoon at 91 ' A the price for money being the same. Exchequer Bills are 42 43, Long Annuities 17Jf 5- 16, and India Bonds are 20 22. The New Spanish Scrip was brought into the Market on Tuesday at 60, and has borne 15< fpm.; from this price it declined to and closed this afternoon at 1 ' A The Cortes Bonds have, during the week, been as low as 54, but they closed at 54% 55. The specula- tion in Portuguese Bonds has been to some extent, anil the price has advanced to 9In the Transatlantic Securities there has been considerable speculation : Chilian Bonds have been as high as 38 to 39, and closed at 36V 3/!£ ; Columbian are 32% 33, and Brazilian S23i' 83J£. In the Northern Bonds the Market generally looks up ; Russian are J 08% 9, Belgian are 99% 100, and Butch Five per Cent. 1003T 101, The illness of the Prince of Orange has checked the advance in the latter. In the Share Market, there has been some business doing at a great advance : Anglo- Mexican Shares are £ 8 10s. to £ 9 10s., Real del Monte £ 31 to £ 32, United Mexican £ 4 10s. to £ 5, and Imperial Brazilian Shares £ 3S 10s. to £ 39 10s. T NKW WORK BV THE EDITOR Of " JOHN JiL'LL-'' Just ready, in 3 vols, post 8vo-., H E B U L L ' S M O U T H or, Satirical Sketches of the Characters and Events of Our Own Time. By the EDITOR of " JOHN Bt'LL." ( Selected from that Journal.) Richard Bentley, 8, New Burlington- street. Consols for Account, 91J4 H 3 per Cent. Consols, 91% Vi 3 per Cent. Reduced, 91* % 3% per Ct. Reduced, 99& % New 3% per Cent., 100; i 101% Bank Long Annuities, 17 % 5- 16 Bank Stock, Ditto for Account, India Stock, Ditto for Account. India Bonds, 20 22 pm. Exchequer Bills, 42 43 pm. The Paris papers of Thursday contain no intelligence of impor- tance. The House of Peers sat 011 Wednesday as a Court of Justice, and issued decrees of accusation against ten more persons charged with a participation in the insurrectionary movements of April last. Among them ire MM. Marrast ( the principal' editor of the Tribune), Kersansi ( editor of the Reformateur), Berrier Fontaine, Cavaignae, Guinard Vignarte, and other noted chiefs of the Republican party. In the House of Deputies, which ( the 21st of January being the anniversary day of the death of Louis XVI.), none of the Royalist Members attended, the President read a letter from the Foreign Minister, Admiral de Rigny, accompanying the documents con- nected with the American claim of 25,000,000f. Another set of documents relative to the negociations which had taken place since the rejection of the Bill in last Session was to be produced on the following day, and the whole of the papers were to be printed. The Journal de Paris of Thursday conveys the intelligence that the Cure Merino has been totally defeated in Castile. PREPARATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES.— The news received at Amsterdam from the United States reaches to the 26th ult. It is stated that orders had arrived at New York from the Naval Board at Washington, directing that all ships on the stocks should be com- pleted for sea within one month, and that the Directors of several Assurance Companies had, at a meeting at Boston, resolved to intro- duce in all their policies a clause to save them from any risk which possibly might arise in consequence of a rupture with France. Business in the Court of King's Bench seems to move on like one of our heavy stage waggons. In Lord Tenterden's time the practice was different. That Learned Judge would not suffer the time of the Court to be wasted by long replies. In special argument and mo- tions for rules, Counsel were heard pro and con., but long speeches in reply were not allowed. Lord Tenterden had the peculiar tact of seeing at one glance, as it were, the merits of the case, and he de- cided with a promptitude truly admirable. A quick astute Judge is much wanted at the present time in the King's Bench.— Morning Post. Three important legal situations have lately fallen to the gift of Government— namely, two Chairmanships of Counties, by the death of Mr, Scott, and the resignation of Mr. Jackson; and a Police Magistracy, by the death of Mr. Graves, of the Head- office. No appointment has yet taken place. Mr. Sergeant Coleridge has been already sworn in before the Lord Chancellor as one of his Majesty's Justices of the King's Bench, and his Lordship will take his seat on the Bench, with the customary formalities, to- morrow morning. We understand that Mr. Justice Patteson, who had determined upon going the Oxford Circuit this next spring, has consented to take the Western, in order to accommodate Mr. Sergeant Coleridge, the rew Judge, who would otherwise, according to the first arrangement, } ive been compelled to have gone his own circuit, where he is neces- fr ily acquainted with many of the causes which are to be tried at 5j p ensuing assizes. - unsel have been retained on behalf of Messrs. West and Hamil- , or the conduct of the petition against the return of Messrs. Y'or. an(* Ru'hven ; and the acknowledgement of the retainer, hv Mr Harrison, was this day received by Mr. Maguire, the agent for tbe\ ' etitioners.—^ Dubli11 Evening Mail. C0NSP1 RAC- Y, T0 MURDER.— On Tuesday night _ Mr._ Stuart, chief con: Pit , with icon's nirftcy to murder Christopher Galway, Esq., land agent * n '. ' f Kenmare. They are fully committed for trial at the next LfizeLl ^ erick Paper. rtin S ATT in MARCH, for MADRAS direct, the regular Trader 1 BiwiT w 500 Tons Burthen, GEORGE IRELAND ( late of the H^ j s ) Commands r> h'ng in the West India Export Docks. She is fitted ex- iresslv'for nasseuiren havInK el(? ht feet height between decks, ami carries a Sur- | eot- For Freigbt^ Pi5? aKe> " PFfc <° ir « < 5 « v Arbnthnot and Latham, Great St Helen's; or to Alvet William arrived, on the passacre from Madras, wh on 27th Nov. Steele, ami ft arrison, 8, Lime- street- square.— The Royal 22d inst., off the Me of Wight, after a remarkably tine . nee she sailed on 7th Oct., and the Cape of Good'Hope T io the NOBILIT V> CLERGY, GENTRY, and Others, en- couragers of Literatu. " e> the following brief case is most respectfully sub- mitted, by or. who knows th, ' premises to be true:- A Popular Writer whose pen- during the many years he been engaged m the pursuits of Literature, as in author and conductor, whoh V or jrantly, of several weekly and other periodi- cals— has ever been devoted to th ec* use 01! religion and virtue, whose loyalty is known, and whose private fortum \ has rendered great service to the Fine Arts, from a series of adversity is so rea ucf< J as to be incapacitated from proceeding with a work which, from its origin al, t>' » could he he placed in a state of pecu- niary comfort so as to enable him to . complete it, would perhaps delight the age. Knowing that appeals to the muuifict ' nt » n behalf of men uniting with genius irreat private worth, and who have cont " buted by their talents to the improve- ^ pntnf sor- i* tv. the writer of this venfri ires to solicit the aid of the affluent in will receive any Subscriptions directed for A • A., at the Office of this Taper, which will be duly advertised. Subscriptions will also be received at Sir Claude Scott's, Cavendish- square, directed for A. Z. A. Subscriptions since our last:— By Mr. Young J T. Curtife', Esq. J. Curtis, jun., Esq. W. Benson, Esq. .. 2 .. 2 .. 2 post 8vo., dedicated to Samuel Edited by S. The Bishop of Durham .. jflO 0 H. Hoare, Esq., Fleet- street .. 10 0 J. T. Collins, Esq 2 2 J. Turner, Esq 11 Just published, in one handsome volume. Rogers, Esq. BRYANT'S POEM WASHINGTON IRVING, Esq. " Bryant's genius consists in a tender pensiveness, a moral melancholy breathing over all his contemplations, dreams, and reveries, even such as in the main are ftlad, and giving assurance of a pure spirit, benevolent to all living creatures, and habitually pious in the felt omnipresence of the Creator. His poetry overflows with natural religion."— Blackwood's Magazine. " America may glory in the name of Bryant."— Metropolitan Magazine. " A single extract is an injustice. Let our readers buy the volume."— Edin. Rev. Printed for J. Andrews, 167, New Bond- street. TfjEST BEAVER HATS, ~ T W E XT Y- ONE SHILLINGS.— jtw HATS of the most approved qualities, superior colours, elegant shapes, which never spot with rain, of unequalled fineness and durability, wholesale and retail. Manufacturers and Patentees, ROBERT FRANKS and Co., T S 140, Regent- street, London, ^ ^ Redcross- street, City. * REGIMENTAL ORDERS. < c The regiment to- morrow will form for inspection, Each man to be characterized by reflection:" The Colonel meant steadiness— other pursuits A Patlander thinking of, polish'd his boots; And shone on parade in resplendence so bnght, That all to his seeming was perfectly right, And proved so— for Pat had the order obeyed Rv boots that suroassing reflection displayed, Not menta., ncieea, outsat cractr/ e. vgr At Warren's Mart gained. No. 30, the Strand # THIS Easy- shinine and Brilliant BLACKING is prepared by ROBERT WARREN, 30, STRAND, London; and sold in every town in the Kingdom. Liquid in bottles, and Paste Blacking in Pots, at6d., 12d., and 18d. each Bepaiticularto enquire for Warren' ® , 30, Strand, all others are counterfeit) MANGNALL'S QUESTIONS AND GEOGRAPHY. Just published, in 12mo. New Edition, 5s. bd. 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London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman. MEADOWS' NUGENT'S DICTIONARY. In one vol. 18mo., the Sixth Edition, price 7s. in cloth boards, or bound, 7s. 6d., MEADOWS' NEW FRENCH and ENGLISH PRONOUN- CING DICTIONARY, on the basis of Nugent's, with many new words in general use, in Two Parts: French and English— English and French ; exhi- biting the Pronunciation of the French in pure English sounds, the Parts of Speech, Gender of French Nouns, regular and irregular Conjugation of Verbs, and Accent of English Words. To which is prefixed, Principles of French Pronunciation, and an Abridged Grammar. By F. C. MEADOW S, M. A. of the University of Paris. London: printed for Thomas Tegg and SOB, Cheapsitle; and may be procured, by order from every Bookseller in the United Kingdom. BUKtidiSri'fcj fiSbfiAth VM- . AiNutl'-' VLCiO. Warehouse, 107, Strand, corner of the Savoy- steps, London, JOHN BURGESS and SON, being apprised of the numerous endeavours made by many persons to impose aspurious article for their make, feel 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 Cau- tions : some are in appearance at first sight " The Genuine," but without any name or address— some " Burgess's Essence of Anchovies"— others " Burgess,' and many more without address. JOHN BURGESS and SON having been many years honoured with such dis- tinguished approbation, feel every sentiment of respect toward the Public, and earnestly solicit them to inspect the labels previous to purchasing what they con- ceive to be of their make, which they hope will prevent many disappointments. BURGESS'S NEW SAUCE, for general purposes, having given such great satis- faction, continues to be prepared by them, and is recommended as a most useful and convenient Sauce— will keep good in all climates. V » rarehouse, No. 107, Strand ( corner of Savoy- steps), London. The original Fish Sauce Warehouse. 1\ JEVV YEAR'S GIFTS.— A due attention to Children's Hair is of the greatest importance, both as to utility and elegance: a more ac- ceptable present to youth of both sexes cannot be granted than a supply of ROW- LAND'S MACASSAR OIL. It is invaluable in the nursery. This celebrated Oil, during a period of many years, has never once failed of eliciting redundancy of hair, even on parts of the head that were previously bald ( proved by testimo- nials received from all parts of the globe), and in preventing the hair from falling off or turning grey to the most advanced periods of life. This Oil eradicates the scurf easily and pleasantly, generates with infancy ample growth of beautiful hair, and will sustain it in perfeciion through all stages of existence. Subduing all relaxing + endencies, it firmly keeps the hair in curl and other decorative forma- tion, during many hours, unimpaired by damp weather, ciowded assemblies, the dance, or equestrian exercise.— The lowest price of the original Macassar, or Rowland's Oil, is 3s. 6d. per bottle. The label has the words " Rowland's Ma- cassar Oil," and between those words are the same words minutely and curiously engraved 24 times ; also the Name and Address in red 011 lace- work— A. ROWLAND & SON, 20, HATTON- GARDEN, Counter- signed ALEX. ROWLAND. Sold by them, and by all respectable Perfumers and Medicine Venders. All others are frauds. INERAL MARMORXTCJM for FILLING ^ DECAYED TEETH, and INCORRODTRLE ARTIFICIAL TEETH FITTED WITHOUT WIRES or other LIGATURES. MONSIEUR LE DRAY and CO., SURGEON- DENTISTS, No. 60, NEW- MAN- STREPS, OXFORD STREET, continue to RESTORE DECAYED TEETH, with their CELEBRATED MINERAL MARMORATUM, so univer- sally recommended by the Faculty. It fills up the cavity WITHOUT the LEAST PAIN, HEAT, or PRESSURE, and in a few seconds HARDENS INTO ENA- MEL, forming a WHOLE TOOTH out of a STUMP ; arresting^ all further pro- gress of deeav ; allaying in one minute the most excruciating PAIN ; and rendering the OPERATION of EXTRACTION UNNECESSARY. They also FASTEN LOOSE TEETH, particularly of aged persons, whether arising from neglect, the use of calomel, disease of the Gums, or any other cause. ARTIFICIAL or NATURAL TEETH of SCRPASS1NG BEAUTY, to match equal in colour and shape, those left in the mouth, FIXED from ONE to a COM- PLETE SET, without the incumbrance of Wires or other Ligatures, on a prin- ciple yet unrivalled, rendering it impossible to distinguish the Artificial Teeth from the Natural Ones; answering most satisfactorily all the purposes of the Original Teeth in MASTICATION and ARTICULATION, IMPARTING to th « COUNTENANCE a YOUNGER and IMPROVED APPEARANCE, and re- maining perfectly secure in their places.— Charges as in France. - HEN Men of Education and Professional Skill use persever- , . ing 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 superiority.— Messrs. GOSS and Co., Surgeons, have been induced to to make the cure of the followingthe object of their particular study, viz.:— Dis- orders frequently contracted in moments of intoxication, which, by an improved plan, are speedily and effectually cured ; as also, debility, whether arising from Bacchanalian indulgences, long residence in warm climates, or vice, too often pursued by youth. In that distressing state of debility, whether the consequence of such baneful habits, or arising from any other cause, by which the powers of the constitution become enfeebled, as regular educated Surgeons of London, they offer a firm, safe, and speedy restoration to perfect health. Patients in the country, are requested to send 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.— GOSS and" Co., Surgeons, 7, Lancaster- p'ace, Strand, London. 1. The iEGIS of LIFE ( twenty- first," edition), a familiar Commentary on the above Diseases— 2. The SYPHILIST— and 3. HYGEIANA ( on Female Com- plaints), by Goss and Co., may be had of Sherwood, 23, Paternoster- row, London, and all Booksellers. Pice 5s. each. GENERAL AVERAGE PRICES OF CORN, For the Week ending Jan. 17. Per Imperial Qr. 40s 7d I Rye 28s 8d 31s 6d Beans 35s lid 21s lid J Pease 40 « 5d ^ Wheat .. 46s 8d Duty on Foreign.. •) BarIev . .. 15, 4d Wheat Barley . Oats .. Average of last Six Weeks. Wheat.. 40s 7< t Barley... 31s 4d Oats.... 22s Id Oats 13s 9d Rve 21s 3d Rye 32s Od Beans 36s lOd Pease 41s Stf Beans.... 15s 6d Pease 8J Od STOCKS. Bank Stock 3 per cent. Red 3 per cent. Consols 3J per cent. 1818 3^ per cent. Reduced New 3J per cent i per cent, of 1826 Bank Long Annuities India Bonds Exchequer Bills Consols for Account Won. Tu. Wed. Thur. Friday Sat. 223 223 223 222} 222} 913 91 i 92 919 91 j 91? 90J 901 91} 91 91* 91 i — 993 99f 993 99} 99} 100 99f 99| 99J 98= 98| 99J 99 9S| 101} 173 17} 17} 171 17} 17 21 p 22 p 20 p 23 p 20 p 2 41 p 40 p 43 p 43 p 43 p 43 92} 92? 91J 91| 911 91} BIRTHS:. In Edinburgh, on Tuesday, the 20th inst., the lady of Sir Hugh P. HumeCamp- bell, pfMarchmont and Hume, Baronet, M. P. for the County of Berwick, ci a daughter. On the 19th inst., in Park- street, the lady of the Hon. William a'Court Holmes, of a son and heir— On the 18th inst., in Bedford- place, the lady of Francis F. Rougemont, Esq., of a daughter— On the 12th of January, the lady of Dr. Wil- liams, of Bedford- place, Russell- square, of a son— On the 20ih inst., at South- ampton, the lady of George Edward Pococke, Esq., of a daughter— On the 10th inst, at Melton Mowbray, the lady of the Rev. .7. S. Halifax, of a son— On the 16th inst., at Woodlands, Hants, the lady of Philip Elliot Farnall. Esq., of a son — On the 18th inst., at Hale End, the wife of the Rev. Warren Mercer, of a son— MARRIED. On the 15th of July last, at St. Helena, William Alexander, Esq., son of the Bishop of Meath, toMissJannet Dallas,, eldest daughter of the Governor and Commander- in- Chief of that Island, and niece of General Sir Thomas Dallas,. G. C. B.— On the 22d inst., at Fulham, George Paterson, Esq., of Poyle- house, Middlesex, to Frances, youngest child of the late Thomas Barnard, Esq., and niece to the late Rev. Benjamin Barnard— On the 20th inst., at Seaford, Sussex,. Captain J. W. Michell, Hon. Company's Bengal Infantry, to Sarah Jane, second daughterof H. Harrison, Esq.— On the 22d inst., at St. Paneras New Church, Henry, son of C. Stainbank, Esq., of Peckham, to Mary, youngest daughter of " Willi- llVl ViCllV TT. irri /-. f Tinner .. loon T. I r-,, On 18fl » second son of Hugh Tuite, Esq., of Sonna, in the county of YVTestmeath— At St. Clement's, Ipswich, on the 20th inst., Edward, son of the late Charles Hanbury, Esq., of Halstead, Essex, to Harriet Anne, daughter of John Cobbold, jun., Esq.,. of the Cliff, Ipswich. DIED. On the 13th instant, suddenly, at his seat, Elsbrock, near Haarlem, Charles Louis, Baron de Tuyll de Serooskerken, Seigneur d'Ysendoorn, and Honorary Chamberlain to His Majesty the King of the Netherlands. On the 16th inst., at his house in Spencer's Belle Vue, Bath, after a few days'" illness, John Watchurst, Esq. On the 16th inst., at Port Eliot, Cornwall, the Lady Susan Lygon, second daughter o£ the Earl of St. German's— In Holies- street, Cavendish- square, on the 8th inst., Lieut.- Colonel Mark Watt, Colonel- Commandant of the Trafford and Hulm Local Militia— On the 20th inst., in the 48th year of his age, Mr. Henry Warren, Printer of the Courier Newspaper— On the 18th inst., at his residence, Hyde Park- place West, in the 62d year of his age, the Riglvt Hon. Thomas Charles Earl of Portmore— On the 17th, in Sussex- place, the Honourable Mrs. E. C. Fletcher— On the 15th inst., at the Rectory, Great Livermere, Suffolk, Maria, wife of the Rev. Augustus Asgill Colvile, Rector of Great and Little Livermere ; and on the 16th inst., Augustus Broderip Colvile, their infant son, aged five days — Om the 20th inst., in North Audley- street, Lady Harriet Maria Villiers, daughter of the Earl and Countess of Clarendon, deeply regretted by all who knew her— Oi* the 20th inst., in the Adelphi, Alderman Christopher Smith, aged 85— At Padstow, on the 17th inst., in the 73d year of her age, Mrs. Rawlings, relict of the late Thomas Rawlings, Esq., of Saunders- hill, Padstow, county of Cornwall— On the 21st inst., in the 12th year of his age, Robert Isaac, eldest son of Robert Espi- nasse, Esq., in the Inner Temple— On the 20th inst., at Epsom, Lieut. Colonel Watts, late of H. M. 13th Regiment— On the 20th inst., at Canterbury- place, Lambeth, Miss Harriet Horsfall; and on the same day her sister, Mrs. Mary Hors- , on vu. vv. XUUVj Ul W J OUU » V 1CVV. 1J i » il. ' ' •• — ~ ~ Navy, aged 20, second son of the late Charles White Williams, K- cj., of Duck- worth, Jamaica— At Glasgow, on the 12th inst., of the sinall- pox, in the 21st year of his age, Lieutenant Alexander Hope, 77th Regiment, fourth and youngest son of General the Hon. Sir Alexander Hope, of Waughton— On the 21st inst., Wil- liam Bagge, Esq., aged 57, for many years one of the Aldermen ofKing's Lynn, Norfolk. LONDON : Printed by EDWARD SHACKBLL, of No. 14, Amwell- street, Pen- tonville, in the County of Middlesex ; and of N" o. 40, Fleet- street, in the City of London ; and published by the said EDWARD SHACfCELL, at No. - 10, Fleet- street, aforesaid, at which last jilaci. tdoWj coiauiunicatioae for tile Editor ( post- paid) are received.
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